California Interscholastic Federation | |
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Abbreviation | CIF |
Motto | "Dedicated to developing student-athletes of character" |
Formation | 1914 |
Type | NPO |
Legal status | Association |
Purpose/focus | Athletic/Educational |
Headquarters | 4658 Duckhorn Drive Sacramento, CA 95834 |
Region served | California |
Official languages | English |
Executive Director | Marie M. Ishida |
Affiliations | National Federation of State High School Associations |
Staff | 14 |
Website | http://www.cifstate.org/ |
The California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) is the governing body for high school sports in the state of California. It mirrors similar governing bodies in other states; however, it differs from some of the others in that it covers most high schools in the state of California, both public and private.All NSCIF media press pass are allowed on the side lines of any team for photography on interview from the coaches. Section 2 and 4 in the CIF founding rules and restrictions state: any member with a CIF pass as acsess to any sidelines.
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The CIF was founded in Los Angeles in 1914 by a group of area school principals. It was founded in order to standardize rules and team structures between schools; it was also intended to prevent abuses such as "school shopping" by athletes and teams fielding players over high school age. Other school principals voluntarily entered into the program, and by 1917, the organization was established statewide.[1]
In 2005, CIF required that all student athletes sign a promise to not take any steroids or they face expulsion.
CIF holds state championships in:
CIF also hosts a State Cheerleading Championship in conjunction with the football championship.
There are also Northern California championships in tennis and girls' wrestling, and Southern California championships in boys' volleyball, girls' wrestling, and boys' and girls' soccer. (There is no state championship in soccer as Southern California plays during the winter, while parts of Northern California get far too much precipitation during that time to make outdoor sports (besides skiing) viable.)
Each CIF section may also conduct championships in other sports, including:
Note that, in sports where a school has separate boys' and girls' teams, girls are not allowed on boys' teams, and boys are not allowed on girls' teams. (In sports such as baseball that do not have girls' teams, girls are allowed to play; on the other hand, in sports such as softball that do not have boys' teams, in most cases boys are not allowed to play.)
In addition, aquatics - swimming times and diving scores are compared based on final results at section meets and ranked statewide to determine a state champion; there is no state championship meet for aquatics events.
CIF offers various awards to its participants [2]:
For CIF administrative purposes, the state is broken up into ten sections.[3] These sections are:
These sections (except Oakland and San Francisco) are further subdivided into leagues. The Southern Section is geographically the largest, covering approximately one-fourth to one-third of the state's total area. (The Southern section includes private schools in the LAUSD service area, whether inside or outside the city of Los Angeles, and the Central Coast and North Coast sections also include private schools in the cities of San Francisco and Oakland respectively. The three "City Sections" are operated by and limited to the corresponding public school systems.)
The sections also serve as the qualifying entities for regional and state competitions, and may organize sports not contested statewide, such as badminton, baseball, field hockey, gymnastics, lacrosse, skiing and snowboarding, soccer, softball, and water polo.
The organization's supreme governing body is the Federated Council. This council consists of one representative from each section, a representative from the California Department of Education, representatives from all bodies recognized as Allied Organizations by the CIF, the Council President, the President-Elect, and the immediate past President. Each representative is elected to a term of two years. The Council meets three times per year.[4]
The following groups have Allied Organization status within the CIF [5]:
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