Wyoming prep boys basketball standings show Class 1A shakeup, local teams move
Week 4 standings updated through games played Jan. 10 show significant shifts in Class 1A and list Albany County teams in Southeast 4A. These results affect playoff races and travel for local families.

Week 4 of the Wyoming high school boys basketball season brought notable movement across the classifications, with league play through Jan. 10 producing the biggest shifts in Class 1A. Updated conference and overall records released this week include complete standings for every class and region — Classes 1A, 2A, 3A and 4A — showing team-by-team records that will shape seeding and postseason paths in the weeks ahead.
For Albany County fans, the standings place Laramie and Rock River in the Southeast 4A regional table, keeping both programs within reach of conference positioning that matters for midseason momentum. With league contests dominating changes this week, teams that held serve at home or managed road wins reshuffled the middle of several race tables, while top seeds in larger classes remained largely intact.
The weekly standings serve as more than a scoreboard. For small communities across Wyoming, including Albany County, they are a pulse check on student activity, school pride and local economies. Game nights draw families to gyms, benefit booster programs and provide important extracurricular outlets for teens. At the same time, the pattern of conference scheduling and long travel distances common in rural regions magnifies inequities between districts. Longer bus rides, overnight trips and the cost of travel both strain school budgets and create burdens for students and parents who juggle work and childcare.
Health and safety remain central concerns as the season progresses. Consistent access to athletic trainers, timely concussion protocols and mental health supports vary by district, and those differences can influence both game-day readiness and season-long participation. Maintaining vigilance on injury prevention and recovery practices is critical, especially as standings tighten and more games carry playoff implications.

Looking ahead, the next stretch of league play will clarify which teams are staking early claims to postseason slots and which must regroup. Coaches will use these standings to adjust rotations and game plans, and communities will rally behind late-season pushes.
The takeaway? Keep an eye on the regional tables if you care about Albany County hoops — those Southeast 4A lines determine travel plans, ticket demand and local bragging rights. Our two cents? Head out to a game, ask your school athletic director how travel and health supports are handled, and support equitable funding so every kid gets a fair shot on the court.
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