Traverse City's Best Pace State's Elite

August 26, 2015

By Dennis Chase
Special for Second Half

TRAVERSE CITY - Two decisions, no regrets.

Holly Bullough made the switch from soccer, Anthony Berry from football.

Today, the two Traverse City seniors are among the best high school runners in the state.

Bullough, a four-time MHSAA champion in track at St. Francis, enters the cross country season as the defending Lower Peninsula Division 3 champion. The Michigan State University commit rallied from nearly 75 yards back to edge Charlevoix's Amber Way by two-tenths of a second in a spectacular finish in last year's Final.

Traverse City Central's Berry finished third in the LP Division 1 boys race. His time of 15:21 was the fastest among all the underclassmen in the state.

Now the two will try to build on their past success, starting Saturday in a season-opening invitational at Benzie Central.

"Anthony Berry and Holly Bullough are the two best distance runners to ever come out of here," Central Hall of Fame coach John Lober said matter-of-factly.

That's a strong statement, considering the area has produced some talented runners, including Central Lake's Ryan Shay, a former All-American at Notre Dame and the NCAA 10,000-meter champion in 2001. Shay was a four-time high school MHSAA champion in cross country. His best time in an MHSAA Final was 15:30.

"Ryan had a great career," Lober said. "But as far as high school runners, Anthony is running faster times than anybody ever has in this part of the state. It's really cool as a coach to see a kid apply himself like that."

Bullough's 2014 Finals time of 17:51.3 was the second fastest among area girls, trailing only Gaylord's Sloan Secord's 17:49.7 in 2007.

And it doesn't end there. A third Traverse City runner, Central sophomore Sielle Kearney, is taking her place among the elite. Kearney finished fifth in last year's Division 1 meet in a 17:57.7. That was the second fastest time by a freshman and it earned her a spot - along with Berry and Bullough - on the Michigan Interscholastic Track Coaches Association all-state Dream Team. In the spring, Kearney broke Central's school record in the 3,200 by five seconds.

"She had an incredible year," Central coach Lisa Taylor said.

Kearney and Bullough, who like to train together, have similar race philosophies – run as hard as you can for as long as you can. It's paid off for Bullough, who used her track speed down the stretch to catch Way in one of the more memorable MHSAA Finals finishes.

"It was crazy," Bullough said. "I didn't think I could catch her, but then at the last second somehow I did. I was in shock. It went by so fast I didn't really feel like it happened."

It did, much to the delight of her coach, Ben LaBelle.

"I think I've worn that video clip out," he said.

Bullough's been involved in a number of close races. Not all have gone her way. She finished second by less than a second to Manistee's Annie Fuller in the 1,600 and 800 at the LP Division 3 Track and Field Finals in June. Facing that type of competition has sharpened her edge.

"Running is a totally mental sport, and I feel I have a stronger mental personality now," she said.

Bullough also has a calming disposition that enables her to stay focused and level-headed. No moment seems too big.

"She is as she presents herself," LaBelle said. "She's a happy person. She's well balanced. She can make herself go when she needs to and she doesn't get flustered."

Bullough is hoping to run in the 17:40s this season, although she realizes it will be a process over the next several weeks. She trained hard – running and lifting – over the summer. She worked out with teammates, Kearney and Way, who will be her future teammate at Michigan State and is a good friend. No shortcuts were taken.

“(Bullough’s) a gifted athlete," LaBelle said. "That's the foundation. But she also works extremely hard to get the best from her God-given gifts."

This could be a special year for the Gladiators. "I expect to contend for the state championship," LaBelle said.

The 17-year-old Bullough, of course, will lead the way. Can she repeat?

"That would be so cool to win again," she said.

Berry has a Finals championship among his goals, too. In fact, he's hoping to win every race he enters this season.

"That's a big thing to say, but I really don't plan on not winning," he said. "I'm going to hold myself to that, and I'm going to work as hard as I can to make that happen."

Lober likes that attitude.

"That's a great goal," he said. "My wish for him is that he does the best he can do every time out. Winning every race, that's the way he operates."

Berry has been on a steady climb since he dedicated himself to running in the ninth grade. In cross country, over the last three years at the MHSAA Finals, he's posted the top freshman, sophomore and junior times in Division 1.

"That's tough to do," Lober said. "What this year holds, well, that's why we're having the season, to find out."

Berry – who plans to take official visits to the University of Michigan, Michigan State and Penn State this fall – seems primed for a banner year. He runs almost every day, averaging about 60 miles a week. Sunday is the exception. He bikes on that day.

"We have all these great biking paths here, so I try to get 30 to 40 miles in to take some of the pressure off my legs and keep my aerobic system up," he said.

His goal is to drop his time under 15 minutes. Berry ran a 14:16.56 to win the Cherry Festival 5K in July, although the course was actually short of that distance.

"It was still a full three miles," Berry said. "And that (time) was with a week off before the race. If I continue training hard, and stay healthy, I can do it (under 15). I don't have a doubt in my mind.”

Like Bullough, Berry is a hard worker with a strong mental makeup and good foot speed. Lober expects him to run under 50 seconds in the 400 next spring.

Berry, 17, is well aware that, on paper, he is the state's top returnee this season. He acknowledged that adds pressure, but at the same time helps motivate him.

And he's not overlooking the competition.

"I'm not taking anything for granted," he said. "I know there are some really good runners in this state."

Lober feels fortunate that he might have the best.

"You're not going to see an Anthony Berry come along very often," he said. "If you haven't seen him run, you better go watch him. He's the real deal. I feel lucky to be part of it."

Taylor feels the same coaching the up-and-coming Kearney.

The 15-year-old was a star in middle school, and she continued to excel in her first year on varsity.

"She loves to run," Taylor said. "I've always felt the kids who are really going to go far, beyond the high school level, always have that as their starting point."

Kearney became the first Central girl to run under 18 minutes at the MHSAA Finals. Her teammate, Ashley Ko, was right behind (17:57.7 and 17:58.5, respectively) as the Trojans placed second as a team. Kearney and Ko, who is now running at Northwestern University, worked together throughout the season, pushing each other, to reach their goal of running under 18.

Kearney is looking to improve upon that this season. She’s shooting for a top-two finish and a time in the 17:30s. But that's not her first goal.

"I really want our team to make the podium again at states," she said. “I think that would be super cool.”

Kearney ran two half marathons in July as part of her off-season training. 

“I upped my mileage, and I'm a lot more confident in my running,” she said.

Kearney followed a half-marathon training schedule for most of her summer workouts. That was fine with Taylor.

“I'm not the kind of coach who says you have to follow my schedule to be successful,” Taylor said. “For me, it’s always been, ‘What can I do to keep you happy as a runner in our program?’

“I think every coach knows deep in their heart that when you have a runner like Sielle, it's not your training that makes them fast. Any coach who is being honest knows these type of kids have something special about them that really has nothing to do with you. Our job as coaches for kids like Sielle is to keep them happy and recognize how much fun the whole team part can be and the friendships that can develop. Sielle’s really good at that.”

For her part, Kearney tries to keep running in perspective. When Taylor recently handed out questionnaires to her team, she asked them what their dream goal will be in three to six years.

Kearney responded: “My biggest goal is to continue to love running. It would be cool to run in college, and maybe even in some big races, but the ultimate goal in my running career is to never stop loving it, even if that means giving up competitive running.”

That answer impressed Taylor.

“That’s what every really great runner can say about their feelings for the sport – that the love was always there, the desire, the motivation,” Taylor said. “That was part of why they were successful because they have those roots for the love of the way it feels, mentally and physically.”

With Bullough, Berry and Kearney, it’s a special time right now in Traverse City, Lober said.

“It's going to be pretty cool to watch these runners,” Lober said. “We're lucky. People have to go watch these kids run to understand what we've got.”

Dennis Chase worked 32 years as a sportswriter at the Traverse City Record-Eagle, including as sports editor from 2000-14. He can be reached at [email protected] with story ideas for Manistee, Wexford, Missaukee, Roscommon, Ogemaw, Iosco, Alcona, Oscoda, Crawford, Kalkaska, Grand Traverse, Benzie, Leelanau, Antrim, Otsego, Montmorency, Alpena, Presque Isle, Cheboygan, Charlevoix and Emmet counties.

PHOTOS: (Top) Holly Bullough (1740) pulls away at the end of last season's LP Division 3 Final at Michigan International Speedway. (Middle) Anthony Berry (157) leads a pack around the final turn of the LP Division 1 boys race. (Below) Sielle Kearney (1172) runs toward a fifth-place finish at her first MHSAA Final. (Photos by RunMichigan.com.)

Preview: Past Champs Back in Running

November 5, 2020

By Geoff Kimmerly
Second Half editor

The first runners down the home stretch at Michigan International Speedway this weekend could look familiar for at least three divisions of the MHSAA Lower Peninsula Girls Cross Country Finals.

The fourth? That’s guaranteed to finish much differently than a year ago.

Reigning champions are expected to set the pace again in Divisions 1, 2 and 3. But Division 4 will be another story entirely, as the reigning team and individual champions are running in Division 3 this time.

A change in format also will switch things up a bit. To limit the number of participants in each race, the four divisions will be run over two days – Friday and Saturday – with each gender in each division spread over two races. Third-place teams and individual qualifiers from Regionals will run first, and first and second-place Regional finishers will run second.

Watching this year’s Finals at MIS also will be different. Attendance is limited due to COVID-19 precautions, but opportunities to watch off-site are available again via MHSAA.tv. Coverage will be enhanced this year with an additional camera on the back of the course to better capture the first 800 meters, 1.5-mile and 2.25-mile marks of the race. The traditional Finish Line camera also will cover the action, with commentary from a crew of announcers. 

Here’s the schedule, with links to broadcasts of each race:

Friday – Nov. 6
Division 1 Finals - Boys at 9:30 and 10 a.m. - Girls at 11 and 11:30 a.m.
Division 2 Finals - Boys at 1:30 and 2 p.m. - Girls at 3 and 3:30 p.m.
 
Saturday – Nov. 7
Division 3 Finals  - Boys at 9:30 and 10 a.m. - Girls at 11 and 11:30 a.m.
Division 4 Finals - Boys at 1:30 and 2 p.m. - Girls at 3 and 3:30 p.m.

Come back both Friday and Saturday for coverage of all four meets on Second Half, and see below for teams and individuals who should be in the running. References to a list of fastest times per division this fall includes only the top time for each runner and can be found with the Finals program and much more information on or linked to MHSAA.com.

Division 1

Reigning champion: Ann Arbor Pioneer
2019 runner-up: Traverse City Central
2020 top-ranked: 1. Traverse City Central, 2. Ann Arbor Pioneer, 3. Holland West Ottawa

This could come down to Pioneer and Central again after the Pioneers edged the Trojans 80-113 at the top of the standings of last year’s Final. Pioneer graduated last season’s individual champion Zofia Dudek and total two of its top five but is keyed by a Regional champion freshman in Rachel Forsyth, while Central brings back five of last season’s top six who are joined by a pair of standout freshmen. Trojans junior Julia Flynn didn’t run at her team’s Regional but has the fastest time in Division 1 this fall at 16:51.27 and finished third at the Final a year ago. Pioneer junior Sarah Forsyth was ninth at the Final in 2019, and Central senior Avery McLean was 17th. West Ottawa is expected to move up from seventh last season as it pursues its first Finals championship, anchored by Arianne Olson – the individual runner-up last season as a freshman.

Individuals: Although Dudek graduated, 14 of last season’s top 20 finishers will reload the field. Following Olson and Flynn last year was Saline now-junior Madi Wood in fourth and Birmingham Seaholm now-senior Audrey DaDamio in fifth, with Novi now-senior Elizabeth Babcock in seventh.  Those five finished within 17 seconds of each other, and DaDamio’s season-best 17:16.40 is the second-fastest time in Division 1 this fall. Also back from last season’s top 20 are Forsyth, Plymouth junior Lauren Kiley (11th), Grand Rapids Ottawa Hills senior Madison Ebright (12th), Lake Orion senior Sophie Novak (13th), East Lansing senior Abbie Draheim (14th), McLean, Plymouth senior Londyn Swenson (18th), Northville senior Yasmine Mansi (19th) and Ottawa Hills’ junior Adit Dau (20th). Two more freshmen – Grand Rapids Forest Hills Central’s Clara James-Heer and Macomb Dakota’s Jayden Harberts – have posted times among the 10 fastest in Division 1 this fall.

Division 2

Reigning champion: East Grand Rapids
2019 runner-up: Petoskey
2020 top-ranked: 1. East Grand Rapids, 2. Petoskey, 3. Grand Rapids Christian

Like in Division 1, last season’s top finishers are expected to push for the championship again – East Grand Rapids for the third straight season and Petoskey attempting to win for the first time. The Pioneers won the race at the top in 2019 36-92, placing five of the top 14 individuals but graduating two last spring including champion Anna Petr. At the same time, freshman Drew Muller, junior Ainsley Workman and senior Hannah Bodine have posted times among the 11 fastest in Division 2; Bodine was seventh and Workman 10th at the Final last season. Petoskey senior Emma Squires has the fastest time in Division 2 (17:26.70), with senior Cambrie Smith fifth (18:07,60), senior Sarah Liederbach 12th and junior Noel Vanderwall 13th – Squires was fifth at the 2019 Final, Liederbach was 20th and Vanderwall was 27th. Grand Rapids Christian finished 12th last season but has three titles and a runner-up finish over the last decade and one of the fastest individuals in junior Madelyn Frens, who edged Muller by just more than a second at their league’s championship race and was sixth at her most recent Finals in 2018.

Individuals: Squires, Bodine and Workman are the only top-10 finishers from 2019 back in the field, but six more return who came in 13-20th – Plainwell sophomore Grace Pettit (13th), Whitehall junior Ryann Jibson (15th), Lansing Catholic sophomore Hannah Pricco (16th), Freeland junior Kiera Hansen (17th), Otsego junior Joy Wolfe (18th) and Liederbach, with two more currently scratched for this weekend's race. Cadillac junior Kendall Schopieray was 47th last year but has the sixth-fastest time in Division 2 this fall. A trio of freshmen as well should make a massive impact on the individual standings: Muller, along with Mason’s Meghan Ford and Frankenmuth’s Mary Richmond. Ford’s best of 17:36.40 ranks second in Division 2 this season, and Richmond’s best is seventh on the list. Shepherd senior Madde Skeel, who ran 20th in Division 3 last season, also is in this field. 

Division 3

Reigning champion: Hart
2019 runner-up: Shepherd
2020 top-ranked: 1. Hart, 2. Grandville Calvin Christian, 3. Benzie Central

Hart is hoping to become the fourth Lower Peninsula girls cross country program to win four consecutive Finals, and the Pirates remain formidable coming off a Regional where they took the top four places. Freshman Alyson Enns (17:46.75) ranks fifth on the list of fastest Division 3 times this fall, with senior Savannah Ackley (4th), junior Audrienna Enns (5th) and senior Lynae Ackley (14th) the team’s top three finishers from last season’s impressive win. Calvin Christian is looking to make a jump from third last season, when now-junior Leanne Krombeen led the way with a 19th-place individual finish. Senior teammate Catherine Kortman also has been among Division 3’s fastest this fall. Benzie Central was seventh last season and is led by standout freshman Mylie Kelly joining four of the team’s top five Finals finishers from 2019.

Individuals: A fast returning field will be bolstered even more by another two-time champion. Stockbridge junior Rylee Tolson won Division 3 last season and is back, and Muskegon Western Michigan Christian junior Abby VanderKooi is in Division 3 this weekend after winning Division 4 the last two years. She has the fastest Division 3 time this fall at 16:48.71. Ithaca junior Lani Bloom, Roscommon junior Allison Chmielewski and Jackson Lumen Christi junior Faith Smith have the next three fastest times, respectively, and the finished 18th, third and 22nd in 2019. Other top-20 finishers from last season running again are Boyne City sophomore Ava Maginity (7th), Harbor Springs junior Maye Burns (8th), St. Louis  junior Libby Munderloh (10th), New Lothrop junior Clara Krupp (11th), Reed City senior Abbigail Kiaunis (13th) and Kent City senior Layla Martini (16th). Bridgman senior Karsyn Stewart, who set the pace for her team's Division 4 championship last fall by coming in sixth, is running in Division 3 as well.

Division 4

Reigning champion: Bridgman
2019 runner-up: Mount Pleasant Sacred Heart
2020 top-ranked: 1. Lansing Christian, 2. Hillsdale Academy, 3. Beal City

Lansing Christian and Hillsdale Academy are running for what would be a first championship, while Beal City is hoping to add a third after topping Division 4 back-to-back in 2013 and 2014. The Pilgrims didn’t qualify for the Finals as a team last season, but did enjoy a third-place individual finish from now-senior Madison Volz, a 20th by now-sophomore Ashlyn Kephart and a 35th place by now-senior Natalie Tebben. Those three rank among the top 19 in Division 4 this fall. Hillsdale Academy is looking to move up from fourth in 2019 with sophomore Megan Roberts again among the division’s fastest after placing 22nd individually a year ago. The Aggies will follow a speedy 1-2 punch of sophomore Kaylee Locke and junior Rachal Weber, who crossed eighth and 10th, respectively, last season as the team finished 17th. Sophomore Tailor Onstott also has run among the leaders this season.

Individuals: This field opens up with VanderKooi running in Division 3. Volz is the highest-placing returnee and also finished second in Division 4 as a sophomore and fifth as a freshman. Maple City Glen Lake junior Makenna Scott (18:42.84) has the fastest time in Division 4 this fall and finished fourth at the 2019 Final, and Buckley freshman Aiden Harrand (18:43.07) surely will be in the mix with the second-fastest time in Division 4, just ahead of the best by Volz (18:47.37). Concord senior Skylar Thompson was fifth last season and ranks fifth on this year’s fastest times list, with Westland Huron Valley sophomore Erika Van Loton fourth this season and coming off a seventh-place 2019 finish. Also back from last season’s top 20 are Mayville senior Haley Rowbotham (9th), Sacred Heart sophomore Olivia Ervin (12th), Gaylord St. Mary freshman Miriam Murrell (14th), Brethren senior Alexis Tracy (15th) and Harbor Beach senior Makara Kramer (19th).

PHOTO: Petoskey's Emma Squires (1427) leads a pack through the middle of last season's Division 2 championship race at Michigan International Speedway. (Click for more from RunMichigan.com.)