Jump to content

Colorado High School Activities Association

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Colorado High School Activities Association
AbbreviationCHSAA
Formation1921
TypeNPO
Legal statusAssociation
PurposeAthletic/Educational
Headquarters14855 E. 2nd Avenue
Aurora, CO 80011
Region served
Colorado
Membership
367 high schools
Official language
English
Commissioner
Michael Krueger[1]
Board President
Ryan West[1]
Associate Commissioner
Bethany Brookens[1]
AffiliationsNational Federation of State High School Associations
Staff
23
Websitechsaanow.com
Remarks(303) 344-5050

The Colorado High School Activities Association (CHSAA) is a governing body for high school activities in Colorado. It was founded in 1921, and as of the 2022–23 school year has a membership of 367 full-time high schools, plus more than 50 middle and junior high schools, for a total of more than 400 schools. The Association hold championships for 29 different sports for both boys and girls, plus competitions in esports, music, sportsmanship, student council, and spirit.

The schools are organised into a number of 'leagues', such as the Arkansas Valley League.

Sports

[edit]

Source: CHSAA website

Fall

  • Boys cross country
  • Girls cross country
  • Field hockey
  • (American) Football
  • Boys golf
  • Gymnastics
  • Boys soccer
  • Softball
  • Spirit
  • Boys tennis
  • Unified bowling
  • Girls volleyball
  • Flag football[2]

Winter

  • Boys basketball
  • Girls basketball
  • Ice hockey
  • Skiing
  • Girls swimming & diving
  • Boys wrestling
  • Girls wrestling

Spring

  • Baseball
  • Girls golf
  • Boys lacrosse
  • Girls lacrosse
  • Girls soccer
  • Boys swimming & diving
  • Girls tennis
  • Boys track & field
  • Girls track & field
  • Boys volleyball

Activities

[edit]
  • Esports
  • Music
  • Speech and Debate
  • Sportsmanship
  • Student leadership

CHSAANow.com

[edit]

CHSAA's website covers the organization's athletics and activities. In addition to game coverage and features,[3] the site also produces weekly rankings[4] during the regular season, as well as All-State teams.[5]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "Staff Directory". chsaanow.com.
  2. ^ "Girls flag football powers to sanctioned status". chsaanow.com.
  3. ^ "Composite Schedule". chsaanow.com.
  4. ^ "Rankings". chsaanow.com.
  5. ^ "All-State Teams". chsaanow.com.
[edit]