Hannah Chase has had quite a season so far for the Alma girls bowling team, and she’s confident of having an even better ending.

It’s her senior year and her third varsity season. The past two seasons, she made it to the state finals, finishing in the top eight last season.

“I’ve done a lot better” this season, Chase said. “This whole summer, I was out practicing a lot more and focusing on that. I plan on going to college and bowling. I got accepted at Pikeville University [in Kentucky]. That’s where my sister [Rebecca Chase] went on a bowling scholarship. They want me to come down and bowl with the team. I have to get a hold of them and see what they have to offer.”

This season, Chase’s team has already won a tournament.

“I think some people underestimate our team,” she said. “We only have five girls. And a couple of them, it’s only their first or second year coming out. We have come together as a team. We can do anything.”

Alma went to the state finals as a team Chase’s sophomore season.

“We have a good chance [this season],” she said. “We just have to focus and keep our heads up. That’s something we have to work on. Once we get down, it’s hard to get back up.”

Chase’s top game has been a 255, and her average has been around 190.

“I really went and worked on spares,” she said. “Strikes are good, but at the end of the game…once I’ve been practicing my spares, my game has gotten better. I’m used to strikes a lot. As long as I work on my spares and keep that up, everything else is good.”

 It’s natural for Hannah to compare herself to Rebecca. “People have told me that if I go to Pikeville, I might do a little better because she’s more laid back and doesn’t like pressure, while I like pressure,” Hannah said. “When she was in high school, her average was a little lower than what mine is now.

“I’m really working on trying to keep my average and game up. The last couple of weeks haven’t been my best games.”

She’ll focus on bowling during the off-season. She also plays golf in the fall.

“It’s going to be close in conference this year,” she said, adding that St. Louis and Ithaca will be tough opponents. “I like to be under pressure.”

 

 

 If your name is Raymond Eddy, you must be a bowler.

The Eddy family continues to make a name for itself when it comes to bowling. The youngest bowler is Heritage High School team member Raymond IV.

Raymond IV’s great-grandfather and grandfather, Ray Eddy, Sr. and Ray Eddy, Jr., are in the Saginaw Bowling Hall of Fame. Ray Eddy III was recently inducted into the Michigan Majors Hall of Fame.

Ray Sr. “was the bowler, then I started bowling, then my brother, then my kids, and now my grandkids,” Ray Jr. said. He has won some “700” titles in Saginaw and various city tournament championships.

“My kids bowled at a young age, the same thing with my grandsons,” said Ray Jr., who started bowling at age 10 or 11. He’s 60 years old now and continues to bowl. While Raymond IV is a high school bowler, high school teams did not exist when Ray Jr. and Ray III were young. They did have the opportunity to bowl in youth leagues, though.

“The bowling alleys were so busy back then, I don’t think they could have done it,” Ray Jr. said.

Ray III said the Michigan bowling sportswriters vote for the Michigan Majors Hall of Fame honorees. “You have to bowl for 15 years or have won over four titles,” he said. “I’ve won four [Michigan major] titles, three majors with end of the year championship tournament twice and the tournament of champions once.”

Ray III has bowled for over 30 years, having started a little younger than when his dad began. He’s had 76 perfect games in his career.

“It was a very big surprise,” Ray III smiled while talking about his Hall induction.

The youngest Eddy goes by Raymond, while the others call themselves Ray.

Raymond IV is a sophomore on the varsity bowling team at Heritage this year, his first on the team. Overall, he’s been bowling about 12 years.

“When I was little, I remember we’d go for a weekend to a tournament, whether it be Michigan Majors or some other tournament,” he said.

Raymond IV has been working on his game for his Heritage team. “We’re looking good for the year,” he said. 

He bowls in the Thursday Afternoon Scholarship league at Stardust Lanes in Saginaw. “But you’re not allowed to bowl on leagues during high school bowling,” Raymond IV said. “Once high school’s done, I’ll go back to that league. I definitely like that league a lot.”

The youngest Eddy says he tries to work on his game whenever time allows in addition to regular high school practices.

Like his great-grandfather, grandfather, and father, Raymond IV definitely plans on bowling his entire life. “It’s something my great-grandpa started. I don’t know if anyone bowled before him. I never got a chance to meet him. He died when my dad was one.”

Raymond IV, also a third baseman and pitcher, plans on playing with the Heritage baseball team this spring.

Another top bowler for Heritage is Tyler Scott, a junior who has been bowling three seasons for the varsity team. Other top players for coach Todd Hare’s team are Shane Carlson, Adam Clauss, Robert Henne, Ben Kastros, Derrick Norman, Morris Pruitt, Brandon Southworth, and Travis Taylor.

“It’s going good, we’re in the rebuilding stage because we’ve lost people the last two years,” Hare said. “It’s going decent.”

Scott and Eddy IV were among the key players on the Heritage team that won the 2014 Flint Metro Invitational Tournament Jan. 19 at Richfield Lanes in Flint. 

“I’ve improved a little bit,” Scott said. “My spares have gotten a lot better. Mentally, I’ve gotten better.  [The others] have improved a lot. We’ve all gotten a lot better from year to year. We’ve gotten more consistent and smarter with how we play. We’re making our spares and everything.”

It was a December night in downtown Detroit that the Big Rapids Cardinals won’t forget for a long time.

The Cardinals were among the high school teams that played at Comerica Park a week before Christmas as part of the Hockeytown Winter Festival, an event that included an NHL game on New Year’s Day between the Toronto Maple Leafs and Detroit Red Wings at Michigan Stadium.

The Cardinals were scheduled to play their top rival, Cadillac, at Comerica in the 2012 Festival, but that game was canceled because of the NHL players lockout and was rescheduled for Dec. 2013.

Big Rapids coach Tim Blashill said he had heard about the possibility of playing at Comerica from his brother, Jeff Blashill, who was with the Detroit Red Wings as an assistant coach at the time. After Big Rapids inquired about being a participant in the Classic, the school got the call.

Big Rapids vs. Cadillac was among eight high school games played at Comerica. Big Rapids, Cadillac, Traverse City Central, and Traverse City West were the only Northern Michigan schools that played at Comerica. The other 12 teams were from metro Detroit.

Big Rapids and Cadillac faced off at 7 p.m. Weather conditions were somewhat pleasant for the game, with a temperature around 18 degrees. “It wasn’t snowing but it was cold,” Blashill said. “We watched the Traverse City Central-West game. We were cold in the stands. After our game started, it got colder.”

Ice conditions were basically okay, Blashill indicated. “We had a few chips here and there. It got a little too cold. We were kind of a dry run. They [Comerica officials] were working with the ice.”

The team made the 3-hour, 15-minute trip from Big Rapids to Detroit on game day, starting early enough that the Cardinals could watch the two Traverse City teams play prior to their game.

Cadillac won the game 3-1 on two second-period goals. In November, Cadillac had beaten Big Rapids 7-1, so Blashill was heartened with the effort, despite the loss. Jeremiah McReynolds scored for the Cardinals in the opening period. Goalkeepers were Joe Templin and Joey Hinds.

The team returned to Big Rapids that night. It was a long trip but worth the experience.

“Each team had to pay $2,500,” Blashill said, noting the Big Rapids hockey boosters covered the costs.

“It was unbelievable, it was real cool experience all the way around,” Blashill said. “We wanted to win, play hard, and do those things. But at the same time, we wanted to take in the experience of playing in a once-in-a-lifetime game.”

Big Rapids took a parent bus to the game with approximately 60 people. Blashill recalls seeing fans other than those from Big Rapids and Cadillac in the stands.

Considering the game was canceled in 2012, it was a dream for the Cardinals when it became reality.  “We told the kids take it all in and enjoy it,” Blashill said. “It was pretty cool and special once it happened.” 

 

 

 

It’s been quite a season for the Lakeview wrestling team and Terry Grieser, who is currently 28-2 this season and has over 100 wins in his career. 

“During this season, he has achieved his 100th career win, undefeated status at the Farwell Team Invite and Mount Pleasant Invite,” said coach Todd Barton. “ He also won the title at his home tournament for the second consecutive year, defeating Spencer Knizacky of Mason County Central in the finals, who had beaten him earlier in the year.”

Grieser also tops Lakeview with 74 takedowns and 14 pins. 

“Terry prides himself on being relentless on the mat. He has very good conditioning and wrestles every match with the attitude that no one can beat him. His relentless nature helps him to be dominating on his feet,” Barton said.  “Just as any good wrestler, Grieser has a goal to finish on top of the podium at the [Palace of Auburn Hills] this year. If he didn’t have that goal, he would be selling himself short.”

Wrestlers like Grieser have helped to make Barton’s coaching season enjoyable.

This is my second year as head coach here at Lakeview, and Terry has been my go-to guy since day one,” Barton said. “He was one of two upper classmen my first year. He naturally fulfilled a leadership role and believed in how I was coaching, though it was different from his past coaches.

My first year as head coach at Lakeview, we had very few kids with any prior experience, which made for a tough season, because I had no idea where to start. I knew I had to try to develop the kids new to the sport and help take the others to the next level, but had no idea how to do it.”

Lakeview was 6-25 last season and had one state qualifier, Grieser.

 

Zack King and Richie Ostrander have been producing valuable points for the Chippewa Hills wrestling team.

Ostrander, at 103 pounds, is 11-4 and has had his season shortened by illness. But head coach Nate Ethridge still expects Ostrander to come back and do some things during the postseason.

Zach King pinned Abe Angious of Reed City at 119 pounds in Central State Activities Association action Jan. 22, improving his record to 31-2 this season. He attacks in all his positions,” said Ethridge. “He’s come a long way. He’s a complete wrestler.”

 Both wrestlers are seniors. At 103 pounds, Ostrander was 0-2 in the state finals last season and went 51-8. At 112 pounds, King placed seventh in the Division 3 state finals last season and ended up with a 52-7 record.

The Eric Davis File

Saginaw Arthur Hill

Sports: Basketball

Class: Junior

Accomplishments: Guided the Lumberjacks to an 8-2 record at the midpoint of the season and a No. 3 ranking in Class A. Three-year varsity starter. Ranked as the No. 1 recruit in Michigan, the No. 11 shooting guard in the country, and No. 89 player overall in the Class of 2015 by ESPN.

Hobbies: Basketball and lots of it

GPA: 3.2 

College: Memphis, Michigan State, Oregon, Iowa State, Iowa, Kansas, North Carolina State, Illinois, Providence, Oklahoma State, Massachusetts and Kent State, but there will be more. Has made two visits so far to Michigan State and N.C. State.

By BUTCH HARMON

LOWELL – After defeating Davison earlier this season, the Lowell wrestling team made it a double play of wins against elite Division 1 powers as the Red Arrows defeated Detroit Catholic Central 36-27 in an afternoon assembly match Wednesday afternoon in a snowy Lowell.

The Red Arrows needed to really to earn the win as they trailed 24-7 midway through the match. The comeback began at 189 pounds where Lowell sophomore Max Dean stunned second-ranked Logan Marcicki with a pin in 5:01. That pin began a string of six straight victories that gave the Red Arrows a 36-24 lead going into the final match and securing the dual-meet victory.

“I felt we wrestled pretty good,” Lowell coach Dave Dean said. “Detroit Catholic Central is a formidable opponent and a very good team. I sensed that we had a lot of energy today. This was a big deal for the kids being able to wrestle in front of their peers and the whole school.”

After Max Dean’s pin, the Red Arrows picked up four team points when second-ranked Garrett Stehly defeated sixth-ranked Nick Giese 13-1. At heavyweight junior Josh Colegrove, ranked number one in Division 2, edged Jimmy Russell ranked number three in Division 1 3-2.

In the light weights the Red Arrows picked up pins from Sam Russell (1:06) at 103 pounds and Lucas Hall (3:02) at 112 pounds. Zeth Dean claimed a major decision at 119 pounds to close out the run.

Lowell started the match with back-to-back wins from Bailey Jack at 130 pounds and Jordan Hall at 135. Jack won a major decision over Evan Toth while Hall won a 9-2 decision.

“This was a great win,” Jack said. “We are definitely on an uphill path now. There is nothing going wrong right now. We are healthy and training hard.”   

 

The Bailey Jack File

Lowell High School

Sport: Wrestling

Accomplishments: As a junior, Jack won the 119-pound state title at the Division 2 individual state wrestling finals. This season, he is ranked number one in the state in Division 2 at 125 pounds. 

GPA: 4.05

Favorite classes: Calculus and AP Government

College Plans:  Bailey has also accepted a scholarship offer to Duke University.

Hobbies: He loves playing video games, his favorite being League of Legends

  

 

By BUTCH HARMON

Thanks to strong team work and players who excel at their roles, the Corunna boys basketball team is enjoying its season and has its sights set on a successful second half of the season and state tournament.

Corunna opened the season by winning seven of its first nine games.

“Halfway through the season, we have been learning to compete and complete games,” said coach Jason Schemenauer. “I have appreciated the team and their willingness to focus on key areas that we’ve identified and need improving.”

One of the most impressive statistics on this year’s team is that the team is averaging 68.4 points per game. While that is impressive, Schemenauer sees other strong points.

“The noticeable thing is scoring, and everyone will read about how many points are scored and be impressed,” Schemenauer said. “The most impressive thing to me is the team’s willingness to adapt to different roles. For example, every game MJ Myles defends the other team’s best shooter/scorer, Josh Fattal defends the other team’s point guard, Mikhail Myles has improved his rebounding and is leading us in blocked shots per game (1.8), Grant Renwick had seven assists and five steals vs. Lakewood.”

The Cavaliers are looking to build on that strong start and to finish just as strong.

“The sky is the limit for this team,” Schemenauer said. “If we get better, improve everyday, and remain close teammates, then anything is possible.”

 

Al Post has reason to be excited about the St. Louis boys bowling team this season. It’s started strong, 2-0 in the conference and 6-0 overall, and it has a chance to do very well in the state tournament.

The team average is 994.

“That’s pretty good for Division 4,” Post said. “We’re an experienced team. We took second at the Battle of the Bakers at Battle Creek. That’s like a Division 1 and 2 tournament for Bakers. We took second in the Owosso tournament, and we were the only Division 4 team in that, too. Not trying to brag, but this is an exceptional group, probably the best I’ve had in the nine years I’ve been coaching.”

Post has three seniors in Chris Adams, Bobby Church, and Conner Pilmore.

“Conner has really come along,” Post said. “He’s been a bowler since he was a sophomore. His game has grown immensely. He can break the lanes down mentally, where he really couldn’t before. It truly comes from a lot of hard work. The starting five made it to the semifinals last year, and they all return this year. From the time we got back last year until now, they’ve worked on their game. They’ve been out here at the bowling alley [300 Bowl]  bowling all summer, working on their game.

“Conner has been huge. He’s been the driving force behind it. He’s got the guys together. If I’m out there and they’re bowling, he helps out. He’s gone beyond expectations for a high school bowler.”

Adams is averaging 204 and Church 198.

“They’ve come along and made it so far last year and saw what it was and have been determined to get back there,” Post said.

Also back are juniors Jeff Fisher and Zack Fenby. “They’ve been on the varsity since they were sophomores,” Post said. “They’ve come along great. The big thing with our team is they’ve learned spares are a central part of our game. Once they get rolling, they’re hard to stop. We cover our spares.

“They drive through the tough spots, cover their spares, and keep pushing and pushing. They take off and accelerate. When they do that, they explode. They really learn how to break down the lanes. That’s because of their dedication, basically. They’re the most dedicated team I’ve had. I’ve had some good ones. In 2011, we went to the finals and got beat in the finals.”

Winning it all is a definite goal.

“You do want to take it one match at a time,” Post said. “But for us, to not make a serious run with this team would be a big letdown. We have all the experience in the world. Their first year there, they went to the final eight and got beat. It’s our year to make a run. For a Division 4 team, they’re phenomenal. Other coaches have said that, too.”

 

 

By BUTCH HARMON

The Owosso community lost long-time coach and teacher Tom Harkema on Jan. 6 when he passed away from cancer at the age of 56.

Harkema, a native of Owosso, had been a fixture in Owosso from his playing days to being a coach and teacher at Owosso High School. The loss was compounded, because Tom’s older brother, William “Bill” Harkema, passed away the same day after battling multiple sclerosis for several years.

Coach Harkema was a 1975 graduate of Owosso High School, where he played football and was a member of the track team. Following high school, he attended Grand Valley State University where he played football. Harkema was named the Scout Team Player of the Year during his career with the Lakers.

After graduating from Grand Valley in 1979, Harkema served as a graduate assistant coach at Grand Valley under his older brother Jim Harkema. He was the head coach at Dexter High School, and he also coached in Texas for six years.

Harkema served two stints as head coach at Owosso. He coached the Trojans from 1988 through 1998, and he returned to the sideline in 2010 and coached the Trojans since.

Along with coaching football, Harkema served as the Owosso boys’ track coach for the last 17 years. Harkema led the team to Capital Area Athletic Conference (CAAC) titles the last two springs.

 “I have known Tom since we were 13 years old, and I have worked with Tom for 25 years,” said Owosso softball coach and administrative assistant JoEllen Smith. “It is not going to be the same without Tom, but it could be better because of Tom if the community comes together as a team the way he taught it will be better.”

Along with coaching, Harkema was a math and physical education teacher at Owosso High School and also served as the public address announcer at Owosso basketball games.

“Tom was definitely an Owosso person,” Smith said. “If he was cut, he would bleed blue and gold.” 

In 2012, Harkema led Owosso to its second-ever playoff appearance. Owosso defeated Cadillac 27-14 in the first round of the playoffs for the first playoff win in school history. 

“Coach Harkema was very excited, and everybody was very excited,” said Brody Eddington, a running back on that team. “We made history. I just remember the look on his face. Everything was amazing.

“Coach Harkema was very passionate,” continued Eddington, who was also a sprinter on the track team for Harkema. “He always pushed every player to be the best they could be.”

Coach Harkema compiled a record of 50-49 during his first stint as head coach of the Trojan football team and was 16-22 the past four seasons for a career record of 66-71.

Harkema impacted many lives as a coach, and even helped some of his former players enter the coaching profession. Former Charlotte High School and current Forest Hills Eastern High School head coach Eddie Ostipow is one such coach who was helped by Harkema. Ostipow graduated from Owosso in 1992 and played on Coach Harkema’s team. 

“I was fortunate enough to play for Coach Harkema and to also coach on his staff,” Ostipow said. “He was also pretty instrumental in helping me get my first head coaching job. We have stayed in contact and talked to this day. I would usually talk with him at least once a week. He was a very good guy; they don’t come any better.”

Ostipow served for four years on Harkema’s coaching staff. Ostipow and Harkema also worked at each other’s football camps during the summer. When Ostipow’s Charlotte teams qualified for the playoffs, Harkema would make the one-hour drive to Charlotte two or three times a week to help at practice or to scout from the press box during the game.

“Tom loved Owosso and loved the high school and loved the kids,” Ostipow said. “He was in his element around kids, and it didn’t have to be football. If a student happened to be a cross country or track runner, he was the kind of guy who would do anything to help him. Tom was one of those guys that any time you needed something, you could count on him.”

Harkema also was known for never forgetting his former players. “Even when you graduated and left the program, you did not end the relationship with Tom,” Ostipow said. “If it was a little thing or a big thing, Tom was willing to do it. If 10 years later he heard a player needed a job, Tom would make the phone call.”

Owosso athletic director Dallas Lintner is now faced with the task of replacing his football and track coach, and he knows what a challenge that will be.

“Tom has been a mentor and a friend of mine for many years,” Lintner said. “My job now is to replace the irreplaceable. Tom was such a fair and loving man that it is quite a tall order. What I have to do is find a coach that will carry our program forward in a way that honors Coach Harkema’s legacy and what he put into the program.”

Harkema cared about all the sports in the Owosso school system, not just the sports that he coached. “Tom helped organize competitive cheer years ago when no one was willing to step up,” Lintner said. “He also started our middle school swim program. He talked to swim coaches from other areas and started a program for middle school kids so they could swim. He was always there to support anything.”  

Harkema’s legacy in Owosso spilled over into all aspects of life.

“There was standing room only and 2,000 people in our gym for the memorial service,” Lintner said. “There were players from his first team, students who never played a sport, parents, community members, members from his church; there were just so many different types of people that he impacted. That was real indicative of the man he was.”