COOKEVILLE, Tenn. -- Named as "one of the 10 most powerful women
in sports," Donna Lopiano will be the guest speaker at the next Dr.
M. Dianne Murphy Leaders for Life program at Tennessee Tech
University. She will address Tech's female student-athletes.
The event is scheduled for 7 p.m., Monday, April 29, in the Don
Ervin Auditorium of Johnson Hall on the TTU campus. Admission is
free, and the event is open to the public.
Dr. Lopiano is the President and founder of Sports Management Resources (SMR), a consulting firm that focuses on bringing the knowledge of experienced, expert former athletics directors to assist scholastic and collegiate athletics departments in solving growth and development challenges.
She is the former Chief Executive Officer of the Women’s
Sports Foundation (1992-2007) and was named "one of The 10 Most
Powerful Women in Sports” by Fox Sports. The Sporting News
has also listed her as one of “The 100 Most Influential
People in Sports.” The Institute for International Sport
named Lopiano among the “100 Most Influential Sports
Educators in America.” She has been nationally and
internationally recognized for her leadership as an athletics
administrator and work advocating for gender equity in sports by
the International Olympic Committee, the National Collegiate
Athletic Association, the National Association for Girls and Women
in Sports, the National Association of Collegiate Women Athletic
Administrators and the National Association of Collegiate Directors
of Athletics.
Lopiano also served for 18 years as the University of Texas at
Austin Director of Women’s Athletics and is a past-president
of the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women. During
her tenure at Texas, she constructed what many believed to be the
premiere women’s athletics program in the country; twice
earning the top program in the nation award. All eight UT sports
were consistently ranked in the nation’s top ten in Division
I where they earned eighteen national championships in six
different sports, produced 51 individual sport national champion
athletes, 57 Southwest Conference championships and 395
All-American athletes, dozens among them Olympians and world
champions. Ninety percent of women athletes who exhausted their
athletic eligibility at the University of Texas received a
baccalaureate degree. Prior to Texas, Lopiano served as an
Assistant Professor and Assistant Athletic Director at Brooklyn
College of the City University of New York.
Recognized as one of the foremost national experts on gender equity in sport, Dr. Lopiano has testified about Title IX and gender equity before three Congressional committees, served as a consultant to the U.S. Office for Civil Rights Department of Health, Education and Welfare Title IX Task Force and as an expert witness in over thirty court cases. Dr. Lopiano has also served as a consultant to school districts, institutions of higher education and state education agencies on Title IX compliance and to domestic and international sport organizations on program development, governance and strategic planning.
She received her bachelor’s degree from Southern Connecticut State University, her master’s and doctoral degrees from the University of Southern California and is the recipient of five honorary doctoral degrees. She has been a college coach of men’s and women’s volleyball, women’s basketball and softball and coached the Italian national women’s softball team.
As an athlete, she participated in 26 national championships in four sports and was a nine-time All-American at four different positions in softball, a sport in which she played on six national championship teams. She is a member of the National Sports Hall of Fame, the National Softball Hall of Fame and the Connecticut and Texas Women’s Halls of Fame, among others.
Dr. M. Dianne Murphy Leaders for Life
Program
Eash semester, Tennessee Tech University Athletics hosts an event
as part of the Dr. M. Dianne Murphy Leaders for Life program,
inviting distinguished guests to speak to all TTU female
student-athletes, along with faculty and community members, on the
role of successful women in athletics. The establishment of this
lecture series has been made possible by a generous gift to
Tennessee Tech Athletics by one of our alumni, Dr. M. Dianne
Murphy, Director of Intercollegiate Athletics and Physical
Education at Columbia University in New York City.