St. Bede Bruins thinkin’ Lincoln

NCIC approves SBA to join Lincoln Division in 2010-11 school year

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The NCIC Lincoln has found a replacement school for the 2010-11 school year when longtime member Kewanee exits for the Three Rivers Athletic Conference and it didn’t have to look very far.

St. Bede Academy was approved to join the NCIC Lincoln in Wednesday’s conference meeting of league principals and athletic directors in Mendota, to compete in every sport but football. If approved by its board, the Bruins would continue to play football in the Big Rivers Conference, while leaving the Tri-County Conference in all other sports.

“We’ve been notified we’ve been accepted by the NCIC. We’re excited by that, but it’s all pending board approval,” St. Bede athletic director Bernie Moore said. “We see it as all positive.”

Moore anticipates the SBA Board to vote on the NCIC invitation in early June and said the Academy would be notifying the Tri-County Conference of its intentions.

St. Bede will become the first-ever private school to join the NCIC and join as the smallest school in the NCIC.

St. Bede presently offers girls’ and boys’ tennis, golf, track and basketball as well as cross country, volleyball, football, wrestling, baseball and softball.
Though St. Bede’s entry will still leave the Lincoln with five teams in football, one short of being eligible to have a conference playoff representative, PHS football coach/AD Dave Moore said it’s a good thing for the conference.

“They’re coming in for the right reasons,” Moore said Thursday morning. “They offer wrestling and tennis and everything else.”

Moore said the Lincoln could still add an additional school at any point to fill out it’s football schedule and give the conference seven members overall. He doesn’t know if St. Bede would consider coming over for football in the future.

The NCIC could face a complete overhaul in the very near future with the schools from the Reagan Division in discussion with someschools from the Western Sun to form a new conference. LaSalle-Peru athletic director Greg Sarver told Shaw News Services they had a positive meeting and should know “what direction we want to go” by the end of May.

The Yorkville board has already approved the move and Sycamore football coach Joe Ryan, formerly at Princeton, said he expects the other boards to follow suit. He believes it is a good move for all the schools, especially on the F/S levels. He said when coaches at the smaller schools in the Western Sun move underclassmen up to the varsity, they have a hard time competing with the larger schools.

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