“Radar, you come up to the free throw line. If you make it, practice is over, and if you miss, we’re going to have two more hours,” former Texas A&M men’s basketball head coach Tony Barone called out to his team’s athletic trainer.
It was Thanksgiving morning under the lights of G. Rollie White Coliseum circa 1992. Barone had the Aggie men’s basketball team working out. Barone had drilled the Aggies for an hour of a scheduled 3 1/2-hour workout. He decided it was time to see if his athletic trainer had what it took to send the team home early.
This wasn’t the first time that Mike “Radar” Ricke had been called to the line.
In his days working under the legendary Shelby Metcalf, who led the Aggies for 27 years, it was somewhat of a regular occurrence. He made some, missed some, but never had his prowess at the charity stripe ever carried this much weight.
If he makes it, they go home. If he misses, the Aggies have two more hours on the hardwood on Thanksgiving Day. Naturally, all eyes and hopes were on him.
Radar made his walk to the line with the entire team gathering its breath, praying that he ended the day’s practice. The spotlight followed as he received the ball. He entered a free-throw routine he hadn’t invested time in to perfect. Without any warm-up he readied himself at the line.
“I better make this,” Radar thought to himself.
MAKING A NAME FOR HIMSELF
Mike Ricke is from La Marque, a small town between Houston and Galveston with a population of approximately 15,000 people. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. K.E. Ricke.
He concluded his 42-year career as an athletic trainer at Texas A&M on August 31, 2021. He was the longest-tenured employee of the athletics department. His career touched six decades, beginning in 1979 as a student trainer.
