AM: Hailing from Arlington, TN and later attending college at Rhodes, Memphis seems to have a lot of personal significance for you. How would you describe your relationship with the city?
BH: It’s home. If you’ve been around Memphis long enough, you’ll hear it called “the most beautiful land in the world,” and hear locals say, “there’s no place like Memphis.” Now that I’ve been away from home almost 8 months, I can assure that to be true. It’s hard to truly put into words but if you’re from Memphis it’s just different. The city prepares you for any and everything and you carry that everywhere in every facet of life. It’s a sense of pride coming from here, and once you’ve been here for a while, you’ll never want to be from anywhere else. The joke is “Memphis is its own state separate from Tennessee” and I tend to agree.
AM: You currently hold to position of Director of Sports Information and Sports Marketing at Texas Lutheran University, an incredible achievement for someone of your age. What was it like assuming this position? Do you feel that your history with Rhodes Athletics has altered or informed your approach to this role?
BH: It was a lot to be honest. Graduating into the pandemic with all that uncertainty produced a ton of questions of “What’s Next?” but I just stayed patient and waited for my opportunity to get back into the sports world. I received a call from my “first boss” at Rhodes, former Sports Information Director James Hill, telling me to apply for the job at Texas Lutheran. I interviewed with our Athletic Director, Coach Bill Miller, and 24 hours later they called me back and stated they had heard enough and offered me the job. I don’t think that happens without the creative freedom Coach Dean, Coach Wagner, Coach Ryan, Danielle Donze, and others allowed me to have at Rhodes. I’m blessed for my experiences at Rhodes to my new home here at Texas Lutheran.
My experience working in the Sports Information Office under James and Danielle as well as being Coach Dean’s student assistant during his time as Head Athletic Director gave me a lot of insight on the job, but once I arrived in Seguin, I realized I still had a lot to learn. I’ve trusted the process and take it day by day in hopes to obtain the same goal I had when I launched “Can’t Knock the Hustle,” give D3 athletes the best experience possible and emulate the “D1” experience as much as I humanly can. I believe D3 deserves just as much publicity and promotion as anyone else due to the time we put in. Coach Miller, the staff, and our student-athletes have bought in and seen my vision of what I’m trying to accomplish, and we’re going to inch closer to that with each passing day.
It’s been fun so far too. Whether it’s traveling across the state of Texas with our football team, seeing Texas Lutheran go from next to last to second in all social media metrics in our conference, or working and getting an ESPN production credit when Texas Lutheran had the privilege to scrimmage The University of Texas as a part of a celebration of our head basketball coach, Mike Wacker, who played for Texas in the 1980s.