No Halftime for MHSAA.TV

January 22, 2013

The winter season has reached its midway point. But there's no break as MHSAA.tv keeps supplying plenty of broadcasts for a variety of sports, in coordination with the School Broadcast Program. 

Find these events from last week by scrolling through the "On Demand" section at the bottom of the MHSAA.tv page.

  • Harbor Springs vs. Charlevoix boys basketball
  • Lincoln Alcona vs. Oscoda boys basketball
  • Alpena vs. Petoskey boys basketball
  • Otsego vs. Plainwell boys basketball
  • Montrose vs. Perry boys basketball
  • Davison vs. Flint Northern boys basketball
  • Ellsworth vs. Boyne Falls boys basketball
  • Charlevoix vs. Petoskey boys basketball
  • Ludington vs. Shelby boys basketball
  • Calumet vs. Hancock boys basketball
  • Indian River Inland Lakes vs. Central Lake girls basketball
  • Rudyard vs. Rogers City girls basketball
  • St. Ignace vs. Cheboygan girls basketball
  • Lincoln Alcona vs. Oscoda girls basketball
  • Dowagiac vs. Plainwell girls basketball
  • Montrose vs. Genesee Christian girls basketball
  • Wolverine vs. Onaway girls basketball
  • Charlevoix vs. Cheboygan girls basketball
  • Bloomfield Hills Cranbrook-Kingswood vs. Warren DeLaSalle hockey
  • Calumet vs. Detroit U-D Jesuit hockey
  • Bloomfield Hills Cranbrook-Kingswood vs. Orchard Lake St. Mary’s hockey
  • Mason vs. Ovid-Elsie boys swimming and diving
  • Mason vs. Haslett/Williamston gymnastics

    MHSAA Perspective: John Johnson explains how a game he recently attended was like so many - a great advertisement for the qualities and role of the high school game - Wasn't that a Great Game?

    MHSAA.tv highlights: This week's School Broadcasting Program package features clips from the Davison/Flint Northern and St. Ignace/Cheboygan girls basketball games and the Boyne Falls/Ellsworth boys basketball game.

    Wounded Warrior Project: DeWitt vs Portland

    December 16, 2011

    DEWITT -- The meeting of two state-ranked teams always will ratchet up a typical football night. Both communities, naturally, want to see which is better on the field.

    But during the hour before the opening kickoff Oct. 14 of DeWitt’s game against Portland, those teams and their supporters together recognized a grander cause. The night was dedicated to the Wounded Warrior Project, which aids U.S. soldiers (and their families) who have suffered service-related injuries and illnesses.

    Rain washed out some planned attractions, but the evening certainly was memorable. Both teams wore camouflage jerseys and each sent its captains to the pre-game coin toss with an honorary captain representing the military. A number of other service personnel were involved – including a local color guard that presented a 30-foot flag for the national anthem.

    It’s understandable if people’s visions of wars and our military are focused an ocean away. But connections hit close to home. DeWitt’s honorary captain, Lansing’s U.S. Army Spc. Jacob Shumway, recently returned from a deployment and has been in the service for two and a half years. He’s a 2003 Lansing Everett graduate, and his mother Susan Land is the principal at Lansing Eastern. His cousins Ethan and Collin Rennaker start for DeWitt, and he walked alongside them for the pregame flip. Shumway plans to attend Lansing Community College and study digital graphic design.

    Both teams are considered contenders for their respective state titles next month; DeWitt is ranked No. 7 in Division 3, while Portland is No. 4 in Division 5. And they played like it – Portland prevailed 22-20 in overtime.

    A great game, no question. But similarly significant was a preliminary figure of more than $11,000 raised for the WWP.

    For more about the Wounded Warrior Project visit http://www.woundedwarriorproject.org.