Highlight Reel: Ice Hockey Finals

March 14, 2015

By John Johnson
MHSAA Communications Director
 

This MHSAA hockey season came to a close Saturday with all three championships won by teams from the Michigan Interscholastic Hockey League. 

Click below for highlights from all three Finals, with one for each of the six teams that took the ice at Compuware Arena.

Division 1: Detroit Catholic Central 5 Grandville 2 

BANG-BANG BULLDOG GOALSGrandville got both of its goals 14 seconds apart. Jacob Baum on the power play, and Gianni Vitali on a scramble in front of the net closed the CC lead to 3-2.

BUT CC ANSWERS A power play gave Detroit Catholic Central an opportunity to quell the Grandville rally. Evan Rochowiak scores the first of his two goals a minute after the Bulldogs pulled close.

Watch the entire game and order DVDs by Clicking Here. 

Division 2: Birmingham Brother Rice 6, Livonia Stevenson 3

STEVENSON TIES IT UPLivonia Stevenson got two goals two minutes apart in the second period to tie the Division 2 Final at 2-2. Joe Alcantara scores for the Spartans on the deflection. 

PYC-ING UP THE REBOUNDBrendan Pyc put Birmingham Brother Rice on top to stay with two power play goals late in the third period. Here he scores his second on a rebound with 40 seconds left.

Watch the entire game and order DVDs by Clicking Here.

Division 3: Bloomfield Hills Cranbrook Kingswood 3, Houghton 0

CRANES LIGHT IT UP QUICKLY It took less than a minute for Bloomfield Hills Cranbrook Kingswood to get on the board in the Division 3 Final against Houghton. Mason Schultz goes top shelf on the rebound.

ADASKAVEG ADDS TO THE LEAD Cole Adaskaveg picks up the second goal for Cranbrook Kingswood with Sean O'Leary getting his second assist of the game on the play. 

Watch the entire game and order DVDs by Clicking Here

'Let Them Lead' Shows How Through Coach's Eyes During Huron Hockey's Rise

By John Johnson
MHSAA Communications Director emeritus

September 17, 2021

Over 30 years of riding shotgun with Jack Roberts, I quickly learned to respond whenever I was asked about the lifetime values of high school sports, with a laundry list with these two items at the top:

Let Them LeadHard Work - Team Work

In reviewing the newly-released book by Ann Arbor’s own John U. Bacon – “Let Them Lead, Unexpected Lessons in Leadership From America’s Worst High School Hockey Team” – everything flows from those two values all of us in prep sports hold near and dear.

I met John in 1997 when he was a sportswriter at The Detroit News, where he was covering his high school alma mater – Ann Arbor Huron – in the Class AA Football Final at the Pontiac Silverdome. Just a few years later, the story that holds the detailed leadership lessons together in this book would begin when he was named the head hockey coach at Huron, inheriting a team that finished the previous season 0-22-3.

Building everything he put into that team with the premises that no one would outwork the River Rats, and as a team they supported each other, Bacon’s charges rose from not even being listed in the national team winning percentage listings - about 1,000 schools - prior to his arrival, to a top-five spot in the state’s rankings in his fourth year.

Along the way, the buy-in to the leadership themes made Huron Hockey cool again at the school and earned the River Rats the respect of their opponents. The values being taught gave value to the program. In making it hard to be a part of the team, more kids wanted to join it. They valued the experience. They led and supported themselves on and off the ice.

With the book being written nearly 20 years after the events it is based on, Bacon solicited input from a variety of players to verify the accuracy of events, and they flooded him with additional stories of their own from their playing days and adult lives which illustrated the leadership skills they learned in the locker room, training sessions, practices and games.

Let Them LeadLike any book on leadership, you forge through those details about applying certain things in the workplace, but what keeps you engaged is the team. You’ve gotten hooked by the River Rats, and you just have to see how this thing turns out.

This feel-good tome resonates whether you’re a coach or a corporate type. It’s an easy read, and you'll take a lot from it.

John U. Bacon did play ice hockey for the River Rats, owning the distinction for playing the most games at the time he graduated – but also never scoring a goal. His writing, teaching and speaking career have produced seven books which have been national best sellers; he’s an established historian on a variety of topics – including the football program at University of Michigan, where he currently teaches; and he’s in demand as a public speaker.

Let Them Lead is published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, and available through a variety of bookstores.

PHOTOS (Top) Huron's hockey team runs the Michigan Stadium stairs in 2002. (Middle) "Let Them Lead" tells the story of the program's transformation. (Below) The River Rats celebrate their Turkey Tournament championship in 2001. (Photos courtesy of John U Bacon.)