Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
1989 basketball championship trophy in East Hampton, New York. The New York State Public High School Athletic Association (NYSPHSAA) is the governing body of interscholastic sports for most public schools in New York outside New York City. [1]
The school was the 77th-ranked public high school in New Jersey out of 339 schools statewide in New Jersey Monthly magazine's September 2014 cover story on the state's "Top Public High Schools", using a new ranking methodology. [8]
St. Joseph High School (Metuchen, New Jersey), Metuchen; St. Peter the Apostle High School, New Brunswick; St. Thomas Aquinas High School (New Jersey), Edison (renamed from Bishop George Ahr High School in 2019) Timothy Christian School (New Jersey), Piscataway; Wardlaw-Hartridge School, Edison; Yeshiva Tiferes Naftoli, Jamesburg
St. John the Baptist High School St. Mary's High School: All sports Catholic High School Athletic Association-New York Section: 1927–present: All Hallows High School Blessed Sacrament-St. Gabriel High School Cardinal Hayes High School Cardinal Spellman High School Fordham Preparatory School Iona Prep La Salle Academy Maria Regina High School ...
New Designs 60, Orthopaedic 50 Horace Mann 58, Sun Valley Magnet 47. Saturday’s Schedule. ... Sign up for the L.A. Times SoCal high school sports newsletter to get scores, stories and a behind ...
The Greater Middlesex Conference is an athletic conference comprising 34 public and private high schools located in the greater Middlesex County, New Jersey area. The league operates under the supervision of the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association.
In addition, Kalegi was a play-by-play announcer for ESPN2’s inaugural "KidsCast" presentation of the Little League World Series and has called high school sports on MSG Network and League Ready.
The earliest high school boys' state championship in New York was held in 1921 as a single-class tournament. The tournament continued as a one-classification competition through 1929, then as a two-classification (A and B) competition from 1930 through 1932. After the 1932 tournament, the NYSPHSAA voted against continuing the competition. [4]