Success Cascades for Jackson-Area Pair

By Jeff Bleiler
Special for MHSAA.com

March 2, 2019

BATTLE CREEK – Not long after they claimed their Division 4 high school bowling singles championships, both Collin Baldwin and Mackenzie Johnson thought back to people who impacted them during their freshman years.

Baldwin proved “some kid” was wrong three years ago, while Johnson paid further homage to her father, who died shortly after her freshman season.

Baldwin, a Napoleon senior, and Johnson, a Vandercook Lake senior, won their MHSAA Finals titles Saturday at M-66 Bowl in Battle Creek, becoming the first Cascades Conference duo to win titles in the same season since Adam LaRoe of Napoleon and Malloree Ambs of Vandercook Lake claimed 2013 crowns.

In front of what sounded like the entire town of Napoleon – the crescendo of cheers getting louder with each successive strike – Baldwin stormed out to a 98-pin lead after the first game in the title match and needed nearly all of it as New Lothrop senior Tate Steinborn rallied but fell short in a 396-366 match.

About 15 minutes later, and eight lanes over, Johnson polished off her second straight Division 4 championship by rolling strikes on five of the first six frames of the second game to defeat Bronson junior Dakota Smith 364-333. Johnson became only the second girl in MHSAA bowling history to repeat as an individual champion, joining Jordan Richard of Tecumseh who won Division 2 titles in 2012 and 2013.

Moments after winning the school’s second Finals singles championship, an emotional Baldwin hugged dozens of teammates, family and fans who made the trek from Napoleon.

“I have a huge support section from my team, family, other teams,” Baldwin said. “I’ve made a lot of friends through this, and they’re all very nice and very supportive of me. I’m just thankful for bowling.”

He had perhaps the most thankless road to the championship, having to face 2017 Finals champion Brandon Hyska of Bronson in the quarterfinals and Vandercook Lake senior Korey Reichard in the semifinals. Baldwin edged Hyska 343-339 with a clutch mark in the 10th frame of the second game, then overcame a 26-pin deficit to Reichard after the first game to win 364-354.

“They’re both really great bowlers,” Baldwin said of Hyska and Reichard. “I’m happy to have bowled with them through high school. They got bad breaks, and I got some good ones. I was relaxed for the most part (going into the championship match), because I had just knocked out Brandon and Korey who had both bowled really good today. Going into the finals, I felt pretty confident in myself and just stuck to my game.”

Baldwin threw eight strikes during a clean 247 to Steinborn’s 149 in a battle of bowlers who employ the ever popular two-handed delivery style. Baldwin went cold in the second game with four opens through nine frames while Steinborn carried a four-bagger and made things interesting. But needing strings of strikes to make up the deficit, Steinborn came up short and Baldwin secured the championship.

“It feels great,” said Napoleon coach Randy Chesney, who also coached the two-handed LaRoe to his Finals championship six years ago. “Collin’s really worked hard, probably harder than any kid I’ve ever had, so he really deserved it. And it was probably the toughest bracket to get through today.”

And that “kid” from three years ago?

“Freshman year, some kid told me I couldn’t bowl two-handed,” said Baldwin, who plans to attend and bowl at Jackson College in the fall. “And I made my goal to be better than him, and I did that today.”

For Johnson, the repeat championship helped cement her among the greats in the storied history of Vandercook Lake bowling and provided proper punctuation to close out Todd Reichard’s 18 seasons as coach.

Johnson trailed after the first game of the championship 170-163. Despite two late open frames the second game, she finished off a 201 to Smith’s 163 to win. Never far from her thoughts was her father, Brad Johnson, who died of an inoperable brain tumor in 2016. He was 49.

“I always feel him in a bowling alley,” she said. “That was the person sixth-grade year, nine hours in a bowling alley a day it felt like. He’d be back there getting his steps in with his Fitbit. I’m always feeling him. If I get lucky on a shot, it’s thanks to Brad. I look up and, ‘Thanks, Brad. You were right.’”

There through every step of her high school years was her mother, Kris, a woman Mackenzie Johnson called “my rock.”

“Throughout this whole thing, my mom is my everything. She’s my rock. She’s my person,” she said. “That is the person I look up to. She’s motivated me to do this. She is my drive. She’s why I do my high school sports; that’s why I’m so competitive. She’s my everything.”

Also there through every step was Reichard, who closed out his high school coaching career guiding his sixth Finals singles champion. Reichard will focus on coaching the Concordia University women’s bowling program, and it seemed fitting that Johnson was the final high school bowler he coached.

“She’s like a daughter to me. Totally amazing,” Reichard said. “There’s nothing she can’t do with a bowling ball. She told me to just (put a bowling ball in her hands) and she can do anything with it. She’s a leader, kids look up to her. She can be tough on them, but she’s a great player. I don’t know where she ranks at Vandercook, but she’s got to be one of the best.”

He might not have seen the last of Johnson, though. She is considering Concordia if she decides to bowl at the next level.

“Todd’s everything I could ask for in a coach and more,” Johnson said. “I honestly don’t plan to bowl anywhere but Concordia. I just thank him for the four seasons he helped me through.”

Click for full girls results and full boys results.

Preview: Championship Chances Abound

By Geoff Kimmerly
MHSAA.com senior editor

March 4, 2020

Considering the majority of Michigan high school bowling divisions have recently enjoyed frequently-changing champions, it’s especially impressive that Flint Kearsley’s girls will enter Friday’s MHSAA Team Finals seeking their seventh straight Division 2 title and Bronson’s boys will be going for a third straight in Division 4.

Those teams are two of six 2019 champions returning to contend for titles this weekend at four sites: Division 1 at Allen Park’s Thunderbowl Lanes, Division 2 at Waterford’s Century Bowl, Division 3 at Jackson’s JAX 60 and Division 4 at Lansing’s Royal Scott.

Saturday’s Singles Finals, meanwhile, will produce at least five new champions across the eight boys and girls tournaments, as only two of last year’s winners will be back for this season’s final day.

Below is a look at possible contenders for all eight championships, both team and singles. Action begins both days at 8:25 a.m. Click for the full list of qualifiers, and come back to Second Half all weekend for coverage from all four Finals sites.

Division 1 Girls

Team: Reigning Division 1 champion Jenison was among six Regional title winners last weekend, rolling the second-highest score in the Division at 3,700. The high score was produced by No. 4 Lake Orion, which won at Grand Blanc Lanes with a 3,923 that outpaced No. 3 Flushing by nearly 300 pins. New Baltimore Anchor Bay, last season’s Finals runner-up, also won its Regional with a 3,592, and top-ranked Westland John Glenn finished second at Canton’s Super Bowl but did qualify for this weekend. Total, seven of the top 10 in the most recent coaches poll advanced to the Finals. No. 8 Salem, No. 5 Farmington and No. 7 Warren Cousino also won Regional titles.

Singles: Jenison senior Anna Bartz was a Finals semifinalist last season and won her Regional on Saturday with a 1,299, and senior teammate Lauren Slagter also was a semifinalist in 2019 and qualified again. St. Clair Shores Lake Shore junior Dani Decruydt was the Finals runner-up last year and will compete again as well after snagging the final qualifying spot at Sterling Heights’ Five Star Lanes. Flushing senior Evelyn Cano, Lake Orion senior Cheyenne Washington, Wyandotte Roosevelt senior Alicia Rager, Anchor Bay junior Kaitlyn Cavender and Farmington junior Carrington Beaman also will be back for the Singles Finals after making the match play last season. Grand Blanc junior Leah Williams, North Farmington senior Lyric O’Steen, Anchor Bay freshman Melanie Straub, John Glenn junior Anna Maxwell and Roosevelt freshman Angelita Rodriguez also won Regional titles last weekend.

Division 1 Boys

Team: We’re guaranteed a new champion as 2019 winner Farmington Hills Harrison closed its doors last summer. Last year’s runner-up and current No. 6 Oxford had the second-highest Regional score in Division 1 last Friday, rolling a 4,330 to win at Grand Blanc Lanes. No. 3 Macomb Dakota rolled a Division-best 4,354 at Five Star Lanes and is plenty familiar at the Finals, finishing runner-up in 2018. Only five of the top 10 ranked teams advanced to this weekend: Dakota and Oxford will be joined by No. 1 Utica Eisenhower, No. 2 Waterford Kettering and No. 4 Farmington in the field of 18. Farmington edged Kettering by 62 pins at Waterford’s 300 Bowl, and Eisenhower finished just 27 pins back of Dakota at their Regional.

Singles: Walled Lake Central senior Jarrod Willbur and Salem senior Jon Hall both made the semifinals last season, but only two others will be back from that larger match play group – Livonia Franklin junior Ken Kloth and Midland junior Izaac Goergen. Goergen rolled the fourth-highest Regional score (1,357) although it was the second highest at Grand Blanc Lanes behind Davison senior Brendan Ashley’s 1,400. Grand Haven junior Justin Strait, Farmington senior Julien Stout, Utica Eisenhower senior Dylan Kelley, Salem senior Noah Samuels and Dearborn Edsel Ford junior Aiden Newman also won Regional titles.

Division 2 Girls

Team: Top-ranked Flint Kearsley has won six straight Division 2 championships and rolled a 3,844 to win the Regional at Gaylord Bowling Center by more than 550 pins. However, No. 8 Coldwater had the day’s highest Division 2 score, winning its Regional at Kalamazoo’s Continental Lanes with a 3,864, nearly 650 pins better than that field. No. 2 Tecumseh, No. 3 Carleton Airport and No. 7 Mason also are among Finals qualifiers, Tecumseh and Mason after winning Regional championships. Tecumseh has finished Finals runner-up to Kearsley the last two seasons.

Singles: Reigning champion Omani Morales will be seeking a repeat as a senior and won her Regional at Comstock Park’s Westgate Bowl last week with a 1,146. Coldwater junior Noella Keplinger made the quarterfinals last season and was another Regional champ Saturday, rolling a Division 2-best 1,238. Muskegon Mona Shores senior Lindsay Cross, Flint Kearsley junior Allison Eible and Croswell-Lexington senior Katelyn Heiden also will be back this weekend after playing in last year’s match play. Kearsley junior Megan Timm, Warren Woods Tower senior Cassie McCarren, Charlotte junior Abigail Mather and Tecumseh junior Liza Verrier rounded out Saturday’s Regional champs.

Division 2 Boys

Team: Eight schools have finished either champion or runner-up in Division 2 over the last four years, but reigning champion New Boston Huron enters this weekend ranked No. 1 and rolled the highest Regional score in Division 2 last weekend – a 3,972 to win at Westland’s Town and Country Lanes. No. 2 Dearborn Divine Child also was at that Regional, and No. 4 Jackson Northwest, No. 5 Cadillac and No. 7 Owosso also made the Finals, Northwest and Cadillac winning Regional titles. Three other teams broke 3,900 – Westgate Bowl champion Grand Rapids Kenowa Hills and Continental Lanes top two Byron Center and Middleville Thornapple Kellogg.

Singles: Cadillac’s Kyle Vermilyea was the only non-senior to make last season’s Division 2 quarterfinals, and he’ll be back among expected contenders after also finishing as singles runner-up in 2018. Warren Woods Tower senior Noah Tafanelli also qualified for the Finals match play in 2019 and won his Regional last week at Westland’s Oak Lanes, while Grand Rapids Northview senior Dan Frey was a match play Finals qualifier last year and finished second at his Regional last week at Westgate Bowl to freshman teammate Kyle Pranger. Petoskey senior Nathan Waldron, Thornapple Kellogg junior Michael Willshire, Jackson Northwest sophomore Damein Milliman and Allen Park sophomore Nathan Roberts also won Regional titles.

Division 3 Girls

Team: Coloma is the reigning champion and returning. But top-ranked Flat Rock rolled the highest Division 3 Regional score last week, 3,591 at Flat Rock Lanes, and will be seeking its first championship since 2012 after reaching the semifinals a year ago. No. 2 Jonesville, No. 3 Midland Bullock Creek, No. 4 Clare, No. 5 Coloma, No. 8 Caro and No. 10 South Haven all qualified for this weekend as well, with Clare, Coloma and Caro among the Regional champions. Unranked Essexville Garber joined Coloma and Clare in breaking 3,500 pins last Friday.

Singles: Clare senior Jenna Betts is the reigning Division 3 champion and won her Regional on Saturday at Cheboygan’s Sparetime Lanes. Adrian Madison senior Isabell Young also will be back at the Singles Finals after making the semifinals in 2019, and Flat Rock senior Amy Jackson was the Regional runner-up at Flat Rock Lanes and made the quarterfinals last season. Hillsdale junior Karissa Manifold and Otsego senior Carley Blanchard also are returning after advancing to last year’s match play, and Livonia Clarenceville senior Madilynn Kieling made the quarterfinals in 2018 and should be a top contender coming off a Regional title Saturday at Flat Rock Lanes. Caro’s Baylee Hutchinson was the only bowler in Division 3 to outscore Kieling on Friday, posting a 1,238 to win at Richmond’s Strikers Bowling Center. Whitehall junior Karli VanDuinen won her Regional at Wyoming’s Park Center Lanes and should be in the mix too after making the Division 2 semifinals last year. Hopkins junior Kennedy Gill and Birch Run sophomore Cheyenne Brown also won Regional titles.

Division 3 Boys

Team: Seven schools have won Division 3 championships over the last seven seasons, and there will be a new champion Friday as reigning title winner Gladwin did not qualify for the Team Finals. Neither did top-ranked and 2019 runner-up Ogemaw Heights. But No. 2 Jonesville – the 2018 champion – posted the highest Regional team score in Division 3 of 4,054 at Flat Rock Lanes. No. 3 Sanford Meridian, No. 5 Flint Powers Catholic and No. 10 Paw Paw also qualified for this weekend, Powers and Paw Paw winning Regional titles. Belding fell just shy of joining Jonesville over 4,000, winning its Park Center Lanes Regional with a 3,957.

Singles: Cheboygan senior Dawson Campbell snagged the final qualifying spot at Sparetime Lanes to earn the opportunity to go for a repeat after winning last year’s final by 64 pins. Similarly, the opponent he defeated in last year’s semifinals – Muskegon Oakridge senior Josh Felcoski – snagged the final qualifying spot at Park Center Lanes. Saginaw Swan Valley junior Braydon Lemmer, Capac junior Adam Savage and Livonia Clarenceville sophomore Jacob Johnson also will be back after making the match play last year. Savage won his Regional at Strikers Bowling Center with a 1,347, second only to Jonesville junior Logan Teubert’s 1,401 in winning at Flat Rock Lanes. Cheboygan freshman Cole Swanberg, Garber junior Braedyn Hofmeister, Durand senior Cooper Neyman and Remus Chippewa Hills senior Bradyn Fate also won Regional titles Saturday.

Division 4 Girls

Team: Bronson broke Vandercook Lake’s two-year hold on Division 4 last season and will have a chance to repeat after snagging the final qualifying spot at Jackson’s JAX 60. Finishing just above Bronson there was reigning runner-up East Jackson, and both trailed champ Quincy by more than 100 pins at a Regional that also saw No. 5 Hanover-Horton and No. 10 Vandercook not advance. Bronson is ranked No. 2 and Quincy No. 7, and they will be joined this weekend in part by top-ranked Oscoda, No. 4 Bad Axe and No. 8 Sandusky, the only top ranked teams to make the Finals field. Quincy’s 3,414 was the Division 4 Regional high, and the Orioles will be rolling for their first Finals championship.

Singles: Two-time champion Mackenzie Johnson from Vandercook Lake graduated, but last season’s runner-up Dakota Smith will be back in contention now as a senior. Only five non-seniors made the match play last season, and all five have qualified for Saturday’s Finals. Joining Smith from that group will be Rogers City junior Chandra Ganske, Pittsford junior Kathryn McArthur, Hudson senior Kaitlyn Yates and Hanover-Horton junior Kassidy Alexander. Alexander won her Regional last weekend with a Division 4 high of 1,201, while McArthur was first and Yates second at Tecumseh’s Ten Pin Alley. Ishpeming Westwood freshman Kylie Junak, Fowler junior Siera Feldpausch, Byron junior Allison Glass and Bad Axe freshman Destiny Ranquist also won Regional championships.

Division 4 Boys

Team: Two-time reigning champion Bronson will go for the three-peat after finishing runner-up at the JAX 60 Regional, three pins behind Vandercook Lake. But the competition should be fierce, with top-ranked Grass Lake rolling a 3,895 to win its Regional at Ten Pin Alley and Rogers City throwing the Division 4 high 3,903 to win at Lucky Jack’s in Traverse City. No. 2 Whittemore-Prescott was second to Rogers City, and No. 4 Manchester was second to Grass Lake. No. 5 St. Charles was first and No. 3 Ithaca second at Bay City’s Bay Lanes at a Regional that saw No. 6 Unionville-Sebewaing not advance.

Singles: There is lots of opportunity as all eight quarterfinalists from last season graduated. Westwood junior Robert Papp, Burton Bendle junior Nick Love and Grass Lake junior Sean Wyers all are back after making the match play in 2019, with Wyers a Regional champion last weekend. USA senior Ethan Androl rolled the highest Division 4 Regional score, 1,284, and joining him and Wyers as Regional winners were Bronson senior Bryan Foote, Byron senior Kurtis Hatch, Ravenna senior Ethan May and Traverse City Christian junior Hunter Haldaman.

PHOTO: A Clinton Township Chippewa Valley bowler steps into his approach during last weekend’s Division 1 Regional. (Photo courtesy of C&G Newspapers.)