SEOAL Football History Part 1: Intro and Timeline
Posted: Thu Oct 27, 2016 11:13 am
Part 2: All-Time Standings and Champions
Part 3: The Member Schools
Part 4: MVPs and Coaches of the Year
Part 5: The SEOAL and the OHSAA Playoffs
Part 6: By the Numbers (Records, etc)
Introduction:
On Friday night in Washington County, the 2,177th and final Southeastern Ohio Athletic League football game will be played between the Logan Chieftains and the Warren Warriors. The Chieftains will be the final "founding member" at the end of the 2016-2017 school year when the Jackson Ironmen leave to join the Frontier Athletic Conference. At that point, the league will no longer be in operation.
The state's oldest, continually operating non-city league was formed on March 7, 1925 at the Rogan Hotel in Wellston, OH. William E. (Bill) Thomas, a Wellston newspaper editor and postmaster called together officials from nine schools throughout southeastern. Those nine schools were Athens, Gallipolis, Ironton, Jackson, Logan, Nelsonville, Oak Hill, Portsmouth, and Wellston.
Thomas, for whom the SEOAL All-Sports Trophy is named, was a well known sports man with an impressive resume. He organized, coached, and played quarterback for the first Wellston High School football team as a sophomore in 1898 and later coached the Wellston team which played for the Ohio state championship against Fostoria in 1915.
Thomas was also a well known football referee who worked his way up from games in southeastern Ohio, to "big time" Ohio high school football, and finally up to the Big Ten. His Big Ten officiating included working the Ohio Stadium dedication game against Michigan.
On March 7, before school officials left the Rogan Hotel, eight of the nine schools signed the new constitution with Oak Hill the only school who declined to join the new league.
The league aligned itself with the Ohio High School Athletic Association and schools agreed to hold championships for basketball, football, and track. The first SEOAL track meet was held nearly two months later on May 2, 1925.
League Timeline:
May 2, 1925: First League event, a track and field meet is held. Membership includes Athens, Gallipolis, Ironton, Jackson, Logan, Nelsonville, Portsmouth, and Wellston.
1926: Pomeroy joins as the league's 9th member.
1927: New Boston Glenwood joines as the league's 10th member. Athens and Portsmouth leave following the 1928 spring season to drop the league to 8 members.
1929: Middleport joins as the league's 9th member. Ironton leaves following the 1930 spring season to drop the league to 8 members.
1931: Athens rejoins the league bringing membership back to 9 members.
1936: New Boston Glenwood leaves the league for the Big Six conference following the 1937 spring season to drop the league to 8 members. The league would not see a membership change until 1967.
1939: Round robin scheduling for football is required for the first time.
1942: Official All-SEOAL teams are selected by coaches and media through the Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
1949: Official All-SEOAL teams, MVP, and Coach of the year selections are made by the Southeast Ohio Radio Broadcasters and Sportswriters.
1952: A polio outbreak cancels or postpones part of Pomeroy's football season.
1966: Middleport and Pomeroy, along with non-member Rutland, consolidate to form Meigs High School following the spring season of 1967. Nelsonville High School, along with non-member Buchtel-York consolidate to form Nelsonville-York High School. Meigs and N-Y immediately accepted into the SEOAL. Membershipd drops to 7 teams.
1967: Meigs and N-Y immediately accepted into the SEOAL. Membershipd drops to 7 teams.
1968: Ironton (from Central Ohio League) is chosen over Vinton County as the league's 8th member.
1969: Nelsonville-York leaves the league for the Tri-Valley Conference following the 1970 spring season dropping the league to 7 members.
1970: Waverly joins as the league's 8th member from the Southern Ohio Conference.
1972: First year of the OHSAA state playoffs. No SEOAL team qualifies.
1973: Ironton is the OHSAA Class AA state runner-up.
1976: Ironton's 34-game SEOAL winning streak is snapped by Gallipolis.
1979: Ironton wins the OHSAA Class AA State Championship, defeating Akron St. Vincent St. Mary 7-6.
1981: Wellston leaves the league following the 1982 spring season for the Tri-Valley Conference dropping the league's membership to 7 teams.
1982: Ironton is the OHSAA Div. III state runner-up. Meigs and Waverly leave the league following the 1983 spring season for the Tri-Valley Conference and Southern Ohio Conference respectively. League membership drops to 5 teams.
1984: Ironton leaves for the Ohio-Kentucky Athletic Conference (OKAC) following the 1985 spring season, putting the league's future in jeopardy. Only four members remained.
1985: Marietta joins as the league's 5th member from the Central Ohio League. League coaches take over making All-SEOAL selections.
1986: Warren Local joins as the league's 6th member from the Tri-Valley Conference.
1994: River Valley joins as the league's 7th member.
1996: Point Pleasant (WV) joins as the league's 8th member. They are the first school from outside Ohio admitted as a member. Jackson is an OHSAA Div. III Regional Finalist.
2000: Logan is an OHSAA Div. I Regional Finalist.
2001: River Valley leaves for the Ohio Valley Conference following the 2002 spring season dropping the league to 7 members.
2003: Point Pleasant leaves dropping the league to 6 members.
2006: Chillicothe (from Ohio Capital) and Zanesville join and Ironton and Portsmouth re-join the league increasing membership to ten teams. The league is divided into two divisions; the North consisting of Athens, Logan, Marietta, Warren, and Zanesville and the South consisting of Chillicothe, Gallipolis, Ironton, Jackson, and Portsmouth. Each team plays three cross-over games and a single champion is crowned in football.
2007: Athens leaves for the Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division following the 2008 spring season dropping the league to 9 members.
2008: Zanesville leaves following the 2009 spring season dropping the league to 8 members.
2009: Ironton leaves following the 2010 spring season dropping the league to 7 members. Round robin scheduling is resumed.
2010: Marietta leaves for the East Central Ohio League following the 2011 spring season dropping the league 6 members. Logan's 34-game winning streak is snapped by Jackson.
2012: Chillicothe leaves for the South Central Ohio League following the 2013 spring season dropping the league to 5 members.
2014: Portsmouth leaves for the Ohio Valley Conference following the 2015 spring season dropping the league to four members.
2015: Jackson is an OHSAA Div. III Regional finalist. Gallipolis leaves for the Ohio Valley Conference following the 2016 spring season dropping the league to three members. Warren becomes an affiliate member of the Ohio Valley Athletic Conference.
2016: Jackson will leave for the newly formed Frontier Athletic Conference following the 2017 spring season. Logan will become an independent. Warren will be an independent with an affiliation with the OVAC.
Part 3: The Member Schools
Part 4: MVPs and Coaches of the Year
Part 5: The SEOAL and the OHSAA Playoffs
Part 6: By the Numbers (Records, etc)
Introduction:
On Friday night in Washington County, the 2,177th and final Southeastern Ohio Athletic League football game will be played between the Logan Chieftains and the Warren Warriors. The Chieftains will be the final "founding member" at the end of the 2016-2017 school year when the Jackson Ironmen leave to join the Frontier Athletic Conference. At that point, the league will no longer be in operation.
The state's oldest, continually operating non-city league was formed on March 7, 1925 at the Rogan Hotel in Wellston, OH. William E. (Bill) Thomas, a Wellston newspaper editor and postmaster called together officials from nine schools throughout southeastern. Those nine schools were Athens, Gallipolis, Ironton, Jackson, Logan, Nelsonville, Oak Hill, Portsmouth, and Wellston.
Thomas, for whom the SEOAL All-Sports Trophy is named, was a well known sports man with an impressive resume. He organized, coached, and played quarterback for the first Wellston High School football team as a sophomore in 1898 and later coached the Wellston team which played for the Ohio state championship against Fostoria in 1915.
Thomas was also a well known football referee who worked his way up from games in southeastern Ohio, to "big time" Ohio high school football, and finally up to the Big Ten. His Big Ten officiating included working the Ohio Stadium dedication game against Michigan.
On March 7, before school officials left the Rogan Hotel, eight of the nine schools signed the new constitution with Oak Hill the only school who declined to join the new league.
The league aligned itself with the Ohio High School Athletic Association and schools agreed to hold championships for basketball, football, and track. The first SEOAL track meet was held nearly two months later on May 2, 1925.
League Timeline:
May 2, 1925: First League event, a track and field meet is held. Membership includes Athens, Gallipolis, Ironton, Jackson, Logan, Nelsonville, Portsmouth, and Wellston.
1926: Pomeroy joins as the league's 9th member.
1927: New Boston Glenwood joines as the league's 10th member. Athens and Portsmouth leave following the 1928 spring season to drop the league to 8 members.
1929: Middleport joins as the league's 9th member. Ironton leaves following the 1930 spring season to drop the league to 8 members.
1931: Athens rejoins the league bringing membership back to 9 members.
1936: New Boston Glenwood leaves the league for the Big Six conference following the 1937 spring season to drop the league to 8 members. The league would not see a membership change until 1967.
1939: Round robin scheduling for football is required for the first time.
1942: Official All-SEOAL teams are selected by coaches and media through the Gallipolis Daily Tribune.
1949: Official All-SEOAL teams, MVP, and Coach of the year selections are made by the Southeast Ohio Radio Broadcasters and Sportswriters.
1952: A polio outbreak cancels or postpones part of Pomeroy's football season.
1966: Middleport and Pomeroy, along with non-member Rutland, consolidate to form Meigs High School following the spring season of 1967. Nelsonville High School, along with non-member Buchtel-York consolidate to form Nelsonville-York High School. Meigs and N-Y immediately accepted into the SEOAL. Membershipd drops to 7 teams.
1967: Meigs and N-Y immediately accepted into the SEOAL. Membershipd drops to 7 teams.
1968: Ironton (from Central Ohio League) is chosen over Vinton County as the league's 8th member.
1969: Nelsonville-York leaves the league for the Tri-Valley Conference following the 1970 spring season dropping the league to 7 members.
1970: Waverly joins as the league's 8th member from the Southern Ohio Conference.
1972: First year of the OHSAA state playoffs. No SEOAL team qualifies.
1973: Ironton is the OHSAA Class AA state runner-up.
1976: Ironton's 34-game SEOAL winning streak is snapped by Gallipolis.
1979: Ironton wins the OHSAA Class AA State Championship, defeating Akron St. Vincent St. Mary 7-6.
1981: Wellston leaves the league following the 1982 spring season for the Tri-Valley Conference dropping the league's membership to 7 teams.
1982: Ironton is the OHSAA Div. III state runner-up. Meigs and Waverly leave the league following the 1983 spring season for the Tri-Valley Conference and Southern Ohio Conference respectively. League membership drops to 5 teams.
1984: Ironton leaves for the Ohio-Kentucky Athletic Conference (OKAC) following the 1985 spring season, putting the league's future in jeopardy. Only four members remained.
1985: Marietta joins as the league's 5th member from the Central Ohio League. League coaches take over making All-SEOAL selections.
1986: Warren Local joins as the league's 6th member from the Tri-Valley Conference.
1994: River Valley joins as the league's 7th member.
1996: Point Pleasant (WV) joins as the league's 8th member. They are the first school from outside Ohio admitted as a member. Jackson is an OHSAA Div. III Regional Finalist.
2000: Logan is an OHSAA Div. I Regional Finalist.
2001: River Valley leaves for the Ohio Valley Conference following the 2002 spring season dropping the league to 7 members.
2003: Point Pleasant leaves dropping the league to 6 members.
2006: Chillicothe (from Ohio Capital) and Zanesville join and Ironton and Portsmouth re-join the league increasing membership to ten teams. The league is divided into two divisions; the North consisting of Athens, Logan, Marietta, Warren, and Zanesville and the South consisting of Chillicothe, Gallipolis, Ironton, Jackson, and Portsmouth. Each team plays three cross-over games and a single champion is crowned in football.
2007: Athens leaves for the Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division following the 2008 spring season dropping the league to 9 members.
2008: Zanesville leaves following the 2009 spring season dropping the league to 8 members.
2009: Ironton leaves following the 2010 spring season dropping the league to 7 members. Round robin scheduling is resumed.
2010: Marietta leaves for the East Central Ohio League following the 2011 spring season dropping the league 6 members. Logan's 34-game winning streak is snapped by Jackson.
2012: Chillicothe leaves for the South Central Ohio League following the 2013 spring season dropping the league to 5 members.
2014: Portsmouth leaves for the Ohio Valley Conference following the 2015 spring season dropping the league to four members.
2015: Jackson is an OHSAA Div. III Regional finalist. Gallipolis leaves for the Ohio Valley Conference following the 2016 spring season dropping the league to three members. Warren becomes an affiliate member of the Ohio Valley Athletic Conference.
2016: Jackson will leave for the newly formed Frontier Athletic Conference following the 2017 spring season. Logan will become an independent. Warren will be an independent with an affiliation with the OVAC.