Preview: Reigning Champs Set High Bar
March 7, 2018
By Geoff Kimmerly
Second Half editor
There’s a chance at this weekend’s MHSAA Gymnastics Finals for the reigning champion to become only the fourth school in state history to win four straight titles in the sport.
There’s also a chance we’ll celebrate a team winning for the first time in a dozen years or more.
Rockford, this weekend’s host, can clinch a fourth straight team championship at Friday’s Team Final. But 11 other contenders have an intriguing opportunity – Rockford, Canton, Grand Ledge and Holt are the only teams to win the title over the last 11 seasons, and the latter three aren’t in the field this time.
Saturday’s Individual Finals present some similar opportunities. The top six finishers in Division 1 from last season either graduated or will not be competing. Three of the top four won’t be back in Division 2 – although Farmington United senior Elisa Bills will return and attempt to repeat as champion.
Team competition begins at 2 p.m. Friday, with the final rotation scheduled for 6:40 p.m. Individual competition in both Divisions 1 and 2 begins at noon Saturday.
Below is a glance at a number of contenders, both team and individual, who could work into the mix this weekend. Click for rotation schedules for both days of competition.
Team Contenders
Farmington United – Farmington won its Regional at Walled Lake Central with a score of 145.775 and will be looking to move up from fourth place at last season’s Final – and can boast a few more impressive wins this winter as well. Farmington won the 20-team Jeanne Caruss Invitational at White Lake Lakeland, and at the start of February won the Canton Invitational against a field including most of the top teams in the state.
Linden-Fenton-Lake Fenton – This co-op team earned its first trip to the MHSAA Team Final with a Regional title last weekend and record score of 143.575. In addition to claiming that title at Grand Ledge, LFLF won the Lakes Valley Conference championship and the Holt Invitational at the start of this season.
Livonia Blue – After finishing 10th at last season’s Team Final, Livonia could make a big jump after an especially strong final month of the regular season. Blue won its Regional at Canton with a 146.225, the highest Regional score in the state this season. It also won the overall league championship in the Kensington Lakes Activities Association – which has six of the 12 teams at this weekend’s competition.
Northville – A series of second places makes Northville look like a team ready to contend for first Friday. The Mustangs finished runner-up at the Holt Invitational, Caruss Invitational and Canton Invitational, plus at the Regional at Walled Lake Central with a score of 141.850. They did win the KLAA Black championship, and should rise from last season’s ninth-place finish at the Team Final.
Rockford – Only three years ago, Rockford won its first MHSAA team gymnastics title since 1989. Now the Rams are on the verge of a dynasty. Rockford will attempt to win a fourth consecutive title with a third coach during this run – first-year leader Michelle Ankney – and no seniors but with a strong group that has had plenty of success. Rockford won its Flip-Flop Invitational, Lowell’s Red Arrow Invitational and the Grand Rapids Kenowa Hills Invitational. The Rams also won their Regional at Kenowa Hills last week with a score of 145.600.
Division 1
Hannah Biesbrock, Grand Rapids Forest Hills sophomore – In her first year of high school gymnastics, Biesbrock won the Regional championship at Kenowa Hills with an all-around score of 35.325 and first places in bars (8.8) and beam (8.875).
Nicole Bragg, Hartland junior – Bragg finished second at her Regional at Grand Ledge with an all-around 35.225 and a first place on vault (8.975).
Lydia Bouma, Grand Rapids Forest Hills senior – Last year’s Division 2 runner-up on vault is competing in Division 1 this time and won vault (9.325) at the Kenowa Hills Regional while finishing third all-around at 34.300.
Emily Caragay, Plymouth senior – Caragay finished 10th at least season’s Division 1 Finals and came in second all-around at last week’s Regional at Canton at 35.850.
Laine Cook, Jackson Lumen Christi senior – After winning the Regional all-around at Grand Ledge by nearly a point at 36.200, Cook could should improve on last season’s 16th-place Finals finish.
Aniessa Conway, Livonia Blue junior – After missing the all-around top 10 by a tenth of a point last season, Conway should be in the title mix coming off the Regional championship at Canton (36.575).
Cate Gagnier, Grosse Pointe United freshman – After graduating a Division 1 standout last spring, GPU has another starting her high school career with Gagnier winning vault (9.5) and beam (9.325) while placing second all-around at Walled Lake Central with a 36.500.
Elizabeth Maurer, Grand Ledge freshman – She finished fourth all-around at the Regional her school hosted, with a 9.6 to win floor that would have placed fourth at last season’s Final.
Erin McCallum, Northville senior – McCallum improved from 17th all-around as a sophomore to seventh in Division 1 last season, and enters her final weekend of high school competition after finishing third all-around at Walled Lake Central at 35.700.
Eve Petrie, East Lansing senior – The Regional champion on beam at Grand Ledge, Petrie scored 9.425, which would have placed third at last season’s Final.
Hallie Roman, Port Huron United senior – Also a Finals-qualifying diver during the fall, Roman could make a big move from finishing 12th last year after winning the Walled Lake Central Regional with an all-around 36.650 and first places on bars (9.075) and floor (9.475).
Paige Sanders, Plymouth senior – Last season’s Division 1 Finals runner-up on beam competed in three events at last week’s Canton Regional and won two scoring a 9.8 on floor and 9.550 on beam; she also was a Finals placer last spring in long jump.
Division 2
Reagan Ammon, Rockford junior – After placing 13th at last season’s Division 2 Final, Ammon is among favorites coming off a Regional win at Kenowa Hills; she scored 36.400 all-around and finished first on bars (8.85) and beam (9.375).
Elisa Bills, Farmington United senior – The reigning Division 2 champion also took first in beam, floor and vault last season. She returned from an injury this season to win the Regional at Walled Lake Central with a 36.900 and first places on vault (9.45) and bars (9.15).
Morgan Case, Rockford sophomore – Case took second on floor in Division 2 last season and is an all-around contender this time. She finished second to Ammon at the Regional with a score of 36.375 and first places on floor (9.55) and vault (9.5).
Ashley Faulkner, Rockford junior – Faulkner tied for 10th all-around in Division 2 last season and took fourth among four teammates at the Kenowa Hills Regional last week with a score of 35.475.
Nicole Graham, Huron Valley freshman – Graham would’ve qualified for all four events after finishing eighth of better in each at the Walled Lake Central Regional, but she also qualified all-around finishing third at 35.750.
Riley Fisher, Salem junior – Fisher scored 35.400 to win the Regional at Canton with second places on floor and beam; she tied for 17th on floor at last season’s Finals.
Taylor Gillespie, Howell sophomore – Gillespie was fifth in Division 2 all-around last season and should be in the mix again; she finished runner-up at the Grand Ledge Regional with a 36.450 and a first place on vault (9.5).
Blake Hutchings, Linden-Fenton-Lake Fenton senior – Hutchings tied for seventh on floor at last year’s Division 2 Finals, but could be a candidate all-around after winning the Grand Ledge Regional at 36.700 with first places on floor (9.675) and bars (9.0).
Chantal Lokers, Rockford junior – Last season’s ninth-place Division 2 all-around finisher – and third-place finisher on beam – was third among teammates and overall at the Kenowa Hills Regional last week.
Kacey Noseworthy, Farmington United junior – After missing last season’s Finals with an injury, Noseworthy should be among high placers Saturday coming in second to teammate Bills (36.775) at their Regional with first places on beam (9.150) and floor (9.550).
Emily Stecevic, Farmington United senior – Last season’s sixth-place all-around finisher in Division 2 will compete on floor Saturday after finishing second (9.5) at the Walled Lake Central Regional in that event.
Maddie Vernon, Brighton sophomore – After tying for 10th place as a freshman, Vernon is another who could be on the rise; she finished third all-around at Grand Ledge with a score of 35.725.
PHOTO: Farmington United’s Elisa Bills performs her floor exercise routine during last season’s Division 2 Finals. (Click for more from HighSchoolSportsScene.com.)
Rockford Shows Skill Across Every Event in Reclaiming Team Title
By
Keith Dunlap
Special for MHSAA.com
March 11, 2022
WHITE LAKE – There was definitely a different routine for Rockford before the actual routines began for the 2022 MHSAA Team Gymnastics Final on Friday at Lakeland High School.
For the first time since 2014, Rockford didn’t play host to the event.
So instead of coming to its home gym and trying to help set everything up, the Rams instead went through a bus trip and the process of getting acclimated to a new environment.
But that wasn’t necessarily a bad thing.
“I think it helped,” Rockford senior Anna Tracey said. “It allowed us to have some team bonding before we got to the meet. We just talked to each other and had fun.”
Indeed, Rockford did just fine away from home, reclaiming the championship throne by edging Grand Ledge. The Rams had 143.825 points to Grand Ledge’s total of 143.500.
After finishing as Final runner-up in 2019 and 2021 (the 2020 meet was cancelled due to COVID-19), Rockford won its first title since claiming the last of three in a row in 2017.
“We always want it, and we always are hopeful for it,” Rockford head coach Michele Ankney said. “We knew we were in the running this year. We weren’t sure where we would line up in the end. Gymnastics is a fickle sport sometimes.”
Rockford was the only team to have at least one top-four finish in every event, starting off by scoring third in the floor exercise.
Following a fourth-place finish in the bars and a third-place finish on the vault, the Rams saved their best for their last event, finishing first on the beam.
Leading the way was junior Lacey Scheid, who had a 9.550 on the floor, a 9.400 on the vault, a 9.100 on the bars and a 9.525 on the beam.
Tracey had a 9.175 on the floor, an 8.975 on the vault, an 8.850 on the bars and a 9.525 on the beam to flank Scheid for Rockford.
“We started strong,” Ankney said. “Our floor and bars were solid. And then we had a few mistakes on bars and beam and we didn’t know what that was going to do to us. This is 100 percent surprise right here.”
Traditional power Grand Ledge was seeking its first title since winning the last of six in a row in 2013, and the Comets finished first in both the floor and vault.
But a seventh-place finish in the beam and a sixth-place finish on the bars proved to be Grand Ledge’s undoing.
“We normally score higher on bars and a lot higher on beam,” longtime Comets head coach Duane Haring said. “Just nerves. I guess I’d be nervous too. But they did really well. Second place is nothing to sneeze at.”
The highest Metro Detroit finisher was Livonia Red, which took third with 142.950 points.
Brighton was fourth at 141.000, while Salem rounded out the top five with 140.825 points.
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