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Minnesota State High School League

The Minnesota State High School League (MSHSL) is a voluntary, non-profit association for the support and governance of interscholastic activities at high schools in Minnesota, United States.[1] The association supports interscholastic athletics and fine arts programs for member schools. Membership includes nearly 500 schools, including special schools, home schools, and 435 high schools.[2] The State High School League is an affiliate of the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS).[3]

Minnesota State High School League
AbbreviationMSHSL
Formation1916
TypeVolunteer; NPO
Legal statusAssociation
PurposeAthletic/Educational
Headquarters2100 Freeway Blvd.
Brooklyn Center, MN 55430
Region served
Minnesota
Membership
601 schools
Executive Director
Erich Martens
AffiliationsNational Federation of State High School Associations
Staff
24
Websitemshsl.org

The League also addresses sportsmanship, chemical health, scholarship recognition, and oversees tournament officials and judges.[4] The League provides educational programs for coaches.[4] The organization's operating revenue is derived from tournament ticket sales, broadcast rights, corporate sponsorship, and sale of tournament merchandise.[2]

History edit

The MSHSL was founded in 1916 as the State High School Athletic Association (SHSAA) in order to promote and regulate school athletics. It later expanded its mission to include fine arts programs. In 1922, SHSAA joined the National Federation of State High School Associations. In 1929, the State High School Athletic Association adopted a new name, the Minnesota State High School League, as well as a new vision. The League started accepting non-public schools' applications for admitance in 1974.[5]

In 1960, the MSHSL was sanctioned as a non-profit by a Minnesota State Statute.[5]

Beginning with the 2015 season, the MSHSL created geographic football districts for regular season scheduling. The change was designed to help programs having difficulty finding opponents for an eight-game schedule.[6]

In 2015, the MNHSL board approved a policy on transgender athletes that allowed those assigned male at birth that identify as female to be eligible for girls’ teams. Girls, and by extension athletes assigned female at birth that no longer identify as such, were already eligible to compete in boys' sports. The policy requires applying for eligibility, sets out criteria for approval including a written statement from a health care professional, and places the decision with the school's activities director. Religiously-affiliated private schools are exempt from the policy.[7]

THe MSHSL was the first state association to officially sanction women's hockey, adapted athletics, robotics, and clay target.[8][9][5]

Class System edit

 
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 idea behind the division was to reduce the inherent advantage that was given to the larger schools. The Board of Directors assigned the largest 128 schools by enrollment to the AA classification. All other member schools were assigned to Class A. Each class is then split into eight sections, with the number of teams in each section varying. In April 1983 the Board of Directors adopted a policy which assigned schools with a minimum enrollment of 500 students to Class AA and schools with an enrollment 1–499 to Class A. Depending on the number of schools participating in an activity, additional classes may be needed or no class system may be needed at all. The highest current class in any activity is AAAAAA (6A) for football.

Post season edit

Section tournaments edit

At the end of the regular season, every MSHSL team is seeded into a sectional tournament. For each class, the state is divided into 8 sections.[11] Every two years, the MSHSL determines a school's activity classification and section placement. Different sections have different numbers of teams depending upon the class and activity in question. For example, most sections in football have 8 teams. In a typical 8-team section, all 8 teams will make the playoffs regardless of their regular season record. If a football section has 9 teams, then the ninth team will not make the playoffs. In all other sports, every team advances to the postseason. In basketball, for Classes AAAA and AAA, a typical section has 8 team, whereas a typical section in Class AA has about 16 teams, and a Class A section can have 20 or more. In these cases where a section has more or less teams than an even 8 or 16, higher seeded teams may receive byes, or lower seeded teams may have to play an extra play-in game. The other option is for a section to be divided into two 8-team (or more) sub-sections with the sub-section champions playing for the section title.

These sections are strictly geographical, and are normally numbered from Southeast to Northwest. Thus, with football, for example, Section 1AAA would have schools in Class AAA that are from the Southeastern part of the state, while Section 7AAAA will have Class AAAA schools from the Northeastern part of the state. As a general rule, this serves pretty well, however it breaks down when dealing with the larger classes. In Class AAAAA Football, given the concentration of large schools in the Twin Cities Metro, Section 1AAAAA comprises the three Rochester public schools, Owatonna, and two southern suburbs. At the other end, Section 8AAAAA covers the entire northern half of the state with Bemidji, Brainerd, Moorhead, one of the St. Cloud public schools, and two northern exurbs. Sections 2AAAAA-7AAAAA are a mixture of suburbs, exurbs and Minneapolis/St. Paul schools.

Each section has its own methods and procedures for determining seeding in the section tournament. Some sections use elaborate point systems while others base seeding simply on records. The winner of the section tournament advances to State.

State tournaments edit

The winners of the section tournaments are seeded into a single elimination state tournament. Pairings of section champion at State are predetermined before the season by the MSHSL. In the Fall of 2005, the MSHSL experimented by having coaches seed the State Soccer Tournament.[12]

Activities edit

The following sports are offered under the supervision of the MSHSL. All of these sports have a single elimination tournament at the end of the season which awards a state championship to the winning team. Some sports also award individual championships as well.

For a complete list of state championship winners by sport see the list of Minnesota State High School League State Championships.

Sports
Fall Classes Winter Classes Spring Classes
Adapted Soccer None Adapted Floor Hockey None Adapted Bowling None
Tennis, Girls A
AA
Nordic Ski Racing, Boys and Girls None Adapted Softball None
Soccer, Boys and Girls A
AA
Hockey, Boys and Girls A
AA
Golf, Boys and Girls A
AA
AAA
Cross Country, Boys and Girls A
AA
AAA
Alpine Skiing, Boys and Girls None Track and Field, Boys and Girls A
AA
AAA
Volleyball, Girls A
AA
AAA
Dance Team, Girls A
AA
AAA
Softball, Girls A
AA
AAA
AAAA
Football 9-man
A
AA
AAA
AAAA
AAAAA
AAAAAA
Wrestling A
AA
AAA
Baseball, Boys A
AA
AAA
AAAA
Swimming and Diving, Girls A
AA
Swimming and Diving, Boys A
AA
Synchronised swimming, Girls None
Basketball, Boys and Girls A
AA
AAA
AAAA
Lacrosse, Boys and Girls None
Gymnastics, Girls A
AA
Tennis, Boys A
AA
Clay Target None
Badminton, Girls None
Activities
Fall Classes Winter Classes Spring Classes
One Act Play A
AA
Speech A
AA
Debate None Visual Arts A
AA
Music A
AA
Robotics None

Conferences edit

Because of the large number of high schools and large distances spanned between some of them, many schools are organized into conferences.[citation needed] These conferences, which, according to Minnesota State High School League rules, must have a minimum of five members, are usually composed of schools that are in close geographic proximity and have similar enrollments. During the regular season, a school plays a number of its games against other teams in its conference (this number varies depending on the sport and conference in question). However, unlike with organizations such as the California Interscholastic Federation or Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association, a team's conference standing has no bearing on its postseason. Since every team makes the playoffs and seeding is done at the discretion of the section, a team's conference performance has no direct effect on its postseason fate. A team could win its conference, but still be seeded lower than teams that finished behind it due to other considerations such as overall record, or the strength of opponents. Often, teams from one conference are spread over different sections and sometimes different classes. Some single sport conferences also exist, especially for hockey.[13]

Alumni edit

The following athletes are among those who were in Minnesota State High School League activities in high school:

Baseball


Basketball

Hockey

Football

References edit

  1. ^ "Ch. 128C MN Statutes". www.revisor.mn.gov. Retrieved 2022-10-23.
  2. ^ a b "About | MSHSL". www.mshsl.org. Retrieved 2022-10-23.
  3. ^ "State-Association-Listing". www.nfhs.org. Retrieved 2022-10-23.
  4. ^ a b "NFHS Learn | Interscholastic Education, Made Easy". nfhslearn.com. Retrieved 2022-10-23.
  5. ^ a b c "MSHSL History | MSHSL". www.mshsl.org. Retrieved 2022-08-09.
  6. ^ Leighton, Tim (June 1, 2014). "High school football: MSHSL's district scheduling will end conference play". St. Paul Pioneer Press.
  7. ^ La Vaque, David (March 9, 2015). "High School League overwhelmingly approves transgender policy". StarTribune.
  8. ^ "Girl's and Women's Hockey (PDF)" (PDF). Retrieved 2022-10-23.
  9. ^ "MSHSL Girls". Vintage Minnesota Hockey - History. Retrieved 2022-10-23.
  10. ^ Class System
  11. ^ "Competitive Sections | MSHSL". www.mshsl.org. Retrieved 2022-10-23.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on March 18, 2014. Retrieved August 10, 2014.
  13. ^ "MSHSL". www.mnhockeyhub.com. Retrieved 2022-10-23.
  14. ^ . The Baseball Cube. Archived from the original on November 21, 2010. Retrieved December 6, 2012.
  15. ^ Hallman, Charles (2016-08-15). "St. Paul and Saints honor Dave Winfield". MSR News Online. Retrieved 2022-10-23.
  16. ^ "Paul Sather - Men's Basketball Coach". University of North Dakota Athletics. Retrieved 2022-10-23.
  17. ^ . Team USA. Archived from the original on October 16, 2014. Retrieved 2022-10-23.
  18. ^ "St. Cloud Cathedral Graduate Anne Schleper Makes U.S. Olympic Team". AM 1240 WJON. Associated Press. Retrieved 2022-10-23.
  19. ^ "Krissy Wendell". www.ushockeyhalloffame.com. Retrieved 2022-10-23.
  20. ^ Tribune, Mark Craig Star. "Mounds View High grad Billy Turner is one Packer you can pull for". Star Tribune. Retrieved 2022-10-23.
  21. ^ Artigue, Hobie (2021-02-01). "Pride swells for Minneapolis North alum as Tyler Johnson heads to Super Bowl". FOX 9. Retrieved 2022-10-23.

External links edit

  • Minnesota State High School League
  • MSHSL Yearbook & Record Book

minnesota, state, high, school, league, mshsl, voluntary, profit, association, support, governance, interscholastic, activities, high, schools, minnesota, united, states, association, supports, interscholastic, athletics, fine, arts, programs, member, schools,. The Minnesota State High School League MSHSL is a voluntary non profit association for the support and governance of interscholastic activities at high schools in Minnesota United States 1 The association supports interscholastic athletics and fine arts programs for member schools Membership includes nearly 500 schools including special schools home schools and 435 high schools 2 The State High School League is an affiliate of the National Federation of State High School Associations NFHS 3 Minnesota State High School LeagueAbbreviationMSHSLFormation1916TypeVolunteer NPOLegal statusAssociationPurposeAthletic EducationalHeadquarters2100 Freeway Blvd Brooklyn Center MN 55430Region servedMinnesotaMembership601 schoolsExecutive DirectorErich MartensAffiliationsNational Federation of State High School AssociationsStaff24Websitemshsl org The League also addresses sportsmanship chemical health scholarship recognition and oversees tournament officials and judges 4 The League provides educational programs for coaches 4 The organization s operating revenue is derived from tournament ticket sales broadcast rights corporate sponsorship and sale of tournament merchandise 2 Contents 1 History 2 Class System 3 Post season 3 1 Section tournaments 3 2 State tournaments 4 Activities 5 Conferences 6 Alumni 7 References 8 External linksHistory editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2014 The MSHSL was founded in 1916 as the State High School Athletic Association SHSAA in order to promote and regulate school athletics It later expanded its mission to include fine arts programs In 1922 SHSAA joined the National Federation of State High School Associations In 1929 the State High School Athletic Association adopted a new name the Minnesota State High School League as well as a new vision The League started accepting non public schools applications for admitance in 1974 5 In 1960 the MSHSL was sanctioned as a non profit by a Minnesota State Statute 5 Beginning with the 2015 season the MSHSL created geographic football districts for regular season scheduling The change was designed to help programs having difficulty finding opponents for an eight game schedule 6 In 2015 the MNHSL board approved a policy on transgender athletes that allowed those assigned male at birth that identify as female to be eligible for girls teams Girls and by extension athletes assigned female at birth that no longer identify as such were already eligible to compete in boys sports The policy requires applying for eligibility sets out criteria for approval including a written statement from a health care professional and places the decision with the school s activities director Religiously affiliated private schools are exempt from the policy 7 THe MSHSL was the first state association to officially sanction women s hockey adapted athletics robotics and clay target 8 9 5 Class System edit nbsp 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 idea behind the division was to reduce the inherent advantage that was given to the larger schools The Board of Directors assigned the largest 128 schools by enrollment to the AA classification All other member schools were assigned to Class A Each class is then split into eight sections with the number of teams in each section varying In April 1983 the Board of Directors adopted a policy which assigned schools with a minimum enrollment of 500 students to Class AA and schools with an enrollment 1 499 to Class A Depending on the number of schools participating in an activity additional classes may be needed or no class system may be needed at all The highest current class in any activity is AAAAAA 6A for football Post season editSection tournaments edit At the end of the regular season every MSHSL team is seeded into a sectional tournament For each class the state is divided into 8 sections 11 Every two years the MSHSL determines a school s activity classification and section placement Different sections have different numbers of teams depending upon the class and activity in question For example most sections in football have 8 teams In a typical 8 team section all 8 teams will make the playoffs regardless of their regular season record If a football section has 9 teams then the ninth team will not make the playoffs In all other sports every team advances to the postseason In basketball for Classes AAAA and AAA a typical section has 8 team whereas a typical section in Class AA has about 16 teams and a Class A section can have 20 or more In these cases where a section has more or less teams than an even 8 or 16 higher seeded teams may receive byes or lower seeded teams may have to play an extra play in game The other option is for a section to be divided into two 8 team or more sub sections with the sub section champions playing for the section title These sections are strictly geographical and are normally numbered from Southeast to Northwest Thus with football for example Section 1AAA would have schools in Class AAA that are from the Southeastern part of the state while Section 7AAAA will have Class AAAA schools from the Northeastern part of the state As a general rule this serves pretty well however it breaks down when dealing with the larger classes In Class AAAAA Football given the concentration of large schools in the Twin Cities Metro Section 1AAAAA comprises the three Rochester public schools Owatonna and two southern suburbs At the other end Section 8AAAAA covers the entire northern half of the state with Bemidji Brainerd Moorhead one of the St Cloud public schools and two northern exurbs Sections 2AAAAA 7AAAAA are a mixture of suburbs exurbs and Minneapolis St Paul schools Each section has its own methods and procedures for determining seeding in the section tournament Some sections use elaborate point systems while others base seeding simply on records The winner of the section tournament advances to State State tournaments edit The winners of the section tournaments are seeded into a single elimination state tournament Pairings of section champion at State are predetermined before the season by the MSHSL In the Fall of 2005 the MSHSL experimented by having coaches seed the State Soccer Tournament 12 Activities editThe following sports are offered under the supervision of the MSHSL All of these sports have a single elimination tournament at the end of the season which awards a state championship to the winning team Some sports also award individual championships as well For a complete list of state championship winners by sport see the list of Minnesota State High School League State Championships Sports Fall Classes Winter Classes Spring Classes Adapted Soccer None Adapted Floor Hockey None Adapted Bowling None Tennis Girls AAA Nordic Ski Racing Boys and Girls None Adapted Softball None Soccer Boys and Girls AAA Hockey Boys and Girls AAA Golf Boys and Girls AAAAAA Cross Country Boys and Girls AAAAAA Alpine Skiing Boys and Girls None Track and Field Boys and Girls AAAAAA Volleyball Girls AAAAAA Dance Team Girls AAAAAA Softball Girls AAAAAAAAAA Football 9 manAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA Wrestling AAAAAA Baseball Boys AAAAAAAAAA Swimming and Diving Girls AAA Swimming and Diving Boys AAA Synchronised swimming Girls None Basketball Boys and Girls AAAAAAAAAA Lacrosse Boys and Girls None Gymnastics Girls AAA Tennis Boys AAA Clay Target None Badminton Girls None Activities Fall Classes Winter Classes Spring Classes One Act Play AAA Speech AAA Debate None Visual Arts AAA Music AAA Robotics NoneConferences editFurther information List of Minnesota State High School League Conferences Because of the large number of high schools and large distances spanned between some of them many schools are organized into conferences citation needed These conferences which according to Minnesota State High School League rules must have a minimum of five members are usually composed of schools that are in close geographic proximity and have similar enrollments During the regular season a school plays a number of its games against other teams in its conference this number varies depending on the sport and conference in question However unlike with organizations such as the California Interscholastic Federation or Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association a team s conference standing has no bearing on its postseason Since every team makes the playoffs and seeding is done at the discretion of the section a team s conference performance has no direct effect on its postseason fate A team could win its conference but still be seeded lower than teams that finished behind it due to other considerations such as overall record or the strength of opponents Often teams from one conference are spread over different sections and sometimes different classes Some single sport conferences also exist especially for hockey 13 Alumni editThe following athletes are among those who were in Minnesota State High School League activities in high school Baseball Aaron Headrick Maranatha Christian Academy Joe Mauer Cretin Derham Hall 14 Dave Winfield Saint Paul Central 15 Joe Bue Becker Basketball Paul Sather Princeton 16 Kris Humphries Hopkins Tessa Johnson St Michael Albertville Tre Jones Apple Valley Tyus Jones Apple Valley Mark Olberding Melrose Khalid El Amin Minneapolis North Lindsay Whalen Hutchinson 17 Rashad Vaughn Robbinsdale Cooper Gary Trent Jr Apple Valley Hockey Matt Cullen Moorhead Neal Broten Roseau Jake Gardiner Minnetonka Taylor Heise Red Wing Nick Leddy Eden Prairie Gigi Marvin Warroad T J Oshie Warroad Brock Nelson Warroad Nate Prosser Elk River Anne Schleper St Cloud Cathedral 18 Nate Schmidt St Cloud Cathedral Krissy Wendell Park Center 19 Alex Stalock South St Paul Justin Faulk South St Paul Bobby Brink Minnetonka K Andre Miller Minnetonka Football Adam Thielen Detroit Lakes Eric Decker Rocori Cold Spring Chris Weinke Cretin Derham Hall James Laurinaitis Wayzata John Carlson Litchfield Karl Klug Caledonia Isaac Fruechte Caledonia Frank Ragnow Chanhassen Amani Hooker Park Center Larry Fitzgerald Academy of Holy Angels C J Ham Duluth Denfeld Tom Compton Rosemount Billy Turner American football Mounds View 20 Joe Haeg Brainerd Maxx Williams Waconia Tyler Johnson Minneapolis North 21 Dillon Radunz Becker Beau Allen MinnetonkaReferences edit Ch 128C MN Statutes www revisor mn gov Retrieved 2022 10 23 a b About MSHSL www mshsl org Retrieved 2022 10 23 State Association Listing www nfhs org Retrieved 2022 10 23 a b NFHS Learn Interscholastic Education Made Easy nfhslearn com Retrieved 2022 10 23 a b c MSHSL History MSHSL www mshsl org Retrieved 2022 08 09 Leighton Tim June 1 2014 High school football MSHSL s district scheduling will end conference play St Paul Pioneer Press La Vaque David March 9 2015 High School League overwhelmingly approves transgender policy StarTribune Girl s and Women s Hockey PDF PDF Retrieved 2022 10 23 MSHSL Girls Vintage Minnesota Hockey History Retrieved 2022 10 23 Class System Competitive Sections MSHSL www mshsl org Retrieved 2022 10 23 2014 Boys Soccer Archived from the original on March 18 2014 Retrieved August 10 2014 MSHSL www mnhockeyhub com Retrieved 2022 10 23 High School Baseball The Baseball Cube Archived from the original on November 21 2010 Retrieved December 6 2012 Hallman Charles 2016 08 15 St Paul and Saints honor Dave Winfield MSR News Online Retrieved 2022 10 23 Paul Sather Men s Basketball Coach University of North Dakota Athletics Retrieved 2022 10 23 USA Basketball Athletes Lindsay Whalen Team USA Archived from the original on October 16 2014 Retrieved 2022 10 23 St Cloud Cathedral Graduate Anne Schleper Makes U S Olympic Team AM 1240 WJON Associated Press Retrieved 2022 10 23 Krissy Wendell www ushockeyhalloffame com Retrieved 2022 10 23 Tribune Mark Craig Star Mounds View High grad Billy Turner is one Packer you can pull for Star Tribune Retrieved 2022 10 23 Artigue Hobie 2021 02 01 Pride swells for Minneapolis North alum as Tyler Johnson heads to Super Bowl FOX 9 Retrieved 2022 10 23 External links editMinnesota State High School League MSHSL Yearbook amp Record Book Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Minnesota State High School League amp oldid 1219633873, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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