
Grand Ole Opry Unveils ‘Who’s Gonna Fill Their Shoes’ Display for Scotty McCreery, Josh Turner, and Randy Travis
Three pairs of boots. One unforgettable night. And a question that’s haunted country music since George Jones first asked it.
On April 20, 2024, Scotty McCreery officially joined the Grand Ole Opry, surrounded by two men who shaped his path. Josh Turner, his longtime mentor, and Randy Travis, the legend who shaped them both. It was the kind of moment you bottle up and pass down, like a family heirloom wrapped in twang and tradition.
Now that memory is no longer just part of country lore. It’s etched into the walls of the Grand Ole Opry, and it’s there to stay.
The Opry just unveiled a backstage display titled Who’s Gonna Fill Their Shoes, a tribute not only to the George Jones classic but also to the kind of lineage country music was built on. The centerpiece? The shoes the three men wore that night: Scotty’s black Lucchese boots, Josh’s square-toe Ariats, and Randy’s worn-in Converse low tops. It’s a quiet but powerful symbol of tradition passed down from one generation of Opry members to the next.


Josh Turner said it best that night: “I stand here proud of the fact that I bridged the gap between the generation of Randy Travis and Scotty McCreery.” Then he quoted Jones’ iconic line: “Who’s gonna fill their shoes?” And right there on stage, the answer was clear. Scotty McCreery.
It’s not just the shoes that make this display sing. The Opry also included the speech Turner gave that night, the same one that had him choking up on stage and later reflecting that it was a career highlight. “Scotty is not only a fine singer and songwriter,” Turner said, “but he’s a great man, husband, and now father. I’m proud that he is filling the shoes of the artists before him.”
In true Opry fashion, the display is understated but loaded with meaning. It’s the kind of thing you only really get if you’ve walked a few miles in those boots chasing dreams, playing empty bars, fighting for airplay, and never once letting go of your roots.
McCreery, who’s spent over a decade quietly climbing from teen talent show champ to certified country heavyweight, called the moment a dream come true. “If you’ve listened to any of my interviews over the last 13 years,” he said, “they’d ask, ‘What’s your biggest goal?’ And I’d always say, ‘One day I wanna be a member of the Grand Ole Opry.’”
That dream came full circle with his 18-month-old son Avery in the audience, a proud wife by his side, and a stage full of heroes behind him. As Scotty looked skyward and sang “Five More Minutes” through tears, the crowd didn’t just see a singer. They saw someone stepping into history.
Fans can now see the Who’s Gonna Fill Their Shoes display on backstage tours at the Opry House. It’s not flashy. It’s not big-budget. It’s just three pairs of shoes, a printed speech, and a whole lot of country heart.
But that’s the point.
Because in a town where boots matter more than billboards, and tradition means everything, this display isn’t just about honoring three men. It’s about honoring what country music is. Past, present, and future.