Vandercook, Gabriel Richard Tops in D4
March 1, 2013
By Jon Malavolti
Special to Second Half
STERLING HEIGHTS – During eight of the first nine seasons of MHSAA Girls Bowling Finals, either Vandercook Lake or Sandusky made the championship match to end the winter.
And after meeting – and splitting – the last two Finals matches, it seemed only right that they met to decide a title again in year 10 at Friday's Division 4 tournament at Sunnybrook Golf and Bowl.
“We were really hungry for Sandusky,” Vandercook Lake senior Becky Cecil said. “We worked our butt off and got our scores up, so if it came down to Vandercook and Sandusky, we would be ready for them.”
After being separated by only six pins with three frames to bowl, the Jayhawks pulled away for a 1,322-1,166 victory to give themselves two of the last three championships – Sandusky finishing first in 2012.
In the Boys Final, Riverview Gabriel Richard beat East Jackson 1,356-1,058.
Vandercook Lake coach Todd Reichard said his squad couldn't wait for the title rematch after finishing runner-up last year.
Facing Sandusky always provides a chance to measure his program.
“That’s who you want, is the best,” Reichard said. “I’m very proud. We set a goal, we wanted to get back here and bowl Sandusky, and we’re right back here now. And we got what we wanted, and I’m thrilled to death.”
Sandusky coach Gordon Williams said he was “extremely proud” of his young squad this season.
And he agreed that the teams seem to bring out the best in each other as they seemingly meet annually in big competitions.
“We always expect to see them at this point,” Williams said. “It was a great match; it was a close match until the last three, four frames. They have an excellent program. I've got nothing but good things to say about them.”
Posing with his team and the boys championship trophy was extra special for Riverview Gabriel Richard coach Bob Stempien, who was able to share the moment with sons Austin and Zack, a freshman and junior, respectively, on the Pioneers.
“They don’t see me as coach. They see me as dad, and sometimes that can be an extra challenge; but it’s great,” the coach said.
“Coming here and watching kids do things you didn't think they could do is just incredible,” he added. “I can’t even really describe it, it’s just awesome. I’m just speechless.”
Zack Stempien had similar praise for his Pioneers teammates taking the title.
“It takes a lot of work and dedication, and after you do it, it’s kind of that moment where everything pays off and you have no words for it,” he said.
East Jackson coach D.J. Miller, meanwhile, was proud of the way his Trojans finished the season.
When asked if he believes his young team set a benchmark for the future of the program, Miller responded, “I definitely think they did.”
“They really came through the last two weekends,” Miller added, referring to the Regional and Final. “They bowled extremely well. They bowled up to their potential.”
Click for full girls results and full boys results.
Clarenceville Girls Follow Captain in Claiming 1st Finals Title
By
Jeff Bleiler
Special for MHSAA.com
February 28, 2025
JACKSON — When it was all over and the realization set upon them, Raegan Priebe could only summon three words while celebrating with her teammates.
“We did it! We did it!” she exclaimed while hugging each one.
The “it” was winning the Division 3 team title at JAX 60 on Friday, the first Finals championship in girls bowling in her school’s history. Livonia Clarenceville defeated Adrian Madison 3-1 in the best-of-five championship, losing the first game 166-131 before rattling off the next three, 204-134, 123-106 and 187-166.
“The key thing was to make our spares and at least match what our opponents were doing,” said John Makar, Clarenceville’s head coach. “Our coaches told the kids that, our team captain repeated it. She’s one of the greatest team captains I have ever seen in any sport.”
That captain is senior Caitlyn Johnson, who willed a lineup laden with youth to the championship.
“These girls have worked so hard, they’ve put all the time, all the effort, all the love, all the tears, all the blood into it,” she said. “Every possible thing they could do, they gave it to me, and I couldn’t be any more proud as captain.”
The last time Clarenceville made the Finals was three years ago during Johnson’s freshman season, and they failed to advance out of the qualifying session. This year, they’re taking home the big trophy.
“It’s a big thrill. I couldn’t have done it without our assistant coaches, especially Art Priebe and Anthony Williams,” Makar said. “I’ve kind of been orchestrating the whole thing, doing the behind-the-scenes work and working with all the freshmen we have.”
Clarenceville qualified first out of 16 teams with a total of 2,944 for the eight Baker games and two team games. The top seed defeated eighth-seed Armada in three games in the quarterfinal, then advanced to the final with a 3-1 victory over Ishpeming Westwood.
Leading 2-1 in the final, Clarenceville had just one open frame in the decisive game with Raegan Priebe throwing strikes in the fourth and ninth and Johnson adding one in the fifth and a spare to clinch it in the 10th.
Johnson, Priebe and freshman Olivia Young qualified for the individual Finals.
Madison earned the second seed out of qualifying, just 36 pins shy of Clarenceville’s total, but had a more dramatic road to the final. Madison needed five games to defeat Gladwin, then went the distance again in the semifinals against Flint Powers Catholic, which included a 156-145 win in the last game.
“These girls, they put their heart and soul in everything,” said coach Randy Ramirez, who credited his assistants with helping the team be successful. “We had an amazing season, we won a couple tournaments. They just caught us at the wrong time.”
Sophomore Vanessa Underwood, freshman Paige Underwood and junior Angelina Alvarez all qualified for the individual Finals for Madison.