So should the football districting survive, schools will not longer be able to schedule at least seven games of their regular season. While now they can affiliate with other schools to form conferences and thus choose what level at which to play their regular season games, in the future the IHSA will decide that for them.
Is there a way to let programs find their own level in a totally subjective way? There may be.
I entered the enrollments and last five years' win-loss records into a spreadsheet for any school that had an enrollment of over 1500 and any 6A school that had an enrollment below that but made last year's playoffs. That included non-boundaried schools for which the current 1.65 multiplier put them over 1500. The enrollments were taken from the IHSA football site. Came out to about 176 schools.
I used the win-loss records to create a "results factor". Essentially it's the win-loss percentage for each year, weighted 5-4-3-2-1 in favor of the most recent year. I added it to 1 and multiplied it by the school's enrollment. If the school was non-boundaried, I kept the 1.65 multiplier.
The top five "results factors" were: Lincoln-Way East 0.8769, Phillips 0.8764, Batavia 0.8652, Prairie Ridge 0.8619, and Oswego 0.8616. The bottom five were: Elk Grove 0.0519, Waukegan and Maine East, both 0.0667, and Proviso East and Chicago Heights Marian, both 0.0815.
If you figure that the 64 biggest schools would have been 8A and the next 64 would have been 7A, the schools whose "results factor" would drop them out of 8A would be:
Elgin
Belleville East
Dundee-Crown
Niles West
O'Fallon
Conant
Stagg
Plainfield East
Glenbard North
Proviso West
McHenry
They would be replaced by:
Benet
Lincoln-Way Central
Lincoln Park
Normal Community
Hononegah
Chicago Mt. Carmel
Whitney Young
Batavia
Von Steuben (would go from 6A to 8A)
Niles Notre Dame (would also go from 6A to 8A)
St. Ignatius (would also go from 6A to 8A)
Schools with enrollments ranking from 65 to 128 would have been 7A. The "results factor" would drop these schools out of 7A:
Proviso West (Drops from 8A to 6A)
Round Lake
Plainfield Central
West Chicago
Proviso East
Mundelein
Streamwood
Elk Grove
Romeoville
Argo
Collinsville
Maine East
Oak Lawn
Granite City
Fox Lake Grant
They would be replaced in 7A by:
Quincy
Shepard
Thornton
Cary-Grove
Chicago Kennedy
Normal West
Crete-Monee
Richards
Lake Forest
Riverside-Brookfield
Rock Island
Prairie Ridge
I suspect that another school could still sneak into 7A from below, but they would have to have had a pretty good four year run from 2014-17 and fallen to 4-5 or worse in 2018. East St. Louis currently sits with the 156th highest score, so they would probably land in 6A.
Lake Park was the lowest scoring 8A school at 3486. That means that any school with an enrollment higher than that is going to be 8A, which means the biggest thirteen schools in the state. The highest scoring 7A team was St. Charles North. The lowest was Chicago Kennedy. Proviso West was the top 6A team.
I'll let someone else do this for the other two thirds of the schools, but my guess is that there's some serious movement given that one third of 7A moved up or down.
Is there a way to let programs find their own level in a totally subjective way? There may be.
I entered the enrollments and last five years' win-loss records into a spreadsheet for any school that had an enrollment of over 1500 and any 6A school that had an enrollment below that but made last year's playoffs. That included non-boundaried schools for which the current 1.65 multiplier put them over 1500. The enrollments were taken from the IHSA football site. Came out to about 176 schools.
I used the win-loss records to create a "results factor". Essentially it's the win-loss percentage for each year, weighted 5-4-3-2-1 in favor of the most recent year. I added it to 1 and multiplied it by the school's enrollment. If the school was non-boundaried, I kept the 1.65 multiplier.
The top five "results factors" were: Lincoln-Way East 0.8769, Phillips 0.8764, Batavia 0.8652, Prairie Ridge 0.8619, and Oswego 0.8616. The bottom five were: Elk Grove 0.0519, Waukegan and Maine East, both 0.0667, and Proviso East and Chicago Heights Marian, both 0.0815.
If you figure that the 64 biggest schools would have been 8A and the next 64 would have been 7A, the schools whose "results factor" would drop them out of 8A would be:
Elgin
Belleville East
Dundee-Crown
Niles West
O'Fallon
Conant
Stagg
Plainfield East
Glenbard North
Proviso West
McHenry
They would be replaced by:
Benet
Lincoln-Way Central
Lincoln Park
Normal Community
Hononegah
Chicago Mt. Carmel
Whitney Young
Batavia
Von Steuben (would go from 6A to 8A)
Niles Notre Dame (would also go from 6A to 8A)
St. Ignatius (would also go from 6A to 8A)
Schools with enrollments ranking from 65 to 128 would have been 7A. The "results factor" would drop these schools out of 7A:
Proviso West (Drops from 8A to 6A)
Round Lake
Plainfield Central
West Chicago
Proviso East
Mundelein
Streamwood
Elk Grove
Romeoville
Argo
Collinsville
Maine East
Oak Lawn
Granite City
Fox Lake Grant
They would be replaced in 7A by:
Quincy
Shepard
Thornton
Cary-Grove
Chicago Kennedy
Normal West
Crete-Monee
Richards
Lake Forest
Riverside-Brookfield
Rock Island
Prairie Ridge
I suspect that another school could still sneak into 7A from below, but they would have to have had a pretty good four year run from 2014-17 and fallen to 4-5 or worse in 2018. East St. Louis currently sits with the 156th highest score, so they would probably land in 6A.
Lake Park was the lowest scoring 8A school at 3486. That means that any school with an enrollment higher than that is going to be 8A, which means the biggest thirteen schools in the state. The highest scoring 7A team was St. Charles North. The lowest was Chicago Kennedy. Proviso West was the top 6A team.
I'll let someone else do this for the other two thirds of the schools, but my guess is that there's some serious movement given that one third of 7A moved up or down.
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