Capital Area Activities Conference

High school sports league in Michigan, US

Capital Area Activities Conference
Founded2003
No. of teams21
Country United States
Official websitehttp://caacsports.org/

The Capital Area Activities Conference (Or CAAC) is a high school sports league located in Central Michigan. It is a member of the Michigan High School Athletic Association (MHSAA). There are currently 21 member schools in the conference that come from the counties of Clinton, Eaton, Ingham, Ionia, and Livingston. The Capital Area Activities Conference Logo was designed by Lansing Catholic 2003 graduate Raymond B. Corey.

Member schools

The CAAC currently has 21 member schools:[1]

Team Class Enrollment Joined City County Previous Conference
Blue Division
DeWitt Panthers A 944 2003 DeWitt Clinton Ingham County League
East Lansing Trojans A 1173 2003 East Lansing Ingham Capital Area Conference
Grand Ledge Comets A 1642 2003 Grand Ledge Eaton Capital Area Conference
Holt Rams A 1455 2003 Delhi Township Ingham Capital Area Conference
Lansing Everett Vikings A 1143 2003 Lansing Ingham Capital Area Conference
Lansing Waverly Warriors A 961 2003 Delta Township Eaton Capital Area Conference
Okemos Wolves A 1489 2003 Meridian Township Ingham Capital Circuit League
Red Division
Fowlerville Gladiators B 774 2003 Fowlerville Livingston Ingham County League
Haslett Vikings B 765 2003 Meridian Township Ingham Ingham County League
Lansing Eastern Quakers A 905 2003 Lansing Ingham Capital Area Conference
Mason Bulldogs A 958 2003 Mason Ingham Capital Circuit League
St. Johns Redwings B 782 2005 St. Johns Clinton Independent
Williamston Hornets B 604 2003 Williamston Ingham Ingham County League
White Division
Charlotte Orioles B 638 2003, 2017 Charlotte Eaton Independent
Eaton Rapids Greyhounds B 619 2003 Eaton Rapids Eaton Capital Circuit League
Ionia Bulldogs B 733 2003 Ionia Ionia Mid-Michigan Athletic Conference
Lansing Catholic Cougars B 394 2003 Lansing Ingham Capital Circuit League
Lansing Sexton J-Dubbs B 651 2003 Lansing Ingham Capital Area Conference
Olivet Eagles B 395 2023 Olivet Eaton Greater Lansing Athletic Conference
Lakewood Vikings B 472 2003, 2023 Lake Odessa Ionia Greater Lansing Athletic Conference
Portland Raiders B 611 2007 Portland Ionia Mid-Michigan Athletic Conference - B
  • Note: The class and population size are from the 2025-26 MHSAA listings

Former members

School City County Joined Previous Conference Departed Successive Conference
Corunna Cavaliers Corunna Shiawasse 2007 Mid-Michigan B 2014 Genesee Area Conference
Jackson Vikings Jackson Jackson 2003 Capital Area Conference 2018 Southeastern Conference
Jackson Lumen Christi Titans Summit Township Jackson 2012 Southern Michigan Athletic Conference 2014 Interstate 8 Athletic Conference
Jackson Northwest Mounties Jackson Jackson 2003 Capital Circuit League 2014 Interstate 8 Athletic Conference
Owosso Trojans Owosso Shiawasse 2007 Big Nine Conference 2017 Flint Metro League
Parma Western Panthers Parma Jackson 2012 Southern Michigan Athletic Conference 2014 Interstate 8 Athletic Conference
Perry Ramblers Perry Shiawasse 2007 Mid-Michigan B 2012 Genesee Area Conference
Stockbridge Panthers Stockbridge Ingham 2012 Southern Michigan 2014 Greater Lansing Athletic Conference

Membership timeline

Sports

The CAAC sponsor many sports for high school athletes during the fall, winter, and spring seasons.[2]

Fall:

  • Cross Country (Boys & Girls)
  • Football
  • Golf (Girls)
  • Soccer (Boys)
  • Swimming & Diving (Girls)
  • Tennis (Boys)
  • Volleyball

Winter:

  • Basketball (Boys & Girls)
  • Bowling (Boys & Girls)
  • Competitive Cheer
  • Gymnastics
  • Swimming & Diving (Boys)
  • Wrestling

Spring:

  • Baseball
  • Golf (Boys)
  • Lacrosse (Boys & Girls)
  • Soccer (Girls)
  • Softball
  • Tennis (Girls)
  • Track & Field (Boys & Girls)

History

The CAAC was created in 2003, consisting of 21 schools coming from the now defunct leagues of the Capital Area Conference, the Capital Circuit League, the Ingham County League, and the Mid-Michigan Athletic Conference. From 2003 to 2007 the conference was made up of three divisions (I, II, III): Division I was made up of eight schools, Division II was made up of seven schools, and Division III was made up of six schools. At the start of the 2007–08 school year, the league switched from Roman numeral-based divisions, to color-based divisions (Blue, Gold, Red, and White), due to new schools joining the league.

The 2012–13 season was when the league reached its peak number of schools in the league; the league consisted of 27 schools with the same Blue, Gold, Red, White Divisions. After two years of competition of 27 schools, the league went through major re-alignment after seven schools departed the league. Lakewood and Stockbridge left the CAAC, and created a new conference with five other Lansing area schools, called the Greater Lansing Athletic Conference (GLAC). Jackson area schools: Jackson Northwest, Parma Western, Jackson Lumen Christi, plus Charlotte left the conference and created the Interstate Eight Conference. Corunna made the decision to move east and join the Flint-based Genesee Area Conference (GAC). The CAAC reduced to three divisions and eliminated the Gold Division. Currently the Blue Division has seven schools, the Red has six, and the White has eight.[3] The 2017–18 school year, the CAAC experienced a minor change. Owosso departed the league and joined the Flint Metro League. Former league member Charlotte, which was one of the seven schools that departed the league a few years prior, joined the CAAC once again, replacing Owosso in the Red Division.

The 2018–19 school year, the CAAC went through re-alignment once again. DeWitt and Lansing Waverly joined the Blue, with East Lansing, Grand Ledge, Holt, Lansing Everett, and Okemos. In the Red, Fowlerville, Lansing Eastern and Williamston joined Haslett, Mason, and St. Johns. Charlotte and Lansing Sexton moved to the White with Eaton Rapids, Ionia, Lansing Catholic, and Portland. Jackson High School departed the league and joined the Ann Arbor based Southeastern Conference (SEC). In 2023 Lakewood rejoined the conference returning to the White Division along with Olivet, joining for the first time. Both schools came from the GLAC.

Rainbow Divisions

Bowling
Blue White
East Lansing Charlotte
DeWitt Eaton Rapids
Fowlerville Ionia
Grand Ledge Lakewood
Haslett Lansing Catholic
Holt Lansing United (Eastern, Everett, Sexton)
Mason Olivet
Okemos (Boys only) Portland
Competitive Cheer
Red White
DeWitt Charlotte
Grand Ledge Eaton Rapids
Holt Fowlerville
Lansing Waverly Lakewood
Mason Lansing Catholic
Okemos Portland
St. Johns Williamston
Gymnastics
One Division
East Lansing (co-op with DeWitt)
Fowlerville (co-op with Byron, Perry & Pinckney)
Grand Ledge
Haslett (co-op with Bath, St. Johns & Williamston)
Holt (co-op with Dansville & Mason)
Lacrosse
One Division
Grand Ledge
DeWitt
Lansing Waverly (co-op with Lansing Catholic)
Haslett
East Lansing
Holt
Okemos
St. Johns (co-op with Ovid-Elsie)
Swimming and Diving
Blue Red
DeWitt Charlotte
East Lansing Eaton Rapids
Grand Ledge Ionia
Haslett Lansing United (Eastern, Everett, Sexton)
Holt Lansing Waverly (co-op with Lansing Catholic)
Mason Williamston (co-op with Lansing Christian)
Okemos
St. Johns

References

  1. ^ "CAAC – CAAC Schools". caacsports.org. Retrieved August 2, 2024.
  2. ^ "CAAC". caacsports.org. Retrieved December 20, 2015.
  3. ^ "Realignment coming to CAAC". www.highschoolsportsscene.com. Retrieved December 20, 2015.
  • CAAC official website
  • https://caacsports.org/fall-sports/football/
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