MTSU Concrete Students Compete for International Bowling Ball Crown
Six Middle Tennessee State University Concrete Industry Management students will be hoping to “strike” it big this weekend when they compete in an international bowling ball competition in San Francisco, California.
Representing a dozen students in their upper division “Special Problems in the Concrete Industry” class, the students will be entering the American Concrete Institute’s Student Fiber-Reinforced Concrete Bowling Ball Competition from 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. PT Sunday, April 2, in the Grand Ballroom of the Hilton San Francisco Union Square.
MTSU students will be competing against engineering and concrete students from around the world — including Middle Eastern and Asian teams — to form and construct the bowling balls and send the concrete ball down a ramp to try to knock down bowling pins. They will also try to impress the judges, who will break open a second submitted ball to determine if the weight and contents meet guidelines.
Jon Huddleston, CIM director, said an MTSU team won the competition in 2012.
“Our students have been working extremely hard in preparation for this contest,” he said. “They’ve been organized, communicated and work well together.”
Clay Karsner, a senior CIM major from Danville, Kentucky, said the team has good camaraderie, is driven and added “we’re all pretty confident. We’ve come up with a good (concrete) mix so far. We’re looking forward to seeing how we do.”
Karsner said the competition “is based on weight, diameter, strength test at five different intervals and the ball being able to roll straight to try to hit six pins. If it rolls to the right, you can adjust. Ours pretty much rolls straight.”
The students, who made about 12 balls in the process of selecting the best two to take with them, began collaborating in January when the spring semester began.
“We spent two to three weeks on mix design,” Karsner said. “Then we worked on a casting design. We took some of the mixes and started casting into molds. We used five or six mixes and different aggregates, fiber and cement.”
Other team members making the trip include junior Jerry Stewart of Murfreesboro and formerly from Stanton, Michigan, a student veteran who is president of the Student Veterans of America B.R.A.V.O., or Blue Raider American Veterans Organization; senior twin sisters Ashley and Kayla Gates of Murfreesboro; junior Caleb Perkins of Greenville, Michigan; and senior Joe Bell of Murfreesboro.
Karsner, who will graduate in May, has had three internships with Lexington, Kentucky-based Gray Construction and will work for them full time after earning his degree.
Several other class members could not attend because of a prior commitment.
Concrete Industry Management is part of the School of Concrete and Construction Management in the College of Basic and Applied Sciences.