DULUTH — Over the past four decades, if you entered a Minnesota road race, or ran inside the Metrodome (or U.S. Bank Stadium) or competed in any number of track meets, Rick Recker of Minneapolis assisted your effort.
The everyman of state running was everywhere. Probably best known for riding his trusty Nishiki 12-speed road bike while measuring 634 road courses and, in all, certifying the correct length of 1,485 races, including Grandma's Marathon and the Garry Bjorklund Half Marathon.
For the first time in recent memory, those North Shore races were run Saturday morning without Recker. He was diagnosed with liver cancer in September 2021 and died five months later, on Feb. 19, at age 77.
Recker's final public moment came Feb. 4, in a Grandma's Marathon Hall of Fame induction ceremony in the library room of his downtown Minneapolis River Towers condominium building, his home the past 30 years.
"Of course, his family came first, but there was never any doubt that running was his life," daughter, Stephanie Ziebarth, 49, of Greencastle, Pa., one of Recker's three children, said recently. "He was independent, a minimalist, and did the best he could to do good for others."
Part of an athletic family while growing up, Recker took to running at Minneapolis Roosevelt High School, Class of 1962, then as a University of Minnesota intramural champion.
That avocation turned into a career. He served as president of the Minnesota Association of USA Track and Field, and the Minnesota Distance Running Association. He helped organize winter indoor running at the state's two domed NFL stadiums. He officiated at countless high school and college track and field meets.
He had a hand in the Twin Cities youth mentoring program Bolder Options. And he was a proud runner until his final days, competing in nearly 3,000 races, including 30 marathons, twice at Grandma's.