Cahokia Conference

The Cahokia Conference is a high school athletic and competitive activity organization which currently consists of 12 schools in southwestern Illinois, near St. Louis. All of the schools are located in St. Clair, Randolph, Monroe, Clinton, and Marion counties. The conference began in 1928.[1]

Cahokia Conference
Established1928
AssociationIHSA
Members12
RegionSouthwestern Illinois (near St. Louis)


List of member schools

Dupo is a member of the Cahokia Conference in all sports except football, where it competes in the Prairie State Conference starting with the 2017 season. [2] Carlyle will also not be a member for football starting in 2020 due to moving from 11-man football to 8-man football. [3]

Two schools, Valmeyer and Steeleville, were added for the 2006–07 season. The addition split the conference into two divisions, the Mississippi and the Kaskaskia. Salem was admitted to the conference in 2017, joining the Mississippi Division.

Mississippi Division

School Location Team Name Colors County School Enrollment (2019-20) Year Joined Previous Conference
Carlyle Carlyle Indians           Clinton 320 1988 Southwest Egyptian
Central Breese Cougars           Clinton 580 1983 Quad County
Columbia Columbia Eagles           Monroe 667 1960 Kaskaskia
Freeburg Freeburg Midgets           St. Clair 647 1928
Red Bud Red Bud Musketeers           Randolph 374 1972 Chartres
Salem Salem Wildcats                Marion 692 2017 Apollo
Wesclin Trenton Warriors           Clinton 387 1983

Kaskaskia Division

School Location Team Name Colors County School Enrollment (2019-20) Year Joined Previous Conference
Dupo1 Dupo Tigers           St. Clair 280 1928
1971
?
Midwestern
Lebanon Lebanon Greyhounds           St. Clair 145 1929
Marissa2 Marissa Meteors           St. Clair 183 1928
1983
New Athens New Athens Yellow Jackets           St. Clair 164 1928
Steeleville Steeleville Warriors           Randolph 163 2006
Valmeyer Valmeyer Pirates           Monroe 139 2006
  1. Dupo played in Midwestern Conference 1956-71.
  2. Marissa left in 1933, and rejoined in 1983.

Former Schools

Partial list, more schools to be added.

School Location Team Name Colors County Year Joined Previous Conference Year Left Conference Joined
O'Fallon O'Fallon Panthers           St. Clair 1928 Independents
(SWC 1926)
1971 Mississippi Valley
Waterloo Waterloo, Illinois Bulldogs           Monroe Unknown Unknown 1997 Mississippi Valley

Future Schools

Expansion and realignment will occur starting with the 2022-23 school year. Chester, Okawville, Roxana and East Alton-Wood River will all join the Cahokia with Sparta expected to also join. While all schools are expected to join in 2022-23, EA-WR and Okawville may join for 2021-22. [4] After all schools join, The conference would then realign into three divisions:

  • Large Division - Breese (Central), Columbia, Freeburg, Roxana, Salem and Wood River (East Alton-W.R.)
  • Medium Division - Carlyle, Chester, Okawville, Red Bud, Sparta and Trenton (Wesclin)
  • Small Division - Dupo, Lebanon, Marissa, New Athens, Steeleville and Valmayer


School Location Team Name Colors County Enrollment Year Joining Previous Conference
Chester Chester Yellow Jackets           Randolph 320 2022 Black Diamond
East Alton-Wood River Wood River Oilers           Madison 552.5 2022 Prairie State
Okawville Okawville Rockets           Washington 176.5 2021 or 2022 Independent
Roxana Roxana Shells                Madison 550.5 2022 South Central

Sports

Each year a conference champion is determined in each division for volleyball, boys and girls basketball, baseball, and softball by each division member playing round-robin home and away. The team with the best win–loss record is the champion.

For boys and girls golf and boys soccer one champion is determined by round–robin play, with each school in the conference playing each other once. The team with the best win–loss record is the champion.

Cross country and track & field for boys and girls each have one champion determined by the winner of each sport's conference meet. The scholastic bowl champion is the winner of the conference tournament.

Like golf and soccer, the conference football championship is determined based on round–robin play. However, only seven teams (the Mississippi division and Dupo) field football teams. As noted above, Carlyle will begin 8-man play in 2020 moving the conference to 6 schools for the short-term.

There is no cross-over for conference play due to the size discrepancy between schools in the Mississippi Division and schools in the Kaskaskia Division.

State trophies

Breese (Central)

  • 1989 Scholastic Bowl Runner-Up
  • 1992 Girls Volleyball Third Place (Class A)
  • 1996 Girls Volleyball Champions (Class A)
  • 1999 Girls Volleyball Third Place (Class A)
  • 2005 Girls Volleyball Champions (Class A)
  • 2006 Girls Volleyball Runner-Up (Class A)
  • 2007 Girls Basketball Champions (Class A)
  • 2007 Girls Volleyball Champions (Class 2A)
  • 2009 Girls Track and Field Second Place (Class 1A)
  • 2010 Girls Volleyball Second Place (Class 2A)
  • 2010 Boys Basketball Fourth Place (Class 2A)
  • 2011 Girls Volleyball Third Place (Class 2A)
  • 2012 Girls Basketball Runner-Up (Class 2A)
  • 2012 Boys Basketball Champions (Class 2A)
  • 2014 Girls Volleyball Third Place (Class 2A)
  • 2014 Girls Competitive Cheerleading Champions (Class S)
  • 2015 Girls Competitive Cheerleading Champions (Class S)
  • 2015 Girls Basketball Runner-Up (Class 2A)
  • 2016 Girls Competitive Cheerleading Third Place (Class S)
  • 2016 Boys Basketball Third Place (Class 2A)
  • 2017 Girls Competitive Cheerleading Champions (Class S)
  • 2018 Girls Basketball Fourth Place (Class 3A)

Carlyle

  • 1981 Boys Baseball Champions (Class A)
  • 1988 Football Champions (Class 2A)
  • 1989 Boys Basketball Champions (Class A)
  • 1995 Girls Basketball Runner-Up (Class A)
  • 1996 Girls Basketball Champions (Class A)
  • 1997 Girls Basketball Champions (Class A)
  • 2016 Girls Competitive Cheerleading Runner-up (Small)

Columbia

  • 1987 Baseball Champions (Class A)
  • 2005 Girls Volleyball Runner-Up (Class A)
  • 2006 Girls Soccer Runner-Up (Class A)
  • 2006 Baseball Fourth Place (Class A)
  • 2007 Scholastic Bowl Runner-Up (Class A)
  • 2007 Baseball Champions (Class A)
  • 2007 Football Runner-Up (Class 3A)
  • 2008 Girls Soccer Third Place (Class A)
  • 2009 Competitive Cheerleading Third Place (Class S)
  • 2010 Competitive Cheerleading Champions (Class S)
  • 2010 Boys Soccer Third Place (Class 1A)
  • 2011 Competitive Cheerleading Champions (Class S)
  • 2012 Competitive Cheerleading Champions (Class S)
  • 2013 Competitive Cheerleading Champions (Class M)
  • 2014 Boys Soccer Champions (Class 1A)
  • 2015 Competitive Cheerleading Second Place (Class M)
  • 2019 Girls Soccer Champions (Class 1A)

Dupo

  • 1990 Baseball Runner-Up (Class A)
  • 1996 Baseball Champions (Class A)
  • 2009 Softball Fourth Place (Class 1A)
  • 2016 Softball Runner-Up (Class 2A)

Freeburg

  • 1956 Baseball Runner-Up
  • 1977 Girls Archery State Champions
  • 1977 Girls Volleyball Third Place (Class A)
  • 1978 Girls Archery Second Place
  • 1979 Girls Volleyball Champions (Class A)
  • 1981 Girls Volleyball Fourth Place (Class A)
  • 1982 Girls Volleyball Champions (Class A)
  • 1985 Softball Champions (Class A)
  • 1989 Baseball Champions (Class A)
  • 2002 Baseball Runner-Up (Class A)
  • 2003 Girls Track Champions (Class A)
  • 2004 Girls Track Champions (Class A)
  • 2005 Girls Track Third Place (Class A)
  • 2008 Girls Volleyball Champions (Class 2A)
  • 2009 Girls Volleyball Champions (Class 2A)
  • 2014 Baseball Third Place (Class 2A)
  • 2016 Boys Cross Country Runner-Up (Class A)

Lebanon

  • 1976 Boys Cross Country Champions (Class A)
  • 1977 Boys Track Runner-Up (Class A)
  • 1997 Softball Runner-Up (Class A)
  • 2008 Softball Fourth Place (Class 1A)
  • 2010 Softball Runner-Up (Class 1A)
  • 2010 Baseball Third Place (Class 1A)
  • 2018 Girls Basketball Third Place (Class 1A)

Marissa

  • 1986 Baseball Champions (Class A)
  • 2008 Baseball Runner-Up (Class 1A)
  • 2009 Baseball Runner-Up (Class 1A)

New Athens

  • 1948 Baseball Runner-Up
  • 1978 Baseball Runner-Up (Class A)
  • 1979 Baseball Champions (Class A)
  • 2013 Girls Volleyball Fourth Place (Class 1A)
  • 2014 Baseball Fourth Place (Class 1A)

Red Bud

  • 1974 Volleyball Third Place (Class A)
  • 2002 Volleyball Third Place (Class A)

Steeleville

  • 1993 Baseball Runner-Up (Class A)
  • 2019 Baseball Third Place (Class A)

Trenton (Wesclin)

  • 1981 Boys Cross Country Runner-Up (Class A)
  • 1982 Boys Cross Country Champions (Class A)
  • 1990 Boys Basketball Champions (Class A)
  • 2002 Boys Bowling Runner-up (Class A)
  • 2006 Baseball Runner-Up (Class A)
  • 2009 Competitive Cheerleading Champions (Class S)
  • 2012 Baseball Fourth Place (Class 2A)
  • 2018 ICTM Math Team Tenth Place (Class 1A)

Valmeyer

  • 2012 Girls Volleyball Fourth Place (Class 1A)
  • 2017 Baseball Runner-up (Class 1A)
  • 2018 Baseball Runner-up (Class 1A)

Miscellaneous Facts

Baseball Achievements

No other small school athletic conference in the state of Illinois has claimed as many state baseball championships as the Cahokia Conference. The list of championships by current member teams includes 7 years (1979, 1981, 1986, 1987, 1989, 1996, and 2007), as well as 9 runner-up performances (1948, 1956, 1978, 1990, 1993, 2002, 2006, 2008, and 2009), and two third-place finishes (2010 & 2014).

2005 Volleyball Championship

In the 2005 state volleyball tournament Breese Central defeated Columbia in the championship match. This was the first time in IHSA Volleyball history that two teams from the same conference met in the title match. Ironically, the conference champion of 2005 was Freeburg, which had moved to class AA and won the first ever AA regional for a school from this conference.

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References

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