Sacred Heart Completes Championship Chase
By
Pam Shebest
Special for MHSAA.com
June 4, 2016
KALAMAZOO — After cruising to an MHSAA tennis title last year, Bloomfield Hills Academy of the Sacred Heart eked out a one-point nail-biter over Traverse City St. Francis to repeat Saturday at Kalamazoo College’s Stowe Stadium.
It was the fourth Lower Peninsula Division 4 title in five years for the Gazelles.
“We’ve been chasing Traverse City all season,” Sacred Heart coach Judy Hehs said. “We lost to them in a dual meet early.
“We had to elevate our game in order to compete with them.”
St. Francis finished second with 27 points and Kalamazoo Hackett, with three individual champs, was third with 24 points.
Jackson Lumen Christi (22) was fourth, Ann Arbor Greenhills fifth (17) and Kalamazoo Christian sixth (16).
Hackett, which earned just one point at last year’s MHSAA Final, had winners at No. 1 singles (senior Kate Ketels), No. 2 singles (sophomore Natalie Moyer) and No. 4 doubles (juniors Kelsie Stewart and Maggie Wilson).
Getting so close to the title but losing was hard, St. Francis coach Paul Bandrowski said.
“One point, that is tough, but you can’t second guess,” he said. “We had a player that was injured and had to be replaced at 3 doubles.
“We had some three-setters that came down to the last seconds. We did really well. You can’t get much closer than that. We had at least one state champ in Rosie (Wilson).”
Although she played high school tennis as a freshman, Ketels instead played USTA tournaments the last two years.
Coming back to high school tennis, “It was definitely worth it,” said Ketels, who pulled out a tough 3-6, 6-2, 6-3 win over Kalamazoo Christian senior Lizzie Bauss for the No. 1 singles title.
“It was an awesome team. A lot of us are friends off the court, so we had a really good dynamic. It makes me more excited to go to Gonzaga (in the fall). Being on a team is a lot more fun; it’s a lot more rewarding.”
After dropping the first set, Ketels, the top seed, regrouped.
“Lizzie came out and played really well,” she said. “I was surprised to see that. I knew I had to play better if I wanted to win.
“My teammates really helped me a lot. Everyone was like ‘Come on Kate, you can do it.’ I don’t think I would have won if they weren’t there.
With their schools in the same conference, the two played each other five times this season with Ketels winning all five.
“Kate and I have grown up playing tennis in the same city all our lives, and we actually did not play each other until this year,” said Bauss, the second seed who will play tennis at Indiana Wesleyan in the fall.
“In the first set, I had a good set and she never really let down. She’s a tough player. I was getting a little tired and tried to keep going.”
Hackett coach Aaron Conroy juggled the lineup when Ketels joined the team.
“When you drop a girl the caliber of Kate Ketels at the top of your lineup, it moves everybody else down and that, in itself, is a pretty big deal,” he said.
“Even more so than that, this group of girls gelled well together, they had fun together, they hung out together. That’s what high school tennis is all about.”
At No. 2, top-seeded Moyer defeated K-Christian senior Audrey Bouma, 7-5, 6-1, in the final.
“She came out with different strategies this time and caught me off guard (in the first set), but I got it back,” said Moyer, who played No. 1 singles last year, earning the team’s only championship meet point.
Playing on the court next to Ketels helped, she said.
“We like to motivate each other,” Moyer said. “We look at each other and like, ‘Let’s go.’ Then we’ll pump each other up.”
The Hackett players were easy to spot around the stadium with their bright pink hats, even though their school colors are green and white.
“Last year, we wondered what we could do about hats, what will set us apart from everyone and give us our own little thing,” Moyer said. “We said pink looks pretty good with green and white, and everyone knows us as the Pink Hats now.”
Bouma, the second seed, won the No. 2 singles title last year.
“(Natalie’s) a very strong player, but I think I had a pretty good first set today,” Bouma said. “I played pretty hard. It was a good match.”
She said the key to their team’s success is, “Everyone really encourages each other to do their best, and we have some great coaches that put in a ton of time. Our team has a really positive attitude.”
Although Sacred Heart’s Elizabeth Etterbeek was the sixth seed at No. 2, she lost to Bouma in the semifinals, giving her team an unexpected point.
At No. 4, Sacred Heart’s Victoria Shahnazany was seeded fourth and lost to St. Francis senior Rosie Wilson, 7-5, 6-3, in the final, earning another unexpected point.
“Two singles played beyond her seed and lost in the semis,” Hehs said. “Victoria, our fourth singles, also played beyond her seed. I’d say those two really made a difference for us.”
Shahnazany said she has played Wilson, the third seed, before and knew what to expect.
“It’s been fun playing Rosie throughout the season,” the sophomore said. “She’s great competition, and I’m glad I had the chance to play her at states.
“I think I could have played better today, but I tried my best on the court and that’s what matters.”
Wilson said they have had some tough matches against each other.
“I knew this would be tough because we played each other twice already,” Wilson said. “I won both, but they were very close. I just knew it was going to be tough, but I had to keep going.”
At No. 3 singles, Sacred Heart senior Selina Fuchs, the second seed, defeated St. Francis sophomore Anne Bandrowski, the top seed, 6-3, 6-3.
“I couldn’t find my rhythm at first, and it’s something most tennis players struggle with,” Fuchs said. “After a while I started seeing how she worked. After that, it was good.”
Bandrowski recovered from a medical timeout in the third set to win her semifinal match.
In the semifinal, “My dad (who is the coach) gave me a pep talk and just told me to forget the last two sets and put it all out there,” to defeat Hackett sophomore Maggie Ketels, 6-4, 5-7, 6-1.
In the final, “I don’t think I played as well, but she was better, I think,” Bandrowski said. “She made a lot more balls.”
Lumen Christi senior Lauren Reynolds and sophomore Sela Clifford held their top seed at No. 1 doubles with a 3-6, 6-4, 6-3 win over St. Francis seniors Carlee McCardel and Jenna Tomczak, seeded second.
“When you come to a venue like this, we (Sacred Heart) needed Jackson Lumen Christi to win that one doubles match,” Hehs said. “That was a swing point.”
Being the top seeds “put an incredible amount of pressure, but it’s good,” Clifford said. “Pressure builds diamonds.
“In the third set, “We just ran with our momentum, and it just took us.”
Although this is their first year as doubles partners, “We work together, we always talk, we always stay up and we always communicate,” Reynolds said.
At No. 2 doubles, Sacred Heart seniors Abby Hildebrand and Gretchen Lemon, seeded second, defeated top seeds Bethany Richey, a senior, and Mary Margaret Sutherland, a sophomore, 6-2, 6-3.
Both Gazelles played singles last year and had a bit of a hard time adjusting to doubles.
“We’re fresh off the singles playing style,” Lemon said. “Coming together as two singles players was really rocky at first. Toward the end, we really found our playing style and found our niche.”
Hildebrand said the two take different styles to their matches.
“She’s really good at the net and I’m better back,” she said. “That really worked out well for us this year and helped us today.”
At No 3 doubles, Sacred Heart’s top seeds, Tate Lehman, a senior, and Kathryn Monahan, a sophomore, defeated St. Francis’ No. 2 seeds, senior Nichole Ehardt and junior A.J. Flannery, 7-5, 6-0.
Flannery started the season on the junior varsity but stepped up when junior Camille Madion was injured.
“It was definitely weird watching,” Madion said. “It was definitely the best for the team for me to be subbed out.”
Paul Bandrowski said: “AJ Flannery is a new player that started this year, played just a few matches. She got all the way to the finals, which was terrific.
”Camille was wonderful, She cheered the entire time, she gave 100 percent of her encouragement to the team and we really wanted to win it for her, too.”
At No. 4 doubles, Wilson and Stewart, the second seeds, defeated Sacred Heart top-seeded juniors Stella Betrus and Meghan Carroll, 4-6, 6-3, 6-4.
“We kept a positive energy the whole time,” Wilson said. “I don’t think we were pumped up enough for it (in the first set). I don’t think we had the right mindset, energy to really grind it out.
In the second set, “We talked to each other, talked to our coach Lizzie (Oosterbaan) and got really pumped up. We got a positive mindset and just grinded it out. (Winning the title) is even better than we thought.”
Stewart said their friendship extends off the court.
“We work really well together and we communicate really well together (on the court),” she said. “Beyond that, we’re just really good friends.”
PHOTOS: (Top) Kalamazoo Hackett's Katie Ketels returns a shot during her run to the No. 1 singles championship at Kalamazoo College. (Middle) Bloomfield Hills Academy of the Sacred Heart repeated as LP Division 4 champion. (Click to see more from HighSchoolSportsScene.com.)
Despite Rival's Return, Forest Hills Northern Completes Repeat Run
By
Tom Kendra
Special for MHSAA.com
June 4, 2022
HOLLAND – Last year was a breeze for the Grand Rapids Forest Hills Northern girls tennis team as it won the Lower Peninsula Division 2 championship by 14 points.
This year, with rival Birmingham Seaholm back from playing in Division 1, the Huskies knew they were in for another battle – which is why all of them took out a black Sharpie and wrote one word of motivation on their left forearm.
“We write FIGHT on our arms for a reason, because we never give up,” explained FHN senior Rhea Marwaha, who teamed with fellow senior Sophie Richards to knock off both of the top seeds to win the No. 1 doubles title.
“We knew this was our last hurrah, so we just decided to keep fighting and keep smiling.”
There were certainly plenty of smiling Huskies on Saturday at Hope College, after they outlasted Seaholm for their 11th Finals championship over the past 20 years.
Forest Hills Northern won with 34 points, with Seaholm right behind with 30 points – a full 12 ahead of the rest of the field, giving the end of the two-day tournament the feel of a dual match.
FHN and Seaholm squared off in all four of the doubles finals, with the Huskies winning first and second doubles and the Maples taking third and fourth. Ironically, neither school won a singles flight, but Northern was runner-up in all four, while Seaholm had no singles players reach the finals.
Mattawan placed third with 18 points as seniors Lizzie Novak and Romika Shokohi won the top two singles flights. Portage Central and Birmingham Groves tied for fourth with 17 points.
Seaholm, which was tied at the top with FHN after the first day with 24 points, needed to sweep the four doubles finals to have a chance. But Forest Hills Northern had other ideas.
Marwaha and Richards, seeded third at No. 1 doubles but the reigning champions at that flight, rode the momentum after downing second-seeded Portage Central in the semifinals to win an intense three-set match over top-seeded Madeleine Leo and Nina Graham of Seaholm in the final, 6-2, 3-6, 6-4.
“We lost to Seaholm earlier this year, but we knew exactly what we did wrong and we fixed it up,” explained Richards. “We wanted to win today for the team, and we really wanted to beat Seaholm.”
FHN also won No. 2 doubles with the duo of senior Isabella Paul and sophomore Ryan Morey.
While Marwaha and Richards were the “giant killers” for the Huskies in doubles, it was junior Miriam Ogilvie who played that role in singles.
Ogilvie, a junior who was seeded fifth at No. 4, made it all the way to the finals – stunning the top seed in three sets in the semifinals before losing in another three-setter in the final to second-seeded freshman Paula Martinez of Battle Creek Lakeview in the last match of the day.
“I had some really tough battles, and I proved to myself that I could stay intense the whole time,” said Ogilvie. “It feels great to know that I came through for my team.”
Ogilvie was one of four singles runners-up for FHN, and it was those extra points which proved to be the difference against Seaholm. Also placing second for the Huskies were seniors Abby Siminski (No. 1 singles), sophomore Nathalie Lanne (No. 2) and junior Anna Dinsmore (No. 3).
The Huskies reached the finals in all eight of the flights, an incredible showing of depth, which put a smile on the face of veteran coach David Sukup.
“It doesn’t get old, because the kids keep me young,” said Sukup, who has led the Huskies to three second-place Finals finishes over the past 20 years, to go along with the 11 titles. “I don’t know how much longer I’ll be doing this, but at this point, I’m on a one-year contract every year.”
Seaholm, which now has four Finals titles and four second-places over the past 10 years, pulled out a couple of big upsets in doubles over FHN to keep its title hopes alive.
Jane Wineman and Tatum Hirsch upset top-seeded FHN at No. 3 doubles, while the duo of Sydney Fong and Jenna Ting went three sets to do the same at No. 4 doubles – but, ultimately, the lack of presence in the singles finals proved costly for the Maples.
The top two singles flights belonged to the Mattawan, as Novak dispatched Siminski (6-1, 6-3) and Shokohi defeated Lanne (6-1, 6-0). Novak will play college tennis next year at the University of Richmond (Virg.), joining her older sister Kate (Bucknell) in the college ranks.
“Oh, we aren’t competitive at all,” Novak said with a laugh, when asked about playing against her sister. “We have good matches, but I think I can beat her.”
Portage Central junior Anna Dinsmore, the third seed at No. 3 singles, upset second-seeded Courtney Marcum of Seaholm in the semifinals, then knocked off top-seeded Andrea Wang of FHN in the final.
At No. 4 singles, Battle Creek Lakeview freshman Paula Martinez became a Finals flight champion by downing Ogilvie in the day’s final match, 7-6, 0-6, 6-2.
PHOTOS (Top) Grand Rapids Forest Hills Northern doubles teammates show their "FIGHT" during a match Saturday. (Middle) Mattawan's Lizzie Novak returns a volley during her No. 1 singles title match. (Below) FHN serves during another doubles match. (Click for more from High School Sports Scene.)