Forest Park Tradition Gains Another Title
November 18, 2017
By Geoff Kimmerly
Second Half editor
MARQUETTE – Fans wearing black and red chanted “U.P. Power” while their favorite team ran for nearly 500 yards without throwing a pass Saturday at the Superior Dome.
This was Crystal Falls Forest Park football. And it didn’t matter how many players were on the field.
The Trojans, in their second season of 8-player, added a fourth MHSAA football championship running away early and often on the way to a 54-12 win in the inaugural 8-Player Division 2 Final.
The way Forest Park won, it could’ve been Ford Field or Pontiac Silverdome – where the Trojans made most of their first 13 championship game appearances. They gained an 8-Player Finals record 481 yards on 52 carries and set another record with eight rushing touchdowns.
The championship was the program's first since 2007.
“Last week, we watched 2007 states in our class, and (Saturday) was just like it,” Forest Park senior running back Connor Bortolini said. “We just stick to running the ball, and that’s what we do.
“The 2007 guys, some of them came up to us before the game, told us ‘Good luck.’ And now it’s our turn to do that.”
Senior Peter Ropiak had 275 yards and three touchdowns on the ground, sharing the backfield load with Bortolini, who totaled 196 yards and four rushing scores. Junior Calvin Post added the eighth rushing touchdown on a 1-yarder with 6:02 to play.
Bortolini scored the first just 1:47 into the game. Portland St. Patrick scored 1:26 later. And then the Trojans (10-2) put up the next 40 points, with Bortolini scoring four in a row total before Ropiak scored three consecutive.
The Trojans might have been the second or third best team in 8-player last season, but ran into Powers North Central in a Regional Final as North Central was finishing its second straight perfect season. Forest Park opened this fall 1-2, but then won its final nine games to return to the state’s elite.
“These kids don’t know the difference between 8-man and 11-man. They are out there competing. They’re out there being the best that they can be,” Trojans coach Dave Graff said. “For them to turn the page here, and do it in style where you have a sophomore middle linebacker who bench presses 115 pounds and runs a 5.5 40, a corner who’s 5-foot-5 and runs a 5-5 40. We’re doing it with people who are young, inexperienced, and yet they come out and get better every week. And they just have a new tradition, an 8-man tradition at Forest Park, and it’s good for them.”
Bortolini and Ropiak did their damage behind a line of junior guard Jacob Peterson, junior center Hal Hoenig, senior guard Robert Ponchaud and senior tight end Jonah Logan. All four weigh in between 205-240 pounds. St. Patrick has only one player tipping above 190.
“They’ve got some big bodies and they’re pretty simple – they come downhill at you,” St. Patrick coach Patrick Russman said “It’s a great scheme for them. We’ve just got to work on getting a little bigger.”
And the Trojans’ defense cannot be forgotten. St. Patrick gained only 169 yards on 43 plays, and the 12 points were the second-fewest the team scored this season as the Shamrocks averaged 35 per game. The inability to move the ball on offense kept the pressure on the defense – a lot to manage against such a productive attack.
The Shamrocks (11-2) were playing for their first football championship since 1992 and in their first Final since 1997 after reaching the Semifinals for the third time since switching to 8-player in 2012. Their only other loss this fall was to Division 1 semifinalist Bellevue.
“Just being around these kids and the seniors especially, all of them, they’re such great leaders off the field. It’s going to carry over for us,” said Russman, also the school’s athletic director. “They’re really good football players on the field, obviously, but the things they’ve done off the field have just been life-changing for the coaches and kids around it.
“So you hope they continue all those things going into their next sports, and we’ll build on it next year.”
Junior Tanner Lawson threw for 125 yards and a touchdown for St. Patrick, connecting with senior Will Simon on a 19-yard score in the first quarter. Senior Isaiah Smith added a fourth-quarter 1-yard rushing touchdown. Smith had 13 tackles and Simon had 11, while junior linebacker Paul Cook added 10.
The MHSAA Playoffs are sponsored by the Michigan Army National Guard.
PHOTOS: (Top) Crystal Falls Forest Park’s Connor Bortolini charges toward the end zone for one of his four touchdowns Saturday. (Middle) A Trojans defender wraps up Portland St. Patrick’s Ned Smith. (Photos by John Johnson.)
Dedication Continues to Make Difference as Pittman Elevates Game, Shores' Offense
By
Tom Kendra
Special for MHSAA.com
September 11, 2024
Jonathan Pittman lives by the acronym “PGF.”
“My mom gave me that life motto; it stands for 'Put God First,'” explained Pittman, the senior quarterback for Muskegon Mona Shores, which is off to a 2-0 start.
“That is the core of who I am.”
Those aren’t just words for Pittman, who starts every day – Monday through Friday, from 6 a.m. to 7, when much of the world and most 17-year-olds are still sleeping – by going to church to study his Mormon faith at the Spring Lake Ward of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
He heads directly from there to school, where he either practices throwing the football or shooting the basketball (Pittman is also a standout on the Sailors’ hoops team). Then it’s off to the classroom – where, by the way, he is a straight-A student in honors classes.
Only when all of that is completed does he switch his focus solely to football. The 6-foot-2, 205-pound senior is a three-year starter with a rocket arm and the power to run over linebackers like a fullback.
“Pitt is the hardest-working kid I have ever coached,” said 14th-year Mona Shores coach Matt Koziak, who has led the Sailors to four Division 2 championship games and won two, in 2019 and 2020.
“He is very critical of his own game. He identifies where he needs to get better, and he just keeps working at it.”
Koziak can track how much film his players are watching. One day, he checked and noticed that senior linebacker and film study devotee Solomon Robertson had logged two hours on that day. The only player with more was Pittman – with six hours.
Pittman’s work ethic appears to be paying dividends, as he’s led the Sailors to impressive road wins over Grand Blanc (28-26) and River Rouge (21-6) to open the season and heading into yet another road game this week at undefeated Flint Hamady.
He did it with his feet against Grand Blanc, running 25 times for 192 yards and throwing for only 43. Against River Rouge, it was just the opposite – he completed 9-of-13 passes for 127 yards, while rushing for just 30.
Pittman comes from good pedigree. His father, also Jonathan Pittman, is a California native and former standout receiver at Brigham Young University who went on to play three years in the NFL for Buffalo, Tampa Bay and the New York Jets. His mother, Quintina, was a three-sport high school star whose college sports dreams were cut short by a knee injury.
The Pittmans moved to Muskegon in 2014 when his father was hired as the general manager at The Lakes Mall, a position he held for five years. (The younger Pittman, who is the second oldest of four children, said his family is not related to any of the many Pittmans in the Muskegon area.)
Pittman has always had a big arm, which allowed him to earn the varsity starting role as a sophomore. Last fall, he completed 87-of-134 passes for 1,391 yards and 15 TDs. His main targets this fall are wideouts Jaeger Johnson and Micah Carafelle and tight end George Duggins.
Pittman is equally well-known for his power running, forming a tough-to-tackle 1-2 duo with junior running back Tomarion “Ike” Steward (5-11, 205).
The biggest improvement for Pittman so far this season has been his increased speed and agility, as he has slimmed down from 218 pounds to 205.
“I wasn’t as fast as I needed to be and couldn’t execute some of the things we like to run,” said Pittman. “I needed to work on that. Our offense is much more diverse this year. We have a ton of weapons, and we can hit teams from all angles.”
Koziak hopes his quicker quarterback will give his team the extra edge it needs in huge Ottawa-Kent Conference Green games at home against Byron Center (Sept. 20) and at Muskegon (Sept. 27) – both against likely Division 2 playoff opponents.
Shores made it to the Division 2 Final four times in eight years, losing to Warren De La Salle Collegiate in 2014 and 2018, then defeating Detroit Martin Luther King in 2019 and De La Salle in 2020. The Sailors have not advanced out of their District the past three years.
Right now, Shores is just waiting to play a game in West Michigan, and will have traveled 1,030 miles round-trip for their first three this season.
The most puzzling aspect of Pittman’s football career thus far is his surprisingly small number of college scholarship offers. Wayne State, Lawrence Tech and Siena Heights have made offers, while Eastern Michigan and Northern Illinois have made the trip to Muskegon to watch him throw.
Pittman, who plans to major in accounting, is not doing any lobbying – preferring to let his play on Friday nights speak for itself.
One thing is for certain: He has made a believer out of Koziak, who has been coaching football for more than 20 years, with prior stops as offensive coordinator at Muskegon Heights and head coach at Muskegon High in 2009.
“I will say this: Wherever he goes, by his junior year, he will be a team captain,” said Koziak. “You combine his athletic ability and his work ethic, and it’s magic. He’s a special kid; a generational kid.”
Tom Kendra worked 23 years at The Muskegon Chronicle, including five as assistant sports editor and the final six as sports editor through 2011. E-mail him at [email protected] with story ideas for Muskegon, Oceana, Mason, Lake, Oceola, Mecosta and Newaygo counties.
PHOTOS (Top) Muskegon Mona Shores' Jonathan Pittman powers into the Grand Blanc defense during his team's season-opening win. (Middle) Pittman watches as a teammate carries the ball upfield. (Photos by Terry Lyons.)