The Game (college football)

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Half-time festivities at The Game, Yale Bowl
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Half-time festivities at The Game, Yale Bowl

The Game (always capitalized) is a title given to several U.S. college football rivalry games, but most particularly the annual contest between the Harvard University "Crimson" and the Yale University "Bulldogs." The Game is played in November at the end of the football season, and the venue alternates between Harvard Stadium and the Yale Bowl. As of 2006, Yale leads the series 65-50-8.

The Game is the oldest and third-most-played college football rivalry, after The Rivalry between Lehigh-Lafayette and the Princeton-Yale game. In 2003, the rivalry was rated the sixth-best in college athletics by Sports Illustrated On Campus, after Alabama-Auburn, Duke-North Carolina, UCLA-USC, Army-Navy, and Cal-Stanford.

Contents

[edit] History

The Game
Yale (65) Harvard (50)
1876 1878
1880 1881
1882 1883
1884 1886
1887 1889
1891 1892
1893 1894
1900 1902
1903 1904
1905 1906
1907 1909
1916 1923
1924 1926
1927 1931
1932 1934
1935 1936
1939 1942
1945 1946
1947 1949
1950 1952
1955 1956
1957 1960
1963 1967
1969 1972
1973 1976
1977 1978
1980 1981
1984 1985
1988 1990
1991 1993
1994 1998
1999 2000
2006
1875 1890
1898 1901
1908 1912
1913 1914
1915 1919
1920 1921
1922 1928
1929 1930
1933 1937
1938 1940
1941 1948
1953 1954
1958 1959
1961 1962
1964 1965
1966 1970
1971 1974
1975 1979
1982 1983
1986 1987
1989 1992
1995 1996
1997 2001
2002 2003
2004 2005
Ties (8)
1879 1897 1899 1910
1911 1925 1951 1968

The first meeting of the teams occurred on November 13, 1875 at Hamilton Field in New Haven; Harvard won 4-0. This was the first intercollegiate football match between two U.S. teams (Harvard had played McGill University of Montreal the previous year, and acquired the rules of the game from that team; previous intercollegiate matches were played under the rules of soccer.) The rules that governed the early years of The Game were a modified version of the rules of rugby and made the game particularly brutal. In the second half of The Game of 1892, Harvard introduced the flying wedge formation, devised by chess master Lorin F. Deland, which so devastated Yale players that it was outlawed the following season (nevertheless, Yale won 6-0). After The Game of 1894, about which newspapers reported seven players carried off the field "in dying condition," the two schools broke off all official contact including athletic competition for two years. Since resuming in 1897, The Game has been played annually except during the First and Second World Wars. The first known reference to "The Game" occurs in an 1898 letter by former Harvard captain A. F. Holden (class of 1888) to Harvard coach Cam Forbes on the occasion of The Game being permanently moved to the end of the season ("it also makes the Yale-Harvard game the game of the season"). But capitalized reference to The Game appears to have been first made by columnist Red Smith in the late 1940s, and it first appeared on the cover of The Game program in 1960.

2005, the 122nd playing, was one of the series' most dramatic games. Harvard came back from being down 21-3 at the half to tie it up at 24 with a Liam O'Hagan two-point conversion. After three overtimes that saw two fumbles and two interceptions, Harvard running back Clifton Dawson '07 scored the winning touchdown. The 30-24 victory was Harvard's fifth straight in the series.

In 2006, Yale ended its five-game losing streak against Harvard, winning 34-13 in the largest Eli victory of the last decade. Harvard's offense was held to 13 points, the lowest of its season, and Harvard's star running back Clifton Dawson gained only 60 rushing yards. Yale tied with Princeton for the 2006 Ivy League title.

[edit] Significance

For many students and alumni of Harvard and Yale, The Game is an important event. The schools are located only a few hours' travel from one another; and, perhaps because they are generally regarded as among the nation's most prestigious (as well as being two of the three oldest), the rivalry is intense. Beating the rival is often considered more important than the team's season record. Furthermore, since Ivy League schools do not participate in post-season football games, The Game is usually the final game of the season (except for 1919, when Harvard beat Yale 3-0 and went on to the Rose Bowl, where they defeated Oregon 7-6); since most Ivy League football players do not go on to professional careers in the sport (the league does not offer athletic scholarships), it is almost always the graduating seniors' final organized game.

The Game is significant for historical reasons as the first football game played between U.S. colleges. The rules of The Game soon were adopted by other schools, such as Rutgers and Princeton, which had been playing soccer (i.e. Association Football) since 1869, making football the archetypal college sport. The schools that would become the Ivy League played a large part in the development of American football in the late 19th century; football's rules, conventions, and equipment, as well as elements of "atmosphere" such as the mascot and fight song, include many elements pioneered or nurtured at Harvard and Yale. For many years, The Game was also likely to determine the Ivy League championship, although recently it has been rare to find both schools enjoying a strong season simultaneously. The Game receives relatively little national attention today; most college football fans are more interested in games between larger institutions whose teams are made up of scholarship athletes, many of them bound for professional careers. The huge seating capacities of Harvard Stadium and the Yale Bowl, however, testify to the vast crowds, including many "locals" without official ties to either university, who once attended The Game.

[edit] Trivia

In what is usually considered the best Game, in 1968, the Harvard team made a miraculous last-moment comeback, scoring 16 points in the final 42 seconds to tie a highly touted Yale squad. Yale was coming off a 16-game winning streak and its quarterback, Brian Dowling, had not lost a game he had started since the sixth grade. The tie left both teams 8-0-1 for the season, inspiring the Harvard Crimson to print the headline "Harvard Beats Yale, 29-29" [1] The Harvard offensive tackle was Tommy Lee Jones, later to find fame in Hollywood.

Half-time at The Game in 2005, Yale Bowl
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Half-time at The Game in 2005, Yale Bowl

The Game is an inviting target for pranksters. The most famous exploit was carried out at Harvard Stadium during the second quarter in 1982, when a Harvard score was immediately followed by a huge black weather balloon, previously installed under the 45 yard line by students from MIT as the letters painted on its side proclaimed, slowly inflating until it exploded, spraying talcum powder over the field (Harvard won, 45-7). On November 18, 1990, during the third quarter of The Game, MIT students carried out a less surreptitious assault by firing a rocket which hung an MIT banner over the goal post (Yale won, 34-19). In 2004, some Yale students impersonated the (non-existent) Harvard pep squad, handed out placards to some 1,800 adult Harvard fans, and alleged that by holding up the placards they would be spelling out "GO HARVARD." Instead, the signs spelled out "WE SUCK"[2]. Harvard won the game 35-3. In 2006, two streakers with MIT painted on their bodies attempted to run around the field during the game. One made it the length of the field before being caught and dragged off the field; the other was tackled by security about ten steps out of the stands.

The Game has also become known for the large, joint Harvard-Yale tailgate parties that run throughout The Game in the fields next to the host stadium every year. While most alumni who travel to The Game actually watch it in the stadium, most students and recent alumni treat the tailgate as their primary destination. The tailgate attracts thousands of students and has recently roused the concern of the Boston Police Department, who have cracked down on underage drinking at the student tailgates, as well as moving it further away from the stadium and reducing the space available [3]. This is significant since, for many students, The Game is the social apex of the year. Considering the cost of getting up to The Game at Harvard, which is no longer subsidized by Yale, some Yale students are considering responding by boycotting Harvard-hosted Games in favor of the season's Yale-Princeton game [4].

The Little Red Flag is a Harvard pennant which, since 1884, has been waved by Harvard's "most loyal fan" after each score by Harvard during The Game. As of 2005, the honorary position is held by William Markus of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, who attends every Harvard football game.

Counterfeit tickets for The Game were first discovered in 1891 when it was played in Hampden Park in Springfield, Massachusetts (Yale winning, 10-0).

Apocryphal tales assert that before the 1908 Game, Harvard coach Percy Haughton strangled a bulldog to death in the locker room to motivate his players. Whether this is true or not, Harvard did win 4-0, the culmination of a 9-0-1 season.

Harvard's 1890 12-6 victory marked its first national championship. Since then Harvard has also won titles in 1898, 1899, 1910, 1912, 1913, and 1919, while Yale has won 12 national championships.

On November 22, 1992, the first Wild Turkey Breakfast was held on the morning of the Game. An annual gathering, Wild Turkey Breakfast typically involves 100-150 celebrants, bourbon, bagels, beer, and a couple of rock bands.

[edit] Bibliography

  • Big-Time Football at Harvard, 1905, edited by Ronald A. Smith (University of Illinois Press, 1994; ISBN 0-252-02047-2) is Harvard head coach Bill Reid's daily diary of the 1905 college football season.
  • The Only Game That Matters, by Bernard M. Corbett and Paul Simpson (Crown, 2004; ISBN 1-400-05068-5) is a year-by-year history of The Game; Corbett is Harvard's radio play-by-play announcer.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links