Northwest Hockey Conference

The Northwest Hockey Conference is a former high school athletic conference that sponsored boys hockey in northwestern Wisconsin. Founded in 1976 and dissolved in 1989, the conference and most of its member schools were affiliated with the Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association.

History

50km
31miles
Location of original Northwest Hockey Conference members

The Northwest Hockey Conference was formed in 1976 by five high schools in northwestern Wisconsin that sponsored hockey: Eau Claire Memorial, Eau Claire North, Hayward, Rice Lake and River Falls.[1] All five members were part of athletic conferences that didn't sponsor the sport: the two Eau Claire schools were part of the Big Rivers Conference, Hayward and Rice Lake belonged to the Heart O'North Conference and River Falls were members of the Middle Border Conference. The conference grew to seven members in 1979 when two schools in Chippewa Falls joined: the public Chippewa Falls High School and the private McDonell Central Catholic.[2] Menomonie's entry into the Northwest Hockey Conference the next year brought the roster to eight schools.[3] It would remain that way for two years until four schools (Chippewa Falls, Eau Claire Memorial, Eau Claire North and Menomonie) left the conference to join its primary affiliation, the Big Rivers Conference, when it added boys hockey to its spate of offerings for athletic competition.[4] Three schools replaced the four outgoing members: Hudson and New Richmond of the Middle Border Conference and Altoona of the Cloverbelt Conference.[5] This brought temporary stability to the Northwest Hockey Conference before the larger Big Rivers Conference lured its more successful members away: first Hayward in 1986,[6] then Rice Lake in 1988[7] and finally Hudson and River Falls in 1989.[8] Despite the addition of Somerset in 1987,[9] the losses were too much for the loop to endure and the Northwest Hockey Conference ceased operations in 1989, with the four remaining members (Altoona, McDonell Central Catholic, New Richmond and Somerset) foregoing conference affiliation to compete as independents.[10]

Conference membership history

Final members

School Location Affiliation Mascot Colors Joined Left Primary Conference
Altoona Altoona, WI Public Railroaders     1982 1989 Cloverbelt
Hudson Hudson, WI Public Raiders     1982 1989 Middle Border
McDonell Central Catholic Chippewa Falls, WI Private (Catholic) Macks     1979 1989 Central Wisconsin Catholic
New Richmond New Richmond, WI Public Tigers     1982 1989 Middle Border
River Falls River Falls, WI Public Wildcats       1976 1989 Middle Border
Somerset Somerset, WI Public Spartans       1987 1989 Upper St. Croix Valley

Former members

School Location Affiliation Mascot Colors Joined Left Primary Conference
Chippewa Falls Chippewa Falls, WI Public Cardinals     1979 1982 Big Rivers
Eau Claire Memorial Eau Claire, WI Public Old Abes     1976 1982 Big Rivers
Eau Claire North Eau Claire, WI Public Huskies     1976 1982 Big Rivers
Hayward Hayward, WI Public Hurricanes     1976 1986 Heart O'North
Menomonie Menomonie, WI Public Indians     1980 1982 Big Rivers
Rice Lake Rice Lake, WI Public Warriors     1976 1988 Heart O'North

Membership timeline

List of conference champions

School Quantity Years
Rice Lake 8 1977, 1978, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1987, 1988
Hayward 3 1983, 1984, 1986
New Richmond 2 1983, 1989
Eau Claire North 1 1981
River Falls 1 1985
Altoona 0
Chippewa Falls 0
Eau Claire Memorial 0
Hudson 0
McDonell Central Catholic 0
Menomonie 0
Somerset 0

References

  1. ^ "North, Memorial in hockey league". Eau Claire Leader-Telegram. 23 December 1976. pp. 1C. Retrieved 17 January 2026.
  2. ^ Stetzer, Rob (12 December 1978). "History begins for Cardinal hockey squad". Chippewa Herald-Telegram. p. 9. Retrieved 17 January 2026.
  3. ^ "Indians expected to be in hockey race". Dunn County News. 17 December 1980. p. 24. Retrieved 17 January 2026.
  4. ^ Hanson, Dave (27 November 1982). "Card skaters to build around 10 lettermen". Chippewa Herald-Telegram. pp. A7. Retrieved 17 January 2026.
  5. ^ Rupnow, Chuck (30 November 1982). "Tough, remodeled NHC may be the strongest ever". Chippewa Herald-Telegram. pp. 2B. Retrieved 17 January 2026.
  6. ^ Handel, Craig (4 December 1986). "Newcomer Hayward to challenge in BRC hockey race". Eau Claire Leader-Telegram. pp. 4B. Retrieved 17 January 2026.
  7. ^ Bur, Dave (1 December 1988). "Rice Lake skaters join BRC chase". Eau Claire Leader-Telegram. pp. 2C. Retrieved 17 January 2026.
  8. ^ "WIAA looking at another new Big Rivers lineup". Eau Claire Leader-Telegram. 24 February 1988. pp. 1B. Retrieved 17 January 2026.
  9. ^ Bur, Dave (8 December 1987). "Rice Lake favored again". Eau Claire Leader-Telegram. pp. 9A. Retrieved 17 January 2026.
  10. ^ Bur, Dave (14 December 1989). "Area hockey a non-conference slate". Eau Claire Leader-Telegram. pp. 5C. Retrieved 17 January 2026.