After 2,400 Miles, MTSU Female Flying Aces Earn Their Wings at Air Race Classic

Three female flying aces representing Middle Tennessee State University’s Aerospace Department just returned from a successful 2,400-mile cross-country trip that pilot Farilyn Hurt described as “empowering, exciting, moving and stressful.”

Middle Tennessee State University’s Air Race Classic 2023 pilots and ground crew await the start of this year’s event. The group, from left, includes pilot Alyssa Smith, Katie Thayer, Hailey Harrison, coach Meredith Boardman, pilot Briana “Bri” McDonald, Denisa Pravotiakova, Rachel Frankenberger, and pilot Farilyn Hurt. From Murfreesboro and the MTSU Flight Operations Center, ground crew members helped the pilots navigate 2,400 miles from Grand Fork, N.D., to Homestead, Fla. MTSU placed 28th overall among the nearly 50 participating teams. (MTSU photo by Merideth Boardman)

“By the end, I felt I could literally do anything,” Hurt, 23, of Milledgeville, Georgia, and a May MTSU graduate, said of the all-women Air Race Classic 2023. The four-day flying event started June 20 in Grand Fork, North Dakota, and ended in Homestead, Florida, on June 23.

Hurt, fellow graduate Briana “Bri” McDonald and junior Alyssa Smith of Collierville, Tennessee, finished 28th overall out of nearly 50 teams registered for the event that reinforces teamwork, endurance and a bit of luck. Teams from Kent State and Southern Illinois universities finished first and second overall.

“It created a lot of experience and piloting skills that I can combine with what I learned at MTSU, enabling me to help teach others, and taking sound advice from the other women,” McDonald, 22, of Jackson, Tennessee, said. “I’m a younger gen (generation) and they inspire me.”

Middle Tennessee State University Aerospace Department pilots and 2023 Air Race Classic competitors Farilyn Hurt, left, Alyssa Smith and Bri McDonald take a selfie while flying during the four-day, June 20-23, competition. (Submitted photo by Briana McDonald)

Smith turned 20 on Tuesday. She and her flying mates celebrated her birthday with an early-morning television interview at Smyrna Airport about their race experience and later in the day at a party with other friends.

Even with all the positives throughout the entire time and successfully completing their quest, the trio experienced frustration when a bad thunderstorm kept them in Pell City, Alabama. But they became MTSU recruiters when two local rising high school seniors “were figuring out what aviation school to attend,” Smith said.

“We sat them down in our plane, turned on the avionics (the Diamond DA40’s electrical system) so they could see moving parts and they got the biggest smiles on their faces,” she added. “We told them about our aerospace program. So, something good came out of the storm.”

Middle Tennessee State University Department of Aerospace pilots Farilyn Hurt, left, Alyssa Smith and Bri McDonald prepare to take off from the Grand Fork, N.D., airport on a sunny day on Tuesday, June 20, the first day of the annual Air Race Classic for all-women pilots. (MTSU photo by Meredith Boardman)

McDonald landed a job with MTSU’s Flight Operations Center at Murfreesboro Airport. Hurt wants to be “a connection point between community and aviation companies (outreach and philanthropic),” while Smith’s ambitions are to fly with a regional airline.

Aerospace sponsored this year’s team. A dance and silent auction in May and other fundraising helped support the trio.

Their coach, Meredeth Boardman, director of MTSU aerospace safety, organized the department’s return to the Air Race Classic for the first time since 2018. She said MTSU plans to enter a team in 2024 “with bigger, better goals. … It is a competition, and we will always continue developing our strategy, but I truly believe that participating in the ARC adds value to our department as a whole.

After arriving in Homestead, Fla., at the conclusion of the 2023 Air Race Classic for all-women pilots, Middle Tennessee State University team members Farilyn Hurt, left, Bri McDonald and Alyssa Smith are relieved their 2,400-journey has come to a successful end. (MTSU photo by Meredith Boardman)

“Of course, there’s the development of technical skills and decision-making skills, but the most rewarding part for me was watching them grow into better teammates throughout the trip. Most, if not all, of these ladies will end up flight instructing, and these are skills and qualities that we need among our instructors to develop the next generation of professional pilots.

An all-woman ground crew — junior Hailey Harrison (social media and flight following), 2023 graduate Rachel Frankenberger (strategy and flight following), senior Katie Thayer (logistics and social media) and senior Denisa Pravotiakova (fundraising) — kept the MTSU flyers informed, safe and aware of weather situations.

Boardman said aerospace staff members Nate Tilton (flight training manager), Sean Logan (assistant flight training manager) and Matt Ivey (strategy), assisted throughout the process.

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