Eastern Cincinnati Conference
The Eastern Cincinnati Conference is an Ohio high school athletic conference in the eastern Cincinnati area, part of the Southwestern Ohio Region. The ECC consists of ten high schools: Anderson, Kings, Loveland, Milford, Turpin, Walnut Hills, West Clermont, Lebanon, Little Miami, and Winton Woods. Each of these schools compete in a variety of OHSAA fall, winter, and spring sports in Divisions I, II, and III.
Timeline of membership
- 2012: Conference founded with Anderson, Glen Este, Kings, Loveland, Milford, Turpin, and Walnut Hills as founding members.
- 2014: Withrow joins the conference as the 8th member; they had been a member of the Cincinnati Metro Athletic Conference.
- 2017: Glen Este consolidates with Amelia High School into West Clermont High School, remaining in the conference.
- 2020: Withrow leaves the conference to rejoin the Cincinnati Metro Athletic Conference. Lebanon, Little Miami, and Winton Woods join the conference as the 8th, 9th, and 10th members.
Fall sports
The ECC officially recognizes the following as Fall sports: boys and girls cross country, boys football, boys and girls soccer, girls volleyball, girls tennis, and boys and girls golf.Football
Football is one of the most competitive sports in the ECC, with games taking place on Friday nights during the fall, usually late August to early November, depending on how far the teams advance in the playoffs. Teams play every other team in the conference once during the regular season, then add the requisite number of non-conference games to complete a 10-game schedule.Conference champions
- 2012: Turpin
- 2013: Loveland
- 2014: Kings
- 2015: Kings, Turpin, Turpin won regular season matchup but lost playoff rematch
- 2016: Turpin
- 2017: Anderson, Milford, West Clermont, each team beat each other once
- 2018: Kings
- 2019: Turpin
- 2020: Winton Woods, Kings, teams did not play each other in regular season due to COVID, Winton Woods won playoff matchup
- 2021: Kings
- 2022: Winton Woods
- 2023: Milford
- 2024: '''Anderson'''
Regional champions
- 2013: Loveland
- 2021: Winton Woods
- 2022: Kings
- 2023: Anderson
- 2024: '''Anderson'''
Soccer
Soccer for the schools in the ECC has been one of the more successful competitive sports for both boys and girls, long before the ECC was formed. Turpin and Walnut Hills have had a history of success in their soccer programs, with Turpin winning 7 combined State Champion titles since the 1980s in boys and girls soccer. Turpin boys soccer is respected as one of the best teams in Ohio, having only lost 2 conference games since becoming a member of the ECC. The conference champion title for boys soccer has bounced back and forth between Walnut Hills and Turpin since the ECC formed in 2012. For girls soccer, the champion has shifted from Milford in 2012, to Loveland for the next two years, and most recently Turpin in the 2015 season.Cross Country
Cross Country is another sport with both boys and girls teams that compete in the ECC. In cross country, schools will send their runners to meets, where they compete for the fastest completion of a 5-kilometer race. For boys cross country, all schools except Withrow have boys competing in varsity cross country. Casey Gallagher from Anderson set the ECC boys cross country record for the 5K run in 2012 at 15 minutes 56 seconds during the Trinity Meet. A close second was made Alaeldin Tirba from Turpin with a 15-minute 59.70-second run. Since then, nobody in the ECC has gotten under the 16:00 mark at an official 5K run. In the 2015 season, there were 192 runners in the ECC, with the fastest 5K run time going to Nick Stone, with a 16:19 time. Girls Cross Country also competes in ECC 5K races, with Walnut Hills or Turpin winning the 5K run fastest time of all four seasons. The fastest girls 5K run in ECC history was set in the 2015 season with an 18:28 time by Samantha Bush at the Ross Meet.Winter sports
Men's basketball
At the conference's founding, each team played each conference opponent twice, then played enough non-conference games to fill a 22-game schedule. When the conference expanded to 10 teams, the number of conference games was set at 16, meaning each team plays seven opponents twice and two opponents once.Conference champions
- 2012-13: Walnut Hills
- 2013-14: Kings, Walnut Hills, Turpin, each team went 1-1 against each other in the regular season
- 2014-15: Milford, Kings, Milford won both regular season matchups
- 2015-16: Kings
- 2016-17: Walnut Hills
- 2017-18: Walnut Hills
- 2018-19: West Clermont
- 2019-20: Turpin
- 2020-21: Walnut Hills, Turpin, Lebanon, Turpin went 3-1 against other two, Walnut Hills 1-2, Lebanon 1-2
- 2021-22: Walnut Hills
- 2022-23: Anderson, Kings, Turpin, Turpin went 3-1 against other two, Kings 2-1, Anderson 0-3
- 2023-24: Winton Woods
- 2024-25: '''Winton Woods'''
District champions
- 2012-13: Walnut Hills
- 2024-25: Winton Woods
- 2024-25: '''Loveland'''