Английская Википедия:Cincinnati–West Virginia rivalry

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Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox sports rivalry Шаблон:OSM Location map

The Cincinnati–West Virginia rivalry is a college sports rivalry between the University of Cincinnati Bearcats and West Virginia University Mountaineers, which are about Шаблон:Convert apart. The rivalry dates from their first college football game in 1921, and has continued across all sports, including basketball since 1940. The rivalry intensified while the two schools were conference foes and members of the Big East Conference.

History

College Comparison
style="Шаблон:NCAA color cell" | [[University of Cincinnati|Шаблон:White]] style="Шаблон:NCAA color cell" | [[West Virginia University|Шаблон:White]]
Founded 1819 1867
Type Public Public
Location Cincinnati, OH Morgantown, WV
Conference Big 12 Big 12
Students 44,338 29,933
School colors Шаблон:Color box Шаблон:Color box Шаблон:Color box Шаблон:Color box
Nickname Bearcats Mountaineers
Stadium Nippert Stadium Milan Puskar Stadium
Arena Fifth Third Arena WVU Coliseum

The schools have not played since West Virginia left the Big East for the Big 12 in 2012. Cincinnati remained in the Big East, which became the American Athletic Conference in 2013. Cincinnati was later invited on September 10, 2021, into the Big 12 Conference, starting in 2023–24 season.[1] To continue the series between the two schools, the Big 12 announced a protective rivalry between the two in the conference's future.[2]Шаблон:Failed verification

In men's basketball both Gale Catlett and Bob Huggins were successful head coaches at both institutions.

Football

Шаблон:See also Шаблон:Infobox sports rivalry

Notable games

November 17, 2007: West Virginia had momentum as the No. 5 ranked team in the nation, and Cincinnati was ranked No. 21 after back-to-back wins against ranked opponents No. 20 USF and No. 16 Connecticut. West Virginia was able to hold on for a victory by defeating No. 21 Cincinnati 28-23 to keep its Big East title hopes alive.[3]

November 13, 2009: Cincinnati was undefeated with a 9-0 record and ranked No. 5, the Bearcats seeking a second consecutive Big East Championship. West Virginia was ranked No. 23. Cincinnati would hold off the Mountaineers to remain undefeated, beating West Virginia 24-21, which helped propel Cincinnati to the 2010 Sugar Bowl.[4]

Game results

Rankings are from the AP Poll (1936–present), CFP Poll (2014–present) Шаблон:Sports rivalry series table

Men's basketball

Шаблон:See also Шаблон:Infobox sports rivalry

Notable games

March 14, 1998: In the round of 32 of the 1998 NCAA tournament #2 Seed Cincinnati would take the lead with 7.1 seconds remaining in the second half before the #10 Seed Mountaineers stormed back down the court and took the lead back with their own 3-point shot, upsetting the Bearcats 75–74.

January 30, 2008: In his first game at West Virginia facing his former school, Bob Huggins lost to his former assistant coach Mick Cronin as Cincinnati beat the Mountaineers 62–39 in Morgantown.

Game results

Rankings are from the AP Poll (1936–present) Шаблон:Sports rivalry series table

Notes

Шаблон:Reflist A1998 NCAA Round of 32
B2010 Big East men's basketball tournament

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:NCAA Division I all sports rivalry navbox Шаблон:Big 12 Conference football rivalry navbox Шаблон:Big 12 Conference men's basketball rivalry navbox Шаблон:Navboxes