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Georgia Tech Vs Georgia – An Old Fashioned Rivalry

Separated by 70 miles of interstate between Atlanta and Athens, Georgia, and founded 100 years apart, the Georgia Institute of Technology (Georgia Tech) and the University of Georgia (UGA) have been rivals since 1893 in more than just football. Georgia Tech is competing for everything in the state of Georgia, from potential students and fans to government grants and academic recognition (Georgia Tech is an engineering research university while UGA is a liberal arts research university). However, it is on the gridiron that this rivalry excels.

The dislike that these two schools have for each other probably started right after the Civil War when it was decided that a new technological school should be founded. Then UGA president Patrick Mell attempted to convince legislators that the new school should be located at Georgia’s main campus in Athens. Despite his efforts, the Georgia Institute of Technology was established near the city limits of Atlanta in 1885.

It didn’t take long for the first hostilities to begin only a few years later, in 1891, over, of all things, the school colors. UGA’s school magazine declared the school colors to be gold, black, and crimson. Georgia’s football coach felt that gold was too close to yellow, which he felt symbolized cowardice. That same year, however, the Tech student body voted white and gold as the official school colors. In their first-ever football game against Auburn, Tech would use gold on their football uniforms, which some felt was a slap in the face of Georgia. Two years later, after Tech defeated Georgia in their first football game, gold was forever removed from Georgia’s school colors. Visit Sklite.co.uk

That first fateful game took place in Athens on November 4, 1893, when Georgia Tech, then known as the Blacksmiths, won by a score of 28-6. But it was who scored those four touchdowns that sparked the rivalry. Leonard Wood was a 33-year old US Army physician who was officially registered as a Georgia Tech student only a few days before the game. However, being a full-time student, he was eligible to play. This fact upset Georgia fans since, during and after the game, they hurled rocks and debris at all the Tech players. The next day, an article in the Atlanta Journal, by an Athens sports writer, mocked that Tech’s football team was nothing more than a collection of Atlanta residents with a few students thrown in.

A Rivalry was born.

For the next several years, Georgia Tech’s football program would perform very poorly. As a result, they decided to hire a new coach from another rival school, Clemson. In 1904, John Heisman was paid $2,250 and 30% of the attendance fees to be Georgia Tech’s football and baseball coach. (Note: After retiring from coaching football in 1927, he became a member of Manhattan’s Downtown Athletic Club in 1935.) After his death in 1936, the club’s trophy for the best collegiate football player was renamed the Heisman Trophy. Heisman immediately turned Tech’s football program around, going 8-1-1 in his first year. By 1908, Georgia alumni were having Tech’s recruiting tactics investigated by the SIAA (Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association). The accusations were unproven, and the SIAA later ruled in favor of Tech. In his 16 seasons at Georgia Tech, Heisman led the Golden Tornado (as Tech was known) to three undefeated seasons, including a 32-game winning streak and an all-important 23–6 victory over Georgia. Heisman also led Tech to the highest-scoring football game ever played with a 222-0 win over a totally outmanned Cumberland State in 1916 (too bad it wasn’t Georgia!).

By 1917, with the onset of WWI, UGA disbanded its football program since many of its able-bodied students were recruited for the war. Since Atlanta was a military training ground at the time, Tech retained its male students and continued its football program throughout the war. When UGA revived its football program in 1919, they proudly proclaimed “UGA in Argonne” and “TECH in Atlanta” on parade floats. As a result, Tech severed all athletic ties with UGA, including canceling several Georgia home games at Atlanta’s Grant Field (UGA commonly used Grant Field as their home field). It would not be until 1925, by mutual agreement, that regular-season competition would resume.

In 1932, Georgia and Georgia Tech would become two of the original 13 members of the SEC, of which UGA is still a member. Tech, however, would leave the SEC in 1964 after coach Bobby Dodd began a feud with Alabama’s Bear Bryant (the result of a cheap shot by an Alabama player that ended the career of a Tech player and Bryant’s refusal to discipline the athlete). There were also concerns about scholarship allocations, questionable recruiting tactics, and student-athlete treatment that led to Tech’s departure from the SEC. However, Dodd understood the importance of a rivalry and led the Yellow Jackets to 8 consecutive victories (1946–1954) and outscored Georgia 176–39 in those games. This remains the longest streak of either team in the rivalry.

Several years later, Tech would attempt to re-enter the SEC, but their application was denied, in large part due to the opposition of Georgia. Tech would find a league to compete in and would join the Metro Conference for all its intercollegiate sports except football. Similar to Notre Dame, Tech would compete as an independent for the next 15 years, until eventually joining the ACC in 1979, the conference in which it still competes today.

Not satisfied with simply disliking each other on the football field, both institutions have also tailored their fight songs to the rivalry. Tech’s Ramblin Wreck song contains the line “To Hell with Georgia”, and “Up With the White and Gold” is immediately followed by the lyrics “Down with the Red and Black” and, later on, “Drop the Battle Axe on Georgia’s Head”. The Georgia fight song, “Glory Glory”, which has technically remained unchanged since first being published in 1909, officially ends with “G-E-O-R-G-I-A.” The student body, however, has modified the closing lyrics to “and to Hell with Georgia Tech!”

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