Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
2009 Boys AA Championship game at the Xcel Energy Center. On April 17, 1975, the member schools of the Minnesota State High School League approved amendments that provided the changes necessary to implement reorganization for two class competition. [10] Prior to this, schools of all sizes were competing against each other.
The Dragons won conference titles in 1964–1965, 1970–1971, 1980–1981, 1981–1982, 2014–2015 and 2016–2017. The Dragons have also earned seven trips to the NSIC Tournament Final, winning the title in 2022 and 2023. [5] Minnesota State University Moorhead was coached by Chad Walthall from 2010–2022.
Most Sports (Except Football) Tomahawk: Buffalo Lake-Hector High School Cedar Mountain/Comfrey† Gibbon-Fairfax-Winthrop High School Lester Prairie High School New Ulm Cathedral High School Sleepy Eye High School St. Mary's High School, Sleepy Eye Springfield High School Wabasso High School: Most Sports (Except Football) Top of the State
The last seconds of a Minnesota high school football championship game on Saturday featured a play so jaw-dropping that it might go down in the history of U.S. Bank Stadium.
The Triton football field is named for former Dodge Center High School football coach, Wally Hitt. The facility is notoriously nicknamed "The Snake Pit." The Triton Cobras Football program, won the Minnesota State Football Championship in 1994 (B Division); 2000 (AA Division) and 2006 (AA Division), all during Don Henderson's tenure as Head Coach (1990-2017).
Marshall School supports 19 athletic teams that compete in the Lake Superior Conference, Section 7A (except Boys Hockey, which competes at Section 7AA), and the Minnesota State High School League. More than 85% of Marshall students participate in at least one sport, often alongside other clubs and activities including cheering on fellow student ...
Minnesota State won both the men’s and women’s Division II national championships this spring, something that hasn't happened in 40 years.
In 1920, St. Thomas was one of seven charter members of the Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (MIAC). [2] However, in 1922, St. Thomas also became a founding member of the North Central Conference. The Tommie football team played in the 1922 NCC season, but withdrew afterwards due to travel burdens.