Ruklick's life is a story from rags to basketball riches

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Coming to stay at the old Covenant Children’s Home in Princeton in the early 1950s could have been unsettling for any 11-year-old boy, forced to live away from his family when his mother developed tuberculosis. But what was supposed to be a short stay lasted five years, turning out to the best thing for the young boy.

Five years later, that boy, Joe Ruklick, grew into becoming the best basketball player to ever don the Tiger uniform at Princeton High School. From PHS, Ruklick went on to become an All-American at Northwestern University, where he still holds school records decades later, and later played in the NBA.

Ruklick, 71, will return to where it all started Saturday evening when PHS and the PHS Booster Club will salute him for his accomplishments in the game prior to the Tigers’ game with Streator.

Superintendent Kirk Haring said PHS is proud to be recognizing Ruklick,whom he calls a great role model for what a student-athlete should be.

“While his athletic accomplishments are phenomenal, the fact that he graduated from Northwestern University with honors speaks volumes about Joe and the education he received at PHS,” Haring said.

Just 12 years old when he entered Princeton High School — he had been placed in the seventh grade at Princeton Logan rather than the sixth grade when he came to town because of class sizes — Ruklick stood 5-foot-11, was skinny and gangly.

He did not make much of an impression on his coach and was cut from the freshmen basketball team.

His career could have ended right there had it not been for a chance encounter in the hallway shortly after with varsity coach Don Sheffer.

Not knowing the boy, Sheffer asked if he played basketball. When Ruklick informed the coach he had just been cut, Sheffer invited him to come to the gym early in the mornings to practice with the JV team if he wanted to work.

“I guess my head was sticking above everybody else,” Ruklick says. “He probably thought I was going to grow, and I did, and coming from the children’s home, I wouldn’t hang around the Chocolate Shop and would probably work hard.

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