This story was updated to include a realignment proposal for football from the New Mexico High School Coaches Association.
The New Mexico Activities Association Board of Directors has approved the state's new realignment for the 2026-27 and 2027-28 sports seasons during a meeting on Thursday, Dec. 4.
Classifications were based on enrollment. In football, the 16 largest schools were placed in 6A, followed by the next 16 biggest in 5A and the next 16 biggest after that in 4A. 3A has 17 schools, 2A has 24 schools and 8-man football has 19 teams from 23 schools (some teams combine two schools together).
Several teams have new classifications and districts, including ones in the Las Cruces area. In football, Chaparral has moved up to 5A and Santa Teresa has dropped down to 4A. Las Cruces, Organ Mountain and Centennial will remain in 6A, Gadsden and Mayfield will remain in 5A, Hatch Valley will remain in 3A and Mesilla Valley Christian will continue playing 8-man football. Santa Teresa will drop down to 4A for football.
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The Bulldawgs, Hawks and Knights will keep Carlsbad, Clovis and Hobbs as 6A district opponents in football, but two Albuquerque teams, Eldorado and Volcano Vista, will join them in the southern 6A district. Like 5A in the past two seasons, 6A will have two eight-team districts instead of one group of six teams, one of seven and one of eight.
The Lobos have been placed in a 5A district with the Panthers and Trojans, alongside Artesia, Deming, Goddard and Roswell, all of whom will remain in 5A. Alamogordo will drop down to 5A to complete the district. 5A will keep its format of two eight-team districts.
An alternative proposal for football would've put 18 schools in 6A in three six-team groups, 14 schools in 5A with one six-team group and one eight-team group and 20 schools in 4A with two seven-team groups and one six-team group. This would've put Las Cruces, Organ Mountain and Centennial in a district with only Carlsbad, Clovis and Hobbs. Mayfield, Gadsden and Chaparral would've been placed in 5A's larger eight-team district, and Santa Teresa would've been placed in 4A's smaller six-team district. However, the NMAA Board of Directors rejected this proposal.
A proposal from the New Mexico High School Coaches Association would've localized districts as much as possible, regardless of classifications, to minimize travel. Teams would then be split into classifications for the playoffs based on who qualifies. The best six teams would qualify from each district, with the largest three schools by enrollment going into the 6A playoffs and the next three going into the 5A playoffs. This would've put Las Cruces, Mayfield, Organ Mountain and Centennial all in the same district for football. However, this proposal wasn't considered by the NMAA Board of Directors.
In non-football sports, Las Cruces, Mayfield, Organ Mountain and Centennial will remain in the same district, but with five teams instead of six. Gadsden will drop down to 4A in non-football sports, leaving only Alamogordo alongside the big four Las Cruces high schools in their district.
The Panthers' new 4A group will contain Chaparral and Santa Teresa. Hatch Valley and Mesilla Valley Christian will remain in 3A and 2A, respectively, for non-football sports.
See what the districts will look like for Las Cruces-area teams here:
Football districts
Only football has a 6A classification in New Mexico.
District 2-6A: Las Cruces, Centennial and Organ Mountain
District 2-5A: Chaparral, Gadsden and Mayfield
District 2-4A: Santa Teresa
District 2-3A: Hatch Valley
8-man District 4: Mesilla Valley Christian
Remaining sports
District 3-5A: Las Cruces, Mayfield, Organ Mountain and Centennial
District 3-4A: Chaparral, Gadsden and Santa Teresa
District 3-3A: Hatch Valley
District 3-2A: Mesilla Valley Christian