Thanks hawkeye171, I will check it out. I think FMCTC carries many of the finals games, but maybe only the Harlan/Waukee semifinal. If I could pick it up I would certainly listen to the WDV/Ankeny game.
I used to wrestle and run track against the kids from Kuemper. They were too big of a school for us to play in football, basketball, etc. Carroll was also a little out of the way, but not too far.
We were 1-A (I went to West Monona) some years we were 2-A. We were always on the borderline of school size. Depending on the size of the freshman class coming in/senior class going out.
Railbird, I agree with you about the California talent versus the Iowa talent. However, it really gets down the point that all the schools here in SoCal are so much bigger than the schools in Iowa. I would doubt it if there are more than 20 teams in all of SoCal that were as small as the high school I went to in Iowa. In Iowa, there were litterally hundreds of schools as small as my high school. Making a comparison is extremely difficult.
One thing though, the football crowds out here are very comparable to the Iowa crowds when it comes to football. The SoCal crowds are big and into it (not unlike most high schools in Iowa). One thing that SoCal can't touch is the enthusiam for basketball and wrestling. My town (Onawa) had less than 3,000 people in it and a gym that held probably 1,500 people. If you wanted to see a high school basketball game on a friday night you had to show up early or you might not get in. Here, schools that are as big as the biggest schools in Iowa sometimes have basketball crowds that are smaller than the majority of 1-A schools in Iowa. I can't even get into how important girls basketball was where I grew up (1964 state champions). Go to a high school girls game here and you can count the whole crowd on both hands sometimes.
As for the girls... sorry, but Rail is right on about that. They can't compare. Honestly, its like a donkey showing up at the Kentucky Derby. I don't see what that has to do with sports however.