[3] In the 1928 basketball game against Kentucky, the "individual brilliance" of reserves Radice and Thurston Dean helped Maryland to a 37–7 victory over, in which the opponent was held to a single field goal.
"[6] For his style of play on the gridiron, Radice was called a "heavy plunging back"[7] and a "clever defensive full".
[8] In the 1929 game against Yale, Radice and George Madigan, "a pair of burly defense men, did most Maryland's tackling in the first half", which The New York Times credited with keeping the Eli's lead to a surmountable 13–0.
[9] The Old Liners tied the score in the second half behind George V. Chalmers passes to Bosey Berger and secured a 13–13 upset against the period powerhouse.
[2] After the season, Radice was invited to play in the New Year's Day Southern Conference all-star game at Grant Field in Atlanta.