Tradition, Big North Competition Drive Petoskey's Quest to Extend Finals Streak
By
Tom Spencer
Special for MHSAA.com
January 24, 2025
At least one thing is certain in boys skiing this winter. Traverse City West and Traverse City Central will not stand in the way of Petoskey winning another Finals championship.
Actually, and almost most certainly, they’ll help the Northmen make good on their potential.
West and Central, perennial contenders for the Division 1 title, provide regular, tough competition that should help the Northman as they set the sites on a sixth-straight Division 2 championship. West and Central regularly challenge the Northmen as participants in their five Big North Conference meets.
Central won the D1 championship last year, snapping a run of three straight by West. Marquette, which won a second straight in 2020, was the last school to win the D1 championship before the Traverse City teams’ domination.
Petoskey hopes to get at least one win over both the Titans and Trojans during the regular season as the Northmen pursue the BNC title before hitting the slopes of the Regional at Boyne Mountain in Boyne Falls and the Final at Boyne Highlands in Harbor Springs. The league scores are cumulative over the season, leading to naming a champion.
“If we have all of our successes coming together in one spot, we definitely have a chance to win one of those conference races” said Petoskey coach Ben Crockett, who began guiding the Northmen in 2019. “The experience of competing against another state champion helps all of our programs to stay competitive when we’re in the state Final.”
Last year the Northmen prevailed in a tougher-than-expected Regional at Crystal Mountain before capturing their fifth-straight D2 Finals championship. That Regional featured Harbor Springs, which finished fifth in the Final, and Gaylord, a familiar Big North opponent, along with Benzie Central, Boyne City, Elk Rapids, Houghton, Ironwood, Maple City Glen Lake, Grayling, Onekama and Petoskey St. Michael. The Regional field this year is almost the same as the Upper Peninsula’s Norway replaces Benzie.
And, Petoskey’s last year’s top performers are all back. The Northman also have added sophomore Eli Dettmer, who returned to Northern Michigan after competing in Maine as a freshman. He is expected to play a key role leading up to February’s Final.
Senior Gavin Galbraith is back after winning the individual Finals title in the slalom and finishing third in the giant slalom last season. Junior Taylor Keiswetter and sophomore Mick Galbraith are also back after placing in the top 10 in the giant slalom. Keiswetter finished fifth, and the younger Galbraith placed eighth.
“A lot of the championship team will be returning, so we think we’re in a pretty good position to defend again,” Crockett said. “Gavin Galbraith will be leading that charge as the returning state champion with the speed to contest for another state championship on the individual level and lead the team as they try to get that sixth.”
While Petoskey will be looking for all four of those skiers to perform well to get back on the podium this winter, that possibility never is taken for granted.
“It is always on our radar, but really on the day I think we’re hoping to have a good performance and everybody ski to their potential,” Crockett said. “We know we have to put in a good effort, and then we have to let the scoring fall where it will.”
Crockett, a 1999 graduate and past Petoskey ski team member, is thrilled to continue as part of the Northmen program. His experience skiing all over North America and Europe during his younger days has been a benefit to the Northmen.
“Skiing was a big part of my athletic career growing up,” Crockett said. “Being able to help this next group of athletes achieve their own goals and dreams has been really fun.”
Last year Orchard Lake St. Mary’s finished runner-up and Pontiac Notre Dame Prep (134) finished third at the Final. The Northmen welcome the competition from downstate and the Upper Peninsula.
“There’s definitely good, competitive skiers coming from spots we don’t really see during the year and face off against when we get to the state meet,” Crockett said.
Effort is the key to maintaining the Petoskey legacy, Crockett emphasizes.
“We really try to honor the tradition of having an excellent program at Petoskey,” Crockett said. “We always try to put in the most effort to continue that legacy into the future.”
Tom 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) Petoskey’s Gavin Galbraith races during the Harbor-Petoskey Invitational this season at Boyne Highlands. (Middle) Sophomore Eli Dettmer, an addition to the team this season, leans into a turn during a race at the Harbor-Petoskey Invite. (Below) Carter Walkerdine approaches a gate. (Photos by Drew Kochanny/Petoskey News-Review.)
Petoskey Boys Ski Faces Familiar Climb
February 17, 2017
By Dennis Chase
Special for Second Half
PETOSKEY – Petoskey has been down this slope before.
Two years ago, the boys ski team finished third in its MHSAA Division 2 Regional, then came back two weeks later to capture the Finals championship.
It was the start of a two-year win streak that came to a sudden end Monday when Petoskey placed second to Little Traverse Bay neighbor Harbor Springs in the regional at Nub’s Nob.
Great North Alpine – a cooperative featuring Elk Rapids, Traverse City St. Francis, Central Lake and Grand Traverse Academy – claimed the third and final qualifying spot.
So can the Northmen bounce back, like they did two years ago, to claim another MHSAA crown, which would be their seventh in a row? Or do their opponents sense an opening?
“After Monday’s race, there might be a chink in the armor,” Great North Alpine coach Doug White said. “But they’re (Northmen) still the favorites in my book.”
Petoskey coach Erik Lundteigen said his team had “a couple hiccups” in the Regional, but still accomplished its main goal of qualifying for the Division 2 Finals, which will be raced Feb. 27 at Boyne Highlands.
“That was the whole goal of the day,” he said. “I’m happy to qualify.”
Petoskey’s streak of Finals ski titles is tied for the second longest in MHSAA history. The Traverse City boys captured eight in a row from 1988 to 1995. The Marquette girls won six in a row from 1999 to 2004.
Lundteigen’s two sons, Gunner and Garret, helped fuel Petoskey’s run. Gunner swept the slalom and giant slalom in the 2013 meet. Garret captured the slalom crown last February.
“What it (streak) tells me is that we’ve had some good skiers come through the program,” Lundteigen said. “They’ve set the bar and given the kids coming behind them a standard to work towards.”
Reaching that standard is a process, one that begins in practice. Lundteigen is a firm believer in that how a skier trains translates to how he’ll perform on race day.
“Our kids take ownership, take accountability for their performance,” he said. “As coaches, we can do everything to prepare them, but once they push out of that starting gate they’re on their own. There are no time outs. You can’t do anything to help them.
“We like to say you train like you race and you race like you train, so there isn’t a drop off between the two. Some kids get really nervous the day of a race, but that’s what you want to avoid. You don’t want your kids skiing scared or tentative. That’s why we train like it’s a race environment. That’s important.”
Petoskey senior Mitch Makela, the reigning Division 2 giant slalom champion, agreed.
“When you ski with that kind of intensity every single day you get used to it,” he said.
Makela teamed with Garret Lundteigen to form a dynamic duo last season. They went one-two in the slalom and one-three in the giant slalom.
“I’ve been in the sport a long time, seen a lot of good skiers, but I’ve never seen a better combination on one team,” Erik Lundteigen said. “They each took 60 high school runs last season and one of the two took first 57 times.”
The other was usually second.
“You could pencil them in at the top of every race,” Lundteigen said. “And the crazy thing is there was not one DNF (did not finish). That proves you can not only ski fast, but you can be very consistent if you do it the right way. That, as a coach, is what you have to get your kids to buy into.”
Garret Lundteigen graduated, but Makela is leading the charge this season on a team dominated by underclassmen.
“I’ve been fortunate to be part of three really good teams,” he said. “This team has the potential and skill. We just have to come together on the day that it counts.”
It did not come together as planned at the Regional. One of the team’s top skiers, Ethan Siegwart, was injured in the giant slalom and did not compete in the slalom. Makela, who was second to Great North Alpine’s Finn Husband in the giant slalom, hooked a tip two gates from the finish in his final slalom run and ended up 24th. Makela was leading the slalom after the first run.
“That’s ski racing,” Lundteigen said, “You get about 35 seconds to show what you can do and you’ve got to be clean because races are won by tenths, if not hundredths, of a second. If you make a mistake, it’s unforgiving. I always tell the kids you have to have a short memory. If something goes wrong, you have to be able to let it go because we’re going to need you later.”
Makela’s mishap surprised those on the hill because it seldom happens.
“Mitch is a fabulous skier,” White said. “He always seems to be spot on. For him to have a bobble, wow, because he’s so solid. He’s a great skier to watch.”
But it proves anything can happen in ski racing, and that’s why the MHSAA Finals hold intrigue.
“Petoskey has a great program,” said White, whose team was runner-up to the Northmen a year ago. “They have a strong team year after year after year. Personally, I like going up against them, because that’s where we want to be as a program.
“I think they might be a little down this year. They might be catchable. I think it’s going to be a tight race. You’re going to have to be on your A game.”
Harbor Springs, no doubt, will be buoyed by its Regional win. The Rams, who also won the girls Regional, last won a boys MHSAA title in 2010, just before Petoskey started its streak.
“Harbor Springs has a really solid program.” Lundteigen said. “They’re always in the running.”
Lundteigen said his team has responded well in practice since Monday’s Regional, and he expects a laser-like focus heading into the Finals.
“We’ll be ready,” he said. “Focus will not be an issue. We just have to ski to our ability.”
As for Makela, the 17-year-old would like nothing better than to make it four MHSAA Finals team titles in four years.
“That would be the icing on the cake,” he said.
And what about another individual title?
“That would be the cherry on top,” he added.
But he knows it will not be easy.
“I’m going to do my best, give a solid effort,” he said. “I would like to win another state championship, but anything can happen. There are a lot of good skiers out there.”
Dennis Chase worked 32 years as a sportswriter at the Traverse City Record-Eagle, including as sports editor from 2000-14. 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) Petoskey's Mitch Makela races during Monday's Division 2 Regional at Nub's Nob. (Middle) Northmen coach Eric Lundteigen watches over one of his skiers earlier this season at Boyne Highlands. (Photos courtesy of Petoskey News-Review.)