Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Ohio Valley Athletic Conference is a high school sports league in parts of southeastern Ohio and northern West Virginia. The OVAC is the largest conference of its kind in the United States. [1] Schools in the upper Ohio Valley supply over 18,000 athletes in various competitive athletic areas. The conference was organized in 1943. [2]
This is a list of high school athletic conferences in the East and Southeast Regions of Ohio, as defined by the OHSAA. [1] Because the names of localities and their corresponding high schools do not always match and because there is often a possibility of ambiguity with respect to either the name of a locality or the name of a high school, the following table gives both in every case, with the ...
The Ohio Valley Conference (OVC) is a collegiate athletic conference which operates in the Midwestern and Southeastern United States.It participates in Division I of the NCAA; the conference's football programs compete in partnership with the Big South Conference in the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS; formerly known as Division I-AA), the lower of two levels of Division I football ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Conference membership in Ohio is voluntary, rather than assigned by the state association like in some states. While this ensures that many rivalries stay intact regardless of classification changes, it also means schools can choose to change conferences pending acceptance into a different conference, or in rare cases, can be forced out of a ...
Willow Wood Symmes Valley Vikings (1971–77, to Ohio Valley Conference, 1984–91, to Southern Ohio Conference) Oak Hill Oaks (1984–92, to Southern Ohio Conference) Bidwell River Valley Raiders (1992–93, to Southeastern Ohio Athletic League)
The Big South–OVC Football Association is an association of football members of the Big South Conference and Ohio Valley Conference (OVC). The Big South–OVC covers the American Midwest and South with member institutions located in Illinois, Missouri, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee.
The Tigers (17-14, 10-8 OVC) will need to win four games in four days to win the conference tournament. TSU has made the NCAA Tournament twice in program history, last in 1994.