Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Wayzata High School
Public school in Plymouth, Minnesota, United States From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Wayzata High School is a comprehensive public high school in Plymouth, Minnesota, United States, a suburb of Minneapolis. The high school, operated by Wayzata Public Schools, had about 3711 students in grades 9 to 12 as of 10/1/23,[2] making it Minnesota's largest secondary school by enrollment. It is also Minnesota's largest secondary school by size, with an interior of 658,000 square feet (61,100 m2).[3][4] The district boundaries include all or part of eight municipalities: Corcoran, Maple Grove, Medicine Lake, Medina, Minnetonka, Orono, Plymouth, and Wayzata.[2] The school finished an expansion project in 2017 with the new capacity of 3,900. It is part of the Lake Conference. Scott Gengler is the principal.
In 2015, Newsweek ranked the school 150th on its "List of the 500 Top High Schools in America".[5] U.S. News & World Report ranked the school 432nd among 21,000 schools nationally and 6th in Minnesota in 2021.[6]
Remove ads
History

The first school in the Wayzata area was established around 1855. Classes were taught in homes until a one-room school was built near what is now the second green of the Wayzata Country Club. This school burned down (for unknown reasons) and a new school was constructed on what is now Wayzata's main street near downtown Wayzata.[7]
What are now the West and Central middle schools were each once the high school building. The West Middle School building served as the high school from 1940 to 1960. Central Middle School's campus was home to the high school from 1960 to 1997. The current Wayzata High School campus was completed in 1997 and classes began in the 1997–98 school year.[7]
On February 25, 2014, voters approved a referendum for a $109 million bond request to expand the high school and improve security and technology. Part of the provisions include the purchasing of adjacent land belonging to the Elm Creek Golf Course and the building of a new wing. Construction took place from 2014 to 2017.[8]
Remove ads
Academics
As of the 2015–16 school year, Wayzata High School offers 24 Advanced Placement classes and one Advanced Placement Pilot course (AP Accounting).[9]
The school also hosts the Minnesota PSEO program, allowing students in 11th and 12th grades to receive college credit.[10]
Wayzata High School has consistently exceeded the state and national average scores on the ACT.[11]
In 2014, the school began a district-wide technology program that issued each student a district-owned iPad.[12]
Remove ads
Extracurricular activities
Summarize
Perspective

Athletics
Wayzata is part of the Lake Conference and in the Minnesota State High School League. Wayzata was in the Classic Lake Conference before 2010–11. The school sponsors the following sports teams:
- Fall
- Girls' Soccer
- Boys' Soccer
- Cheer team
- Girls' cross country
- Boys' cross country
- Football
- Girls' swimming and diving
- Girls' tennis
- Girls' volleyball
- Winter
- Alpine ski racing
- Boys' basketball
- Girls' basketball
- Cheer team
- Dance team
- Gymnastics
- Boys' hockey
- Girls' hockey
- Nordic ski racing
- Boys' swimming and diving
- Wrestling
- Spring
- Softball
- Boys' golf
- Girls' golf
- Boys' lacrosse
- Girls' lacrosse
- Baseball
- Synchronized swimming
- Boys' tennis
- Boys' track and field
- Girls' track and field
- Boys' volleyball
Girls' cross country won the Nike NXN National Cross Country Championship in 2013.[13]
Clubs and activities
In the 2019 National Science Bowl Competition, Wayzata High School won the Final Championship against Dulles High School. The school also participated in the competition in 2011, 2014, 2018, and 2020.
Wayzata's quiz bowl team won both the NAQT Minnesota State Championship and Minnesota High School Quiz Bowl League in 2012, 2013, 2018, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023 and 2024. It has performed well at the national level, placing T-8 in the High School National Championship Tournament in 2018 and 2021.[17]
Wayzata participates in the Minnesota State High School Mathematics League, holding the season champion title for 11 years (2007–2017) and producing many state individual champions. Several Wayzata students travel to the American Regions Mathematics League held in University of Iowa and Harvard-MIT Mathematics Tournament as members of the Minnesota All-State Mathematics Team.
The 9th grade Knowledge Master Open team won the national spring KMO in the 9th grade division in 2009.[18] The trivia team has been continued by two Questions Unlimited 3-2-1 teams, each composed of students in grades 9, 10, 11, and 12.
Wayzata's Volunteer Club serves as one of the premier volunteering clubs in the state, focusing on community development, education, and fostering relationships. Notable partnerships include elementary school carnival support, Salvation Army donations, and removal of invasive Buckthorn species.
Remove ads
Notable alumni


- Charles Nolte (1941), Broadway and film actor
- Dick Beardsley (1975), marathon runner
- David Gaither (1975), former Minnesota state senator and Governor Tim Pawlenty's Chief of Staff[19]
- Steve Wright (1977), NFL player, contestant on Survivor: Redemption Island
- Amy Klobuchar (1978), U.S. senator representing Minnesota[20]
- Kimberly Elise (1985), actress
- Betsy Hodges (1987), former mayor of Minneapolis[21]
- Tim Herron (1989), professional golfer[22]
- Mike Muller (1991), NHL player
- David Bromstad (1992), interior designer and HGTV television show host
- Ben Hamilton (1996), NFL player[23][24]
- Kirsten Gronfield (1996), actress[citation needed]
- Benjamin Salisbury (1998), actor (The Nanny)
- Marion Barber III (2001), NFL player
- Shawn Daivari (2002), professional wrestler
- Andrew Peterson (2003), former defender for the Columbus Crew
- Dominique Barber (2004), NFL player
- Ryan Saunders (2004), head coach of the Minnesota Timberwolves[25]
- François-Henri Désérable (2005), author and professional ice hockey player
- James Laurinaitis (2005), NFL player[26]
- Emily Tyra (2005), actress, singer and dancer
- Ariya Daivari (2007), professional wrestler
- A.J. Tarpley (2010), NFL player
- Heather Arseth (2011), swimmer in the 2012 Summer Olympics
- Andrew Donlin (2011), professional team handball player
- Joey Gerber (2015), professional baseball player
- Sophia Kunin (2015), PWHL player
- Andrew Tang (2018), chess grandmaster
- Patrick Weah (2020), professional soccer player
- Camden Heide (2021), college basketball player
Remove ads
Notable faculty
- Terry Steinbach (1980), former head baseball coach
- David Plummer (2013-2016) and (2024-present), head boys swim and dive coach
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads