TC Central's Zielinski Eying Finals Records, U-M Stardom, Olympic Aspirations

By Tom Spencer
Special for MHSAA.com

May 29, 2026

Lorelai Zielinski may be on the verge of winning her second-straight MHSAA Finals championships in both the discus and shot put as she prepares to compete at Saturday’s Lower Peninsula Division 1 Track & Field Finals in Rockford.

Northern Lower PeninsulaAnd, while being named a champion again would be an honor for the Traverse City Central junior star, she’s quick to put it in perspective.

“One thing that I always tell myself, the point of track & field is not to win — it’s all that hard work that you have done to build up to that point, and winning is just part of it all,” the University of Michigan commit said.  “It's just the effect of everything that you do, and it definitely is a great accomplishment because it’s ‘states’ and some people's biggest meet of the year. Having state champion next to your name, especially more than once, and more than one event, is amazing.”

Zielinski won last year’s titles as a sophomore with throws of 46 feet, 11¾ inches in the shot put and 155-1 in the discus. She has dominated the competition so much the last couple years that local media often report her success as a winning “by a long way again.”

Her personal records, both set this spring, are 52-6 in the shot put and 168-5 in the discus. Both would set MHSAA Finals records for all divisions if she replicates them Saturday.

To Paul Anderson, Central’s head coach, Zielinski is in a category all by herself. Anderson has been around high school track in New Mexico and Michigan for 30 years. He’s coached a couple of nationally recognized names over the years, but noted Zielinski really stands out.

At Central, Anderson also coached recent Stanford graduate Julia Flynn, who made national headlines when she became the first prep girl during the 2020 season to run a 5K faster than 17 minutes. In New Mexico at Los Alamos High School, Anderson coached Chase Jackson (then Chase Ealey), currently a dominant global force in track & field. Jackson made history as the first American woman to win a shot put world title, claiming outdoor gold in 2022 and 2023.

“Lorelai is a thrower, a strong woman, and is just a great person,” Anderson said. “She is probably one of the highest-rated high school athletes that I've ever coached. It’s not just her consistency, but dominance.”

During Zielinski’s early days in the sport she was coached by her mother, Amanda. Lorelai competed in shot put as a sixth grader for Traverse City East Middle School. 

Zielinski, who remains the sixth, seventh and eighth-grade record-holder at East, started exploring throwing discus the summer after seventh grade.

“Lorelai started learning about and following the sport very early, but not obsessively,” Anderson said. “She loves it — but it's not owning her — it doesn't mean that’s who she is. It’s like, ‘This is what I do, and I'm not going to be like anybody else.’  Everybody talks about what a good person she is and then being an athlete — then being a thrower — gives a nice dimension.”

Zielinski has high hopes for success in college sports and quite possibly, and most likely, as onlookers say, for the national team someday.

She has her eyes on the throwing qualifying standards for the 2028 U.S. Olympic Trials, and she realizes 2032 might be a more obtainable goal. She’s planning to focus on shot put and discus while exploring the javelin, hammer and weight throws while competing for the Wolverines and pursuing studies in physical therapy or audiology.

Zielinski launches the shot while a gathered crowd watches.But for now, she is celebrating having an impact on young female athletes. She recalls her younger sports days looking up to basketball and track athletes, including current teammates.

“Obviously, track is about performing and all that, but I wanted to be able to be a role model for these younger girls,” said Zielinski, who also plays basketball for the Trojans. “I wanted to be able to inspire younger girls. It's definitely a great feeling that other people look to me for inspiration.”

Zielinski is a recognized figure around middle school and elementary track meets as she volunteers to help with events including shot put. She’s enjoyed watching anecdotal evidence of growth in the sport’s numbers and talent as well as in the presence of high school coaches helping out middle school throwers in particular.

As further evidence of Zielinski’s impact, earlier this week Traverse City kids swept the shot put podium at the MHSAA Middle School Regional in Cadillac. West’s Anna Hornacek, the school’s seventh and eighth-grade record-holder, took first with a 40-2 throw. East’s Delaney Neveau, a sixth grader, was second at 33-5, and West’s Eilley Dwyer, the second-leading seventh-grade thrower all-time, was third at 32-11.

Zielinski and Anderson are thrilled to have field events coach Chad Norton guiding her success. Zielinski especially appreciates Norton’s constant reminders that “practice doesn’t make perfection – practice makes progress.”

Norton’s been especially helpful with the mental aspects of throwing, something with which Zielinski admits she has often struggled.

“One thing Coach Doug always tells me is to breathe and have fun,” she said. “Getting in my head or setting my standards too high, I won't be having fun, and the point of it is to have fun.”

Anderson, now in his 10th year at the helm of the Trojans’ track program, is quick to point out the pride Norton has in Zielinski’s success. Anderson also points to the development of freshman thrower Nora Jensen, who already has found success under Zielinski’s mentorship.

“Doug avoids the spotlight and he’s very much honed into knowing what he had with Lorelai and his responsibility,” Anderson said. “I love Chad as a coach, because not only does he work with Lorelai, but then he takes as much time, or more, with the new shot putters. It's a great community that he has going there.”

Zielinski, who is hoping to have Norton train with her over the summer and next winter, has her freshman year MHSAA Finals in the back of her mind as she prepares for this year’s meet.

She finished second in both shot put and discus two years ago to then senior Abigail Russell of Allen Park. But she’s since exceeded Russell’s distances as she looks to become a teammate to Russell at Michigan.

Zielinski bettered Russell’s distances, in fact, at this year’s Regional Meet in Mount Pleasant.  The Trojan stellar throw topped the 50-foot mark in the shot put and exceeded 161 feet in the discus.

Expect Zielinski to be wearing her trademark different-colored shoes again at the Finals. She’s worn two colors since entering high school, and this time she’ll be sporting a new pair of yellow and orange Nikes. She introduced them this week at the Traverse City Record-Eagle Honor Roll Meet.

Zielinski must replace the shoes during the season because she wears out the bottom of her right one.

“So I buy two pair of shoes for that reason, as well as my freshman year when I started doing it I felt a little bit superstitious. So I always have different-colored shoes as a tradition,” Zielinski said. “I also write different affirmations on each of my shoes such as ‘Have fun,’ ‘Breathe,’ ‘Control,’ and ‘Be the one thing in life you can control.’”

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) Traverse City Central’s Loralei Zielinski winds up during a discus throw. (Middle) Zielinski launches the shot while a gathered crowd watches. (Top photo by Jan Michael Stump/Traverse City Record-Eagle. Middle photo by TC Rick Sports Photography.)

Owner of State's All-Time Farthest Shot Put Aiming for National Record, Olympics

By Paul Costanzo
Special for MHSAA.com

March 25, 2026

From the first time Montrose's Addyson Stiverson picked up the shot put at a sixth-grade track & field practice, it was clear there was something there.

Bay & ThumbEven if she wasn’t quite clear on the name.

“I ran at the first couple practices, and was like, this wasn’t for me,” she said. “They said, ‘You’re strong, try the heavy ball thing.’ I honestly never threw it like a baseball. It wasn’t impeccable, but I kind of knew the basics. I definitely had some sore elbows and shoulders.”

Five years later, Stiverson sits atop the record books as she’s thrown that heavy ball thing farther than any female in Michigan high school history.

Her personal best of 53 feet, 7½ inches, which she threw Dec. 13 at an indoor meet at Grand Valley State University, is nearly two feet farther than the previous record of 51-11 held by Byron great Sarah Marvin, according to MichTrack.org, which tracks records from all meets. (The MHSAA record book is for Finals meets only.)

And as she enters her junior outdoor season having already won the shot put twice and discus once at the Lower Peninsula Division 3 Track & Field Finals, Stiverson’s goals go well beyond the state’s borders.

“(Competing in the Olympics) is the goal,” Stiverson said. “Throwing in 2028 would be nice, but I think a good goal is to be a good contender in (2032). Even going to trials in 2028 and getting close to making the team would be a big win for me.”

It’s a huge goal, but not at all outlandish for Stiverson, who is already fielding scholarship offers from between 20 and 30 major Division I programs and is part of the Nike Elite Team, which includes 40 of the country’s top high school track & field athletes. 

She also trains with Dane Miller at Throws University in Reading, Pa. Miller has trained two national champions and 12 World Team members.

“When he texted me like a month or two after we went out there and he was like, ‘I want to coach you,’ I was like, holy crap. I was kind of fan-girling for a moment,” Stiverson said. “He’s like one of the only reasons I throw as far as I do. When he first started coaching me, he was like, you’re not doing this anymore, we’re doing this. He cut out all the bad stuff.”

Stiverson’s 53-7½ would rank seventh all-time on the National Federation of State High School Associations list. The listed record there is 57-1¼, by Alyssa Wilson of New Jersey. But Wilson threw 58-1 during the summer after her senior year, and that’s the record Stiverson is chasing.

Montrose's Addyson Stiverson competes in the shot put at last season’s LPD3 Finals.Plus a little more.

“She always has that goal in the back of her mind of breaking that 58-1,” said Adam Stiverson, Addyson’s father and Montrose’s girls track coach. “She kind of has a little future goal that no one really talks about it: Could a high school female thrower ever hit 60 feet?

“She wants to compete in college no matter what, and she wants to get better. There’s always room for improvement. If she can fix some things, get a little bigger, a little stronger, 60 feet could be possible. But let’s get 55 feet out of the way, 56 feet out of the way, 57 feet out of the way. If we can get to 57, then we can talk about that 60, because then we’d know that 58-1 is coming.”

While chasing down national goals, Stiverson has been dominating locally.

She’s never been beaten in the shot put during the high school season, and she’s never finished lower than third in the discus, despite it being much less of a focus for her, as she doesn’t want it to affect her form in the shot.

“I’m not going to lie, I don’t touch a disc that much,” Stiverson said. “I give it maybe 75-25, maybe 70-30 during the season. I feel like if I give it too much attention, it could mess up my shot.”

While throwing is her main focus now, Stiverson did play varsity basketball as a freshman and sophomore at Montrose. She also played football all the way through freshman year.

At 5-foot-9, her all-around athletic ability and explosiveness are a great base for her throwing ability, and while she hasn’t shown it off in a while, she can run, too.

On the day she set the Montrose school record for the shot put as a freshman, she also won the 100 meters at a Mid-Michigan Activities Conference quad meet.

“That was for team points,” Stiverson said with a laugh. “Our coach said, ‘One of the girls didn’t show up, we need you to run.’ And I had my spikes with me, so I did.”

Stiverson was the Division 3 Finals champion in the shot put both of the past two years, and won the discus in 2025 as well. She was runner-up in the discus as a freshman.

There are still two full seasons to go, but she’s on pace to become the first female thrower in the Lower Peninsula to win four Finals titles in the shot put.

“I think that was my biggest goal when I came into high school; I wanted to be a four-time shot put state champ,” she said. “When it does happen, that would be one of the coolest things. That was a dream.”

Paul CostanzoPaul Costanzo served as a sportswriter at The Port Huron Times Herald from 2006-15, including three years as lead sportswriter, and prior to that as sports editor at the Hillsdale Daily News from 2005-06. He can be reached at [email protected] with story ideas for Genesee, Lapeer, St. Clair, Sanilac, Huron, Tuscola, Saginaw, Bay, Arenac, Midland and Gladwin counties.

PHOTOS Montrose's Addyson Stiverson competes in the shot put at last season’s LPD3 Finals. (Photos by Mary Wilson/RunMichigan.com.)