Holland Christian Shows D3 Dominance
March 10, 2018
By Chris Stevens
Special for Second Half
UNIVERSITY CENTER – After finishing second in the state twice during his coaching career, Holland Christian’s Todd Smeenge had the unmistakable look of a champion following Saturday’s Lower Peninsula Division 3 swimming & diving championships at Saginaw Valley State University.
Smeenge’s hair, his shirt and his shorts were all wet. Only championship coaches know that feeling.
Smeenge’s team, led by superb performances from seniors Skylar Cook-Weeks and Ian Miskelley, unseated four-time reigning champion Bloomfield Hills Cranbook Kingswood to capture the title. Holland Christian finished with 326.50 points, easily out-distancing East Grand Rapids which finished second with 240 points. Spring Lake was third with 201 points, while Cranbook was fourth at 197.
“It’s a great feeling,” Smeenge said. “Between Cranbrook and East Rapids, they’re the perennial favorites, so it’s a good feeling (to win the title.)”
It was the first time Holland Christian’s boys had won a Finals swim title since 1989. Smeenge has led the Maroons to a pair of runner-up finishes during his time as coach, in 1990 and 2011.
Cook-Weeks, meanwhile, was at his absolute best en route to winning two individual titles and being part of two first-place relay teams. Cook-Weeks finished his high school career with seven Finals titles.
And Saturday’s team finish topped it all off.
“It feels fantastic,” Cook-Weeks said moments after he and his teammates, along with their head coach, carried out the tradition of jumping into the pool to celebrate. “To go out my senior year by winning a state championship, you can’t ask for anything more than that. It just feels great to be able to do it with these guys. I’m going to miss being with them.”
Cook-Weeks won individual titles in the 200-yard freestyle and the 500 freestyle. His time of 1:37.27 in the 200 free set a new LP Division 3 Finals record. In the 500, he broke his own meet record with a time of 4:25.84.
“His work ethic in the pool is just outstanding,” Smeenge said. “It drives everybody else. That’s the thing that I will think of and remember the most about him.”
Cook-Weeks also was part of the winning 200 and 400 relay teams. His teammates on the 200 team were Miskelley, junior Brad Windemuller and junior Jacob Heeres; and on the 400 team were Heeres, junior Riley VanMeter and senior Luke Mason.
“We wanted to go into the meet by doing the best that we could, and we came out the way we wanted to be,” Cook-Weeks said of the mindset that he and his teammates had entering the meet as the top-ranked team.
The Maroons’ Miskelley also turned in a stellar performance. He won a pair of individual titles, capturing the 200 individual medley in a meet record time of 1:49.58. He also placed first in the 100 backstroke in a meet-record time of 49.05 seconds.
Mason was second in the 200 free and third in the 500.
“We obviously lose some big guns (to graduation) with Skylar, Ian and Luke,” Smeenge said. “But we’ve got a nice group of guys who are returning and who scored points for us. I don’t know if it’s going to be enough to win a state championship again, but we’re going to give it a shot.”
In other events, Christian Bart of East Grand Rapids won the 50 free in 20.31 seconds, breaking his previous meet record in the race. Nolan Briggs of Byron Center captured the 100 butterfly in 49.16 seconds, and Spring Lake’s Cam Peel placed first in the 100 free in a meet-record time of 44.97.
Bart also repeated in the 100 breaststroke in 56.07 seconds, just off his meet record time of 55.82 set last season.
St. Johns’ junior Cayden Petrak won the diving championship with 470.35 points, edging East Grand Rapids sophomore Nick Merritt by a mere 1.5.
PHOTOS: (Top) Holland Christian hoists its LP Division 3 championship trophy Saturday. (Middle) Swimmers launch during the 400 freestyle relay. (Click for more from HighSchoolSportsScene.com.)
Coach Called It: Jesuit's Intangibles Lead to Speed, Program's 1st Finals Win
By
Keith Dunlap
Special for MHSAA.com
March 15, 2025
ROCHESTER — When practice started back in November, Detroit U-D Jesuit head boys swimming & diving coach Drew Edson looked at his team and knew it could be a special season.
But his forecast actually had little to do with the talent that was evident in the pool.
“It was because of the way they carried themselves,” Edson said. “It wasn’t the swimming or how many great swimmers we had in the pool. It was the attitude and the work ethic. It was the day in and day out effort they showed every day. It was amazing.”
Amazing to finish this season as well was the fact the Cubs achieved something Saturday they had never accomplished before – win an MHSAA Finals championship.
U-D Jesuit won its first by topping the rest of the Lower Peninsula Division 2 challengers at Oakland University, scoring 305 points. Byron Center was second with 256.5 points, and Birmingham Seaholm was third with 207. Farmington (149) and Rochester Hills Stoney Creek (122) rounded out the top five.
Jesuit had three individual winners: seniors Evan Tack and Patrick Mackillop, and sophomore Charlie McCuiston.
Tack won the 200-yard individual medley in a meet-record time of 1:46.28, McCuiston won the 100 freestyle in 45.45 seconds and Mackillop captured the 100 breaststroke in a time of 54.88.
“It just means the world,” Mackillop said. “It’s such a good culture. It’s the greatest feeling ever, and I wouldn’t want to do it with another group of guys.”
U-D Jesuit also won the 400 free relay in a meet-record time of 3:03.68 with the team of Tack, freshman Jack McCuiston, senior Matt Garza and Charlie McCuiston.
“It’s hard to put it into words,” said Edson, who completed his ninth year as head coach. “It was the culture. It was the way they treated each other and the way they’ve built this team off of the things that really mattered. The fast swimming has come after that.”
Stoney Creek senior Will Cicco and Seaholm junior Elliot Rijnovean won multiple individual events. Headed to swim next for Brown University, Cicco won the 200 free in a time of 1:37.36 and the 500 free in a time of 4:28.36.
Committed to Indiana, Rijnovean won the 100 butterfly in a time of 47.85 and the 100 backstroke in a time of 47.10 that set an all-class/division Finals record.
“I just locked in,” Rijnovean said. “Everything was on the line, and I managed to pull through. That was my thought process throughout the whole thing.”
Rijnovean also swam leadoff for Seaholm’s 200 medley relay that won in a time of 1:30.09. He was joined by junior Finn Murray, senior Emmett Knudsen and sophomore Quinn O’Neill.
Utica Ford senior Maximus Dexter won the 50 free in a time of 20.75, and Portage Northern junior William Blind won diving with 508.90 points.
Farmington’s team of senior Luke Morden, junior Josh Luo, senior Paul DeMartini and senior Jack Tomlinson won the 200 free relay in a time of 1:24.04.
PHOTOS (Top) U-D Jesuit's Patrick Mackillop swims to a championship in the 100 breaststroke Saturday at Oakland University. (Middle) Birmingham Seaholm's Elliot Rijnovean swims to an all-Finals record in the 100 backstroke. (Below) Mackillop and teammate Charlie Michael swim side by side in the breaststroke; Michael finished third. (Click for more from High School Sports Scene.)