Metro Alliance Explained

Metro Alliance
Classification:MSHSL
Founded:1997
Folded:2005
Members:8

The Metro Alliance was a Minnesota State High School League-sanctioned athletics conference that existed from 1997 to 2005. The conference was formed for the 1997-98 school year by seven schools. The majority of the schools came from the Tri-Metro Conference and included Brooklyn Center High School, Mahtomedi High School, Mound Westonka High School, Orono High School, and St. Anthony Village High School.[1] Columbia Heights High School and Fridley High School, the other two founding members of the conference, left the North Suburban Conference to join.[2] Farmington High School declined an invitation to be an eighth founding member;[3] however, Benilde-St. Margaret's ultimately joined the conference as final school.[4]

The break-up of the short-lived conference began soon after it formed. Mahtomedi left the Metro Alliance to join the new Classic Suburban Conference at the end of the 2000-01 school year.[5] When the conference broke up in 2005, Fridley and Benilde-St. Margaret's joined the North Suburban Conference.[6] St. Anthony and Brooklyn Center returned to the Tri-Metro after being placed by the Minnesota State High School League.[7]

Membership history

Rivalries

Notable athletes

References

  1. "New seven-team Metro Alliance to begin play in fall." St. Paul Pioneer Press, January 28, 1997, pg. 7D
  2. "New seven-team..."
  3. "New seven-team..."
  4. "Boys' Basketball History." Benilde-St. Margaret's. Web site: Boys' Basketball History . 2008-06-12 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080506010643/http://www.bsm-online.org/boysbbhistory.aspx . 2008-05-06 .
  5. Leighton, Tim. "It's bye-week for 6 SPS schools," St. Paul Pioneer Press, February 3, 2000, pg. 1D
  6. Haggstrom, Ron. "Season Preview: Metro Alliance." Minneapolis Star-Tribune, September 1, 2004.
  7. "Teams Headed for New Homes." Minneapolis Star-Tribune, April 27, 2005.
  8. La Vaque, David. "Revived Highway 65." Minneapolis Star-Tribune, September 28, 2005.