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Oahu Interscholastic Association

Coordinates: 21°17′31″N 157°49′19″W / 21.2919°N 157.8220°W / 21.2919; -157.8220
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Oahu Interscholastic Association
Formation1940 (1940)
TypeAthletic conference
Location
Coordinates21°17′31″N 157°49′19″W / 21.2919°N 157.8220°W / 21.2919; -157.8220
Membership24
President
John Brummel (Mililani)[1]
AffiliationsHawaii High School Athletic Association
Websitewww.oiasports.com

The Oahu Interscholastic Association (OIA) is an athletic conference composed of all public secondary schools on the island of Oahu, Hawaii, U.S.A. The OIA was first founded in 1940 as the Rural Oahu Interscholastic Association (ROIA). The five founding schools were Castle High School, Kahuku High School, Leilehua High School, Waialua High & Intermediate School and Waipahu High School. The OIA originally comprised all the rural schools on Oahu, which were all of the schools that were not situated in the main city of Honolulu. This changed however in 1970 with the addition of the five former public school members of the Interscholastic League of HonoluluFarrington High School, Kaimuki High School, McKinley High School, Roosevelt High School and Kalani High School. After the public Honolulu schools joined, the league changed its identity from the ROIA to simply OIA to reflect the integration of all of the public high schools on the island.

The OIA now has 24 member schools who compete in 19 different junior varsity and varsity level sports. The league produces a number of quality athletic teams in a number of sports, especially football. The OIA concurs with the Hawaii Board of Education and Hawaii Department of Education in recognizing athletics as an integral part of the educational program of the high school and holds its athletes to a number of academic and behavioral standards.

Mission statement

The mission of the OIA is to promote unity and cooperation amongst the member schools in the establishment and administration of policies and regulations for implementing an interscholastic athletic program. The association shall stress educational and cultural values, promote skills in competitive activities and foster sportsmanship and mutual respect.[2]

Members

Institution Nickname Location Football Division Enrollment Home Field (Football) Logo
Aiea High School Na Alii Aiea Division 2 1280 Aiea Field
Anuenue School Na Koa Palolo None 378 None
Campbell High School Sabers Ewa Beach Open Division 2890 Campbell Stadium
Castle High School Knights Kaneohe Division 1 1947 Castle Stadium
Farrington High School Governors Kalihi Open Division 2579 Edward "Skippa" Diaz Stadium
Hakipuu Learning Center Kaneohe None 94[3] None
Halau Ku Mana Manoa None 99 None
Halau Lokahi Kapalama None 214 None
HI Center for the Deaf and Blind Waikiki None 72 None
Kahuku High School Red Raiders Kahuku Open Division 1879 Carleton Weimer Field
Kailua High School Surfriders Kailua Division 1 972 Kailua Stadium
Kaimuki High School Bulldogs Kaimuki Division 2 1297 Ticky Vasconcellos Stadium
Kaiser High School Cougars Hawaii Kai Division 2 1025 Kaiser Stadium
Kalaheo High School Mustangs Kailua Division 2 1060 Kailua Stadium
Kalani High School Falcons Kahala Division 2 1161 Kaiser Stadium
Kapolei High School Hurricanes Kapolei Open Division 2333 Kapolei Stadium
Samuel M. Kamakau Laboratory Kailua None 115 None
Leilehua High School Mules Wahiawa Division 1 1878 Hugh Yoshida Stadium
McKinley High School Tigers Honolulu Division 2 1945 Ticky Vasconcellos Stadium
Mililani High School Trojans Mililani Open Division 2421 John Kauinana Stadium
Moanalua High School Na Menehune Moanalua Division 1 2016 Moanalua Stadium
Myron B. Thompson Academy Honolulu None 552 None
Nanakuli High School Golden Hawks Nanakuli Division 2 1303 Nanakuli Field
Pearl City High School Chargers Pearl City Division 2 1980 Edwin Neves Stadium
Radford High School Rams Salt Lake Division 1 1343 John Velasco Stadium
Roosevelt High School Rough Riders Honolulu Division 2 1672 Ticky Vasconcellos Stadium
Waialua High School Bulldogs Waialua Division 2 677 Toshi Nakasone Field
Waianae High School Seariders Waianae Open Division 2068 Raymond Torii Stadium
Waipahu High School Marauders Waipahu Division 1 2544 Waipahu Stadium

Baseball

The OIA divides its baseball teams into 3 conferences spanning 2 divisions: OIA Division 1 East, Division 1 East, and Division 2 (combined East-West).

Football

Beginning in 2018, the OIA decided to divide its football teams into 3 divisions/conferences: the OIA Open Division , OIA D1, and OIA D2. Teams are realigned every 2 years based on performance of both the varsity and junior varsity.

State Champions and Runners-up

See: Oahu Prep Bowl

Division I

Teams from the Oahu Interscholastic Association have competed in every Division I State Championship game since the creation of the championship in 1999. The OIA lost the first ever Division I state championship game in 1999 with the St. Louis Crusaders beating the Kahuku Red Raiders 19–0. In total, the OIA is 8–6 in the Division I State Championship.

Kahuku High School holds the current record for the most appearances (8) and wins (6) in the OIA and the state for the Division I title. Kahuku is also the current Division I champion after beating Punahou School 42–20 on November 23, 2012.

Division II

Teams from the OIA have competed in the Division II State Championship game 6 of the 10 times it was held from 2003–2012. The OIA has won only 2 (in 2003 and 2004).

Aiea High School and Campbell High School are the only 2 OIA schools to have won the HHSAA Division II State Championship. Radford High School holds the record for most appearances by the OIA with 2 (2005 and 2008). Iolani School currently holds the state record for most Division II State Championships with 7 wins of 8 appearances (including a 6-game winning streak since 2007).

Football Rivalries

Teams Rivalry Name/Trophy Last Meeting
Campbell Sabers Waipahu Marauders The Cane Knife September 27, 2013 35–14 Campbell
Campbell Sabers Kapolei Hurricanes Battle of the Ewa Plains September 13, 2019 45–13 Campbell
Castle Knights Kailua Surfriders The Hammer October 5, 2019 26–21 Kailua
Kaimuki Bulldogs Kalani Falcons The Calabash Bowl October 11, 2019 49–18 Kaimuki
Kaimuki Bulldogs McKinley Tigers October 4, 2019 56–7 Kaimuki
Kalani Falcons Kaiser Cougars September 7, 2019 34–10 Kaiser
Leilehua Mules Radford Rams The Spirit of Freedom Bowl October 11, 2019 54–6 Leilehua
Leilehua Mules Mililani Trojans November 11, 2016 51–35 Mililani
Punahou Buffanblu Roosevelt Rough Riders The Paint Brush August 12, 2011 38–0 Punahou
Kahuku Red Raiders Farrington Governors October 12, 2019 28–6 Kahuku
Kahuku Red Raiders St. Louis Crusaders November 29, 2019 45–6 St. Louis
Kahuku Red Raiders Waianae Seariders The Crunch Bowl October 24, 2019 32–0 Kahuku
Farrington Governors Waianae Seariders September 27, 2019 19–14 Farrington
Farrington Governors Kamehameha-Kapalama Warriors September 21, 2019 28–25 Kamehameha
Farrington Governors McKinley Tigers September 14, 2013 25–13 Farrington
Waianae Seariders St. Louis Crusaders October 11, 2019 56–26 St. Louis

OIA Football Playoffs Bracket 2009

RED Division

Wild Card
@ Higher Seed
Quarterfinal
@ Higher Seed
Semifinal
@Aloha Stadium
Championship
@ Aloha Stadium
W1 Leilehua 29
E4 Kailua 21 E4 Kailua 13
W5 Campbell 0 W1 Leilehua 9
E2 Farrington 7
E2 Farrington 26
W3 Kapolei 7
W1 Leilehua 20
E1 Kahuku 24
W2 Waianae 16
W4 Mililani 47 E3 Castle 23
E5 Kaimuki 35 E3 Castle 14
E1 Kahuku 19
E1 Kahuku 35
W4 Mililani 27


3rd Place @ Kaiser HS
   
E2 Farrington 42
E3 Castle 26
  • RED-Champ: KAHUKU Red Raiders
  • 2nd Place: LEILEHUA Mules
  • 3rd Place:FARRINGTON Governors

Note: Will advance to play for HHSAA DI championship playoff. see HHSAA DI football championship bracket.

* Denotes Overtime Game

WHITE Division

Semifinal Championship
@ Aloha Stadium
      
1 Moanalua 21
4 Kalaheo 20
Moanalua 21
Aiea 7
3 Aiea 7
2 Radford 0
  • WHITE-Champ: MOANALUA Menehunes
  • 2nd Place:AIEA Na Ali'i

Note:

Will advance to play for HHSAA DII championship playoffs. see HHSAA DII football championship bracket.

OIA Football Playoffs Bracket 2010

RED Division

Wild Card
@ Higher Seed
Quarterfinal
@ Higher Seed
Semifinal
@Aloha Stadium
Championship
@ Aloha Stadium
W1 Mililani 21
E4 Farrington 10 E4 Farrington 14
W5 Aiea 0 W1 Mililani 38
W3 Waianae 28
E2 Kailua 7
W3 Waianae 49
W1 Mililani 0
E1 Kahuku 0 [FORFEIT]
W2 Leilehua 26
W4 Radford 29 E3 Castle 13
E5 Moanalua 22 W2 Leilehua 16
E1 Kahuku 46
E1 Kahuku 52
W4 Radford 7


2nd/3rd Place @ Leilehua HS
   
W2 Leilehua 28
W3 Waianae 20
  • RED-Champ: Mililani
  • 2nd Place: Leilehua
  • 3rd Place: Waianae

Note:

Will advance to play for HHSAA DI championship playoff. see HHSAA DI football championship bracket.
* Denotes Overtime Game

WHITE Division

Semifinal Championship
@ Aloha Stadium
      
1 Kaimuki 14
4 Pearl City 13
Kaimuki 48
Kalaheo 12
3 Kalaheo 43
2 Waipahu 28
  • WHITE-Champ: Kaimuki
  • 2nd Place: Kalaheo
Note:Will advance to play for HHSAA DII championship playoffs. see HHSAA DII football championship bracket.

OIA Football Playoffs Bracket 2011 to Present

OIA Football Playoff Brackets for seasons 2011 to present can be found in their respective OIA season pages.

References

  1. ^ "OIA Directors". Oahu Interscholastic Association. Retrieved February 7, 2012.
  2. ^ "About the OIA: Mission Statement". Oahu Interscholastic Association. Retrieved January 31, 2012.
  3. ^ "Hakipu'u Learning Center - A Public Charter School". High-Schools.com. Retrieved February 7, 2012.

OIA Sports

Baseball | Basketball (boys and girls) | Bowling | Cheerleading | Cross Country | Football | Golf | Judo | Paddling | Riflery | Soccer (boys and girls) | Softball | Soft Tennis | Swimming | Tennis | Track and Field | Volleyball (boys and girls) | Water Polo | Wrestling |