2021 Champs Make Up for 2020's Lost Opportunities

By Dean Holzwarth
Special for MHSAA.com

March 27, 2021

ROCKFORD – Lizzie Maurer’s 2020 bid for an all-around gymnastics championship was cut short as the pandemic ended last season prematurely. 

The Grand Ledge senior had one more shot at achieving her goal at Saturday’s MHSAA Individual Finals at Rockford High School – and she made the most of it. 

Maurer claimed the Division 1 individual all-around championship with a total score of 37.450 across her four events.

She clipped Rockford sophomore Lacey Sheid, who finished with a 37.400.

Farmington United senior Sydney Schultz won the all-around in Division 2 with a score of 37.000, while Rockford’s Anna Tracey (35.775) placed runner-up.

Individual Gymnastics Finals 2

Maurer placed fourth in the Division 1 all-around two years ago and was looking forward to her final chance.

“Ever since my freshman year, my coach and I kind of knew that I had the potential to win,” Mauer said. “And after having that taken away from me last year with COVID and everything, I really wanted to come in this year and try my hardest to fight for that top spot.”

Maurer won three of the four events. She took top honors in the floor exercise by producing a career-best score (9.8) and also won vault (9.525) while tying Livonia Stevenson’s Autumn Wronikowski on the balance beam as both scored a 9.575. 

The beam gave Maurer troubles in the team competition Friday night, as she fell, but she redeemed herself in victorious fashion.

She also overcame a minor injury on her first rotation of the day.

“I had a pretty bad bar rotation and I injured my elbow, so we weren’t sure how I was going to do,” Maurer said. “It was a rough way to start the meet, but I’m really proud of how I did on everything.

“I stayed on the beam and won, and on floor I had my highest score in my gymnastics career. I hit my first 9.8 so that really got me motivated to do vault.”

Maurer knew she needed a high score in that final event.

“We were looking at other people’s scores and saw I needed that 9.5 to win,” she said. “I just really ran into that vault, and sticking it I think was the highlight because it was the end of my career and it’s what won the meet for me.”

Scheid topped the field in the beam with a score of 9.650 and was runner-up to Maurer in the floor exercise. 

“I was so happy with my bars,” Scheid said. “I have not hit a good bar routine in a while. I didn’t hit my feet on my bail and I almost stuck my double, so I was super proud of it.”

Individual Gymnastics Finals 3A tough beam effort prevented Scheid from overtaking Maurer.

“I’m a little disappointed because of my beam performance,” she said. “If I would’ve stayed on the beam I could’ve won, but that’s OK. I’m super proud of how I did and super proud of who won because she did an amazing job.” 

Scheid was making her debut appearance at the Finals.

“This was my first state meet because I had never done high school gymnastics, so my expectations were very low,” Scheid said. “I just wanted to get a feel of the environment and what to expect. My goal was to not win, it was to have fun and stay calm. I hope I can carry that throughout to senior year.”

Schultz notched high scores on the vault (9.450) and bars (9.225). She tied for third on floor (9.125).

“I just tried to take one event at a time,” Schultz said. “I was just trying to keep my cool, I guess.”

Schultz finished sixth in the all-around at the 2019 Finals.

“I was just happy that I kept a positive attitude through all of it,” Schultz said. “I have a hard time with that sometimes.”

Tracey, a junior, snagged the beam title with a score of 9.375. Jackson’s Addi Richmond won the Division 2 floor exercise with a 9.325.

Click for full Division 1 and Division 2 results.

PHOTOS: (Top) Grand Ledge's Lizzie Maurer performs her beam routine during Saturday's Division 1 Individual Finals. (Middle) Rockford/Sparta's Lacey Sheid performs her floor exercise routine. (Below) Farmington United's Sydney Schultz also performs on floor. (Click for more from HighSchoolSportsScene.com.)

2022 Runners-Up Climb Final Step to Give Grand Ledge Individual Title Sweep

By Keith Dunlap
Special for MHSAA.com

March 11, 2023

WHITE LAKE — Grand Ledge senior Alaina Yaney came agonizingly close to winning an MHSAA Finals individual title last year.

And if you think that wasn’t on her mind for a full year, think again. 

Yaney said she had notes written throughout her room in a quest to be better than a half-tenth of a point – the margin between her and 2022 first-place finisher Morgan Ruffing of Livonia Red.

“It was on my mind every single day at practice, and it motivated me to work harder,” Yaney said. “It was just one little toe point, and I knew that I could do it and I was very close. I had many things in my room reminding me to work harder.”

The top Division 1 individual champions are recognized Saturday, including champion Alaina Yaney, far left, from Grand Ledge.Instead of notes, Yaney will now have a Finals championship medal to display.

Yaney earned her redemption after a year’s wait, this time walking out of Lakeland High School as the Division 1 individual champion Saturday. 

Yaney finished with an all-around score of 38.075, ahead of Ruffing and Emma Stewart of Salem, who tied for second with identical scores of 37.925. 

Lacey Scheid of Friday’s team champion Rockford was fourth at 37.450, while Howell’s Maria Petru rounded out the top five at 37.375. 

For Yaney, her day broke down like this: 

Floor exercise. Yaney opened up in this event, and took second with a score of 9.575. “My mindset was to just go in calm, dominate and do what I knew I could do,” Yaney said. Ruffing won with a score of 9.800. 

 Up next for Yaney was this event, where she finished first with a score of 9.700. Stewart was second with a 9.575. “That is best my event,” Yaney said. “I just knew if I did what I know how to do, I would be fine.”

Bars. In her third event, Yaney finished third with a score of 9.325. Stewart was first with a 9.500, while Ruffing was second with a 9.425. “I was nervous because I had to make my new skill in order to get the score I needed,” Yaney said. 

ydia Beaton competes on vault for the Comets, on the way to finishing first.Beam. When Yaney got to her final event, she knew good scores in her previous three put her on the cusp of the title. “I just had to stay calm and focus and be confident that I could do it,” Yaney said. “I knew I was having good scores throughout the day, so it helped me stay calm.” Yaney delivered with a first-place finish, earning a score of 9.475. Stewart was second with a 9.400, and Scheid was third with a 9.350. 

Vault.Yaney wasn’t the only Grand Ledge gymnast to leave with an individual title and redemption. 

Teammate Lydia Beaton won the Division 2 competition with an all-around score of 36.650, finishing ahead of Coldwater’s Charlotte Calhoun, who had a 36.275. 

Grace Spencer of Farmington United was third with a 35.825. 

As was the case with Yaney in Division 1, Beaton was the runner-up last year in Division 2. 

“I felt really confident,” Beaton said. “I woke up in the hotel room and I was like, ‘I’m going to win. I’m going to come in strong.’ I believed in myself.”

Beaton finished first in the vault (9.450) and the beam (9.575). 

Yaney and Beaton’s titles helped Grand Ledge make up for what was a lower finish than usual at Friday’s team event, where the Comets finished in eighth place. 

“I just knew they had a chance,” Grand Ledge head coach Duane Haring said. “All we talked about all day was to focus. If you focus, you could be there at the end. And they were there at the end. I’m so proud of them.”

Click for full results.

PHOTOS (Top) Grand Ledge's Alaina Yaney competes on the uneven parallel bars; she finished third on that apparatus. (Middle) The top Division 1 individual finishers are recognized Saturday, including champion Alaina Yaney, far left, from Grand Ledge. (Below) Lydia Beaton competes on vault for the Comets, on the way to finishing first. (Click for more from High School Sports Scene.)