Jenison Will Smile: 'That's What Syd Would Want'

August 21, 2019

By Dean Holzwarth
Special for Second Half

JENISON – The Jenison girls golf team is playing with heavy hearts this season.

Teammates and coaches are mourning the loss of the Wildcats’ No. 1 player, Sydney Carfine, who would have been a senior this fall.

The 17-year-old Carfine was tragically killed on the night of June 14 in a two-car crash in Ottawa County.

“It was like disbelief, like this can’t be real,” Jenison girls golf coach Linda Reimink said. “I was up north, and I knew that I had to get home and get together with our team. It was very emotional and just devastating for everyone.”

Carfine’s death shook the Jenison community and took its toll on her teammates, who had to deal with the loss of their fun-loving, outgoing and talented teammate.

“It was definitely hard for all of us, and the day after we got together to see each other and talk about it,” senior Amanda Smaby said. “I think as a team we’ve come together more because of it because we all loved Syd, and it’s making our season more meaningful.

“We’re looking at it as inspiration instead of keeping us from having a great season because that’s what Syd would want. Just to enjoy golf because she made it fun and she loved golf.”

Carfine was expected to be a leader on this year’s squad, and was looking forward to her final year of high school.

“She sent a long text to the team at the end of the school year how this was going to be our year and how she wanted to do sweatshirts with last names, and we’re going to carry through on that,” Reimink said. “We also have smiley faces on our shirts in honor of Syd because that was her motto: ‘Just smile.’”

While Carfine’s unexpected death has been hard to comprehend, senior Sophie Hoekstra said she thinks of her often on the course.

“One way I cope with it is I just remember that she is watching over me,” she said. “When I make a bad putt, she’s up there laughing at me, and when I have a good shot I say in my head, ‘At least you were here to see it.’

“It’s not too different because I know that she’s still here, but at the same time it’s really different because we don’t get to see her smile or get our hugs anymore. She was always so positive and always made friends with everyone she was with.” 

Carfine began playing golf at a young age. Her mother, Jennifer, golfed at Michigan State University, and her late grandfather, Mike Mieras, was a PGA Professional at Hidden Valley Golf Course.

Carfine was a dedicated student of the game and worked hard to improve in all aspects.

She made the varsity team as a freshman at Byron Center and helped the Bulldogs reach the Lower Peninsula Division 2 Final.

Carfine moved and transferred to Jenison, where she emerged as one of the top players on the team and in the Ottawa-Kent Conference Black the past two seasons.

Despite her prowess on the golf course, Reimink said Carfine kept her sport in perspective and was dedicated to success in the classroom as well.

“She was really competitive, and when she got on the golf course she was competing, but also giggling about boys or something going on in school,” Reimink said. “It wasn’t all business, and she was way more than a golfer. She really cared about how well she did in school. When she had a freak out moment, it wasn’t about golf – it was about school. She was really committed and worked hard on her studies. She was very creative with her writing and art.”

Reimink said the team is doing its best to cope, but Carfine’s absence at practices has been noticeable.

“I think all the girls internally have handled it differently, but Amanda and Sydney always had individual competitions and that competitive nature against someone on the team she is going to miss big time,” Reimink said. “I feel like in practices, (Sydney) was really focused on her game, and we’re going to miss that. She was such a competitor and had big hopes for a really good year.”

Smaby said Carfine brought out the best in her and her teammates.

“It’s definitely a different environment now without her because she always added so much and was the leader of our team,” she said. “She always gave us a passion to want to do better, and she would make practices fun.

“She was the one we could talk to about anything. She made jokes and made everything a little lighter mood. It’s sad to think about, but the impact she made on our team and our program was just incredible.”

After struggling through back issues as a sophomore, Carfine qualified as an individual for the Division 1 Final last season and had aspirations to play golf in college.

“Her junior year, that was her number one goal,” Reimink said. “To get back to state.”

Carfine was honored last week during play at the annual Jenison Invitational. It was renamed as the Sydney Carfine Memorial Tournament.

There will be a moment of silence for Carfine at the Wildcats’ home football game Sept. 6.

Dean Holzwarth covered primarily high school sports for the Grand Rapids Press and MLive for 16 years and more recently served as sports editor of the Ionia Sentinel and as a sports photojournalist for WZZM. Contact him at[email protected] with story ideas for Allegan, Kent and Ottawa counties.

PHOTOS: (Top) Jenison’s Sydney Carfine would have been a senior this fall. (Middle) The Jenison girls golf team stands together last season, including Carfine, far left. (Photos courtesy of the Jenison girls golf program.)

3-Time Finals Champ Cherishes Memories, Considering Golf Future

By Keith Dunlap
Special for MHSAA.com

August 3, 2022

Golf has been a major part of Katy Nightwine’s past – and it could be a big part of her future.

But at the present time, there’s something more important to tend to that’s putting golf on the backburner.

Close to three decades after making history as a golfer at Ann Arbor Pioneer, much of Nightwine’s time and energy these days is as a stay-at-home mom raising her 2-year-old son Henry with her husband Bryan.

But even while doing that, it’s hard to get golf completely out of her mind, as she’s already trying to plant a seed with her son.

“He enjoys putting the ball on the tee,” Nightwine said. “We’re happy with that progress.”

If the little guy starts fully getting into the game, he’ll be hard-pressed to find a better mentor than his mother.

Katy NightwineNearly 30 years ago Nightwine, then Katy Loy, made history by becoming the first to win three straight MHSAA Girls Golf Finals individual titles in the highest classification/division when she claimed three consecutive crowns in Lower Peninsula Class A.

Nightwine said she grew up on a golf course in Dexter (now closed), which is where she learned the game and grew a passion for it.

“I liked going to golf more than I liked going to swim practice,” she said. “It became that thing I did with my dad after work. The weekends would be spent golfing, and that became my favorite place to be.”

Nightwine won the Class A title in 1993 as a sophomore, and then repeated as a junior in 1994.

She remembers going into her senior year with a lot of people talking about whether she could make it three in a row, but it didn’t put any more pressure on her than she’d already put on herself.

“If I didn’t get it then, that was going to be the blemish,” Nightwine said. “It had so much more meaning than it being the third time, but let’s cap it off and really give me something to remember.”

In her words, it “wasn’t looking so good,” for Nightwine on the front nine during the last round of the Final in 1995, but she turned it around on the back nine at Michigan State’s Forest Akers West to claim her third-straight title.

From there, Nightwine went on to the University of Michigan and was named Freshman of the Year in the Big Ten in 1996.

Due to a desire to play in warmer weather and more prestigious tournaments, Nightwine transferred after her freshman year to the University of Kentucky, where she finished out her collegiate career.

Nightwine turned professional after college and played in a futures tour, but a back injury ultimately led her to quit playing professionally.

Katy NightwineShe worked as a golf instructor here and there. But in 2008, Nightwine started focusing on what she said was her other passion: Baking.

She opened up a pastry shop in Ann Arbor and continued in that business for 10 years before her family decided in 2018 to sell the property where the bakery was located to a company that repurposed it.

Now, Nightwine is fully entrenched in the business of being a mom and raising her son, but is hoping for a golfing revival in the future.

When her son gets older, she’s thinking about getting back into golf instruction or doing something else in the industry.

If nothing else, she wants to at least get back to playing consistently again.

“To see where my swing is at and go from there,” she said.

Regardless of what the future holds in the sport, Nightwine will always own a piece of state golf history, something she cherishes to this day.

“I will always be involved with golf, especially if (my son) takes a liking to it,” she said. “I have such fond memories of people I met.”

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PHOTOS (Top) At left, Katy Loy watches a drive during the 1994 Lower Peninsula Girls Golf Final. At right, Loy, now Nightwine, with her husband Bryan. (Middle) Katy Nightwine takes a swing at the driving range. (Below) Katy and Bryan Nightwine. (1994 Finals photo courtesy of Ann Arbor News/MLive; current photos courtesy of Katy Nightwine.)