By Ty Marzean
WKTV Contributor
After winning their second state championship in three seasons, the Tri-unity Defenders are once again poised to make a run to the Breslin Center in the final year of Coach Mark Keeler’s storied career.
Coach Keeler has spent 38 years pacing the sidelines at Tri-unity in a remarkable career that includes six state championships, six state runner-up trophies, 15 Final Four appearances, 19 regional titles, 26 district titles and 22 conference championships.
Keeler recently achieved his 700th victory as a varsity coach, making him the fourth coach in state history to reach this milestone in boys’ basketball. Roy Johnston holds the record for the most wins in state history with 833 victories.
“I feel very blessed … so many awesome parents,
unbelievable players and great assistant coaches”
“I feel very blessed,” Keeler said. “I’ve had some great assistant coaches and coaches who have been involved and positive. I’m very excited to have achieved that, but I feel like its more of a school achievement than for just me as a coach. I’ve had so many awesome parents and so many unbelievable basketball players that have played for me. Those wins are more about those players than it is about me.”
Keeler started coaching at Tri-unity when the school was K-9 and that morphed into a varsity squad a few years later. Often having to rent gym space from Grandville schools until they could put bleachers in, Coach Keeler built the Tri-unity basketball program figuratively and literally from the ground up.
In the early years, Tri-unity played in the West Michigan Liberty Conference made up of small Christian schools, traveling from Niles to Whitehall to Lansing.
“I’ll never forget Niles First Assembly had a carpeted gym, I’ll never forget that,” Keeler chuckled. “Nobody locally wanted to play us because they never heard of us.”
Tri-unity Athletic Director Evan Przybysz said Keeler is the most humble winner he’s ever met.
“For all of the 700-plus wins that he will receive, the credit first goes to the Lord, and then to his players,” Przybysz explained. “He has instilled a system and a culture within his program that allows them to be successful year over year. To be one of four people in MHSAA history to reach the 700 win milestone is an achievement not only in success, but longevity. Especially all at the same school.
“We will certainly miss him when he retires at the end of the year, but are happy for him and Cheryl on the next stage of life they will be moving into. He has created a foundation that we will continue to build on, and we are confident in Brent Voorhees (his current assistant) who will take over as the head of the program.”
Former NBA player Chris Kaman from Tri-unity
One of his more notable players, superstar Chris Kaman, graduated from Tri-unity in 2000. Kaman played college ball at Central Michigan University and was drafted in the first round by the Los Angeles Clippers, but also played for the Lakers, Dallas Mavericks and a couple other teams.
The Defenders have started this season with a 7-2 record with wins against East Grand Rapids, Calvin Christian and Lee in their first conference game of the season.
Tri-unity took an 80-53 road victory against the two-time defending Alliance League champion Legends last Friday.
“It was a very good game,” Keeler said. “They hung tough. We kept about a 10-point lead throughout the early going, but they kept on fighting and they are very well coached. We eventually pulled away late, but they fought all the way through.”
6-foot-7 senior Joey Mellon led the way with 27 points and 18 rebounds (11 offensively) in a strong effort for the Defenders.
“Joey had an unbelievable game,” Keeler exclaimed. “The 11 offensive rebounds blows me away. He was just a machine.
“We shot about 50 percent, but there were a lot of shots taken. We missed 32 shots, but we had 20 offensive rebounds so really only missed 12 in my way of thinking.”
Senior Noah Silverton added 10 points and four assists, while Keaton Blanker filled the stat sheet with eight points and 11 rebounds.
“They are wonderful young men; they have been nothing but positive and encouraging to me as a coach.”