This Year’s Honorees

We are proud to recognize this year’s honorees—individuals whose impact on sports and our community reflects the spirit of the Hank Greenberg Invitational.

Alan Trammell

Hank Greenberg Lifetime Achievement Award

Alan Trammel awards ceremony

For 20 seasons, Alan Trammell was the face of the Detroit Tigers. During those 20 years, Trammell’s all-around excellence led the Tigers to victories while putting him on the path to Cooperstown.

Trammell was drafted by the Tigers in the second round of the 1976 amateur draft. He made his big-league debut at the age of 19 on Sept. 9, 1977, and by 1978 Trammell was the Tigers starting shortstop – finishing fourth in the American League Rookie of the Year voting.

In 1980, Trammell earned his first All-Star selection, batted .300 for the first time and won his first of four Gold Glove Awards. In 1983, Trammell hit .319 with 14 homers, 66 RBI and 30 stolen bases and was awarded the Comeback Player of the Year in the American League following two straight years where he hit .258.

In 1984, Trammell battled shoulder tendinitis to finish fifth in the AL batting race (.314) and eighth in on-base percentage (.382). The Tigers went 104-58 to win the AL pennant and the World Series. Going 9-for-20 with two homers and six RBI, Trammell was named World Series MVP.

In 1987 He became the first Tiger to have 200 hits and 100 RBI in a season since 1955 and finished in the league top 10 in batting average (.343), RBI (105), hits (205), runs (109), total bases (329), on-base percentage (.402) and slugging percentage (.551).

Trammell finished second in MVP voting that year to Toronto’s George Bell. That season, Trammell became the first player in big league history to hit at least .340 with 28 home runs and 100 RBI in a season while playing at least half his games at shortstop.

Trammell retired following the 1996 season with six All-Star Game selections, three Silver Slugger Awards and four Gold Glove Awards. He batted better than .300 seven times in his career, finishing with a .285 batting average, 185 home runs, 1,003 RBI, 412 doubles and 2,365 hits. He finished in the Top 10 in AL MVP voting three times.

Trammell was elected to the Hall of Fame in 2018.

Mike Serling headshot

Michael Serling

Barry Bremen Memorial Inspiration Award

Michael Serling was raised in Detroit. He founded his law firm, Serling & Abramson, PC, in the 1970s, specializing in asbestos litigation, which he pioneered with the first case in Michigan. He has been involved extensively in philanthropy for the past 40 years. Michael and Elaine, inspired by living in Israel for a year, gave the naming gifts for the MSU Serling Institute for Jewish Studies and Modern Israel and the Tamarack Israeli Camper Program. Serling chairs the MSU Serling Institute advisory board, and has served on the ADL board, the MSU Hillel board, and the AIPAC Michigan Council for many decades. The Serlings also support a panoply of other Jewish community and secular charities as they strongly believe in giving back. Serling has been honored by the Zekelman Holocaust Center, Tamarack Camps, Jewish Senior Life-Eight Over 80, and MSU. The Serlings are blessed with two daughters and sons-in-law, and four grandchildren.

Dan Shulman headshot

Dan Shulman

Dick Schaap Award for Media Excellence

Dan Shulman began his broadcasting career in 1990 at CKBB in Barrie, Ontario before moving to the The FAN radio station in Toronto in 1991. At the Fan, he hosted a number of talk shows in addition to the pre and postgame shows on Blue Jays broadcasts.

He began serving as the Blue Jays’ play-by-play announcer in 1995 and also started working part time for ESPN on baseball and college basketball in 1995 before joining ESPN full-time in 2001.

With ESPN, Dan was the voice of Wednesday Night Baseball from 2002-2007, Monday Night Baseball from 2008-2010, and served as ESPN’s Sunday Night Baseball play-by-play announcer from 2011-2017. In addition, Dan called ESPN Radio’s MLB postseason from 1998 through 2022, including 12 World Series from 2011-2022. Dan has called NCAA basketball for ESPN since 1995, including the network’s signature Saturday Primetime games since 2007.

Dan has also covered three Olympics, calling hockey in Lillehammer, Norway in 1994, and basketball for the Tokyo games in 2021 and the Paris games in 2024.

Dan has received many honors and accolades for his work, including the 2011 NSMA National Sportscaster of the Year Award in the US and the Canadian Screen Award in 2022. In addition, Dan was named the winner of the Canadian Baseball Hall of Fame’s Jack Graney Award in 2020 and is a three-time finalist for the National Baseball Hall of Fame’s Ford C. Frick Award.

Honor the Honorees in the Hank Greenberg Ad Journal


Show your support with a tribute ad, message, or sponsorship listing—while helping advance the mission of the Michigan Jewish Sports Foundation.

Place an ad in the 35th Annual Hank Greenberg invitational ad journal and align your business with community leadership and LIfesaving Impact. Congratulate our honorees, showcase your brand, and support critical cancer care- all in one meaningful placement.


$400 Quarter-Page

3.625″X 4.875″

$600 Half-Page

4.875″X7.5″

$900 Full-Page

7.5″X10″

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Ad book deadline May 22, 2026.