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Basketball court: Date: 20 January 2007, 12:36 (UTC) Source: modification of Basketball court dimensions.png: Author: maix ¿? Permission (Reusing this file) public domain with ShareAlike (license used for modifications must allow editing) Other versions: Basketball court dimensions.png, Basketball court dimensions.svg
Midfield High School is a four-year public high school located in Midfield, Alabama, United States, a suburb of Birmingham. It is the only high school in the Midfield City School District. School colors are red, white, and blue, and the athletic teams are called the Patriots. Midfield competes in AHSAA Class 3A athletics. [2]
The first school board office was in a house behind the Midfield Public Library, which was the Midfield City Hall at the time. Jefferson County operated the schools for the remainder of the 1970-71school year, and on July 1, 1971, the county turned over the operation of three schools to Midfield.
One other high school-owned facility has a basketball capacity that would place it in this list—the Round Valley Ensphere, at Round Valley High School in Eagar, Arizona. Although it has a maximum capacity of 9,200 for court sports, it is not included in this list because it is a domed football stadium. [6]
The home court of the Miami Heat of the National Basketball Association. In basketball, the basketball court is the playing surface, consisting of a rectangular floor, with baskets at each end. Indoor basketball courts are almost always made of polished wood, usually maple, with 10 feet (3.048 m)-high
Basketball court: Date: 21 January 2007, 13:27 (UTC) Source: modification of Basketball court dimensions.png: Author: maix ¿? Permission (Reusing this file) public domain with ShareAlike (license used for modifications must allow editing) Other versions: Basketball court dimensions.png Image:Basketball court dimensions no label.svg
Coaches: Bertha Teague, Byng High School, Byng, Oklahoma.Won three straight state tournament championships in the 1930s (1936-1938), a record that was not equaled in Oklahoma girls' basketball until 1987 (now that Oklahoma has switched to five-on-five, and established multiple enrollment-based classifications in the sport—now seven—it has become easier to "three-peat").
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