MHSAA TV Live Broadcasts Return

September 8, 2020

By John Johnson
MHSAA Director of Broadcast Properties

A new season of live high school sports coverage is underway on the NFHS Network and MHSAA.tv, with the coming week’s schedule packed with boys soccer and girls volleyball action.
 
More games than ever before will be available online beginning this season, with approximately 260 MHSAA member schools taking part in the School Broadcast Program with Pixellot units being installed at their athletic facilities or schools still producing games using traditional hands-on student crews.
 
Pixellot is the NFHS Network’s automated production solution. More than 400 Pixellot units are already installed or about to be installed in high school stadiums and gymnasiums around the state. The NFHS Network has been offering schools up to two free Pixellot units since early July – with the schools only needing to cover installation costs.
 
Additionally, MHSAA regulations regarding live video broadcasts and streaming have been relaxed during the pandemic to allow schools to use their choice of means to distribute games to fans who are unable to attend because of government-imposed spectator limits. Third-party broadcasters – like local television stations and cable television outlets – also are allowed to originate games live.
 
In the coming week, more 300 events will be available on the NFHS Network/MHSAA.tv. Monthly subscriptions are $10.99. Click for a complete list of upcoming games and for a complete list of on-demand games.
 
Fans can also type their school name into the search field on the MHSAA.tv page to search for events. Here is a list of varsity sports events being broadcast over the coming week:
 

GIRLS VOLLEYBALL (Home team listed first)

 
Wednesday – Sept. 9
Multi-team Event @ Pontiac Notre Dame Prep - 5 PM
Niles vs. Berrien Springs  - 6 PM
Stevensville Lakeshore vs. Portage Northern  - 6:30 PM
Bloomfield Hills Cranbrook Kingswood vs. Royal Oak Shrine Catholic  - 6:30 PM
Petoskey vs. Traverse City Central  - 6:30 PM
Traverse City West vs. Gaylord  - 7 PM
Cadillac vs. Alpena  - 7 PM
Macomb Lutheran North vs. Allen Park Cabrini  - 7 PM
Hemlock vs. St. Louis  - 7:30 PM
 
Thursday – Sept. 10
Grand Rapids Christian vs. Grand Haven  - 5 PM
Mt Morris vs. TBD - 5:30 PM
Grand Blanc vs. Linden  - 5:45 PM
Grand Rapids Catholic Central vs. Grand Rapids Ottawa Hills  - 6 PM
Armada vs. Richmond  - 6 PM
Harbor Beach vs. Brown City  - 6 PM
Kinde North Huron vs. Mayville  - 6 PM
DeWitt vs. Williamston  - 6 PM
Fowlerville vs. St Johns  - 6 PM
Auburn Hills Oakland Christian vs. Rochester Hills Lutheran Northwest  - 6:30 PM
South Lyon East vs. White Lake Lakeland  - 6:30 PM
Flint Powers Catholic vs. Midland  - 6:30 PM
South Lyon vs. Waterford Kettering  - 6:30 PM
Macomb L'Anse Creuse North vs. New Baltimore Anchor Bay  - 6:30 PM
Negaunee vs. Ishpeming - 6:30 PM
Grand Rapids South Christian vs. Wayland - 7 PM
Hopkins vs. Wyoming Godwin Heights - 7 PM
Fremont vs. Big Rapids  - 7 PM
Maple City Glen Lake vs. Buckley  - 7 PM
Bear Lake vs. Mason County Eastern  - 7 PM
Gladstone vs. Escanaba  - 7 PM
 
Friday – Sept. 11
Marquette vs. Eben Junction Superior Central  - 6:30 PM
 
Saturday – Sept. 12
Cadillac vs. Big Rapids  - TBA
Novi vs. TBD - 8 AM
Grand Rapids NorthPointe Christian vs. TBD - 8:30 AM
Corunna vs. TBD - 8:30 AM
Mt Morris vs. TBD - 8:30 AM
East Kentwood vs. Rockford  - 8:30 AM
Multi-team Event @ Mason – Part 1 - 8:30 AM
Caro vs. TBD - 9 AM
Cedar Springs vs. Greenville  - 9 AM
Multi-team Event @ Petoskey - 9 AM
Cadillac vs. Essexville Garber  - 9 AM
Pellston vs. TBD - 9 AM
Multi-team Event @ Petoskey - 1 PM
Multi-team Event @ Mason- - Part 2 - 1:30 PM
Peck vs. TBD  - 6 PM
 
Monday – Sept. 14
Multi-team Event @ Pontiac Notre Dame Prep - 5 PM
Fenton vs. Holly  - 5:15 PM
Flint Kearsley vs. Swartz Creek  - 5:15 PM
Linden vs. Flushing  - 5:15 PM
Bay City John Glenn vs. Essexville Garber  - 5:30 PM
Corunna vs. Goodrich  - 6:15 PM
Bloomfield Hills Cranbrook Kingswood vs. Grosse Pointe Woods University Liggett - 6:30 PM
Calumet vs. Marquette - 6:45 PM
Grand Rapids NorthPointe Christian vs. Comstock Park  - 7 PM
Morley Stanwood vs. Holton  - 7 PM
Harrison vs. Sanford Meridian  - 7:30 PM
 
Tuesday – Sept. 15
East Grand Rapids vs. Grand Rapids Forest Hills Northern  - 6 PM
Peck vs. TBD  - 6 PM
Kinde North Huron vs. Kingston  - 6 PM
Williamston vs. Eaton Rapids  - 6 PM
Romulus Summit Academy North vs. Dearborn Henry Ford Academy - 6 PM
Harbor Beach vs. Ubly  - 6 PM
Cedar Springs vs. Middleville Thornapple Kellogg  - 6 PM
Wayland vs. Lansing Catholic - 6 PM
Mayville vs. Akron-Fairgrove  - 6 PM
Chesaning vs. Durand  - 6:15 PM
Gladstone vs. Ishpeming - 6:30 PM
Westland Huron Valley Lutheran vs. Bloomfield Hills Roeper  - 6:30 PM
St. Clair Shores Lake Shore vs. Marine City  - 6:30 PM
Northville vs. Canton  - 6:30 PM
Painesdale Jeffers vs. Dollar Bay  - 6:30 PM
Galesburg-Augusta vs. Kalamazoo Christian  - 6:30 PM
Grand Blanc vs. Flint Powers Catholic  - 6:30 PM
Negaunee vs. Escanaba  - 6:30 PM
Novi vs. Hartland  - 6:30 PM
Brighton vs. Salem  - 6:30 PM
South Lyon vs. South Lyon East  - 6:30 PM
Sterling Heights Parkway Christian vs. TBD - 6:30 PM
Calumet vs. Hancock  - 6:45 PM
Marquette vs. Wakefield-Marenisco  - 7 PM
Big Rapids vs. Newaygo  - 7 PM
Plymouth Christian Academy vs. Livonia Clarenceville  - 7 PM
Cass City vs. Vassar  - 7:30 PM
St Charles vs. TBD - 7:30 PM
 

BOYS SOCCER (Home team listed first)

 
Tuesday – Sept. 8
Ithaca vs. Alma  - 5:30 PM
St. Joseph vs. Kalamazoo Loy Norrix  - 6:30 PM
Stevensville Lakeshore vs. Portage Central  - 6:30 PM
Cedar Springs vs. Middleville Thornapple Kellogg  - 6:45 PM
East Grand Rapids vs. TBD - 6:45 PM
Bloomfield Hills vs. TBD - 7 PM
Saline vs. DeWitt  - 7 PM
Livonia Clarenceville vs. Bloomfield Hills Roeper  - 7 PM
Walled Lake Western vs. South Lyon East  - 7 PM
Walled Lake Central vs. Waterford Kettering  - 7 PM
Freeland vs. Birch Run  - 7 PM
White Lake Lakeland vs. South Lyon  - 7 PM
Brighton vs. Howell  - 7 PM
 
Wednesday – Sept. 9
Plainwell  vs. TBD - 6 PM
Hemlock vs. Standish-Sterling - 7 PM
 
Thursday – Sept. 10
Manchester vs. Stockbridge  - 5:30 PM
Warren De La Salle Collegiate vs. Detroit Catholic Central  - 6 PM
Chesaning vs. Otisville LakeVille  - 6 PM
Stevensville Lakeshore vs. Richland Gull Lake  - 6:30 PM
Grand Rapids Catholic Central vs. Middleville Thornapple Kellogg  - 6:45 PM
Clare vs. Ogemaw Heights  - 7 PM
Bloomfield Hills vs. Oxford  - 7 PM
South Lyon vs. Walled Lake Northern  - 7 PM
Pontiac Notre Dame Prep School vs. TBD - 7 PM
Troy vs. Berkley  - 7 PM
Livonia Clarenceville vs. Romulus Summit Academy North  - 7 PM
South Lyon East vs. Walled Lake Central  - 7 PM
Brighton vs. Novi  - 7 PM
Howell vs. Salem  - 7 PM
West Bloomfield vs. Utica  - 7 PM
Freeland vs. Bay City John Glenn - 7 PM
 
Friday – Sept. 11
East Grand Rapids vs. TBD - 4 PM
White Lake Lakeland vs. Walled Lake Western  - 4:45 PM
Madison Heights Lamphere vs. Warren Woods-Tower  - 7 PM
 
Saturday – Sept. 12
Multi-team Event @ Pontiac Notre Dame Prep - 9 AM
 
Monday – Sept. 14
Ithaca vs. Hemlock  - 5:30 PM
Manchester vs. Quincy  - 5:30 PM
Vicksburg vs. Allegan  - 6 PM
Grand Blanc vs. Midland  - 7 PM
Madison Heights Lamphere vs. Macomb L'Anse Creuse North  - 7 PM
Grand Rapids South Christian vs. East Kentwood  - 7:15 PM
 
Tuesday – Sept. 15
Bloomfield Hills Cranbrook Kingswood vs. Macomb Lutheran North  - 4:30 PM
Stevensville Lakeshore vs. Battle Creek Central  - 6:30 PM
Petoskey vs. Cadillac  - 6:45 PM
Grand Rapids Catholic Central vs. Cedar Springs  - 6:45 PM
Livonia Clarenceville vs. Plymouth Christian Academy - 7 PM
Pontiac Notre Dame Prep vs. TBD - 7:30 PM

Now in its 12th year, the School Broadcast Program gives members an opportunity to showcase excellence in their schools by creating video programming of athletic and non-athletic events with students gaining skills in announcing, camera operation, directing/producing and graphics. Pixellot – The NFHS Network’s automated streaming solution – is used by schools wishing to live stream games, but lacking the ability to staff the events. The program also gives schools the opportunity to raise money through advertising and viewing subscriptions.

NFHS Network subscriptions begin at $10.99 a month. Subscribers will have access to all live video and streaming statistics across the country. All content becomes available for free, on-demand viewing 72 hours after being shown live. A portion of every subscription sold by an SBP school goes to benefit its program. 

A complete list of participating schools can be found on the School Broadcast Program page of the MHSAA Website

Century of School Sports: State's Storytellers Share Winter Memories

By Geoff Kimmerly
MHSAA.com senior editor

December 31, 2024

As part of our school year-long celebration of a “Century of School Sports” and the MHSAA’s 100th anniversary, we’re connecting every season with members of Michigan’s sports media, our historian and longtime communications staff to present some of what they remember most from their time covering our games.

Below is our second installment, covering several of their winter sports memories.

Never Underestimate How Much These Moments Mean

Jack Doles, WOOD TV (Grand Rapids)

In one of my first years covering sports for WOOD-TV in Grand Rapids, Allendale High School went on a deep run in the 1991 basketball tournament. Joe Modderman was the star player for Allendale. He played his heart out, but the team ended up losing (in the Class D Final, 62-48 to Ann Arbor Father Gabriel Richard). During our postgame interview, Joe got very emotional. I saw just how important this game was to him. Joe ended up playing at Iowa State and eventually Grand Valley, so he knew he had a lot of basketball left to play. His tears were for his teammates, who had played their final game. 

I still bump into Joe and we talk about that moment we shared afterward. It was a great lesson in how impactful those moments are.  

Memorable All-Time Matchup, Unforgettable Scores

Tim Staudt, WILX (Lansing), in 53rd year of broadcasting

Picking one from the winter is easy – the District-opening game of the 1977 state basketball tournament at Don Johnson Fieldhouse and Lansing Everett’s Earvin Johnson versus Eastern’s Jay Vincent. Everett won 63-41 after losing 70-62 to Eastern in Jenison Field House before 10,000 fans the previous Friday to end the regular season. Both those scores I still remember to this day.

Detroit Cooley celebrates its 1987 Class A boys basketball championship.‘C-O-O, L-E-Y, Cooley, Cooley, Cooley High’

Mick McCabe, Detroit Free Press since 1970

March 28, 1987, Crisler Arena
Detroit Cooley 82, Detroit Southwestern 77, OT.

This time it was in the bag. Losers in five consecutive state championship games, Southwestern was certain to win its first state championship against a Cooley team that seemed to have no business playing in the state finals. After all, Southwestern had already beaten Cooley twice and the second victory came only a month earlier when the Prospectors destroyed Cooley by 35 points in the Detroit Public School League title game. Yes, 35 points!

But behind the play of sophomore Michael Talley (23 points) and senior Rafeal Peterson (22 points), Cooley took control early and led by 11 points at halftime The Cardinals led by eight heading into the fourth quarter and thought they had the game won before Doyle Callahan scored for the Prospectors an instant before the buzzer to force overtime. Southwestern scored the first basket in overtime and it would have been the perfect time for Cooley to call it an afternoon. But Peterson countered with the biggest basket of the day to tie the score and kept Southwestern from extending its lead. Instead, Southwestern had consecutive turnovers, missed a shot and committed a foul as Cooley took a five-point lead with 38 seconds remaining as chants of: “C-O-O, L-E-Y, Cooley, Cooley, Cooley High” reigned down from the Crisler rafters. It was the first of three straight Class A state championships for Cooley and Talley, who as a senior went on to become the Hal Schram Mr. Basketball Award winner.

Future U-M Teammates Face Off to Finish High School Careers

Greg Miller, formerly of 9&10 News (Cadillac)

The girls basketball Class C state championship game in 2011 pitted future college teammates Nicole Elmblad (St. Ignace) and Madison Ristovski (Grosse Pointe Woods University Liggett) in a shootout for the ages. Ristovski scored 30 points, while Elmblad put up 33 points to go along with a 19-rebound effort, as the Saints pulled away in the fourth quarter to earn a 65-54 victory. Elmblad scored 14 of her 33 points in the deciding quarter to lead St. Ignace to the championship. It was a great back-and-forth matchup of two evenly-matched teams led by two outstanding athletes. The following year, the pair began to play as teammates at the University of Michigan and were both part of some of the winningest teams in program history.

Coles' Shot Goes the Distance

Perry Farrell, MHSAA.com and formerly of Detroit Free Press

I didn't cover the event, but Saginaw Buena Vista's Chris Coles made a shot from about 65 feet in the Class B state boys championship basketball game to defeat arch-rival Flint Beecher 33-32. It is the greatest shot in Michigan high school basketball history. And being a graduate of Buena Vista it was one of the highlights of our school.

Competitive Cheer Finals Atmosphere has Few Rivals

Geoff Kimmerly, MHSAA Communications Director and formerly of Lansing State Journal

I moved to the MHSAA during the 2011-12 school year after more than a decade at the Lansing State Journal, where among other areas of coverage we produced team-by-team previews for all of our area varsity sports – including the addition of a competitive cheer preview as that sport began to gain popularity and participation in the mid-Michigan area. But before leaving the LSJ, I had never covered a competition.

The new job, and a new venture of covering all of our MHSAA Finals for our previous Second Half website, brought me to the Grand Rapids Delta Plex on a Friday night in early March, 2012. I had covered Finals in several other MHSAA sports – although 2011-12 would also see my debut at lacrosse, swimming & diving, gymnastics, cross country, hockey and bowling championship events – so I’d been around some of the larger and loudest crowds for high school competitions over the previous decade or more.

But WOW. The Division 1 crowd, which reached into the Delta Plex rafters, was as charged as anything I’d seen at Ford Field or the Silverdome, or Breslin aside from the oft-recalled Detroit Renaissance/Wyoming Park boys basketball game in 2004. Coming close on atmosphere were some of the Team Wrestling Finals I’d experienced. But this night had people seemingly piled so high I thought they might roll out of the stands onto us. Dads were leading full sections in chants, and when their teams took the mat they were even more electric, and all of that took the typical emotions of a season-ending event to another level.

And of course, the competition was outstanding. Southgate Anderson won its first of what would be three straight Division 1 titles (and if you still don’t credit this as being a sport, try to do anything these athletes make happen on the mat). I was definitely a little awestruck by the whole evening, and left with a whole new appreciation for how another of our sports energizes its community.

Vikings Find Stride at Tournament Time

Brian Calloway, Lansing State Journal

Watching Lansing Everett defy the odds and make an improbable run to the boys basketball state Semifinals at Breslin Center in 2016 is one of the most notable things I observed from the winter sports season. Everett lost 10 regular-season games that year and at that time had become the first team in a decade to reach the state Semifinals despite double-digit losses in the regular season. Everett wound up falling to North Farmington in the Semifinal in what was its second-straight appearance in the final four in Class A.

Marquette and Orchard Lake St. Mary's hockey players shake hands after their record-setting championship game.

Never-Ending 2008 Hockey Championship Game Ends with 2 Champions

John Johnson, MHSAA Communications Director from 1987-2020

On the ice that night, the busiest championship weekend the MHSAA has known came to an end with the longest game in the history of the Finals. Marquette and Orchard Lake St. Mary’s skated for 109 minutes and eight overtimes before administrators ruled the game a 1-1 tie and awarded co-championships in the name of safety for two exhausted teams who had earned victory. Ironically, the contest was just 1:32 from ending (in regulation) when Tim Hooker of St. Mary's knotted the score at 1-1. His tally equaled a power-play goal by Marquette’s Mike Peterson in the second period.

Coming home at the end of the weekend, and feeling like everything was wrapped up as I got closer to Lansing, I’ll never forget my phone blowing up with calls from folks wondering about what was happening with hockey. And then rushing into the house to punch up the audio of the game on the computer, I listened to a very hoarse John Kreger announcing that co-champions had been declared.

Evans’ Game-Winner Still Unbelievable

Lorne Plant – State Champs!

I had the opportunity to get to know then-head coach at Detroit Rogers Steve Hall when I did a State Champs! feature on Brenda Gatlin, who was the first woman to be head coach of a PSL boys basketball team in the (19)80s at Cass Tech. Just so happened, Steve Hall was a player on her team. That took place during the 2002-2003 basketball season, which was the first winter season in the State Champs! era. Two years later, Detroit Rogers had won the state championship the previous two years, so you can only imagine how hard it is to try and win three in a row. As far as I could tell, only two teams had won Class D state titles three times in a row. Chassell did it in the mid 50s, and Detroit East Catholic did it in the late 70s and early 80s. It had been a while. Strange that what only happened three times in 79 years has happened three more times in the last 20 (Class D/Division 4 state champions by a single team three times in a row. No one's ever won four in a row, but I digress).

Back to the '05 final, when the ball went out of bounds with three seconds left in OT and the ball was given to Rogers down a point, I settled in for the final shot. Then the refs overturned the call and gave it to Bellaire, and I thought to myself, "You had a nice run, Steve." And then, the freshman Eric Evans made one of the most incredible plays I've ever seen. He stole the ball and in the same motion threw it up towards the basket and it went in, I couldn't believe it. I will never forget that play.

1 Reporter's Take on Boys Basketball “Games of the Decade”

Brad Emons, Detroit Free Press (formerly of Observer & Eccentric newspapers)

March 6, 1986: In a Class A District Semifinal before an overflow crowd of 2,000 at Alumni Arena, host Wayne Memorial (18-3) took eventual state champ Romulus (25-2) and Mr. Basketball Terry Mills to two overtimes before falling, 93-92. The 6-foot-9 Mills, who later starred at Michigan and played 10 seasons in the NBA, scored 37 points, including 11 in the second OT. The Eagles, who also featured DI players Steve Glenn (Austin Peay) – who added 19 points – and Juan Street (Bowling Green), went on to defeat Detroit Southwestern for the state title at U-M’s Crisler Arena, 72-65. Wayne, which gave up an average height of five inches per man, had three players foul out. The Zebras got a team-high 27 points from Mark Robinson, while Spence Williams and Rod Sommons added 18 and 14, respectively.

March, 18, 1978: Orchard Lake St. Mary’s capped a perfect 27-0 season with a 67-52 Class D championship win over Detroit St. Martin dePorres at U-M’s Crisler Arena. Just a day earlier at MSU’s Jenison Field House, St. Mary’s ousted Mio Au Sable and the state’s all-time career scorer Jay Smith (2,841 points) in convincing fashion, 77-52. In the Quarterfinals at Corunna, OLSM thwarted Saranac and 6-8 MSU recruit Ben Tower, 71-53. The Eaglets’ starting lineup featured Dominican Republic native Evaristo Perez (MSU), Jim Paciorek (Michigan), Barry Bugaj, Dave Kay and Gregg Williamson. After the Semifinal win over Mio, St. Mary’s coach Bob Shoemaker lauded the play of Paciorek saying, “They couldn’t stop Jim even with a blow torch.”

Avoiding Pin, Mason's Jackson Becomes Championship Hero

Rob Kaminski, MHSAA communications coordinator since 1999

During my quarter-century here with the MHSAA, Team Wrestling has always been one of my favorite tournaments. The venue, whether Kellogg Arena in Battle Creek or Wings Event Center in Kalamazoo, is the perfect size for the event, and the crowds are raucous and enthusiastic with the Finals often packed to the rafters.

At one time, the format always began with the lightest weights wrestling first, finishing with the heaviest weights. The format then changed, with the starting weight being drawn right before the competition began, so there was a greater emphasis on strategy: which wrestlers would coaches send out for each weight class?

Such was the case in 2003 at Kellogg Arena. The Division 2 Final between Mason and Lapeer West not only featured two schools always near the top of their sport at the time, but also one of the top individuals in MHSAA history in Lapeer West’s Roger Kish, already a three-time individual champion who ruled the 189-pound weight class.

When 215 was drawn as the starting weight for the Final, the stage was set for a potential dramatic finish as Kish would face Mason’s Tom McDiarmid in the last bout of the meet. However, thinking that Kish would have an easier time against Mason’s 215-pounder and possible getting six points for a fall, Lapeer West sent Kish out for the first match of the dual against Mason’s Kody Jackson. An audible murmur filled the arena, as fans from the other divisions began to take notice of the strategy while also wanting to see one of the best wrestlers in MHSAA history. It seemed as though the first matches on the other three mats might as well have been taking place on Mars, as everyone focused on the D2 circle.

Kish did win the bout, 26-15, but the deafening roar from Mason’s crowd – and other non-partisans in the arena – for Jackson’s effort was something I’ll never forget. The young man had stayed off his back, avoided a pin, and Lapeer West got two points less than it had gambled for.

When it came time for McDiarmid’s turn at 189 to end the meet, Mason trailed 27-25. McDiarmid then took care of business with a 14-1 major decision to give Mason the title, 29-27, and send the crowd into a frenzy.

A week later, Kish and McDiarmid did indeed meet, this time in the MHSAA Individual Finals at 189, where Kish posted a 26-11 technical fall to secure his fourth MHSAA individual crown, and second straight at that weight.

#11 Never Forgotten

Jack Doles, WOOD TV (Grand Rapids)

The last story I'll share deals with a high school athlete who played multiple sports at Grandville high school and left a legacy, not with his play, but his actions. 

Ryan Fischer headshotRyan Fischer played football and hockey at Grandville. He was a captain and the unquestioned leader of the team. Ryan was also beloved by his classmates, because he was an active listener and friend to everyone in the hallways. Sadly, Ryan died unexpectedly during the (2014) hockey playoffs (on the morning of the team's Division 1 Semifinal against Detroit Catholic Central). The team wasn't sure if they could play, but as they waited outside the Fischer home, Ryan's father brought his jersey to the team and told them Ryan would want them to play.

Grandville lost in the (Semifinal), but they fought and made a community proud. At the end of the game, the team took a knee to say a quick prayer, and then Detroit Catholic Central joined them. An incredible level of sportsmanship. Not long after the Fishers buried their son, they started a scholarship in his name. The scholarship is given to the athlete that embodies Ryan's values and spirit. In a story we did, his brother Connor told us his goal was to win that scholarship. He did, and now he serves in the United States Army. Meanwhile, the Grandville and Wyoming communities hand out an award each year called the 11.

Ryan wore number 11. His legacy lives on around West Michigan and beyond.

Previous "Century of School Sports" Spotlights

Dec. 17: MHSAA Over Time - Read
Dec. 10:
On This Day, December 13, We Will Celebrate - Read
Dec. 3:
MHSAA Work Guided by Representative Council - Read
Nov. 26: 
Finals Provide Future Pros Early Ford Field Glory - Read
Nov. 19:
Connection at Heart of Coaches Advancement Program - Read
Nov. 12:
Good Sports are Winners Then, Now & Always - Read
Nov. 5:
MHSAA's Home Sweet Home - Read
Oct. 29:
MHSAA Summits Draw Thousands to Promote Sportsmanship - Read
Oct. 23:
Cross Country Finals Among MHSAA's Longest Running - Read
Oct. 15:
State's Storytellers Share Fall Memories - Read
Oct. 8:
Guided by 4 S's of Educational Athletics - Read
Oct. 1:
Michigan Sends 10 to National Hall of Fame - Read
Sept. 25: MHSAA Record Books Filled with 1000s of Achievements - Read
Sept. 18:
Why Does the MHSAA Have These Rules? - Read
Sept. 10: 
Special Medals, Patches to Commemorate Special Year - Read
Sept. 4:
Fall to Finish with 50th Football Championships - Read
Aug. 28:
Let the Celebration Begin - Read

PHOTOS Clockwise from top left: (1) Earvin Johnson brings the ball upcourt for Lansing Everett. (2) Nicole Emblad gets a shot up for St. Ignace. (3) A Grandville teammate of Ryan Fischer wears his jersey for the Division 1 Semifinal after Fischer died that morning. (4) Southgate Anderson competes at the 2012 Competitive Cheer Final. (5) Mason's Kory Jackson (red) and Lapeer West's Roger Kish wrestle during the 2003 Division 2 Final. (Middle) Detroit Cooley celebrates its 1987 Class A boys basketball championship. (Below) Marquette and Orchard Lake St. Mary's hockey players shake hands after their record-setting championship game. (MHSAA file photos.)