The Sun (Lowell)

Umass Lowell launches sports engineerin­g program

Academic minor first of its kind in the country for undergradu­ates

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LOWELL >> Sports engineerin­g, the latest new minor for Umass Lowell undergradu­ates, is a home run among engineerin­g students who also have a passion for athletics.

The first integrated undergradu­ate program in sports engineerin­g in the United States, according to the Internatio­nal Sports Engineerin­g Associatio­n, Umass Lowell’s program is housed in the university’s Francis College of Engineerin­g.

Gabriel Merrow, a firstyear student from Bolton, and a sprinter for Umass Lowell’s Division 1 men’s track and field team, said he was excited to learn he could pursue the minor and achieve a profession­al career combining his major in civil engineerin­g with his love of sports.

“Putting the two together would be great, especially working with profession­al athletes in any sport,” Merrow said.

Developed by Umass Lowell’s Dean James Sherwood, a professor of mechanical engineerin­g and editor-in-chief of the Journal of Sports Engineerin­g and Technology, the program is tied to Umass Lowell’s Baseball Research Center — the primary equipment testing lab for Major League Baseball.

“Because we have the baseball lab, we routinely receive inquiries from high school students and their parents asking if they can study sports engineerin­g here,” Sherwood said. “The new program should draw people from all over the U.S. and is also a good draw for Division 1 athletes.”

Partnering with Sherwood to develop the program is Patrick Drane, the baseball center’s assistant director and an executive committee member for the Internatio­nal Sports Engineerin­g Associatio­n.

The new minor, currently offered to engineerin­g students, will be expanded in the future to accommodat­e students studying other discipline­s, such as computer and exercise sciences.

First-year Honors College student Joey Soly, a mechanical engineerin­g major from Billerica, said he chose Umass Lowell over another college after learning about the new minor.

“My dream was to become a profession­al athlete, but when I realized

that wasn’t happening, my next dream was to go into engineerin­g,” he said.

After an introducto­ry class, the minor offers six areas of focus that are based on a student’s major, primary career interest or both. For example, students majoring in chemical or plastics engineerin­g could choose to learn about how plastics are used to produce sports materials and equipment. The other areas of focus are biomechani­cs, sports electronic­s, sports product design, sports engineerin­g mechanics and sports infrastruc­ture, which includes the study of sports arenas and other facilities.

Students in the minor also take elective courses on sports-related topics outside of engineerin­g.

“A student who really wants to get a job in sports engineerin­g needs to be familiar with the social side — the business of sports, sports psychology, physiology and health, and politics, race and gender in sports,” said Drane, who also co-leads Umass Lowell’s Sports Collaborat­ive for Open Research and Education, which brings together faculty, staff, students, industry partners and others to explore sports’ impact on society and improve

athletic performanc­e.

As seniors, all students in the minor are asked to either complete a sports-related capstone project or take part in a hands-on industry, business or legal experience. Interested students can also do research with faculty who study materials, biosensors, human performanc­e, smart fabrics and more.

While the minor is new, many of the Umass Lowell students who have interned or worked as research assistants in the Baseball Research Center since it was founded in 1999 have gone on to work for sporting goods companies.

Upon graduation, Umass Lowell alumna Becky O’hara, who worked as a graduate research assistant in the baseball center while completing her master’s degree in mechanical engineerin­g, was hired as a bat engineer by Rawlings Sporting Goods. She is now director of research and developmen­t at the company, which sends baseball and softball bats, balls, helmets and other protective equipment to the baseball lab for testing.

O’hara said Rawlings and other companies in the sports equipment industry will be eager to hire engineerin­g graduates who also have some understand­ing of business, data analytics and athletics.

 ?? UMASS LOWELL PHOTO ?? Umass Lowell mechanical engineerin­g student Kevin Yon, of Ipswich, spends time in the university’s Baseball Research Center.
UMASS LOWELL PHOTO Umass Lowell mechanical engineerin­g student Kevin Yon, of Ipswich, spends time in the university’s Baseball Research Center.

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