Sunday 8th June 2025

Bettye Giles Inducted Into Tennessee Sports Hall Of Fame

bettye-giles

Martin, Tenn.–University of Tennessee at Martin and national pioneer for women’s athletics Bettye Giles was presented her Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame award this afternoon at the Dunagan Alumni Center on campus.

It was announced on Feb. 17 that Giles was part of the star-studded 11-person Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame Class of 2020. The original banquet was set for Aug. 1 but was postponed because of health and safety concerns. A fully produced virtual induction ceremony is in the works and is expected to take place soon.

The Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame Class of 2020 includes Giles, former NFL head coach Jeff Fisher, current Vanderbilt head baseball coach Tim Corbin, former NFL quarterback Heath Shuler, former NBA guard Tony Delk, former NFL running back DeAngelo Williams, founder of Bristol Motor Speedway Bruton Smith, current Nashville Predators sports analyst Terry Crisp, former collegiate head basketball coach Sonny Smith, former Tennessee Golf Association executive director Dick Horton and former collegiate football head coach Carl Torbush.

Giles was the primary advocate for women’s equality in sports in the state of Tennessee and was instrumental in their development of athletic opportunities. She has served on numerous national committees promoting the growth of women’s sports, receiving the Pathfinder Award from the National Association of Girls and Women in Sports while additionally founding and serving as the first president of the Tennessee College Women’s Sports Federation.

A Clarksville, Tenn. native, Giles started her UT Martin tenure as a professor of physical education in the fall of 1952. That same year, she began the university’s women’s tennis program and served as the head coach for eight years. In 1956, the tennis program was UT Martin’s first women’s sport to achieve varsity status.

In 1969, Giles was entrusted as UT Martin’s first and only director of women’s athletics – a role she would proudly serve until 1994. She jokingly convinced a tall, skinny UT Martin freshman from Ashland City, Tenn. that she had to play volleyball as a “conditioner” for basketball season. That student-athlete was Pat Head Summitt, who went on to become one of the best coaches in the history of basketball, winning 1,098 games and eight national women’s championships at the University of Tennessee.

Giles’ leadership and activism for women’s athletics coincided with the Title IX movement, which was enacted by the United States Congress on June 23, 1972. Four years later, the first athletic grant-in-aid scholarship was awarded at UT Martin.

Retired since 1995, Giles remains an avid Skyhawk supporter. She was inducted into the UT Martin Hall of Fame in 1985 and the UT Martin softball program branded its stadium as “Bettye Giles Field” a little over a decade later. During Homecoming weekend of 2012, statues of Giles, Summitt and former UT Martin head women’s basketball coach Nadine Gearin were unveiled outside of the Kathleen and Tom Elam Center on campus.

Established in 1966, the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame enshrines and honors athletes, teams, coaches, sportswriters and sports administrators who have made an impact on the history of Tennessee sports. The Tennessee Department of Tourist Development oversees all operations along with the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame Board of Directors. For more information, please visit organization’s website at www.tshf.net.

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