Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association

Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association (MPSSAA) is the association that oversees public high school sporting contests in the state of Maryland.[2] Organized after World War II in 1946, the MPSSAA is made up of public high schools from each of Maryland's 23 counties and independent city of Baltimore, which joined the association in 1993 when its public high schools withdrew from the earlier longtime athletic league, the Maryland Scholastic Association (MSA) which was founded in 1919. The MSA had been composed of public high schools in Baltimore and private/religious/independent schools on the secondary level in Baltimore and its metropolitan area and the surrounding central Maryland region. It was one of the few state-level interscholastic athletic leagues in the nation composed of both public and private/religious/independent secondary schools. After the Baltimore City public high schools withdrew from the MSA, the remaining private/religious/independent schools conferred and organized two parallel regional/state-wide athletic leagues with sports competition and exercise activities with one for young men and the other for young women. These were the Maryland Interscholastic Athletic Association (MISAAfor boys) and the Interscholastic Athletic Association of Maryland (ISAAMfor girls), which still exist today. All three state-wide athletic leagues, two for private/religious/independent secondary schools and one for co-ed public high schools exist today marrying on the proud traditions, memories and championships of the old Maryland Scholastic Association (MSA)one of the oldest state athletic leagues for secondary schools in the country.

Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association
AbbreviationMPSSAA
Formation1946 (1946)
TypeVolunteer; NPO
Legal statusAssociation
PurposeAthletic/Educational
HeadquartersNancy Grassmick Building, Maryland State Department of Education, 200 West Baltimore Street
Baltimore, Maryland 21201
Region served
Maryland
Membership
199 public high schools[1]
Official language
English
Executive Director
Edward F. Sparks
AffiliationsNational Federation of State High School Associations
Websitempssaa.org

The current MPSSAA includes nearly 200 public high schools, with more than 110,000 student-athletes participating in 24 sports. The Association is governed by the Division of Instruction of the Maryland State Department of Education. All public high schools in Maryland in the 23 counties who qualify under the established rules and regulations may become members of the MPSSAA.

The stated purpose of the MPSSAA is "to promote, direct, and control all interscholastic activities of high school students; to establish, maintain, and enforce regulations to assure that all such activities are part of and contribute toward the comprehensive educational program of the state of Maryland; to work with the state department of education in the development of the program to safeguard the physical, mental, and moral welfare of high school students and protect them from exploitation."[3]

Team sports

Individual sports

Member high schools

Due to the state's unique geography, Maryland high school athletics is divided into nine districts by the MPSSAA for purposes of organizing athletic activities and postseason tournaments. MPSSAA member schools compete within geographic regions (jurisdictions) and are divided into leagues across the state. In total, there are five conferences and six counties competing together to form a league, but remaining independent.

Classifications

The MPSSAA's 199 member schools are arranged by classification to ensure that schools compete on a regular basis with other schools in the geographic area of a similar size. The classifications are 1A (the smallest), 2A, 3A, and 4A (the largest).

  • 1A = Lowest 25 percent based on enrollment
  • 2A = Next 25 percent based on enrollment
  • 3A = Next 25 percent based on enrollment
  • 4A = Top 25 percent based on enrollment

District Alignment

  • District 1 – Allegany, Carroll, Frederick, Garrett, and Washington counties
  • District 2 – Montgomery County
  • District 3 – Prince George's County
  • District 4 – Charles, Calvert, and St. Mary's counties
  • District 5 – Anne Arundel and Howard counties
  • District 6 – Baltimore County
  • District 7 – Cecil and Harford counties
  • District 8 – Caroline, Dorchester, Kent, Queen Anne's, Somerset, Talbot, Wicomico, and Worcester counties
  • District 9 – Baltimore City

Appalachian Mountain Athletic Conference

AlleganyGarrett
Allegany High SchoolNorthern Garrett High School
Mountain Ridge High SchoolSouthern Garrett High School
Fort Hill High School

Bayside Conference

CarolineDorchesterKentQueen Anne'sSomersetTalbotWicomicoWorcester
Colonel Richardson High SchoolCambridge-South Dorchester High SchoolKent County High SchoolKent Island High SchoolCrisfield High SchoolEaston High SchoolJames M. Bennett High SchoolPocomoke High School
North Caroline High SchoolNorth Dorchester High SchoolQueen Anne's County High SchoolWashington High SchoolSt. Michaels High SchoolMardela High SchoolSnow Hill High School
Parkside High SchoolStephen Decatur High School
Wicomico High School

Monocacy Valley Athletic League

CarrollFrederickWashington
Century High SchoolBrunswick High SchoolBoonsboro High School
Francis Scott Key High SchoolCatoctin High SchoolClear Spring High School
Liberty High SchoolFrederick High SchoolHancock High School
Manchester Valley High SchoolGovernor Thomas Johnson High SchoolNorth Hagerstown High School
Linganore High SchoolSmithsburg High School
South Carroll High SchoolMiddletown High SchoolSouth Hagerstown High School
Westminster High SchoolOakdale High SchoolWilliamsport High School
Winters Mill High SchoolTuscarora High School
Urbana High School
Walkersville High School

Southern Maryland Athletic Conference

CalvertCharlesSt. Mary's
Huntingtown High SchoolHenry E. Lackey High SchoolChopticon High School
Northern High SchoolLa Plata High SchoolGreat Mills High School
Calvert High SchoolMaurice J. McDonough High SchoolLeonardtown High School
Patuxent High SchoolNorth Point High School
Thomas Stone High School
Westlake High School
St. Charles High School

Upper Chesapeake Bay Athletic Conference

CecilHarford
Bohemia Manor High SchoolAberdeen High School
Elkton High SchoolBel Air High School
North East High SchoolC. Milton Wright High School
Perryville High SchoolEdgewood High School
Rising Sun High SchoolFallston High School
Harford Technical High School
Havre De Grace High School
Joppatowne High School
North Harford High School
Patterson Mill High School

Anne Arundel County League

  • Annapolis High School
  • Arundel High School
  • Broadneck High School
  • Chesapeake High School
  • Crofton High School
  • Glen Burnie High School
  • Meade High School
  • North County High School
  • Northeast High School
  • Old Mill High School
  • Severna Park High School
  • South River High School
  • Southern High School

Baltimore City League

  • Baltimore City College ("City")
  • Baltimore Polytechnic Institute ("Poly")
  • Carver Vocational Technical High School
  • Digital Harbor High School (formerly Southern High School)
  • Paul Laurence Dunbar High School
  • Edmondson-Westside High School
  • Frederick Douglass High School
  • Forest Park High School
  • Lake Clifton Eastern High School
  • Mergenthaler Vocational-Technical High School ("Mervo")
  • Northwestern High School
  • Patterson High School
  • Reginald F. Lewis High School
  • Southwestern High School
  • Western High School

Baltimore County League

  • Catonsville High School
  • Chesapeake High School
  • Dulaney High School
  • Dundalk High School
  • Eastern Technical High School
  • Franklin High School
  • George Washington Carver Center for Arts and Technology
  • Hereford High School
  • Kenwood High School
  • Lansdowne High School
  • Loch Raven High School
  • Milford Mill Academy
  • New Town High School
  • Overlea High School
  • Owings Mills High School
  • Parkville High School
  • Patapsco High School
  • Perry Hall High School
  • Pikesville High School
  • Randallstown High School
  • Sparrows Point High School
  • Towson High School
  • Western School of Technology and Environmental Science
  • Woodlawn High School

Howard County League

River Hill High School competes against Baltimore City College for the 2009 Class 2A girls' basketball state championship at UMBC's Retriever Activities Center in Catonsville.
  • Atholton High School
  • Centennial High School
  • Glenelg High School
  • Hammond High School
  • Howard High School
  • Long Reach High School
  • Marriotts Ridge High School
  • Mount Hebron High School
  • Oakland Mills High School
  • Reservoir High School
  • River Hill High School
  • Wilde Lake High School

Montgomery County League

Prince George's County League

  • Bladensburg High School
  • Bowie High School
  • Central High School
  • Crossland High School
  • Frederick Douglass High School
  • DuVal High School
  • Fairmont Heights High School
  • Charles Herbert Flowers High School
  • Friendly High School
  • Gwynn Park High School
  • Henry Alexander Wise Jr., High School
  • High Point High School
  • Largo High School
  • Laurel High School
  • Northwestern High School
  • Oxon Hill High School
  • Parkdale High School
  • Potomac High School
  • Eleanor Roosevelt High School
  • Suitland High School
  • Surrattsville High School

See also

  • Maryland Interscholastic Athletic Association — a boys' sports conference for private high schools generally located in the Baltimore metropolitan area
  • Interscholastic Athletic Association of Maryland — an association of schools that organizes the female athletic programs in the Baltimore metropolitan area
  • Washington Catholic Athletic Conference — an association of Catholic Schools in the Washington, DC metropolitan area, which also includes schools in Maryland and Virginia

References

  1. "About Us". Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association. Retrieved February 22, 2024.
  2. "Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association". Maryland Public Secondary Schools Association. Retrieved 1 April 2011.
  3. "2013-14 Handbook" (PDF).
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