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Spoofhound statues left over from the convention were sold at carnivals in 1922. Leslie Edward Ziegeler (1894-1957), who coached high school team said his players looked like a bunch of Spoofhounds. The name stuck and as the 1923 football season began the team was called the Spoofhound by the Maryville Daily Forum .
In 1961, it was named Rickenbrode Stadium for long-time university business manager and athletic booster William Rickenbrode. Through the 1970s, the stadium with lights was the home field for the Maryville High School Spoofhounds and was used as a venue for various civic functions including the annual 4 July display.
The Midland Empire Conference (also called MEC) is a high school athletic conference whose members are located in northwest Missouri. The conference participates in the MSHSAA. The conference was created during a March 1962 meeting at Armstrong's Restaurant in Maryville, Missouri and took effect in the 1962-63 school year.
[40] [41] The high school has the unique mascot of "Spoofhounds." Both schools have green and white for their school colors. [42] Adam Dorrel, a Maryville High graduate, succeeded his former boss Tjeerdsma when he retired as coach in 2010 and kept up the tradition winning the national titles in 2013, 2015 and 2016. [citation needed]
The Athletics farm system consists of six Minor League Baseball affiliates across the United States and in the Dominican Republic.Four teams are independently owned, while two—the Arizona Complex League Athletics and Dominican Summer League Athletics—are owned by the major league club.
Since the OHSAA began basketball competition in 1922–23, many schools have decided to band together in conferences to help scheduling, added competition for titles and bragging rights, and oftentimes help determine seeding for the early rounds of the state tournament.
Strafford forfeited its participation in the 2007-2008 MSHSAA State Volleyball Championships due to the use of an ineligible player. St. Mary's (Independence), which lost to Strafford 25–23, 25-12 for third place on the court, is officially recognized as the third-place finisher, and the fourth-place position is hereby recognized as historically vacant.
In late 1926, St. Edward's joined the Texas Conference, [4] where they competed until late 1939, when the university discontinued intercollegiate athletics. [5] During the pre-World War II era, St. Edward's teams had at least three different nicknames: Saints , Tigers , and Crusaders .