Difference between revisions of "South Metropolitan Scholastic Bowl League"
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{| border="0" cellspacing="3" cellpadding="3" | {| border="0" cellspacing="3" cellpadding="3" | ||
|-style="background: #e3e3e3;" | |-style="background: #e3e3e3;" | ||
− | !width="225"|School||width="100"|Town||width="125"|Head Coach ( | + | !width="225"|School||width="100"|Town||width="125"|Head Coach (16-17) |
|- | |- | ||
|[[Bishop McNamara|Bishop McNamara Fightin' Irish]]||Kankakee||Joan Linneman | |[[Bishop McNamara|Bishop McNamara Fightin' Irish]]||Kankakee||Joan Linneman | ||
Line 18: | Line 18: | ||
|[[Mt. Carmel|Mt. Carmel Caravan]]||Chicago||Tom Eisenbraun | |[[Mt. Carmel|Mt. Carmel Caravan]]||Chicago||Tom Eisenbraun | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | |[[Providence|Providence Celtics]]||New Lenox||Chris Tagler | + | |[[Providence Catholic|Providence Celtics]]||New Lenox||Chris Tagler |
|-style="background: #e3e3e3;" | |-style="background: #e3e3e3;" | ||
|[[St. Francis|St. Francis Spartans]]||Wheaton||Jay Olaszek | |[[St. Francis|St. Francis Spartans]]||Wheaton||Jay Olaszek | ||
|- | |- | ||
|[[St. Laurence|St. Laurence Vikings]]||Burbank||Carlin Glennon | |[[St. Laurence|St. Laurence Vikings]]||Burbank||Carlin Glennon | ||
− | |- | + | |--style="background: #e3e3e3;" |
− | |[[St. Rita|St. Rita Mustangs]]||Chicago|| | + | |[[St. Rita|St. Rita Mustangs]]||Chicago||Andrew McIntosh |
|-" | |-" | ||
|} | |} | ||
==History== | ==History== | ||
− | The SMSBL can be traced to events in 1996. Jim Johns, a highly successful soccer coach had coached the Scholastic Bowl team at St. Joseph before coming to Marist for the 1996-97 school year. With no soccer coaching jobs, he set about starting a scholastic bowl team at Marist with the help of his fellow physics teacher, [[Tom Egan]]. The pair hosted a tournament for private schools, and began forming a network of coaches from across the southern part of the City of Chicago and the associated suburbs. Also that year, the pair had attended the February, 1997 Schobofest, an event sponsored by the [[IHSSBCA]]. While the pair had already discussed the idea of trying to form a league, the idea was kicked into higher gear when, while attending one of the meetings, it was learned that [[David Riley]] at [[Loyola Academy]] was already planning to form a league for the north suburban Catholic schools. Susan Rhoades, the coach at Wheaton Academy was given the job of organizing a southern league. When Rhoades was not moving fast enough to get a league started for the next year, she turned the job over to Johns and Egan. Discussion of having a single united league with southern and northern divisions was rebuffed by Riley, though both leagues chose to use parallel names. | + | The SMSBL can be traced to events in 1996. Jim Johns, a highly successful soccer coach had coached the Scholastic Bowl team at [[St. Joseph]] before coming to [[Marist (IL)|Marist]] for the 1996-97 school year. With no soccer coaching jobs, he set about starting a scholastic bowl team at Marist with the help of his fellow physics teacher, [[Tom Egan]]. The pair hosted a tournament for private schools, and began forming a network of coaches from across the southern part of the City of Chicago and the associated suburbs. Also that year, the pair had attended the February, 1997 Schobofest, an event sponsored by the [[IHSSBCA]]. While the pair had already discussed the idea of trying to form a league, the idea was kicked into higher gear when, while attending one of the meetings, it was learned that [[David Riley]] at [[Loyola Academy]] was already planning to form a league for the north suburban Catholic schools. Susan Rhoades, the coach at [[Wheaton Academy]] was given the job of organizing a southern league. When Rhoades was not moving fast enough to get a league started for the next year, she turned the job over to Johns and Egan. Discussion of having a single united league with southern and northern divisions was rebuffed by Riley, though both leagues chose to use parallel names. |
− | In late April, Marist hosted a meeting of the coaches from the eight interested schools. While Fenwick was not represented at the meeting, they joined as a founding member. Joliet | + | In late April, Marist hosted a meeting of the coaches from the eight interested schools. While [[Fenwick]] was not represented at the meeting, they joined as a founding member. [[Joliet Catholic]] joined the league in July, bringing the total to ten. After the conclusion of the first season, [[Mt. Carmel]] joined the league, with [[St. Francis]] joining the next autumn, before the league started year two, bringing league membership to twelve. Wheaton Academy eventually dropped out after their third year, and [[Brother Rice]] would join years later. The league's second year ended with eight of the twelve teams advancing from the regionals into the sectional tournament, which is believed to be a state record that still stands. This mark is made possible because of the extreme geographic spread of the league, in addition to representatives representing both of Illinois' two classes. |
At the time of the April, 1997 meeting, Egan had already been laid off from his job at Marist during a massive downsizing, and had already accepted a job at [[Maine South]]. He volunteered to stay on and act as an independent commissioner who would handle finances, scheduling, and question/award ordering. He did so for two years. | At the time of the April, 1997 meeting, Egan had already been laid off from his job at Marist during a massive downsizing, and had already accepted a job at [[Maine South]]. He volunteered to stay on and act as an independent commissioner who would handle finances, scheduling, and question/award ordering. He did so for two years. | ||
− | The league currently stands at ten members, following the 2011 defection of Timothy Christian and Wheaton Academy to the Metro Suburban League. | + | The league currently stands at ten members, following the 2011 defection of [[Timothy Christian]] and [[Wheaton Academy]] to the [[Metro Suburban League]]. |
− | == | + | ==Champions== |
− | + | {| border="0" cellspacing="3" cellpadding="3" | |
+ | |-style="background: #e3e3e3;" | ||
+ | !width="100"|Year||width="125"|Varsity Season||width="125"|Tournament||width="125"|F/S Season||width="125"|Tournament | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |2012||Fenwick||Fenwick||Providence||Providence | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |2013||Joliet Catholic||Fenwick||Fenwick||Fenwick | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |2014||Fenwick||Fenwick||Fenwick||Fenwick | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |2015||Providence||Providence||Fenwick||Providence | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |2016||Br. Rice||Br. Rice||Fenwick||Fenwick | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |2017||Fenwick||Fenwick||St. Laurence||St. Laurence | ||
+ | |} | ||
==IHSA State Place Winners== | ==IHSA State Place Winners== |
Latest revision as of 18:43, 22 May 2023
The South Metropolitan Scholastic Bowl League or "South-Metro" or "SMSBL" is a league of schools created specifically to support Scholastic Bowl. The teams comprising the League are found on Chicago's South Side as well as the south, southwest and near west suburbs. Most of the schools compete athletically in the Chicago Catholic League or East Suburban Catholic League. St. Francis is from the Suburban Catholic League. The League is a mix of both small and large schools. All of the schools are private religious schools.
Membership
School | Town | Head Coach (16-17) |
---|---|---|
Bishop McNamara Fightin' Irish | Kankakee | Joan Linneman |
Brother Rice Crusaders | Chicago | Michelle England |
Fenwick Friars | Oak Park | Colby Burnett |
Joliet Catholic Academy Hilltoppers | Joliet | Jake Ziesmer |
Marist RedHawks | Chicago | Jeff Nicholson |
Mt. Carmel Caravan | Chicago | Tom Eisenbraun |
Providence Celtics | New Lenox | Chris Tagler |
St. Francis Spartans | Wheaton | Jay Olaszek |
St. Laurence Vikings | Burbank | Carlin Glennon |
St. Rita Mustangs | Chicago | Andrew McIntosh |
History
The SMSBL can be traced to events in 1996. Jim Johns, a highly successful soccer coach had coached the Scholastic Bowl team at St. Joseph before coming to Marist for the 1996-97 school year. With no soccer coaching jobs, he set about starting a scholastic bowl team at Marist with the help of his fellow physics teacher, Tom Egan. The pair hosted a tournament for private schools, and began forming a network of coaches from across the southern part of the City of Chicago and the associated suburbs. Also that year, the pair had attended the February, 1997 Schobofest, an event sponsored by the IHSSBCA. While the pair had already discussed the idea of trying to form a league, the idea was kicked into higher gear when, while attending one of the meetings, it was learned that David Riley at Loyola Academy was already planning to form a league for the north suburban Catholic schools. Susan Rhoades, the coach at Wheaton Academy was given the job of organizing a southern league. When Rhoades was not moving fast enough to get a league started for the next year, she turned the job over to Johns and Egan. Discussion of having a single united league with southern and northern divisions was rebuffed by Riley, though both leagues chose to use parallel names.
In late April, Marist hosted a meeting of the coaches from the eight interested schools. While Fenwick was not represented at the meeting, they joined as a founding member. Joliet Catholic joined the league in July, bringing the total to ten. After the conclusion of the first season, Mt. Carmel joined the league, with St. Francis joining the next autumn, before the league started year two, bringing league membership to twelve. Wheaton Academy eventually dropped out after their third year, and Brother Rice would join years later. The league's second year ended with eight of the twelve teams advancing from the regionals into the sectional tournament, which is believed to be a state record that still stands. This mark is made possible because of the extreme geographic spread of the league, in addition to representatives representing both of Illinois' two classes.
At the time of the April, 1997 meeting, Egan had already been laid off from his job at Marist during a massive downsizing, and had already accepted a job at Maine South. He volunteered to stay on and act as an independent commissioner who would handle finances, scheduling, and question/award ordering. He did so for two years.
The league currently stands at ten members, following the 2011 defection of Timothy Christian and Wheaton Academy to the Metro Suburban League.
Champions
Year | Varsity Season | Tournament | F/S Season | Tournament |
---|---|---|---|---|
2012 | Fenwick | Fenwick | Providence | Providence |
2013 | Joliet Catholic | Fenwick | Fenwick | Fenwick |
2014 | Fenwick | Fenwick | Fenwick | Fenwick |
2015 | Providence | Providence | Fenwick | Providence |
2016 | Br. Rice | Br. Rice | Fenwick | Fenwick |
2017 | Fenwick | Fenwick | St. Laurence | St. Laurence |
IHSA State Place Winners
Place | School (year) |
---|---|
Fourth Place | Fenwick (2001, 04) |