By Jordan Nailon
The Chronicle
The local prep sports landscape is going to look at least a little different next year and the possibility for even more changes appear to be flickering on the event horizon.
Pe Ell and Willapa Valley high schools have all announced that they’ll shifting down to the 1B ranks beginning next fall based on updated enrollment numbers. The 2020-21 school year will mark the beginning of the next four-year cycle of classifications for schools that are affiliated with the Washington Interscholastic Activities Association.
Those classifications (1B, 2B, 1A, 2A, 3A, 4A) are determined by the WIAA based on the average size of the school’s student body in grades 9-11. This go-around the WIAA is using hard-line cutoff for assigning classifications, whereas in years past the state’s affiliated schools were split between the six classifications. For the next four years 2A schools will have between 500 and 899 students, 1A schools will range between 225 and 449 students, 2B schools will feature between 224 and 105 students, while 1B schools will be 104 students or fewer.
Additionally, 4A, 3A, 2A and 1A schools are able to take the percentage of students who use the free and reduced lunch program to bring their head count down. The deadline to file for a petition to play up or down a classification was Jan. 10. On Sunday, the WIAA Executive Board will vote on the slate of reclassifications and there are several other area schools in the mix for a variety of changes in their assorted fields of play.
Pe Ell and Willapa Valley are both currently members of the 2B Pacific League. Willapa Valley was credited with 83 students during the most recent round of reclassifications while Pe Ell’s headcount came in at 60.
Not everything is set to change out, however, as the two schools will continue to combine as the PWV Titans in football, baseball and softball. Those teams will remain at the 2B level.
The Trojans are simply letting the numbers dictate where they land, Pe Ell athletic director Brandon Pontius said.
“In our court sports, we’re going to drop down,” said Pontius in reference to basketball and volleyball,” Pontius said. “We chose to be where we’re supposed to. In the past we opted up to 2B and it’s been the same ever since.”
While the two schools know they will be playing in a different league next academic year, they are not yet sure which league that will be or what teams will be in it. Some of the closest current 1B schools in the southwest Washington include Oakville, Naselle, and North River.
Last year South Bend, with 116 students, opted to play an independent 8-man football schedule for the first time in school history, rather than an 11-man season like other 2B schools.
Next year Winlock, with 131 students, may wind up doing something similar as they’ve petitioned the WIAA for a waiver to compete as a 1B school in football only. If the Cardinals are granted an exemption they could then play a league schedule and compete for a 1B playoff spot. Even if Winlock is denied their petition they could still play an independent 8-man season while forfeiting their playoff eligibility. The Cardinals will know more about their future on the gridiron after this weekend.
The Pacific 2B League is also likely to lose Life Christian to the 1A ranks but will pick up at least one new team with Forks poised to drop from the 1A Evergreen League. Stevenson, with 205 students, and Chimacum 174 students, will also be dropping to the 2B ranks but it’s not entirely clear which leagues they will join.
Meanwhile, Tenino, with 275 students, will be staying put in the 1A Evergreen League.
“We had some discussions about opting down to 2B for football,” Tenino athletic director Joe Chirhart said. “I’ll just call a spade a spade. None of the Kalamas, Napavines or Adnas were very interested in having Tenino join. I don’t know that I blame them. It’s just the top dogs very much want to remain the top dogs.”
With Stevenson moving out of the 1A TriCo League, there has been some discussion about combining the TriCo and the Evergreen leagues in order to form one conglomerate conference.
“That would leave us with a 10-team super league,” noted Chirhart.
The Tenino AD quickly added that if he were a betting man he still wouldn’t wager any money on that particular scenario coming to fruition, due to increased travel and other scheduling concerns.
With Forks on the move next year, that should leave the Beavers in a five-team league with Elma, Montesano, Hoquiam, and Eatonville (431 students), as the Cruisers get ready to drop down from the 2A ranks.
Prep sports fans from Centralia, Chehalis and Rochester likely won’t have to deviate far from their standard operating procedure next year, since those schools all appear set to stay at the 2A level in the Evergreen Conference.
“The 2A’s are pretty boring. Nobody is really going anywhere, at least around here,” W.F. West athletic director Jeff Johnson said.
That being said, Johnson also noted that Shelton, with 1,127 students, has filed a petition to drop down to the 2A level. If their petition is approved, Johnson said the Highclimbers would likely join the 2A EvCo.
With so many divergent scenarios still in play, it’s still difficult to imagine what the local prep scene will look like next year. Still, there seems to be one common thread of thought amongst each school that has contemplated the consequences of a move up or down in classification — they are all trying to find the sweet spot to benefit their student athletes in the impending change in the pecking order.
“It just gives us some more opportunity to have some success,” said Torrey, when talking about Mossyrock’s looming move to 1B. “The main thing is just trying to get kids out and trying to be competitive. When you’re losing, losing, losing, I think kids and families sometimes want to move away to try to find somewhere that you can find some more success.”