logo
Login Subscribe
Google Play App Store
  • News
    • Obituaries
    • Lifestyle
    • Opinion
  • Sports
  • E-edition
  • Public Notices
  • Calendar
  • Archives
  • Contact
    • Contact Us
    • Advertisers
    • Form Submission
    • About Us
    • News
      • Obituaries
      • Lifestyle
      • Opinion
    • Sports
    • E-edition
    • Public Notices
    • Calendar
    • Archives
    • Contact
      • Contact Us
      • Advertisers
      • Form Submission
      • About Us
With conference realignment, are football rivalries history?
commentary
October 12, 2023
With conference realignment, are football rivalries history?
By ?r. James Finck, USAG History Professor

Many of you are probably like me and feel fall is the best of the seasons. With fall, the heat starts to break with cooler temperatures.

The fall foliage is amazing, especially where I grew up in Virginia. We get to celebrate Halloween and Thanksgiving, but mostly of all we get football.

I love college football; not just the game but the entire culture surrounding it. I was fortunate enough to earn my masters at Virginia Tech during its height with Michael Vick, and because my wife worked for the Corps of Cadets, we had 50-yard line tickets. Then while earning my doctorate I was able to call the hogs along with 70,000 Razorbacks fans. It’s a unique experience.

However, recently the sport I love is taking a hit with NIL deals, transfer portals, and conference realignment.

One of the hardest parts of the realignment is the breakup of traditional rivalries, which are a fundamental part of the game and bring together entire communities and states, even if the unification is in hatred of each other. While many of the rivalries are still intact, Michigan v. Ohio State and Cal v. Stanford and others are coming back together, BYU v.

Utah, many others are being split up and will potentially strip away an important part of the game.

While most rivalries are just sports related, historically speaking, there are some – and one in particular – that goes beyond sports.

Some of the hardest breaks are going to be the interstate rivalries.

Here in Oklahoma the Oklahoma v. Oklahoma State Bedlam game goes way beyond the field. All the K-12 schools join in the rivalry with canned goods or blood drives.

It’s a game that builds all week with trash talking followed by a year of bragging rights. With OU now leaving for the SEC in a money grab, I predict the state will suffer.

Now we are being told the yearly Red River Rivalry between OU and Texas will end as the SEC is doing away with divisions and so the match will not be a yearly event. I’m not sure, but that could also possibly doom the other SEC rivalries like Alabama v. Auburn. Can you imagine a season without the Iron Bowl or the Largest Outdoor Cocktail Party? I don’t want to.

Luckily most of the oldest rivalries are still intact. Yale v. Princeton is the oldest, started in 1873 and the most played game ever is Lafayette v. Lehigh with 158 games.

Yet, one of the oldest important rivalries and one that has significant historic roots has not survived realignment.

In 2012, in one of the earlier conference shifts, Missouri announced that it would leave the Big 12 for the SEC. In doing so, it destroyed a rivalry that officially goes back to 1891 but unofficially began in 1854.

In that year, Kansas exploded into violence as pro-slavery forces from Missouri began to raid into Kansas to attack anti-slavery forces. The two sides were fighting over whether the state should join the Union as a free or slave state.

Both sides organized themselves as the official government of the state and both sides wrote a constitution and sent it to D.C. to apply for statehood. The pro-slavery element organized themselves in Lecompton, Kansas, and were known as Border Ruffians. More importantly the anti-slavery forces organized themselves in Lawrence, Kansas, and became known as Jayhawks. The violence between the two known as Bleeding Kansas would last up to and past the Civil War.

While there were large battles in Kansas and Missouri, the ma

• of the fighting in this region was guerrilla action. The Jayhawks, also called Red Legs, raided into Missouri causing all sorts of devastation including the sacking of the town of Osceola. Later, several women related to the Missouri raiders were arrested and put in prison in Kansas City.

In 1863, the prison collapsed and killed several of the women. These two events led to the Missouri men known as Bushwhackers retaliating by riding through Kansas cutting huge swaths of destruction.

The most famous incident happened in August of 1863 when Missouri men, under the direction of William Quantrill, sacked the town of Lawrence, killing around 150. At the same time, Missouri towns organized themselves into home guard units to protect themselves against future raids. The Town of Columbus, Missouri, was no different when they organized their home guard calling them the Tigers.

Jump ahead to 1891.

Both states had built state institutions and prepared to meet on the gridiron. The University of Kansas, in Lawrence, called their team the Jayhawks, while the University of Missouri, in Columbus, were the Tigers. Both were named after guerilla groups that terrorized the other.

Today I know the OU v. OSU fans claim hatred, but in these early games there were Civil War veterans from the two sides standing on the sideline staring at each other as they had once done on the battlefield.

While there are stories of veterans shaking hands at reunions like Gettysburg, it was much harder to reconcile between guerilla groups. These groups terrorized families and killed innocents. And now, for many too old to still fight, footballs replaced bullets and there seemed to be more than just bragging rights on the line.

This game, deemed the Border War, later changed to the Border Showdown after 9/11, has brought out passions over the years even as the veterans faded away. The rivalry lasted for decades including 2007 t-shirts from Missouri referencing the sacking of Lawrence, while Kansas students wore shirts with John Brown and the fictional quote of keeping America safe from Missouri since 1854.

Fortunately, there are supposedly talks of renewing this historic rivalry. While this one may have hope, there are many more that may be doomed to end. While this hurts the game, it unfortunately hurts the fans and communities that celebrate these games even more.

James Finck, Ph.D. is a professor of history at the University of Science and Arts of Oklahoma.

He can be reached atHistoricallySpeakingl 776@gmail.com.

World Champion Fighting Bull found dead
A: Main, News...
World Champion Fighting Bull found dead
By LADONNA RHODES STAFF WRITER 
January 15, 2026
A legendary, world-champion freestyle fighting bull named “Hugh Hefner” from Penthouse Fighting Bulls, was tragically shot and killed in Oklahoma. Hugh was known as a dominant, blackcoated bull feared...
this is a test
Eufaula Ironheads crowned Warner Eagles Cherokee Classic Champions
B: Sports, Sports...
Eufaula Ironheads crowned Warner Eagles Cherokee Classic Champions
By Rodney Haltom sports EDITOR 
January 15, 2026
The No. 8 Eufaula Ironheads (11-2) were crowned Warner Eagles Cherokee Classic Champions Saturday after dismantling the No. 3 Okay Mustangs 60-47. Eufaula continues to be a fun team to watch. They’re ...
this is a test
A: Main, News...
Muscogee Nation files lawsuit against state of Oklahoma over hunting, fishing license for tribal members
By Rodney Haltom sports EDITOR 
January 15, 2026
The Muscogee Nation is suing the State of Oklahoma over whether tribal members need a state license to hunt or fish on land within the Five Tribes’ reservations. The Okmulgee-based tribe has filed a c...
this is a test
Area schools have room for improvement
A: Main, News...
Area schools have room for improvement
By LYNN ADAMS SPECIAL TO THE EUFAULA INDIAN JOURNAL 
January 15, 2026
The day report cards come out at school is often rife with anxiety for students. Did I do as well as I think I did? In areas with room for improvement, did I succeed? Students aren’t the only ones who...
this is a test
A: Main, News...
ANNUAL DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. EVENTS
January 15, 2026
CELEBRATION – Jan. 18 The Annual Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day Celebration will be held on Sunday, January 18, 2026 at 3 p.m., Mt. Olive Star Baptist Church, located at 413665 E. 1080 Rd., Checotah;...
this is a test
A: Main, News...
Checotah Masonic Lodge #86 Pork Loin Dinner Fundraiser
January 15, 2026
To support the Checotah 4H and FFA Booster Club Sunday, January 18 11:30 a.m. – 2 p.m. $12 donation per plate 625 W. Gentry Ave. Checotah, OK
this is a test
ePaper
coogle_play
app_store
Editor Picks
A: Main, News...
Don’t miss the 2026 Annual Women’s Conference January 16-17
January 15, 2026
Friday Conference: 6:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m. Saturday Breakfast: 8:30 a.m. – 9:30 a.m. Conference: 9:30 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. Ages 13 and up Checotah First Free Will Baptist Church 713 N. Broadway St., Checota...
this is a test
Eufaula Chamber of Commerce welcomes Tim Turner as new executive director
A: Main, News...
Eufaula Chamber of Commerce welcomes Tim Turner as new executive director
January 15, 2026
SHAUNA BELYEU GENERAL MANAGER The Eufaula Area Chamber of Commerce has welcomed Tim Turner as its new executive director, a role he officially assumed on Jan. 1. “Tim brings fresh perspective and ener...
this is a test
A: Main, News...
Plans for 18th Annual Chili Cook-Off underway
January 15, 2026
It’s time to pull out those famous family chili recipes and see if you have what it takes to win this year’s 18th Annual Chili Cook-Off set for Saturday, Feb. 28 at the Checotah Community Center. The ...
this is a test
Senseless killings still seen by a sovereign God
Opinion
Senseless killings still seen by a sovereign God
January 15, 2026
Every day I turn on the news I hear of more senseless killings. Headlines read “A senseless act” when a 15-year-old shoots and kills an Uber driver on New Year’s Day. One was working a holiday to make...
this is a test
Opinion
Lankford, Cornyn, and Colleagues introduce Stop Illegal Aliens Drunk Driving Act
January 15, 2026
WASH INGTON, DC — US Senators James Lankford (R-OK), John Cornyn (R-TX), and colleagues today introduced the Stop Illegal Aliens Drunk Driving Act, which would strengthen current immigration laws to e...
this is a test
Facebook
Twitter
Tweets
Twitter
Tweets

MCINTOSH COUNTY DEMOCRAT
300-A S. Broadway
Checotah, OK
74426

(918) 473-2313

This site complies with ADA requirements

© 2023 Mcintosh Democrat

  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Accessibility Policy