Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Allen County Athletic Conference

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Allen County Athletic Conference
Remove ads

The Allen County Athletic Conference (ACAC) is a seven-member Indiana High School Athletic Association (IHSAA) conference. While all of its charter schools are and were located in Allen County, it also has member schools from Adams, Jay, and Wells counties. The ACAC, along with the Porter County Conference, are the only two county conferences left in existence.

Quick facts Founded, Region ...
Remove ads

History

Summarize
Perspective

The Allen County Athletic Conference began with nine schools in Allen County in 1956.[1] The schools were smaller, rural schools, with the exception of Elmhurst, the sole Fort Wayne school that wasn't included in the Fort Wayne City Series. The conference was hit hard by consolidation, and the nine original schools were down to four by the 1968 season (and two of those were new consolidations). The conference responded by going outside county borders by admitting Norwell (itself a newly consolidated school) in 1967, followed by Adams Central, Churubusco, and Eastside in 1968. The rebooted conference now expanded well outside of the Allen County footprint, including schools from Adams, DeKalb, Wells, and Whitley counties. All of the schools now sponsored football, and competition in that sport began in 1969.

The conference went to a two division format in 1971 with the addition of new school Homestead and Southern Wells. That format ended in 1975, as Homestead left for the Northeastern Indiana Athletic Conference, followed by Eastside leaving for the Northeast Corner Conference in 1980. The breakup of the NEIAC in 1989 led to a wide-scale realignment of conferences in Northeast Indiana, as schools looked to realign themselves with rivals of similar enrolments. The ACAC became the home for mid-sized schools, while the Northeast Corner housed small schools, and the newly formed Northeast Hoosier Conference became the stable for the largest non-Fort Wayne schools. Carroll and Norwell left that year for the NEHC, while Churubusco left for the NECC. They were replaced by NEIAC schools Bluffton and South Adams. Garrett, becoming too large for the Northeast Corner, moved to the Allen County league in 2005.

Jay County joined the conference beginning with the 2014–15 school year.[2] However, the conference shrank down to seven schools in 2015, as Garrett moved to the Northeast Corner Conference in 2014, and Leo joined six of the eight Northeast Hoosier Conference high schools in a new conference (Northeast 8) in 2015.[3][4]

Remove ads

Membership

Current members

More information School, Location ...
  1. Adams Central played in the ACAC and the EWVC concurrently for 1965–66, the final year for the EWVC.
  2. Woodlan was known as Woodburn before 1959.

Former members

More information School, Location ...
  1. Lafayette Central became part of Roanoke High School in 1963. Roanoke itself consolidated into Huntington North in 1966, taking Lafayette Township with it. The township then split off from HNHS to become part of Southwest Allen County Schools in 1971.

Membership timeline

Jay County High SchoolGarrett High SchoolSouth Adams Jr./Sr. High SchoolBluffton High School (Bluffton, Indiana)Southern Wells Jr/Sr High SchoolHomestead High School (Fort Wayne, Indiana)Heritage Junior-Senior High SchoolEastside Junior-Senior High SchoolChurubusco High SchoolCarroll High School (Fort Wayne, Indiana)Norwell High School (Indiana)Norwell High School (Indiana)Adams Central High SchoolWoodlan Junior/Senior High SchoolHeritage Junior-Senior High SchoolLeo Junior/Senior High SchoolHomestead High School (Fort Wayne, Indiana)Carroll High School (Fort Wayne, Indiana)Heritage Junior-Senior High SchoolWoodlan Junior/Senior High SchoolElmhurst High SchoolCarroll High School (Fort Wayne, Indiana)
Remove ads

Division Format 1971-75

More information North, South ...
More information Boys, Girls ...

Conference championships

Summarize
Perspective

Football

More information #, Team ...
  • 1971-74: N = North Division champions, S = South Division champions, C = title game champions (not held in 1973).

Boys basketball

More information #, Team ...
  • Champions from 1958–59 to 1990-91 not listed are unverified.

Girls basketball

More information #, Team ...
  • Champions from beginning of competition (ca. 1974–75) until 2000 not listed are unverified.

Wrestling

More information #, Team ...

[5]

Only tournament champions listed.

Remove ads

State titles

Adams Central Flying Jets (2)

  • 2000 Football (A)
  • 2024 Football (2A)

Bluffton Tigers (5)

  • D'Wayne Eskridge - 200 M Dash (2015, 2016), 100 M Dash (2016) [6]
  • Randy Pursley - 130 lbs Wrestling (1999)[7]
  • Ben Sprunger - 130 lbs Wrestling (2000)[8]

Garrett Railroaders (1)

  • 1974 Football (A)

Heritage Patriots (1)

  • 1982 girls basketball

Leo Lions (1)

  • 2014 Girls Softball (3A)
  • 2008 Justin Woods, Leo 33-0 215lb State Wrestling Champion

South Adams Starfires (1)

• Davona Runkel - Girls shot put (1986)

Southern Wells Raiders (1)

  • 2001 Football (A)

Woodlan Warriors (0)

Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads