BILLINGS, MT - Dr. Gary Gray, Director of Intercollegiate
Athletics at
Montana State University-Billings, announced Thursday that
the
university will add men's and women's indoor and outdoor
track and
field beginning with the 2007-2008 academic year. The
addition of the
four new sports (men's indoor, men's outdoor, women's
indoor, and
women's outdoor) will give MSU-Billings 17 intercollegiate
sports, the
most of any college or university in the state. Montana State
in
Bozeman has the next most with 15, and the University of
Montana in
Missoula has 14."We're excited to bring on board men's and women's indoor
and outdoor
track and field as our next four Yellowjacket sports," said
Gray, who
has now overseen the addition of 10 new sports at the
university since
1996. "This is a great time for us to add track and field
since they
are officially sanctioned sports in our new conference, the
Great
Northwest Athletic Conference. It's our pleasure to add four
more
teams to expand participation opportunities for Montana's
track and
field student-athletes."
While the addition of track and field coincides with the
university's
upcoming move to the GNAC, it was not a condition of
conference
membership. MSU-Billings has explored the possibility of
adding track
and field for a number of years, but neither indoor nor
outdoor track
and field have been conference sports in the Yellowjackets'
two most
recent conferences (Pacific West and Heartland).
MSU-Billings track
and field athletes will immediately be eligible to compete for
GNAC
conference championships next year.
Gray says that current men's and women's cross-country
head coach Dave
Coppock will also serve as the head coach for both the
men's and
women's track and field programs. Coppock has been the
MSU-Billings
cross-country coach for 19 years. A 1979 graduate of the
University
of Montana, Coppock ran cross-country and track for the
Grizzlies. He
guided the Yellowjacket women's cross-country team to the
2006
Heartland Conference championship and was named the
conference's Coach
of the Year. Coppock is also a two-time Montana USATF
Road Racer of
the Year.
"The GNAC is a well-established and highly-competitive
track and field
conference on a national level, and this is a great time to
add track
and field here at MSUB now that we've joined that league,"
said
Coppock. "Adding a Division II track and field program here
will give
Montana kids a great opportunity to compete in the NCAA
while
attending an in-state school."
Eight of the other nine schools in the GNAC sponsor men's
and women's
outdoor track and field, and seven of nine schools sponsor
indoor
track and field. University of Alaska-Fairbanks does not
sponsor
track and field at all, and University of Alaska-Anchorage has
only
outdoor track and field. With the addition of the four sports,
MSU-Billings will have the most intercollegiate sports of any
school
in the GNAC. Western Washington is next with 16 sports,
and the
average number of sports per school in the conference is
13.6.
"Initially, I'm interested in recruiting athletes who have the
range
to be competitive from the long sprints to running
cross-country in
the fall," said Coppock. "We lose a lot of eastern Montana
kids to
the Dakotas where the NAIA schools there offer track and
field. This
should fill a huge void in this region and open up some
opportunities
to a lot of Montana athletes. This will be a great opportunity
for
Montana kids to get a high-quality, low-cost college
education while
being able to compete in NCAA track and field.
"We'll have the opportunity to compete in a wide range of
meets
anywhere from Colorado to the Dakotas to the Pacific
Northwest and
West coast," added Coppock. "I attended the GNAC Indoor
Championships
this winter at the Idaho Sports Center in Nampa, and I was
really
impressed with the track, facilities, organization, and
officiating.
It's a high quality meet which will be a great experience for
our
athletes. I came away from that meet thinking that we just
have to do
this. It's too great an experience to pass up. Bringing
college
track back to Billings will add another dimension and
interest to an
already strong track and road racing sports community."
MSU-Billings sponsored men's track and field in the 1960s
and 1970s,
primarily under the direction of Hall of Fame coach Nels
Christiansen.
The university was a member of the NAIA at that time.