Pickens' largesse to OSU prompted Texas A&M's
12th Man Magazine to label A&M's decision not to renew Pickens' $25-a-month freshman basketball scholarship as one of the top 10 mistakes in Aggie history.
Because of that tuition slight, Pickens transferred to OSU (then Oklahoma A&M), where he earned a degree in geology in 1951.
Talk about a self-inflicted Aggie joke.
In 2006, Pickens formed his T. Boone Pickens Foundation to focus on health and medical research and services, at-risk youth, and educational, entrepreneurial, political and athletic initiatives.
Over the years, Pickens gave $2 million to the VNA Dallas' Meals on Wheels. He spent many Christmas and Thanksgiving days delivering dinners to recipients who had no clue who the delivery guy was.
Today Pickens' name is on more than a dozen buildings and facilities in North Texas, including the YMCA in downtown Dallas, the biomedical building at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Texas Woman's University's Institute of Health Sciences-Dallas Center, the dinosaur floor of the Perot Museum of Nature and Science and Baylor Health Care System's cancer center.
Pickens tried out a machine in the new weight room at Oklahoma State in 2009. Through a series of donations, Pickens provided the bulk of the funding for a $286 million stadium overhaul. (Sue Ogrocki / AP)
The T. Boone Pickens Virtual Learning Center at the Center for BrainHealth honors his $11.5 million in donations since his first gift in 2006.
But just as important to the fledgling center was Pickens' influence on other powerbrokers. He hosted CEOs from around the country at periodic BrainHealth Summits at Mesa Vista ā vastly increasing the center's visibility, said Sandra Bond Chapman, founder and chief director of the University of Texas at Dallas' cognitive research institute.
"Boone told me, 'This is one of the greatest investments I have ever made in terms of ROI to humanity and new discoveries,' " she said.
Pickens was among the first guinea pigs for its BrainHealth Physical ā allowing the center to assess how his brain was functioning.
Chapman wasn't the least bit surprised by the findings about the then-79-year-old's gray matter. "It showed that Boone had an ultimate brain ā a younger working brain with vast cognitive prowess combined with the expertise and wise decision-making of a mature brain and a retained penchant for innovation and risk-seeking," she said.
Tossing with both hands
Pickens credited his early days as a newspaper boy for the
Holdenville Daily News for giving him a leg up in the world of entrepreneurism.
As a teen, he expanded his newspaper route by acquiring surrounding routes, one by one.
"I ended up with 154 papers before I was through," Pickens said in 2016. That came to about $38 a month since the paper didn't publish on Saturdays. "Let me tell you, when I was 12 years old, that meant real money in my pocket. This was during the Depression."
But his proudest accomplishment was his ability to throw from either hand.
Some would say he did that in the energy business, too.
Pickens once told
The Dallas Morning News that his father gave him the best piece of advice: A fool with a plan can beat a genius with no plan. "I was dragging my feet in life and taking my time in college. That's when he sprung that line on me," he said in 2017. "Hit me so hard I almost didn't hear the last part of it: 'And, son, your mom and I are concerned we have a fool with no plan.' "
He got the message.
While at OSU, Pickens worked as a roughneck and in a Texaco refinery. After graduation, he worked as a geologist for Phillips Petroleum for three years but got crosswise with the oil company's bureaucracy.
With $2,500 of borrowed money, Pickens and two investors formed an oil and gas firm that eventually became Mesa Petroleum, which he took public in 1964. Pickens built Mesa into one of America's largest independent natural gas and oil companies.
In 1996, Pickens was pushed out of Mesa in a messy power play after having served nearly four decades at its helm.
T. Boone Pickens at his ranch northeast of Amarillo.(Brad Loper / The Dallas Morning News)
Pickens was photographed in his Dallas office in 2008 after he gave the Museum of Nature and Science $10 million. (Lara Solt / The Dallas Morning News)
Pickens delivered a keynote address during the National Clean Energy Summit at the Cox Pavilion at the University of Nevada Las Vegas in 2008. (Ethan Miller / Getty Images)
Rather than retire, the 68-year-old launched a new career.
"Walking out, I had a goal headline: 'The Old Man Makes a Comeback,' " Pickens recalled in 2017.
It was prescient. Pickens became a billionaire six years later.
Pickens was a bit of a wildcatter when it came to his personal life, too.
All five of his marriages ended in divorce. His most recent, to Toni Chapman Brinker, widow of legendary Dallas restaurateur Norman Brinker, ended in 2017 after less than four years.
In recent years, Pickens rekindled his relationship with his third wife, Nelda Pickens.
Despite his marital issues, Pickens was a devoted family man with five children: Deborah Pickens Stovall, Pam Pickens, Michael Pickens, Tom Pickens and Liz Pickens Cordia; 11 grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.
Swift Boat misstep
Pickens took politics personally, mostly with a Republican point of view.
He was Texas' finance chairman for Ronald Reagan's 1980 presidential campaign and donated $10 million to the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in 2005 to underwrite its Air Force One Pavilion.
Pickens' most notorious political foray was as a leader of the Swift Boat attacks ā along with fellow Dallas billionaires Sam Wyly and the late Harold Simmons ā against Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry in 2004, which was discredited as a smear campaign. It attacked Kerry's military record as a Swift Boat commander in Vietnam through a tax-exempt organization called Swift Boat Veterans for Truth.
Pickens would later publicly endorse climate-change legislation authored by Kerry, but he never really apologized for his participation in Swift Boat.
Pickens wrote two
New York Times best-sellers: his 1987 biography,
Boone, and
The First Billion is the Hardest, his treatise on how the United States could free itself from its dependence on OPEC oil, published in 2008.
Pickens was photographed in his Amarillo office in 2005 for a High Profile piece in The News..(Michael S. Wirtz / The Dallas Morning News)
That same year, Pickens launched his self-funded, $100 million grass-roots campaign aimed at reducing America's crippling addiction to OPEC oil by boosting the U.S. adoption of wind, solar and especially natural gas power.
"In 2008, when Boone was 80 years old," Rosser said, "he stress-tested and launched the Pickens Plan, wrote and published a book, and, at the company, somehow weathered one of the greatest financial collapses in American history.
"That was a pretty big year."
When BP Capital's stock crashed along with oil and gas commodities in 2008, Pickens shored up his commitment to OSU with cash from his pocket.
"That's when we really, really found out who Boone Pickens was," said OSU athletic director Mike Holder. "Not only did OSU have catastrophic losses, but he personally had catastrophic losses.
"He was there in the best of times. Sure, everybody is. But in the worst of times, that's when he stood tallest," Holder said.
"Jerry Jones once said, 'If Boone Pickens tells you that a goose can pull a wagon, start loading the wagon.' That pretty much sums it up."
Eternal optimist
After his big fall in 2017, Pickens reflected on his life on LinkedIn in what was his own eulogy of sorts.
"Just a year ago I felt immortal, wearing my age with pride, even joking about it. Last year I opened a speech with this: 'The other day, I turned 88 and realized my life was half over.' I refused to call my 2008 autobiography
Life in the Fourth Quarter because, well, hell, I wasn't in the fourth quarter. But things have changed for me since the strokes. I clearly am in the fourth quarter, and the clock is ticking and my health is in decline, much as it is with others in my stage of life.
1/3Pickens kicked back on his almost weekly plane ride to Mesa Vista Ranch, a 68,000-acre piece of property he turned into a bird hunting sanctuary in the panhandle of Texas near the town of Miami. (Tom Fox / The Dallas Morning News)
Pickens had his Holdenville, Okla., boyhood home moved and restored to Mesa Vista Ranch. In 2017, he donated it and moved it to his alma mater, Oklahoma State University in Stillwater.(Tom Fox / The Dallas Morning News)
Pickens posed in 2017 at a spot overlooking a series of manmade lakes leading from The Lake House to The Lodge on his Mesa Vista Ranch in the panhandle. The ranch took nearly 10 years to build, including the stone aqueduct shown in the background. (Tom Fox / The Dallas Morning News)
"Now don't for a minute think I'm being morbid. Truth is, when you're in the oil business like I've been all my life, you drill your fair share of dry holes, but you never lose your optimism.
"There's a story I tell about the geologist who fell off a 10-story building. When he blew past the fifth floor, he thought to himself, 'So far so good.'
"That's the way to approach life. Be the eternal optimist who is excited to see what the next decade will bring ... I'm fond of 'Boone-isms.' Number 15 on my list is this: 'Don't ever let age be an obstacle.' And I won't."
And he didn't.
Boone-isms
āBe willing to make decisions. Thatās the most important quality in a good leader.ā
āDonāt fall victim to what I call the āready-aim-aim-aim-aimā syndrome. You must be willing to fire.ā
"Show up early. Work hard. Stay late. Work eight hours and sleep eight hours, and make sure they are not the same eight hours."
"I told a friend, 'This is the kind of market that builds character.' He looked at me and said, 'If it gets any worse, you'll have more character than Abe Lincoln.' "
"My mother once told me, 'Son, you talk too much. You should listen more. You don't even know who the enemy is.' "
āIf youāre on the right side of the issue, just keep driving until you hear glass breaking. Donāt quit.ā
"Play by the rules. It's no fun if you cheat."
T. Boone Pickens in his Dallas offices in May. (Smiley N. Pool / The Dallas Morning News)