Skiing Climbs Toward 70 Years on Slopes
January 31, 2020
By Ron Pesch
Special for Second Half
A glance at the MHSAA record books shows 45 years of MHSAA skiing championships, beginning in 1975.
But did you know the Association has sanctioned an Upper Peninsula Regional meet since 1952? And a Lower Peninsula Regional was added in 1954?
Skiing had been a favorite winter sport across the state long before that. The city of Ishpeming lays claim as the “birthplace of organized skiing in America.” In 1888, the Norden Ski Club sponsored their first formal tournament. Renamed the Ishpeming Ski Club in 1901, the group hosted its 133rd Annual Ski Jumping Tournament this year.
In 1905, the National Ski Association, rechristened the United States Ski Association (USSA) in 1962, was formed in Ishpeming to oversee jumping tournaments and in later years ran meets to develop the sport. The city also was home to the “Flying Bietilas,” a family of world renowned ‘ski riders’ – jumpers – including four who would make the U.S. Olympic team. During the late 1930s and early 1940, Pine Mountain in Ironwood hosted the biggest ski jumping event in the Midwest, with crowds swelling toward 20,000. Ski Clubs have long existed at high schools across the state.
Sugar Loaf Resort, located in Cedar not far from Traverse City, opened in 1947 and inaugurated a High School Invitational Ski meet in 1949. The event was sponsored by the Leelanau School of Glen Arbor and sanctioned by the Michigan High School Athletic Association. Students at Cadillac High school first formed a ski club during the 1948-49 school year.
“With the Caberfae ski area so near, skiing is the up-and-coming winter sport,” wrote the staff in the Cadillac High School annual. The club numbered about 50, and competed that first year in an “inter-scholastic ski meet” with teams from Traverse City, Manistee, and Leelanau. “Events for both boys and girls were downhill, slalom and cross country. Held at Caberfae in February, Cadillac won the meet and was presented with a trophy.”
So, it was with little surprise that the MHSAA was petitioned with “consistent requests of a large number (from) the (Iron Mountain) student body who desired to form a ski team and compete against other Upper Peninsula schools,” according to the Ironwood Daily Globe in 1951. Requests from other U.P. schools followed.
Recognition by the MHSAA
“Skiing has won a spot in the Upper Peninsula’s high school athletic program,” announced the Detroit Free Press on January 3, 1952. “The first Upper Peninsula skiing meet sanctioned by the Michigan High School Athletic Association will take place at Iron Mountain Feb 2. Teams scheduled to compete include Iron Mountain, Kingsford, Houghton and Hancock and more entries are expected.”
According to the Daily Globe, the boys competition consisted of Alpine downhill and slalom racing, and Nordic events, jumping and cross-country. For the girls, competition featured only Alpine events. The second U.P. Regional was held in early 1953.
The total number of ski sites in Michigan had grown to 41, with 33 in the Lower Peninsula, and the sport was considered the fastest-growing in Michigan. Prior to the 1953-54 school year, the MHSAA decided to sanction skiing as a sport in the Lower Peninsula as well, and to sponsor a second Ski Regional.
“Both boys and girls teams are authorized by the state association, making skiing the only opportunity for a girl to win a major sports award,” noted the Petoskey Evening News in June of 1953.
“Personally, I feel it is one of the fine sports which should receive attention in those areas of the state where the activity is available,” said Charles Forsythe, the MHSAA’s Executive Director at the time. “I am quite sure that the MHSAA will continue to be interested in it.”
Lower Peninsula Joins the Fun
The Manistee boys grabbed the inaugural L.P. Regional title in 1954 without winning a single first place in the meet. Hosted at Sugar Loaf, it included 10 participating schools and 92 competitors. The gathering differed from the U.P. competition in that it included only Alpine races, consisting of two runs by riders in both the slalom and downhill events, with combined times determining team and individual scores.
Leelanau School for Boys finished second, followed by Cadillac and Traverse City. A pre-event favorite, Traverse City’s Larry Bensley won the downhill competition. However, iced conditions caused him to fall “in each of two runs through the slalom gates … (and) cost him the championship title,” according to the Traverse City Record Eagle. Ben Boutell Jr. of Bay City Central ended the day with the best time in the combined slalom and downhill events to win the boys individual championship, followed by his brother Bill in second place.
Senior Barbara Sherberneau led Traverse City to the downstate girls team title. She finished first in the downhill, covering the course in 66.2 seconds while 15-year-old schoolmate Joey Cowell placed second. Freshman Patrice Freel of Gaylord won the slalom, followed by Sherberneau and Myra Turner from Lowell. (Interestingly, the Traverse City boys and girls teams were instructed by future football coaching legend, Jim Ooley, who would guide the Trojans to three MHSAA Class A football titles).
With “winter recreation areas in Hickory Hill and Holiday Hills, and other facilities … such as Sugar Loaf, Briar Hill, Caberfae and Boyne Mountain” nearby, to little surprise, the Traverse City teams would emerge as a hotbed for prep skiers in the coming years.
Cadillac swept both the boys and girls Lower Peninsula tournaments in 1955, this time hosted at Caberfae. Cowell of Traverse City returned to the slopes from an injury earlier in the season to earn the girls individual title while Ross Hohn of the Leelanau School just slipped past Bay City’s Ben Boutel for top boys accolades.
Two weeks later, at the 4th Annual Upper Peninsula Regional hosted at Michigan Tech Ski Area at Houghton, seven schools competed for team honors with individual competitors coming from Calumet, Lake Linden and St. Ignace. Houghton High School “copped top honors for the meet,” with both boys and girls teams taking first place in every event for the second year in a row. Houghton had now won each of the team titles since the initiation of state-sponsored Regionals.
Changes Above the Bridge
In 1959, a decision was made by the U.P. Ski Coaches and Principals to do away with combined scoring and separate the Regional into Nordic and Alpine events held over two days, with trophies given to the winners in each category. Girls would continue to compete in only the Alpine events. Iron Mountain boys and girls squads earned the Alpine meet championships, while Ishpeming grabbed the Nordic title.
A total of 133 skiers from 10 high schools – 52 boys and 36 girls in the Alpine events, 27 boys in the cross country race and 18 boys in jumping – were scheduled to compete in the U.P event in February of 1961. Icy conditions postponed the Alpine events, but the Nordic events were run as planned. Coach Theron Peterson’s Ironwood Ski Devil team won both the team jumping and cross country competitions.
Individually, Dave Engstrom, the lone senior on the Ironwood team, “captured first place in Saturday’s jumping with leaps of 77 and 79 feet for a total of 80 distance points and he received 61.5 form points for a grand total of 141.5. His 79-foot jump was the longest of the meet and his form rating was the highest of any entry,” noted the Daily Globe. Veikko Lapinoja of Ishpeming won the cross country event with a time of 17 minutes flat, topping Ironwood’s Chris Vizanko by four seconds. The event was hosted at Quarry Hill in Ironwood.
In March at Indianhead Mountain in Wakefield, Ironwood’s boys swept the Alpine competition, winning their second of three straight U.P. Regional titles, while the Hancock girls won their fifth title in six years, dating back to 1956.
Ski Landscape Continues to Change
In December 1963, the MHSAA and the United States Ski Association ironed out a plan to officially allow student-athletes to compete in USSA Central Division meets without affecting prep eligibility. “Forsythe said the association recognized skiing ‘as a fine activity and one that has a long carryover value’” according to a United Press International report. The Association’s “outside participation rule,” in place since 1946, had been loosely applied to skiing prior to the agreement.
The Nordic competition was eliminated from the 13th Annual U.P. Regional in 1964 due to limited interest. Only three teams participated in the jumping event in 1963, while just two schools had skiers racing in cross country. Marquette Graveraet’s boys and girls teams, winners of the Alpine games in 1963, again swept the meet.
In March, guided by ski writer Paul Preuss and a panel of ski coaches, the Detroit News introduced its 1st Annual All-State Ski squad: “First and second teams of six boys and six girls each were selected by a panel of 10 coaches and ski experts.” The honors would become a fixture of future ski seasons.
The 1965 event saw 25 teams and 138 competitors in the boys division in the Lower Peninsula. The Traverse City girls picked up their fourth Regional win in a row and ninth overall. The Trojans boys grabbed their sixth consecutive crown. The giant slalom had replaced the downhill event in both peninsula competitions. In the U.P. Regional, nine teams – two fewer then the year previous – battled it out for honors. Ironwood won the boys division, while Marquette grabbed the girls title.
Talked about since at least 1959, the idea of a ski state championship was pitched to the MHSAA in 1966 by the Ski Coaches Association from both peninsulas. The idea was “for a meet between the two top boys’ teams and the two top girls’ teams and all of the medal winners from each of the two regionals.” Iroquois Mt Ski Area near Sault Ste. Marie would serve as the site. Reflecting the growth in the sport across the state, the MHSAA Representative Council instead opted to add a second Regional in the Lower Peninsula, representing southern Michigan for the 1966-67 school year.
Geographic Expansion
In February 1967, 20 prep teams met at Sugar Loaf for the Northern Michigan Regional, at Mt. Holly in the Pontiac area for the South Regional, and at Mount Ripley in Hancock for the Upper Peninsula Regional.
Led by brothers Marty and Brock Walker, Gaylord snagged its first title, breaking the seven-year stronghold that the Traverse City boys teams had held on the Regional. In turn, Cadillac’s squad interrupted the five-year parade of Traverse City girls titles. It was the fourth title for Cadillac in the 14 years of the L.P. Regional, with the other 10 won by the Trojans.
West Bloomfield won the first of four straight Southeastern Regionals titles, besting Rochester, Southfield, Walled Lake and entries from 16 other schools.
In the Upper Peninsula, Ironwood’s boys and girls teams emerged as champions. The boys squad slipped past Hancock by a mere 1.7 seconds, while the girls eked out victory over the Hancock team by one tenth of a second. The meet consisted of two runs of the slalom and one run of the giant slalom. The first 10 individuals in each event were awarded medals. Mike Porcarelli of Wakefield, skiing with the Iron Mountain team, won both the slalom and giant slalom. Porcarelli would go on to earn four NCAA titles while skiing for the University of Colorado.
Finally, a State Championship
In 1972, 59 high schools sponsored ski teams and the state was now broken into four regions – three in the Lower Peninsula at Mt. Brighton in Brighton, Pine Nob in Clarkston and Schuss Mountain in Bellaire; and Cliff’s Ridge near Marquette in the U.P.
Beginning in 1970, teams were hosting a postseason invitational meet that included the top two teams from each Regional competing to determine an unofficial state champion. Following the 1972 Regionals, the winning boys and girls teams from the various schools gathered at Timberlee Ski Area near Traverse City for the ‘Bloomfield Invitational’ meet – a runoff to identify a state ski champion for each gender. Houghton finished with the boys title, topping Bloomfield Hills Andover and Waterford Kettering. Marquette emerged as the girls champion, edging Traverse City by 4.5 seconds. The Houghton girls finished third.
During the 1973-74 school calendar, 72 schools across the state sponsored skiing, and in June of 1974, MHSAA Executive Director Allen Bush announced plans to sponsor the first state ski meet.
“This is the first year that we’ve had an official state meet,” said Lyn Salathiel, coach of the Traverse City squads at the time. “Previously they were not state-sponsored events. Now they’ll have eight boys and eight girls teams competing, which is the top two from each of the four regionals.”
Mike O’Brian of Houghton won both the slalom and giant slalom events, but the depth of the Traverse City boys team meant victory in the first MHSAA ski championship. “… Without placing a skier in the top three,” wrote the Associated Press, “… Traverse City raced 502.4 seconds to clinch their title.” Houghton ended second with 506 seconds, followed by East Lansing at 513.3. The event was held at Cliff’s Ridge.
The Trojans girls, led by Judy Kramer, topped Cadillac, clocking in at 384.5 to 405.9. Hancock ended third with 407.1 seconds. Kramer won the slalom with a time of 63.844. Mimi Petritz of Benzie Central grabbed the giant slalom title with a time of 26.868 seconds.
To little surprise, Salathiel was named “Coach of the Year” by the News.
In 1996, the MHSAA moved from a single team champion for each gender to two titles per year for each, classifying schools by enrollment, and also began naming individual champions for the slalom and giant slalom. Currently, Marquette’s boys have won seven straight Division 1 championships, and Petoskey’s boys won eight straight from 2011-18. Marquette’s girls have won four straight in Division 1, while a different program has won the girls title the last seven seasons in Division 2.
Special thanks to Debbie Lindblom, Tim Boutell, Tracy Welch and the Bay County Library System for assistance in gathering the above images and information.
Ron Pesch has taken an active role in researching the history of MHSAA events since 1985 and began writing for MHSAA Finals programs in 1986, adding additional features and "flashbacks" in 1992. He inherited the title of MHSAA historian from the late Dick Kishpaugh following the 1993-94 school year, and resides in Muskegon. Contact him at [email protected] with ideas for historical articles.
PHOTOS: (Top) Canonsburg Ski Area, northeast of Grand Rapids, hosts a high school ski event. (2) A Muskegon patch from the 1960s is among mementos from earlier years of the sport at the high school level. (3) Traverse City's Barb Sherberneau in 1954. (4) Bill Boutell [43] and brother Ben Jr. [44], with dad Ben Sr., were mid-century standouts for Bay City Central. (5) Houghton's girls provided half of a school sweep of the 1954 Upper Peninsula Regional titles. (6) The 1961 Hancock teams were among powerhouses during Upper Peninsula Regionals at that time. (7) The 1967 West Bloomfield boys ski team sets up on the slopes for a yearbook shot. (Photos gathered by Ron Pesch, with permission, from his personal collection, yearbooks from Traverse City, Hancock Central and West Bloomfield high schools, along with other sources mentioned above.)
Performance: Gaylord's Reagan Olli
February 23, 2019
Reagan Olli
Gaylord junior – Skiing
Despite a broken left wrist, and cast covering it, Olli won the giant slalom at the Division 2 Regional at Nub’s Nob in a two-run 54.94, and also qualified for Monday’s MHSAA Finals in the slalom in earning the Michigan Army National Guard Performance of the Week.
Olli suffered the wrist injury while racing in Duluth , Minn., a few weeks earlier and she anticipates wearing a cast into early March. But that won’t stop her from attempting to repeat as the Division 2 champion in the slalom, although the wrist has given her a little more pain in that race because competitors cross-block – or make contact with the gates – which they do not in the GS. She finished seventh in the slalom at last week’s Regional in 127.10 and expects to contend in both races Monday at Boyne Mountain. She finished second in the giant slalom at the 2018 Finals.
Olli also is the goalkeeper for Gaylord’s varsity girls soccer team and anticipates being ready to block plenty of shots once that season gets rolling in the spring. She’s considering the possibility of competing in either sport in college after she finishes up high school next year and also carries a GPA above 4.0 that ranked her among the top five students in her graduating class academically heading into this school year. Of course, she has plenty of time to decide, but is interested in the medical field and considering studying to become a physician’s assistant.
Coach Bill Snow said: “I’ve had the privilege of coaching Reagan for three years. Reagan is a dedicated, committed, talented, humble, accomplished, skier. Not only is she a superb skier on the hill, she is an exceptional young adult off the hill. She is also a major asset to the Gaylord High School ski team because she motivates and inspires her peers. During dryland training, when Reagan was a sophomore with a hand injury from soccer, she looked at me and said, ‘I want to be the state champion, and champions need to work hard.’ She accomplished this goal last year at the 2018 state meet when she won the slalom title and placed second in GS. This year she will go into the 2019 state meet with another battle scar, a broken hand, but that won’t stop her one bit! I look forward to watching her effortlessly fly down the hill to another victory.”
Performance Point: “I had broken (the wrist) the Sunday the week before,” Olli said. “So I had tried to get a little bit used to it during the week once I got casted. I just tried to practice, and mostly my goal going into Regionals was just to try to ski clean. I wasn’t really aiming for a win that day. At that point it was still awkward-feeling because normally you’re used to having a lot of wrist motion for pole touching and getting out of the start gate, but that day I just had to go with what I had.”
Big Monday ahead: “I’m a little bit nervous just because I wish I was at full strength. There’s nothing I can do about it now, so I’m going to go forward and try to put my best skiing out there and work with what I have. I don’t know the amount of time it’s been affecting me right now, but as far as skiing itself now, I think I’m still in contention with all of those girls. It’s just a matter of getting my good skiing out. The starts at Boyne Mountain are a bit flatter, which will be tougher, so I’ll have to make up some time.”
I love it all: “I’ve always been a skier. I started skiing at the little hill in Gaylord when I was probably 2. My mom’s family is big on skiing, so I was always out there. I did a bunch of other sports when I was a kid; skiing has just always been what I wanted to be doing. I worked my way up in different programs, and I got here. … There are so many things I love about it. I love the way it feels going down the hill. It’s so different all the time – there’s not one course ever the same as the other. We’re always on different hills, and you have to adapt and learn to ski different places and in different ways. I love the atmosphere around it as well. You can make so many new friends. It’s a great feeling to be out there skiing … (and) I like the cold.”
Overseas slopes: “I went to Austria this fall with a group from Traverse City, so I know a lot of girls from TC West and TC Central. It was great. The views out there were incredible, and the hills were a lot steeper, so that was a cool experience. And we were on a T-bar the whole time, so we just got lap after lap and we skied for so many hours.”
Setting up senior year: “I’m more of a go-with-the-flow kinda person. I want to try to do some bigger races in the FIS (International Ski Federation) part of the sport. As far as state and Regionals go, I would like to be back on top and in contention for titles. My goal for senior year, I guess, would be to be healthy, because it definitely helps.”
- Geoff Kimmerly, Second Half editor
Every week during the 2018-19 school year, Second Half and the Michigan Army National Guard recognizes a “Performance of the Week" from among the MHSAA's 750 member high schools.
The Michigan Army National Guard provides trained and ready forces in support of the National Military Strategy, and responds as needed to state, local, and regional emergencies to ensure peace, order, and public safety. The Guard adds value to our communities through continuous interaction. National Guard soldiers are part of the local community. Guardsmen typically train one weekend per month and two weeks in the summer. This training maintains readiness when needed, be it either to defend our nation's freedom or protect lives and property of Michigan citizens during a local natural disaster.
Past 2018-19 honorees
February 14: Jake Stevenson, Traverse City Bay Reps hockey - Read
February 7: Molly Davis, Midland Dow basketball - Read
January 31: Chris DeRocher, Alpena basketball - Read
January 24: Imari Blond, Flint Kearsley bowling - Read
January 17: William Dunn, Quincy basketball - Read
November 29: Dequan Finn, Detroit Martin Luther King football - Read
November 22: Paige Briggs, Lake Orion volleyball - Read
November 15: Hunter Nowak, Morrice football - Read
November 8: Jon Dougherty, Detroit Country Day soccer - Read
November 1: Jordan Stump, Camden-Frontier volleyball - Read
October 25: Danielle Staskowski, Pontiac Notre Dame Prep golf - Read
October 18: Adam Bruce, Gladstone cross country - Read
October 11: Ericka VanderLende, Rockford cross country - Read
October 4: Kobe Clark, Schoolcraft football - Read
September 27: Jonathan Kliewer, Grand Rapids Forest Hills Northern soccer - Read
September 20: Kiera Lasky, Bronson volleyball - Read
September 13: Judy Rector, Hanover-Horton cross country - Read
PHOTOS: (Top) Gaylord's Reagan Olli skies during her team's Division 2 Regional last week at Nub's Nob. (Middle) Olli won the giant slalom and also qualified for the Finals in the slalom. (Photos by RD Sports Photo.)