Metro Suburban Conference

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Metro Suburban Conference (MSC) is an organization of seven high schools in northern Illinois, representing seven communities in that part of the state. These high schools are all members of the Illinois High School Association. The conference began competing during the 2006–07 academic year, with four schools from the former Suburban Prairie Conference East Division.

Two new schools (Timothy Christian and Illiana Christian) were added for the 2009–10 academic year, both previously part of the Private School League.[1] Glenbard South High School will be added for 2010–11 following the dissolution of the Western Sun Conference.[2]

Membership

SchoolTownNicknameEnrollment
Elmwood Park High SchoolElmwood Park, IllinoisTigers1,040 (2009) St. Edward High SchoolElgin, IllinoisGreen Wave407 (2012) Fenton High SchoolBensenville, IllinoisBison1,573 (2009)
Illiana Christian High SchoolLansing, IllinoisVikings632 (2009)
Ridgewood High SchoolNorridge, IllinoisRebels879 (2009)
Riverside-Brookfield High SchoolRiverside, IllinoisBulldogs1,466 (2009)
Timothy Christian High SchoolElmhurst, IllinoisTrojans399 (2009)
Glenbard South High SchoolGlen Ellyn, IllinoisRaiders1,451 (2009)

References

  1. Stone, Bill (16 July 2008), "Two teams join Metro Suburban Conference", Chicago Sun-Times, retrieved 26 April 2010, "The Metro Suburban Conference will add two more teams beginning with the 2009-10 school year. Timothy Christian and Illiana Christian will join the conference, which includes Elmwood Park, Ridgewood, Fenton and Riverside-Brookfield ... Timothy and PSL rival Illiana recently finalized a deal to join the current four-team Metro Suburban on a two-year trial basis. The PSL, which has nine schools in the sports that Timothy competes, will remain intact for the 2008-09 school year." 
  2. Schwarz, Orrin (6 November 2009), "Glenbard South to join Metro Suburban", Daily Herald, retrieved 26 April 2010, "Glenbard South announced Friday that it will join the Metro Suburban Conference for the 2010-2011 school year." 
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.