By LISA WARREN
Staff Writer
The sound of
basketballs rhythmically hitting the gym floor filled the inside of Eastview Recreation
Center.
In one corner, a man's face familiar to basketball fans here in Greene County could
be seen talking to a group of young ladies. They were gathered around him, all listening intently to
what he had to say.
For more than twenty years, Coach Larry Ricker has been spending a
portion of his summers teaching, encouraging, and instilling the game of basketball into young
Greene County athletes. The exception was last year when the coach was continuing to recover from a
tragic accident that nearly cost him his life.
Earlier this month, however, Coach Ricker was
back on the basketball court holding camp, traveling quickly across the gym floor in a motorized
wheelchair, and continuing to share his knowledge and love for a game that he cultivated through
decades of coaching.
It has been two years now that one of the most successful coaches in
Greene County girls basketball history suffered the spinal injury that forever changed his life. He
lost a son – and he was left with a devastating, near-fatal injury.
For anyone in a similar
position, it would have been easy – and understandable – to have just given
up. Yet, like in so
many of the games that he had coached, Coach Ricker refused to quit.
In the early summer of
2006, Coach Ricker conducted his annual basketball camps – one for girls and
one for boys. By
early August, he was looking ahead toward a new school year at Camp Creek Elementary School, where
he was a teacher and coach.
Prior to his move a year earlier to Camp Creek, Coach Ricker had
served for 22 years as a teacher and coach at South Greene High School. As head basketball coach of
the Lady Rebels, he garnered an impressive four state championships, three additional title
appearances and 648 victories.
He was also a successful football coach at South Greene and at
Camp Creek – where he led the Bears to a county title in 2005.
On the weekend of Aug. 12,
2006, however, the coach was taking a rare step away from team sports, and turning his attention
toward one of his other favorite pastimes – bass fishing.
He and his son, Neal, 22, had been
fishing that evening at Cherokee Lake when a terrible tragedy suddenly occurred. Their 18-foot bass
boat collided on the water with a cabin cruiser — killing Neal and nearly taking the life of
Coach Ricker. Mike Riddle, a boater on the cabin cruiser, was also seriously injured in the
accident.
At the University of Tennessee Medical Center in Knoxville, where Coach Ricker was
airlifted from the lake, doctors delivered the news to him and his family. His spinal cord at the
4th and 5th cervical vertebrae in his neck was injured. The spinal cord wasn't severed, but it was
damaged. Coach Ricker was facing paralysis.
The National Institute of Neurological Disorders
and Stroke explains that spinal cord injuries typically result from a blow that fractures or
dislocates the vertebrae – the bone disks that make up the spine.
Most spinal injuries don't
sever the spinal cord. Instead, they cause damage when pieces of vertebrae tear into cord tissue or
press down on the nerve parts that carry signals.
In a complete spinal cord injury, the cord
can't relay messages below the level of the injury. As a result, the patient is paralyzed below the
level of the injury.
With an incomplete injury, such as the one that Coach Ricker
experienced, there is some movement and sensation below the injury.
Spinal cord injuries
affect "different people in different ways," the coach explained.
"Some have no movement
whatsoever, and they have to be put on a ventilator (in order to breathe.) Some are like me, and
they have a little bit more success," he said.
In the early days of his injury, Coach Ricker
could not move his arms or his legs at all.
He spent two weeks hospitalized at UT Medical
Center and was then transferred to a rehabilitation center in Atlanta, Ga., which specializes in
spinal cord injuries. It was at Shepherd Center that Coach Ricker began his long and difficult
journey toward recovery.
After nine weeks in Atlanta, he was finally able to return home to
Greene County, where he continued further rigorous therapy. He began traveling three days a week to
Quillen Rehabilitation Center in Johnson City, and later to Greeneville Orthopaedic Clinic, where he
worked with physical therapist Allen Nance, one of the coach's former football players and athletic
trainers at South Greene.
Slowly – very slowly – Coach Ricker began to regain some use of his
arms and hands. It was a very encouraging sign.
"When I first went to Shepherd Center, I
couldn't even move my arms. Some people with this type of injury still can't," he
explained.
Today, Coach Ricker continues to work hard on his rehabilitation, which he calls
"unbearable" at times.
At home, he works out regularly with dumbell weights and Thera-bands,
elastic resistance bands that aid with muscle conditioning.
"I'm just doing the things I can
do. I'm still very limited, but anything beats nothing."
The hardest part of his recovery has
not been the physical part. It has been the emotional one.
Losing a child is a parent's worst
fear. And for Coach Ricker and his family, Neal's death has been devastating.
"The hardest
part of all of this has been the loss of our son," he said. "There's not a day that I handle it well
... My wife and my son, Andy ... we all struggle."
In coping with his losses, Coach Ricker
said he has turned to faith and put his trust in the Lord.
"God only knows why He left me here,"
the coach said. "Perhaps He has more for me to do. I don't know."
Through this, the coach
said he has learned to take things day-by-day.
"I have good days and bad days," he said.
"Different days I feel different emotions. Some days I could motivate someone to try harder, but
other days I need motivating myself."
The coach gives high praise to his wife, Billie June,
for her love and support. "She's my primary caregiver," he said. "She has been amazing to help me
overcome things."
He also expressed deep appreciation to everyone who has reached out to him
and his family during the past two years.
At the basketball camp, he said he was extremely
appreciative to his brother, Chris Ricker, also a former coach, and several of his former South
Greene basketball players who were volunteering their time and talents to help teach the young
athletes.
"People have done many things for me, and I'm real appreciative of it – even though
I may not seem to show it or say it. I still feel it," he said.
Being involved with the
basketball camp
this year has been a positive experience for him, he said.
"It helps
getting out," the coach continued. "It's easy for someone to go through a tragedy like this and
become withdrawn. I find myself doing that often.
"My brother, Chris, has been a Godsend,
Coach Ricker continued. "He has been much more than any brother could hope for in this awful
situation. My mother, Nadine, has also helped tremendously, and the rest of my family members and
friends have been supportive as well.
"It's good to be here (at the camp) and share this with
my brother and some of my former players, and be a part of this camp. To see the excitement in the
kids' eyes – it makes me feel better.
"I feel like I still have a lot to give," he
said.
Six of Coach Ricker's former South Greene players helped with the camp: Jeanette
Fillers, Jennifer Roderick, Nicole Riddle, Marcey Compton, Lana Shuffler and Brandi Daniel. Other
volunteers included:
Jalyn Shuffler, Shelby Hicks, Ansley Ricker, Megan Sizemore, Megan
Castell, Brittany Kinser and Rochelle Dye.
Throughout his recovery, Coach Ricker said he has
found himself remembering his own words – ones he often preached to his players in order to motivate
them.
"A lot of the things that I've said as a coach are coming back to haunt me now," he
said.
Perseverance. Determination. Pride. These were all qualities that Coach Ricker tried to
instill in his players. Now, he has been reminding himself of those same attributes.
"One
thing I've always done is try hard," he said.
"I'm still an organized person. I still demand
discipline and hard work," he explained.
This strong belief carried him through his years of
successful coaching, as well as through his long months of rehabilitation.
Now, he hopes that
same belief has been successfully conveyed to the young female athletes who participated in his
recent basketball camp.
"Our slogan for the camp was 'Little Things Make Big Things,'" Coach
Ricker said.
"Every day I try to see if I can have just a little bit more movement ... to see
if I can do a little more of something that I couldn't do yesterday," he said.
"These kids
are really working hard and trying to improve," he said of the 70 young athletes who attended the
camp.
"I think all of our dreams are for them to be able to compete on a high level. Maybe we
even have a future state champion here," he said.
Most importantly, however, the coach said
perhaps some of the campers will one day receive needed
college scholarships money – not only
through basketball success, but also through their achievements in the classroom.
Coach
Ricker is proud that many of his student athletes were able to continue their education on the
college level.
"I had some really good girls early in my high school career," he said. "They
were real hard workers and dedicated.
"Many people always thought it was only about winning
with me," Coach Ricker said. "But it wasn't. It was about, first of all, being a good person,
secondly, being a good student, and then being a good athlete."