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The following is a list of high school athletic conferences in Wisconsin.All of the following are overseen by the Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association (WIAA). The listed district for each conference is designated by WIAA, who divided the state into seven portions: District 1 is Northwest, District 2 is Northeast, District 3 is West Central, District 4 is East Central, District 5 is ...
The Classic 8 Conference, also known as the C8C, is a high school athletic conference made up of 9 teams in southeastern Wisconsin. The Classic 8 Conference is a member of the WIAA . The conference has schools that participate in such sports as lacrosse , field hockey , alpine skiing , boys ice hockey , girls ice hockey , and cross-country skiing .
The Woodland Conference is a high school athletics conference in Southeastern Wisconsin. It is overseen by the Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association (WIAA). Members of the conference are: Brown Deer , Cudahy , Greendale , Greenfield , New Berlin Eisenhower , New Berlin West , Pewaukee , Shorewood , South Milwaukee , Pius XI , Milwaukee ...
The Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association football postseason brackets were released Saturday morning.
The total cost of the new school was $171 million and the facility is over 460,000 square feet. Neenah faced De Pere in the field's first football game, with the Rockets getting past the Redbirds ...
The WIAA released a list of 63 schools impacted by the tournament performance factor on Thursday. 6 Milwaukee-area high school teams will be reclassified due to recent performance in WIAA ...
It also provides the licensing program for more than 10,000 officials in the state, and oversees junior high or middle school athletics in about 100 of the state's nearly 400 school districts. Among its duties are the administration of state tournament series in its various sports, overseeing eligibility and conference alignment, and promoting ...
The conference added a seventh high school in 1929, a year after Racine High School split into William Horlick High School on the north side and Washington Park High School on the south side of the city. [3] Park took Racine's place in the conference when it was split in 1928, and Horlick joined the conference a year later. [4]