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Interstate Athletic Conference

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Interstate Athletic Conference is an all-boys high school sports league made up of six private high schools in the Washington, D.C., area, competing in twelve varsity sports: baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, ice hockey, lacrosse, soccer, swimming and diving, tennis, track and field, and wrestling. The IAC is widely regarded[who?] as one of the most competitive and talent-deep lacrosse leagues in the nation. Some schools in the IAC are co-ed, so they do not have as many boys to participate in athletics as some schools in the MAC and WCAC. For example, Gonzaga College High School (WCAC), has over 900 boys enrolled at the school while Episcopal High School (IAC) only has 435 boys and girls combined. Despite this, the IAC is seen as on par with or surpassing the WCAC and the MAC and more competitive than the PVAC, the other private high school sports conferences in the Washington, D.C. area. The IAC is also known for its academics as it boasts 3 of the most elite boarding schools in the country.[1]

Each year, the conference awards the Founder's Cup to the school that is most successful across all sports.

Members

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School Location Colors Established Enrollment Team name Joined
Bullis School Potomac, Maryland    1930 745 Bulldogs -
Episcopal High School Alexandria, Virginia    1839 435 Maroon -
Georgetown Preparatory School North Bethesda, Maryland    1789 490 Hoyas -
Landon School Bethesda, Maryland    1929 670 Bears -
St. Albans School Washington, D.C.    1909 575 Bulldogs -
St. Stephen's & St. Agnes School Alexandria, Virginia     1924 450 Saints -

Past members

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School Location Colors Established Enrollment Team name Joined Left
Sidwell Friends School Washington, D.C.    1883 1,150 Quakers - 1999
Saint James School St. James, Maryland    1842 235 Saints - 1974

History

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The IAC was founded in 1938 as the Academic Athletic Association and later named Interstate Academic Conference before becoming the Interstate Athletic Association.[2]

  • 1970: Georgetown Prep's football team is banned from the league. This ban lasts 11 years.[3]
  • 1990: Sidwell Friends withdraws from league play in football.[4]
  • 2004: League Headmasters meet and decide to remove Georgetown Prep's football team, citing the school's larger number of male students and higher football aspirations than the league's other schools.[3] Prep returned to the IAC for football in 2014.[5]

Notable athletes and coaches

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Landon School

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Episcopal High School

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St. Albans School

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Bullis School

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Georgetown Preparatory School

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St. Stephens and St. Agnes School

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Sidwell Friends School (1999 and earlier)

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References

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  1. ^ "The 50 Most Elite Boarding Schools in the US".
  2. ^ https://www.stalbansschool.org/iac-championships
  3. ^ a b "Prep Is Too Good For Its Conference" by Tarik El-Bashir, Washington Post
  4. ^ Eichelberger, Curtis (1990-01-15). "SIDWELL FOOTBALL LEAVES IAC". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286.
  5. ^ Grimes, Prince J. (2014-08-06). "Georgetown Prep football comes home". SoMdNews.com.