List of college rivalries in the United States

This is a list of college rivalries in the United States.

School rivalries are common in the United States, and are prevalent in intercollegiate sports. Rivalries can be defined as two or more teams who have a history of competitiveness that effects more than just the players on the field.[1] Rivalries within sports conferences are listed below. Some rivalries, such as the Indiana–Kentucky rivalry, take place between two schools from different conferences.

By athletic conference edit

ACC rivalries edit

Basketball and football are typically the focus of sports rivalries in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC), though schools find themselves in rivalries across all sports, including baseball and lacrosse. Notable rivalries include:

All sports edit

- Conference
- Non-conference

Basketball edit

- Conference
- Non-conference

Football edit

- Conference
- Non-conference

America East rivalries edit

Basketball is typically the focus of sports rivalries in the America East Conference, though schools find themselves in rivalries across all sports, including baseball and lacrosse. Notable rivalries include:

- Non-conference

Big East rivalries edit

The Big East Conference, founded as a basketball conference, is a league of 11 Division I schools, with only University of Connecticut playing FBS–level football. The conference, while centered in the northeast, is also geographically diverse, stretching from Nebraska to New England. Current rivalries include:

  • Butler Bulldogs and Xavier Musketeers – among the most successful Division I men's basketball programs in the 21st century, the two schools were founding members of the Midwestern Collegiate Conference,[3] and were also two of the three Midwestern schools invited to join the Big East at its relaunch in 2013.
  • DePaul Blue Demons and Marquette Golden Eagles – originally Division I independents, both joined Conference USA and the original Big East at the same time, and are among the "Catholic 7" that formed the current Big East after breaking away from the former members of the conference who all sponsored Division I Football Bowl Subdivision-level football. One of several sports rivalries involving teams from Chicago and Milwaukee, alongside the Brewers–Cubs rivalry and (by proxy) the Bears–Packers rivalry. The rivalry reached its zenith in the late 1970s, when both DePaul and Marquette were national powers. However, the rivalry has, as of late, heavily favored Marquette, with the Milwaukee school winning approximately four out of every five meetings since the early 1990s.
  • Georgetown Hoyas and St. John's Red Storm' — these two "Catholic 7" schools, neither of which plays Division I FBS football (Georgetown plays in Division I FCS, and St. John's has no football program), had their basketball teams rise to prominence in the 1980s, having numerous meetings that impacted the NCAA Championship as well as the Big East title. Both teams were known for their charismatic coaches, John Thompson at Georgetown and Lou Carnesecca at St. John's. Rivalry has declined in recent years. This rivalry has also influenced other sports, as the two schools' baseball teams opened Citi Field on March 29, 2009 with the third game of a three-game series that started at Georgetown. The Hoyas won the game, and the series.
  • Georgetown–UConn men's basketball rivalry — first game played between the two schools took place on December 22, 1958.
  • Georgetown Hoyas and Villanova Wildcats — these two Division I FCS football schools share an intense rivalry in basketball, stemming from Villanova's defeat of John Thompson's Hoya team in the 1985 NCAA championship game. The rivalry takes on a religious tone as Augustinian (Villanova) versus Jesuit (Georgetown). Jokes about the opposing orders fly back and forth during the week preceding Villanova–Georgetown. In recent years the rivalry has undergone somewhat of a revival, with both teams enjoying success in the regular season and recent NCAA tournaments. This rivalry continues in the reconfigured Big East.[4]
  • Providence Friars and Villanova Wildcats — the two smallest schools in the original Big East battle each year. The rivalry is also elevated by the Catholic orders which run the schools; Providence's Dominicans and Villanova's Augustinians.
  • St. John's Red Storm and Seton Hall Pirates – two local "Catholic 7" schools battle every year in basketball. New York vs New Jersey bragging rights are on the line as well as competing for many local basketball recruits in the area.
- Non-conference
  • Notre Dame–UConn women's basketball rivalry – a rivalry that started in the 1990s when both schools were members of the original Big East, intensified in the 2000–01 season with three pivotal matchups (one of which became the focal point of a published book, Bird at the Buzzer), and became nationally significant in the 21st century, especially after UConn's rivalry with Tennessee went on a 13-year hiatus. Notre Dame was responsible for more than half of UConn's losses from 2011 to 2019 (8 out of 15).
  • Ocean State Rivalry a college basketball rivalry that started in 1920 between Providence College and the University of Rhode Island.
  • Rutgers–UConn women's basketball rivalry – a rivalry that intensified after Tennessee stopped scheduling Rutgers in non–conference play.
  • Stanford–UConn women's basketball rivalry – another nationally significant rivalry, with five of their 18 total meetings coming in the Final Four.
  • Tennessee–UConn women's basketball rivalry – the women's basketball rivalry between the University of Tennessee Lady Volunteers and the University of Connecticut Huskies is one of the fiercest rivalries in college basketball, and perhaps the only one to reach national consciousness out of the women's game. This rivalry was halted in 2007 due to a falling-out between the schools' head coaches (respectively Pat Summitt and Geno Auriemma), and did not resume until 2020 (four years after Summitt's death).

Big Ten rivalries edit

The 14 universities part of the Big Ten Conference, most of which are located in the Midwestern United States, have more rivalries than other universities in the conference. These include;

Basketball edit

Football edit

Big 12 rivalries edit

Current rivalries in the Big 12 Conference include:

Other current rivalries involving Big 12 schools include:

Former Big 12 rivalries that are now dormant due to conference realignment in the early 2010s include:

Coastal Athletic Association rivalries edit

Rivalries in the Coastal Athletic Association (CAA) and its technically separate football arm of CAA Football include:

Likely future rivalries are:

Ivy League and service academy rivalries edit

Rivalries between and among the Ivy League schools and the service academies include:

Pac-12 rivalries edit

The Pac-12 Conference currently falls neatly into six regional pairings, leading to strong rivalries. Three of these pairs are cross-state rivals, one pair is within the same metropolitan region (San Francisco Bay Area), and one pair vies for bragging rights within the same city (Los Angeles). However, the Pac-12 is all but certain to fold, at least in its current form, in 2024, with four members joining the Big Ten Conference, four joining the Big 12 Conference, and two joining the Atlantic Coast Conference.

Other Pac-12 rivalries:

  • University of California, Berkeley (Cal) and University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) (all sports) – The schools are the highest rated universities in the University of California system and compete in the biggest "intra-university" rivalry in the nation. However, the two campuses will be separated in 2024, with Cal in the ACC and UCLA in the Big Ten.
  • University of Oregon and University of Washington – (football) a rivalry between the two of the four programs in the Pacific Northwest described as one of the "most temperamental cross-state rivalries".[14] Both will move together to the Big Ten in 2024, and their football rivalry is another of the Big Ten's "protected" matchups.
  • University of Arizona and University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) (basketball and softball) – In the mid-1990s, Arizona and UCLA, as the two strongest basketball teams in the Pac-10, often clashed for dominance in the conference and for the conference championship. As in softball in the 1990s the two teams combined for nine of the ten championships awarded. And both combine for 19 national championships of 34 contended. The two will be separated in 2024, with Arizona in the Big 12 and UCLA in the Big Ten.
  • Stanford University and University of Southern California (USC) – two of the major private universities in California and the only two private schools in the Pac-12, these two schools are highly competitive in most sports. Recent football upsets of the long successful Trojans (24–23 Stanford in 2007, the biggest point-spread upset in NCAA football history and an end to USC's 6-year home winning streak and 55–21 in 2009, the most points ever scored against the Trojans in the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum) have led to a rekindling of the long-standing rivalry. However, the schools will be separated in 2024, with Stanford in the ACC and USC in the Big Ten.

Additional non-conference rivalries involving Pac-12 schools (the most famous of which is arguably Notre Dame–USC) can be found in other sections of this article.

SEC rivalries edit

Home of the biggest football teams, the Southeastern Conference, (SEC), naturally includes the biggest rivalries which can be vital in deciding playoff position and even national championships. These include:

Notre Dame rivalries edit

The University of Notre Dame (an independent in football) has numerous football rivals, the most notable of which include:

  • Boston College – a game between the only two Catholic colleges that have Football Bowl Subdivision football programs. They compete for the Ireland Trophy. The rivalry has also been dubbed "The Holy War". This is one of several rivalries that have been revived on an intermittent basis following Notre Dame's 2013 entry into the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC); while Notre Dame remains an independent in football, it has agreed to play five games per season against ACC schools, and to play all other ACC members at least once every three years. The first game under this new arrangement was won by Notre Dame at Fenway Park in 2015.
  • Michigan State University – a series that includes one of several "Games of the Century", the 1966 matchup that ended in a 10–10 tie. The teams play for the Megaphone Trophy. The game will be played less often in the future, due both to Notre Dame's new ACC commitments and the Big Ten increasing its conference schedule to nine games in 2016.
  • Northwestern University – a rivalry that had its heyday in the 1920s and 1930s and even featured a Shillelagh trophy much like the ones that go to the winner of the Notre Dame–USC and Notre Dame–Purdue games. This rivalry game has been played infrequently in recent years.
  • Purdue University – The Shillelagh Trophy. To be played less often in the future for the reasons mentioned in the Michigan State discussion.
  • University of Miami – initially an easy win for the Irish, became a rivalry that was at its peak in the 1980s and often held national title implications. This is another rivalry that was revived following Notre Dame's arrival in the ACC; the first game under the new deal was in 2016, with the next matchup expected to be in 2025. See also: Catholics vs. Convicts.
  • University of Michigan – a game between two of the winningest college football programs of all time. This rivalry went on hiatus after the 2014 season due to Notre Dame's ACC commitments.
  • United States Military Academy (Army) – a rivalry held almost every year from an initial meeting in 1913 to the 1950s, in the era when the two were among the top schools in the nation, the two now play infrequently, with the most recent game occurring in 2016 at the Alamodome in San Antonio.
  • United States Naval Academy (Navy) – a rivalry which Notre Dame has dominated. Navy won this game in 2007 for the first time since 1963, and again in 2009, 2010, and 2016, somewhat reversing the lopsided nature of the rivalry the previous four decades. It is one of the longer-running series in college football and is always hard-fought on both sides. Before Navy became a football-only member of the American Athletic Conference in 2015, the two schools were the longest-standing independents in Division I FBS. The rivalry is officially scheduled through the 2026 season, and is expected to continue indefinitely.
  • University of Pittsburgh – longtime rivals that shared Big East Conference affiliations (except in football) and ACC affiliations when both schools joined the ACC in 2013. Many of Notre Dame's most famed talents such as Joe Montana, Lou Holtz and Johnny Lujack hail from the Pittsburgh area. The "public vs. private" aspect as well as always having opposing team members that have played with or against each other since grade school has given the contest a unique distinction of dividing neighborhoods or even families during a fall Saturday. This rivalry will be played once every three years as part of Notre Dame's agreement to play five ACC schools per season.
  • University of Southern California[5] – Playing for the Jeweled Shillelagh, it is a game between two of the three teams with the most Heisman Trophies. See also: Notre Dame–USC football rivalry
  • Stanford University – nicknamed the Legends Trophy, this rivalry is a battle between legend-producing schools. Notre Dame created many legends while Stanford created legends like Jim Plunkett, John Elway, Toby Gerhart, and recently Andrew Luck. Also, during the early-2020s conference realignment, Notre Dame strongly lobbied for Stanford to be invited to the ACC; the Cardinal was eventually accepted as a new ACC member effective in 2024.
  • Georgia Tech – played on and off since the early mid-20th Century as a North vs. South rivalry of sorts. Following Notre Dame's arrival in the ACC, the rivalry resumed in 2015 on a three-year rotation, with the next meeting expected to be in 2024.

Additionally, Notre Dame men's basketball has traditional rivalries with DePaul University, Marquette University, and UCLA when each of the programs met regularly and were national contenders. Notre Dame women's basketball has developed a nationally significant rivalry with the University of Connecticut, with a published book focusing on one specific matchup.

By region edit

Midwest rivalries edit

Northeastern rivalries edit

Southeastern rivalries edit

Universities in the Southeastern U.S., including those in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC), Conference USA (C-USA), Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC), Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC), Southeastern Conference (SEC), Southern Conference (SoCon), Southland Conference, and Sun Belt Conference, have perhaps the most complex jumble of rivalries, many associated with annual football games, and often with colorful nicknames:

Old Southeastern rivalries seldom played due to conference obligations, divisional changes etc.:

Texas rivalries edit

These rivalries involve Texas schools that are not currently members of the Big 12 Conference. In two of these rivalries, both sides involved were members of the old Southwest Conference, four of whose schools were founding members of the Big 12. Another rivalry involves an old SWC team against an Oklahoma rival.

Western rivalries edit

Other edit

Historically Black Colleges and Universities edit

Religious schools edit

References edit

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See also edit