SUNY Broome lands local commitment from Cazenovia senior Mikayla Streator
SUNY Broome added another in-state piece to its women’s basketball rebuild when Cazenovia senior Mikayla Streator verbally committed to join the Hornets on July 2. The move gives the program a nearby recruit from Central New York and gives Streator a direct path from Cazenovia High School to NJCAA basketball in Binghamton.
That geography matters for a Broome program trying to tighten its regional recruiting reach. SUNY Broome is located at 907 Upper Front St. in Binghamton, and Streator’s jump from Cazenovia keeps the roster-building pipeline close to home. In a junior-college setting, where staffs often have to replace players quickly and build depth on the fly, an in-state commitment can carry real value because it helps connect local high school talent to a college opportunity without leaving New York.
Streator’s decision also arrives during a busy stretch for the Hornets. Broome had already picked up a verbal commitment from Windsor senior Emily Ayers on June 26 and signed Wyalusing senior Alissa Baldwin to a letter of intent on June 25. The roster page for the upcoming team is already live, underscoring how much of the offseason work is centered on filling out the next group before workouts and class enrollment begin.
The timing fits Broome’s recent trajectory. The Hornets finished 4-16 overall and 3-9 in conference play, and a season recap noted that the program returned only three players from the 2024-25 team while adding several newcomers for 2025-26. That kind of turnover makes every commitment more important, especially for a staff trying to restore consistency in the Mid-State Athletic Conference.
Streator’s high school background points to a player with established varsity credentials. Cazenovia’s 2025-26 girls basketball roster listed her as a senior, while recruiting profiles identify her as a Cazenovia girls varsity basketball player in the Class of 2026 and as a shooting guard. For SUNY Broome, that gives the Hornets another guard prospect from inside the state, and another sign that the program is working to keep New York talent in the NJCAA fold.
Sources
- [1]broomehornets.com
- [2]news.sunybroome.edu
- [3]maxpreps.com
- [4]hudl.com
- [5]njcaa.org