The Ohio High School Athletic Association (OHSAA) has confirmed a sweeping realignment that will see eight football programs elevate to Division I for the upcoming season, a shift described by officials as unprecedented.
Playoff expansion and division reshuffle
Five of the schools — including Euclid and Cleveland Heights — have been placed in Division I, Region 1, while three additional programs now sit in Division I, Region 2. The realignment expands the Division I playoff field from 72 to 80 teams and contracts Division II from 106 to 98 spots.
Notable regional swaps include Perrysburg and Toledo Whitmer moving from Region 1 to Region 2, and Lebanon, Middletown and Springboro shifting from Region 3 to Region 4. Upper Arlington, previously in Region 2, now heads to Region 3.
Coach perspectives
OHSAA spokesperson Tim Stried emphasized that the decision was driven less by competitive difficulty and more by the sheer number of teams in each region, prompting the association to seek a more balanced geographic distribution.
Euclid coach Damion Creel, whose program has long identified as a Division I school, explained that the move reflects the district’s size and ambition, noting that the previous region simply contained too many teams to sustain a traditional alignment.
Tony Fisher, a standout player from one of the relocating squads, echoed the sentiment, highlighting how the new placement aligns with the school’s athletic philosophy and community expectations.
What’s next for Ohio football
Beyond the on‑field implications, the reshuffle triggers a series of consolidation discussions in Cleveland and Youngstown, where mergers such as Glenville and the Youngstown East‑Chaney combination will determine final division placements. The upcoming season promises a fresh competitive landscape, with larger playoff brackets and a re‑imagined regional map that could reshape rivalries and recruitment patterns across the state.