Tri-Rivers Conference is located in Iowa
Tri-Rivers Conference
Tri-Rivers Conference
Tri-Rivers Conference
Tri-Rivers Conference
Tri-Rivers Conference
Tri-Rivers Conference
Tri-Rivers Conference
Tri-Rivers Conference
Tri-Rivers Conference
Tri-Rivers Conference
Tri-Rivers Conference
Tri-Rivers Conference
Tri-Rivers Conference
Tri-Rivers Conference
Tri-Rivers Conference
Tri-Rivers Conference school locations in Iowa

Tri-Rivers Conference
ConferenceIHSAA / IGHSAU
Founded1967
Sports fielded
  • 13
No. of teams15
RegionEastern Iowa
Official websitehttps://www.tririversconference.org/

The Tri-Rivers Conference is a high school conference in eastern Iowa sponsoring athletic competition, as well as speech and music activities. Formed in 1967, the conference has enjoyed long-term stability while enduring periods of significant change over its 50-plus year history. With the return of Edgewood–Colesburg in 2017 (after a brief 4-year hiatus), all but one of the founding members were still conference members. (Center Point, following its merger with Urbana, simply out-grew its former competitors).

Members

Institution High school location Mascot Colors Affiliation 2022-2023 BEDS[1]
Alburnett Alburnett Pirates     Public 168
Calamus–Wheatland Wheatland Warriors     Public 102
Cedar Valley Christian* Cedar Rapids Huskies     Private 26
Central City Central City Wildcats     Public 106
East Buchanan Winthrop Buccaneers     Public 147
Easton Valley Preston River Hawks     Public 112
Edgewood–Colesburg Edgewood Vikings     Public 103
Isaac Newton Christian Academy* Cedar Rapids Patriots       Public 29
Lisbon Lisbon Lions     Public 154
Maquoketa Valley Delhi Wildcats     Public 141
Marquette Catholic Bellevue Mohawks     Private 41
Midland Wyoming Eagles     Public 129
North Linn Troy Mills Lynx     Public 121
Prince of Peace Prep Clinton Irish     Private 40
Springville Springville Orioles     Public 92
Starmont Arlington Stars     Public 147

*Although Isaac Newton Christian Academy is not technically a member, they co-op with Cedar Valley Christian for almost all activities.

Historic roots of the Tri-Rivers Conference

The conference's roots go back to the annual Linn County basketball tournament, first played in 1929–30.[2] High schools competing throughout most of the 1930s, 40s and 50s included Alburnett, Center Point, Central City, Coggon, Ely, Lisbon, Mt.Vernon, Palo, Springville, Toddville, Troy Mills, Viola and Walker. These 13 schools were all located outside the Cedar Rapids-Marion urban area and the high schools generally had significantly smaller enrollments than their urban counterparts.

In January 1951, 8 schools, Alburnett, Center Point, Central City, Palo, Toddville, Troy Mills, Viola and Walker, joined together to form what was tentatively named the Upper Linn basketball league. Coggon and Springville attended the meeting but decided not to join, while Lisbon was already affiliated with the Wapsi-Eight league, Mt. Vernon was affiliated with the Eastern Iowa league, and Ely was no longer a high school. Ultimately renamed simply the Linn County league, the new league would begin play in 1951–52.[3] Toddville merged with Alburnett beginning with the 1953–54 season,[4] reducing the Linn County league to 7 schools. The league would play its 4th and final season in 1954–55.

Beginning in 1955–56, the Linn County league was succeeded by the 7-member All-Ac (All Activities) league. The new league was formed by 5 of the 7 remaining Linn County league schools: Alburnett, Center Point, Central City, Troy Mills and Walker, joined by Coggon and by Winthrop, from Buchanan County.[5] (Palo and Viola took different paths and their high schools would both close by the early 1960s.) In early 1957, superintendents of the 12 non-metro schools in Linn County voted to not hold the boys and girls county basketball tournaments in 1957–58 and to drop the county music festival as well;[6] both examples of county-based institutions giving way to conference-based ones. In 1959–60, the new Linn-Mar (Marion) high school[7] joined the All-Ac bringing it to 8 schools,[8] and in 1960–61, Winthrop, Aurora and Quasqueton merged to form East Buchanan, bringing the later two communities into the league.[9] East Buchanan would leave after the 1961–62 season, but Springville joined in 1962–63 keeping league membership at 8.

During the 1960s, as high school football's popularity rapidly grew, Central City, Coggon and Linn-Mar (All-Ac members with early football programs), joined with Lincoln (Stanwood), Midland (Wyoming) and Olin to form the Pinicon football conference, beginning play in the fall of 1964.[10][11] Center Point joined the Pinicon beginning with the 1965 season,[12] and Springville joined for 1966, bringing the football league membership to 8, 5 of them active members of the All-Ac conference.[13] The fall of 1966 would be the third and final year of the Pinicon[14] as the soon-to-be-formed Tri-Rivers conference would include football and begin play in the fall of 1967.

1966–67 would also be the final year of the All-Ac. Coggon, Troy Mills and Walker remained a part of the league, but were playing their first year of competition as North Linn. And Linn-Mar was competing in both the All-Ac and East Central Iowa (ECI) league for one season in preparation for a complete move to the ECI the following year.[15] The combined effect was a net loss of 3 teams, leading the All-Ac to reconfigure and reemerge the following season as the Tri-Rivers Conference.

Tri-Rivers Conference history

The Tri-Rivers first season of athletic competition was 1967–68. The new conference included 5 teams from the former All-Ac that represented 8 of the 13 teams that had played basketball together since at least the late 1920s: Alburnett (and Toddville), Central City, Center Point, North Linn (Coggon, Troy Mills and Walker) and Springville. East Buchanan (Winthrop) returned to join its former All-Ac competitors following a 5-year hiatus in the Upper Mississippi League. Coming with East Buchanan from the Upper Mississippi was Edgewood–Colesburg and Maquoketa Valley (Delhi).[16]

Starmont (former independent) joined the Tri-Rivers in 1974–75.[17] Jesup (formerly in the Cedar-Wapsie league) joined the conference in 1987-88.[18] In 1989–90, Center Point began 'whole sharing' with Urbana bringing Urbana into the conference as part of the Stormin' Pointers.[19] Center Point and Urbana (CPU) officially merged in 1993-94. Jesup left the league after the 1997–98 school year for the North Iowa Cedar League.

In 2003–04, the Tri-Rivers expanded to 12 with the addition of Anamosa, Cascade, and Monticello from a struggling Big Bend Conference.[20] At that point the conference was split into two divisions: River (larger schools) Anamosa, Cascade, CPU, Maquoketa Valley, Monticello and Starmont, and Valley (smaller schools) Alburnett, Central City, East Buchanan, Edgewood–Colesburg, North Linn and Springville. After the 2006–07 school year, Anamosa and CPU (then 2 of the conference's 3 largest schools) left for the WaMaC where they would be competing against schools closer to their own size. At that point the smaller 10-member Tri-Rivers conference reverted to a single-division format.

A 2012 order from the Iowa Department of Education would force a realignment of conferences in eastern Iowa. In anticipation of the changes Starmont and Edgewood–Colesburg moved to the Upper Iowa Conference beginning with the 2013–14 school year.

When the state order was finalized, its changes took effect beginning with the 2013–14 school year and locked schools into the state-dictated conference alignments for 4 years. The order moved Cascade and Monticello from the Tri-Rivers to the newly formed River Valley Conference. The order dissolved the Big East Conference, and expanded the Tri-Rivers to 13 teams. Coming from the disbanded Big East were Bellevue Marquette, Calamus–Wheatland, Clinton Prince of Peace, Easton Valley (Preston), Lisbon and Midland (Wyoming). Also placed in the Tri-Rivers was Cedar Valley Christian (CVC) of Cedar Rapids, which began competing in 2011–12 as an independent, but had been seeking conference affiliation.[21]

The resulting Tri-Rivers conference split itself into two divisions: West (the remaining original members plus Lisbon) Alburnett, Central City, East Buchanan, Lisbon, Maquoketa Valley, North Linn and Springville, and East (former Big East members plus CVC) Bellevue Marquette, Calamus–Wheatland, Clinton Prince of Peace, CVC, Easton Valley and Midland.

In 2017–18, when the state-imposed alignments expired, Edgewood–Colesburg rejoined the conference as a member of the West division and Lisbon moved to the East division. In 2018–19, Starmont rejoined as a member of the West division. This would be short lived, and the following year Starmont would re-affiliate with the Upper Iowa Conference. The loss would eliminate divisions in the conference.

The 2022-2023 academic year will see current River Valley Conference member North Cedar join the conference bringing membership of the Tri-Rivers conference to 16 teams. [22]

Tri-Rivers pro-athlete alumni

The conference has advanced at least three athletes to the pros:

Al Eberhard played for the Springville Orioles, and graduated from Springville High School, located in Springville, Iowa. Eberhard attended Missouri University from 1972–74 and played with the Missouri Tigers. A 6'6" power forward, he averaged 16.9 points a game in college, and was a first-round pick of the 1974 NBA draft by the Detroit Pistons. He played four seasons with the Pistons. Eberhard is a member of the Iowa High School Basketball Hall of Fame, as well as the Missouri Sports Hall of Fame.

Robert Gallery played for the East Buchanan Buccaneers and graduated from East Buchanan High School in Winthrop, Iowa. He played college football at the University of Iowa and professional football for the Oakland Raiders, Seattle Seahawks and the New England Patriots.

References

  1. "IHSAA: Classifications".
  2. "Palo And Center Point Survive In County Meet", Cedar Rapids Evening Gazette, Cedar Rapids, February 6, 1932.
  3. "Linn Schools For [sic] 8-Team Cage Loop", Cedar Rapids Gazette, Cedar Rapids, January 8, 1951.
  4. McPartland, Pat. "Toddville, Alburnett Schools Merged", Cedar Rapids Gazette, Cedar Rapids, August 11, 1953.
  5. Ogden, Jack. "6 Linn Schools, Winthrop Form a New Conference", Cedar Rapids Gazette, Cedar Rapids, December 26, 1954.
  6. "Vote To Drop Linn Meets", Cedar Rapids Gazette, Cedar Rapids, March 22, 1957.
  7. "Rural School Bond Issue Passes By Rousing 78 Percent Margin", Marion Sentinel, Marion, July 16, 1958.
  8. Ogden, Jack. "Meet The Preps", Cedar Rapids Gazette, Cedar Rapids, November 15, 1959.
  9. "East Buchanan School District Is Approved", Waterloo Courier, Waterloo, December 6, 1959.
  10. Ogden, Jack. "Meet The Preps", Cedar Rapids Gazette, Cedar Rapids, September 6, 1964.
  11. "Prep Roundup, Pinicon - Final Standings", Cedar Rapids Gazette, Cedar Rapids, November 2, 1964.
  12. "Prep Roundup, Pinicon - Final Standings", Cedar Rapids Gazette, Cedar Rapids, November 1, 1965.
  13. "Prep Roundup, Pinicon - Final Standings", Cedar Rapids Gazette, Cedar Rapids, November 14, 1966.
  14. "New Loop?", Cedar Rapids Gazette, Cedar Rapids, September 4 1967.
  15. "Two Conference Bids For Linn-Mar Cagers", Cedar Rapids Gazette, Cedar Rapids, November 6, 1966.
  16. "Set Up Plans for Tri River [sic] League", Cedar Rapids Gazette, Cedar Rapids, November 6, 1966.
  17. "Loop Bid", Cedar Rapids Gazette, Cedar Rapids, September 1, 1974.
  18. Hilton, Bob. "Center Pt., Starmont top Tri-Rivers again", Cedar Rapids Gazette, Cedar Rapids, September 6, 1987.
  19. Hilton, Bob. "When necessary, sharing is great for students", Cedar Rapids Gazette, Cedar Rapids, November 6, 1989.
  20. Linder, Jeff. "Big Bend's end draws near", Cedar Rapids Gazette, Cedar Rapids, January 6, 2003.
  21. Batterson, Steve (May 30, 2012). "Iowa ruling splits up Big East Conference". Quad-City Times. Retrieved May 30, 2012.
  22. "Grinnell's 2023 entrance will give the Wamac a 12th member".
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