High 5s: 11/7/12

November 7, 2012

This past Saturday saw eight teams and eight individuals crowned MHSAA champions, and this week we feature a few who will be listed among the best for all time. 

Erin Finn
West Bloomfield senior
Cross country

Finn won her second straight MHSAA individual Lower Peninsula Division 1 championship, this time in 17:07.9. Her finish was the fastest from any of the four divisions that raced Saturday at Michigan International Speedway, and gave her the victory in hers by 27 seconds. Finn’s time was the fourth-best ever at an MHSAA Final. She has three of the top 15 times ever run at MIS, more than any other runner.

On track for more: Finn also won an MHSAA Track and Field championship last season, setting an all-division/class record in the 1,600 with a time of 10:17.86. That time was nearly five seconds better than the previous best.

Maize and Blue: Finn will run next season at the University of Michigan. The Wolverines cross country team is ranked No. 7 nationally heading into Friday's NCAA Great Lakes Regional. 

Scientifically speaking: Finn intends to study biomechanical engineering at U-M. "My junior year, I found out I love physics, and I already knew I loved bio and chemistry. So, what's better than to combine those?"

Runners to chase: “I looked up to Megan Goethals (of Rochester), number one, and Shannon Osika (of Waterford Mott). They’re people I competed with. I know that one day I can be like that. It’s more real to me.”

Click to read more.

Nick Raymond
Erie Mason senior
Cross country

After dashing to the lead last season and finishing fourth, Nick Raymond dominated the Lower Peninsula Division 3 Final at MIS with a time of 15:05.1 – the second-fastest time for a Division 3/Class C MHSAA Final to only Maverick Darling's 14:52.8 for Ovid-Elsie in 2007. Raymond is the first individual cross country champion from Erie Mason (not counting another who finished first among individuals before team and individual placers were combined for one race beginning in 1997) and also placed in both the 1,600 and 3,200 at the spring's Lower Peninsula Division 3 Track and Field Final. 

A long drive: "I've been working hard, since the first time (I ran) in sixth grade. Working hard and training hard over the summer and during mandatory practices too." 

Brotherly influence: Raymond began running cross country in the footsteps of his older brother Andrew Raymond, a 2010 graduate. "He told me, 'If you just keep working hard, just look forward at your dream, your goal, you will achieve it.'"

Now the pool, then the track: Raymond swims during the winter, specializing in butterfly and breaststroke. Then it's on to track. Raymond finished fourth in the 1,600 (4:21.84) and seventh in the 3,200 (9:44.91) at last season's Lower Peninsula Division 3 Final. 

Looking up to Pre: Like many in the running community, Raymond considers former Oregon and international star Steve Prefontaine a major influence. "I liked how he had a lot of faith in himself."

Click to read more. 

East Kentwood soccer

The top-ranked Falcons edged Grand Blanc 1-0 at Troy Athens to claim their fourth Division 1 championship in six seasons. They finished 22-1-4, their seventh with at least 20 wins in the last eight years. 

Click to read more. 

Previous 2012-13 honorees:

Cochran, Jenison Rising Among Elite of Inaugural MHSAA Boys Volleyball Season

By Dean Holzwarth
Special for MHSAA.com

May 27, 2026

JENISON – Quinn Cochran never envisioned that one day he would have the opportunity to compete for a state championship while playing volleyball. 

West MichiganBut with boys volleyball an MHSAA-sponsored sport for the first time this spring, Cochran and his second-ranked Jenison squad will have the chance to do just that as they begin postseason play tonight as one of nearly 120 teams participating in the inaugural postseason. 

“I love it,” the 6-foot-2 high-flying Cochran said. “It’s great for us, and the sport is finally getting the recognition it deserves, especially because it’s such a fun sport. It’s also a chance for kids who want to play a spring sport.

“There are some teams that just want to play for fun, and some that want to be competitive and try to win a state championship. That’s what we’ve been focusing on this year. The first few years as a club sport it was just about ‘let’s have fun and get better,’ but now that it’s an actual sanctioned sport we want to go and play and win.”

The Wildcats will play Muskegon Mona Shores tonight in a Division 1 first-round Regional matchup.

A victory would more than likely set up a highly-anticipated match against top-ranked Grand Haven, which Jenison beat recently – handing the Bucs their only loss of the season.

“We have a lot of confidence knowing that we can go in and compete against the top teams in the state,” Cochran said. “We know we can play them and beat them, so if we play like we know we can play then we can definitely win a state title.

Cochran, far left, elevates for another kill attempt.“Our toughest battle will be Grand Haven on Friday. They were down one of their top players last time when we played them, but we still can beat them. We didn’t play as well as we could’ve against them earlier in the season, and I think if we can beat Grand Haven then we have a good chance to win it.”

Cochran, an athletic outside hitter/setter, is one of several talented players for head coach Teran Peerboom-Vanderbroek.

Jenison entered today with a sparkling 29-4-1 record.

“They’ve done a really good job all year of kind of dialing in, working hard and improving,” Peerboom-Vanderbroek said. “They’ve really concentrated on where our weaknesses are and then focused on fixing them. We had that big win against Grand Haven and played well against Hudsonville, so this is a hard-working group of guys who have a good chance of making a run if we play well this week.”

Cochran believes that the team’s versatility has been a major factor in their success.

“I think what makes us good is that we don’t have a weak spot,” he said. “Our setting and hitting have been great, as well as our passing, serving and middle blocking. We don’t have a hole in our team, and we are all super solid.”

Cochran, a two-year captain, has been the catalyst of this year’s team after a breakout junior season that garnered all-state second-team honors. 

He’s been one of the top players in the state again this season and was recently named a finalist for the Mr. Volleyball Award by the Michigan Interscholastic Volleyball Coaches Association.

Grand Haven’s Caleb Cryst, Saline’s Quinn Burns, White Lake Lakeland’s Zachary Dorbin and Farmington’s Charlie Engelhardt are the other finalists.

“I think it’s very cool to be recognized like that,” Cochran said. “And being recognized as one of the best players in the state is something I’ve worked toward my whole life. Seeing that hard work pay off is definitely a good pat on the back, and helping my team be competitive has been fun.” 

Cochran played basketball all four years of high school and baseball until his sophomore year.

His true passion is volleyball, and he’s gradually improved each year while playing on indoor club teams for the past seven.

Cochran and his teammates pose for a photo with a trophy in hand. (“We had a beach volleyball court in our backyard, and I loved playing with my dad and his buddies,” Cochran said. “At a young age I knew I could play well against people older than me, and then I took it seriously. I started playing at a high level in club and realized I could play at that level.”

Cochran has been playing beach volleyball since he was 6, and even had the opportunity to play with AVP players Logan Webber and David Ryan in tournaments. “That was definitely fun, and I was grateful for the experiences,” Cochran said. 

He will play next season at Cornerstone University.

“I didn’t think about playing in college until my junior year,” Cochran said. “I was playing pretty well, and I didn’t want to be done playing indoor volleyball. I was a little late in the recruiting process, but I narrowed it down and I wanted to be close to home.”

Peerboom-VanderBroek has high praise for Cochran’s character and leadership, but has also been impressed by his ability to adapt to a different role when called upon. 

“He’s very selfless as well, and he’s been playing some middle for us, which is definitely not his preferred position,” she said. “It seals up some of our blocking issues, and he can run and pass out of the middle and take control a little bit.

“It has been really great, and I think he’s seeing the team’s success as a result of the move – so I’m really proud of him in that way. It’s not easy to go from a spot that you really shine in to something more uncomfortable, but it makes our team better.”

Dean HolzwarthDean Holzwarth has covered primarily high school sports for Grand Rapids-based WOOD-TV for five years after serving at the Grand Rapids Press and MLive for 16 years along with shorter stints at the Ionia Sentinel and WZZM. Contact him at [email protected] with story ideas for Allegan, Kent and Ottawa counties. 

PHOTOS (Top) Jenison’s Quinn Cochran (1) winds up for a kill attempt against Hudsonville this season. (Middle) Cochran, far left, elevates for another kill attempt. (Below) Cochran and his teammates pose for a photo with a trophy in hand. (Photos courtesy of Quinn Cochran.)