Each bicycle had a custom Michigan license plate that represented all seven schools that took part in the Road & Bicycle Safety Program: Bagley Elementary, Brown Academy, Gompers Elementary, King Academic and Performing Arts Academy, Mason Elementary, Munger Elementary and Spain Elementary.
"It's amazing. Even standing here talking to you now, I'm getting goose bumps hearing the excitement behind us right now," said Chris Granger, group president, Sports & Entertainment, Ilitch Holdings, Inc. "It's just so exciting. This is truly a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity for many of these kids. We're thrilled to be a part of it, we thank Chevrolet for being a part of it. It's just a wonderful partnership and we look forward to doing it again in the future."
Also in on the surprise were Detroit Red Wings Danny DeKeyser and Luke Witkowski.
"The amount of distracted drivers, you got to teach these kids the bike safety things because people are not all paying attention," Witkowski said. "You've got to pay attention to the traffic and all the people on the road."
DeKeyser revealed to the students that he started riding a bike when he was six years old and his first bike was a Batman bike. "I think it got sold at a garage sale," DeKeyser said. "I think I had another bike by that time, a bigger one that fit me better."
Witkowski, a Holland, Mich. native, said he kept his first bike for a long time, much longer than DeKeyser kept his Batman one.
"I told the kids up there it was a Mongoose," Witkowski said. "I don't think we got rid of it until I was 20-some years old. I think some kid in the neighborhood is still riding it so it's still around. We gave it to some neighbor kids."
During their Q&A session, one kid asked Witkowski if he could do a wheelie, which was an opportunity Witkowski couldn't really pass up.