Tomahawk Conference
ClassificationMSHSL 1A-2A
Sports fielded
  • 7
Region Minnesota

The Tomahawk Conference is a Minnesota State High School League sanctioned athletic conference comprising schools located in the south central region of Minnesota.

Offerings

Sports

The conference offers the following:

Fall Winter Spring
Volleyball Basketball (b/g) Baseball
Cross Country (b/g) Wrestling Softball
Tennis Gymnastics Track (b/g)
Dance Team Golf (b/g)

The conference schools football teams play in either the Southern Minnesota Conference or Gopher Conference. Teams in the Tomahawk Conference compete in competitive classes of A and AA for section and state tournaments.

Activities

The conference offers the following:

Fall Winter Spring
Speech Speech
Knowledge Bowl
Math Team
One Act Play

Current members

The conference consists of 10 schools, although Cedar Mountain High School and Comfrey High School have a co-op for all sports, leaving 9 teams to compete.

While a majority of schools in the conference are public, Minnesota Valley Lutheran, New Ulm Cathedral, and Sleepy Eye St. Mary's are private schools.

Institution Location (Population) Founded Affiliation Enrollment Nickname
Buffalo Lake-Hector-Stewart High School Hector, Minnesota
(1,151)
1987 Public 151 Mustangs
Cedar Mountain High School/Comfrey High School Morgan, Minnesota
(896)

Comfrey, Minnesota
(382)

1983/1917 Public 156 Cougars
Gibbon-Fairfax-Winthrop High School Winthrop, Minnesota
(1,399)
1987 Public 246 Thunderbirds
Minnesota Valley Lutheran High School New Ulm, Minnesota
(13,522)
1979 Private 191 Chargers
New Ulm Cathedral High School New Ulm, Minnesota
(13,522)
1919 Private 144 Greyhounds
Sleepy Eye High School Sleepy Eye, Minnesota
(3,599)
1890 Public 143 Indians
Sleepy Eye St. Mary's High School Sleepy Eye, Minnesota
(3,599)
1884 Private 113 Knights
Springfield High School Springfield, Minnesota
(2,152)
1889 Public 165 Tigers
Wabasso High School Wabasso, Minnesota
(696)
1893 Public 125 Rabbits

Former members

  • McLeod West High School - closed spring 2009.

References

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