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Here's the results for every WIAA state championship football game since the inaugural title games in 1976.
The Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association (WIAA) is the regulatory body for all high school sports in Wisconsin. Its history dates to 1895, making it the earliest continually existing high school athletic organization in the country. It also provides the licensing program for more than 10,000 officials in the state, and oversees junior ...
The Northern Wisconsin Conference is a former high school athletic conference in north central Wisconsin. The conference only existed for one season (1955-1956), and all members were affiliated with the Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association .
The following is a list of high school athletic conferences in Wisconsin.All of the following are overseen by the Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association (WIAA). The listed district for each conference is designated by WIAA, who divided the state into seven portions: District 1 is Northwest, District 2 is Northeast, District 3 is West Central, District 4 is East Central, District 5 is ...
(This story has been updated to add new information. It will be updated again.) The third round of the Wisconsin high school football playoffs is here, with 60 teams still alive in 11-player ...
In 1979, Lincoln High School closed [24] and Harold S. Vincent High School [25] [26] opened on the city's far northwest side as a replacement. In the years prior, realignment of the high school athletic conferences in southeastern Wisconsin was discussed extensively, driven mostly by the WIAA's desire to get the high schools in Racine and Kenosha into a larger conference after they were forced ...
Wisconsin high school football playoffs: Division 7 Area teams: Section 4 - Kenosha St. Joseph Catholic (9-2), Kenosha Christian Life (5-5). No. 1 seeds: Kenosha St. Joseph Catholic, Spring Valley ...
Madison opened a fourth high school on the city's far east side in 1963 named after Wisconsin politician Robert M. LaFollette. [7] They joined the Big Eight in 1964 along with the new George Nelson Tremper High School on the south side of Kenosha. [8] The existing high school in Kenosha was also renamed after local educator Mary D. Bradford ...