Fox Valley Association
Conference | WIAA |
---|---|
Founded | 1970 |
Sports fielded |
|
No. of teams | 10 |
Official website | www |
The Fox Valley Association is an athletic conference comprising ten high schools located within the Fox Valley region of northeastern Wisconsin. The management of the conference is vested in the principals of the member schools, who determine the rules governing the eligibility of athletes and the schedules. Rules and regulations may not be less restrictive than those of the Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association.
History
[edit]The conference was formed in 1970 when the Appleton Area teams split from the Fox River Valley Conference teams and joined up with the suburban Fox Valley teams. Oshkosh North and Appleton North joined the conference when the schools were built in 1972 and 1995, respectively. In 2010, The Wisconsin Valley Conference needed assistance in football scheduling. Therefore, the WIAA merged both conferences to form the Valley Football Association. Due to the conference subsequently having 16 teams and thus the inability to have all teams play one another in a two-month period, the conference was forced to split into two divisions: North & South. In 2014, Hortonville High School replaced original member Menasha High School, who departed the FVA for the Bay Conference. Menasha cited the school's declining enrollment and inability to compete with the larger FVA schools as the reason for the move.[1]
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, some members of the FVA joined some members of the Fox River Classic Conference and Wisconsin Valley Conference to form the 20-team football-only Fox Valley Classic Conference, which will play in spring 2021.[2]
Members
[edit]Member School | Location | Enrollment | Year Joined | Nickname | Colors |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Appleton East | Appleton, WI | 1,493 | 1970 | Patriots | Scarlet, Navy, & White |
Appleton North | Appleton, WI | 1,664 | 1995 | Lightning | Navy & Vegas Gold |
Appleton West | Appleton, WI | 1,434 | 1970 | Terrors | Royal Blue, Orange & White |
Fond du Lac | Fond du Lac, WI | 2,038 | 1989 | Cardinals | Cardinal, Black & White |
Hortonville | Hortonville, WI | 1,151 | 2014 | Polar Bears | Red & White |
Kaukauna | Kaukauna, WI | 1,253 | 1970 | Galloping Ghosts | Orange & Black |
Kimberly | Kimberly, WI | 1,595 | 1970 | Papermakers | Red & White |
Neenah | Neenah, WI | 1,979 | 1970 | Rockets | Red & White |
Oshkosh North | Oshkosh, WI | 1,231 | 1972 | Spartans | Green & Gold |
Oshkosh West | Oshkosh, WI | 1,686 | 1970 | Wildcats | Royal Blue & White |
Associate members
[edit]Member School | Location | Enrollment | Nickname | Colors | Primary Conference | Sports |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Berlin | Berlin, WI, | 474 | Indians | Red & Green |
East Central | Boys' & Girls' Swimming & Diving (Co-op team with Green Lake) |
Green Lake | Green Lake, WI | 101 | Lakers | Black, Gray & White |
Trailways | Boys' & Girls' Swimming & Diving (Co-op team with Berlin) |
Lourdes | Oshkosh, WI | 178 | Knights | Red & White |
Trailways | Boys' & Girls' Swimming & Diving (Co-op team with Oshkosh North) |
Notre Dame de la Baie | Green Bay, WI | 727 | Tritons | Royal Blue, Green & White |
Fox River Classic | Boys' Volleyball |
Former members
[edit]Member School | Location | Enrollment | Year Joined | Year Departed | Nickname | Colors | Football Division | Current Conference |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Menasha | Menasha, WI, | 966 | 1970 | 2014 | Bluejays | Blue & White |
South | Bay |
Two Rivers | Two Rivers, WI | 480 | 1977 | 1979 | Purple Raiders | Purple & Gold |
N/A | Eastern Wisconsin |
Sponsored sports
[edit]The conference supports the following sports:
- Baseball (Boys)
- Basketball (Boys & Girls)
- Cross Country (Boys & Girls)
- Golf (Boys & Girls)
- Soccer (Boys & Girls)
- Softball (Girls)
- Swimming (Boys & Girls)
- Tennis (Boys & Girls)
- Track (Boys & Girls)
- Volleyball (Boys & Girls)
- Wrestling (Boys)
Girls are allowed to participate in wrestling.
Notes
[edit]- ^ "Menasha, Hortonville to switch conferences". Archived from the original on 2014-07-14. Retrieved 2014-07-10.
- ^ "Twenty high schools form spring football conference". The Press Times. Multi Media Channels. October 15, 2020. Retrieved October 16, 2020.