AD Inducted to National Hall of Fame
May 7, 2014
By Geoff Kimmerly
Second Half editor
Winter gets hectic so quickly that we’re forced to save some intriguing items that come our way for a sunnier day – and that day is today.
Following are news, notes and a few key links collected over the last few months, including the national Hall of Fame induction of a longtime Michigan athletic director, local recognition for another and statewide acclaim for a group of students putting their video production equipment to good use benefiting all.
Ann Arbor AD Honored Nationally
Former Ann Arbor Huron athletic director Jane Bennett was among five inducted into the National Interscholastic Athletic Administrators Association Hall of Fame in December.
Bennett served 26 years as a teacher, coach, athletic director and assistant principal in Michigan before spending the last decade as a principal at two schools in Montana. She served as athletic director at Huron for 15 years through 2002-03. The NIAAA reported that during her final decade in that position, participation in athletics doubled.
Bennett, who received her bachelor’s and master’s degrees from the University of Michigan, began her career at Huron in 1977 as varsity softball coach and became a math teacher and the co-director of athletics a year later. She coached the softball team 14 seasons before moving into the full-time athletic director position. Bennett was co-founder of the Michigan High School Softball Coaches Association and served as MHSSCA president from 1982-87.
Among other achievements at Huron, Bennett was a leader in a successful campaign to gain voter approval of a $60 million bond package, which included $20 million to improve and expand athletic facilities. She also developed curriculum for an annual varsity captains/head coaches leadership training program and composed handbooks/guidebooks for coaches, athletes and parents.
Bennett also was a valuable contributor to the Michigan Interscholastic Athletic Administrators Association and the NIAAA. She was president of the MIAAA in 1993-94 and a state conference speaker on several occasions. Bennett also served in various NIAAA leadership positions including on the committee that developed the Leadership Training Institute in 1996.
Bennett was named MIAAA Athletic Director of the Year in 1998 and received its State Award of Merit in 1997. She received the MHSAA’s Women in Sports Leadership Award in 1995 and was inducted into the MHSSCA Hall of Fame in 1995. Prior to her selection to the NIAAA Hall of Fame, Bennett was honored with the NIAAA Distinguished Service Award in 1998 and the NIAAA Thomas E. Frederick Award of Excellence in 2000. In 2005, she was inducted into the National Council of Secondary School Athletic Directors Hall of Fame, having served as its president in 2003 and been selected as its Athletic Director of the Year in 1998.
PSL's Ward: 'Pillar' of Detroit Athletics
Alvin Ward, the executive director of athletics for the Detroit Public School League and a member of the MHSAA Representative Council, received a 2014 Pillar in the Community Award in April from the Coast II Coast All-Stars, a Detroit-based pro basketball team that plays in the American Basketball Association.
Ward has served as a teacher, assistant principal and principal as well for Detroit Public Schools, and directs programs with a combined 500 coaches and 4,500 athletes.
Linked up
- This winter, the MHSAA Representative Council adopted a number of football practice rules changes aimed at improving player acclimatization at the start of fall and reducing head trauma and injuries. The Adrian Daily Telegram’s Doug Donnelly got responses from a number of coaches from that area of the state; click to find out why they feel these changes are important.
- Port Huron Times Herald writer Paul Costanzo let people know about our Student Advisory Council through the experience of Marlette’s Connor Thomas, one of our juniors and a great contributor this school year.
Power of Awareness
The Kimberly Anne Gillary Foundation works to educate Michigan schools on sudden cardiac arrest and train personnel in CPR and the use of an AED (automated external defibrillator). The video below teaches us again about the importance of awareness.
Saginaw Heritage was awarded $5,000 in April as the winner of the Gillary Foundation’s High School AED Contest. Students were asked to create a 3-minute video emphasizing the importance of Michigan high schools being adequately prepared to respond to a sudden cardiac arrest or related event on school property.
Randy and Sue Gillary created the foundation after their 15-year-old daughter Kimberly – an athlete at Troy Athens – died after suffering sudden cardiac arrest in 2000. The contest judges were Kimberly’s sisters Emily Kucinich, Jennifer Gregroy and Katie Gillary.
As of April 1, the Gillary Foundation had raised $1.2 million and donated 650 AEDs to schools – with three lives having been saved with donated AEDs. For more, click www.kimberlysgift.org.
Lewandowski Quadruplets Locked In to Lead TC West's Finals Titles Pursuits
By
Tom Spencer
Special for MHSAA.com
February 13, 2026
Rivalry. Cross-town? Conference?
Not so much for this year’s Traverse City West ski teams.
It’s sibling rivalry fueling the Titans, and more specifically the “Quads” – as they are widely known – quadruplets Summer, Cam, Dane and Brock Lewandowski.
And, while conference and cross-town school Traverse City Central will be an obstacle in the path of West’s drive to reclaim the boys and girls Division 1 Championships later this month, the sibling rivalry will take center stage when the Quads hit the slopes of Boyne Mountain for the Division 1 Finals on Feb. 23.
Not necessarily among those four, though. This sibling rivalry is mostly a long-standing one between the Quads and their older brothers, Aiden and Caleb, who own individual and team Finals championship trophies. All the Lewandowski children are life-long skiers, and a Lewandowski has been leading the Titans program every year since 2019.
The older brothers haven’t let them forget West has failed to win a boys championship since they left. Aiden and Caleb, who were on West’s first Finals championship team in 2021 and now attend Michigan State University, remind the Quads every chance they get. West’s boys also won Division 1 titles in 2022 and 2023.
That sibling rivalry pressure could help propel the Titans boys and girls to the top this year despite steep competition from last year’s girls champion, Central, and boys champ, Marquette.
“I know there's a lot of pressure on them to perform and to want to be better than their siblings,” acknowledged their mother, Tonya Lewandowski. “Ski racing is a mentally grinding, tough sport because you will have way more failure than success in this sport. We have been so proud of our kids.”
Father Jeremy Lewandowski knows the bar was set pretty high for the Quads by his state champion sons.
“Their whole life the Quads have felt that,” said Jeremy Lewandowski. “And Caleb never lets them forget it. Aiden just raced at fall camp again to prove to them he's still faster.”
The West boys already have their eyes set on Marquette and have locked up the Big North Conference championship with one more competition next week. The Titans haven’t lost a conference race this year, and they topped Marquette in this year’s Regional on Monday.
The West girls are trailing Central as they head into next week’s Big North Conference finale at Crystal Mountain. The Quads and their coaches see their opponents more as friends competing together, rather than rivals.
“It's going to come down probably to the one-hundredth of the second of who is a little bit faster,” predicted West coach Libby Shutler. “We lost the last BNC race to Central girls by a half a point. It's anybody's race on Tuesday.”
Shutler heads up the girls program with the support of boys head coach Ed Johnson and assistant coaches Austin Johnson and Morgan Siemer. She looks for the Final to be just as close.
“On any given day you never know,” Shutler said. “The cool thing about the state championship meet and what has been since I raced in the '80s and '90s is it truly brings the best ski racers in the state of Michigan together to perform, and they're all really good. There's a group of probably 10 boys, 10 girls, any of them could win the state championship.”
The Central girls edged West this week at the Regional with a combined score of 60 for the giant slalom and slalom. West finished with 61.
To get by Central in the league and Final, the West girls will battle stiff competition in Central’s Quinn Gerber, who is looking for a fourth-straight individual Finals title, and her teammates Avery Taggert and Kellen Kudary.
Summer Lewandowski is ready for the challenge, though, with her teammates Avery Plummer and Sarah Shapiro always competing for the top spots.
“Quinn (Gerber) and Avery (Taggert) are making me better because they're just amazing skiers, and I don't want to be the only one out of the four (Quads) that's not exceeding expectations,” Summer Lewandowski said. “Sarah Shapiro tore her ACL her freshman year – which was horrible – but she got back into it and it feels like we're sisters, and these times are so close with that good competition out there.”
While the West girls battle Central and the rest of the Division 1 competitors, the Lewandowski family is quick to assert Brock Lewandowski may be the difference maker in a boys title run.
He missed last season and part of this one recovering from multiple leg breaks.
“After healing he broke it again – same leg, different spot,” said Tonya Lewandowski. “He missed all of the sophomore year. So we have been so insanely proud of Brock this year. It is ‘The year of Brock.’”
Dane, Cam and Brock Lewandowski all credit the efforts of their captain Grady Ellis for keeping the Titans’ focused on opportunities ahead. Ellis finished fifth in the giant slalom and seventh in the slalom at the Regional.
And Cam Lewandowski also agreed Brock’s return has been a difference-maker.
“It’s pretty crazy this year seeing him as good as he is right now,” he said. “It shocked me, actually, the first few races, up there – sometimes you never know what's going to happen. I feel like I would definitely be scared to come back and do it all.”
Brock Lewandowski admitted it wasn’t easy to get back on the hill after the second injury. But he’s also quick to point out he’s more than ready to compete for championships.
“It wasn't great watching from the hill, watching from the sideline, and it was definitely a little scary the start of our season thinking of what happened in the past years with two breaks,” he admitted. “But after I got over that, it's been really fine. I haven't even really thought about it at all.”
Brock Lewandowski is ready to quiet his older brothers a little bit, as is Dane Lewandowski, who took fifth in last year’s Final in both slalom and giant slalom. He believes the team title is well within the Titans’ grasp. Individual titles are also in sight as the Lewandowskis will still have a senior year left next winter.
“We have a little more depth, I would say, than last year and we're working pretty well together,” said Dane Lewandowski, who pointed out his older brothers first started skiing with the older brothers of Central’s three-time champion Gerber. “We know what Marquette can do, and that's definitely our competition for states. We’ve just got to ski to our ability and nothing better, nothing worse.”
Both Lewandowski parents are engineers, and not ski racers. They were introduced to skiing while attending Michigan Tech. Mom was a swimmer and Dad was a baseball and lacrosse guy.
“The joke is people ask, ‘Were you and Jeremy really good ski racers?’ and we're like, ‘No, we grew up downstate and we were just lucky,’” Tonya said. “Jeremy's a much better skier than I am, but it was just one of those situations when our kids were young, where it would hit about 5:30 at night and we had six young kids and we'd go, ‘What are we going to do now ’til bedtime?’”
The answer became clear. It led to their children learning to ski at Hickory Hills, a Traverse City-owned ski hill.
“Jeremy pulled out the Home Depot lights and we set up the little plastic picnic tables in the yard and made jumps and luges for these kids on plastic skis,” Tonya recalled. “They just loved it. And then our friends introduced us to Hickory Hills, and it changed our life. It totally changed our life.”
Tom 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) The Lewandowski quadruplets – Summer, Cam, Dane and Brock – race this season. (Middle) The Lewandowski family poses for a photo with the quadruplets as infants, and then later during a day on the hill. (Below) The Lewandowski quads stand for a photo with friends from Traverse City Central during Monday’s Regional. (Regional photos courtesy of the Traverse City Record-Eagle. Family and other ski photos courtesy of the Lewandowski family and Traverse City West ski programs.)