Mississippi Valley Conference

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The Mississippi Valley Conference (also called MVC) is a high school athletic conference whose members are located in the metro areas of eastern Iowa. Additionally, in Wisconsin, there is an athletic confederation known as the Mississippi Valley Conference too. The Iowa-based conference is divided into two segements: the Mississippi division and the Valley division. At present the MVC is comprised of all 4A schools with the exception of Cedar Rapids Xavier and Dubuque Wahlert, who are categorized as 3A schools.

Contents

[edit] Member Schools

There are 14 members of the Mississippi Valley Conference:

Institution Location Founded Affiliation Enrollment Mascot Division
Cedar Falls Cedar Falls 1900 Public 1,164 Tigers Mississippi
Cedar Rapids Jefferson Cedar Rapids 1958 Public 1,651 J-Hawks Valley
Cedar Rapids Kennedy Cedar Rapids 1967 Public 1,887 Cougars Valley
Cedar Rapids Washington Cedar Rapids 1956 Public 1,626 Warriors Valley
Cedar Rapids Prairie Cedar Rapids 1954 Public 1,052 Hawks Mississippi
Cedar Rapids Xavier Cedar Rapids 1998 Private/Catholic approx. 700 Saints Valley
Dubuque Hempstead Dubuque 1970 Public 1,718 Mustangs Mississippi
Dubuque Senior Dubuque 1923 Public 1,551 Rams Valley
Dubuque Wahlert Dubuque 1959 Private/Catholic 614 Golden Eagles Mississippi
Iowa City High Iowa City ???? Public 1,526 Little Hawks Mississippi
Iowa City West Iowa City 1968 Public 1,721 Trojans Mississippi
Linn-Mar Marion 1959 Public 1,249 Lions Mississippi
Waterloo East Waterloo 1874 Public 1,298 Trojans Valley
Waterloo West Waterloo ???? Public 1,804 Wahawks Valley

[edit] History

Since its founding, the Mississippi Valley Conference was a league comprised of metropolitan schools in eastern Iowa. Until 1969, the MVC (as it is known to some locals) also included Quad-City area schools in both Iowa and Illinois; this list included Davenport High (since 1960, Davenport Central) and Davenport West in Iowa; and Illinois Quad-City area schools East Moline (now United Township), Moline and Rock Island. Clinton High School was also a member of the conference, as were Jefferson and Washington of Cedar Rapids, Iowa City High and Dubuque Senior (known for years simply as Dubuque). Cedar Rapids Kennedy joined immediately upon its opening in 1967.

The league was reorganized in 1969, with the five Quad-City area schools leaving to form a new league (the Quad-City Metro Conference, along with Catholic schools Davenport Assumption and Rock Island Alleman). The six remaining schools were joined by newcomers Bettendorf, Muscatine and Iowa City West (the latter which opened in 1968). Early in 1970, the newly opened Dubuque Hempstead was admitted to the conference. One member - Muscatine - gained infamy during the 1970s when it lost 44 consecutive football games, including 40 straight league games between 1973 and 1977.1

The league reorganized again in 1978 when Bettendorf, Clinton and Muscatine left to join the newly formed Mississippi Athletic Conference; Dubuque Wahlert joined at that time to make the MVC an eight-team conference.

Since the 1980s, the MVC's membership has grown and has been at its current 14-school membership since the mid-1990s. The most recent additions have been Waterloo East, Waterloo West, Cedar Falls and Cedar Rapids Regis. Regis joined the MVC to begin the 1993 school year and was subsequently closed and merged with LaSalle High School to form Xavier High School. Regis and LaSalle are now middle schools that feed into Xavier.

As of March 2007, Cedar Rapids Xavier is exploring options to re-enter the MVC as a 4A school beginning with the 2009 school year.

[edit] Sports

The conference offers the following sports:

Although the member schools field freshman — and in some cases, junior varsity — teams in many of the above-mentioned sports, conference championships are determined at sophomore and varsity levels only.

[edit] Sources

  • 1"Thank God it's over!" Sports article from the Muscatine Journal, September 10, 1978.