Louisville-West Virginia rivalry

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Louisville Cardinals-West Virginia Mountaineers
  
History
1st Meeting September 8, 1984
Last Meeting November 8, 2007
Next Meeting 2008
Number of Meetings 9
All-Time Series WVU: 7-2
Largest victory WVU: 52-13 (9/07/1985)
Current Streak WVU: Won 1
Longest Louisville Win Streak 1 (1990 & 2006)
Longest West Virginia Win Streak 4 (1984-1986, 1989)

The Louisville-West Virginia rivalry is a new rivalry game between the University of Louisville and West Virginia University football teams. The rivalry was introduced in 2005, as Louisville left Conference USA and moved into the Big East conference. Since then, it has become a marquee matchup in Big East play and college football. The game has also become more important in basketball play as well.[1]

West Virginia leads the current series 2-1, and the all-time series 7-2.[2]

Contents

[edit] History

[edit] Pre-rivalry

The Mountaineers and Cardinals first met on a football field in 1984.[2] In that game, the Cardinals were defeated at Mountaineer Field in Morgantown by a score of 30-6. The next year, 1985, the Mountaineers again defeated Louisville, this time by a score of 52-13, in front of 62,000 fans in Morgantown. In 1986, the first game was played in Louisville, but the Mountaineers won for the third-straight time, 42-19.

In 1989, the #9 Mountaineers came into Louisville to fans who were calling the game the “Game of the Century.” Louisville legend Johnny Unitas and West Virginia legend Sam Huff were brought in on helicopter to watch the ceremonial coin toss in front of a CBS-televised audience. The Cardinals were winning the game going into the fourth quarter, before the Mountaineers rolled off 17 unanswered fourth-quarter points to win the game, 30-21.[3]

In 1990, the Mountaineers suffered their first loss to the Cardinals. In Morgantown, the Mountaineers fell to Louisville, 9-7.[2] The game was hailed as "The Rematch".[4][verification needed] In 1993, the Mountaineers were down 21-10 going into the fourth quarter. The Mountaineers used Louisville turnovers to then come back and win by a score of 36-34.

[edit] Early rivalry

In 2005, the Big East Conference opened its season with the arrival of three teams from the Conference USA: Louisville, Cincinnati, and South Florida. Louisville entered the season behind Heisman candidates Brian Brohm and Michael Bush. West Virginia entered the season with a young team. The Mountaineers lost early to Virginia Tech, but rallied behind freshman Pat White and Steve Slaton to have a 5-1 record for the matchup, while Louisville entered with a 4-1 record after being upset by South Florida. In the game, Louisville held a 24-7 record going into the fourth quarter. The Mountaineers rallied behind Slaton and scored three consecutive times to tie the game 24-24. The game went into three overtimes, and the Mountaineers held a 46-44 lead after Louisville scored a touchdown. Brohm tried to run on the ensuing 2-point conversion, but was tackled short of the endzone by Eric Wicks to win the game, 46-44, for the Mountaineers. Slaton scored a Big East record six times in this game, cementing his place in West Virginia lore. Controversy surrounded this game due to an onside kick in the fourth quarter by West Virginia, which fans determined was illegal. The Big East apologized for missing the call after the game.[5] The Mountaineers won the Big East championship and upset the Georgia Bulldogs in the Sugar Bowl, 38-35. Louisville lost the Virginia Tech in the Gator Bowl, 35-24.

In 2006, the Mountaineers and Cardinals entered the game undefeated. The Mountaineers were ranked #3, while the Cardinals were ranked #5. The game ended with a 44-34 score in the Cardinals' biggest win in school history.[6] The Cardinals entered the game without Michael Bush, but relied on the arm of Brian Brohm and their defense to win the shootout. The Mountaineers committed three turnovers and the Cardinals took a punt and fumble back for touchdowns. Slaton ran for 156 yards and a score, but fumbled twice, and White threw for 222 yards and ran for 125 yards and 4 touchdowns. But Brohm was the star, as he threw for 354 yards and a touchdown against the poor Mountaineers' secondary.[6] The game set a new Big East record with 1,008 total yards in the game.[6] The Cardinals won the Big East crown and won in the Orange Bowl against the ACC champs, Wake Forest. The Mountaineers earned runner-up status in conference play and won in the Gator Bowl against Georgia Tech, 38-35.

In 2007, the #7 Mountaineers entered the match-up with a 7-1 record after losing to South Florida, who after the win was ranked #2 in the nation before losing three games in a row. The Cardinals entered the season with a new head coach, Steve Kragthorpe, and entered the game with a disappointing 5-4 record after an early season loss to Syracuse. The Cardinals, however, still had Brian Brohm, while Slaton and White were still juniors for the Mountaineers. The game looked good for the Mountaineers, who jumped out to an early 21-7 lead. However, Brohm had a one-yard touchdown run to make the score 21-14 at halftime. The Mountaineers added a field goal, and then forced Brohm to fumble on a sack that safety Eric Wicks took 44 yards for a score to make the game 31-14. The Cardinals answered with three straight scores - two touchdowns and a field goal - to make it 31-31 with 3:05 left in the game. However, freshman running back Noel Devine returned a kickoff for 41 yards, which led to Patrick White's 50-yard game-winning touchdown run.[7] West Virginia kicker Pat McAfee booted the ensuing kickoff down to the one-yard line as it rolled between the Cardinals' returners' legs, which sealed the 38-31 win. White racked up 328 total yards and 3 touchdowns, even though fumbling twice, while Slaton was held to 60 yards and a touchdown on 17 carries. Brohm had 345 yards and 3 touchdowns through the air, and a rushing touchdown, as he tried to lead the Cardinals to a comeback win.

[edit] Game results

Games before the game was officially considered a rivalry are annoted with * by the date.

Year Home Away Location
1984* West Virginia 30 Louisville 6 Morgantown
1985* West Virginia 52 Louisville 13 Morgantown
1986* Louisville 19 West Virginia 42 Louisville
1989* Louisville 30 West Virginia 21 Louisville
1990* West Virginia 7 Louisville 9 Morgantown
1993* West Virginia 36 Louisville 34 Morgantown
2005 West Virginia 46 Louisville 44 Morgantown
2006 Louisville 44 West Virginia 34 Louisville
2007 West Virginia 38 Louisville 31 Morgantown

[edit] Trivia

  • In the 2006 matchup, the Louisville Cardinals announced that the game would be "Black Out Thursday". The Louisville fans showed up at the game in all-black, and the Cardinals' uniforms were black alternates. In 2007, the Mountaineers announced that the game would be a "Gold Rush", using the same idea Louisville used the year before. The Mountaineers sported all-gold uniforms.[3]

[edit] References

[edit] See also

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