#TBT: Payment's Jump Sets Standard

May 28, 2015

By Geoff Kimmerly
Second Half editor

Brimley's John Payment entered the 1989 Upper Peninsula Track & Field Finals with a personal-best high jump of 6-foot-8¾ – achieved in a meet only four days before the final competition of his high school school. 

He left Marquette High School that May 27 with an all-Finals record of 7-1 that remains the all-time high and is the only all-Finals boys track & field record held by an Upper Peninsula athlete. 

The 6-foot-3 Payment graduated as a three-time U.P. Finals champion in the event and entered his senior season with a best jump of 6-6. He cleared 7 feet twice at the 1989 Finals to tie and then break the then-previous all-Finals records set by Sterling Heights Stevenson's John McIntosh and Ann Arbor Pioneer's David Elliott set in 1979.

Brimley swept the top three places in high jump at the U.P. Class D Final in 1989, with Payment followed by teammates Bob Carrick and Kevin Sutton. Payment twice missed at 7-0 before eclipsing that mark and going for more. 

"We're one big team," Payment said at the time. "Bob was telling me how far I was jumping from the bar. Bob told me I was too far out and to come in. That's when I cleared 7-1." 

Only four others have jumped 7-0 at MHSAA Finals. 

Click to read more from the Sault Evening News and its piece that is published as part of the Upper Peninsula Sports Hall of Fame website. 

Moment: Fisher Runs into Record Books

April 27, 2020

By Geoff Kimmerly
Second Half editor

Grant Fisher had already established himself as one of the state's top high school distance runners of his era when he took the track for his last MHSAA Finals on May 30, 2015.

By the end of the day, he'd run into the record books as one of Michigan's fastest all-time.

Fisher added his fourth and fifth individual Lower Peninsula Division 1 Finals championships that day, three-peating in the 3,200 meters (8:53.41) and repeating in the 1,600 (4:00.28). His time in the latter broke the previous all-MHSAA Finals record by more than seven seconds and at the time was the second-fastest time in NFHS history. It remains the third fastest nationally.

The previous all-MHSAA Finals record in the 1,600 had been set by fellow Grand Blanc graduate Omar Kaddurah (4:07.67) in 2010.

“I never raced against Omar,” Fisher said after his last Finals races. “I thought it was incredible he ran a 4:10. It’s nice to keep it in Grand Blanc. He was someone I looked up to.”

Fisher went on to star at Stanford, winning league and NCAA championships, earning 12 All-America honors and setting the U.S. collegiate record for the indoor 3,000 meters.

Click for coverage of his 2015 Division 1 Finals from Second Half and watch his 1,600 record run from the NFHS Network.