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Mike Thacker stands on the family acreage in Greenacres built by his father, Ray Thacker, years ago. Ray Thacker was also a legendary Central Valley High School basketball coach, a vocation Mike has also aspired to. He led the Liberty High School Lancers to second place in the state 2B basketball tournament held at the Spokane Arena in March.

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This apple didn't fall far from the tree
3/30/2015 2:52:30 PM

By Mike Vlahovich
Splash Contributor

The press breaker and deadly accurate free-throw shooting of the Liberty High School boys basketball team during the State 2B basketball tournament in March produced a flashback to days of yore.

You'd have thought the ghost of Ray Thacker - the prickly Central Valley coaching legend from the early 1940s through 1971 highlighted by the Bears' 1968 state championship - was hovering near the Lancers' bench.

Perhaps it was. After all, Thacker's youngest son, Mike, is Liberty's coach. He channels much of his late father's philosophy and some of the family personality.

"Definitely the press breaker is something I brought with me from my dad," Mike Thacker said. "Some of my out-of-bounds offenses are what my dad ran and definitely all his ideas on shooting are a lot of his stuff. When you're around a guy that long, a lot rubs off." 

He also inherited dad's legendary fiery temperament.

Mike Thacker cut his own swath from more than 30 years of basketball experience as both player and successful coach at four different high schools.

The baby in the family and 1977 CV grad played basketball as both Bear and at Eastern Washington University for three years. When injury sidelined his career, he began coaching at East Valley while student teaching. The odyssey had begun.

Thacker moved to Tonasket from 1981-85. He spent 11 years in Moses Lake, 10 as coach, spent nearly a decade in Freeman and this year completed his fifth year at Liberty. Although he said he probably shouldn't have taken on Moses Lake given its notoriety as a wrestling state power at the expense of basketball, he did take the Chiefs to their first state tournament in some 35 years. They've only made one trip since. 

"It took years off my life," he said.

At Freeman, the Thacker Scotties, which hadn't been to state in a dozen years, qualified for the State 1A tournament eight straight, placing five times and finishing as high as fourth. His career record there was 234-91.

Then, out of the blue, he was unceremoniously dropped in 2007. It resulted in a contentious and mystifying public airing despite overwhelming support by Freeman parents, a memory Spokesman-Review columnist John Blanchette described prior to this year's State 2B tournament as a "clumsy and unpopular coup."

Freeman's loss became Liberty's gain. The Lancers hadn't been to state since 2000. They reached the state finals this year.

"One of my former players reminded me something I told him a long time ago," Thacker said, half joking. "If we had taken third place or any place other than second, we probably would have been happy. But when you (lose) the championship game, at the time, it's such a letdown. But it's a great feeling, don't get me wrong. Second place is great for the kids and great for the program."

What else would a Thacker do but coach? It's the family business - along with tending the apple orchard on the family's Greenacres property. Among those who have followed in the family coaching footsteps include a brother (who won a state basketball title at Walla Walla), sister, cousin and assorted other relatives by marriage.

"I was at my dad's heels since I could walk," Mike Thacker said. "That was a lot of basketball. He was a wonderful basketball mind long after he retired. I still use one of (the) offense(s) he and I put together.

"We were sitting at the kitchen table and arguing over the ins and outs of this offense that I use to this day."

Mike Thacker is a professed basketball junkie and plans to keep coaching as long as it's enjoyable. Since Ray Thacker was forced into retirement kicking, it could be for a long time. He has a little kids program in place in Spangle and a good sophomore nucleus that contributed to Liberty's 2B finals run.

"We have a good thing going right now," he said.

• • • 

New CV baseball coach also following family roots

Mike Amend isn't a Central Valley graduate, but his dad, Harry, is. And like Mike Thacker, he's following in pop's footsteps.

Harry Amend, a 1963 alumnus, coached Bears baseball in the decade of the 1970s. Under his guidance, CV finished second and third in the 1974 and '75 state tournaments.

He went on to a career in administration in three school districts, including Freeman. That's where Mike Amend attended school, graduating in 1995.

Like Mike Thacker, Mike Amend is following in pop's footsteps.

He is beginning his first year as CV's new baseball coach. Also like Thacker, his route back home has been circuitous. A 101-pound wrestler in high school, he qualified for state and wrestled for two years at Pacific Lutheran University.

"The family's been in baseball forever," Amend said. "I participated throughout high school, and I tried out in college, but evidently they didn't want a guy who is 5-foot-nothing and weighed 100-pound-nothing on a baseball team so they told me they would love to have me as a student assistant.

"I told them I was not done playing yet and I'd go wrestle."

But it didn't diminish his zeal for baseball.

His journey took him to Eastern Washington University to finish his education; a school in Kansas where he taught and coached three sports, including baseball; to southern California; to Christian ministries and position with Young Life in Spokane and a teaching position at CV from 2006-08.

He went to Division II Washburn University in Kansas where he earned his master's degree and did doctoral class work while assisting in baseball.

"I finished last fall and it opened up the possibility to move," Amend said.

That led to his return to CV, where he is dean of students half of the day and freshman physical science teacher the other half.

Baseball coach Barry Poffenroth retired last year. Amend applied and takes over the job his dad was hired for some 45 years ago.

"It's kind of a new start and a fresh approach for sure," Amend said. "I'm loving what I'm doing."

Like fathers, like sons. 

- Mike Vlahovich

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