Leinaar to be Inducted into NIAAA Hall of Fame during National ADs Conference

By Geoff Kimmerly
MHSAA.com senior editor

December 15, 2023

Frankfort’s Karen Leinaar – one of the most active and influential administrators over the century-long history of the MHSAA – will receive deserved national recognition Tuesday with her induction into the National Interscholastic Athletic Administrators Association (NIAAA) Hall of Fame during the closing banquet of the 54th National Athletic Directors Conference in Orlando.

Leinaar is in her fifth school year as executive director of the Michigan Interscholastic Athletic Administrators Association (MIAAA) – the state’s professional organization for school sports administrators – and served as an athletic administrator at five schools over four decades through this spring. She also served 22 years on the MHSAA’s Representative Council and from 2009-13 on the Board of Directors for the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS).

She first served as athletic director at Delton Kellogg for nearly 17 years, from March 1982 through October 1998. She spent three years at Gaylord, then 8½ at Benzie Central before taking over at Bear Lake in November 2010 and spending the next decade organizing athletic programs for students in grades 5-12 before retiring in January 2021. She returned to serve as interim AD at Frankfort for the 2022-23 school year.

Leinaar has been honored several times for her contributions, most recently with the MHSAA’s Charles E. Forsythe Award for a lifetime of contributions to school sports. She also received the MHSAA’s Women In Sports Leadership Award in 1998, a Citation from the NFHS in 2000, was named MIAAA Athletic Director of the Year in 2001 and received an MHSAA’s Allen W. Bush Award in 2014.

A multiple-sport standout while attending Delton Kellogg High School, Leinaar graduated in 1977 and then earned a bachelor’s degree in physical education, health and recreation, with a minor in driver education, from Michigan State University in 1982. She completed a master’s in athletic administration from Western Michigan University in 1994.

The NADC banquet begins at 6 p.m. Tuesday and will be streamed live on the NFHS Network at no cost. Click to watch.

PHOTOS Frankfort’s Karen Leinaar accepts the 2023 Charles E. Forsythe Award from Grand Haven superintendent and MHSAA Representative Council president Scott Grimes during the Division 1 Boys Basketball Final in March.

MHSAA ‘AD Connection Program’ Debuts with Start of 2023-24 School Year

By Geoff Kimmerly
MHSAA.com senior editor

August 7, 2023

A first-of-its-kind mentorship program is greeting more than 100 first-time high school athletic directors who are officially beginning their tenures at Michigan High School Athletic Association member schools with the start of the 2023-24 school year.

The “AD Connection Program” has matched those first-year high school athletic directors with one of eight mentors who have recently retired from the field and will now provide assistance as those new administrators transition to this essential role in school sports.

A total of 102 first-year high school athletic directors are beginning at MHSAA schools, meaning a new athletic administrator will be taking over at nearly 14 percent of the 750 member high schools across the state. Athletic director turnover at MHSAA high schools has reached 10 percent or more annually over the last few years, and it’s hoped that this additional mentorship will support athletic directors adjusting to the high pace and responsibilities of the position for the first time.

The AD Connection Program will build on training received at the required in-service program all new athletic directors must attend each fall. There is also a strong connection to programming from the Michigan Interscholastic Athletic Administrators Association (MIAAA), the professional development organization for the state’s athletic administrators.

"When you crystalize it, the AD Connection Program is an attempt for us to give a true year-long in-service to new athletic directors with people who have done it,” said MHSAA Assistant Director Brad Bush, who is coordinating the program and joined the MHSAA staff in January after more than two decades as an athletic administrator at Chelsea High School. “This also connects new ADs with a larger professional group, and it will culminate in March at the annual MIAAA conference, where there will be several face-to-face meetings with all ADs.

“These mentors are meant to become that first-year AD’s go-to person.”

Mentors will conduct frequent meetings with their cohorts. They also will meet monthly (or more) with each first-time athletic director individually via zoom, and at least once during the academic year face-to-face at the mentee’s school.

The eight mentors, noting their most recent schools as an athletic director, are Chris Ervin (most recently at St. Johns), Brian Gordon (Royal Oak), Sean Jacques (Calumet), Tim Johnston (East Grand Rapids), Karen Leinaar (Frankfort), Scott Robertson (Grand Haven), Meg Seng (Ann Arbor Greenhills) and Wayne Welton (Chelsea). Leinaar also will serve as the AD Connection Program’s liaison to the MIAAA, which she serves as executive director.

High school practices at MHSAA member schools may begin today, Monday Aug. 7, for the nine fall sports for which the MHSAA sponsors a postseason tournament. The AD Connection Program was approved by the MHSAA Representative Council during its annual Winter Meeting on March 24.

The MHSAA is a private, not-for-profit corporation of voluntary membership by more than 1,500 public and private senior high schools and junior high/middle schools which exists to develop common rules for athletic eligibility and competition. No government funds or tax dollars support the MHSAA, which was the first such association nationally to not accept membership dues or tournament entry fees from schools. Member schools which enforce these rules are permitted to participate in MHSAA tournaments, which attract more than 1.3 million spectators each year. 

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