After graduating from UMKC in 1992, Racy practiced law at Gage and Tucker Law Firm in
Kansas City, Missouri. In 1993, Racy moved to the
NCAA to become a legislative assistant. In 1995, Racy was approached by NCAA President Cedric Dempsey to assist the NCAA President's Commission in rewriting the NCAA Constitution and to help lobby NCAA membership support for a restructured NCAA and a reorganized NCAA governance process. The effort was successful following membership votes at the 1996 and 1997 NCAA Conventions. In 1999, Racy became vice president of the NCAA and served as the chief executive officer for the
Division II level. While leading NCAA Division II, Racy developed the NCAA Sports Festival, as well as secured a television agreement with
CBS College Sports for regular season D2 football and basketball games, managed the $30 million budget for the division, helped the division grow to over 300 member schools, authored the NCAA Division II "Life in the Balance" Strategic Positioning Platform, and helped establish the
Make-A-Wish Foundation fundraising partnership for Division II student-athletes. In June 2013, after fifteen years as a vice president for the NCAA, Racy voluntarily stepped away from this visible leadership position to discover new paths and new opportunities in higher education. That summer, Racy become the Vice President for Law, Policy and Strategy at the
University of Central Missouri in
Warrensburg, Missouri. Since Racy became the commissioner of the MIAA, the Association has won 30 NCAA Team National Championships, in 11 different sports, by 8 different MIAA member schools. During his time as commissioner, Racy created the MIAA Sports Media Network, moved the conference headquarters to a visible office suite inside Hy-Vee Arena (formerly Kemper Arena in Kansas City), doubled the number of MIAA corporate partners, successfully implemented a new instant replay system for Divisions II and III football, expanded the conference's membership into a fifth state (Arkansas), and started conference-wide risk management and health/safety initiatives. Under Racy's leadership, the MIAA Network broadcast more than 1600 live athletic contests and campus events in 2025–26. ==References==