Capital Area Activities Conference

Capital Area Activities Conference
Founded 2003
No. of teams 20
Country  United States
Official website http://caacsports.org/

The Capital Area Activities Conference is a high school sports league located in Central Michigan. It is a member of the Michigan High School Athletic Association (MHSAA). There are currently 20 member schools in the conference that come from the following counties of Clinton, Eaton, Ingham, Ionia, Jackson, Livingston, and Shiawassee. The Capital Area Activities Conference Logo was designed by Lansing Catholic 2003 graduate Raymond B. Corey.

Member schools [1]

The CAAC currently has 20 member schools:

School Mascot Division Class Enrollment Year Admitted County
DeWittPanthers Red A 1002 2003 Clinton
East LansingTrojans Blue A 1117 2003 Ingham
Eaton RapidsGreyhounds White B 810 2003 Eaton
FowlervilleGladiators White B 833 2003 Livingston
Grand LedgeComets Blue A 1694 2003 Eaton
HaslettVikings Red B 875 2003 Ingham
HoltRams Blue A 1881 2003 Ingham
IoniaBulldogs White B 835 2003 Ionia
JacksonVikings Blue A 1243 2003 Jackson
Lansing CatholicCougars White B 532 2003 Ingham
Lansing EasternQuakers Blue B 856 2003 Ingham
Lansing EverettVikings Blue A 1434 2003 Ingham
Lansing SextonBig Reds Blue B 610 2003 Ingham
MasonBulldogs Red A 1009 2003 Ingham
OkemosChieftains Blue A 1276 2003 Ingham
OwossoTrojans Red A 946 2007 Shiawassee
PortlandRaiders White B 579 2007 Ionia
St. JohnsRedwings Red A 1015 2005 Clinton
WaverlyWarriors Red A 1009 2003 Eaton
WilliamstonHornets White B 643 2003 Ingham

Sports[2]

The CAAC offer many sports for boys and girls athletes during the fall, winter, and spring seasons.

Fall:

Winter:

Spring:

History

The CAAC was created in 2003, consisting of 21 schools coming from the now defunct leagues of the Capital Area Conference, the Capital Circuit League, the Ingham County League, and the Mid-Michigan Athletic Conference. From 2003 to 2007 the conference was made up of three divisions (I, II, III): division I was made up of eight schools, divisions II was made up of seven schools, and division III was made up of six schools in each. At the start of the 2007–08 school year the league switched from I, II, III to color-based divisions (Blue, Gold, Red, and White), due to new schools joining the league. The 2012-13 season was when the league reached its peak number of schools in the league; the league consisted of 27 schools with the same blue, gold, red, white divisions. After two years of competition of 27 schools, the league went through major re-alignment after seven schools departed the league. The CAAC reduced to three divisions and eliminated the gold division. Currently the blue division has eight schools, the red has six, and the white has six also.[3] Former league member Charlotte, which was one of the seven schools that left the conference at the start of the 2014-15 school year, to join the newly formed Interstate Eight Conference, will be leaving that conference and will be joining the CAAC once again at the start of the 2017-18 school year. Charlotte will compete in the red division, Waverly will leave the red and move to the blue division.

Current Alignment -

Standard Alignment

CAAC Blue:

CAAC Red:

CAAC White:

Bowling

Blue:

Red:

Competitive Cheer

Red:

White:

Gymnastics

Ice Hockey

Lacrosse

Swim & Dive

Blue:

Red:

Past Alignments[4]

2003-2005 Alignment

Division I:

Division II:

Division III:

2005-2007 Alignment

Division I:

Division II:

Division III:

2007-2011 Alignment

Blue:

Gold:

Red:

White:

2011-2012

Blue:

Gold:

Red:

White:

2012-2014 Alignment

Blue:

Gold:

Red:

White:

2014-Present Alignment

Blue:

Red:

White:

*The CAAC did not allow Jackson Lumen Christi to play football in the league until 2012

References

  1. "CAAC – CAAC Schools". caacsports.org. Retrieved 2015-12-20.
  2. "CAAC". caacsports.org. Retrieved 2015-12-20.
  3. "Realignment coming to CAAC". www.highschoolsportsscene.com. Retrieved 2015-12-20.
  4. "Athletic directors give OK for Lumen Christi football to join CAAC in 2012". MLive.com. Retrieved 2015-12-20.

External links

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