L.A. City Section Adopts a New Playoff Format
The L.A. City Section on Monday officially adopted a new football playoff format for next fall that establishes two more evenly balanced divisions and places conference teams in leagues based on last season’s conference records.
The City adopted the new format after rejecting a last-minute proposal presented by Kennedy High Coach Bob Francola that would have grouped teams in 4-A and 3-A division brackets at the end of the 1991 regular season.
The new plan, which will be reviewed after one season, establishes a 24-team 4-A Division and a 25-team 3-A Division with each division consisting of six leagues. Last year, the 4-A had only 12 teams in three leagues.
Next fall, each of the City’s six conferences will consist of one 4-A league and one 3-A league. In each conference, the four teams with the best conference records last year will make up the 4-A league. The 3-A league will consist of the other four teams from each conference. The Southeastern Conference has nine teams.
In the Southern Pacific Conference, the 4-A league will consist of Carson (7-0 in conference play last season), Banning (6-1), Dorsey (5-2) and Gardena (4-3). The conference’s 3-A league will consist of Washington (3-4), Crenshaw (2-5), San Pedro (1-6) and Narbonne (0-7). The only change from last season is that Gardena, champion of the 3-A Southern League, moves up to the 4-A Pacific League in place of Crenshaw.
In the Coastal Conference, Fairfax (7-0), Westchester (6-1), Manual Arts (5-2) and Palisades (3-3-1) will be 4-A teams; Venice (3-3-1), University (2-5), Los Angeles (1-6) and Hamilton (0-7) will compose the 3-A league.
Francola had endorsed a plan devised by Fairfax High Coach Ron Price that would have established two 16-team playoff brackets, but not until the end of the regular season and based on 1991 records. In effect, teams in each conference would start the season with no division designation and then play themselves into a bracket. Under the proposal, only conference champions would be named.
More to Read
Get our high school sports newsletter
Prep Rally is devoted to the SoCal high school sports experience, bringing you scores, stories and a behind-the-scenes look at what makes prep sports so popular.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.