Orange County football has the usual high number of tight league races happening this season. League rivalries are about as good as they’ve ever been.
Enjoy them now, because most of these league rivalries are very unlikely to be around next season.
They could continue as nonleague games, but it’s more fun when a playoff berth or a league championship is at stake.
Orange County high schools agreed this past spring to reassemble its football leagues and conferences after this season. With the exception of the Trinity League teams, all of the Orange County 11-player football teams will placed into one basket. CalPreps’ ratings will be used to place teams into leagues. This is a football-only plan. League and conference memberships will be different for other sports.
If the 2023 football season was over, what would the leagues look like in 2024?
Let’s do this … but first a couple of items to know …
Again, the Trinity League is excluded. The four football teams with the top ratings by CalPreps will be in one league, then there will be 10 six-team leagues, and the bottom five teams in one league.
The league names have not been finalized, so the working titles are Orange County Football Conference A (OCFC A) and Orange County Football Conference B (OCFC B),etc. For this exercise, we’re going with “leagues.”
The previous two years of ratings will be used to place teams into leagues, weighted at 65 percent for the 2023 season and 35 percent weighted for the 2022 season.
Going into this week’s games, with rounded-off ratings totals, here are what the leagues would look like in 2024 (league members listed in alphabetical order):
League A: Edison, Los Alamitos, Mission Viejo, San Clemente.
League B: Corona del Mar, Newport Harbor, San Juan Hills, Tesoro, Villa Park, Yorba Linda.
League C: Capistrano Valley, Cypress, El Modena, Trabuco Hills, Tustin, Western.
League D: El Dorado, Foothill, Huntington Beach, La Habra, Laguna Beach, Laguna Hills.
League E: Crean Lutheran, Dana Hills, Fountain Valley, Irvine, Northwood, Orange.
League F: Aliso Niguel, Canyon, El Toro, Santa Ana, St. Margaret’s, Troy.
League G: Brea Olinda, Esperanza, Kennedy, Segerstrom, Sonora, Sunny Hills.
League H: Beckman, Fullerton, Garden Grove, Marina, Valencia, Westminster.
League I: Buena Park, Calvary Chapel, Pacifica, Portola, University, Woodbridge.
League J: Estancia; Katella, Los Amigos, Ocean View, Rancho Alamitos, Santa Ana Valley.
League K: Anaheim, Bolsa Grande, Costa Mesa, La Quinta, Loara, Santiago.
League L: Century, Godinez Magnolia, Saddleback, Savanna.
The margins could be tight when teams are placed into football leagues for the 2024 season. Through eight games of this season, using the Calpreps ratings, Irvine’s rating is 4.79 and Aliso Niguel’s is 4.78. So if the 2023 season was over now, Irvine would be the bottom team in League E and Aliso Niguel would be the top team in League F.
NOTES
CIF-SS football playoff brackets will be released Oct. 29 at 10 a.m. The 8-man football playoff brackets will be released Oct. 29 at 1 p.m. …
Yes, Orange County has 8-man football. Sage Hill, in Newport Beach, is in the Prep League and is 4-2 overall and 0-1 in league and averages 48 points a game. Vista Meridian, in Santa Ana, plays a freelance schedule and is 1-4. …
The CIF-SS Division 1 football championship game will be played at the Coliseum on Nov. 24. The first CIF championship football game played at the Coliseum was in 1923 when Long Beach Poly defeated Glendale 15-8. The most recent CIF final at the Coliseum was in 1997 when Long Beach Poly beat Mater Dei 28-25. …
It looks like the Pacific Coast Conference schools will present a proposal at Monday’s releaguing meeting that would exclude Rosary from its group. This past spring Orange County schools included Rosary in the Pacific Coast group in the approved releaguing plan for all sports outside of football. The Freeway League, which would be broken up in the passed proposal, has indicated that it would present a proposal that would keep its membership intact. …
Holly Barker of Trabuco Hills and Evan Noonan of Dana Hills, so far, are making it easy to select the Orange County boys and girls cross country athletes of the year by winning or finishing high in just about every race they enter. Barker won last weekend’s Orange County Championships and earlier finished first in the Central Park Invitational. Noonan finished first in the Orange County Championships, the Woodbridge Classic and was third in the Clovis Invitational. …
The CIF-SS Division 1 girls volleyball playoffs started Wednesday. Mater Dei swept Palos Verdes in three sets (the first was a tough one, 27-25), Los Alamitos lost to Mira Costa in three sets and Huntington Beach swept Alemany (and another tough first set there, with the Oilers winning 28-26). Division 1 pool play resumes Tuesday with Los Alamitos at Huntington Beach. Huntington Beach beat Los Alamitos in their two Surf League matches. …
Newport Harbor’s girls flag football team had its closest win of the season Wednesday, a 14-12 victory over Edison. Newport Harbor is 21-1, with the loss to Woodbridge, which Newport Harbor defeated a couple of weeks later.
Related Articles
High school football live updates: Thursday’s games for Week 9 in Southern California
Fryer on Football: Previews and predictions for Week 9’s other top games
Video: Steve Fryer and Dan Albano predict the winners of Week 9’s top football games
Mater Dei defensive lineman Kaho Tuihalamaka, an Arizona commit, transferred to Leuzinger
High school football: Orange County stat leaders through Oct. 14