This is an interesting connection -
First - one of the top senior DEA agents (Drug Enforcement Agency) and Deputy Administrator who helped track & capture the world's most notorious drug lords
and that led to his conviction - is an agent named Jack Riley.
He is interviewed here on this video at 1:59, 3:47, 4:08, 5:00 and 6:50 and he is WEARING HIS BRADLEY athletic gear!
But in a separate interview he says this...
"After high school Riley went to Bradley University with the hope of walking onto the basketball team.
"They wouldn't let me in the gym, I was so bad," he says. He focused on having a good time, and
by graduation he still had no idea what he wanted to do with his life."
https://www.chicagoreader.com/chicag...t?oid=13657554
"IF JACK RILEY were not pursuing the world's most notorious drug lord, he'd be coaching in a youth basketball league,
repairing psyches and developing skills of players cut from high school teams. For much of the past 25 years Riley has
been trying to turn young ballers into the player he never became: a 6-foot guard whose walk-on attempt at
Bradley University four decades ago ended with an unappealing offer from the coach: Do you want to be a team manager? He didn't."
He was even profiled in a 2014 issue of Bradley Hilltopics
https://issuu.com/hilltopics/docs/hi...20140623-issuu
First - one of the top senior DEA agents (Drug Enforcement Agency) and Deputy Administrator who helped track & capture the world's most notorious drug lords
and that led to his conviction - is an agent named Jack Riley.
He is interviewed here on this video at 1:59, 3:47, 4:08, 5:00 and 6:50 and he is WEARING HIS BRADLEY athletic gear!
But in a separate interview he says this...
"After high school Riley went to Bradley University with the hope of walking onto the basketball team.
"They wouldn't let me in the gym, I was so bad," he says. He focused on having a good time, and
by graduation he still had no idea what he wanted to do with his life."
https://www.chicagoreader.com/chicag...t?oid=13657554
"IF JACK RILEY were not pursuing the world's most notorious drug lord, he'd be coaching in a youth basketball league,
repairing psyches and developing skills of players cut from high school teams. For much of the past 25 years Riley has
been trying to turn young ballers into the player he never became: a 6-foot guard whose walk-on attempt at
Bradley University four decades ago ended with an unappealing offer from the coach: Do you want to be a team manager? He didn't."
He was even profiled in a 2014 issue of Bradley Hilltopics
https://issuu.com/hilltopics/docs/hi...20140623-issuu
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