The CCS, which is the governing body of high school athletics in
Santa Clara, San Mateo, San Benito, Monterey and Santa Cruz
counties, as well as some schools in San Francisco and Alameda
County, examines realignment every other year. If administrators
from schools in the three conferences -- the Northern, Central and
Southern -- determine realignment is needed, they submit proposals
that are put to a vote. The last major realignment was in 1998.
Should there not be any appeals in Thursday's meeting -- and CCS
assistant commissioner Steve Stearns said that as of Tuesday he
hadn't heard of any -- the realignment will be instituted in the
2002-2003 school year.
Moving private schools out of the Blossom Valley and Santa Clara
Valley athletic leagues has been talked about the past few years.
Public-school coaches have complained they can't consistently
compete with private schools because those schools have open
enrollment and can attract athletes from all over. Public schools
are confined to their neighborhoods or districts.
``I think it's great we're not going to have to compete against
St. Francis in league,'' said Ami Williams, Palo Alto's girls
volleyball coach. Palo Alto finished 34-9 last season, losing twice
to the Lancers in the SCVAL De Anza Division, and in the finals of
the CCS and NorCal Division II tournaments. ``We still hope to face
St. Francis in non-league play, because we do enjoy playing them.
``I realize we'll still have to deal with them in the CCS
playoffs, but we'll at least have a better chance to win a league
championship once they're out of the SCVAL.''
Not all public-school coaches share Williams' opinion.
``I really kind of hate to lose Mitty out of our league,'' said
Robb Karr, Leland's girls basketball coach and a former assistant at
Mitty. ``I really enjoy the challenge of playing Mitty twice a year.
It has been a great experience for our girls. Playing against Mitty
has helped make us a better team in preparation for the CCS
playoffs.''
The WCAL for girls will consist of Mitty, Presentation and Valley
Christian from the Blossom Valley Athletic League, St. Francis from
the Santa Clara Valley Athletic League and St. Ignatius, Sacred
Heart Cathedral, Sacred Heart Prep and Notre Dame-Belmont from the
Girls Private Schools League. Seven of those eight teams advanced to
the CCS basketball semifinals or beyond.
``This is going to be a powerful girls league, one of the
toughest in the state,'' WCAL Commissioner Ed Ravenscroft said.
Another significant change in the Central Conference will be the
Valley Christian boys moving to the WCAL from the BVAL, joining St.
Francis, Bellarmine, Mitty, Serra, St. Ignatius, Riordan and Sacred
Heart Cathedral.
The Valley Christian football team has improved dramatically the
past five seasons, moving from the lowest division of the BVAL to
second in the highest division of the BVAL this season and advancing
to the CCS Division I semifinals. That makes the Warriors a good fit
for the WCAL, St. Francis Coach Mike Mitchell said.
``Valley Christian has a quality football program that fits the
philosophy of our league,'' Mitchell said. ``I think they will be a
welcome addition.''
The most significant and controversial change in the Northern
Conference is moving Menlo, a private school of 550 students in
Atherton, into the 17-member public school PAL. Many PAL schools
opposed the Menlo move, but the motion passed 20-15.
``It wasn't so much the Menlo School boys as it was the girls,''
PAL Commissioner Gordon Young said. ``The feeling is that Menlo
School is very strong in several girls sports, like volleyball and
tennis, and that it's going to be difficult for the PAL schools to
compete against them.''
Menlo already has boys teams in the PAL, including football, but
it will be the first time the school's girls will compete in the
league. Menlo's girls tennis team won the CCS championship this
season, and its girls basketball team finished second in the CCS
Division IV playoffs.
An alternative would have been to place the Menlo girls in the
Private Schools Athletic League, Christian Private School Athletic
League or the newly created Girls Private Schools League. The small
private schools leagues aren't as strong as the PAL, and they felt
Menlo would be a better fit for the PAL. The 20 votes in favor of
the realignment came from the schools in the newly aligned PSAL,
CPSAL and GPSL.
``It's something we didn't necessarily want, but it's something
we're going to have to live with,'' said Pam Wimberly,
Menlo-Atherton's athletic director and girls basketball coach. ``We
realize Menlo is a small school, but they get some outstanding
athletes from a wide area, many from public school districts in San
Mateo County. It doesn't make for a level playing field.''
Menlo School Athletic Director and Coach Craig Schoof had a mixed
reaction about joining the PAL.
``We're excited about playing in the PAL; it's a great league,''
Schoof said. ``But, at the same time, I was disappointed by the way
the PAL voted, which I think was aimed against our girls.
``I can understand their position; I played and coached at
Homestead, and I remember what it was like going up against the
private schools. But we are all members of the same conference, and
the PAL seemed to be the better way to go because it's a more
equitable situation than having us compete against the smaller
private schools. It was like we were between a rock and a hard
place.''
The issue in the Southern Conference was realigning schools into
the new league from the established Monterey Bay, Santa Cruz Coast
and Mission Trail athletic leagues because of the number of new
schools expected to open the next few years.
The new league, yet to be named, will be made up of Monterey,
North Monterey County and Alisal from the MBL, Monte Vista Christian
from the SCCAL, Seaside from the MTAL and a school expected to open
in Watsonville by 2003.
The MBL will become a seven-school league, with the addition of a
new school in Morgan Hill, also with a proposed 2003 opening. The
SCCAL will have nine schools, including a new St. Francis High in
Watsonville and Mt. Madonna, neither of which will field teams in
all sports.
The MTAL will have 10 schools -- including York, Anzar and Santa
Catalina, an all-girls school -- that don't field teams in every
sport.
``There were other proposals offered, but we ended up going with
having four leagues,'' MBL and MTAL Commissioner Elgie Bellizio
said. ``Not everybody was happy with it -- the final vote was
18-12.''
Bellizio said Salinas' public schools -- North Salinas, Salinas,
Alisal and Alvarez -- voted against the proposal because they want
to be in the same league. North Salinas and Salinas were left in the
MBL; Alisal and Alvarez have been placed in the new league.
Pat Lovell, commissioner of the SCCAL, said most administrators
from the schools in his league voted against the proposal. He said
they felt realignment could be delayed at least two more years
because of the uncertainty of when the new Morgan Hill and
Watsonville schools will open.
``The proposal may not be ideal for every school,'' Bellizio
said, ``but I think it's best for balance in the conference. As for
realigning in 2004, that would have left us with the problem of what
to do with the new schools opening in 2003. In my opinion, that
could have created a mess.''
Stearns said the CCS doesn't have a position on the realignment.
``I'm not surprised by what's happening,'' Stearns said. ``There
have been a whole lot of folks who have seen this coming for a long
time, especially the new WCAL for girls. . . . It's going
to be one heck of a league.''
Central Conference
West Catholic girls
Northern Conference
Southern Conference
Contact Dave Payne at dpayne@sjmercury.com or (650)
688-7570. Fax (650) 688-7555.