The Carolina–Clemson rivalry, also referred to as the The Battle of the Palmetto State or The Palmetto Bowl, is an American college rivalry between the sports teams of the University of South Carolina and of Clemson University: the South Carolina Gamecocks and the Clemson Tigers. Both institutions are public universities supported by the state of South Carolina, and their campuses are separated by only 132 miles. USC and Clemson have been bitter rivals since the 1880s, and a heated rivalry continues to this day for a variety of reasons, including the historic tensions regarding their respective charters and the passions surrounding their athletic programs.
Both universities are members of premier collegiate athletic conferences: South Carolina is in the Southeastern Conference (SEC); Clemson is in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC).
Origin[]
Background[]
Category | Clemson University | University of South Carolina |
---|---|---|
Location | Clemson | Columbia |
Students | 19,914 | 30,721 |
School colors | Clemson Orange and Regalia[1] | Garnet and Black |
Nickname | Tigers | Gamecocks |
Mascot | The Tiger and The Tiger Cub | Cocky |
National Championships | 4[2] | 8[3][4][5] |
Unlike most major college rivalries, the Carolina–Clemson rivalry did not start innocently and because of competitive collegiate sports. The deep-seated bitterness began between the two schools long before Clemson received its charter and became a college. The two institutions were founded eighty-eight years apart from one another on a chronological scale: South Carolina College in 1801 and Clemson Agricultural College in 1889.
South Carolina College was founded in 1801 to unite and promote harmony between the Lowcountry and the Backcountry.[6] It closed during the Civil War when its students aided the Southern cause, but the closure gave politicians an opportunity to reorganize it to their liking.[7][8] The Radical Republicans in charge of state government during Reconstruction opened the school to blacks and women while appropriating generous funds to the university, which caused the white citizens of the state to withdraw their support for the university[9] and view it as a symbol of the worst aspects of Reconstruction.
The Democrats returned to power in 1877 following their decisive electoral victory over the Radical Republicans and promptly proceeded to close the university. Sentiment in the state favored opening an agriculture college, so the university was reorganized as the South Carolina College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts.[10] In 1882, the college was renamed to its antebellum name, South Carolina College, which infuriated the farmers who felt that the politicians had frustrated the will of the people by de-emphasizing agriculture education, even though the school still retained the department of agriculture.[11] Clemson, from its beginning, was an all-white male military school. The school remained this way until 1955 when it changed to "civilian" status for students and became a coeducational institution.[12]
Agitation from the farmers[]
Benjamin Tillman emerged in the 1880s as a leader of the agrarian movement in South Carolina and demanded that the South Carolina College take agricultural education more seriously by expanding the agriculture department.[13] In 1885, Tillman was convinced of the superiority of a separate agricultural college by Stephen D. Lee, then the President of the Agricultural and Mechanical College of the State of Mississippi, and subsequently Tillman would accept nothing less than a separate agriculture college in South Carolina.[14] He offered the following reasons why he felt that it was necessary to have a separate agriculture college outside the confines of Columbia:
- Mississippi A&M featured practical training without unnecessary studying of the liberal arts.[14]
- Mississippi A&M provided poor students work-scholarships so that they could attend the college.[14]
- There were too few students who studied agriculture at the College to justify an agriculture college there.[14]
- The College was a place "for the sons of lawyers and of the well-to-do"[15] who sneered at the agriculture students as if they were hayseeds.[16]
- The students at the College lived a life of luxury as compared with the sweat and toil endured by students at Mississippi A&M.[17]
- There was not enough farm land near the College to allow for proper agriculture study.[18]
The Conservatives, who held the reins of power in South Carolina from 1877 to 1890, replied to each point made by Tillman:
- The most advanced agriculture educational research was being conducted at the University of California and at Cornell University, both of which combined agriculture colleges with liberal arts colleges.[19] Additionally, a separate agriculture college would be more expensive and result in an inferior product.[20]
- The work scholarships attracted the lowest quality of students who only cared about obtaining a college degree, not about an education in agriculture or mechanical studies. Furthermore, there was little advantage of attending a college only to pitch manure and grub stumps.[21]
- The constant attacks by Tillman on the College caused many to doubt whether state support for the institution would continue. As a result, the enrollment numbers were not impressive, although the numbers of students taking agriculture and mechanical classes increased from 34 in 1887 to 83 in 1889.[22]
- Over half of the students at the College were the sons of farmers, though most did not study agriculture as Tillman wished.[16] John McLaren McBryde, President of the College, correctly predicted that most students of an agriculture college would not go back to work the farm after graduation.[16]
- While some students at the College were the sons of the well-to-do, the majority were poor.[17]
- The College farm added 100 acres (0.4 km2) in 1887, just one mile from campus.[23]
Clemson's will[]
Tillman was bolstered in 1886 when Thomas Green Clemson agreed to will his Fort Hill estate for the establishment of an agriculture college.[24] Yet, Tillman did not want to wait until Clemson died to start a separate agriculture college so he pushed the General Assembly to use the Morrill funds and Hatch funds for that purpose.[25] Instead, the legislature gave those funds to the South Carolina College in 1887 which would use them along with a greater state appropriation to reorganize itself as the second University of South Carolina and to also greatly expand the agriculture department.[26] After this victory for South Carolina, in January 1888 Tillman wrote a letter to the News and Courier that he was retiring from public life.[27][28]
Tillmanites | Conservatives | |
Favored college | Clemson | South Carolina |
Figurehead leader | Benjamin Tillman | Wade Hampton III |
Political ideology | Agrarian populism | Conservatism |
Base of support | The Upstate; rural | Statewide; urban |
Confederate service | 50.0%[29] | 79.1%[29] |
It was less than ninety days when Tillman reemerged on the scene upon the death of Thomas Green Clemson in April 1888.[30] Tillman advocated that the state accept the gift by Clemson, but the Conservatives in power opposed the move and an all out war for power in the state commenced. The opening salvo was fired by Gideon Lee, the father of Clemson's granddaughter and John C. Calhoun's great granddaughter Floride Isabella Lee, who wrote a letter on her behalf to the News and Courier in May that she was being denied as Calhoun's rightful heir.[31] Furthermore, he stated that Clemson was egotistical and "only wanted to erect a monument to his own name."[31] In November, Lee filed a lawsuit in Federal Court to contest the will which ultimately ruled against him in May 1889.
The election of 1888 afforded Tillman an opportunity to convince the politicians to accept the Clemson bequest or face the possibility of being voted out of office. He demanded that the Democratic party nominate its candidates by the primary system, which was denied, but they did accept his request that the candidates for statewide office canvass the state.[32] Tillman proved excellent on the stump, by far superior to his Conservative opponents, and as the Democratic convention neared there was a clear groundswell of support for the acceptance of Clemson's estate.[33]
Bequest barely wins support[]
Tillman explained his justification for an independently controlled agriculture college by pointing to the mismanagement and political interference of the University of South Carolina as had occurred during Reconstruction. The agriculture college, as specified in Clemson's will, was to be privately controlled. With declining cotton prices, Tillman played upon the farmer's desperation by stating that the salaries of the college professors were exorbitant and it must be a sign of corruption.[34] Consequently, the legislature was compelled to pass the bill to accept Clemson's bequest in December 1888, albeit with the tie-breaking vote in the state Senate from Lieutenant Governor William L. Mauldin.[31] Thus was reborn the antagonistic feelings of regional bitterness and class division that would plague the state for decades.[35]
Having achieved his agriculture college, Tillman was not content to sit idly by because what he really desired was power and political office.[36] After winning the 1890 election and becoming Governor, Tillman renewed the attacks on the Conservatives and those who had thwarted his agriculture college. He saved the coup de grâce for Senator Wade Hampton III, a South Carolina College graduate and Confederate General during the Civil War, who "invoked Confederate service and honor as a barrier to Tillmanism."[37] Tillman directed the legislature to defeat Hampton's renomination for another term in December 1890.[37][38]
While campaigning for Governor in 1890, Tillman leveled his harshest criticism towards the University of South Carolina and threatened to close it along with The Citadel, which he called a "dude factory."[39] Despite the rhetoric, Tillman only succeeded in reorganizing the University of South Carolina into a liberal arts college while in office.[40] It would eventually be rechartered for the last time in 1906 as the University of South Carolina. However, Clemson Agricultural College held sway over the state legislature for decades and was generally the more popular college during the first half of the 20th century in South Carolina.[41]
Role reversal[]
After World War II, the long held perceptions of the two schools switched. Whereas South Carolina was viewed as an elitist institution for much of its existence, it opened its doors to every qualified veteran and later encouraged minority enrollment, and the school's enrollment grew exponentially. Clemson was limited on the number of veterans who could be admitted due to various dilemmas with transferring credits and a flood of applications. Top priority, however, was given to veterans over non-veterans.[42] Clemson, however, did not admit women as undergrads until 1955 and did not admit its first African-American, (future Charlotte, North Carolina, mayor Harvey Gantt.[43]), until 1963. In 1964, the college was renamed Clemson University as the state legislature formally recognized the school's expanded academic offerings and research pursuits.[44]
In the 1950s, the University of South Carolina expanded its reach across the state by establishing branch campuses under the auspices of the University of South Carolina System.[45] Clemson, having obtained university status in 1964, tried to compete with this network in the 1960s by establishing branch campuses in Greenville and Sumter. House Speaker Sol Blatt was alarmed by the spread of Clemson and declared that South Carolina "should build as many two year colleges over the state as rapidly as possible to prevent the expansion of Clemson schools for the Clemson people."[46] Accordingly, the University of South Carolina began a new wave of expansion across the state and was aided by the fact that the Clemson extensions never proved popular. In 1973, USC acquired the Clemson campus at Sumter due to disappointing enrollment numbers[47] and Clemson's Greenville campus would return to its independent status as Greenville Tech.[48]
Football[]
Football | |
---|---|
History | |
First Meeting | Carolina, 12-6 (1896) |
Last Meeting | Carolina, 27-17 (2012) |
Next Meeting | Carolina, November 30, 2013 |
Number of Meetings | 110 |
All-Time Series | Clemson leads, 65-41-4 |
Largest victory | Clemson, 51-0 (1900) |
Current Streak | Carolina, 4 |
Longest Clem Win Streak | 7 (1934–1940) |
Longest USC Win Streak | 4 (1951–1954, 2009–2012) |
Trophy: | Hardee's Trophy |
The annual Carolina-Clemson football game (sometimes dubbed "The Battle of the Palmetto State" or the "Palmetto Bowl" from the state's nickname) is the longest uninterrupted series in the South and the second longest uninterrupted NCAA D1a/FBS series in the country, having been played every year since 1909. (104 consecutive games)[49] The universities maintain college football stadiums in excess of 80,000 seats each, placing both in the top 20 in the United States.[50] Clemson holds a 65-41-4 lead in the series, which dates back to 1896. From 1896-1959, the Carolina-Clemson game was played in Columbia and referred to as "Big Thursday." Since 1960, the game has alternated between both teams' home stadiums as the regular season finale. Though Clemson leads the football series, approximately forty games have been decided by a touchdown or less. Clemson has more wins against USC than any other program has,[51] and Carolina is third behind Georgia Tech and Georgia in most wins against Clemson.[52] The rivalry is the third-longest continuous rivalry in college football.
Every year, each school engages in a ritual involving the other team's mascot. South Carolina holds the "Tiger Burn", and Clemson holds a mock funeral for Cocky. After 7 students (6 from USC, 1 from Clemson) died in the Ocean Isle Beach house fire in 2007, the Cocky funeral was cancelled and the Tiger Burn was changed to the "Tiger Tear Down" for that year.[53][54][55]
Early years: 1896–1902[]
When Clemson began its football program in 1896, coached by Walter Riggs, they scheduled the rival South Carolina College for a Thursday morning game in conjunction with the State Fair. Carolina won that game 12–6 and a new tradition was born – Big Thursday.
The Gamecock mascot made its first appearance in 1902. In that first season as the Gamecocks, Carolina defeated a highly favored Clemson team coached by the legendary John Heisman 12–6. But it was the full-scale riot that broke out in the wake of the game that is remembered most.
"The Carolina fans that week were carrying around a poster with the image of a tiger with a gamecock standing on top of it, holding the tiger’s tail as if he was steering the tiger by the tail," says Jay McCormick. "Naturally, the Clemson guys didn’t take too kindly to that, and on Wednesday and again on Thursday, there were sporadic fistfights involving brass knuckles and other objects and so forth, some of which resulted, according to the newspapers, in blood being spilled and persons having to seek medical assistance. After the game on Thursday, the Clemson guys frankly told the Carolina students that if you bring this poster, which is insulting to us, to the big parade on Friday, you’re going to be in trouble. And naturally, of course, the Carolina students brought the poster to the parade. If you give someone an ultimatum and they’re your rival, they’re going to do exactly what you told them not to do."[56]
As expected, another brawl broke out before both sides agreed to mutually burn the poster in an effort to defuse tensions. The immediate aftermath resulted in the stoppage of the rivalry until 1909. The Carolina–Clemson game has been played every year since.
World War II era[]
World War II produced one of the most bizarre situations in the history of the rivalry. Cary Cox, a football player of the victorious Clemson squad in 1942, signed up for the V-12 program in 1943 and was placed at USC. The naval instructors at USC ordered him to play on the football team and he was named the captain for the Big Thursday game against Clemson. Cox was reluctant to play against his former teammates and he voiced his concerns to coach Lt. James P. Moran who responded, "Cox, I can't promise you'll get a Navy commission if you play Thursday, but I can damn well promise that you won't get one if you don't play!"[57] Cox then went out and led the Carolina team to a 33-6 win against Clemson. He returned to Clemson after the war and captained the 1947 team in a losing effort to Carolina, but Cox earned his place in history as the only player to captain both schools' football teams.
Modern era - Post World War II[]
1946: Near riot - counterfeit tickets
The 1946 game could be the most chaotic in the football series. Two New York mobsters printed counterfeit tickets for the game. Fans from both sides were denied entrance when the duplicate tickets were discovered, which led to a near riot. To add to the wild scene, a Clemson fan strangled a live chicken at midfield during halftime. Fans from both sides of the rivalry, many of whom who had been denied entrance, along with fans who poured out of the stands, stormed the fences and gates and spilled onto the field. It took U.S. Secretary of State James F. Byrnes, who attended the game along with Strom Thurmond, to settle down the hostile crowd. Once order was restored, fans were allowed to stand along the sidelines, with the teams, while the second half was played to the game's conclusion. The Gamecocks eventually won by a score of 26-14.[58]
1952: Game mandated by South Carolina law
The Southern Conference almost brought the longstanding rivalry to an abrupt end when it ordered Clemson to play no other league team other than Maryland as punishment for both schools accepting bowl bids against conference rules (both Clemson and USC were members at the time). Upon request of both schools' presidents, the S.C. General Assembly passed a resolution on February 27, 1952, ordering the game to be played.[59] The Gamecocks won the contest 6-0. The S.C. law still stands in the books today requiring both teams to play each other every year.
1959: Final Big Thursday
For 64 years, Clemson traveled to Columbia to face the Gamecocks for the annual Big Thursday rivalry. This year would mark the end of the tradition as the rivalry progressed to a home-and-home series played on a Saturday. However, the two schools would not move the contest to the last regular season game until two years later. Clemson won the final Big Thursday match-up 27-0.
1961: The Prank
In 1961, the USC fraternity Sigma Nu pulled what some have called the greatest prank in the rivalry's history. A few minutes before Clemson football players entered the field for pre-game warm ups, a group of Sigma Nu fraternity members ran onto the field, jumping up and down and cheering in football uniforms that resembled the ones worn by the Tigers. This caused the Clemson band to start playing "Tiger Rag," which was followed by the pranksters falling down as they attempted to do calisthenics. They would also do football drills where guys would drop passes and miss the ball when trying to kick it. Clemson fans quickly realized that they had been tricked, and some of them angrily ran onto the field. However, security restored order before any blows could be exchanged. The Carolina frat boys had also acquired a sickly cow they planned to bring out during halftime to be the "Clemson Homecoming Queen", but the cow died en route to the stadium. Carolina won the game 21-14.
1963: National tragedy moves game
On November 23, 1963, the Tigers and Gamecocks were set to play the annual rivalry on live national TV. However, the assassination of President John F. Kennedy the day before would affect the scheduling of the game. Both schools planned to proceed with the original day and time, but federal government pressure caused the schools to push the game to November 28, marking the only time Clemson and Carolina played on Thanksgiving Day. Clemson won the game 24-20.
1975: Most points scored by Carolina
On November 22, 1975, Carolina defeated Clemson 56-20 to set a Gamecock record for most points scored in a football game against the Tigers.
1977: "The Catch"
On November 19, 1977, Clemson WR Jerry Butler made a diving, backwards, 20-yard touchdown reception on a pass from QB Steve Fuller with 49 seconds left in the fourth quarter to give Clemson the 31-27 victory in Columbia. This play is known as "The Catch" and is one of the most memorable plays in the rivalry.[60]
1980: Orange pants
In the last regular season game for the 1980 season, a heavily favored Carolina team traveled to Death Valley to take on the Tigers. In a surprise to both the players and the fans, Coach Danny Ford unveiled new orange uniform pants for the Tigers to wear. This was the first time in Clemson's history that they wore orange pants in any combination for a football game. Inspired by the pants, the underdog Tigers defeated the Gamecocks, 27-6.
1981: Clemson wins a National Championship
In 1981, Clemson defeated Carolina 29-13 en route to the National Championship.
1984: Black Magic
Carolina took their 9-1 record on the road to Clemson, and fell behind 21-3 to the Tigers. With about three minutes remaining in the game, Gamecock QB Mike Hold led an eight-play 86-yard touchdown drive which included a 4th-and-10 conversion, and thanks to a Clemson penalty that allowed a re-kick of a missed extra point, defeated the Tigers 22-21 to finish the first 10-win season in program history.[61]
1987: Highest ranked match-up
On November 21, 1987, with the highest combined rankings of the two football programs entering the game (the Gamecocks were #12 and the Tigers were #8), Carolina beat Clemson 20-7 on national television (ESPN). The Gamecock defense held the Tigers to 166 total yards, the lowest amount of coach Danny Ford's career at Clemson.
1989: Orange on the road and Ford's last hurrah
After suffering two disappointing upsets to Duke and Georgia Tech, the 8-2 Tigers traveled to Columbia for the annual game. Danny Ford allowed the Clemson players to wear orange pants on the road for the first time. Led by halfback Terry Allen's 97-yard, two touchdown first half, the Tigers rolled the Gamecocks on the ground for 355 yards en route to a 45-0 victory. The game would be Ford's last against South Carolina as Clemson's coach. He finished with a 7-3-1 record against the Gamecocks.[62]
1992: Signing the Paw
After an 0-5 start to begin the 1992 season (USC's first in the SEC), freshman sensation Steve Taneyhill led Carolina to four wins in his first five starts as Gamecock quarterback. With Clemson needing a win at home to become bowl-eligible, Taneyhill led his team to a 24-13 victory and famously signed his name with his finger on the Tiger Paw at midfield following a key second-half touchdown.[63]
1994: "The Return"
With both teams entering the game 5-5 and trying to become bowl-eligible, Carolina led 14-7 at the half in Clemson. Gamecock RB Brandon Bennett received the kick to start the third quarter, took a few steps, then turned and threw a backward pass to the other side of the field which was caught by DB Reggie Richardson who returned the ball 85 yards to the Tigers' 6-yard line. Bennett ran it in for a touchdown on the next play, putting Carolina ahead 21-7 and the Gamecocks never looked back, going on to win the game 33-7 and clinching a bid to the Carquest Bowl.[64]
2000: "The Catch II"/"The Push-off"
In 2000, Trailing late in the game 14-13, Clemson quarterback Woody Dantzler connected with wide-receiver Rod Gardner for a 50-yard reception to Carolina's 8-yard line with 10 seconds remaining. Carolina fans point to a replay that seems to show Gardner pushing off the Gamecock defender, but Clemson fans contend that the contact was mutual and incidental.[65] No penalty flag was thrown on the play, leaving Clemson kicker Aaron Hunt to kick a 25-yard field goal that gave Clemson a 16-14 win. Clemson fans remember this game as "The Catch II" while Carolina fans call it "The Push-Off Game".
2001: A bicentennial win
In the 200th year of the University of South Carolina, the Gamecocks hosted the Tigers at the end of a successful regular season that saw them ranked in the Top 25 every week and 7-3 heading into the rivalry game. Carolina jumped out to an early 20-9 lead behind a strong ground attack, and held on to win 20-15 and secure a bid to their second straight Outback Bowl. Interestingly, this would not be the final regular season game for Clemson due to the September 11 attacks. The Tigers rescheduled their September 15 game (Vs. Duke) for the first weekend of December.
2003: Most points scored by Clemson
In 2003, Clemson defeated Carolina 63-17, to set the record for the most points scored by either team in the series.
2004: The Brawl
The South Carolina-Clemson brawl during the 2004 football game is the most recent eruption of hostilities in this rivalry. It is also the last time Lou Holtz coached, having retired shortly thereafter. Clemson won the game 29-7. Each team had won a total of six games that year and were technically bowl eligible. However, both schools elected to forfeit their postseason because of the unsportsmanlike nature of the fight.
2005: A quarterback wins 4
In 2005, the two teams showed an unusual gesture of sportsmanship by meeting at midfield before the game to shake hands, putting the melee of 2004 behind them. Clemson won this game 13-9, leaving the Tiger's quarterback, Charlie Whitehurst, undefeated against USC in his 4 years at Clemson. The only Carolina quarterback to do so against the Tigers was Tommy Suggs, who led the Gamecocks to three victories in a row from 1968-1970.
2006: Kickers make the difference
Clemson was leading 28-14 in the third quarter, with Carolina quarterback Blake Mitchell throwing three interceptions. The Gamecocks then scored 17 unanswered points, including two Mike Davis touchdown runs and a 35-yard field goal from Ryan Succop - the only points in the fourth quarter - to give the Gamecocks a 31-28 lead. Clemson kicker Jad Dean missed a field goal attempt wide left as time expired to give Carolina the win. This game would also mark the moving of the series to the Saturday following Thanksgiving Day.
2007: Last-second victory
On November 24, 2007, Clemson kicker Mark Buchholz hit a 35-yard field goal as time expired to give #21 Clemson a memorable 23-21 victory over Carolina. The win lifted Clemson coach Tommy Bowden to 7-2 all-time against the Gamecocks and 2-1 against USC coach Steve Spurrier. The 2007 game is notable as the first in the series with the winning points scored on the game's final play.
Last Meeting
Carolina earned their fourth consecutive victory in the rivalry with a 27-17 victory over Clemson in Death Valley. Although the Tigers led 14-10 at the half, backup quarterback Dylan Thompson led the Gamecocks on three second-half scoring drives while South Carolina's defense kept Clemson out of the end zone. The meeting was the highest combined ranked matchup between the two teams since 1987 (Clemson #11, South Carolina #12). The game was also notable as the win gave Steve Spurrier his 65th career victory at USC, making him the school's winningest head coach.
Game results[]
Clemson victories are colored ██ orange. South Carolina victories are colored ██ garnet. Ties are white.
The Early Years
|
Post WWII - Modern Era Begins
|
Conference Expansion: SEC vs ACC
|
Baseball[]
In baseball, the teams previously met four times during the regular season, with two games scheduled at each home field. Two of the games were played on Saturday and Sunday, and then later in the season 2 games were played during the mid-week, usually on Wednesday. Since 2010, the teams have competed against each other over the course of a single weekend: once on each home field and once at a neutral site. Fluor Field at the West End (2010, 2011, 2013) in Greenville, SC and Riley Park (2012) in Charleston, SC have served as the host sites. The other instances where the teams met in neutral site games were the 2002 College World Series and the 2010 College World Series, both times at Rosenblatt Stadium in Omaha, NE. Both schools are perennially considered to be among the top programs in the country, giving the rivalry a prominent spot in college baseball beyond the state of South Carolina. SEBaseball.com's Mark Etheridge has called it "college baseball's most heated rivalry,"[66] and Baseball America's Aaron Fitt has called it "far and away the most compelling rivalry college baseball has to offer."[67]
Recent series[]
2013 Series | All-Time Series | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Date | Location | Winner | Score | Attendance | |
March 1, 2013 | Doug Kingsmore Stadium • Clemson, SC | Carolina | 170-131-2 | ||
March 2, 2013 | Fluor Field • Greenville, SC | Clemson | |||
March 3, 2013 | Carolina Stadium • Columbia, SC | Carolina |
College World Series in the 2000s[]
The rivalry has taken a deeper hold in the 2000s, as twice in the decade the two teams battled, coincidentally in the semifinals both times, with the Tigers being 2-0 and needing only one win to advance to the championship, and the Gamecocks losing the first game and having to win twice to reach the finals out of the double elimination repechage round in both situations.
2002
Leading up to the 2002 semifinals, Clemson had already won three out of four regular season games against Carolina. The Gamecocks beat their rivals soundly, 12-4, and then beat the Tigers again, 10-2, the following day to advance to the national championship game. The Gamecocks fell to Texas 12-6 in the championship game, the last under the format where a one-game final was played.[68]
2010
Eight years later, in what has been called The Last Bat at Rosenblatt, an identical situation leading to the series began. Clemson had taken both on-campus games from South Carolina in the regular season, including a lopsided 19-6 victory in the rubber match, played before over 8,000 fans at Carolina Stadium in Columbia, but had lost in the "neutral site" game. The Gamecocks had just come off a 12-inning win against the Oklahoma Sooners less than 24 hours before, while the Tigers had two days of rest. However, fatigue was not a factor as the Gamecocks won the first game, 5-1, on a dominating complete game pitching performance by reliever Michael Roth, who had not started a game in more than a year. Carolina won the second game the following day, 4-3, to advance to the championship series against UCLA, who they defeated, 7-1 (Game 1) and 2-1 (Game 2) to win the NCAA Division I Baseball Championship. South Carolina went on to win the National Championship again in 2011.
Other varsity sports[]
Men's teams[]
Sport | Last Matchup | All-Time Series | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Date | Location | Winner | Score | Attendance | Leader | Record | |
Basketball | Dec. 2, 2012 | Colonial Life Arena • Columbia, SC | Clemson | Carolina | |||
Soccer | Sep. 18, 2012 | Stone Stadium • Columbia, SC | Carolina | Clemson | |||
Swimming & Diving | Oct. 29, 2011 | Westside Aquatic Center • Greenville, SC | Carolina | Carolina | |||
Tennis | Mar. 3, 2013 | Carolina Tennis Center • Columbia, SC | Carolina | Carolina |
- Carolina does not sponsor Men's Cross Country.
- Men's Golf and Men's Track & Field teams do not compete head-to-head.
- Clemson will discontinue swimming/diving programs by 2012 (with the exception of women's diving).
Women's teams[]
Sport | Last Matchup | All-Time Series | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Date | Location | Winner | Score | Attendance | Leader | Record | |
Basketball | Nov. 18, 2012 | Colonial Life Arena • Columbia, SC | Carolina | Clemson | |||
Soccer | Sep. 1, 2012 | Stone Stadium • Columbia, SC | Clemson | Clemson | |||
Swimming & Diving | Oct. 29, 2011 | Westside Aquatic Center • Greenville, SC | Carolina | Carolina | |||
Tennis | Feb. 3, 2013 | Hoke Sloan Tennis Center • Clemson, SC | Clemson | Clemson | |||
Volleyball | Sep. 7, 2012 | Volleyball Competition Facility • Columbia, SC | Carolina | Carolina |
- Carolina does not sponsor Women's Rowing.
- Clemson does not sponsor Women's Equestrian, Women's Golf, Women's Lacrosse, or Softball. (Carolina won the only meeting of the Softball teams.)
- Women's Cross Country and Women's Track and Field teams do not compete head-to-head.
Blood drive[]
Series Originated | 1985 |
Overall Record | Series tied, 14-14 |
South Carolina logo | Clemson logo |
Carolina (14) 1987 1993 1998 1999 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 |
Clemson (14) 1985 1986 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1994 1995 1996 1997 2000 2006 2007 |
The rivalry extends beyond sports to the annual blood drive between the two schools. Students, faculty and fans from the schools band together in an effort to collect blood before the holiday season when many are too busy to give blood. The blood drive is held from Monday through Friday the week before the football matchup. 2012 marked the 28th occurrence of the blood drive, with South Carolina winning for the fifth consecutive year with 3,655 pints versus Clemson's 3,534 pints of blood.[69] The blood drive is sponsored by the American Red Cross at the University of South Carolina and the Gamma Lambda chapter of the Alpha Phi Omega national service fraternity at Clemson.[70] Everyone who gives blood receives a free shirt, with the graphic on the back usually featuring a Tiger and Gamecock together and a statement explaining that even though the competition is part of the rivalry, both schools share the common ground of giving blood. It is currently the largest collegiate blood drive in the country.[71][72][73]
See also[]
- Clemson Tigers
- Clemson Tigers baseball
- Clemson Tigers football
- Clemson Tigers men's basketball
- South Carolina Gamecocks
- South Carolina Gamecocks baseball
- South Carolina Gamecocks football
- South Carolina Gamecocks men's basketball
- South Carolina Gamecocks men's soccer
- South Carolina Gamecocks women's soccer
- South Carolina Gamecocks women's basketball
- South Carolina Gamecocks men's tennis
- South Carolina Gamecocks men's track and field
References[]
- ↑ "Clemson Color Palette". http://www.clemson.edu/campus-life/campus-services/creative-services/visual-guide/colors.html.
- ↑ Traditions :: Clemson Tigers - Official Athletic Site
- ↑ University of South Carolina Official Athletic Site - Traditions
- ↑ Gamecocks Win National Championship
- ↑ USC Equestrian Wins Second National Championship
- ↑ Hollis 1951, p. 18
- ↑ Hollis 1951, pp. 212–225
- ↑ Hollis 1956, p. 32
- ↑ Hollis 1956, p. 79
- ↑ Hollis 1956, p. 89
- ↑ Hollis 1956, p. 102
- ↑ "History of Clemson University". History of Clemson University. Clemson University. http://www.clemson.edu/about/history/. Retrieved 3 November 2011.
- ↑ Ball 1932, p. 210
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 Hollis 1956, p. 134
- ↑ Ball 1932, p. 212
- ↑ 16.0 16.1 16.2 Hollis 1956, p. 138
- ↑ 17.0 17.1 Hollis 1956, p. 152
- ↑ Hollis 1956, p. 135
- ↑ Hollis 1956, p. 139
- ↑ Hollis 1956, p. 140
- ↑ Hollis 1956, pp. 139–140
- ↑ Hollis 1956, p. 150
- ↑ Hollis 1956, p. 146
- ↑ Simkins, Francis Butler (2002). Pitchfork Ben Tillman. University of South Carolina Press. p. 122.
- ↑ Hollis 1956, p. 143
- ↑ Hollis 1956, p. 144
- ↑ Hollis 1956, p. 148
- ↑ Ball 1932, p. 215
- ↑ 29.0 29.1 Cooper 2005, p. 212
- ↑ Simkins, Francis Butler (1964). The Tillman movement in South Carolina. Duke University Press. p. 84.
- ↑ 31.0 31.1 31.2 Cooper 2005, p. 164
- ↑ Hollis 1956, p. 151
- ↑ Cooper 2005, p. 163
- ↑ Ball 1932, p. 209
- ↑ Cooper 2005, p. 167
- ↑ Edgar 1998, p. 437
- ↑ 37.0 37.1 Cooper 2005, p. 206
- ↑ Hollis 1956, p. 157
- ↑ Edgar 1998, pp. 437, 439
- ↑ Edgar 1998, p. 439
- ↑ Lesesne 2001, p. 3
- ↑ http://www.clemson.edu/cedp/cudp/pubs/ths-v1/14-ch14.pdf
- ↑ "Harvey Gantt and the Desegregation of Clemson University; an Online version of an exhibit presented by the Library in conjunction with "Integration With Dignity: A Celebration of 40 Years" on January 28, 2003". http://www.clemson.edu/oir/factBook/Historical%20Enrollment/Integration.htm. Retrieved January 21, 2011.
- ↑ "The History of Clemson University". http://www.clemson.edu/about/history.html. Retrieved June 20, 2007.
- ↑ Lesesne 2001, p. 109
- ↑ Lesesne 2001, p. 178
- ↑ <http://www.uscsumter.edu/about/history.shtml>
- ↑ <http://www.gvltec.edu/about_greenvilletech/history.html>
- ↑ College football gets new oldest rivalry, College Football gets new oldest rivalry.
- ↑ NCAA football records, p. 118.
- ↑ South Carolina all-opponent record 1869-2006
- ↑ Clemson all-opponent record 1869-2006
- ↑ http://media.www.dailygamecock.com/media/storage/paper247/news/2007/11/14/News/Tiger.Burn.Comes.Under.Fire-3098917.shtml
- ↑ http://www.clemson.edu/newsroom/articles/2008/november/Black_Friday.php5
- ↑ http://media.www.dailygamecock.com/media/storage/paper247/news/2007/11/15/News/Tiger.Burn.Update-3102793.shtml
- ↑ Metrobeat.Net
- ↑ Lesesne 2001, p. 27
- ↑ "Tigers-Gamecocks in annual classic". Miami Herald. October 23, 1957. http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=2206&dat=19571023&id=DJQzAAAAIBAJ&sjid=neoFAAAAIBAJ&pg=3093,3010339.
- ↑ [1]
- ↑ Will Vandervort (2008-11-26). ""The Catch" Lives On". Scout.com. http://clemson.scout.com/a.z?s=46&p=2&c=814910&ssf=1&RequestedURL=http%3a%2f%2fclemson.scout.com%2f2%2f814910.html. Retrieved 2009-09-03.
- ↑ Gamecock ’84 win made season even more special
- ↑ [2]
- ↑ Where are they now: Steve Taneyhill
- ↑ A Step Ahead
- ↑ ESPN video
- ↑ Etheridge, Mark (28 May 2012). "Nine Innings: Finishing Second or Next to Last". SEBaseball.com. Archived from the original on 2012-05-29. http://www.webcitation.org/681bhnQ4v. Retrieved 29 May 2012.
- ↑ Fitt, Aaron (1 March 2012). "Weekend Preview: South Carolina, Clemson Get Together Again". BaseballAmerica.com. Archived from the original on 2012-05-29. http://www.webcitation.org/681boNb28. Retrieved 29 May 2012.
- ↑ South Carolina Baseball Media Guide 2007, p. 111.
- ↑ USC Wins 28th Annual Carolina/Clemson Blood Drive
- ↑ http://www.clemsonapo.org
- ↑ http://www.sa.sc.edu/fsl/carolina-clemson-blood-drive/
- ↑ http://uscnews.sc.edu/2008/11112008-STUD_Web062.html
- ↑ http://www.clemson.edu/newsroom/articles/2008/november/blood_drive.php5
Sources[]
- Ball, William Watts (1932). The State That Forgot; South Carolina's Surrender to Democracy. The Bobbs-Merrill Company.
- Cooper, William (2005). The Conservative Regime: South Carolina, 1877-1890. University of South Carolina Press. ISBN 1-57003-597-0.
- Edgar, Walter B. (1998). South Carolina: A History. University of South Carolina Press.
- Hollis, Daniel Walker (1951), University of South Carolina, I, University of South Carolina Press
- Hollis, Daniel Walker (1956), University of South Carolina, II, University of South Carolina Press
- Lesesne, Henry H. (2001). A History of the University of South Carolina, 1940-2000. University of South Carolina Press.
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