Benzie Central Boys Looking to Add Finals Run to Growing Lanes Legacy

By Tom Spencer
Special for MHSAA.com

February 21, 2025

Best ever.

Northern Lower PeninsulaAll season long, Logan Hewitt, Kameron Johnson, Keaton Hickey, Jeremiah Wilkinson, Tyler Brooks, Lorin McNiel and Jaylan Ewing have performed like the best bowling team in Benzie Central’s history.

Nothing is changing either. Last month, their names were entered into the record book for combining for the highest two-game series score in program history – 1,777 pins – while competing against Traverse City Central, Traverse City West, Cadillac, Traverse City Christian, Frankfort and Glen Lake.  

On the same day, the team produced the school-record single team game, 975, and Brooks racked up the highest individual game in Benzie boys history at 277.

Then this week, while winning the Division 4 Regional championship, the Benzie bowlers set a school record with a 243 Baker game and then reset their two-game series record at 1,782.

Now, they’d like to stake claim to the school’s first MHSAA Finals bowling championship when they return to Northway Lanes in the Muskegon – the site of their Regional success – for next Friday’s Final.

“We don’t give up,” said Benzie coach Chip Fryer, now in his 22nd season with the Huskies. “We keep trying right to the end, no matter what, to do our best.”

And their best has been pretty darn good.

“I am not surprised at their records,” Fryer admitted.  “I know they are fully capable.”

Good practice games are discussed and analyzed as the Huskies strive for more, Fryer noted.

Senior Tyler Brooks bowls a frame.“I challenge them If they go out and bowl a 170 in practice to try to add 10 or 20 pins on top of that in matches,” Fryer said.  “We talk about making a couple more spares here or there or getting a good break and carrying a strike here and there.”

Brooks and Wilkinson also qualified for the Singles Final this year. Hewitt fell one pin short.

Wilkerson had two Regional games over 200 en route to qualifying. Hickey had led the Huskies in the Regional team competition with two games over 200.

Those four Huskies are seniors. In fact, of the 12 bowlers on the varsity and junior varsity squads this year, only two will be back next season. So Benzie is going for broke, with lots of previous Regional and Final experience.

“They know how to get there,” Fryer said.  Jeremiah (Wilkinson), Logan (Hewitt) and Tyler (Brooks) were on the team back in 2023 when we won Regionals for the first time in school history.  And Jeremiah and Logan were on the first team we ever had qualified for states the year before.”

Brooks did not join the bowling team until his sophomore year. He averaged 145 per game then. Last year he averaged 162 and finished 25th in the Singles Final qualifying block.  He is averaging 180 this year and has high aspirations for himself and his team.

“We’ve all put in the time, and I feel like we’re pretty prepared,” Brooks said minutes before a late-season practice. “I like to strive to greatness. I always want to get better.”

Brooks recalls every moment of his school-record 277 game. He was matched up with Traverse City Central’s Carter Banton, who just missed qualifying for match play at last year’s Division 1 Singles Final. Banton and Brooks both entered the seventh frame with a perfect game.

Brooks, right, and teammate Keaton Hickey confer during a break.Banton didn’t mark in the seventh, and Brooks picked up a spare before hitting strikes the rest of the way.

“The ball checked up and went a little high and left me a spare, and I made the spare,” Brooks recollected. “Carter is a great bowler, and I just want to bowl the best I could.”

Brooks was one pin from a possible perfect game.

“It was just one little frame,” Brook acknowledged.  “The rest were strikes.”

Brooks’s 277 made a huge contribution to the team’s 975 record, as did Hewitt’s 244. McNiel and Hickey both rolled a 153. Wilkinson had a 144. The 975 toppled the previous school record by more than 50 pins.

Johnson rolled a 177 in the second game as the Huskies set the two-game series school record in January, subbing for McNiel. Hewitt was next at 170, Brooks followed at 166, Hickey at 159 and Wilkinson 137.

When the Huskies broke their record at the Regional, Hickey led the way with a 233 and 220. Wilkinson kicked in a 190 and 181. Brooks had a 182 and 176, Hewitt had a 148 and 147, and McNiel and Ewing each bowled one game, scoring 139 and 158, respectively.

Next, the Huskies are planning to place their highest ever at the Team Final.

“The last two times we’ve qualified for states we finished 11th, and they only take the top eight into the bracket,” Frey said. “Missing a seven pin or a 10 pin or a single pin spare costs you the game. We’ re going to hopefully increase their scores just by making those spares.”

Tom SpencerTom Spencer is a longtime MHSAA-registered basketball and soccer official, and former softball and baseball official, and he also has coached in the northern Lower Peninsula area. He previously has written for the Saginaw News, Bay County Sports Page and Midland Daily News. He can be reached at [email protected] with story ideas for Manistee, Wexford, Missaukee, Roscommon, Ogemaw, Iosco, Alcona, Oscoda, Crawford, Kalkaska, Grand Traverse, Benzie, Leelanau, Antrim, Otsego, Montmorency, Alpena, Presque Isle, Cheboygan, Charlevoix and Emmet counties.

PHOTOS (Top) Benzie bowlers Jayden Ewing, standing, and Logan Hewitt share a fist bump during a recent match. (Middle) Senior Tyler Brooks bowls a frame. (Below) Brooks, right, and teammate Keaton Hickey confer during a break. (Photos by Tom Spencer.)

Pennfield Aims to Build on Historic Run

By Pam Shebest
Special for MHSAA.com

December 19, 2017

BATTLE CREEK — The Battle Creek Pennfield bowling teams are building impressive resumes again this winter after finishing the 2016-17 season on a historical note.

The Panthers capped last season by claiming both the Division 3 girls and boys singles championships – becoming the first program in MHSAA history to sweep the Singles Finals – and a day after Pennfield’s boys won the Division 3 team title.

The success has continued into a new campaign. Last weekend, the girls and boys teams won the Battle Creek All-City tournament, the girls’ ninth consecutive title and the boys’ seventh. Both teams are 2-0 in dual matches with Interstate 8 Athletic Conference play beginning in January. And the boys earned the 100th win in school history two weeks ago against Sturgis – joining the girls, who reached the century mark last season.

Both James Ruoff and Haley Hooper are back this season after claiming those individual Finals championships in March. Both teams also are building for title attempts, although admittedly that path should be more treacherous this winter – Pennfield moved into Division 2, where it is one of the smallest schools.

Boys ready to climb again

The Panthers’ boys slowly worked their way up to last season’s team title, finishing third at the Finals in 2015 and second in 2016.

Program director Mike Roach, who works with both teams, credits fourth-year coach Rickie Hinds with the boys’ success.

“The first year I coached we were 0-11 and the boys never jelled,” Hinds said. “They never came together as a team, so I started preaching team unity and relying on each other. It’s not an individual sport.

“They came together at the end (of the 2016 season) and we ended up in third place. The second year after that, they jelled and we were .500. We ran into some stiff competition – let me tell you. They made a run to second.

“Last year, we won it all. It was a great feeling to win it all.”

Ruoff, a junior who has been bowling since he was 2 years old, threw a 300 last year and amassed an 800 series this year, both in youth leagues.

“Lindy Burton, owner of M-66, got me started,” he said. “My entire family bowled out here. 

“Once I turned 4 she got me my first ball, and that’s when I really got into the youth leagues.”

Hinds said bowling is Ruoff’s passion.

“He was the young one, just a sophomore (last year), but he does a lot of extracurricular bowling,” the coach said. “He’s the one who has it in his heart; the burning, the yearning.

“The other guys bowl and like it but have other sports or interests. But when they came together as a team, they won it all.”

Ruoff said high school bowling intrigued him.

“I went to a few matches and Coach Roach talked to me when I was younger,” he said. “We’d been to some matches with my parents, and we saw how everything went,

“I like to bowl, a lot. As soon as I saw the competition, I was excited.”

Last season’s Division 3 Finals were rolled at M-66 Bowl, Pennfield’s home lanes, which was good and bad, Ruoff said.

 “Not (good) so much for the bowling because this house plays really tough, but having all my bowling family behind me made a big difference,” said Ruoff, who was the 15th seed and upset second seed Adrian Hall of Corunna, 416-313, in the first round.

That was a reverse deja vu.

“The year before, I was the third seed bowling against the 14th seed, and I got knocked out first round so I had the confidence that I could do it,” Ruoff added.

In the championship match, Ruoff defeated Shepherd’s Jonah Montney, 395-349.

Ruoff, who lugs six 15-pound balls “with different cores, different drillings, different layouts” to each competition, also sparked the Panthers’ 1312-1129 win over Corunna for the team title the day before.

In his fourth season of varsity bowling, senior Sean Young also has been with Pennfield’s program since the rise began.

“That was all the tension buildup for us,” he said of the title run. “We were tired of losing.

“Our coach helped us with that. He’s a big mentor for us. When we’re down, he tells us how to get back up.”

Seeded 16th individually, Young lost to top seed Gage Nickelson from Wyoming Kelloggsville, 452-410, in the first round of singles but, “I ended up ninth in state because my series were so high first round.”

A key to a repeat team title is spares, he said.

“That was our biggest thing last year. We really, really improved on our spares,” he added. “If we repeat, we’ll be first team in the state to move up a division and repeat, so that’s our goal.”

Hooper leads focused girls team

Hooper’s road to the title was similar to Ruoff’s path.

As the 16th seed, she upset top seed Kendra Grandy of Birch Run, 371-301, in the first round.

In the championship match she defeated Hannah Bergsma of Grand Rapids South Christian, 399-325.

Hooper is not one to bask in her success.

“I never felt like I had it won until the end of my final match,” she said. “It was mixed feelings. I was on cloud nine, but the other girl was really upset and I know she could have beat me on any given day.

“Winning state was definitely a great experience, but I also know that a lot of those girls could beat me on any day. I had a good day.”

Hooper’s success is fueled by her ability to pick up spares, Roach said.

“She hits her target every time and if she doesn’t get a strike, she picks up her spares,” the coach said.

“She’s an outstanding spare shooter. She’s the most consistent.”

This season’s Division 2 tournament is at Super Bowl in Canton (M-66 also will again host Finals, but in Division 4.). And the Pennfield girls are of course motivated to make it a two-day event.

Bowling in the team competition the day before singles is a big help, Hooper said.

“It helped warm me up and get used to the lanes, but (it was tough) because it was so disappointing from losing the day before and then coming back the next day,” she said.

After the girls team won Regionals last year, it narrowly fell to Caro 1122-1120 at the Finals in the first round of match play.

Hooper said last year the team did not really bond, but this year the girls know what is important to advance.

“Staying focused in practice and really being a team,” she said. “It’s more team bonding and coming together as a family.”

Seniors dominate the boys team, which has just two underclassemen – Ruoff and freshman Carson Dyer.

Seniors besides Young are Trace Davis, Joe Larsen and Nick Hohnberger.

Just four girls join Hooper are their team: senior Megan Elwell, juniors Makayla Skidmore and Kelsey Kipp and sophomore Stephanie Woodman.

Pam Shebest served as a sportswriter at the Kalamazoo Gazette from 1985-2009 after 11 years part-time with the Gazette while teaching French and English at White Pigeon High School. She can be reached at [email protected] with story ideas for Calhoun, Kalamazoo and Van Buren counties.

PHOTOS: (Top) Haley Hooper, left, and James Ruoff practice recently; they were the Division 3 singles champs last season. (Middle) Senior Sean Young gets in some practice work. (Below) Clockwise from top left: Pennfield coaches Mike Roach and Rickie Hinds, Hooper and Ruoff. (Photos by Pam Shebest.)