Fair
48°
Morris, IL
Fair|Forecast »

Athletic Direction

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa
Scott Garrett, a 1998 graduate of Minooka High School, stands inside Kansas State University's Bramlage Coliseum. As the school's Associate A.D./Ticketing & Fan Strategies, Garrett is responsible for filling as many of the 12,528 seats as possible for every men's and women's basketball game. (Photo provided)

Officially, 301,031 fans have attended the six football games the Kansas State University Wildcats have played, and won, this season at their home facility, Bill Snyder Family Stadium.

The person in charge of the sales of those tickets — and tickets to the four other sports from which KSU derives revenue — is Scott Garrett. A 1998 graduate of Minooka Community High School, Garrett has served as the school's Associate A.D./Ticketing & Fan Strategies since June of 2010.

Less than a decade after taking an internship with compensation that failed to cover the cost of his commute, Garrett oversees marketing, ticket sales, trademark licensing and concessions in a major NCAA Division I athletic department. He continues to work toward his career goal, as stated on his LinkedIn page: "I hope to one day earn an opportunity to direct a Division I athletics program."


Starting in sports

Garrett was a lineman for the MCHS football team through the 1997 season, when the Indians went 9-2. Other than football, the only sport he played in an organized setting was soccer in Channahon when he was "5 or 6 years old." The lack of diversity in his involvement was not due to a lack of passion.

"I was a huge sports nut starting when I was 5 or 6 years old," Garrett said. "I was always in band. I played the trombone starting with when I was in fifth grade. That and football consumed most of my time."

As an MCHS student, Garrett began to seriously consider a career in sports. He remembers talking with a sports writer during career day when he was a sophomore.

"The wheels started spinning," he said. "I didn't know if I wanted to be a journalist or a sports agent or what, but I realized sports is a big business, and it can be a career."

Mike Briscoe, who became MCHS head football coach in time for Garrett's senior season, still remembers the passion Garrett had for athletics.

"Scott Garrett was the student/athlete that younger players always looked up to," Briscoe said. "He truly loved all sports and liked the sense of belonging to a team. Scott was a player that always understood that teamwork and having fun was the true meaning behind athletics. His maturity and loyalty made him a joy to coach."

Previous Page|1||||

Comments


Reader Poll

Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all