Georgia–South Carolina football rivalry

Georgia–South Carolina football rivalry
First meeting November 3, 1894
Georgia 40, South Carolina 0
Latest meeting October 9, 2016
Georgia 28, South Carolina 14
Next meeting November 4, 2017
Statistics
Meetings total 69
All-time series Georgia leads, 49–18–2
Largest victory Georgia, 40–0 (1894)
Longest win streak Georgia, 10 (1908–41, 1966–77)[1]
Current win streak Georgia, 2 (2015–present)

The Georgia–South Carolina football rivalry is an American college football rivalry between the Georgia Bulldogs and South Carolina Gamecocks. The rivalry started in 1894, and has been played annually since the Gamecocks joined the Southeastern Conference (SEC) in 1992. Georgia leads the series 49–18–2.[1]

Emergence of the rivalry

Traditionally, Georgia has had three main rivals: Georgia Tech, Auburn, and Florida.

They’ve got more rivals than almost anybody I know. They really do. Traditionally, we’ve only had Clemson because we haven’t beaten anybody enough to have any more rivals. Georgia, I’ve always said, is our biggest conference rival since they’re closest to us, I think, than any other school.[5]
Steve Spurrier, former South Carolina Head Coach, October 3, 2012

Notable games

Schedule change

In most years, since the 1991 SEC conference expansion, the game was the first conference game on the schedule for both teams. The game was typically held during the second week of the season with a non-conference game being played prior. (This was typically the case with a few early exceptions where the game was the first game of the season for both programs.) Due to SEC expansion in 2012, the schedule needed to be modified to accommodate new SEC members Texas A&M and Missouri. These became known as "bridge" schedules because they were meant to be temporary scheduling formats used to bridge the gap between the formats of 5–1–2, pre-expansion, and 6–1–1, which was agreed upon by the SEC membership as the new format. The 2012 "bridge" schedule, issued by the SEC home office, moved the UGA-USC game to October 6, 2012. However, in 2013 the SEC offices saw fit, even in the face of issuing another "bridge" schedule, to move the yearly tilt between the two programs back to the second week of the season for each program stating that the game would fill needed conference TV inventory for the early week in the season. At the same time the SEC announced that another "bridge" schedule would be issued for 2014, but that schedule has yet to be released by the SEC home office in Birmingham, Alabama.[20][21][22] However, later the SEC released a 2014 schedule that is not a bridge schedule, and also released the future cross-division opponents for each team for the 2014-2025 seasons. Additionally, while USC remained as UGA's first conference game, the first conference game for USC was a week 1 game against Texas A&M. It remains to be seen if this is a permanent change to USC's schedule, as the SEC has yet to release schedules for 2018 and beyond. In 2016, the game was postponed from Saturday October 8 to Sunday October 9 due to the effects of Hurricane Matthew.

Game results

Georgia victoriesSouth Carolina victoriesTie games
No.DateLocationWinnerScore
1October 3, 1894 Columbia, SC Georgia 40–0
2October 20, 1900 Athens, GA Georgia 5–0
3October 12, 1901 Augusta, GA Georgia 10–5
4October 17, 1903 Athens, GA South Carolina 17–0
5October 26, 1904 Columbia, SC South Carolina 2–0
6October 17, 1908 Athens, GA Georgia 29–6
7October 7, 1911 Athens, GA Georgia 38–0
8October 11, 1919 Athens, GA Georgia 14–0
9October 9, 1920 Columbia, SC Georgia 37–0
10October 4, 1924 Athens, GA Georgia 18–0
11October 2, 1937 Columbia, SC Georgia 13–7
12October 1, 1938 Columbia, SC Georgia 7–6
13November 18, 1939 Athens, GA Georgia 33–7
14October 5, 1940 Columbia, SC Georgia 33–2
15October 4, 1941 Athens, GA Georgia 34–6
16October 4, 1958 Athens, GA South Carolina 24–14
17October 3, 1959 Columbia, SC #16 South Carolina 30–14
18October 1, 1960 Athens, GA Georgia 38–6
19October 7, 1961 Athens, GA Georgia 17–14
20October 6, 1962 Columbia, SC Tie7–7
21October 5, 1963 Athens, GA Georgia 27–7
22October 3, 1964 Columbia, SC Tie7–7
23October 1, 1966 Columbia, SC Georgia 7–0
24October 7, 1967 Athens, GA #5 Georgia 21–0
25October 5, 1968 Columbia, SC #16 Georgia 21–20
26October 4, 1969 Athens, GA #7 Georgia 41–16
27October 31, 1970 Athens, GA Georgia 52–34
28October 30, 1971 Columbia, SC #7 Georgia 24–0
29September 28, 1974 Athens, GA Georgia 52–14
30September 27, 1975 Columbia, SC Georgia 28–20
31September 25, 1976 Athens, GA #7 Georgia 20–12
32September 24, 1977 Columbia, SC Georgia 15–13
33September 30, 1978 Columbia, SC South Carolina 27–10
34September 29, 1979 Athens, GA South Carolina 27–20
35November 1, 1980 Athens, GA #4 Georgia 13–10
No.DateLocationWinnerScore
36September 26, 1981 Athens, GA #17 Georgia 24–0
37September 25, 1982 Columbia, SC #7 Georgia 34–18
38September 24, 1983 Athens, GA #14 Georgia 31–13
39September 29, 1984 Columbia, SC South Carolina 17–10
40September 28, 1985 Athens, GA Georgia 35–21
41September 27, 1986 Columbia, SC Georgia 31–26
42September 26, 1987 Athens, GA Georgia 13–6
43September 24, 1988 Columbia, SC #14 South Carolina 23–10
44September 30, 1989 Athens, GA South Carolina 24–20
45September 5, 1992 Columbia, SC #14 Georgia 28–6
46September 4, 1993 Athens, GA South Carolina 23–21
47September 3, 1994 Columbia, SC Georgia 24–21
48September 2, 1995 Athens, GA Georgia 42–23
49September 14, 1996 Columbia, SC South Carolina 23–14
50September 13, 1997 Athens, GA #25 Georgia 31–15
51September 12, 1998 Columbia, SC #13 Georgia 17–3
52September 11, 1999 Athens, GA #12 Georgia 24–9
53September 9, 2000 Columbia, SC South Carolina 21–10
54September 8, 2001 Athens, GA #21 South Carolina 14–9
55September 14, 2002 Columbia, SC #10 Georgia 13–7
56September 13, 2003 Athens, GA #8 Georgia 31–7
57September 11, 2004 Columbia, SC #4 Georgia 20–16
58September 10, 2005 Athens, GA #9 Georgia 17–15
59September 9, 2006 Columbia, SC #12 Georgia 18–0
60September 8, 2007 Athens, GA South Carolina 16–12
61September 13, 2008 Columbia, SC #2 Georgia 14–7
62September 12, 2009 Athens, GA #21 Georgia 41–37
63September 11, 2010 Columbia, SC #24 South Carolina 17–6
64September 10, 2011 Athens, GA #12 South Carolina 45–42
65October 6, 2012 Columbia, SC #6 South Carolina 35–7
66September 7, 2013 Athens, GA #11 Georgia 41–30
67September 13, 2014 Columbia, SC #24 South Carolina 38–35
68September 19, 2015 Athens, GA #7 Georgia 52–20
69October 9, 2016 Columbia,SC Georgia 28–14
Series: Georgia leads 49–18–2

Series record sources: ESPN College Football Encyclopedia[23] College Football Data Warehouse.[24]

Border Bash

The Border Bash is an annual event held in Augusta, Georgia on the banks of the Savannah River celebrating Georgia–South Carolina rivalry. It is held on the Friday prior to the yearly UGA-USC football game. The event is supported by numerous business and private sponsors from both sides of the river. The evening event regularly draws over 10,000 fans from both fan-bases and proceeds are used to support numerous children's charities from around the CSRA through the Border Bash Foundation. Both mascots, as well as each program's cheerleaders, represent their programs at the event along with various dignitaries from the schools themselves. Neither the football coaches or the ballplayers attend due to conflicts with their pregame preparations.[25][26]

References

  1. 1 2 "Georgia Football 2011 Media Guide". Georgiadogs.com. Retrieved May 23, 2012.
  2. "SOUTH CAROLINA FOOTBALL HISTORY DATABASE". Retrieved 14 March 2012.
  3. "Spurrier gives UGA some love in recruiting". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Retrieved 15 March 2013.
  4. "UGA Football: Steve Spurrier, South Carolina and the Brewing of a Fierce Rivalry". Retrieved 22 March 2013.
  5. "Gamecocks preparing for emotional week". IndependentMail.com. Archived from the original on 3 November 2012. Retrieved 3 October 2012.
  6. South Carolina-Georgia 1993: Who Could Forget?
  7. Georgia vs. South Carolina Sep 09, 2000
  8. "Pollack's fourth-quarter interception an odd gem". ESPN.com. Retrieved 22 March 2013.
  9. "Greene heats up late to rescue Bulldogs". ESPN.com. Retrieved 22 March 2013.
  10. "Georgia finally beats Spurrier". ESPN.com. Retrieved 22 March 2013.
  11. "Cock of the Walk: USC upsets No. 11 Georgia". Anderson Independent Mail. Archived from the original on 9 January 2009. Retrieved 22 March 2013.
  12. "UGA survives Gamecocks to earn- revenge". Anderson Independent Mail. Archived from the original on 5 May 2014. Retrieved 22 March 2013.
  13. Foster, Mike. "The UGA-South Carolina Rivalry: Downright Dirty, New Fashioned Hate". The Bleacher Report. Retrieved 14 March 2012.
  14. "Marcus Lattimore gives South Carolina edge over Georgia". ESPN. Associated Press. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
  15. "South Carolina 2010 Results". 247 Sports. Retrieved 14 March 2012.
  16. "Georgia turnovers help No. 12 South Carolina win on the road". ESPN. Associated Press. Retrieved 14 March 2012.
  17. "Georgia fights off Kentucky to win SEC East title". ESPN. Associated Press. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
  18. "Connor Shaw solid as South Carolina squashes Georgia to stay unbeaten". ESPN.com. Retrieved 22 March 2013.
  19. "Aaron Murray, No. 11 Georgia top No. 6 S. Carolina in SEC East clash". ESPN.com. Retrieved 8 September 2014.
  20. "SEC has another 'bridge' schedule in 2013". Times Free Press. Retrieved 2014-05-20.
  21. "SEC Releases 2013 Conference Football Schedule > SEC > NEWS". Secdigitalnetwork.com. 2012-10-18. Retrieved 2014-05-20.
  22. "SEC slate a dilemma: Cross-divisional matchups create potential imbalances in schedules". Times Free Press. Retrieved 2014-05-20.
  23. MacCambridge, Michael (2005). ESPN College Football Encyclopedia. New York: ESPN Book. pp. 310–314. ISBN 1-4013-3703-1.
  24. and College Football Data Warehouse, Retrieved October 02, 2012.
  25. Kaylor, Lisa (2012-12-14). "Border Bash money goes to 17 Augusta-area charities | The Augusta Chronicle". Chronicle.augusta.com. Retrieved 2014-05-20.
  26. "Access Denied | The Community Foundation". Cfcsra.org. Retrieved 2014-05-20.

Additional sources

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