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Big Eight Conference (Wisconsin)

Wisconsin high school athletic conference From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Big Eight Conference (Wisconsin)
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The Big Eight Conference is a high school athletic conference with its membership concentrated in south central Wisconsin. All member schools are affiliated with the Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association.

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History

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1925–1964

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50km
31miles
Racine Park
Racine Horlick
Madison West
Madison East
Madison Central
Kenosha
Janesville
Beloit Memorial
Location of Big Eight Conference Members (1930-1964)

The Big Eight Conference was originally formed in 1925 as the Big Six Conference and its original members were Beloit Memorial, Janesville, Kenosha, Madison Central, Madison East and Racine.[1] It consisted of the largest high schools in southern Wisconsin that were located outside of the greater Milwaukee area and was alternatively known by its official name (the Southern Wisconsin Conference) during its early years.[2] The conference added a seventh high school in 1929, a year after Racine High School split into William Horlick High School on the north side and Washington Park High School on the south side of the city.[3] Park took Racine's place in the conference when it was split in 1928, and Horlick joined the conference a year later.[4] However, it wouldn't be known as the "Big Seven" for long as Madison added a third high school on the west side of the city in 1930,[5] and they immediately became members upon opening.[6] The original Big Eight lineup lasted for over thirty years before rapid growth created a rift that changed its membership in the modern era.

1964–1970

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50km
31miles
Racine Park
Racine Horlick
Racine Case
Madison West
Madison Memorial
Madison LaFollette
Madison East
Madison Central
Kenosha Tremper
Kenosha Bradford
Janesville Parker
Janesville Craig
Beloit Memorial
Location of Big Eight Conference Members (1967-1969)

As the metropolitan areas of the Big Eight grew, so too did the need for more space for high school students to relieve overcrowding. 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. More changes were on the horizon, and three more recently opened high schools joined the conference. Jerome I. Case High School opened on Racine's west side in 1966, and two others joined in 1967: James Madison Memorial High School[9] (renamed after Wisconsin politician Vel Phillips in 2021[10]) on Madison's far west side and George S. Parker High School on Janesville's west side.[11] Janesville's current high school was also named after local politician Joseph A. Craig in the process.[12]

By this time, the Big Eight had ballooned to thirteen members (twelve after Madison Central High School closed in 1969), and along with that growth came greater problems with scheduling and travel. In 1967, the five Madison high schools announced their exit from the Big Eight Conference and gave the three high schools in Rock County the option of joining them in a new conference, which they accepted.[13] The five high schools in Racine and Kenosha formed the South Shore Conference after their forced removal from the Big Eight,[14] which had a tumultuous ten-year history before it was finally disbanded in 1980.[15]

1970–present

With the Madison-area schools having successfully split from those in southeastern Wisconsin, the new-look Big Eight Conference began play in 1970 with seven schools (Beloit Memorial, Janesville Craig, Janesville Parker, Madison East, Madison La Follette, Madison Memorial and Madison West).[16] Membership increased back to eight with the addition of Sun Prairie High School from the Badger Conference in 1977,[17] and in later years the Big Eight added two other large metropolitan Madison high schools: Middleton in 1994[18] and Verona in 2008[19] (both formerly of the Badger Conference). Membership stayed at ten schools until 2022, when Sun Prairie High School completed its split into two schools.[20] Sun Prairie High School became Sun Prairie East and Sun Prairie West High School was completed on the west side of the district. The following year, Beloit Memorial left the Big Eight after nearly a century of membership to join the Southern Lakes Conference.

Football-only alignment

In February 2019, in conjunction with the Wisconsin Football Coaches Association, the WIAA released a sweeping football-only realignment for Wisconsin to commence with the 2020 football season and run on a two-year cycle.[21] The Big Eight Conference decreased its football membership from ten to eight schools, with the two Janesville schools leaving for membership in the Badger Conference's large-school division.[22] They would return to the Big Eight for football in 2022, exchanging affiliation with the newly split Sun Prairie East and Sun Prairie West, who took their place in the large-school division of the Badger Conference. Beloit Memorial also left to join the Southern Lakes Conference for football, one year prior to moving over as full members in 2023.[23]

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List of member schools

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Membership timeline

Full members

Football members (since 2020)

Membership map

Big Eight Conference
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13km
8.1miles
10
10 Verona
10 Verona
9
9 Vel Phillips Memorial
9 Vel Phillips Memorial
8
8 Sun Prairie West
8 Sun Prairie West
7
7 Sun Prairie East
7 Sun Prairie East
6
6 Middleton
6 Middleton
5
5 Madison West
5 Madison West
4
4 Madison LaFollette
4 Madison LaFollette
3
3 Madison East
3 Madison East
2
2 Janesville Parker
2 Janesville Parker
1
1 Janesville Craig
1 Janesville Craig

List of state champions

Fall sports

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List of conference champions

Boys Basketball

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Girls Basketball

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Football

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See also

References

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