Ron Nocetti, executive director of the California Interscholastic Federation (CIF), is the new president of the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) for 2025-26. Nocetti, the 66th president of the NFHS, began his one-year term July 2 following the NFHS Summer Meeting, which was held this year in Chicago, Illinois.
Lance Taylor, executive director of the Arkansas Activities Association (AAA), was elected by the NFHS Board of Directors to the position of president-elect for the upcoming year.
The following individuals were approved by the NFHS National Council for four-year terms on the NFHS Board of Directors: Doug Ute, executive director, Ohio High School Athletic Association (OHSAA), Section 2; Erich Martens, executive director, Minnesota State High School League (MSHSL), Section 5; and Misty Wharton, superintendent, Nestucca Valley School District, Cloverdale, Oregon, at large, Sections 5 and 8.
Ron Nocetti was named the CIF’s ninth executive director in 2019. He is responsible for appeals, the CIF constitution and bylaws, interpretations, section commissioners, eligibility, CIF Executive Committee/Federated Council, legislation, sports medicine and liaison to the NFHS.
Before succeeding Roger Blake as the leader of the CIF, Nocetti had been the CIF’s associate executive director since 2012. Nocetti, who heads the CIF’s 10 sections and more than 1,600 member schools, has been involved in education since 1991 as a teacher, coach, athletic director and administrator. In 2008, he was hired as the CIF director of championship events, promoted to senior director shortly thereafter before becoming the associate executive director.
As associate executive director, Nocetti was responsible for advisory committee membership, budget/finances, contracts, equity, legislation, the participation census, the Pursuing Victory with Honor program, sports medicine, as well as administering the sports of baseball, football and golf.
Nocetti received his bachelor’s degree in economics, a master’s degree in sport management and a doctorate in educational leadership – all from the University of San Francisco.
Lance Taylor was named executive director of the Arkansas Activities Association (AAA) in 2006, after seven years as the organization’s associate executive director (2000-03), deputy executive director (2003-05) and executive director-elect (2005-06). Prior to joining the AAA in 2000, he was a teacher, coach and principal at three Arkansas schools for 13 years.
After graduating from Arkansas State University (ASU) in 1987, Taylor began his career as a teacher and coach at Hot Springs (Arkansas) Cutter Morning Star High School (1988-93) and Greenwood (Arkansas) High School (1993-98). He then served two one-year stints as a high school principal at Greenwood High School and Batesville (Arkansas) High School.
Taylor, who is the second-longest tenured state association executive director, will be serving his second term on the NFHS Board of Directors. He previously served a term from 2011 to 2015. At 19 years of service, Taylor is second behind Jerome Singleton, who has directed the South Carolina High School League since 2005.
Taylor’s other involvement on NFHS committees has been extensive. He has held positions on the Football Rules Committee, Soccer Rules Committee, Sports Medicine Advisory Committee, Citizenship Committee, Appeal Board, Summer Meeting Advisory Committee, NFHS HOLDCO Committee and the NFHS Foundation Board of Directors. In addition, he has been a member of two NFHS Strategic Planning Committees, including chair of the 2016-2021 committee.
A certified principal and superintendent and Arkansas native, Taylor received his master’s degree in secondary administration from ASU in 1992.
Doug Ute, a former coach, teacher, athletic administrator, principal and superintendent who spent 35 years in Ohio’s schools, was named the executive director of the OHSAA in 2020. He is the 11th director in the history of the OHSAA.
Ute joined the OHSAA near the height of the COVID-19 pandemic and guided the organization through the ever-changing environment. Under his leadership, the OHSAA was able to navigate financial, attendance and facility availability restrictions in order to complete all of its state tournament events during the 2020-21 school year.
Along with his duties as executive director, Ute serves as the OHSAA’s sport administrator for girls and boys basketball, directly overseeing the coordination of the regional and state tournaments in those sports.
Ute was a school superintendent for 20 years—nine years at Marion Elgin Local Schools and 11 years at Newark City Schools—prior to assuming his post at the OHSAA. He also coached and taught at Noble Local Schools in eastern Ohio and Buckeye Central High School, which is near his hometown of Bellville in north central Ohio.
Ute began his career in 1988 as a basketball coach and part-time business teacher at Noble Local Schools (Shenandoah High School) in Sarahsville in eastern Ohio. He then went to Buckeye Central in New Washington as a teacher and coach, while also serving as the athletic administrator. In 1996 he became the principal at Marion Elgin and then took over as superintendent in 2000 at Elgin, a district of 1,500 students. Ute became superintendent in Newark in 2009.
Ute was a standout student-athlete at Clear Fork High School, graduating in 1980, and played basketball at Ashland University, where he led the team in assists all four years and left as the school’s career assists leader (he currently ranks second with 687, an average of 6.36 per game). He earned a bachelor’s degree in business administration and marketing and would later return to Ashland to earn a master’s degree in school administration, a graduate teaching degree in business, a principal’s license and a superintendent’s license.
Erich Martens, a Minnesota native, has spent the majority of his educational and professional career in his home state. He currently serves as the MSHSL executive director, a role he has had since 2017. Behind his leadership, the League continues to thrive and serve as a national trailblazer for education-based opportunities for students. Martens is the seventh executive director in the 110-year history of the League.
Previously the principal for 13 years at Sauk Rapids-Rice High School in Sauk Rapids, Minnesota, Martens also served a four-year term on the League’s Board of Directors, including a one-year position as president, prior to assuming the executive director position.
Before his time at Sauk Rapids-Rice High School, Martens was principal at Sauk Centre High School from 1999 to 2004. He began his career in education in 1988 as a math instructor and coach at Sauk Rapids-Rice High School, Cosmos High School and Mitchell (South Dakota) High School.
A graduate of New Ulm High School in 1984, and four years later from St. John’s University in Collegeville, Minnesota, Martens has held numerous professional leadership roles, including the Minnesota Association of Secondary School Principals. While at New Ulm High School, he was a four-sport participant, a member of the band and choir and served in student leadership roles.
Misty Wharton has been superintendent of the Nestucca Valley School District in Cloverdale, Oregon, since 2017 after serving as principal of Nestucca Valley Elementary School for five years and social studies teacher at Nestucca High School for 10 years.
While serving as a teacher at Nestucca High School, her alma mater, Wharton coached cross country, track and field, and softball, and was the junior varsity coach for volleyball. After graduating from Nestucca High School, Wharton was a college golfer at Portland State University in Portland, Oregon.
Wharton has been heavily involved with the Oregon School Activities Association (OSAA), having served on the OSAA Delegate Assembly since 2017. She also has been a member and chair of the OSAA Budget Committee and has chaired the OSAA Classification and Districting Committee since 2021.
Wharton also is a member of the Coalition of Oregon School Administrators (COSA) and served on the COSA Equity Board of Directors.