TheBattle for the Old Mountain Jugwas the name given to theAppalachian State–Western Carolinafootball rivalry,an Americancollege footballrivalrygame that became dormant when Appalachian State left theSouthern Conferenceand moved to theFBSin 2014.
Sport | Football |
---|---|
First meeting | November 5, 1932 Appalachian State, 20–0 |
Latest meeting | November 23, 2013 Appalachian State, 48–27 |
Trophy | Old Mountain Jug |
Statistics | |
Meetings total | 78 |
All-time series | Appalachian State leads, 58–19–1 |
Largest victory | Appalachian State, 54–7 (1939) |
Longest win streak | Appalachian State, 13 (1932–1948) & (1985–1997) |
Current win streak | Appalachian State, 9 (2005–present) |
History
editThe Mountaineers and Catamounts first played each other in a football game in 1932. The two teams then played annually without interruption from 1946 to 2013. The trophy series began in 1976.
The Old Mountain Jug, an oldmoonshinejug, has been awarded to the winner since 1976. It is painted gold with Appalachian State's mascot, aMountaineer,and Western Carolina's mascot, aCatamount,on opposing sides.[1]
The rivalry had natural origins. Appalachian and Western were the onlypubliccolleges in thewestern halfofNorth Carolinafor decades and made similar steps to their present status as comprehensive regional universities. Both basically recruited athletes from the same high schools in the early years and their graduates were, in large part, public school teachers. The alumni of the schools found themselves working together, which helped foster the rivalry.[1]
Prior to the game in 1976,[2]the idea was pitched of heightening the long-standing rivalry. The jug idea was presented toalumniof both universities and theSports Information Directorswere charged with drumming up media exposure. The jug was donated by Roby Triplett, the manager of the Appalachian State Bookstore. It weighs approximately 25poundsand is capped with its original traditionalcork.Dee Triplett, Roby's wife, painted the jug. Excluding minor touchups, the jug and its logos have not been altered since their creation.[3]
In the mid-1980s, the series was mentioned as "the best football rivalry you've never heard of" bySports Illustrated;but after 1985, the series became one-sided, with Western Carolina winning only 2 of the last 28 meetings.[4]The 1979 game was the second-ever live broadcast on theESPNsports network.[4]
With Appalachian's move to theSun Belt Conferenceof theFootball Bowl Subdivisionin 2014, the trophy was retired after 2013's contest. The Old Mountain Jug currently resides in a trophy case at Appalachian State.[5]
Game results
editThe Appalachian State and Western Carolina rivalry dates back to 1932 with the Appalachian State Mountaineers holding a 59–18–1 advantage over the Western Carolina Catamounts. The two teams had squared off for 68 consecutive years since the game was suspended forWorld War II,1942–1945.
Appalachian State victories | Western Carolina victories | Tie games |
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See also
editReferences
edit- ^abWestern Carolina University."Battle for the Old Mountain Jug - WCU vs. ASU".Catamount Sports. Archived fromthe originalon May 11, 2008.RetrievedSeptember 30,2008.
- ^Appalachian Sports Information (November 22, 2008)."No. 2 ASU Looks to Close Out Perfect SoCon Season at Archrival WCU".GoASU.RetrievedNovember 24,2008.
- ^Flynn, Mike (2008).2008 Appalachian Football: Old Mountain Jug(PDF).Appalachian Sports Information. p. 151. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on March 17, 2012.RetrievedOctober 1,2008.
- ^abHooker, Daniel (2008).2008 Western Carolina Football Media Guide(PDF).WCU Media Relations Department. p. 46. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on May 23, 2011.RetrievedNovember 23,2008.
- ^Hardin, Ed (November 27, 2019)."Ed Hardin: A mountain family favorite, spending Thanksgiving Day locked away and alone".Winston-Salem Journal.RetrievedJuly 23,2024.