Crew commander Mike Hopkins, 51, is an Air Force colonel and former space station resident who grew up on a hog and cattle farm in Missouri. He played football for the University of Illinois and, before becoming an astronaut in 2009, worked at the Pentagon.

Mike was working as a special assistant to the vice chairman of the Joints Chief of Staff when he got the call from NASA. He and wife Julie have two college-age sons.

If you watched any of yesterday's SpaceX/NASA launch for a 5-6 month stay at the International Space Station (ISS) you got to learn a bit about Mike Hopkins and the other three astronauts who make up the crew.

Getty Images
Getty Images
loading...

Navy Cmdr. Victor Glover is the only one of the group who is being described as a "space rookie," and he's the first African-American astronaut to head up to the ISS for a "long-term stay."

I'm sure that Mike Hopkins isn't one of those guys with a "been there, done that" attitude, but...he's been there and done that when it comes to the ISS. He flew to the International Space Station on a Soyuz spacecraft for a stay in 2013.

Getty Images
Getty Images
loading...

You think that maybe Mike is proud of his Illini heritage? Well, his Twitter handle is @Astro_illini, so I'm guessing the answer might be yes. Here was Mike's tweet when he found out that the weekend's launch, scheduled for Saturday, was going to be delayed by a day:

 


 

READ ON: Weird, wild UFO sightings from throughout history

More From WROK 1440 AM / 96.1 FM