Minnesota–Nebraska football rivalry

Minnesota–Nebraska football rivalry
First meeting November 29, 1900
Latest meeting November 12, 2016
Next meeting 2017
Statistics
Meetings total 57
All-time series Minnesota leads, 31–24–2
Largest victory Nebraska, 84–13 (1983)
Longest win streak Nebraska, 16 (1963–2012)
Current win streak Nebraska, 2 (2015–present)

The Minnesota–Nebraska football rivalry is an American college football rivalry between the Minnesota Golden Gophers and Nebraska Cornhuskers.

History

The rivalry can be split into four eras. The first two are Minnesota's glory days, and Nebraska's rise to prominence. These eras took place when the teams were non-conference rivals. They played each other on a fairly regular basis from 1900–74, then on a much more intermittent basis until 1990. The Big Ten era started in 2011, when Nebraska joined and was in the Legends Division with Minnesota.[1] The trophy era began in 2014, with the creation of the $5 Bits of Broken Chair Trophy. Minnesota leads the series 31–24–2; from 1900–54, they went 28–5–2. Nebraska then won 17 of the next 18 games; the last 12 victories (1969–2012) were major blowouts, such as the 84–13 drubbing in 1983, the worst loss in Minnesota history.[2]

$5 Bits of Broken Chair Trophy

The origin of the $5 Bits of Broken Chair Trophy is rooted in November 2014 banter between the Twitter accounts for Minnesota mascot Goldy Gopher and "Faux Pelini", a parody account for Bo Pelini, Nebraska's head coach at the time.[3] Goldy suggested a wager on the game with this tweet: "Hey @FauxPelini, how about a friendly wager for this weekend's game? Team that gets the most points gets a conference win? Seem fair?"[4] Faux Pelini responded "OK how about if we [Nebraska] win you give me $5, if you [Minnesota] win I get to smash a wooden chair over your back".[5] This prompted Goldy to start crowdsourcing Twitter followers and the community at Reddit's college football section to design the "$5 Bits of Broken Chair Trophy".[6] Many designs were quickly presented and eventually Goldy created a real trophy, which was brought to the 2014 game in Lincoln. Minnesota won 28–24 to take the trophy, their first victory in Lincoln since 1960; it also gave Minnesota their first winning streak against Nebraska since their 3-game streak from 1951–54.[7] It received widespread acceptance from both fanbases, and has since been subsequently displayed at Minnesota's spirit events with other trophies such as Floyd of Rosedale and the Little Brown Jug.[8] The trophy changed hands for the first time on October 17, 2015 after Nebraska defeated Minnesota 48–25 in Minneapolis.[9]

In 2016, after Nebraska defeated Minnesota in Lincoln, the trophy seemingly disappeared. Inquiries to both the Nebraska and Minnesota athletic departments on the status of the trophy revealed that both school's position on the trophy was that it never existed as an official trophy between the school to begin with. This essentially ended the $5 Bits of Broken Chair Trophy in any official capacity with no plans between the two school to have it replaced.[10]

Game results

Minnesota victoriesNebraska victoriesTies
#DateLocationWinnerScore
1 November 29, 1900 Lincoln Minnesota 20–12
2 October 12, 1901 Minneapolis Minnesota 19–0
3 October 18, 1902 Minneapolis Nebraska 6–0
4 October 29, 1904 Minneapolis Minnesota 16–12
5 November 18, 1905 Minneapolis Minnesota 35–0
6 November 3, 1906 Minneapolis Minnesota 13–0
7 October 19, 1907 Minneapolis Minnesota 8–5
8 October 17, 1908 Minneapolis Tie0–0
9 October 16, 1909 Omaha Minnesota 14–0
10 October 16, 1910 Minneapolis Minnesota 27–0
11 October 21, 1911 Minneapolis Minnesota 21–3
12 October 19, 1912 Minneapolis Minnesota 13–0
13 October 18, 1913 Lincoln Nebraska 7–0
14 October 11, 1919 Minneapolis Tie6–6
15 October 15, 1932 Minneapolis Minnesota 7–6
16 October 6, 1934 Minneapolis Minnesota 20–0
17 October 12, 1935 Lincoln Minnesota 12–7
18 October 10, 1936 Minneapolis Minnesota 14–9
19 October 2, 1937 Lincoln Nebraska 14–9
20 October 1, 1938 Minneapolis Minnesota 16–7
21 October 7, 1939 Lincoln Nebraska 6–0
22 October 5, 1940 Minneapolis Minnesota 13–7
23 November 8, 1941 Minneapolis Minnesota 9–0
24 October 17, 1942 Lincoln Minnesota 15–2
25 October 2, 1943 Minneapolis #9 Minnesota 54–0
26 September 30, 1944 Minneapolis Minnesota 39–0
27 October 6, 1945 Lincoln Minnesota 61–7
28 September 28, 1946 Minneapolis Minnesota 33–6
29 October 4, 1947 Lincoln Minnesota 28–13
#DateLocationWinnerScore
30 October 2, 1948 Minneapolis Minnesota 39–13
31 October 1, 1949 Lincoln Minnesota 28–6
32 October 7, 1950 Minneapolis Nebraska 32–26
33 October 20, 1951 Minneapolis Minnesota 39–20
34 November 15, 1952 Lincoln Minnesota 13–7
35 September 25, 1954 Minneapolis Minnesota 19–7
36 September 26, 1959 Minneapolis Nebraska 32–12
37 September 24, 1960 Lincoln Minnesota 26–14
38 September 28, 1963 Minneapolis Nebraska 14–7
39 September 26, 1964 Minneapolis Nebraska 26–21
40 September 30, 1967 Lincoln #7 Nebraska 7–0
41 September 28, 1968 Minneapolis #9 Nebraska 17–14
42 October 4, 1969 Minneapolis Nebraska 42–14
43 October 3, 1970 Minneapolis #6 Nebraska 35–10
44 September 18, 1971 Lincoln #1 Nebraska 35–7
45 September 30, 1972 Lincoln #7 Nebraska 49–0
46 October 6, 1973 Minneapolis #2 Nebraska 48–7
47 October 5, 1974 Lincoln #6 Nebraska 54–0
48 September 17, 1983 Minneapolis #1 Nebraska 84–13
49 September 15, 1984 Lincoln #1 Nebraska 38–7
50 September 23, 1989 Minneapolis #3 Nebraska 48–0
51 September 22, 1990 Lincoln #8 Nebraska 56–0
52 October 22, 2011 Minneapolis #13 Nebraska 41–14
53 November 17, 2012 Lincoln #16 Nebraska 38–14
54 October 13, 2013 Minneapolis Minnesota 34–23
55 November 22, 2014 Lincoln #25 Minnesota 28–24
56 October 17, 2015 Minneapolis Nebraska 48–25
57 November 12, 2016 Lincoln #21 Nebraska 24–17
Series: Minnesota leads 31–24–2

References

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