Delaware
Caravel, Saint Mark’s switch classes in 2025-26 football realignment
Caravel Academy football players lift the state championship trophy after defeating Howard. Now, a DIAA/ DIFCA realignment is lifting them up a class. Photo by Nick Halliday
By Nick Halliday
The Delaware Interscholastic Athletic Association (DIAA) board of directors has approved a significant football realignment for the 2025-26 season, just one day after the Delaware Interscholastic Football Coaches Association (DIFCA) proposed changes that impact all three classifications in the state.
The most significant changes are back-to-back state champion Caravel Academy moving up to 3A, Saint Mark’s dropping a class to 2A, and 2024 1A champion Indian River moving up to 2A.
A DIAA press release says DIFCA “input, along with a thorough analysis of factors such as enrollment and roster data, historical performance, and program growth, played a key role in shaping the plan.”
DIFCA’s membership comprises football coaches and athletic directors throughout the state. DIAA stated, “The association’s commitment is to [promote] competitive balance and fairness.”
Middletown, Caravel, Indian River win state championships
As for the changes, Caravel will move up to 3A after back-to-back state championships. going 26-0 during those two seasons and 38-1 over three seasons in 2A since the original classification realignment. Here is the full list of schools affected by the change:
- Moving to Class 3A: Caravel Academy
- Moving to Class 2A: Saint Mark’s (reverting from Class 3A), Indian River, Tatnall, and Polytech
- Moving down to Class 1A: Concord, Newark, and Delcastle
Newark Charter, which recently completed its inaugural junior varsity season, will begin competing in Class 1A.
Football realignment formula
The realignment formula, updated from previous cycles, played a key role in these decisions. The updated formula is as follows:
- 20% Enrollment
- 30% Four-Year Winning Percentage
- 30% Two-Year Winning Percentage
- 20% Four-Year Winning Percentage Against Current Classification Teams
This formula, combined with qualitative factors such as program growth, roster size, margin of victory or defeat, and participation trends, provided a comprehensive basis for the reclassification process.
DIAA Executive Director Dave Baylor emphasized the importance of collaboration and fairness in the realignment process.
“As we evaluate football realignment, our goal is to create a structure that provides equitable opportunities and fosters healthy competition. Moving forward, we remain committed to refining this process in partnership with our member schools and stakeholders to ensure it meets the evolving needs of Delaware’s high school athletics community.”
Who’s where after football realignment?
Here are the new classifications for the 2025-26 season.
Class 3A:
- District 1: Appoquinimink, Caravel, Hodgson, Middletown, Salesianum, William Penn
- District 2: Caesar Rodney, Cape Henlopen, Dover, Smyrna, St. Georges, Sussex Central
Class 2A:
- District 1: Archmere, Friends, Howard, Mount Pleasant, Tatnall, Tower Hill
- District 2: DMA, Milford, Odessa, Polytech, Red Lion, Saint Mark’s
- District 3: Delmar, Indian River, Lake Forest, Laurel, Sussex Tech, Woodbridge
Class 1A:
- District 1: A.I. duPont, Brandywine, Concord, Dickinson, McKean, St. Elizabeth
- District 2: Christiana, Charter of Wilmington, Conrad, Delcastle, Glasgow, Newark
- District 3: Early College, First State Military, Newark Charter, Seaford, St. Andrew’s
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Delaware
Thomas Jefferson University to run Delaware’s first medical school
Thomas Jefferson University is opening a regional campus of its Sidney Kimmel Medical College in Delaware, an effort that will result in the state’s first medical school.
Jefferson beat out three other bidders to establish the four-year program in partnership with the state. The other bidders were the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, the consulting firm PriceWaterhouseCoopers and Ponce Health Sciences University in Puerto Rico, Spotlight Delaware reported.
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The inaugural class of 40 medical students will begin instruction in July 2028. Initially, the campus will be based at the University of Delaware in Newark, with Jefferson faculty providing instruction. A permanent home for the campus is still being finalized, the Inquirer reported.
The medical students will receive 18 months of preclinical training on campus before receiving clinical training from healthcare providers in Delaware’s southern counties, where the state’s physician shortage is most deeply felt. That shortage is compounded by an aging population, Delaware officials said.
“Jefferson is committed to being part of the solution to Delaware’s physician shortage,” Jefferson CEO Dr. Joseph Cacchione said in a statement. “We are proud to help build a future where every Delawarean has access to the care they deserve. Jefferson is all in.”
The school’s creation is being supported by $157.4 million from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
Delaware is one of three states without a Doctor of Medicine or Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine program. Since the late 1960s, Jefferson and the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine have reserved seats for Delaware students.
“Sidney Kimmel Medical College has trained generations of physicians for more than 200 years, more than any other medical college in the country,” Said Ibrahim, dean of Sidney Kimmel Medical College, said in a statement. “It is a privilege to bring our mission to Delaware’s patients and communities.”
Jefferson has announced several expansions recently. The university is establishing a full-time doctor of nursing practice-nurse anesthesia program and several online graduate programs at the Lehigh Valley Health Network Center for Healthcare Education in Lehigh County. It also is opening a satellite respiratory therapy lab at Lehigh Valley Hospital-Cedar Crest in Allentown.
Delaware
Delaware is getting its first medical school, with classes set to start in 2028
Delaware officials said medical students will start their classroom instruction at UD and then do their clinical training at offices and health care systems in Kent and Sussex counties, where the shortage of doctors is most acute.
However, ChristianaCare, which has its own partnership with Jefferson, is not participating. The state’s largest health care system was part of Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine’s unsuccessful bid to operate the school. In a joint statement from ChristianaCare and PCOM, the two organizations expressed disappointment with not being part of the consortium of higher education institutions and healthcare organizations.
“The path forward raises genuine questions about whether the school’s goals can be fully realized without ChristianaCare’s meaningful participation in its clinical training mission,” it said. “The success of any four-year medical program depends not just on an academic institution, but on a true and committed partnership with its clinical partners — one built on shared mission, mutual investment and trust developed over time.”
Students in the first class can get their tuition subsidized, covering all of their education costs, in exchange for an agreement to work in rural Delaware for five years.
Running the medical school is expected to cost Jefferson $78 million over the next five years. The money is from a federal rural health grant through the Rural Health Transformation Program, which congressional Republicans created in the so-called “One Big, Beautiful Bill Act.”
The program will give $50 billion to every state over five years, though exactly the total each will eventually receive is unclear. Half of the money is to be distributed equally to states and the other half is awarded by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services based on a variety of factors.
The state applied for $1 billion late last year to improve health care in Kent and Sussex counties. The Trump administration has so far allocated Delaware $157 million. Delaware is expected to receive at least $500 million over the life of the fund.
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