Meyers Serves, Strides for Norrix Fall Teams

By Pam Shebest
Special for MHSAA.com

August 21, 2017

KALAMAZOO — Finding a face in a crowd of 357 runners erupting down a hillside all at once could be a daunting task.

But spotting sophomore Joe Meyers is easy, said Greg Savicke.

“He’ll be one of the ones out front,” the Kalamazoo Loy Norrix coach predicted.

That was true at Friday’s Portage Central Early Bird Invitational, where Meyers finished 14th with a time of 17 minutes, 12 seconds.

That sounds like a great time for a first race of the season, but Meyers was not celebrating.

“I had a pretty bad race,” he said. “I was training in Colorado for like a month with my new coach, and I put in a lot of training.

“I should have been well in the 16s. It was just not a good race.”

He didn’t have much time to fret.

The two-sport athlete had his first tennis match of the season Monday.

He’s playing No. 2 singles for the Knights after putting together a 21-5 record at the same flight last year.

Juggling two fall sports is not a problem for the amiable Meyers, with tennis taking priority.

“We work around the tennis schedule,” said Savicke, in his 29th year as Norrix’s head cross country coach. “We get Joe when he’s available. Early in the season it’s not so much, but down the stretch, yes.

“That’s the championship part of our season for us, in October, so we get him for the most important meets coming up.”

Both sports are in Meyers’ DNA.

His mother, Jody, got him on the tennis court when he was 5 and just playing for fun. 

“Then I quit and mainly played hockey for years until seventh grade, then picked up tennis again,” he said.

He started running with his father, John, at age 9.

As a freshman, “I didn’t really want to pick one because I knew I could do pretty good in both,” Joe Meyers said. “It worked out last year.”

Both are individual sports, but in running, “you have to definitely have a lot more drive to go out and run by yourself because you can have a lot of excuses not to,” he said.

“In tennis, you go to group and you have to try as hard as you can. I don’t really get as tired in matches (since I’ve been) running.”

Meyers works out with sophomore Reed Crocker, Norrix’s No. 1 singles player.

Crocker qualified for the MHSAA Lower Peninsula Division 2 Finals last season, losing his top-flight title match, 7-6(6), 3-6, 7-6(8), to top-seeded Varun Shanker of Midland Dow.

The only way Meyers will make it to the Finals is if Loy Norrix as a team qualifies, since the No. 1 player is the only individual eligible if the team falls short at Regionals. The No. 1 singles champion and runner-up at Regionals advance to Finals play even if their teams do not qualify.

“We have a better chance (as a team) this year,” Crocker said. “The team’s looking better.

“We’ve been doing a lot of sprints, a lot. (Sunday) was an easy day. We only ran a mile” before practice.

Crocker said Meyers pushes him to be better.

“Joe is like the marathon runner, so it helps me with conditioning and it helps me on the court because I know he can help build the wins,” Crocker said.

“We hit together, and he pushes me get better. I’ve had the joy to hit with him the last year or so because he joined my coach (Bill Jenkins, who is also Norrix’s head coach).”

Jenkins, in his third season with the Knights, has coached tennis for 38 years.

Meyers possesses a “good work ethic, and genetics are very much in his favor as far as a force in track,” Jenkins said. “He’s built for it in tennis as well.

“He’s also extremely coachable so he has a very good perspective, very good mindset and disposition for tennis. He’s extremely intense, extremely passionate and competitive, but he’s also very level-headed, so he’s able to channel a lot of that energy into proper use.”

Jenkins said, in his experience, it is unusual to have an athlete be so successful in two sports in the same season.

“He’s got very set dreams but he works at them on a daily basis, knowing that the only way to achieve them is through his commitment,” the coach said.

“Regardless of whatever natural distractions may come up, he seems to stay on track very diligently and is years ahead of his time.”

While Meyers needs the team to qualify for the MHSAA Finals in tennis, he has a much better shot of earning a berth in cross country.

Last year, then-senior Gabe Runyon was the only Norrix runner to qualify for the Lower Peninsula Division 1 competition at Michigan International Speedway. 

Meyers just missed qualifying, finishing 21st at his Regional with a time of 17:04. The top 15 runners moved on.

Savicke lost Runyon and four of his other top seven runners to graduation this spring, noting that Meyers has moved up from second in the order to become the team’s top runner.

Meyers has improved on his 2016 Regional time and has an unofficial personal best of 16:30. He has hit 17:00 in a race, and his short-term goal is to get into the 16s during competition.

Said Savicke: “Joe’s father was a runner in high school for (Kalamazoo) Hackett in the 1980s, and he’s really active in bicycling and running events. He’s brought Joe along with him.

“I think that just paid dividends with his running abilities. I saw Joe in middle school, so I knew he would be a good fit for us.”

Norrix’s next cross country meet is Thursday with Meyers leading a varsity contingent of junior Will Carrier, senior Zach Skinner, sophomore Myles Baker, junior Rowan Mathieson, senior Garrett Bloom and sophomore Erick Ponce.

Once the fall season is over, Meyers does not plan to leave sports behind.

He bicycles and was the Michigan Bicycle Racing Association road race junior state and point series champ a year ago and “might pick up hockey or swimming this year,” he said.

In the spring, he is part of the varsity track & field team, competing in the 1,600, 3,200 and 3,200 relay.

Pam Shebest served as a sportswriter at the Kalamazoo Gazette from 1985-2009 after 11 years part-time with the Gazette while teaching French and English at White Pigeon High School. She can be reached at [email protected] with story ideas for Calhoun, Kalamazoo and Van Buren counties.

PHOTOS: (Top) Kalamazoo Loy Norrix sophomore Joe Meyers returns a volley during a tennis practice Sunday. (Middle) Clockwise from top left: Meyers, tennis teammate Reed Crocker, Knights’ boys tennis coach Bill Jenkins, Knights’ boys cross country coach Greg Savicke. (Below) Meyers pushes ahead of a pack during Friday’s Early Bird race at Portage Central. (Photos by Pam Shebest.)

Black Hawks Soar Again in Division 1, while Kumar Repeats with Top-Flight Title

By Scott DeCamp
Special for MHSAA.com

October 15, 2022

HOLLAND – While Bloomfield Hills boys tennis coach Greg Burks was being interviewed late Saturday afternoon at Hope College’s Etheridge Tennis Complex, the Black Hawks’ team canopy lifted in a gust of wind and toppled onto the court.

That was about the only thing that went wrong for Bloomfield Hills this weekend. The Black Hawks used their supreme depth to run away with the MHSAA Division 1 boys tennis championship, the program’s third in six years and fourth in eight seasons – and also their first since 2018.

Bloomfield Hills capped the chilly, two-day tournament by capturing titles in five of eight flights and finishing runner-up in two others. The top-ranked Black Hawks tallied 35 points to win going away.

Northville was runner-up with 25 points, followed by Troy with 24. Novi was fourth with 17 points.

Each of the top four teams was ranked in the top four of the Michigan High School Tennis Coaches Association poll.

“We had a lot of depth. We had a couple kids come in – a couple freshman, Jonah Chernett and Connor Shaya – and they kind of extended that lineup even further to where we were just very, very deep,” said Burks, who also guided the Black Hawks to Division 1 titles in 2015, 2017 and 2018.

“To be honest, everybody just worked very hard in the offseason. They knew that we were getting those couple of guys and we only graduated one from last year, so they just knew – these are the stakes, and we knew that Troy and Northville and Novi were going to be tough. Yeah, it was great.”

Bloomfield Hills settled for a Finals runner-up finish last season behind Troy. This time, championships at two of the four singles flights and three of the four doubles flights helped push the Black Hawks over the top.

Bloomfield Hills senior Daniel Stojanov repeated at No. 2 singles with a 4-6, 6-1, 6-2 victory over Bloomfield Hills Brother Rice’s Patrick Cretu. At No. 4 singles, the spunky Shaya defeated Troy’s Dhruv Gupta in the Finals match, 6-2, 6-3.

The doubles teams of Pierce Shaya-Merrick Chernett (No. 1), Michael Dillon-Ryan Rose (No. 2) and Kierth Lingam-Dominic Pascarella (No. 4) earned big points for Bloomfield Hills with flight championships.

Bloomfield Hills’ Aaron Rose was runner-up to Detroit Catholic Central’s Alec Maynard at No. 3 singles (6-2, 6-4). The Black Hawks’ Drew Davis and Toni Vasile finished second at No. 3 doubles, falling to Ann Arbor Huron’s Warren Gunnar and Hassan Hejazi in the final.

Northville junior Sachiv Kumar fires a backhand during his No. 1 singles final. Northville junior Sachiv Kumar repeated at No. 1 singles winning a championship rematch against Rochester junior Clayton Anderson, 7-6, 4-6, 6-1. Kumar defeated Anderson in last year’s title match, 6-3, 4-6, 7-6(5). Kumar finished 34-1 this season with his lone loss coming against Anderson during a dual meet.

It was a different Finals experience for Kumar this time around. Last year’s Division 1 Finals in Kalamazoo was moved indoors because of rain.

“The conditions – just way too cold outside, and (too) windy to play tennis, but somehow I didn’t cramp and the conditions didn’t get to me,” the even-keel Kumar said with a smile, alluding to temperatures hovering at or just below 50 degrees.

“It’s really, really nice, especially to say I won it once and I won it again – won it twice in a row.”

Stojanov knows the pressure of attempting to repeat as well.

It wasn’t easy for him Saturday, but the reward was well worth it, especially since his teammates also can call themselves state champions.

“It was great to get it done as a team. Fell short last year, so getting it done as a team was great this year,” Stojanov said.

“Down a set, I had to raise my level, I had to raise my game. I played a great player, so everything had to align for me to get the win. I want to give credit to my coaches and my teammates for cheering me on. It was great overall.”

Burks recalled how the 2018 Division 1 title team also displayed superior depth and won six of eight flights.

He considers that a “fantastic year,” but said what differentiates this group is that every single person on the team held his own and played an important role.

This Black Hawks squad is relatively young, so the future looks bright, too.

“It felt amazing because, like, I was really nervous because early in the season. I barely beat (Gupta) in the third set, but I really felt in that third set (Saturday), I knew his game. When I came here to play him today, I felt great,” said Shaya, who goes by the nickname “Cosmo.”

“It’s amazing (to win the team title) because we all just feel like champions. It was the perfect season.”

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PHOTOS (Top) Bloomfield Hills senior Daniel Stojanov sends a volley on the way to repeating at No. 2 singles. (Middle) Northville junior Sachiv Kumar fires a backhand during his No. 1 singles final. (Click for more from High School Sports Scene.)