Let there be sports! IHSA releases 2020-21 sports schedule
The wait is over, winter high school sports season officially on hold
Earlier today the prep sports association announced that all IHSA sports and activities will cease as of Friday, November 20, until the state's COVID-19 positivity returns to a level safe enough that the governor will return the state to Tier 1 of its pandemic response plan.
Below is the complete release from the IHSA.
The Illinois High School Association (IHSA) Board of Directors met for a special virtual meeting on Thursday, November 19, 2020, where the Board provided an update on winter sports.
To maintain compliance with the most recent mitigations issued by Governor Pritzker that take effect on November 20, the IHSA Board issued guidance to pause all IHSA winter sports and activities by November 20.
"All IHSA sports and activities will cease by November 20 for what we hope is a short-term pause," said IHSA Executive Director Craig Anderson. "Given the rising COVID-19 cases in our state and region, we support the Governor’s mitigations and believe it is imperative for everyone in the state to do their part in following them so that we can return to high school sports participation as soon as possible."
Photo: PhotoNews Media/Clark Brooks
"Taking into account the current state mitigations, the Board believes that early to mid-December will be the most reasonable target to review the status of winter IHSA sports and activities," said Anderson. "The Board is sensitive to the scheduling difficulties these delays create for athletic directors and coaches. However, our experiences this summer and fall lead us to believe that setting arbitrary start dates hinders the process even more. We realize it may seem redundant, but we have to preach patience as we await more data and direction from the state. Despite the obstacles this unprecedented school year has presented, the Board’s vision to provide participation opportunities in all IHSA sports has not wavered."
The Board was steadfast in their desire to remind all athletes and athletic programs that adhering to the mitigations is vital to the hopes of safely playing high school sports in Illinois as soon as possible.
"I believe there is a misconception that IHSA and non-school athletic programs have an adversarial relationship," said Anderson. "In my time at the IHSA, I have not found that to be the case at all. More so, I think there is a mutual respect for the opportunities that each provide for athletes. IHSA schools have been exemplary in adhering to state regulations throughout this pandemic and we are calling upon non-school programs to hold themselves to that same standard. As school and non-school sports temporarily cease in Illinois, and throughout the Midwest, it is a great reminder that putting the health and safety of our fellow citizens at the forefront in the short-term will allow all levels of athletics to thrive in the long-term."
The Board provided the following participation clarifications to member schools:
Winter Season Start Date: Given the timing of the Governor’s new mitigations, November 16 will not be recognized as the start date of the winter season, regardless of whether winter sport teams conducted any official tryouts or practices. A new start date will be established for each sport once winter sports can be conducted again.
Conditioning & Weight Training: Conditioning and weight training before and after school are paused. Local schools will decide if conditioning and weight training programs that are a part of their academic curriculums continue or are ceased.
Open Gyms: Are paused and cannot be conducted at this time.
Outdoor Workouts: Outdoor workouts may be conducted in any sport in groups of 10 or less with masks and social distancing. Coaches are counted toward the 10. Use of sport-specific equipment is allowable with proper sanitizing practices.
One-on-One Skill Work: Per Tier 3 Resurgence Mitigations and with school approval, one-on-one skill work between a coach and student-athlete is permitted for winter sports only, but is limited to one coach and one student-athlete per facility.
Activities: Practices and competitions may only be conducted virtually.
Non-School Participation: All sports organizations in the state, school or non-school, have been directed to abide by the Governor’s mitigations. IHSA coaches cannot organize non-school participation in any fashion. IHSA by-law 3.100 will be in effect once winter sport seasons begin following this pause.
IHSA announces 2024-25 officials of the year

Pasquale Mattera, Arlington Heights Girls Soccer
Mike McDermott, Lockport Football
Chris Terpstra, Lisle Boys Basketball
Richard Doman, Gibson City Girls Basketball
Thomas Strohl, Neoga Boys Lacrosse
Nitin Rao, Northbrook Girls Lacrosse
Elizabeth Demara, Bloomington Baseball
Jim Urbanek, Chicago Heights Softball
Dale McConnell, Centralia Girls Volleyball
Jeffrey Crow, Mt. Vernon Boys Volleyball
Kym McKay, Batavia Boys Swimming & Diving
Emil Barbato, Schaumburg Girls Swimming & Diving
Randy Clark, Bloomingdale Water Polo
Joseph Trickey, DeKalb Cross Country
Jesse Rocha, West Chicago Boys Track & Field
Michael Gibbs, River Forest Girls Track & Field
Tiffany Seay, Chicago Girls Gymnastics
Betty Axelson-McClelland, South Barrington Competitive Cheerleading
Amber Cruser, Waterloo Competitive Dance
Allison Stewart, Grayslake Boys Wrestling
Dave Fellinger, Chicago Girls Wrestling
Dr. Dan McDonnell, Morris
IHSA members expand football playoffs, schedule changes approved for 2026 season
BLOOMINGTON - Friday nights in October are about to mean a little more to a lot more Illinois high school football teams next fall. Illinois high school football will see its largest postseason field in state history beginning in 2026, after member schools approved a sweeping expansion of the IHSA football playoffs. The change reshapes not just who gets in, but how schools schedule, compete and stay invested long after the first losses of the season. In a move away from a five-win season to qualify, the change means that teams with four or less wins during the season may become playoff eligible. Schools voted this month to expand the playoffs from 32 teams per class to 48 teams per class, increasing the total number of qualifiers from 256 to 384 while keeping eight classes intact. The vote was part of the IHSA’s annual by-law referendum process, which concluded Dec. 15 and was independently certified the following morning. IHSA officials say the move is aimed less at exclusivity and more at long-term stability across the sport. “Too often throughout the years, football decisions have negatively impacted other sports at IHSA schools,” IHSA Executive Director Craig Anderson said. “We are hopeful that this football playoff expansion will provide intended relief to our schools by stabilizing conference movement and eliminating the difficulty of scheduling football games that many of our schools face each year.” Under the previous format, teams needed five wins to qualify, a threshold that drove schools to avoid strong nonconference opponents or scramble late to fill open dates. The expanded field is expected to reduce that pressure, encouraging more balanced scheduling and fewer late-season cancellations.
The change also keeps more teams mathematically alive deeper into the season, increasing the number of meaningful games in October and helping maintain student-athlete engagement even after early losses or injury setbacks.
Beginning in 2026, the football season will still start Aug. 10, but the first regular-season games will be played one week earlier, on Aug. 20, eliminating the traditional Week Zero scrimmage. The adjustment brings Illinois in line with neighboring states such as Indiana and Michigan, a move coaches say should ease cross-border scheduling challenges.
The expanded playoff field is expected to allow most teams with three or four wins in the nine-game regular season to qualify. Previously, all five-win teams and only some four-win teams advanced. Every team already qualifies for the postseason in other IHSA-sponsored sports.
While the expansion was approved unanimously by the membership, some coaches have raised concerns about competitive balance.
“I’m all for kids playing more football and getting more practices,” Mount Carmel coach Jordan Lynch told the Chicago Sun-Times. “But what about potential injury risk? There are some teams that have three wins that are not very good football teams.”
IHSA officials acknowledge the possibility of short-term growing pains, including first-round mismatches, but note that such issues already exist under the current format. They point instead to the developmental benefits of postseason participation, particularly for rebuilding and mid-tier programs that gain additional practices and exposure through playoff preparation.
Beyond football, schools also approved several governance and policy changes. The IHSA Board of Directors will expand from 11 to 15 elected members, adding four seats designated for superintendents or heads of school. Cooperative teams made up of 3,500 students or more will no longer be eligible for state series team awards, and the IHSA’s summer no-contact period will shift from early August to the week of the Fourth of July beginning this year.
For many communities, the football expansion carries significance beyond the field. More playoff games mean increased gate revenue, additional school-hosted events and deeper community engagement during the fall. “It may create some short-term complications for some schools, conferences, and coaches,” Anderson said, “but we remain optimistic it will create long-term stability in football and beyond.”
IHSA state volleyball semifinal streaming schedule this Friday
NORMAL - If you can't make it to the CEFCU Arena to watch semifinal championship on Friday, you can catch all the action online via the NFHS Network. Viewers can subscribe to watch games on various platforms, including computers, mobile devices, and third-party apps like Roku and Apple TV. Below is Friday's broadcast schedule. Click the image to watch the game.
Nov 14, 2025 - 10:00 AM EST
Norris City-Omaha-Enfield High School
vs
Stockton High School
Nov 14, 2025 - 11:30 AM EST
Tremont
vs
Cissna Park
Nov 14, 2025 - 1:00 AM EST
Columbia
vs
Rockford Christian
Nov 14, 2025 - 2:30 AM EST
Central Catholic
vs
Riverdale
Nov 14, 2025 - 5:00 AM EST
Nazareth Academy
vs
Providence Catholic
Nov 14, 2025 - 6:30 AM EST
University
vs
Prairie Ridge
Nov 14, 2025 - 8:00 PM EST
Benet Academy
vs
Lockport Township
Nov 14, 2025 - 9:30 PM EST
Marist
vs
Fremd
Tyler Luchinski and Savanna Franzen earn All-State Mention from IHSA
BLOOMINGTON — The Illinois High School Association announced the 26 members who were selected for the 2025 IHSA All-State Academic Team. Two area student athletes, one Charger and one Spartan, made this year's list released today. St. Joseph-Ogden's Savanna Franzen and Centennial's Tyler Luchinski earned Honorable Mention recogition and will be recognized at a banquet held in Bloomington on April 13. Each year, IHSA member schools can nominate one female student and one male student to be a part of this prestigious team. Nominees needed to possess a minimum 3.50 grade point average on a 4.0 scale after their seventh semester, have participated in at least two IHSA sponsored sports or activities during each of the last two years of high school, and demonstrated outstanding citizenship. "The IHSA All-State Academic Team truly represents the best that Illinois has to offer," IHSA Assistant Executive Director Stacy Lambert said in a press release. "When you look the credentials of these team members, you are not only going to see outstanding grades and incredible test scores, but participation in multiple sports and activities, as well as significant contributions to their school and community. The ability to not only balance but also simultaneously excel in all these endeavors is inspiring. We are proud to have these future leaders represent the IHSA and Illinois." The nominations were evaluated by a committee up of IHSA principals, athletic directors, and activities directors. One male winner and one female winner from each of the seven IHSA Board of Directors Divisions were selected initially, while the final 12 spots on the team were then rounded out with at-large candidates from anywhere in the state. A complete list of all award winners is below.
Williamsville High School
Barrington High School
Benton High School
University High School | Normal
Walter Payton | Chicago
Stillman Valley High School
Crystal Lake Central
Highland High School
Galena High School
Carlinville High School
Mahomet-Seymour High School
Lane Tech High School | Chicago
University High School | Chicago
Mater Dei Catholic | Breese
Pontiac High School
Rockford Christian High School
Central Catholic High School | Bloomington
Brother Rice High School | Chicago
Oak Park & River Forest High School
Manteno High School
Father McGivney | Glen Carbon
Hononegah High School | Rockton
Triad High School | Troy
Northside College Prep | Chicago
Lyons High School | LaGrange
Prospect High School | Mt. Prospect
Lisle Senior High School
Central Catholic High School | Bloomington
Ottawa Township High School
New Trier High School | Winnetka
Salem High School
Marist High School | Chicago
Lyons High School | LaGrange
Maine South High School | Park Ridge
St. Joseph-Ogden
Columbia High School
Fremd High School | Palatine
Central High School | Camp Point
Carlinville High School
Herrin High School
Heyworth High School
Washington Community High School
Yorkville High School
Brussels High School
Shelbyville High School
Sycamore High School
Auburn High School
Boylan Catholic High School | Rockford
Richmond-Burton High School
Lakes High School | Lake Villa
Centennial High School | Champaign
York High School | Elmhurst
Knoxville High School
Sycamore High School
Central High School | Camp Point
St. Ignatius College Prep | Chicago
Carbondale High School
De La Salle Institute | Chicago
Alton Senior High School
Walter Payton College Prep | Chicago
Fulton High School
El Paso-Gridley
Lena-Winslow High School
Sesser-Valier High School
Lincoln-Way West High School | New Lenox
Annawan High School
Annawan High School
Jersey High School | Jerseyville
Riverside-Brookfield High School
Vernon Hills High School
University High School | Chicago
Lane Tech High School | Chicago
East Peoria High School
Scared Heart-Griffin High School | Springfield
Greenville High School
Shelbyville High School
IHSA releases 2021 schedule for sports
That phrase will no doubt echo the feelings around the state after the Illinois High School Association released the schedule high school sports for the remainder of the 2020-21 academic year in Illinois.
The Board of Directors issued the following statement:
"Unprecedented circumstances create extraordinary decisions. The IHSA Board of Directors faced one of the most difficult decisions in the Association’s 100-plus year history today. Please know that we did so with great diligence, empathy, and understanding. There were an immense number of factors that went into today’s decisions. We knew there would be obstacles no matter what we decided. Whether those hurdles included overlapping seasons for multi-sport athletes, equity between sports, preseason acclimatization guidelines, the prioritization of spring sports, facility conflicts for schools, officiating, and that is just naming a few. Please know that each potential roadblock was recognized and given consideration. The IHSA membership, like our state, is incredibly large and diverse. Each Board member brought different concerns to the table that impacted their own school or region differently. There was never going to be a one-size fits all solution to playing 25 sports seasons in a little over four months. What did occur was collaboration and camaraderie. Each Board member may not have been able to have all of their specific concerns addressed, but we worked together to produce a schedule and plan that we believe will work for our student-athletes."
In case you haven't seen it yet, here is the list of the sports along with their start and finish dates.
It's on! Looks like prep basketball is finally a go in Illinois!
Using the guidance provided by the SMAC, the Board will allow Boys and Girls Basketball to begin practices on November 16.
Both boys and girls teams can begin competitive play on November 30th within each of the designated Illinois Department of Public Health's COVID Regions or between member schools of a conference. Teams will be limited to just 31 games this season.
"I was pretty excited when I heard it," said returning varsity starter Ty Pence. The St. Joseph-Ogden sophomore received his first official college offer from Western Illinois University on Saturday. "I am ready to go out and see what my squad and I can do this season."
The 2019-20 Spartan basketball roster was bulging with ten seniors. It will be interesting to see how much the contingent matures this season.
"I think it is a great opportunity for us as a squad," Pence said. "We have a lot of young guys who have to prove themselves."
SJO head basketball coach Kiel Duval is also excited about the upcoming season, now that it looks like there will be one.
"We have a lot of young guys we need to see grow. You can see it taking place gradually now, but after practice and games there could be huge strides," he said. "High School is not a fun time for students right now. There are no athletic events to attend. No homecoming. Not seeing your friends everyday or in the capacity you usually do. This would be huge news for their spirits."
The move forward by the IHSA in the face of rising infections across the state and Governor JB Pritzker's declaration almost 24 hours earlier that put winter sports on an indefinite hold and moved basketball from a medium-risk sport to a higher-risk sport within the IDPH guidelines. Despite the rise in positive cases both locally and statewide in the past weekm and with their finances in jeopardy without the revenue from football and volleyball state finals this fall, the IHSA put its cards on the table hoping for the high hand.
"This would be great news for our kids if it actually happens. Our guys have put a lot into this," Duval said. "It has given them something to look forward to."
After the IHSA released their intentions, Governor Pritzker countered with a wildcard, looking at a possible flush, in enforcing his mandate.
"The school districts know what the rules are," he replied when queried about the plans to pursue winter competition. "It is unfortunate, but I think they would probably be taking on legal liability if they went ahead beyond what the state has set as the mitigation standard."
Winter sports still on hold, IHSA to host pandemic Pow-Wow
In a statement released by the IHSA, the Board also announced that schools who plan to begin basketball practice on November 16 should adhere to the Level 1 mitigations from the IDPH All Sports Policy until at least November 19. The high school sports association invited the representatives from Governor Pritzker’s Office, the Illinois Department of Public Health (IDPH), the Illinois Principals Association (IPA), the Illinois Association of School Administrators (IASA), the Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE), and representatives from "a coalition of nearly 200 school superintendents who recently contacted the Governor regarding school sports during the 2020-21 school year" for pandemic sports pow-wow.
"The Board hopes to create a dialogue and build a more collaborative relationship with all the entities involved with developing sports policy in our state as everyone tries to navigate the myriad issues caused by the pandemic," Craig Anderson, IHSA Executive Director, said in the statement. "The Board’s decision to move forward with the IHSA basketball season was not meant to be adversarial. It was rooted in a desire to receive more direct communication and data from our state partners. They hope all the groups will see the mutual benefit of increased discourse and be represented at the meeting on November 19."
Adopting a noticeably softer tone, the IHSA says they will be able to provide more direction on basketball practices and games following the meeting for their 813 member schools.
Nearly two weeks ago Governor J.B. Pritzker announced that sports, normally played from November to March, would start their season in March. The recent rise in COVID-19 cases statewide and the governor's response toward mitigating the spread of the virus thus far makes it likely that if the season did get off to a start, it would have been short-lived.
In a survey with 546 schools who responded, nearly 300 IHSA schools do not plan to start basketball on November 16, and another 212 schools remain unsure of their status leaving roughly one-third of the organization in the pool of willing to play.
At a quick glance, the major drawback to districts ignoring the governor's guidance and moving confidently forward with the IHSA plan was the inability to secure insurance coverage. According to multiple sources, insurers were not willing to to cover schools that went against the IDPH and ISBE.
Gibson City-Melvin-Sibley Superintendent Jeremy Darnell issued a statement highlighting the liability exposure.
"The decision was made based on both the system and individual legal liabilities as determined by the GCMS School District attorneys and insurance providers," he said in a story in The News-Gazette. "Recently, both Governor Pritzker and Dr. Carmen Ayala (State Superintendent of Schools) have clearly stated that any district that directly defies the recommendations of IDPH, as it pertains to winter sports (basketball), would knowingly be putting their districts at risk both legally and financially."
The Peoria school board voted 5-1 to postpone the season according to the Peoria Journal Star.
"It’s not me desire to take anything away from the kids," Board President Doug Shaw was quoted saying prior to the board's vote. "But it seems it would be irresponsible from my point of view (to continue with a winter schedule). It’s an unpopular decision, but it’s the way we need to go."
The foreshadows in Anderson's final comment carries a bushel of uncertainty on a number of different levels.
"The Board recognizes the difficult decisions they have placed on member schools regarding basketball," said Anderson. "With a limited number of schools set to begin their season on November 16, they believe it is prudent to adhere to IDPH guidance as they work with state officials to gain greater clarity on the metrics and mitigations required to conduct certain high school sports throughout the remainder of the 2020-21 school year."
Photo Gallery | Keeping order on the mat: A look at IHSA state wrestling officials
CHAMPAIGN - Champions aren’t the only ones under the bright lights at the IHSA state wrestling tournament. The officials who patrol the mats shoulder a responsibility as heavy as any bracket favorite’s expectations. Their decisions shape momentum, define outcomes, and maintain the integrity of every match. This gallery captures the focus, intensity, and professionalism of the referees who help make the state finals a showcase of the sport at its best. From quick whistles to split‑second judgment calls, referees navigate the chaos with sharp eyes and sharper instincts. As wrestlers battle for glory, these officials sprint, slide, and signal their way through some of the most high‑stakes bouts of the season. Here’s a look at the people in stripes who keep the action moving.
Varsity Club Collection
Gallery Collection: 02202026SW1
Varsity Club Collection
Gallery Collection: 02202026SW2
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