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Mississippi Valley Conference (Wisconsin)

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Mississippi Valley Conference
ConferenceWIAA
Founded1989
Sports fielded
  • 19
    • men's: 10
    • women's: 9
DivisionDivision 1
No. of teams7
HeadquartersLa Crosse, Wisconsin
RegionLa Crosse Metropolitan
Official websitewww.mvconference.org
Mississippi Valley Conference (Wisconsin) is located in Wisconsin
Mississippi Valley Conference (Wisconsin)
Mississippi Valley Conference (Wisconsin)
Mississippi Valley Conference (Wisconsin)
Mississippi Valley Conference (Wisconsin)
Mississippi Valley Conference (Wisconsin)
Mississippi Valley Conference (Wisconsin)
Mississippi Valley Conference (Wisconsin)
Mississippi Valley Conference Member School Locations in Wisconsin

The Mississippi Valley Conference (MVC) is a high school athletic conference in southwest Wisconsin. All MVC schools are members of the Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association (WIAA) and are located in the La Crosse-Onalaska-Sparta combined statistical area.

History

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Original Mississippi Valley Conference (1933-1965)

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The first incarnation of the Mississippi Valley Conference was founded in 1933 and contained five smaller high schools in western Wisconsin: Alma, Arcadia, Durand, Mondovi and Osseo.[1] Augusta joined from the Little Eight Conference in 1935,[2] replacing Alma after their return to the Bi-County Conference. Whitehall followed in 1936[3] while maintaining dual membership in the Trempeleau Valley Conference (which they left in 1938). Black River Falls became the conference's seventh member school when it joined in 1938.[4] These seven schools competed together for two decades before three left to become charter members of the new Dairyland Conference in 1959: Augusta, Osseo and Whitehall.[5] Chippewa Falls and Cochrane-Fountain City took their place that same year.[6] Menomonie was also accepted into the conference for 1959 but withdrew before ever playing a game.[7] Three schools exited the conference in 1963: Black River Falls for the South Central Conference, Chippewa Falls for the Big Rivers Conference and Cochrane-Fountain City for the Dairyland Conference.[8] For the last two years of its existence, the Mississippi Valley Conference competed as a three-school circuit until Arcadia left for the Coulee Conference in 1965, thus ending the conference's run.[9]

New Mississippi Valley Conference (1989-present)

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The current incarnation of the Mississippi Valley Conference was formed in 1989[10] to accommodate for the growing attendance in schools in traditional rural-based conferences and shorten travel distances for its members.[11] Holmen and Onalaska joined from the Coulee Conference, Sparta and Tomah from the South Central Conference, and La Crosse Central High School and Logan High School from the Big Rivers Conference. Shortly after, in 1997, Aquinas High School joined from the Central Wisconsin Catholic Conference of the Wisconsin Independent Schools Athletic Association, a private school athletic league, to become the conference's seventh member.[12]

In 2014, West Salem began competition in the Mississippi Valley Conference for football only. They remain in the Coulee Conference for all other sports. Due to competitive differences between Aquinas and the rest of the conference, their football team moved to the Coulee Conference with all other sports remaining in the MVC.[13]

Sports Sponsored

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The MVC sponsors 19 varsity sports. They are:

List of Member Schools (1989-present)

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Current Members

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School Location Affiliation Enrollment Mascot Colors Year Joined
Aquinas La Crosse, WI Private (Catholic) 307 Blugolds     1997
Holmen Holmen, WI Public 1,215 Vikings     1989
La Crosse Central La Crosse, WI Public 1,029 Riverhawks     1989
La Crosse Logan La Crosse, WI Public 738 Rangers     1989
Onalaska Onalaska, WI Public 923 Hilltoppers     1989
Sparta Sparta, WI Public 909 Spartans     1989
Tomah Tomah, WI Public 919 Timberwolves     1989

Associate Members

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School Location Affiliation Enrollment Mascot Colors Joined Participating Sports Primary Conference
West Salem West Salem, WI Public 607 Panthers     2014 Football, Soccer, Volleyball Coulee
Reedsburg Reedsburg, WI Public 897 Beavers     2022 Football Badger

All Sports

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Nineteen varsity sports count towards the Mississippi Valley Conference "All Sports Award". Points are awarded based on a team's finish in a given sport (seven for the conference championship, six for second place and so on to one point for the seventh-place finisher). At the completion of each sport season (fall, winter and spring), updated standings are posted on the league's Web site, and at the end of the school year, the school with the most points is declared the winner of the "All Sports Award."[14]

List of Member Schools (1933-1965)

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School Location Affiliation Enrollment Mascot Colors Joined Left Conference Joined Current Conference
Alma Alma, WI Public 65 Rivermen     1933 1935 Bi-County Dairyland
Arcadia Arcadia, WI Public 417 Raiders     1933 1965 Coulee
Durand Durand, WI Public 307 Panthers     1933 1965 Independent Dunn-St. Croix
Mondovi Mondovi, WI Public 250 Buffaloes     1933 1965 Independent Dunn-St. Croix
Osseo Osseo, WI Public 255 Chieftains     1933 1959 Dairyland Cloverbelt
Augusta Augusta, WI Public 226 Beavers     1935 1959 Dairyland
Whitehall Whitehall, WI Public 216 Norse     1936 1959 Dairyland
Black River Falls Black River Falls, WI Public 481 Tigers     1938 1963 South Central Coulee
Chippewa Falls Chippewa Falls, WI Public 1,454 Cardinals     1959 1963 Big Rivers
Cochrane-Fountain City Fountain City, WI Public 175 Pirates     1959 1963 Dairyland

List of State Champions

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Fall Sports

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Boys Cross Country
School Year Division
La Crosse Central 1990 Division 1
Aquinas 2007 Division 3
Aquinas 2018 Division 3
Aquinas 2019 Division 3
Aquinas 2020 Division 2
Onalaska 2021 Division 1
Girls Cross Country
School Year Division
La Crosse Central 1989 Division 1
La Crosse Central 1990 Division 1
Football
School Year Division
Aquinas 2007 Division 5
Girls Golf
School Year Division
Onalaska 1989 Single Division
La Crosse Central 1990 Single Division
La Crosse Central 1991 Single Division
La Crosse Central 1992 Single Division
La Crosse Central 1993 Single Division
La Crosse Central 1998 Single Division
Aquinas 2017 Division 2

Winter Sports

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Boys Basketball
School Year Division
Onalaska 1992 Division 2
Aquinas 2003 Division 3
Aquinas 2008 Division 3
Aquinas 2011 Division 3
Onalaska 2012 Division 2
Aquinas 2013 Division 3
La Crosse Central 2017 Division 1
Girls Basketball
School Year Division
Holmen 1995 Division 2
Aquinas 2018 Division 4
Aquinas 2019 Division 4
Gymnastics
School Year Division
Onalaska 1997 Division 2
Onalaska 1998 Division 2
Holmen 2005 Division 2
Holmen 2006 Division 2
Boys Wrestling
School Year Division
Aquinas 1999 WISAA (Single Division)

Spring Sports

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Baseball
School Year Division
La Crosse Logan 2001 Division 1
Aquinas 2007 Division 3
Aquinas 2017 Division 3
Aquinas 2024 Division 3
Girls Soccer
School Year Division
Aquinas 2015 Division 4
Softball
School Year Division
Holmen 1999 Division 1
La Crosse Logan 2015 Division 2
Boys Track & Field
School Year Division
Aquinas 2011 Division 2
Aquinas 2019 Division 3
Aquinas 2021 Division 3
Girls Track & Field
School Year Division
Aquinas 2012 Division 2
Aquinas 2019 Division 3

Summer Sports

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Baseball
School Year Division
Holmen 1990 Single Division

Rivalries

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The Mississippi Valley Conference has a number of intense rivalries, both based on proximity, and performance.

City

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  • Central Vs. Logan - The two La Crosse public schools' intense rivalry is well publicized by local media and is highlighted by football's Battle for the Ark of Victory.
  • Central Vs. Aquinas - A heated battle for city supremacy and the overall city championship.
  • Logan Vs. Aquinas - A heated battle for city supremacy and the overall city championship.

Other Main Rivalries

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  • Holmen Vs. Onalaska - Proximity spices up this rivalry, as the two school districts overlap city boundaries. Both schools also came over from the Coulee Conference together.
  • Tomah Vs. Sparta - Both came over from the South Central Conference and are separated by 17 miles of Interstate 90. The closest conference foe for both teams.
  • Reedsburg Vs. Baraboo - Both moved to the MVC as affiliated members and have one of the longest rivalries in the state.

In addition to these main rivalries, many other rivalries have developed based on different sports and success. In the early 2000s, Holmen and Aquinas had fierce competitions in Boys' Basketball in which tickets were sold out days after going on sale. Additionally, in the early 1990s, Onalaska Vs. Central was a heated matchup in Boys' Basketball. That rivalry was rekindled in the 2010s as both teams regularly competed for state bids. In wrestling, Holmen Vs. Sparta and Holmen Vs. Tomah have come and gone. In Boys' Ice Hockey, Onalaska and Aquinas/Holmen/G-E-T/C-FC hold a battle for the Omni Center rivalry, as both teams play in the same venue.

Many non-conference rivalries are also in the MVC. Onalaska Vs. West Salem, Logan and Central Vs. Eau Claire Memorial and North, Tomah Vs. Black River Falls, and Holmen Vs. G-E-T are all annual football games. Aquinas maintains matchups with old conference members from their WISAA days.

Rivalry Week

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In many different sports, particularly but not limited to football, basketball, and wrestling, the three big rivalries will frequently be played on the same days, coining the phrase Rivalry Week in football and Rivalry Night in other sports. These rivalries are Central Vs. Logan, Holmen Vs. Onalaska, and Sparta Vs. Tomah. Occasionally, Aquinas will be inserted into a city match up or against Holmen or Onalaska on a Rivalry Night.

References

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  1. ^ "News of Northwest Wisconsin, Mondovi section". Eau Claire Leader-Telegram. 23 May 1934. p. 5. Retrieved 20 November 2024.
  2. ^ "Durand Cagers Beat Hudson, 21 to 12". Eau Claire Leader-Telegram. 30 November 1935. p. 8. Retrieved 20 November 2024.
  3. ^ "Whitehall Opens Cage Season on Nov. 10". The La Crosse Tribune. 5 November 1936. p. 12. Retrieved 20 November 2024.
  4. ^ "Arcadia Takes New Loop Post". The La Crosse Tribune. 14 March 1938. p. 4. Retrieved 20 November 2024.
  5. ^ "Dairyland New Tag". The La Crosse Tribune. 16 November 1958. p. 15. Retrieved 20 November 2024.
  6. ^ "Chippewa, Menomonie Join Mississippi Valley League". Chippewa Herald-Telegram. 30 October 1958. p. 18. Retrieved 20 November 2024.
  7. ^ "Prior Commitments Force Menomonie To Withdraw From Mississippi Valley". Chippewa Herald-Telegram. 6 November 1958. p. 12. Retrieved 20 November 2024.
  8. ^ Gunderson, Jim (23 March 1963). "Gunning for Sports (Three-School League)". The La Crosse Tribune. p. 4. Retrieved 20 November 2024.
  9. ^ Bueldi, Ron (26 February 1965). "Buckshot". Eau Claire Leader-Telegram. p. 13. Retrieved 20 November 2024.
  10. ^ "New league given a name". The La Crosse Tribune. 20 November 1988. p. 15. Retrieved 20 November 2024.
  11. ^ Seering, Jeff (26 May 1988). "Some thoughts on realignment". Reedsburg Times-Press. p. 30. Retrieved 20 November 2024.
  12. ^ Brown, Jeff (14 February 1996). "MVC principals agree: Aquinas in". The La Crosse Tribune. pp. C-1. Retrieved 20 November 2024.
  13. ^ Kelly, Drew (July 24, 2018). "Aquinas football to compete in Coulee Conference in 2020". WKTY. Retrieved February 16, 2020.
  14. ^ "Home". mvconference.org.
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