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Genoa Area High School is a public high school near Genoa, Ohio, United States. It is the only high school in the Genoa Area Local School District. Other towns in the district are Curtice, Clay Center, Martin, and Williston. The nickname for the athletic teams is the Comets. Genoa became a charter member of the Northern Buckeye Conference in 2011
Deiter attended Genoa Area High School in Genoa, Ohio.While there, he played high school football. [1] In his junior season, he was selected Northern Buckeye Conference all-conference as both offensive lineman and defensive lineman in 2012.
The second weekly OHSAA high school football computer rankings are released, as the season heads into Week 9. ... Genoa Area (5-3) 11.25, 10. Johnstown (7-1) 10.875, 11. Archbold (5-3) 10.6125, 12 ...
For the 1972-73 school year, Eastwood, Elmwood, and Genoa leave the Northern Lakes League to form the SLL with Gibsonburg, Lakota, and Oak Harbor from the Sandusky Bay Conference, and Otsego and Woodmore from the Lakeshore Conference. Geographic location and comparable athletic competition were acknowledged as sound reasons for establishing the ...
Nov. 4—Dave Mifsud spent his first 24 years as a high school head football coach up in Michigan, and these days he doesn't recall if any of his teams at Dearborn or Parma Western ever managed to ...
For the 1972-73 school year, Eastwood, Elmwood, and Genoa leave to help form the Suburban Lakes League (SLL), leaving 6 members for a while. [8] Swanton and Napoleon were suggested as replacements. Southview joins in 1976 after Sylvania High School splits. [9] Bowling Green leaves the GLL in 1978 to bring the league total to 8. [10]
The conference was formed in 1991 as a football-only union of the Big Eight Conference and the Mid-Northern Conference.The original 12 members consisted of six Big Eight schools (Burlington Central, Genoa-Kingston, Hampshire, Harvard, Marengo, and Richmond-Burton), five Mid-Northern schools (Byron, Forreston, Oregon, Stillman Valley, and Winnebago), and one independent school (Ottawa Marquette).
These five Augusta-area high school football programs are still alive in the Georgia state playoffs. Here are their opponents this week.