The Meeteetse Longhorns are testing their six-man prowess in the most dramatic way possible — by taking their game to Texas.

The Longhorns will play at Robert Lee, Texas, in the season opener Aug. 30 in Robert Lee. The game will kick off at 7:30 p.m. CDT (6:30 p.m. MDT).

The Robert Lee High School Steers went 10-2 last season, losing in the second round of the Class 1A Six-Man Division 2 playoffs.

Robert Lee is in west-central Texas, about 70 miles southwest of Abilene and about 100 miles east of Midland. And it’s 1,156 miles from Meeteetse, according to Google Maps’ preferred route.

Robert Lee has 42 students in its high school.

Meeteetse, meanwhile, went 6-4 last season, losing to Snake River in the semifinals of the Wyoming six-man playoffs. The Longhorns do return the state’s leading rusher, Seth Bennett, who ran for 1,951 yards last year and also threw for 1,171.

The game marks only the second time a Wyoming high school will play a school from Texas and the first time a Wyoming high school will play in Texas. On Sept. 22, 1939, Natrona beat Pampa, Texas, 18-6 in Casper.

Meeteetse AD Cory Dziowgo said the team is looking to fundraise to help pay for the trip. If you’re interested in helping, you can contact Dziowgo at cdziowgo@park16.k12.wy.us or you can call the school at 307-868-2501.

–patrick

The rosters have been set for the Six-man Shootout all-star football game between Wyoming and Nebraska.

The game will be played at 1 p.m. Saturday in Dubois. Teams check in and practices will begin Wednesday.

This the second year for the all-star game. Wyoming won last year’s game 54-52 in Arthur, Neb., by scoring 34 consecutive second-half points.

This year’s rosters:

Wyoming
Dubois: John Bartlett, Cody Flynn, Jesse Hawk, Kyle Tea.
Hanna: Rylie Richardson.
Hulett: Preston Neiman, Kellen Wilson.
Kaycee: James Caro, Markus Koch, Garrett Kremers.
Midwest: Anthony Butler, Bryce Cisneros.
Snake River: Cole Gourlay, Conner Lee, Grayson Lee, Clay Orchard, Manuel Quinteros.
Ten Sleep: Friscoe Erdahl.

Nebraska
Arthur County: Logan Lewis.
Elba/North Loup Scotia: Abe Dush, Jerrod Moody.
Elkhorn Valley: Taylor Hanson, Alex Ellison, Jacob Heldt.
Maywood: Aaron Doxon.
St. Edward: Josh Osantowski, Wyatt Jasa.
Silver Lake: Catarino Perez, Jayden Grabill.
Sioux County: Garrett Gray, Johnny Dunn.
Wauneta-Palisade: Connor Kayton, Jack McGraw, Weylin Davis, Logan Bischoff.

–patrick

A couple weeks ago, the Wyoming High School Activities Association set new cutoffs for the number of teams in each football classification.

The biggest changes come in the small-school ranks, where Class 2A will go from 16 to 14 teams and where a 14-school cutoff line was established in Class 1A to separate 11-man and six-man squads.

The WHSAA’s decision has some ramifications worth deeper consideration:

Scheduling: With an anticipated 14 schools in 2A and Class 1A 11-man (although 1A might be different, and we’ll get to that in a second), the schools in those classifications will have the chance to have one more nonconference game before diving into a six-game conference schedule. This change highlights two important points: the chance for more flexibility in nonconference scheduling (which may reduce total travel for schools) and the ability to have a balanced conference schedule with three home games and three road games.

The WHSAA, which makes all the varsity football schedules statewide, has not had a lot of flexibility in scheduling because of the large, eight-team conferences in 2A and 1A 11-man the past few years. The flexibility afforded by smaller conferences — even if that flexibility is only one additional nonconference game — should help the WHSAA keep some schools closer to home during the first two weeks of the season.

But one of the problems with this option is that it doesn’t account for schools opting up, and two 11-man programs that, if the cutlines existed now, would be classified as six-man would likely do just that, thereby eliminating a week of nonconference flexibility for the 1A 11-man classification.

Opting up/down: With the 1A cutline established where it is — the 14 largest 1A schools as 11-man, the remainder as six-man — at least four schools will probably have tough decisions to make.

Although the final classifications won’t be set until enrollment numbers are collected after this school year, if the enrollments remain consistent from the last reclassification cycle in 2011, two current 11-man schools — Burlington and Cokeville — would be classified as six-man. Cokeville has a long history of opting up in situations like this and would likely be the first in line to move to 11-man; Burlington could follow. And even if Burlington’s enrollment number classifies it as an 11-man school, the program that was right above the Huskies in enrollment in 2011 — Upton — has been adamant about salvaging its 11-man program and avoiding six-man at all costs.

Conversely, two schools that opted down to six-man for the 2013 season — Wyoming Indian and Saratoga — will likely fall into the 11-man classification for 2014. Those schools will have a tough choice to make: stay in six-man and be ineligible for the playoffs, or go back to 11-man after one year in six-man. Either way, the coaches, administrators and players face a difficult conundrum if the enrollment numbers stand up, as they most certainly will for the Chiefs and probably will for Saratoga, especially with the Panthers’ co-op with Encampment in effect.

Normative Services, which will move from 11-man to six-man in 2013, has a stable and low enrollment that should place the Wolves safely in the six-man ranks for years to come.

The Upton-Sundance co-op: Upton and Sundance are entering the second season of their temporary co-op in 2013. If the Patriots want to continue in 2014, though, they face an interesting situation, one that may make it easier for them to stay connected.

One of the big questions the U-S team faced in 2012 was playoff eligibility. To remain eligible, the combined enrollments of the two programs (the total Upton enrollment plus the Sundance male enrollment) had to be smaller than the smallest Class 2A school. It was, just barely, and the Patriots finished 2012 in third place in the 1A 11-man East, qualifying for the playoffs.

With the two largest 2A schools coming down to Class 1A in 2014, though, the enrollment cutoff for the two schools to reach will likely be quite a bit higher, making it easier for the two schools to stay together and remain playoff eligible if they so choose. If participation numbers for the two programs remain in the low teens apiece, I wouldn’t be surprised to see the Patriots survive to 2014 and 2015.

Rock River: The Longhorns finished their first season of junior-varsity six-man football last year and are set to play another JV season in 2013. With the school still tentatively scheduled to make the jump to varsity play in 2014, the state will have an uneven number of football programs (65), making scheduling for either the 11-man or the six-man division that much more difficult depending on opt-ups or opt-downs as listed above.

Of course, if the Upton-Sundance co-op remains in tact, the state will have 64 football programs. But even with an even number, opt-ups and opt-downs could create an odd number of schools in BOTH 11-man and six-man at the 1A level, which could be a scheduling nightmare for the WHSAA.

Class 4A and Class 3A: Barring some large shifts in enrollment, Class 4A and Class 3A will remain untouched by these changes in 2014. The only potential shifts in 3A could be in nonconference scheduling, as we may see more 2A-3A interclass games now that 2A schools have an extra week of nonconference scheduling available. We will only see two such games in 2013, and they both, obviously, come in Week 1: Glenrock at Torrington and Rawlins at Kemmerer.

Who moves: This is always the biggest question in any reclassification proposal. For now, only two schools will actually switch classifications, as the smallest two schools in 2A will move to 1A. Using 2011’s ADMs, those schools would be Tongue River and Big Horn. Don’t be surprised if that’s the case: When ADMs were calculated for the last reclassification cycle in 2010, Big Horn was the smallest 2A school at about 140; Tongue River was second-smallest at 145; Moorcroft was third-smallest at 163. Either Big Horn or Tongue River would have had to have done some significant growing, or Moorcroft (or Greybull or Wright) would have had to have done some significant shrinking, to have anyone but the Rams or Eagles move. (But don’t pen the moves in just yet. ADMs are always a little quirky. No one knows where, exactly, they’ll fall until the numbers are finalized.)

The remaining moves will be based on two things: (1) enrollment, although the existing gaps between the smallest 4A/3A schools and the largest 3A/2A schools make such changes seem unlikely, and (2) any six-man to 11-man or 11-man to six-man changes, as outlined above.

Big picture: The WHSAA made some good changes with this proposal. Six-man is now stable enough to support itself — it doesn’t need the “help” of bigger programs dropping down to supplement numbers. The eight-team conferences in 2A and 1A 11-man proved unmanageable, and although seven-team conferences aren’t much better, they are an improvement and should provide some travel relief. New programs at St. Stephens and Rock River should help bolster and stabilize six-man. The proposal has enough flexibility to accommodate an Upton-Sundance co-op (or, for that matter, other co-ops that may develop).

Of course, as with any changes, questions will linger until we have a chance to see the proposal in action. Nevertheless, these changes are good, necessary steps to stability in the small-school classes.

–patrick

The Wyoming High School Activities Association on Tuesday voted to give Class 1A schools the option of joining either six-man or 11-man in 2013.

In doing so, the WHSAA acknowledged problems might arise from the offer, as four schools have approached the WHSAA about moving from 11-man to six-man next year.

An article in the Casper Star-Tribune said 11-man schools Wyoming Indian, Saratoga and NSI let the WHSAA know they were interested in moving from 11-man to six-man for the 2013 season, while St. Stephens — which has a sub-varsity six-man program — said it wanted to move to the varsity level next year.

Such moves would leave 11 programs in Class 1A 11-man and would give Class 1A six-man 14 programs, but WHSAA Commissioner Ron Laird and Associate Commissioner Trevor Wilson told the Star-Tribune they will ask NSI to stay in 11-man and ask St. Stephens to play another year of JV in order to balance the number of schools in each division at 12 apiece, in order to facilitate scheduling.

++++++

My take

Good on Saratoga, Wyoming Indian, NSI and St. Stephens for trying to get into the six-man game. And, from what I can gather from the article, even though two of these schools — NSI and St. Stephens — might be stonewalled in 2013, it sounds like they’ll both be welcomed in 2014 after the WHSAA can take care of the scheduling problems an 11-team Class 1A 11-man creates.

But boo on the WHSAA for attempting to thwart those two schools from joining six-man in 2013.

I understand the scheduling problems inherent in a switch like this. Heck, the 2013 football schedule will be out in just more than a month. But we’ve seen patchwork schedules before (the Natrona JV team is in the running for the 1A title this year, right?) and a schedule could be turned around in time for 2013.

(I’m no genius, and I’m not privy to all the demands of the individual schools, but I drew up a nonconference schedule that would work for most schools in about 15 minutes — lots of 2A vs. 1A games Week 1, a East vs. West rotation in Weeks 2-3, conference games in Weeks 4-8.)

Of course, the one problem with that schedule is that it would be extremely patchwork, as most out-of-state schools already have their dates filled.

The WHSAA could also just be buying time until the two-year cooperative agreement between Sundance and Upton ends after the 2013 season. Then, with the programs splitting back into two independent teams, the WHSAA could look at having an even number of schools in each classification, which will help scheduling immensely.

All that said, I think the athletes who would be playing for NSI and St. Stephens in 2013 are being asked to unfairly shoulder a burden being asked of them. For St. Stephens to play another year of junior varsity — that would make three in a row — is a difficult task. And for NSI to play 11-man (where they’ve been getting worked for several years) instead of moving to six-man is a bit unfair when two other schools who asked the same request will likely have theirs granted, more out of convenience and geography than anything else.

As a small aside, it’s worth noting that Rock River, who is playing a sub-varsity six-man schedule this season, was not in the discussion for varsity play in 2013.

++++++

Here is how the Class 1A football conferences would look in 2013 with all requests honored:

Class 1A 11-man West Conference: Burlington, Cokeville, Riverside, Rocky Mountain, Shoshoni, Wind River.
Class 1A 11-man East Conference: Lingle, Lusk, Pine Bluffs, Southeast, Upton-Sundance.
Class 1A six-man North Conference (anticipated): Dubois, Hulett, Kaycee, Meeteetse, NSI, St. Stephens, Ten Sleep.
Class 1A six-man South Conference (anticipated): Farson, Guernsey, Hanna, Midwest, Saratoga, Snake River, Wyoming Indian.
(Six-man might also work east-west with Dubois, Farson, Meeteetse, St. Stephens, Snake River, Ten Sleep and Wyoming Indian in the West and Guernsey, Hanna, Hulett, Kaycee, Midwest, NSI and Saratoga in the East.)

Here is how the Class 1A football conferences would look in 2013 with the WHSAA suggestions:

Class 1A 11-man West Conference: Burlington, Cokeville, Riverside, Rocky Mountain, Shoshoni, Wind River.
Class 1A 11-man East Conference: Lingle, Lusk, NSI, Pine Bluffs, Southeast, Upton-Sundance.
Class 1A six-man North Conference (anticipated): Dubois, Hulett, Kaycee, Meeteetse, Ten Sleep, Wyoming Indian.
Class 1A six-man South Conference (anticipated): Farson, Guernsey, Hanna, Midwest, Saratoga, Snake River.

+++

Your thoughts? What does Tuesday’s vote mean for your school? What do you think of the WHSAA telling a couple schools to wait a year before entering six-man? Post some thoughts below and we can discuss this as long as you want.

–patrick

Rock River will join the six-man football program ranks this fall, playing a junior-varsity schedule. And the program’s development is thanks in part to an NFL grant from former Greybull star Brett Keisel, now with the Pittsburgh Steelers.

Rock River coach Kyle Stucky said the community raised about $8,000 to bring football to the small school about 40 miles north of Laramie, and that money was augmented by $5,000 in grant money supplied by the NFL through Keisel.

A second try

Stucky said it was a Rock River connection to Keisel — Keisel is acquaintances Les Dunmire, the longtime boys basketball coach for the Longhorns, and his daughter, Heather Alexander, the Longhorns’ volleyball coach — that helped inspire the community to get serious about football.

Stucky said any NFL player can choose any youth football team in the country for the grant, “and he chose us.”

“Since he was from a small Wyoming school, he gets it,” Stucky said, “where small schools struggle to have teams and (have) financial restraints.”

Rock River was one of 10 programs named in the original six-man proposal in 2009 that was approved by the Wyoming High School Activities Association, but the school dropped the idea after funding concerns arose, which kept the Albany County School District from giving final approval to the team’s formation.

Excitement grows

Stucky said the school didn’t find out about the grant until this summer. The grant called for a community match, and Rock River raised more than a match, putting together about $8,000 in less than a week to over-match the NFL’s $5,000.

“I’m really excited for our community,” Stucky said. “Just in talking with the 1A schools… (and) what it’s done for their communities, I’m real excited.

“I think that’s something our community can really embrace and enjoy. … They’ve already supported us financially. I have no doubt that they’ll be there.”

Stucky said Rob Hall will assist him with coaching duties. The school has ordered gear, which is expected to arrive later this month. The field and the bleachers are being built this summer, as well.

“We’re truly starting from the ground up, which is kind of neat, and that’s part of the challenge,” Stucky said.

The schedule

Rock River will play a junior varsity schedule this fall, with hopes of moving up to the varsity level in either 2013 or 2014, Stucky said. Between 12 and 15 players are anticipated to come out, Stucky said.

The move to varsity play may depend in part on the WHSAA, which has pushed reclassification back to the 2014-15 school year but may make a special exception for football reclassification.

Rock River will have three home games and three road games; the Longhorns will play JV teams from Kaycee and Snake River and freshman teams from Laramie.

Rock River is the second school to add six-man football at the junior varsity level in the past two years. St. Stephens added football last year and played a limited sub-varsity schedule in 2011, and is planning to do so again this fall.

The Longhorns’ home games are set for Sept. 22 (Snake River JV, 1 p.m.), Sept. 27 (Laramie freshmen, 4 p.m.) and Oct. 6 (Kaycee JV, 1 p.m.). Road games are scheduled for Sept. 8 (Kaycee JV, 1 p.m.), Sept. 13 (Laramie freshmen, 5 p.m.) and Oct. 20 (Snake River JV, noon).

–patrick

With 32 34 consecutive second-half points, Wyoming beat Nebraska 54-52 in the inaugural Six-man Shootout all-star football game on Saturday in Arthur, Neb.

Wyoming scored the winning points with 19 seconds remaining as Dubois’ Mitchell Baker threw a 31-yard touchdown pass to Snake River’s Daniel Wille. The touchdown was the final piece of a comeback that saw Wyoming rally from a 52-20 third-quarter deficit.

Wille finished with 282 total yards — 186 receiving, 94 rushing — and five touchdowns.

Snake River’s Rex Stanley scored twice and Midwest’s Ty Fenster also scored for Wyoming.

Nebraska led big early, staking a lead of 46-12 late in the second quarter. Nebraska led 46-20 at halftime and scored early in the third quarter to take a 52-20 lead.

Scoring summary
First quarter
N: Jordan Trimble 17 run (Hayes Rose kick), 10:10, 0-8
W: Daniel Wille 42 run (PAT fail), 9:10, 6-8
N: Cameron Goldman 5 run (Rose kick), 5:57, 6-16
N: Terryl Peterman 15 pass from Trimble (Rose kick), 0:45, 6-24
Second quarter
N: Brad Vasa 25 run (PAT fail), 8:03, 6-30
W: Rex Stanley 4 pass from Mitchell Baker (PAT fail), 6:26, 12-30
N: Hunter Walker 4 pass from Trimble (Rose kick), 4:49, 12-38
N: Peterman 3 pass from Trimble (Rose kick), 2:47, 12-46
W: Wille 4 run (Wille kick), 1:17, 20-46
Third quarter
N: Brandon Barker 54 pass from Trimble (PAT fail), 8:12, 20-52
W: O.B. Ready Ty Fenster 14 pass from Baker (PAT fail), 5:00, 26-52
W: Wille 1 run (Wille kick), 2:45, 34-52
W: Safety, 2:36, 36-52
W: Wille 37 pass from Baker (PAT fail), 1:26, 42-52
Fourth quarter
W: Stanley 60 pass from Baker (PAT Fail), 1:33, 48-52
W: Wille 31 pass from Baker (PAT fail), 0:19, 54-52

Individual stats
Rushing: W, Wille 19-94, Cody Wells 9-63, Adam VanNorman 7-58, Baker 6-44, Stanley 1-17, Team 2-2. N, Trimble 16-84, Vasa 9-76, Bryce Potter 8-47, Cale Brown 1-15, Brett Ryan 1-6, Brandon Barker 2-4, Cameron Goldman 2-1, Hunter Walker 1-(-1).
Passing: W, Baker 13-27-2-276, Wille 1-1-0-17, VanNorman 0-2-0-0, Skyler Stephenson 0-2-0-0, Stanley o-1-0-0. N, Trimble 16-27-4-204, Tyler Barta 0-2-0-0, Potter 0-1-0-0.
Receiving: W, Wille 9-186, Stanley 3-81, Fenster 1-14, Miles Engelhart 1-12. N, Barker 4-91, Walker 3-44, Tyrel Hinton 1-27, Barta 3-21, Peterman 2-18, Vasa 2-13, Potter 1-(-10).
Defensive leaders: W, Stanley 10 solo tackles, 5 assisted tackles, 1 fumble recovery; VanNorman, 5 solo, 5 assists, 1 fumble recovery, Jordan Largent, 3 solo, 6 assists, 2 sacks, 1 fumble recovery. N, Ryan, 15 solo, 11 assists, 2 fumble recoveries; Gabe Ware, 8 solo, 8 assists, 1 fumble recovery, 1 interception; Sean Grote, 6 solo, 3 assists.

Box score courtesy Ken Swieter.

–patrick

The Wyoming and Nebraska rosters for the first “Six-man Shootout” all-star football game have been set.

The first game is scheduled for June 30 in Arthur, Neb., Wyoming coach Michael Bates of Snake River said.

The roster from Wyoming includes 20 total players, including four players from Snake River (Daniel Wille, Rex Stanley, Miles Engelhart, O.B. Ready), four from Kaycee (Jordan Largent, Chase Gosney, Lane Robinson, Cody Wells), three from Midwest (Adam VanNorman, Chad Rinker, Ty Fenster), two from Ten Sleep (Kolter Hughes, Skyler Stephenson), two from Dubois (Mitchell Baker, Tyrell Finley), two from Guernsey (Taylor Girard, Chris Orr), two from Hulett (Austin Snook, Cooper Letellier) and one from Hanna (Wyatt Houston).

Bates will be Wyoming’s head coach; the offensive coordinator is Kaycee coach Dustin Sipe and the defensive coordinator is Midwest’s Ken Swieter.

Nebraska’s roster includes 18 players: Arthur County’s Jordan Trimble, Hunter Walker and Brad Vasa; Hitchcock County’s Cale Brown, Gabe Ware and Alex Pollman; Lynch’s Cameron Goldman; Sioux County’s Sean Grote; Loup County’s Tyler Barta, Brandon Barker and Tyrel Hinton; Wheeler Central’s Matt Olson; Greeley/Wolbach’s Brett Ryan; Cedar Rapids’ Tyler Hellbusch; Elkhorn Valley’s Bryce Potter and Arcadia’s Matthew Quick. The Nebraska head coach is Scott Tribmle of Arthur County.

Arthur County was Nebraska’s six-man state champion in 2011; Trimble and Brown were named honorary co-captains of Nebraska’s all-state six-man team, which was selected in November.

–patrick

I spent most of my free time on Saturday up in Kaycee, watching the hometown Buckaroos play the Hulett Red Devils in what turned out to be a pretty fantastic game of six-man football.

Oh, and I brought my camera, too.

I uploaded my photos to my Flickr account and then added them to the Wyoming-football.com group pool. The cool thing about that group is that it’s open to the public, and when you add photos to the pool, they become part of the slideshow that now graces this site’s front page.

So next time you take some photos at a game, please feel free to upload them to the Flickr group! I am excited to see what our shutterbugs across the state can come up with.

Below, I’ve added one of my favorite photos from Saturday: Hulett senior Austin Snook taking control of the huddle.

Hulett's Austin Snook

Hulett's Austin Snook takes control of the huddle during Saturday's game against Kaycee.

–patrick

For the first time since 1965, St. Stephens will sponsor a high school football team.

The Eagles will play a six-game six-man schedule mostly against junior varsity teams in 2011, St. Stephens AD William Benn said in an email.

WHSAA Associate Commissioner Trevor Wilson said the association has allowed St. Stephens to play a junior varsity schedule, but said he wants to make sure the Eagles can establish a program on a consistent basis before including the school at the varsity level.

Once that happens, Wilson said, “We would love to have them.”

The Eagles are not eligible for the postseason this fall.

St. Stephens’ schedule this year includes:

Aug. 27 at Hanna (Zero Week)

Sept. 10 Kaycee JV

Sept. 15 Dubois JV

Sept. 20 at Farson JV

Sept. 27 Farson JV

Oct. 13 at Kaycee JV

Benn said the school is trying to schedule more games.

St. Stephens fielded football teams from 1957 to 1965 and were highly successful, compiling a record of 41-24 over those nine seasons, including a state runner-up finish in 1961 and a mythical Class B state championship in 1962.

–patrick

The Wyoming High School Activities Association on Wednesday approved new conference alignments for the 2011 and 2012 football seasons. All of the changes were motivated by teams switching classifications, which forced some reorganization. The new conferences are:

Class 4A
Cheyenne Central
Cheyenne East
Cheyenne South
Evanston
Gillette
Kelly Walsh
Laramie
Natrona County
Rock Springs
Sheridan
(Cheyenne South in, Green River out. Pretty simple changes for the round-robin 4A.)

Class 3A
East Conference

Buffalo
Douglas
Lander
Rawlins
Riverton
Torrington
West Conference
Cody
Green River
Jackson
Powell
Star Valley
Worland
(Green River moves into the West from 4A, which forces Lander to the East. Wheatland drops to 2A.)

Class 2A
East Conference

Big Horn
Burns
Glenrock
Moorcroft
Newcastle
Tongue River
Wheatland
Wright
West Conference
Big Piney
Greybull
Kemmerer
Lovell
Lyman
Mountain View
Pinedale
Thermopolis
(Wheatland comes into the East from 3A, which bumps Thermopolis over to the West. Wyoming Indian drops to 1A.)

Class 1A 11-man
East Conference

Lingle
Lusk
Normative Services
Pine Bluffs
Southeast
Sundance
Upton
West Conference
Burlington
Cokeville
Riverside
Rocky Mountain
Saratoga
Shoshoni
Wind River
Wyoming Indian
(Hulett and Dubois both drop into 1A six-man. Wyoming Indian comes into the West from 2A.)

Class 1A six-man
North Conference

Dubois
Hulett
Kaycee
Meeteetse
Ten Sleep
South Conference
Farson
Guernsey
Hanna
Midwest
Snake River
(Hulett and Dubois come in and the classification splits into two conferences.)

Most of these moves make sense to me. The 3A East-West is a tough split, but Lander joins Riverton in the East for a logical pairing. The 2A division, with Thermopolis in the West, makes more geographic sense. The 1A 11-man splits work, too, although, there will probably be some out-of-state pairings that come out of the seven-team East Conference. The 1A six-man split is a bit of a surprise to me (I would have anticipated an East-West split), but no matter the split, teams are going to have to do a fair amount of traveling.

What do you think? Post your thoughts below.

–patrick