Podría ser algo así:
SELECT CONCAT(DATE_FORMAT(NOW(), '%Y%m%d'),'_',LPAD( @a:=@a+1,4,'0') ) AS i_ticket
FROM ticket_support
WHERE i_ticket like ('20190227%')
AND d_request = DATE_FORMAT(now(), '%Y%m%d')
Lo que se hace aquí es ayudarse de una variable de usuario, que se le incrementa en cada iteración, para ser usada como contador.
9.4 User-Defined Variables
You can store a value in a user-defined variable in one statement and
refer to it later in another statement. This enables you to pass
values from one statement to another.
User variables are written as @var_name, where the variable name
var_name consists of alphanumeric characters, ., _, and $. A user
variable name can contain other characters if you quote it as a string
or identifier (for example, @'my-var', @"my-var", or @my-var
).
User-defined variables are session specific. A user variable defined
by one client cannot be seen or used by other clients. (Exception: A
user with access to the Performance Schema user_variables_by_thread
table can see all user variables for all sessions.) All variables for
a given client session are automatically freed when that client exits.
User variable names are not case-sensitive. Names have a maximum
length of 64 characters.
Fuente: https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/8.0/en/user-variables.html
ATENCIÓN
No se reiniciará el contador si en vez de now()
usas un campo fecha y este varía.