Tina Arlidge, HB Netball operations manager, says the player development programmes will replace the teams.
"At Hawke's Bay Netball we endeavour to provide quality netball experiences for girls to enjoy netball for life, and this is a step in the right direction," Arlidge says of the programmes which aim to enhance movement skills, physical capacity, tactical awareness and understanding the game.
Mark Aspden, Sport Hawke's Bay chief executive, believes the change is a positive move.
"There is a myth that specialising early and achieving childhood success in sport translates to adult success. Children develop at different rates and some develop much later," Aspden says.
"We're seeing situations where young people are suffering serious long-lasting injuries from over-training and from specialising in one sport from too young an age. We applaud this move from netball and hope other sports watch with interest."
Last year, netball was the top participation sport in New Zealand, at secondary school level, with 29,257 participants. Rugby followed with 27,261 participants (NZSSSC census).
Bay secondary schools have mirrored the national trend for the past three years.