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Central Iowa Metro League

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Central Iowa Metro League is located in Iowa
Central Iowa Metro League
Central Iowa Metro League
Central Iowa Metro League
Central Iowa Metro League
Central Iowa Metro League
Central Iowa Metro League
Central Iowa Metro League
Central Iowa Metro League
Central Iowa Metro League
Central Iowa Metro League School Locations in Iowa
Central Iowa Metro League
ConferenceIHSAA / IGHSAU
Founded1991
Sports fielded
  • 21
No. of teams9
RegionDes Moines Metro
Official websitehttps://www.cimlcentral.org/

The Central Iowa Metro League (also called CIML) is a high school athletic conference whose members are located in the suburban cities of Des Moines, Iowa.

The conference includes 9 schools, all of which compete at the 5A classification level, which is for the largest schools.

Member schools

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There are currently 9 members of the Central Iowa Metro League (CIML):

Institution Location Affiliation 2024-2025 BEDS[1] Mascot Colors
Ankeny Ankeny Public 1,332 Hawks/Hawkettes    
Centennial Ankeny Public 1,517 Jaguars    
Dowling Catholic West Des Moines Private 1,024 Maroons    
Johnston Johnston Public 1,791 Dragons    
Northwest Waukee Public 1,582 Wolves    
Southeast Polk Pleasant Hill Public 1,712 Rams    
Urbandale Urbandale Public 969 J-Hawks    
Valley West Des Moines Public 2,290 Tigers    
Waukee Waukee Public 1,335 Warriors    
Shared Sports and Cooperatives
School Sport Cooperative Schools
Ankeny Football, Boys Soccer, Boys Tennis, Boys Wrestling, Girls Soccer, Girls Tennis Ankeny Christian Academy
Johnston Boys Tennis Dallas Center-Grimes
Johnston Girls Soccer, Girls Tennis Woodward-Granger
Urbandale Boys Tennis, Boys Wrestling, Girls Tennis Des Moines Christian
Waukee Boys Tennis ADM, Van Meter
Waukee Girls Tennis ADM

History

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Since its founding, the Central Iowa Metro League was a league composed of metropolitan schools in central Iowa. The conference, for many years, consisted of just 14 schools: the 5 Des Moines schools, Ankeny, Ames, Valley, Dowling, Indianola, Marshalltown, Southeast Polk, Newton and Urbandale. In 1992, Mason City and Fort Dodge joined the conference, leaving the Big Eight, which had recently been decimated by other conference realignments. With these two new additions the conference split into two divisions. Ottumwa and Johnston joined the conference later in the 1990s to make the CIML an 18 team conference, splitting the conference into a three division format. For the 2006–07 athletics season, Waukee joined the conference, replacing Newton, who joined the Little Hawkeye Conference.

The three division format comprised the Central, Iowa, and Metro Conferences, organized like this:

Central Iowa Metro
Ankeny Mason City Des Moines East
Indianola Ames Des Moines Hoover
Dowling Catholic Marshalltown Des Moines Lincoln
Johnston Fort Dodge Des Moines North
Southeast Polk Waukee Des Moines Roosevelt
Urbandale Valley Ottumwa

In the fall of 2013, the Ankeny Community School District split into two high schools, with both Ankeny High and Ankeny Centennial competing at the 4A level. In anticipation of adding Centennial to the League, the League approved the current four division format, beginning it in the 2012–13 school year, with Centennial joining the next year.

In 2015 the CIML was restructured[2] for the 2016–2018 school years. The three division format, which comprises the Central, Iowa, and Metro Conferences, was reorganized like this:

Central Iowa Metro
Ames Mason City DM East
Ankeny Fort Dodge DM Hoover
Ankeny Centennial Marshalltown DM Lincoln
Southeast Polk Dowling Catholic DM North
Valley Johnston DM Roosevelt
Waukee Urbandale Ottumwa

Representatives from the 12 schools of the Central Iowa Conference (Ames, Ankeny, Centennial, Dowling Catholic, Ft. Dodge, Johnston, Marshalltown, Mason City, Southeast Polk, Urbandale, Valley (WDM), and Waukee) of the Central Iowa Metropolitan League met on Wednesday, February 4 in Johnston to discuss the realignment of the league moving forward. In previous discussions, the league was to be divided with the five Des Moines Public Schools, Ottumwa, and Indianola, in one conference and then the other 12 schools in two conferences. Since that time, Indianola has announced it will depart the CIML for the Little Hawkeye Conference in the 2016-2017 school year. As a result of that decision and action taken on February 4, the following recommendation will be made to the Council of Activities’ Directors for approval on February 25, 2015, and then the Principals of the league in a subsequent meeting thereafter.

A second Waukee high school, Northwest, opened in the fall of 2021 to compete in the CIML.

On March 1, 2021, nine high schools made the announcement to leave the CIML and form a new conference. These schools included Ames, Fort Dodge, Marshalltown, Mason City, and Ottumwa, as well as the five public Des Moines schools (East, Hoover, Lincoln, North, and Roosevelt). The schools left the conference for the 2022–23 season to create a new conference. The withdrawal was due to a low percentage in wins from the non-suburban schools in the conference.[3][4] The new conference was called the Iowa Alliance Conference, and will include ten former CIML teams as well as East High, Waterloo.[5]

Sports

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The conference offers the following sports:

The CIML, like all other conferences in Iowa, does not sponsor football. The IHSAA has a separate classification system for football, and competition is set up in districts separate from conference affiliation.

Although the member schools field freshman — and in some cases, junior varsity — teams in many of the above-mentioned sports, conference championships are determined at sophomore and varsity levels only.

References

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  1. ^ "IHSAA: Classifications".
  2. ^ "CIML Restructure - 2015" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-11-28. Retrieved 2016-11-27.
  3. ^ Rohlfing, Noah. "Change on the horizon: Marshalltown, others reveal CIML departure plans". Times Republican. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  4. ^ "Understanding the CIML". j-hawks.com. 25 July 2022. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  5. ^ Mollenbeck, Andrew (20 November 2021). "11 schools join new Iowa athletic conference". KCCI. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
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