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Sandy Journal

UHSAA sets region alignments for 2017

Jan 20, 2017 01:19PM ● By Kelly Cannon

The Utah High School Activities Association realigns region schools every two years. This season the association was forced to reevaluate its own transfer rules. (UHSAA)

By Greg James | [email protected]
           
The Utah High School Activities Association (UHSAA) recently rearranged its member schools’ region alignments, a process they revisit every two years. They have also been required by the Utah State Board of Education to revise its own transfer rules.
 
“I personally like that the activities association re-evaluates the region alignments every once in a while. It helps keep the classification and school sizes close. I think it also helps with safety and spreads out travel costs,” said Riverton High School Athletic Director Daniel Henderson.
 
Under current UHSAA rules, region alignments adjust on a two-year cycle. The proposed school classification was presented in a public meeting in November. In December the proposal for the 2017–18 school year was approved.
 
The biggest change in the upcoming school year will be the division’s six classifications for all sports.
 
Salt Lake County schools were affected by the changes in various ways. Here is how the regions stack up:
 
Region 2 will maintain some and add long-time rivalries amongst neighboring schools; Hunter, Granger, Hillcrest and Kearns will be joined by Cyprus. The Pirates [AC1] jumped into the 6A classification because it added ninth grade students from Brockbank Jr. High.
 
Region 3 will see a complete remake. West Jordan, Copper Hills and Taylorsville will welcome Riverton, Herriman and East (in football only). East is the defending 4A state football champion.
 
“In my opinion the realignment is a good thing. I wish they could last three years though, to help us continue and build rivalries,” said Copper Hills Athletic Director Darby Cowles.
 
During the alignment public hearing that placed them in Region 4, Bingham representatives argued that this would force higher travel costs on their programs. Their requests were denied and they were placed in the prominently Utah County region with American Fork, Lone Peak, Westlake and Pleasant Grove.
 
The 2017 6A football playoffs could be exciting. Current classification champions East and Bingham will both be in the 6A classification.
 
East High School will compete in Region 6 for all sports except football. They will face Highland, Olympus, Murray, Skyline and West (Lehi will take East’s place for football only).
 
Region 7 will join Alta, Brighton, Jordan, Corner Canyon, Cottonwood and Timpview.
 
Smaller county schools like Providence Hall, Summit Academy, Judge Memorial and American Leadership will move to the 3A classification.
 
“At the end of the day the UHSAA has an incredible task to make everyone happy. There is no way they can. We are content with the changes. The transfer rule change is going to be difficult. Every time I discipline a player I will wonder if he is going to leave,” West Jordan boys basketball coach Scott Briggs said.
 
The trustee alignment meetings were overshadowed by the Utah State Board of Education’s fall ruling to open the student athletes’ transfer ability. The UHSAA was forced to change its guidelines in relationship to transfers. Sub-varsity athletes are now eligible to transfer at will, while varsity athletes may only transfer in defined circumstances.
 
“I think these new rules will encourage coaches to make varsity rosters with many freshman players to prevent them from transferring,” Cowles said.
 
From July 2015 to June 2016, the UHSAA had 1,994 student athletes request transfers; only 16 transfer requests were denied.
 
“I feel that some of our Hunter kids go to other schools because of the wrong reasons. Sports teaches more than just the activity. It teaches integrity and character. It is now all about winning. True development of the student athlete has been lost,” said Hunter head football coach Scott Henderson.
 
Open enrollment has forced many high school coaches to recruit its own boundary students to stay in their hometown program.
 
“I know we lose many incoming freshman to other schools. We do not know the numbers, but we hear it a lot,” Henderson said.