Kentucky High School Athletic Association Article Index for
Kentucky
Website Links For
Kentucky
 

Information About

Kentucky High School Athletic Association





The KHSAA governs competitions for both public and private schools throughout the state, plus two federally administered schools— Fort Campbell and Fort Knox High Schools, located on the U.S. Army bases of the same names. Fort Campbell High is actually located on the Tennessee side of the base, which straddles the state border, but the United States Department Of Defense organizes the schools it runs on the two bases under a single district.

Not all secondary schools in Kentucky participate in the KHSAA. About two dozen small, private religious schools are sanctioned by the Kentucky Christian Athletic Association. Kentucky Christian Athletic Association web site

Whether public, private, or federally administered, all member schools compete for state championships on an equal basis. Unlike some other states' school athletic governing bodies, the KHSAA governs only athletics; it does not govern band, academic competitions, or other extracurricular activities, all of which are governed by separate bodies. Also, unlike bodies in a growing number of states, the KHSAA does not govern Cheerleading competition, which is organized by the Kentucky Association of Pep Organization Sponsors .


FOOTBALL

2007 Season Preview
There has been a re-alignment for the 2007 season with 6 classes instead of 4.


6A Rankings:


6A


5A


4A



CLASSIFICATION

Unlike the situation in most states, the default in Kentucky is to conduct a single state championship for all schools, with no classification of schools by enrollment.123456789 Most notably, Kentucky does not divide schools into classes in basketball,10 with Delaware being the only other remaining state with a single state basketball championship for each sex. Of the 13 sports in which the KHSAA sanctions state championships, only three are organized in multiple classes—cross-country, football, and track. As of the 2007-08 school year, the classification rules for the three sports which are divided are:
  • Cross-country11 and track12

  • ---Class A — 570 or fewer students

  • ---Class AA — 571-950 students

  • ---Class AAA — More than 950 students

  • Football1314

  • ---Class 6A — The 36 largest schools in the state, based on average enrollment (see below) ''of boys only'', among schools that sponsor the sport.

  • ---Class 5A, 4A, 3A, 2A — Each with 36 schools, in decreasing order of enrollment

  • ---Class A — All remaining schools that sponsor football after the other classes are filled

  • The 2007-08 school year is the first for a six-class alignment in football; previously, a four-class system had been used.15


Schools were allowed to petition the KHSAA for reclassification before the football realignment became final. Eleven schools requested that the KHSAA place them in a higher class than their enrollment warranted; six of these requests were approved. No school was allowed to play in a lower class, although the KHSAA accepted one school's request to adjust its enrollment downward.16 As a result of these requests, the final number of schools in each classification is:
  • Class 6A — 36 schoolsA new Harlan County High School is scheduled to open in 2008-09. It has already been classified as a 6A school, which will bring the number of schools in the class to 37 for that school year.

  • Class 5A — 37 schools

  • Class 4A — 35 schools

  • Class 3A — 39 schools James A. Cawood High School , classified as 3A, is one of the three schools that will close once the new Harlan County High opens.

  • Class 2A — 33 schools

  • Class A — 41 schoolsCumberland and Evarts High Schools, the other two schools that will merge into Harlan County High, are in this class.


In all three sports, classification is based on a four-year average enrollment in grades 9 through 12. Single-sex schools are deemed to have double their actual average enrollment for cross-country and track; prior to the 2007 realignment, football also used this rule. In cross-country and track, the KHSAA rule is to divide the classes so that 40% of all schools that sponsor the sport are in Class A and 30% are in both Class AA and AAA.


ELIGIBILITY CONSIDERATIONS

As is standard for high school sports in the U.S., students are limited to four consecutive years of eligibility (grades 9-12), whether or not they participate in any sports during one or more of those years. In football and soccer, students are not allowed to play on the varsity until they are actually enrolled in the ninth grade, and wrestlers cannot compete until they have entered the seventh grade.17 In other sports, there is no grade restriction; for example, highly-touted basketball prospect O.J. Mayo first played on a high school varsity team as a seventh-grader at Rose Hill Christian School in Ashland , and current PGA Tour golfer JB Holmes first played on the golf team of Taylor County High School in Campbellsville while in the third grade.18 The eligibility "clock" for such students does not start until they enter ninth grade.

Like all U.S. jurisdictions, Kentucky has an upper age limit for high school athletic participation. The KHSAA rule is that students must be under age 19 as of the July 31 preceding the current academic year. This particular rule is actually codified in Kentucky Revised Statutes § 156.270(2)(e).19

A student who is repeating a grade during high school for any reason is not allowed to compete during his or her second year at that grade level.

Homeschoolers are prohibited from participating in any KHSAA-sanctioned activities.


NOTES AND REFERENCES




EXTERNAL LINKS