By TTU Sports Information & OVC Media Relations
BRENTWOOD, Tenn. – For the second straight season, the third time in the past four years, and the fourth time in program history, the Tennessee Tech soccer team took home the Ohio Valley Conference's Team Sportsmanship Award, as announced by the league Wednesday afternoon. The Golden Eagles have now captured the honor in 2009, 2021, 2023, and 2024.
Voted on by the student-athletes and coaches of the respective sports, the team awards are bestowed upon the Conference squads deemed to have best exhibited the standards of sportsmanship and ethical behavior as outlined by the OVC and NCAA. Included in the areas for evaluation are the conduct of student-athletes, coaches, staff and administrators, and fans.
"Without sportsmanship, there are truly no meaningful victories," said Beth DeBauche, OVC Commissioner. "The recipients of the OVC Team Sportsmanship awards should accept this award with great pride for their fellow competitors have made it clear their teams exemplify the best in intercollegiate athletics. In receiving this prestigious honor other competitors are saying these student-athletes compete with class, respect their opponents, and value fair play. That is quite a compliment as those are all traits that will lead to true victories throughout the course of life."
The 2024-25 school year marks the 20th year the team sportsmanship honors have been awarded.
Implemented in August 2005, the team honors are the most recent addition to an awards program that recognizes and celebrates sportsmanship within the Conference. In 1998, the league established the Steve Hamilton Sportsmanship Award, presented annually to a male or female student-athlete of junior or senior status who best exemplifies the characteristics of the late Morehead State student-athlete, coach, and administrator. Five years later, the Conference added the OVC Sportsmanship Award, presented annually to the member institution selected by its peers to have best exhibited the standards of sportsmanship and ethical behavior as outlined by the OVC and NCAA.
"[Head coach] Corey [Boyd], his staff, and each of our Golden Eagle soccer student-athletes are well aware of what it means to play at an elite level and to do it with respect for the game, their opponents, the fans, and everyone involved," Tech Director of Athletics Mark Wilson said. "For them to be able to claim both an OVC Championship and an OVC Sportsmanship Award in back-to-back years is simply impressive and goes to show that this program understands the goals we have for each of our student-athletes. They are proud ambassadors of Tennessee Tech both on and off the pitch and are more than deserving of our congratulations and this recognition for making sportsmanship a top priority."
In 1995, the Ohio Valley Conference implemented a first-of-its-kind "Sportsmanship Statement," a policy promoting principles of fair play, ethical conduct, and respect for one's opponent. The statement answered the challenge of the NCAA Presidents Commission to improve sportsmanship in collegiate athletics and has become a model for others to follow across the nation.
Photo by Thomas Corhern