Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Although Carterville prides itself on its athletic teams, traditionally Carterville is a football town. Carterville has won 116 total Black Diamond Conference championships, including 19 in football, which is the most won by any school in the conference. Carterville has been a long-time member of the Black Diamond Conference. Other Black ...
Carterville's athletic teams are nicknamed the Hurricanes and the school's colors are purple and gold. Cartersville teams compete in the following sports: [3] Baseball; Basketball; Cross country; Football; Golf; Gymnastics; Marching band; Soccer; Softball; Swimming; Tennis; Track and field; Volleyball; Wrestling
The Black Diamond Conference was created first as a football-only conference in 1949. The original schools were members of the Coal Belt Conference for other sports. The original conference schools were Carterville, Christopher, Elkville, Sesser, and Zeigler.
Here are the North Carolina high school football playoff brackets for the 2023 postseason. State championships will be held Dec. 8-9 with two classifications at University of North Carolina and ...
Football Previous Conference; Mississippi Division: Anna-Jonesboro Community High School: Anna, Illinois: Wildcats Lady Wildcats Royal Blue White 1993–Present A, 1A, 2A 3A Southwest Egyptian Conference Carterville High School: Carterville, Illinois: Lions Lady Lions Navy Blue Orange 2010–Present A, 2A, 2A 4A Black Diamond Conference: Du ...
The IHSA football playoffs continue across Illinois as the high school football postseason enters its third weekend. We will go from eight teams to a final four in each bracket, all aiming to play ...
CHS was the only public high school in southern Illinois that performed above the state average of 21 on ACT testing. [9] The Carterville Unit 5 Schools' athletic programs have been successful in the past, winning the IHSA State Conference Championship in Class 3A football in 1996 and in Class 2A softball in 2008 and 2016.
Watson began his football coaching career as a graduate assistant in 1982 at Southern Illinois; the same school where he had completed his playing career.. His first full-time position was at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, where he started as a graduate assistant for two years beginning in 1983 before promotions to offensive tackles coach, tight ends coach, and wide ...