
A Sudden Split from State Competition (Image Credits: Pixabay)
Las Vegas – Thirty public high schools in the Clark County School District shocked the Nevada sports community this month by announcing their football teams would compete as independents for at least the next two seasons.[1][2] The decision effectively removes these programs from contention for state titles in the Open Division, Class 5A, and Class 4A, leaving only a handful of private and charter schools from Southern Nevada eligible.[3] Principals cited frustrations with an uneven playing field, but the district’s vague responses have fueled demands for clearer explanations.
A Sudden Split from State Competition
The principals from the affected schools formally notified the Nevada Interscholastic Activities Association on March 18, 2026, invoking a rule that allows independent status during realignment cycles.[2] This move means CCSD football programs will schedule their own regular-season games but forfeit postseason opportunities, including league, regional, and state championships.[3] The NIAA confirmed the schools must still follow its bylaws, such as a nine-game schedule limit, though no official titles will be at stake.
Clark County School Board Trustee Linda Cavazos praised the principals for prioritizing the interests of 4A and 5A players.[2] Yet the district’s communications team offered only a brief statement: Schools would collaborate on schedules, post them publicly, and provide updates to communities.[1] Coaches and several principals, including those on the NIAA Board of Control, declined interview requests from local media.
Frustrations Boiling Over Bishop Gorman and Charters
At the heart of the exodus lies resentment toward Bishop Gorman, the Catholic powerhouse that claimed 16 of the last 17 top-division state titles.[1] The private school routinely ranks among the nation’s elite, often delivering lopsided championship victories. Liberty High School’s 2019 upset over Gorman stands as a rare public-school highlight, but recent years brought blowouts.[1]
Liberty co-athletic director and football coach Rich Muraco highlighted deeper issues beyond one rival. “It’s not just a Gorman issue,” he said. “The Mater East, the Sloan Canyons, the SLAMs. They have an unfair advantage of being able to get kids in there.”[1] Public schools face stricter zone and enrollment rules, while charters and privates draw talent more freely. Even Northern Nevada teams like Spanish Springs and McQueen claimed lower-division crowns last year, underscoring broader competitive gaps.[1]
Secret Meetings and Legal Shadows
The path to independence involved closed-door principal gatherings inaccessible to the public or press, raising transparency concerns.[1] Earlier NIAA realignment efforts, including a proposed 10-team Open Division to curb Gorman’s out-of-state games, drew legal threats from the Archdiocese of Las Vegas. Officials argued the board violated bylaws by bypassing committee processes.[2]
CCSD principals responded with a unified letter decrying the NIAA’s yielding to “legal bullying tactics.” The district’s HRM points system for classifications also drew fire as overly complex and error-prone, with multiple revisions last year.[2] These tensions culminated in the mass opt-out, but CCSD leadership remained tight-lipped on specifics.
Impacts on Students and Calls for Reform
Hundreds of CCSD athletes now face seasons without championship stakes, prompting questions about lost opportunities. Principals plan to meet soon to finalize structures, with coaches handling schedules.[2] Critics argue smaller fixes could suffice, such as easing public-school recruitment, expanding Gov. Joe Lombardo’s open enrollment push, or tweaking transfer rules between charters and publics.
- Bishop Gorman’s national profile relies on frequent out-of-state matchups, unavailable to most CCSD teams.
- Charter schools like Sloan Canyon leverage flexible admissions to build rosters.
- Public enrollment zones limit talent pools for traditional neighborhood schools.
- NIAA’s HRM system has led to classification disputes and forfeits.
- Recent Northern Nevada wins highlight that dominance isn’t solely Southern private.
Superintendent Jhone Ebert, who champions community input for a “Destination District,” faces pressure to host forums on these reforms.[1]
Key Takeaways
- CCSD’s independent move denies state titles to public-school players for two years.
- Unequal rules favor privates and charters, per coaches like Rich Muraco.
- District silence and closed meetings erode public trust.
This football rift exposes longstanding inequities in Nevada high school sports. While independence offers short-term relief, lasting solutions demand open dialogue and rule changes to restore fair competition. What do you think about the CCSD split? Tell us in the comments.