Northmen Kings of the Mountain Again

By John Vrancic
Special for MHSAA.com

February 26, 2013

MARQUETTE — The Petoskey boys were nearly in top form Monday, earning their third straight MHSAA Division 2 ski title at Marquette Mountain with 39 points.

They were followed by Bloomfield Hills Andover with 119 and Houghton-Hancock with 129.

The Northmen placed three among the top six in giant slalom and a trio among the top nine in slalom.

Petoskey junior Gunner Lundteigen became a double winner, taking giant slalom in 59.76 seconds and slalom in 1:19.22.

“We have a deep team this year,” Lundteigen said. “We all have the potential to win a race on any given day. We can also trust each other. If somebody has an off day, we have somebody else who can pick up the slack. It’s been like that all year. We felt there was a little extra pressure on us this time, although we tend to use that to our advantage.

“We’re a close-knit group and we all worked real hard for this. Some of my best friends are on this team. I just tried to ski to my potential and push myself harder each time.”

Lundteigen toured the course in 28.94 during the first run, and followed with a 30.82 in giant slalom. In slalom, he opened at 39.64 and improved to 39.58 in the second run.

Senior teammate Brian Erhart was runner-up in giant slalom (1:00.13), with Gerret Lundteigen sixth (1:01.22) and Ben Loomis 12th (1:02.31).

“This is definitely an exciting time for us,” said Erhart, who plans to attend a college in Colorado this fall. “We felt we had pretty good chance to win it. Although, we didn’t really plan anything. You never know what might happen. I was glad to see my teammate win. We train together all the time. This has been an awesome season. We’re a real strong team.”

Noah Honaker added a sixth in slalom (1:22.45), with Gerret Lundteigen ninth (1:23.61), Trevor Kingsbury 13th (1:26.8) and Erhart 16th (1:27.08) on a partly sunny and mild day.

Petoskey had just 13 points in giant slalom and 26 in slalom. Its top four skiers finished within three seconds of each in giant slalom.

The Northmen were coming off an even more dominant performance in this year’s Regional at Boyne Mountain, where they won by 90 points.

“The boys were one point away from a perfect score in the regional,” said Petoskey coach Travis Hill. “When you have momentum like that, it’s a great thing. And the kids really wanted it. This is good stuff.”

Maple City Glen Lake’s Thomas Waning was runner-up in slalom (1:19.38) and ninth in giant slalom (1:01.77).

Andover’s T.J. Stewart was third in both races. He was clocked at 1:00.23 in giant slalom and 1:20.03 in slalom. The Barons’ stronger event on this day appeared to be giant slalom, where Braden Cleary was 14th (1:02.53) with Ryan Stewart 16th (1:02.55).

Houghton’s Ian Helman was the highest Upper Peninsula finisher, taking 10th in slalom (1:25.08). Teammate Jacob Jarvis was 11th in giant slalom (1:02.16).

The Houghton-Hancock unit was the lone U.P. team to qualify for the Finals. Its next highest finisher was Tony Stein, who was 15th in slalom (1:26.98) and 22nd in giant slalom (1:03.71).

Click for full results.

PHOTO: The Petoskey boys ski team poses with its MHSAA championship trophy. (Photo courtesy of Petoskey skiing program.
 

Northmen Rule Again in D2 Final

February 24, 2014

By Andy Sneddon
Special to Second Half

HARBOR SPRINGS – A first for Cadillac, and more of the same for Petoskey.

Keenan Cooper became the first male skier in Cadillac history to sweep the MHSAA individual ski titles Monday when he accomplished the feat at the Division 2 Final at Nub’s Nob.

Petoskey, led by double-medalist Gunnar Lundteigen, ran away with the team championship, its fourth consecutive and 15th in the storied history of the program.

“The team’s been really solid in the past, obviously, and being a part of it really feels good,” said first-year Petoskey coach Erik Lundteigen.

“Watching this senior class, they haven’t lost a conference, a Regional or a state Finals in four years, which is unbelievable.”

Almost as unbelievable was the performance of Cooper, who edged Andrew Schumacher of Grand Rapids Christian to win the slalom, and beat out Robbie Cort of Birmingham Brother Rice to capture the giant slalom.

“I woke up feeling good today, and it was just an on day for me,” said Cooper, a senior whose previous best Finals finish was a fourth in slalom last season. “I took that first run today and it just felt smooth. From that point on I could let it all out today.

“I knew I had a chance at it, but I knew I had to ski really well because there’s a lot of good skiers here. Just had to ski my own race and not really think about what other people were doing. Just go out there and do what I could do.”

Familiarity with the steep and tricky terrain at Nub’s helped, said Cooper, who estimated he had competed on the hill at least five times in his career.

“Scarface is just a brutal hill no matter what course is set on it because you’re doing every type of turn you can throw in there, fall-aways, bank turns, and it just becomes a tough course,” he said. “You kind of take all the tools you’ve learned over the years and you apply it to one course.

“I’m decently familiar with it. Makes a huge difference.”

Gunnar Lundteigen was in Cooper’s ski boots a year ago, when he swept the individual titles at Marquette Mountain.

He failed to repeat, but brought home medals in the slalom (third place) and GS (fourth) as Petoskey dominated the team competition. The Northmen finished with 41.5 points, a whopping 62 better than runner-up Cadillac.

The Northmen ripped through the morning slalom competition, placing four skiers – Gunnar Lundteigen, Trevor Kingsbury, Garret Lundteigen and Patrick Sheperd – among the top 10.

By the time the afternoon giant slalom started, all Petoskey had to do was get four skiers to the finish line.

“Everybody skied up to their potential,” coach Lundteigen said. “They’re all good skiers, they’ve trained hard all year, they’ve worked hard all year. We had one of our best days today. 

“There’s a lot of depth. If one guy makes a mistake or goes down, the rest of the guys pick him up.”

While Gunnar Lundteigen recorded Petoskey’s lone top-10 finish in the GS, the Northmen had four other skiers finish from 11th-16th

Joining Cooper and Gunnar Lundteigen as double medalists were Schumacher, Nate Houk of Cadillac and Ben Hicks of Bellaire.

Click for partial results. 

PHOTOS: (Top) Petoskey skiers celebrate with another MHSAA championship trophy. (Middle) Ironwood's Ethan Johnson works downhill during one of his runs Monday.