Taylor Johnson, MS, CSCS, USAW, CES, PN2, began his career as a performance coach in Division 1 Power Five schools, ultimately leading him to the National Football League (NFL) and the San Francisco 49ers. During his NFL tenure, he managed strength and conditioning, nutrition, and rehabilitation while also overseeing their sport science initiatives. Johnson then transitioned into the realm of esports, where he built player and coach development programs for professional teams and academies. He coached some of the world’s best gamers on teams such as OpTic Gaming, Astralis, eUnited, and Evil Geniuses. In addition to coaching, Johnson helped lead teams pioneering software and research studies of cognitive athletes at Aim Labs. Blending neuroscience and gaming technology led to the creation of one of the largest esport training platforms in the world. He now coaches and provides consulting services to groups across sports, esports, business, and the military, and he is a partner and performance coach with Liminal Collective. He holds a master’s degree in exercise science and rehabilitation and a bachelor’s in exercise biology, as well as certifications in strength and conditioning, corrective exercise, nutrition, sport performance, and neurolinguistic programming.
Joanne DiFrancisco-Donoghue, PhD, ACSM-CEP, is the director of clinical research and a professor in the New York Institute of Technology College of Osteopathic Medicine (NYITCOM) in Old Westbury, New York. Donoghue has been at the NYITCOM since 1998 and has dedicated her expertise to the study of exercise physiology and nutrition. Her extensive clinical research over the past 25 years has resulted in a vast number of peer-reviewed publications, contributing significantly to the field of esport medicine. She has also presented her findings at both national- and international-level conferences. Donoghue has emerged as a leading figure in the field of esport medicine, conducting pioneering research in this area and earning her recognition as a keynote speaker on multiple occasions. She has received funding from renowned organizations such as the Michael J. Fox Foundation, the American Osteopathic Association, The Marfan Foundation, General Electric, Fnatic, SecretLab, and the National Institutes of Health. She currently serves as a board member of the Esports Research Network (ERN), holds the position of associate editor for the
Journal of Electronic Gaming and Esports, and serves as a member of the American College of Sports Medicine research committee for the greater New York region.
Jerry Balentine, DO, FACOEP, FACEP, is the executive vice president and provost at the New York Institute of Technology (NYIT), where he evaluates new opportunities for university growth and expansion, especially in the area of faculty research, as well as overseeing strategic resource allocation. His areas of responsibility also include all six academic schools at NYIT, dining services, global campuses and programs (Canada and China), and two academic health care centers, as well as the Center for Global Health, Center for Sports Medicine, Ehlers-Danlos Center, and Parkinson’s Center.
Balentine is an editorial board member and published author of the
International Journal of Esports, the
Journal of Electronic Gaming and Esports, and the
Journal of Medical Regulation. He has authored multiple textbook and journal articles in the field of emergency medicine and is a frequent contributor and editor of articles in the WebMD network. Before joining NYIT in 2014, he was the executive vice president and chief medical officer of the St. Barnabas Healthcare (SBH) System in the Bronx, New York. In his role at SBH, he was responsible for a large physician group, a level-one trauma center, multiple outpatient facilities, a Medicaid health plan, a nursing home, and a federally qualified health center. He graduated from the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine and the emergency medicine residency program at the Lincoln Medical and Mental Health Center, where he served as the chief resident. During his career, Balentine had the opportunity to work as an emergency medicine residency program director, emergency department director, and medical director of a hospital and trauma center. He has served as a chief medical officer of a medical malpractice fund, established an urgent care center on Rikers Island, served as a consultant to SBH Prison Health, and owned and operated his own urgent care center in the Bronx for 10 years. Balentine is the past president of the New York chapter of the American College of Emergency Physicians and has served as vice chair of the New York State board of medicine, as chair of the finance committee of the NYCOM educational consortium, and on the education committee of the Federation of State Medical Boards.