Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Warriors compete in the Siouxland Conference. [6] State Championships. Sioux Center's varsity teams have won three basketball titles, a football championship, and two each boys' and girls' state track meets. [7] [8] [9] Boys' Basketball - 1959, 1967, 2003 [10] Football - 1972 [11] Boys' Track and Field - 1980, 1982 [12] Girls' Track and ...
Page is now 4-AA with 1822 students. The 2009 Page High School Varsity Men's Soccer Team won the 4A State Championship. The 1980, 1983, 1985 & 2011 Page High School Varsity Football Team won the 4AA State Championship. The football players of the 1984 / 1985 State Champion football team were all inducted into the NC Football Hall Of Fame in 2010.
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 ...
MOVING ON TO THE REGIONAL FINALS: Cuttler Adams scores 4 TDs, Robbinsville football runs to NCHSAA 1A West Region final Class 1A East No. 2 West Columbus (12-1) at No. 1 Tarboro (12-0), 7 p.m.
The NCHSAA was founded in 1913 by Dr. Louis Round Wilson, a professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.The university served as the primary source of funding and leadership for the Association from 1913 through 1947, before the organization adopted its current model, which provides school administrators with direct influence through the presence of the NCHSAA Board of Directors.
As an independent school, Sioux Center won the big school state title in 1959, [21] followed by the small school state title in 1967, in its first year within the Siouxland Conference. [22] Maurice-Orange City claimed the 2A state championship in 1987–88 and again in 1988–89, [23] and won the 3A title in 2004–05 as MOC-Floyd Valley.
Inside the Novant Health Field House at Greensboro Coliseum, the Girls’ All-Star Game tips at 6:30 p.m., with the Boys’ All-Star Game following around 8:30 p.m.
Welborne attended Walter Hines Page Senior High School in Greensboro, North Carolina. [1] He was a three-sport star at Page High School, playing football, basketball and baseball. [2] He was rated the #1 wide receiver prospect in the country while in high school and was an All-State basketball and football player on both offense and defense. [4]