For release:
Feb. 13, 2013
News and Media Relations contact: Jimmy Hart, 615-898-5131 or Jimmy.Hart@mtsu.edu
Second MTSU contact: Andrew Oppmann, 615-494-7696 or Andrew.Oppmann@mtsu.edu
NASHVILLE — Conference
USA Commissioner Britton Banowsky got his first taste of Middle Tennessee
hospitality Wednesday with a luncheon and press event at the Country Music Hall
of Fame and Museum to introduce him to Music City USA.
MTSU accepted an invitation to join the conference last
November, then announced last month that it would officially leave the Sun Belt
Conference and join C-USA on July 1, 2013.
Representatives from the two of Music City’s iconic
institutions — the Grand Ole Opry and the Hall of Fame — were on hand to
welcome the commissioner, along with representatives from Nashville Sports
Council and the Nashville Convention and Visitors Bureau.
MTSU alumnus Pete Fisher, vice president and general manager
of the Grand Ole Opry, presented Banowsky with a framed Opry appearance poster
welcoming the commissioner to Middle Tennessee.
Fisher, a 1987 recording industry management graduate, said
the poster reflects an Opry tradition and that “Britton Banowsky is our star
today.”
“The Grand Ole Opry is synonymous with Nashville and Middle
Tennessee,” Fisher said following the presentation. “This (move to C-USA) is
obviously a great step of growth and affirmation for everything that’s going on
in this area. Conference USA obviously recognizes that. This rising tide raises
all ships.”
Banowsky applauded the university’s leadership, pointing to
importance of infrastructure improvements on campus as well as an emphasis on
academic excellence.
“It’s a great university and what makes great universities
are great leaders. Academically they do a great job not only for their
students, but their student-athletes,” Banowsky said. “We think the university
is absolutely a perfect fit for what we’re trying accomplish going forward in
Conference USA.”
MTSU President Sidney A. McPhee, along with Athletics
Director Chris Massaro and Football Coach Rick Stockstill, led the University’s
delegation at the Nashville event.
“So on behalf of our 100,000 alumni, our outstanding
faculty, staff, administrators and students, I want to offer a true Blue Raider
welcome to Commissioner Britton Banowsky,” McPhee said. “Our university alumni,
friends and supporters are truly excited about MTSU being a part of the largest
FBS (Football Bowl Subdivision) conference in the NCAA.”
MTSU officials say the move to C-USA is expected to enhance
the university’s national profile athletically and academically as it joins a
conference featuring member schools such as Rice, Tulane and Marshall. McPhee
noted that C-USA’s partnerships with television networks CBS, Fox and ESPN will
raise the profile of the university’s programs and its student-athletes.
“We have made it a point as a university to align ourselves
academically and athletically with entities that will continue this university
on the explosive growth pattern over the past 10 years and certainly Conference
USA does just that,” McPhee said.
The commissioner traveled to Murfreesboro after the
Nashville event to tour the MTSU campus and appear at a Business After Hours
event of the Rutherford County Chamber of Commerce held Wednesday evening at
the Kennon Sports Hall of Fame on campus.
About MTSU
Founded in 1911 as one of three state normal schools for
teacher training, MTSU is now the oldest and largest public university in
Middle Tennessee. With an enrollment of more than 25,000 students, MTSU is the
largest undergraduate university in Tennessee.
MTSU remains committed to providing individualized service
in an exciting and nurturing atmosphere where student success is the top
priority. With a wide variety of nationally recognized academic degree programs
at the baccalaureate, master's and doctoral levels, MTSU takes pride in educating
the best and the brightest students from Tennessee and around the world.
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MTSU is committed to
developing a community devoted to learning, growth, and service. We hold these
values dear, and there’s a simple phrase that conveys them: “I am True
Blue.” Learn more at www.mtsu.edu/trueblue.
For MTSU news anytime, visit www.MTSUNews.com.
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