Civil Conflict

Civil Conflict
Sport Football
First meeting October 26, 2013
UCF 62–17
Latest meeting October 22, 2016
UCF 24–16
Next meeting November 11, 2017
at Orlando, FL
Statistics
Meetings total 4
All-time series Tied 2–2
Largest victory UCF, 62–17 (2013)
Longest win streak UConn, 2 (2014–2015)
Current win streak UCF, 1 (2016–present)

The Civil Conflict (sometimes styled as the conFLiCT[1]), is the name given by former University of Connecticut football head coach Bob Diaco to Connecticut's annual matchup against the UCF Knights football team of the University of Central Florida. [2][3] The teams first met in 2013 as members of the American Athletic Conference (The American). Diaco was fired at the end of the 2016 season, to be replaced by Randy Edsall.

In June 2015, Connecticut created a trophy for the rivalry and announced it on Twitter. UCF had not been involved in the announcement and was unaware of it beforehand.[4][5][6] The Knights head coach and interim athletic director George O'Leary dismissed both the trophy and the motivations for a rivalry between the two teams.[7] Diaco responded by saying, "They [UCF] don't get to say whether they are our rival or not."[2][8] The New York Post said that Diaco created the "worst rivalry in sports history."[9]

Before Diaco gave a name to the series, the teams had played twice. UCF won the first game in 2013, and Connecticut's upset of UCF in 2014 was the Knights' only conference loss in their first two years as members of The American. Connecticut won for the second straight year in 2015 game, dropping UCF's record on the season to 0–6. Following its win in the 2016 game, UCF exited the field without accepting, or even acknowledging, the trophy.[10]

Game results

Connecticut victoriesUCF victories
No.DateLocationWinnerScore
1 October 26, 2013 Orlando, FL UCF 62–17
2 November 1, 2014 East Hartford, CT Connecticut 37–29
3 October 10, 2015 Orlando, FL Connecticut 40–13
4 October 22, 2016 East Hartford, CT UCF 24–16
5 November 11, 2017 Orlando, FL
Series: Tied 2–2

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.