MURFREESBORO, Tenn. —They entered Murphy Center excited to watch the MTSU Lady Raiders play a college basketball game. All of the thousands of Murfreesboro City Schools’ students left happy when the final horn sounded.
In between, they danced, wiggled and screamed as the Lady Raiders used a 22-7 fourth-quarter spurt to defeat visiting Georgia State, 69-54, in front of 11,310 mostly student fans at the seventh Education Day game.
“We’re always happy to have Murfreesboro City Schools students on our campus,” said Deb Sells, vice president of Student Affairs and vice provost for Enrollment Management. In all, 12 schools brought busloads of students to the game.
Coach Rick Insell was pleased with the response his players provided after the Panthers rallied to tie the game at 47-all after three quarters.
“We knew it was going to be a tough game,” said Insell, whose team improved to 6-2 on the season. “I’m very proud of our young ladies for hanging in there and coming back after they got behind.”
“It was loud … and I loved this day,” Insell added. “My hat’s off to Dr. Linda Gilbert(City Schools director) and her staff. They have to have great leadership … to pull this off. It’s a win-win for them and it’s a win-win for us.”
Reeves-Rogers sixth-grader Serenitee Matheny, 11, who plays basketball for both the Boys and Girls Club and an AAU team, predicted before tip-off “it is going to be an intense game.” And she was right.
Georgia State (3-2) rallied to tie the game heading into the final 10 minutes before MTSU hit 8 of 12 field goals and four consecutive free throws to ice the game.
A’Queen Hayesled the Lady Raiders with 20 points and added seven rebounds. Alex Johnson(14 points), Taylor Sutton(13) and Jordan Majorscame off the bench with 12 points and a career-high 14 rebounds in the victory.
President Sidney A. McPheeand MTSU first lady Liz McPheewere among those in attendance.
Earlier in November, Rutherford County Schools attended an Education Day game. The MTSU men’s team defeated Milligan College, 102-70, in Murphy Center.
MTSUhas more than 300 combined undergraduate and graduate programs.
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