Beginning with the 2026 football season, the Illinois High School Association will significantly reshape the postseason landscape after member schools approved a plan to expand the state playoffs. The move increases the number of qualifiers from 256 to 384 teams statewide, expanding each class from 32 to 48 teams and marking one of the most substantial changes to Illinois high school football in decades.
Under the new format, 16 teams in each class will receive first-round byes, while the remaining 32 teams compete in opening-round games. The postseason will lengthen by one week, forcing a corresponding shift in the regular-season calendar. As a result, Week 0 scrimmages will be eliminated, and the season will begin one week earlier in August to accommodate the additional playoff round.
IHSA officials and supporters of the proposal have emphasized flexibility and stability as primary goals. The expanded field reduces the pressure on schools to chase a fifth win, eases scheduling conflicts, and provides more schools the opportunity to experience postseason football. Critics, however, have expressed concern about competitive balance and the possibility of early-round mismatches.
For the Little Illini Conference, the impact of the expansion could be profound.
In recent seasons, the LIC has routinely placed four to five teams into the playoffs under the 32-team-per-class format. With 48 teams now qualifying in each class, it becomes realistic — and in some years likely — that six or even seven LIC schools could reach the postseason. “Being in the hunt” now carries more tangible postseason implications. Simulations indicate that many, if not most, teams with a 2-7 record will qualify.
That shift fundamentally changes the internal dynamics of the conference. Qualifying for the playoffs will no longer be the primary benchmark of success. Instead, attention will turn toward seeding, byes, and matchup positioning. Earning one of the coveted top-16 spots — and avoiding a first-round game altogether — could become the new dividing line between good seasons and great ones.
The calendar shift also presents real-world challenges. While most schools will simply “move up” their football schedule by one week, matchups against out-of-state opponents, given the change in dates, will be more problematic.
There are cultural implications as well. Expanded access means more LIC communities will experience postseason football more often, keeping fan interest high later into the fall and strengthening youth-to-varsity pipelines. Additional practices and games can further player development, particularly for younger rosters, while also extending demands on coaches and student-athletes.
In many ways, the expanded playoffs do not lower expectations for the Little Illini Conference. They raise them. Starting in 2026, the question will not be how many LIC teams can sneak into the bracket — but how many can position themselves to make real postseason runs.





