IveyIs that Govenah Ivy or upcoming Governor Tommy (Ears) Tuberville?
The AHSAA declined to comment but in April of 2025, when the state house tried to pass the bill that would've put two legislators on the AHSAA's board, Executive Director Heath Harmon gave the following statement.
"Since we are a private association, with our board makeup established under a federal court order, we would be the only private board with a mandate for political representation which would interject politics into high school sports. We strive to keep politics out of the boardroom and focus on doing what is best for all student athletes."
The bill, labeled Senate Bill 73, was read for the first time on Jan. 13. The bill says that a public K-12 school in Alabama cannot be a member of an athletic association that doesn't have a board that "is comprised of at least 50 percent of members who are appointed by the Governor, Speaker of the House of Representatives, President Pro Tempore of the Senate or the Lieutenant Governor." The bill goes on to say that at least 15 members of the board would need to be appointed by the government.
Odd- if the regular season is played together, why not the playoffs too? Privates can be hit with a 1.5x or 1.65x multiplier to determine what size class they should be in for playoffs to help even things out.There's a huge fight in Alabama right now to separate the public and private schools in the AHSAA. The AHSAA proposal is for all schools to play regular season together then have a public school playoff and a private school playoff.
The AHSAA is trying to compromise to keep the Alabama privates from leaving and forming their own group (They would not return to the barely existing AISA)And if that wouldn't work, then why play the regular season together?
Pretty aggressive but I guess we can try - how much water do you think we'll have to pump in to fill it up?Trying to lock them guys down. Build the wall around the state. ***
We've had threads about this before. The multiplier and forcing schools to move up when they are successful have really angered a lot of parents. I previously shared about the school who's girls basketball team success is forcing their boys team to play up way higher than they should be. That's just one example. If you go and look at some of the other sports, it's much worse. There are 2A schools by size who've abandoned sports like tennis because they had a strong class that raised them too high and now they are forced to play 6A tennis with a handful of 8th graders and one upperclassman. Soccer is also really unbalanced. Basically any sport where both girls and boys play.
Your kid only gets one shot at high school sports and a lot of folks have watched their kid's team be unfairly handicapped by rules that allegedly make it fair but have an outsized negative effect on smaller private schools.
They don’t do that. They go up by sport. A football team can go up to 4A while the tennis and volleyball teams are in 2A. I think his point is that a team wins a state championship with a senior laden class and then they go up a classification in the next realignment and the group of younger players who aren’t as good are playing in a higher classification than they should.Forcing every sport at a school to go up in class due to the success of a single sport at that school is insane.
That is different from just applying a multiplier for any private schools.
If there is a system in place that bases class on sport success, then it should only apply to specific sports within a school. Girls bowling winning state 10 years in a row shouldnt mean Boys basketball has to move up 4 classes.
Thank you for clarifying.They don’t do that. They go up by sport. A football team can go up to 4A while the tennis and volleyball teams are in 2A. I think his point is that a team wins a state championship with a senior laden class and then they go up a classification in the next realignment and the group of younger players who aren’t as good are playing in a higher classification than they should.
The AHSAA reclassifies every two years. If you get moved up or down, you’re there for two years until the next reclassification.Thank you for clarifying.
He said that a boys basketball team had to play up multiple classes because the school's girls basketball team was successful, so it sounds like he is mistaken.
As to your point, I would hope there would be a multi-year analysis for teams that should move up or not- so small schools arent subject to what you describe just because there was 1 year of great success. Like a 3 year rolling average or something.
But if a team is forced to move up due to their prior year's success, I would think they would also be able to quickly move down after one year, if they struggled due to young players.
So its one season of not having success at the state level(they could still play similar sized teams/conference teams during the regular season) and then they move back to where they should be based on ability.
Ah, gotcha. Yeah that could be tough for some teams when it comes to state level play.The AHSAA reclassifies every two years. If you get moved up or down, you’re there for two years until the next reclassification.
It's not every sport. It's sport specific. But it crosses gender lines because of travel. So if your girls tennis team wins state several times in a row, it doesn't matter if your boys team is awful, they must move up with the girls. Also, when those mini-Serenas graduate, you stay up. So if your daughter is middling at tennis but there are superstars a few years ahead of her at Slapout Christian Academy, she better get ready to play the best of the best and get her head beat in by Mountain Brook High because that's what's gonna happen when they graduate.Forcing every sport at a school to go up in class due to the success of a single sport at that school is insane.
That is different from just applying a multiplier for any private schools.
If you're going to have a promotion system, it needs to be for 1 year only and you get relegated back if you finish last in your division. And it needs to be only the one sport that got promoted. If your boys and girls basketball team get put in different classes, they can still schedule boy-girl doubleheaders at their discretion.It's not every sport. It's sport specific. But it crosses gender lines because of travel. So if your girls tennis team wins state several times in a row, it doesn't matter if your boys team is awful, they must move up with the girls. Also, when those mini-Serenas graduate, you stay up. So if your daughter is middling at tennis but there are superstars a few years ahead of her at Slapout Christian Academy, she better get ready to play the best of the best and get her head beat in by Mountain Brook High because that's what's gonna happen when they graduate.
What brand gov is he? Lot of sudden desire for government to have their nose in everything. Odd.
I like relegation. Would love to see it start happening in some form in the US. Not many things I want from Europe...If you're going to have a promotion system, it needs to be for 1 year only and you get relegated back if you finish last in your division. And it needs to be only the one sport that got promoted. If your boys and girls basketball team get put in different classes, they can still schedule boy-girl doubleheaders at their discretion.
It is interesting to see how high school sports are handled from state to state.It's not every sport. It's sport specific. But it crosses gender lines because of travel. So if your girls tennis team wins state several times in a row, it doesn't matter if your boys team is awful, they must move up with the girls. Also, when those mini-Serenas graduate, you stay up. So if your daughter is middling at tennis but there are superstars a few years ahead of her at Slapout Christian Academy, she better get ready to play the best of the best and get her head beat in by Mountain Brook High because that's what's gonna happen when they graduate.