Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Three Rivers Athletic Conference was an Ohio High School Athletic Association (OHSAA) high school athletic conference that began athletic competition in 2011 and lasted until 2023 with 10 high schools from Northwest Ohio, seven of which were from the Toledo metropolitan area, and one each from the cities of Findlay, Fremont and Lima. [1]
The Three Rivers Conference is a high school athletic conference in northeast Indiana, consisting of schools in Cass, Fulton, Miami, Wabash, and Whitley counties. [ 1 ] History
The Three Rivers Conference dropped football from 1999 until the 2013-14 school year. During this hiatus, the league offered championships in other sports, [12] and member schools, either independently or as part of a co-operative, participated in the football-exclusive Big Rivers Conference.
West Milton Milton-Union Bulldogs (1941–82, 2001-2021, to Three Rivers Conference) Northridge Polar Bears (1959-2021, to Three Rivers Conference) Camden Preble-Shawnee Arrows (1984-2021, to Western Ohio Athletic Conference) Tipp City Tippecanoe Red Devils (1941–82) Versailles Tigers (1944–51) Trotwood Trotwood-Madison Rams (1942–43 ...
Three Rivers Conference may refer to: Three Rivers Conference (Illinois) , USA; school sports conferences Three Rivers Conference (Indiana) , USA; school sports conferences
The conference was originally the Darke County League, began in 1923. The League renamed itself after most of the Wayne Trace League merged with the DCL in 1978. The conference ended in 2021, as the schools split into the Three Rivers Conference and the Western Ohio Athletic Conference. Ansonia Tigers (1923-2021 (Football, 1978-2021), to WOAC)
The Three Rivers Black team’s second pool-play games is at 5 p.m. Wednesday, with the Tri-Cities team playing the Strikers of Fox Valley, Ill. The game will be live-streamed on Vimeo at https ...
The Three Rivers Athletic Conference was a short-lived conference based in Southern Indiana, not to be confused with the Three Rivers Conference in northern Indiana, which still exists. [1] [2] The five schools that made the conference were very small, far-flung schools that were unable to find a home in closer leagues for various reasons. The ...