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HomeUncategorizedCoaching and Commitment – Two Harbors JV Girls Basketball Coach Marks 40...

Coaching and Commitment – Two Harbors JV Girls Basketball Coach Marks 40 Years

Basketball has been a significant part of Rick Ray’s life, and for forty years, the Two Harbors junior varsity girls basketball coach has been just as significant to the pro­gram, the players he mentors, and the local community.

“Who would have thought?” said Ray of his coaching tenure. “I said okay I’ll do it for a year and now here I am.”

Rick Ray first said yes to coaching for­ty-three years ago, starting with two years leading 7th and 8th grade basketball, followed by a season coaching 5th grade boys. When his for­mer athletic director and football coach, Chuck Halsted, ap­proached him about coaching the junior varsity girls team, Ray initially declined. However, after some gentle persuasion, he accepted the role— and now, decades lat­er, he wouldn’t have it any other way.

The journey wasn’t without its challenges. After his wife passed away from cancer, Ray was ready to step away from coach­ing. It was his old­est daughter, then a sophomore, who con­vinced him to stay in the game.

“In my mind, I was going to give up coaching and she told me she thought that was a mistake,” he said. “I needed to stay in coaching because my kids were coming up.”

At the time, Ray’s youngest daughter was just six, and his middle daughter was in 8th grade. By de­ciding to continue coaching, he spent the next fourteen years with at least one of his kids involved in the program.

“I’m glad she had that vision for me to stay with it. That was huge,” said Ray. “I got to enjoy my kids. And the kids that I was coaching at the time helped me get through. They helped me deal with it. They helped my kids deal with it. It was kind of like one big family.”

That’s one thing that hasn’t changed in all his years of coaching. “I know you are coach­ing a bunch of kids, but they’re almost like daughters,” Ray explained. “It’s like having twenty-five or thirty daughters.”

Over the years, Ray has built countless friendships with his players—many of whom he now con­nects with on Face­book—and he remains grateful for the inspi­ration and camarade­rie of the people he’s worked with. At one point, he teamed up with Scott Ross, now the Two Harbors High School Athletic Direc­tor, and Julie Benson, who also served as the school principal. The trio coached together for sixteen years.

“It’s the friendships I’ve made with coach­es over the years. I’ve had lifetime friend­ships with coaches and officials.”

A former player was recently induct­ed into the Two Har­bors Athletic Wall of Fame. Though unable to attend the cere­mony, Kylie Wainer made a special trip to watch the Lady Agates girls basketball game against Deer River on January 3rd—a game the Agates won 43-38.

Wainer earned 13 varsity letters while at­tending Two Harbors high school, excelling in both swimming, track, and basketball, and received All-Con­ference honors in mul­tiple sports. She con­tinued her basketball career on a scholarship at Morningside Col­lege, where she earned a Bachelor of Science degree before pursuing a Doctor of Osteopath­ic Medicine degree. Today, she serves as an Emergency Medicine physician in the Flori­da Air National Guard.

“It was really nice to see her,” said Ray. “I hadn’t seen her since she graduated in ’97. Scott, Julie, and I coached her. It was fun memories of years past.”

These days, Ray finds himself coaching the daughters of for­mer players. “The sec­ond wave is coming through,” he laughed. “I hope to be out be­fore the third one.”

Originally planning for this season to be his last, Ray is now considering one more year on the sidelines. While he hasn’t made a firm commitment, he admitted, “Once you coach, it gets in your blood.”

“Preseason I told my family I thought this was it but now that we’re into it,” he said, “I think my plan is to maybe go one more. It’s a very rewarding experience. I just like watching the kids de­velop and become better as a season pro­gresses and as their ca­reers progress through the years.”

Ray noted the no­ticeable growth in players who join as seventh graders, often with limited skills. He takes pride in working with them and seeing how much they im­prove by the time they reach eighth grade.

“It’s nice to see the improvement,” he said. “Especially kids that you don’t expect are going to be great basketball players.”

Over the years, Ray has witnessed many changes in the game, most notably the in­creased dedication players now show to the sport. In the past, offseason opportuni­ties to work with play­ers were limited, but that has changed, al­lowing for extra prac­tice and significant skill development.

“Now there is a win­dow of opportunity in June and July to work with your kids and we play a lot more games now than we used to,” the coach said.

The addition of the state-of-the-art weight room at Two Harbors School has also made a significant impact, providing student-ath­letes with the opportu­nity to build strength both during and out­side of the season.

“Tom Nelson has a great program with the football program,” Ray said, of the oppor­tunity available for all students. “The girls can go in there and he’ll help them along with that stuff, too. Things of that nature have changed a lot.”

With the extra time dedicated to building skills and strength, along with the de­mands of traveling to distant schools and keeping up with homework, these stu­dent-athletes have become adept at man­aging their time. Ac­cording to Ray, top athletes often have top GPAs.

Another shift has been a shortage of players. For the first time in Ray’s memo­ry, the varsity squad didn’t have any se­niors last year. Many seventh graders are now being called up to the varsity court.

“It’s hard to get kids to commit as much as they used to,” said the coach. “I think they have so many oppor­tunities to do other things.”

Ray acknowledged that last year’s team didn’t secure many wins, saying, “We were very young, and we took our lumps. But now this year, that’s paying off.” After starting the sea­son 1-2, the team is currently riding a six-game winning streak.

“I always tell them that by the time Christ­mastime comes and early January we are a completely differ­ent team than we are at the start of the sea­son. And that’s how it is right now,” Ray said. “The improve­ment compared now to day one is just night and day. And they just keep getting better in the season. Most of the time that’s how it is.”

Ray believes the success of the Two Harbors volleyball team this fall has giv­en the basketball team some momentum, as many of the girls play both sports.

Before games, Ray keeps his pre-game talks simple, focusing on the essentials. “I tell them the big thing is they control how they play. Nobody controls how they play other than them, each individual. They got to go out there and give it all they got. There’s no guarantee that they will get to play tomor­row,” he said.

Ray has seen many injuries that have end­ed careers, including one that sidelined his daughter so severely that he didn’t believe she would return to the court. However, after her recovery, she went on to score over 1,000 points in her basket­ball career, something Ray takes great pride in.

Ray also takes pride in the fact that, in all his years of coach­ing, he has never been called for a technical foul. He feels he has no right to yell at a ref­eree when he doesn’t believe he could be a better one himself. It requires being quick with the whistle, something Ray told me is hard enough to do in practice.

Though he was more competitive in his earlier years, Ray be­lieves he has gained more maturity as he’s grown older. “I was more into winning,” he said. “I still have that to a point, but I don’t take it home with me. I’ve always coached with the philosophy of having fun. Go out there and play basket­ball and have fun.”

Congratulations to Coach Rick Ray for his forty years (plus three) as a basketball coach for Two Harbors High School. Here’s hoping for (at least) one more.

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