Georgia Southern Eagles–Georgia State Panthers |
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Football History |
First Meeting | October 25, 2014 |
First Result | GA Southern 69 GA State 31 |
Latest Meeting | December 5, 2015 |
Latest Result | GA State 34 GA Southern 7 |
Next Meeting | TBA |
Total Number of Meetings | 2 |
Current Streak | GA State (1) |
All-time Series | Tied 1–1 |
Football Conference Success |
Sun Belt Regular Season 1st Place Finishes
- GA Southern – 1(*)
- (*)The Sun Belt does not currently have a championship game because it lacks the minimum of 12 teams.
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Men's Basketball History |
First Meeting | 1948 (non-NCAA) |
First Result | GA Southern 76 GA State 57 |
Latest Meeting | January 19, 2016 |
Latest Result | GA State 69 GA Southern 66 |
Next Meeting | February 23, 2015 |
Total Number of Meetings | 50 |
Current Streak | GA State (3) |
All-time Series | GA Southern leads 35–17 |
Sun Belt Series | GA State leads 3–1 |
Men's Basketball Conference Success |
Sun Belt Regular Season 1st Place Finishes
Sun Belt Tournament Championships
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Georgia Southern University
The Georgia Southern–Georgia State rivalry is a college athletics rivalry between the Georgia Southern University Eagles and Georgia State University Panthers, also known as Modern Day Hate.[1][2] Both schools are members of the Sun Belt Conference. While the teams have only met twice in football (due to Georgia State beginning their program in 2010),[3] the rivalry dates back to the 1970s in basketball and other sports.[4]
History
Georgia Southern and Georgia State have only competed against each other in football since 2014. They played annually in basketball from the 1971–72 to 1980–81 seasons, 1995–96 and 1996–97, and 2009–10 to 2013–14 out-of-conference and as conference mates from the 1985–86 to 1991–92 seasons (in the Trans America Athletic Conference, which is now the Atlantic Sun Conference) and since the 2014–15 season in the Sun Belt Conference.[5][4] As of 2015, Georgia Southern has a 35–17 lead in the all-time series.[5]
Since both schools can be abbreviated GSU, a point of conflict between the two schools is that both fan-bases claim that their university is, in fact, the real GSU. Georgia State lays claim to the initials as it became a university (and therefore GSU) long before Georgia Southern did in 1990 (Georgia State became a university in 1969).[6][7] Also, Georgia State's URL and official logo both contain the abbreviation.[8] Georgia Southern officially uses GS in all of their branding.[9]
The beginning of the football rivalry was initiated after the hire of former Appalachian State (a major rival of Georgia Southern) athletic director Charlie Cobb to the same position at GSU. During Georgia State's press release introducing Cobb, he revealed that Georgia Southern's athletic director Tom Kleinlein told him "welcome, now the war is on."[10] The two teams met on the gridiron during the 2014 football season at Georgia Dome. During the run up to the game, fans from both teams expressed their dislike for the other over social media outlets such as Twitter, at times trending with tags of "SouthernNotState" and "StateNotSouthern" both of which were used as slogans for shirts given out by both universities.[11] During the period before the game, fans dubbed the matchup as "Modern Day Hate," a play on the rivalry between Georgia Tech and UGA, Clean, Old-Fashioned Hate.[2] Georgia Southern beat Georgia State by a final score of 69–31, while drawing the second largest crowd of 28,427 for any Georgia State game.[12] In 2015, Georgia State beat Georgia Southern 34–7 to give the worst home defeat for Georgia Southern in school history.[13][14] Currently, the series is tied at 1–1.
Rivalry series
On October 1, 2015, both schools' athletic directors announced the beginning of an annual "rivalry series" in which the winner takes home a yet-to-be-announced trophy and bragging rights at the following year's football game. The trophy will be awarded to the school that defeats the other in a points-based system that encompasses all sports. Most wins will count as 1 point with football counting as 2 points. 2 points total are awarded to community service projects, and 1 to the school with they highest departmental GPA. Points will be totaled at the end of each academic school year.[15][16] See external links section for full points explanation and scoreboard. Georgia State currently leads the 2015–16 series 6–3.
Football game results
Georgia Southern victories | Georgia State victories |
# | Date | Location | Winner | Score |
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1 | October 25, 2014 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia Southern | 69–31 |
2 | December 5, 2015 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia State | 34–7 |
Series: Tied 1–1 |
Georgia Southern's first official season was in 1924. But due to World War II, football at the school was suspended in 1941 an did not resume until 1981. Georgia State's first season was in 2010. Teams did not meet in out-of-conference games prior to both being members of the Sun Belt upon Georgia Southern's arrival in 2014.
Men's basketball game results
Table shows results since both teams officially entered NCAA basketball competition with one another. [17]
Georgia Southern victories | Georgia State victories |
# | Date | Location | Winner | Score |
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1 | February 19, 1972 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia Southern | 103–55 |
2 | March 1, 1972 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia Southern | 107–77 |
3 | February 19, 1973 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia Southern | 79–62 |
4 | February 24, 1973 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia State | 97–96 |
5 | February 20, 1974 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia Southern | 126–91 |
6 | March 1, 1974 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia Southern | 89–71 |
7 | December 7, 1974 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia State | 69–59 |
8 | January 16, 1975 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia Southern | 82–73 |
9 | December 8, 1975 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia State | 83–72 |
10 | February 14, 1976 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia State | 107–88 |
11 | January 15, 1977 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia Southern | 83–65 |
12 | February 21, 1977 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia Southern | 81–75 |
13 | November 30, 1977 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia Southern | 75–73 |
14 | January 9, 1978 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia Southern | 88–83 |
15 | November 27, 1978 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia Southern | 86–68 |
16 | January 20, 1979 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia Southern | 81–79 |
17 | December 8, 1979 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia Southern | 70–66 |
18 | February 13, 1980 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia State | 96–68 |
19 | December 6, 1980 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia State | 81–69 |
20 | January 14, 1981 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia Southern | 80–61 |
21 | January 10, 1985 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia Southern | 77–61 |
22 | February 7, 1985 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia Southern | 77–50 |
23 | March 2, 1985 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia Southern | 109–61 |
24 | January 9, 1986 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia Southern | 91–77 |
25 | February 6, 1986 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia Southern | 66–62 |
26 | January 3, 1987 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia Southern | 85–79 |
27 | February 5, 1987 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia State | 73–68 |
28 | January 7, 1988 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia Southern | 80–60 |
29 | February 11, 1988 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia Southern | 73–65 |
30 | March 10, 1988 | Daytona Beach, FL | Georgia Southern | 71–55 |
31 | January 5, 1989 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia Southern | 100–93 |
32 | February 2, 1989 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia Southern | 95–90 |
33 | January 27, 1990 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia Southern | 68–66 |
34 | February 22, 1990 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia Southern | 78–66 |
35 | January 17, 1991 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia State | 73–72 |
36 | February 14, 1991 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia State | 90–86 |
37 | January 11, 1992 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia Southern | 88–87 |
38 | February 8, 1992 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia Southern | 91–84 |
39 | March 11, 1992 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia Southern | 95–82 |
40 | December 12, 1995 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia State | 60–58 |
41 | December 21, 1996 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia State | 68–49 |
42 | December 22, 2009 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia State | 85–65 |
43 | December 22, 2010 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia Southern | 74–72 |
44 | December 22, 2011 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia State | 72–52 |
45 | December 29, 2012 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia Southern | 68–64 |
46 | December 20, 2013 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia State | 73–61 |
47 | February 5, 2015 | Statesboro, GA | Georgia Southern | 58–54 |
48 | March 7, 2015 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia State | 72–55 |
49 | March 15, 2015 | New Orleans, LA | Georgia State | 38–36 |
50 | January 19, 2016 | Atlanta, GA | Georgia State | 69–66 |
Series: Georgia Southern leads 33–17 |
External links
References
- ↑ Ben, Moore (August 18, 2015). "Who Takes Title For 2015–16 in Modern Day Hate?". CBSsports.com. 247sports. Retrieved December 10, 2015.
- 1 2 Roberson, Doug (October 26, 2014). "Georgia Southern destroys Georgia State". Cox Media Group. Atlanta Journal Constitution. Retrieved October 26, 2014.
- ↑ "Georgia State Football Timeline". Georgia State University. April 17, 2008. Retrieved March 21, 2015.
- 1 2 "Sounds like Georgia State and Georgia Southern have a rivalry?". Atlanta Journal and Constitution. October 24, 2014. Retrieved March 21, 2015.
- 1 2 Georgia State 2015–16 Men's Basketball, p. 153.
- ↑ "Becoming a University". Making History. Georgia State University. Retrieved July 2, 2013.
- ↑ Wilver, Paul. "Georgia Southern University Fack Book 2000–2001" (PDF). Georgia Southern University. Retrieved July 2, 2013.
- ↑ Hillyard, Chris. "GSU Set to Host Georgia Southern (GaSo)". Panthersville.com. Scout. Retrieved July 2, 2013.
- ↑ "Georgia Southern University Identification Standards Guide" (PDF). Georgia Southern University. Retrieved July 2, 2013.
- ↑ Roberson, Doug. "Q&A with new Georgia State AD Charlie Cobb". Cox Media Group. Atlanta Journal Constitution. Retrieved August 20, 2014.
- ↑ Roberson, Doug (October 26, 2014). "Sounds like Georgia State and Georgia Southern have a rivalry". Cox Media Group. Atlanta Journal Constitution. Retrieved October 26, 2014.
- ↑ "Georgia Southern vs Georgia State (Oct 25, 2014)". Georgia State Sports. Georgia State Athletics. Retrieved October 26, 2014.
- ↑ Brown, Mike (December 5, 2015). "Georgia State rolls to victory in Statesboro". The Telegraph (Macon). Retrieved December 5, 2015.
- ↑ Roberson, Doug. "Georgia State dominates Georgia Southern". AJC. Cox Media Group. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
- ↑ Roberson, Doug (October 1, 2015). "Georgia State and Georgia Southern add trophy to rivalry". Cox Media Group. Atlanta Journal Constitution. Retrieved October 2, 2015.
- ↑ Holmes, Mike (October 1, 2015). "Georgia State-Georgia Southern Rivalry Series Announced". Georgia State Athletics. Retrieved December 10, 2015.
- ↑ "Georgia Southern Men's Basketball 2015–16 Media Guide" (PDF). Retrieved December 18, 2015.
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