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Iowa Hawkeyes College Football Tickets
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About Iowa Hawkeyes Football
Stadium Name: Kinnick Stadium
Schedule:
Hawkeyes Schedule
Key Rivals: Michigan, Ohio State, Purdue
About Iowa Hawkeyes Basketball
Stadium Name: Kinnick Stadium
Schedule:
Hawkeyes Schedule
Key Rivals: Michigan State, Ohio State, Illinois
To the winner of the Iowa-Minnesota football game goes
possession of a statue of a pig named "Floyd of Rosedale."
A bet in 1935 between Minnesota Governor Floyd B. Olson
and Iowa Governor Clyde Herring gave birth to Floyd of Rosedale. Tensions
between the two state universities had been running high and a wager was
made in an effort to relieve the situation.
After Iowa lost the 1935 game, Herring presented Olson
with Floyd of Rosedale, a full-blooded champion pig and a brother of BlueBoy
from Will Rogers' movie "State Fair". Olson gave the pig to
the University of Minnesota and commissioned St. Paul sculptor Charles
Brioscho to capture Floyd's image.
The result is a bronze pig 21 inches long and 15 inches
high. Floyd currently resides in Minneapolis as a result of Minnesota's
25-21 victory last season in Iowa City. Minnesota holds a 37-26-2 advantage
in the series with Floyd of Rosedale on the line.
The winning university is entitled to keep the trophy
until it loses the annual battle.
Herky and the Hawkeyes
The University of Iowa borrowed its athletic nickname
from the state of Iowa many years ago.
The name Hawkeye was originally applied to a hero in
a fictional novel, The Last of the Mohicans, written by James Fenimore
Cooper. Author Cooper had the Delaware Indians bestow the name on a white
scout who lived with them.
In 1838, 12 years after the book was published, people
in the territory of Iowa acquired the nickname, chiefly through the efforts
of Judge David Rorer of Burlington and James Edwards of Fort Madison.
Edwards, editor of the Fort Madison Patriot, moved his
paper to Burlington in 1843 and renamed it the Burlington Hawk-Eye. The
two men continued their campaign to popularize the name and territorial
officials eventually gave it their formal approval.
The Hawkeye nickname gained a tangible symbol in 1948
when a cartoon character, later to be named Herky the Hawk, was hatched.
The creator was Richard Spencer III, instructor of journalism.
The impish hawk was an immediate hit and he acquired
a name through a statewide contest staged by the athletic department.
John Franklin, a Belle Plaine alumnus, was the man who suggested Herky.
Since his birth over 40 years ago, Herky has symbolized
Iowa athletics and epitomized University life. He even donned a military
uniform during the Korean War and became the insignia of the 124th Fighter
Squadron.
During the mid-1950s Herky came to life at a football
game as the Iowa mascot. Since then Herky has been a familiar figure at
Iowa athletic events.
Winner of In-State Battle Earns Cy-Hawk Trophy
When The University of Iowa resumed its football series
with Iowa State in 1977, the Des Moines Athletic Club donated a trophy
to be awarded to the winner of the annual in-state battle.
The Cy-Hawk Trophy features a football player in the
classic running back pose, and also includes a likeness of both Herky
the Hawkeye and Cy the Cardinal on the front of the trophy.
Iowa Hawkeyes
The Hawkeyes hold a 33-14 advantage in the series that began in 1894,
including a 17-6 margin since 1977 when the Cy-Hawk Trophy was first awarded.
Over the past 20 years, the climb of the Iowa Hawkeyes
from the ranks of also-rans to a position of national prominence, was
orchestrated by legendary Coach Hayden Fry.
With Kirk Ferentz, a former Fry assistant at Iowa for
nine seasons, in his second year as the Hawkeye head coach, loyal followers
of Hawkeye football are certain Iowa's football fortunes will continue
to be as rosy as the recent past.
Accomplishments of Iowa football over the past two decades;
Three Big Ten Conference titles and Rose Bowl appearances
as the Big Ten Conference representative (1981, 1985, 1990)
14 bowl game appearances since 1980
14 first-division finishes in the Big Ten Conference, including three
championships and seven additional finishes among the top three teams
in the league
11 seasons which included at least seven victories, including 10-win seasons
in 1985, 1987 and 1991.
In 1981, with Fry in his third season at Iowa and Ferentz in his first
year as the Hawkeye offensive line coach, Iowa found itself celebrating
victories over nationally ranked Nebraska, UCLA and Michigan, a Big Ten
title and its first trip to the Rose Bowl since the 1958 season.
Powered by an offense led by all-American quarterback
Chuck Long and a defensive unit led by all-America linebacker Larry Station,
the 1985 Hawkeyes staked claim to the top of the college football world.
Iowa's 1985 squad was ranked No. 1 nationally for five weeks en route
to a school-record 10 victories, another Big Ten title, and an appearance
in the 1986 Rose Bowl. Iowa's Mike Haight, under the guidance of Ferentz,
was named Big Ten Lineman of the Year.
Unranked and unheralded at the start of the season, the
1990 Hawkeyes shocked the nation by defeating Big Ten rivals Michigan,
Michigan State and Illinois - all on the road - to claim the Big Ten crown
and earn yet another berth in the "Granddaddy of all bowl games,"
the 1991 Rose Bowl.
Iowa's 1991 squad also provided some surprises. The Hawkeyes
used another high-powered offense and solid defense to capture 10 victories
en route to a berth in the 1991 Holiday Bowl. The 10th victory -- a 23-8
verdict over Big Ten rival Minnesota -- was the 100th for Fry as head
coach of the Hawkeyes.
The Hawkeyes earned their third bowl invitation of the
1990s in 1993, winning their final three regular season games to earn
an invitation to the inaugural Alamo Bowl in San Antonio, TX. The clinching
victory, a 21-3 win over Minnesota in the season finale, was win No. 200
in Fry's legendary coaching career.
Iowa's late-season success continued in 1995 as Iowa
defeated Wisconsin in Madison and Minnesota in Iowa City for a 7-4 record,
earning an invitation to the Sun Bowl. In El Paso, the Hawkeyes dominated
Pac-10 co-champion Washington, winning 38-18.
Iowa maintained its status as one of the Best in the
Big Ten in 1996, posting a 9-3 record and placing third in the league.
A 21-20 win at Penn State sparked Iowa to a 6-2 Big Ten record and the
Hawkeyes capped the season with a 27-0 shutout over Texas Tech in the
Builders Square Alamo Bowl.
Iowa earned its third straight bowl invitation in 1997,
posting a 7-5 record despite losing three road games by a total of just
eight points. The Hawkeyes featured the Big Ten's Offensive Player of
the Year in RB Tavian Banks and the Defensive Lineman of the Year in DT
Jared DeVries.
Another measure of Iowa's success over the past 20 seasons
is the Hawkeyes' standing as nearly a full-time member of the various
"Top 25" polls. Iowa was ranked among the nation's elite at
season's end 10 times under Fry, including the aforementioned 1985 campaign
when the Hawkeyes were the top team in the land for five straight weeks.
The number of Hawkeyes singled out for post-season honors
is also an indication of Iowa's stature as one of the nation's premier
programs. More than 65 Hawkeyes earned all-American status and well over
135 earned all-Big Ten honors at Iowa during the 1980's and 1990's.
Two Hawkeyes - all-American quarterback Chuck Long and
all-American running back Nick Bell - have been named winners of the coveted
Chicago Tribune Silver Football, awarded annually to the Big Ten Conference's
most valuable player.
The Hawkeyes and Post-Season Bowl Games
1997 Sun Bowl
1996 Alamo Bowl
1995 Sun Bowl
1993 Alamo Bowl
1991 Holiday Bowl
1991 Rose Bowl
1988 Peach Bowl
1987 Holiday Bowl
1986 Holiday Bowl
1986 Rose Bowl
1984 Freedom Bowl
1983 Gator Bowl
1982 Peach Bowl
1982 Rose Bowl
1959 Rose Bowl
1957 Rose Bowl
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