Английская Википедия:Greater Cleveland Conference

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Шаблон:Short description The Greater Cleveland Conference is an active OHSAA athletic league that originally existed from 1950 to 1998, then re-formed (including two prior members, Mentor and Euclid) to begin play in the 2015–2016 school year.[1][2]

Current Member Schools

This second collection of schools was able to use the name "Greater Cleveland Conference" from the defunct league because Mentor retained the rights to the name from its previous tenure in the GCC.[3] All of the initial members of the reformed league but one left the Northeast Ohio Conference to join, while Euclid came over from the Lake Erie League.[4] As noted under "History", three schools have left the GCC since its reformation, while two have joined (including one that rejoined after leaving).

The current roster of members include four schools from Cuyahoga County (Euclid, Cleveland Heights, Shaker Heights, and Strongsville), two from Medina County (Brunswick and Medina), and one from Lake County (Mentor). The departed schools were from Lorain County (Elyria) and Cuyahoga County (Solon).

Файл:GreaterClevelandConferenceMap.png
School Nickname Location Colors Type Tenure
Brunswick Blue Devils Brunswick, Ohio Blue & White
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Public 2015-
Euclid Panthers Euclid, Ohio Navy Blue & Gold
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Public 2015-
Medina Battling Bees Medina, Ohio Green & White
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Public 2015-
Mentor Cardinals Mentor, Ohio Scarlet & Gray
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Public 2015-
Strongsville Mustangs Strongsville, Ohio Green & White
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Public 2015-
Cleveland Heights Tigers Cleveland Heights Black & Gold
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Public 2023-
Shaker Heights Red Raiders Shaker Heights Red & White
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Public 2015-2020, 2023-

History

Original conference

The Greater Cleveland Conference was originally formed by six high schools in 1950: five from Cuyahoga County (Bedford, Berea, Euclid, Garfield Heights, and Maple Heights), and one from Lake County (Willoughby Union). When Willoughby Union split into two schools in 1957, one of those schools, Eastlake North, replaced it in the GCC; the other, Willoughby South, was not added. However, when the Berea district was similarly split into two schools, Berea and Midpark, in 1962, both were added to the GCC, with Euclid moving to the Lake Erie League along with a neighboring school, South Euclid-Lyndhurst Brush. But in 1968, when Garfield Heights also left the GCC for the Lake Erie League, Willoughby South, Mentor, and Mayfield (all from the Freeway Conference) joined the GCC to increase the league to eight schools. Seven years later, in 1975, Berea and Midpark left to join the Lake Erie League, which had more schools on the west side of Cleveland, but Euclid rejoined the GCC and bought Brush along, maintaining the league at eight. The conference remained unchanged after that for eighteen years until 1993, when Mentor left for the Lake Erie League, to be replaced by Nordonia High School, the league's . However, that began a process of league dissolution, and the conference dissolved within the next five years, with Mentor retaining the rights to the league name.

Original GCC Members

Current conference

The inaugural lineup of the reformed Greater Cleveland Conference[5] began in 2015 with Brunswick, Elyria, Euclid, Medina, Mentor, Shaker Heights, Solon, and Strongsville. But two changes happened within the first five years.

Shaker Heights announced in January 2019 that they would leave the GCC to rejoin the Lake Erie League for the 2020–21 school year. The district cited "new and improved leadership in the LEL, better geography and travel times, but also diversity/cultural sensitivity issues" as reasons for leaving.[6] On January 16, 2020, Elyria accepted an invitation to leave for the Southwestern Conference, effective in 2021. These departures left the league with only six schools for the 2021–22 and 2022–23 school years.

More changes followed quickly. A unanimous vote on April 13, 2022, granted approval for Cleveland Heights and Shaker Heights of the Lake Erie League to join the conference beginning with the 2023-24 school year.[7] Later that year, in September, Solon announced plans to leave for the Suburban League at the conclusion of the current school year, a year earlier than conference bylaws allowed. At its December 2022 meeting, the GCC approved Solon's departure for all sports except for football, citing difficulties scheduling with seven teams. Under the agreement, Solon football will play the 2023 season in the GCC while all other sports will begin play in the Suburban League. Football will join the Suburban League in 2024.[8]

Former Members

  • Elyria Pioneers (2015-2021 (to Southwestern Conference))
  • Solon Comets (2015-2023 (to Suburban League))

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:Northeast Ohio High School Athletic Conferences