Louisiana–Monroe–Northwestern State football rivalry

Louisiana–Monroe–Northwestern State football rivalry
Sport Football
First meeting November 8, 1952
Northeast Louisiana State 20, Northwestern State 14
Latest meeting September 1, 2005
Northwestern State 27, Louisiana–Monroe 23
Next meeting
Trophy None
Statistics
Meetings total 48
All-time series Northwestern State leads, 28–19–1
Largest victory Northeast Louisiana, 46–0 (1978)
Longest win streak Northwestern State, 9 (1961–1969)
Current win streak Northwestern State, 2 (2003–2005)
University of Louisiana at Monroe
Northwestern State University
Locations in Louisiana

The Louisiana–Monroe–Northwestern State football rivalry is a former American college football rivalry between the Louisiana–Monroe Warhawks and the Northwestern State Demons. The rivalry stems from the time the two teams spent competing together in the Gulf States Conference (1953–71) and later in the Southland Conference (1987–93). The game has been infrequently played since 1994, following Louisiana–Monroe's move to the NCAA's Football Bowl Subdivision.[1]

History

The two teams have met 48 times on the football field, with Northwestern State currently holding a 28–19–1 edge in the all-time series. In the 1992 game, the teams' mascots Vic the Demon and Chief Brave Spirit got involved in a fight that distracted television cameras to the point that the entire altercation was caught on video.[2] In the scuffle, Vic the Demon's head is ripped off as the two crashed to the ground behind one of the end zones, which according to the video clip breaks a "cardinal rule" of being a mascot. The melee was broken up by college police without further incident.[3]

Game results

Louisiana–Monroe victoriesNorthwestern State victoriesTie games

See also

References

  1. "Indians Renew Rivalry with Northwestern Saturday". ulmwarhawks.com. September 19, 2003. Retrieved 2013-01-31.
  2. Hunsucker, Adam (September 8, 2016). "NSU President fires shot at ULM". The News-Star. Monroe. Archived from the original on September 22, 2016. Retrieved September 21, 2016.
  3. "A history of bizarre mascot incidents". CNN.
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