Chris Plonsky to receive CoSIDA's 2010 Trailblazer Award at annual Convention

Chris Plonsky to receive CoSIDA's 2010 Trailblazer Award at annual Convention

The CoSIDA Trailblazer Award is presented annually to an individual who is a pioneer in the field of sports information who has mentored and helped improve the level of ethnic and gender diversity within CoSIDA.

Plonsky began her collegiate athletic administration career as an SID, serving as women's athletics SID at both Iowa State and the University of Texas. She was named the BIG EAST Conference Director of Public Relations in July 1986 and spent seven years with the league in public relations and assistant/associate commissioner capacities. She rejoined UT Athletics in October of 1993 as associate AD for external services under men's AD DeLoss Dodds. Plonsky is in her 21st year of association with UT, serving the last eight years as women's athletics director, senior woman administrator (SWA), and director of men's/women's athletics external services.


In CoSIDA, Plonsky is a frequent Convention panelist and was a member of then-president Roger Valdisseri’s task force committee to consider the organization’s direction. She also helped start the CoSIDA Writing Contest.

She will be honored at CoSIDA's San Francisco Convention on Tuesday, July 6.

written by Bill Little, University of Texas Special Assistant to Football Coach for Communications


It has been over 30 years since Christine Plonsky, a Kent State women’s basketball player who was vertically challenged and cursed with wobbling knees - but blessed with the intangible qualities of spirit and determination - gave up the game she loved and decided she would become a Sports Information Director.

Destiny is often an interesting traveling companion, but for Chris Plonsky, destiny had arrived. A career that began as a student SID in 1976 would take her on a trip that spanned the country, and landed her as one of the most respected people in all of college athletics.

A team co-captain in basketball and the editor of her school newspaper, Plonsky was named Kent State’s outstanding journalism graduate in 1979. From there, she moved to Iowa State, where she served as women’s SID from 1979-81. In January of 1982, she moved to the bright lights of The University of Texas, where she became the Sports Information Director of the school’s Intercollegiate Athletics Department for Women.

It was in that role that she would begin to establish herself as a pathfinder in the growing new world of women’s college athletics. At the same time, she became one of the bright new stars of the College Sports Information Directors of America.

As Plonsky’s career evolved, she left Texas following the Longhorns’ (and her great friend, Coach Jody Conradt’s) remarkable unbeaten run to the 1986 NCAA basketball championship and became the director of public relations of the Big East Conference.

In CoSIDA, Plonsky was a frequent panelist, a member of then president Roger Valdisseri’s task force committee to consider the organization’s direction, and helped start the CoSIDA Writing Contest. Plonsky spent seven years with the Big East in the roles of public relations and assistant/associate commissioner capacities.

In 1993, she returned to The University of Texas as associate athletics director for External Services. She currently serves as UT’s women’s athletics director, senior woman administrator and director of men’s/women’s athletics external services.

On a national level, she is a member of the National Football Foundation/College Football Hall of Fame Board of Directors, the Honda collegiate women’s sports award selection committee, and USA Basketball’s Board of Directors. Her past NCAA committee work includes service on the NCAA Committee on Academic Performance and the NCAA President’s Task Force on Commercialization, and five years with the Division I Management Council.

Plonsky fits perfectly the description of the “Trailblazer” award as one who “has mentored and helped improve the level of ethnic and gender diversity within CoSIDA.” She did it in her years of service to the SID profession, and she does it still with the example she sets for all those who aspire to continue growing in a career in college athletics.