Maryland–Virginia men's soccer rivalry

The Maryland–Virginia men's soccer rivalry, sometimes referred to as the Tydings Cup[note 1], is a rivalry between the University of Maryland Terrapins men's soccer team, and the University of Virginia Cavaliers men's soccer team. When both teams competed in the Atlantic Coast Conference, the rivalry was considered one of the most intense college soccer rivalries in the United States.[5] Much of this is due to the program's long-standing rivalries across other sports and competing for recruits in the Mid-Atlantic, as both programs participated in the ACC for over 60 years before Maryland left for the Big Ten Conference.

Maryland-Virginia men's soccer rivalry
SportCollege soccer
First meetingOctober 8, 1941
Maryland 12, Virginia 0
Latest meetingSeptember 2, 2019
Virginia 2, Maryland 0
Statistics
Meetings total82
All-time seriesMaryland, 42–30–10
Largest victoryMaryland 12–0 Virginia (1941)
Longest win streak20, Maryland (1941–1969)
Longest unbeaten streak23, Maryland (1941–1971)
Current win streak1, Virginia (2019)

Both UVA and Maryland have NCAA Championship programs in men's soccer. The Cavaliers have won seven NCAA Championships (1989, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994, 2009, 2014) while the Terrapins have won four (1968, 2005, 2008, 2018). Both programs are also extremely consistent. As of 2019, Virginia has made the College Cup Tournament bracket an NCAA record 39 consecutive years. Maryland has made the tournament 19 consecutive years since 2001.

Virginia is 29–16–7 in the rivalry since 1978, but Maryland started 26–1–3 between 1941 and 1977, and still leads 42–30–10 overall. The programs are coached by two of the most reputable coaches in the collegiate game who have both coached their respective programs for over 20 years. The Cavaliers are coached by George Gelnovatch while the Terrapins are coached by Sasho Cirovski.

Rivalry

History

Klöckner Stadium, the home ground of Virginia.

The origins of both programs begin in the early to mid-1940s. In 1941, Virginia began sponsoring a varsity men's soccer program, while Maryland followed suit in 1946.[6] Prior to the 1946 meeting, Virginia's varsity team played Maryland's club team in the early 1940s in season fixtures. The first recorded meeting between both teams was on October 8, 1941 where the Maryland club team defeated the Virginia varsity team, 12-0, making it the largest defeat by either team in the series.[7] The first meeting between the two sides as varsity programs was on October 25, 1947, where Maryland defeated Virginia 3-0.[7]

The two teams met infrequently through the remainder of the 1940s into the mid-1950s. In 1955, the Atlantic Coast Conference began sponsoring men's college soccer as a conference sport, in which both Maryland and Virginia joined, thus causing the two teams to meet on an annual basis for the next half-century. The specific origins of the rivalry from this point are unknown, but much of it became rooted in the proximity between the two schools, and the fact Virginia and Maryland are border states.

The rivalry between both schools did not escalate until well into the 21st century, primarily due to the fact the school's until then saw periods of success on the pitch at different times. Maryland, for instance, saw much success in the NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Tournament, including a national title in the mid-to-late 1960s, whereas Virginia only qualified for one NCAA Tournament during that time. Conversely, Virginia saw much of their success come under Bruce Arena during their five-peat run in the late-1980s to mid-1990s. However, from 1976 to 1994, Maryland only qualified once for the NCAA Tournament.

In the late 1990s, the rivalry intensified with both teams regularly jockeying for ACC supremacy, which, at the time, was one of the top college conferences in the sport. This was due to the amount of national championships won, and at-large berths received in comparison to other collegiate conferences. Additionally, the rivalry intensified as both schools often tried to attract the top high school talents in the Mid-Atlantic region. Throughout the 2000s, the teams were both regularly ranked in the Top-10 of the NSCAA polls. Also during this team, Maryland's Sasho Cirovski and Virginia's George Gelnovatch were established as some of the most elite collegiate coaches in the United States. This was emphasized with Cirovski's National Coach of the Year Award in 2005, as well as both Cirovski and Gelnovatch's ACC Coach of the Year Awards earned throughout the late 1990s into the early 2000s.[8] Additionally, during this time, three of the ten national championships in the 2000s were won by either Maryland or Virginia. Maryland won the NCAA title in 2005 and again in 2008. The following year, Virginia won the 2009 title. Furthermore, during the 2000s either one of the teams reached the College Cup (Final Four) eight of the 10 occasions. In 2011, College Soccer News rated the rivalry as the third most intense in the nation.[9]

Ludwig Field, the home ground of Maryland.

The general Maryland-Virginia rivalry has become less intense since Maryland moved to the Big Ten Conference during the 2010–2014 NCAA conference realignment, causing the teams to no longer meet in any sport on a regular basis.[10][11][12]

The final match between the two sides as ACC teams came in 2013, when the programs met in the College Cup, or Final Four, of the 2013 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship.[5] Ahead of the match, Maryland's head coach, Sasho Cirovski praised the rivalry calling it "a dream scenario." Cirovski ahead of the clash emphasized how large the rivalry is in college soccer: "I’ve said it a thousand times: It’s the best rivalry in college soccer."[5] The American soccer publication, Soccer America called it the "end of one of college soccer's great rivalries".[13]

The two sides met for the first time since Maryland's departure on November 22, 2015 in the 2015 NCAA Division I Men's Soccer Championship.[14][15] There, Maryland posted a 1-0 victory thanks to a 38th-minute goal from Eryk Williamson.[16][17] Maryland and Virginia later scheduled their first regular-season match as non-conference opponents on September 3, 2018, which ended in a scoreless draw at Audi Field in Washington.

Results

  Maryland win   Draw   Virginia win Rankings from the Soccer America poll[7]

Competition Date Home team Result Away team Venue Attendance Recap Series
1941 ISFA seasonOctober 8, 1941Maryland
12–0
VirginiaOld Byrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 1–0–0
1947 ISFA seasonOctober 25, 1947Virginia
0–3
MarylandScott Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 2–0–0
1948 ISFA seasonNovember 17, 1948Maryland
5–0
VirginiaGriffith Stadium, Washington, D.C.UMD 3–0–0
1949 ISFA seasonOctober 14, 1949Virginia
1–10
MarylandScott Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 4–0–0
1950 ISFA seasonOctober 20, 1950Maryland
3–1
VirginiaByrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 5–0–0
1954 ACC seasonNovember 19, 1954Virginia
0–7
MarylandScott Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 6–0–0
1955 ACC seasonNovember 18, 1955Maryland
3–0
VirginiaByrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 7–0–0
1956 ACC seasonNovember 13, 1956Virginia
0–2
MarylandScott Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 8–0–0
1957 ACC seasonOctober 25, 1957Maryland
2–0
VirginiaByrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 9–0–0
1958 ACC seasonOctober 28, 1958Virginia
1–2
MarylandScott Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 10–0–0
1959 ACC seasonOctober 30, 1959Maryland
5–1
VirginiaByrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 11–0–0
1960 ACC seasonOctober 7, 1960Virginia
1–4
MarylandScott Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 12–0–0
1961 ACC seasonOctober 6, 1961Maryland
3–0
VirginiaByrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 13–0–0
1962 ACC seasonOctober 26, 1962Virginia
2–3
MarylandScott Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 14–0–0
1963 ACC seasonOctober 23, 1963Maryland
7–2
VirginiaByrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 15–0–0
1964 ACC seasonOctober 22, 1964Virginia
0–2
MarylandScott Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 16–0–0
1965 ACC seasonNovember 5, 1965Maryland
2–0
VirginiaByrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 17–0–0
1966 ACC seasonNovember 10, 1966Virginia
1–5
MarylandScott Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 18–0–0
1967 ACC seasonOctober 9, 1967Maryland
4–0
VirginiaByrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 19–0–0
1968 ACC seasonOctober 29, 1968Virginia
0–5
MarylandScott Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 20–0–0
1969 ACC seasonOctober 28, 1969Maryland
2–2
VirginiaByrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 20–0–1
1969 NCAA TournamentNovember 17, 1969Maryland
5–0
VirginiaByrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 21–0–1
1970 ACC seasonOctober 18, 1970Virginia
2–3
MarylandScott Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 22–0–1
1971 ACC seasonOctober 13, 1971Maryland
1–2
VirginiaByrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 22–1–1
1972 ACC seasonOctober 15, 1972Virginia
1–1
MarylandScott Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 22–1–2
1973 ACC seasonOctober 5, 1973Maryland
3–1
VirginiaByrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 23–1–2
1974 ACC seasonOctober 4, 1974Virginia
0–1
MarylandScott Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 24–1–2
1975 ACC seasonOctober 25, 1975Maryland
6–1
VirginiaByrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 25–1–2
1976 ACC seasonOctober 23, 1976Virginia
2–2
MarylandScott Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 25–1–3
1977 ACC seasonOctober 22, 1977Maryland
4–2
VirginiaByrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 26–1–3
1978 ACC seasonNovember 11, 1978Virginia
3–1
MarylandScott Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 26–2–3
1979 ACC seasonSeptember 15, 1979Maryland
0–1
VirginiaByrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 26–3–3
1980 ACC seasonSeptember 12, 1980Virginia
2–1
MarylandScott Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 26–4–3
1981 ACC seasonSeptember 12, 1981Maryland
0–1
VirginiaByrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 26–5–3
1982 ACC seasonSeptember 25, 1982#4 Virginia
2–1
MarylandScott Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 26–6–3
1983 ACC seasonSeptember 25, 1983Maryland
1–4
VirginiaByrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 26–7–3
1984 ACC seasonSeptember 22, 1984#11 Virginia
8–1
MarylandScott Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 26–8–3
1985 ACC seasonSeptember 22, 1985Maryland
0–2
#1 VirginiaByrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 26–9–3
1986 ACC seasonSeptember 21, 1986#11 Virginia
1–0
#16 MarylandScott Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 26–10–3
1987 ACC seasonSeptember 20, 1987#20 Maryland
0–1
#4 VirginiaByrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 26–11–3
1988 ACC seasonSeptember 18, 1988#2 Virginia
2–1
MarylandScott Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 26–12–3
1989 ACC seasonSeptember 17, 1989Maryland
1–4
#1 VirginiaByrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 26–13–3
1990 ACC seasonSeptember 16, 1990#7 Virginia
0–1
MarylandScott Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 27–13–3
1991 ACC seasonSeptember 15, 1991Maryland
0–3
#3 VirginiaByrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 27–14–3
1992 ACC seasonSeptember 13, 1992#1 Virginia
5–1
MarylandKlöckner Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 27–15–3
1993 ACC seasonSeptember 12, 1993Maryland
0–1
#1 VirginiaByrd Stadium, College Park, MarylandUMD 27–16–3
1994 ACC seasonSeptember 11, 1994#1 Virginia
4–2
MarylandKlöckner Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 27–17–3
1994 NCAA TournamentNovember 27, 1994#4 Virginia
2–1
MarylandKlöckner Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 27–18–3
1995 ACC seasonSeptember 12, 1995#5 Maryland
2–2
#1 VirginiaLudwig Field, College Park, MarylandUMD 27–18–4
1996 ACC seasonSeptember 15, 1996#5 Virginia
1–1
MarylandKlöckner Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 27–18–5
1996 ACC TournamentNovember 17, 1996#1 Virginia
0–2
MarylandKlöckner Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaUMD 28–18–5
1997 ACC seasonSeptember 13, 1997#2 Maryland
0–0
#11 VirginiaLudwig Field, College Park, MarylandUMD 28–18–6
1997 ACC TournamentNovember 16, 1997#8 Virginia
2–0
#11 MarylandDisney's Wide World of Sports Complex, Orlando, FloridaUMD 28–19–6
1998 ACC seasonSeptember 12, 1998#7 Virginia
4–1
#17 MarylandKlöckner Stadium, Charlottesville, VirginiaRecapUMD 28–20–6
1999 ACC seasonOctober 12, 1999#4 Maryland
1–0
#17 VirginiaLudwig Field, College Park, Maryland2,034RecapUMD 29–20–6
1999 ACC TournamentNovember 11, 1999Virginia
2–0
#5 MarylandSpry Stadium, Winston-Salem, North Carolina2,201RecapUMD 29–21–6
2000 ACC seasonNovember 3, 2000#10 Virginia
2–0
MarylandKlöckner Stadium, Charlottesville, Virginia3,096RecapUMD 29–22–6
2001 ACC seasonNovember 4, 2001Maryland
0–3
#2 VirginiaLudwig Field, College Park, Maryland1,673RecapUMD 29–23–6
2002 ACC seasonNovember 1, 2002#20 Virginia
1–0
#5 MarylandKlöckner Stadium, Charlottesville, Virginia2,474RecapUMD 29–24–6
2002 ACC TournamentNovember 17, 2002#10 Maryland
3–0
#11 VirginiaSAS Stadium, Cary, North Carolina1,822RecapUMD 30–24–6
2003 ACC seasonOctober 31, 2003#3 Maryland
1–0
VirginiaLudwig Field, College Park, Maryland2,245RecapUMD 31–24–6
2003 ACC TournamentNovember 16, 2003#2 Maryland
1–1
VirginiaSAS Stadium, Cary, North Carolina3,287RecapUMD 31–24–7
2004 ACC seasonNovember 5, 2004#9 Virginia
0–1
#12 MarylandKlöckner Stadium, Charlottesville, Virginia4,081RecapUMD 32–24–7
2004 ACC TournamentNovember 14, 2004#5 Maryland
1–2
#11 VirginiaSAS Stadium, Cary, North Carolina3,841RecapUMD 32–25–7
2005 ACC seasonOctober 19, 2005#8(t) Maryland
3–0
#8(t) VirginiaLudwig Field, College Park, Maryland2,567RecapUMD 33–25–7
2006 ACC seasonOctober 11, 2006#4 Virginia
3–0
#2 MarylandKlöckner Stadium, Charlottesville, Virginia3,618RecapUMD 33–26–7
2007 ACC seasonNovember 3, 2007#25 Maryland
4–1
#14 VirginiaLudwig Field, College Park, Maryland3,267RecapUMD 34–26–7
2008 ACC seasonOctober 31, 2008Virginia
1–2
#4 MarylandKlöckner Stadium, Charlottesville, Virginia1,737RecapUMD 35–26–7
2008 ACC TournamentNovember 16, 2008#4 Maryland
1–0
VirginiaWakeMed Soccer Park, Cary, North Carolina1,513RecapUMD 36–26–7
2009 ACC seasonOctober 31, 2009#5 Maryland
0–0
#6 VirginiaLudwig Field, College Park, Maryland1,112RecapUMD 36–26–8
2009 ACC TournamentNovember 11, 2009#5 Maryland
0–1
#6 VirginiaWakeMed Soccer Park, Cary, North Carolina4,302RecapUMD 36–27–8
2009 NCAA TournamentDecember 3, 2009#2 Virginia
3–0
#13 MarylandKlöckner Stadium, Charlottesville, Virginia4,900RecapUMD 36–28–8
2010 ACC seasonOctober 29, 2010#5 Virginia
0–2
#3 MarylandKlöckner Stadium, Charlottesville, Virginia3,944RecapUMD 37–28–8
2010 ACC TournamentNovember 12, 2010#3 Maryland
2–0
#13 VirginiaWakeMed Soccer Park, Cary, North Carolina1,937RecapUMD 38–28–8
2011 ACC seasonOctober 7, 2011Virginia
2–1
#23 MarylandKlöckner Stadium, Charlottesville, Virginia2,898RecapUMD 38–29–8
2012 ACC seasonOctober 5, 2012#1 Maryland
1–0
VirginiaLudwig Field, College Park, Maryland4,846RecapUMD 39–29–8
2013 ACC seasonOctober 11, 2013#23 Virginia
3–3
#5 MarylandKlöckner Stadium, Charlottesville, Virginia1,708RecapUMD 39–29–9
2013 ACC TournamentNovember 17, 2013#4 Maryland
1–0
#12 VirginiaMaryland SoccerPlex, Boyds, Maryland4,763RecapUMD 40–29–9
2013 NCAA TournamentDecember 13, 2013#4 Maryland
1–0
#8 VirginiaPPL Park, Chester, Pennsylvania4,172RecapUMD 41–29–9
2015 NCAA TournamentNovember 22, 2015#10 Maryland
1–0
VirginiaLudwig Field, College Park, Maryland2,737RecapUMD 42–29–9
2018 NCAA seasonSeptember 3, 2018Maryland
0–0
#11 VirginiaAudi Field, Washington, D.C.3,527RecapUMD 42–29–10
2019 NCAA seasonSeptember 2, 2019#1 Maryland
0–2
#12 VirginiaAudi Field, Washington, D.C.1,884RecapUMD 42–30–10

Honors

Team NCAA
National Championships
ACC
Championships
Big Ten
Championships
Conference
Regular Season
Virginia 7 9 N/A 18
Maryland 4 6 3 24
Combined 11 15 3 42

Notes

  1. The name Tydings Cup referred to the named of the trophy received by the winning team of the American football rivalry from the 1920s until 1945.[1][2][3][4]

References

  1. Speck, Jason G. (2010). University of Maryland: The Campus History Series. Chicago: Arcadia Publishing. pp. 25–41. ISBN 9781439641460.
  2. Wilkinson, Jack; Beck, Stan (2013). College Sports Traditions: Picking Up Butch, Silent Night, and Hundreds of Others. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 304. ISBN 978-0-8108-9120-3.
  3. "Secretary William Jardine and Senator Millard Tydings with Tydings Trophy, November 13, 1926" (Photograph). digital.lib.umd.edu. University of Maryland Digital Libraries. November 13, 1926.
  4. University of Maryland Archives (August 17, 2016). "Twenty-four represents the number of years Millard Tydings served in the United States Senate" (Blog). umdarchives.wordpress.com. WordPress. Retrieved January 14, 2018.
  5. Goff, Steven (December 12, 2013). "At College Cup, 'the best rivalry in college soccer' gets a fitting send-off". The Washington Post. Nash Media, LLC. Retrieved January 14, 2018.
  6. "Maryland Men's Soccer Record Book" (PDF). umterps.com. College Park, Maryland: University of Maryland, College Park. August 10, 2017. p. 2. Retrieved January 12, 2018.
  7. "All-Time Results - Virginia Men's Soccer" (PDF). grfx.cstv.com. University of Virginia. July 23, 2017. pp. 1–6. Retrieved January 12, 2018.
  8. "Virginia, Maryland Renew Men's Soccer Rivalry This Weekend". University of Virginia. CBSSports.com. September 12, 1998. Retrieved August 19, 2011.
  9. CollegeSoccerNews.com (May 9, 2011). "The 5 Greatest Rivalries in College Soccer". First Point USA. Archived from the original on March 30, 2012.
  10. Edds, Kevin (December 4, 2014). "Death Of A Conference, Part 3". The Sabre. Retrieved January 13, 2018.
  11. Prewitt, Alex; Svrluga, Barry (November 19, 2012). "Big Ten Expansion: Maryland leaves ACC, joins conference in financial move". The Washington Post. Retrieved January 13, 2018.
  12. Prewitt, Alex (June 30, 2014). "Maryland is a Big Ten school; who will be its rival?". The Washington Post. Jeff Bezos. Retrieved January 12, 2018.
  13. "One last time for Terrapins and Cavs". socceramerica.com. Soccer America. December 13, 2013. Retrieved January 14, 2018.
  14. "Eryk Williamson's strike pushes Maryland men's soccer past Virginia". The Diamondback. Maryland Media, Inc. November 22, 2015. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  15. "Terps, Virginia Battle in the NCAA Second Round". umterps.com. November 19, 2015. Retrieved January 13, 2018.
  16. "Williamson Goal Lifts Terps Past Virginia". umterps.com. November 22, 2015. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  17. Goff, Steven (November 22, 2015). "NCAA roundup: Terps, Hoyas men, Virginia women advance". The Washington Post. Nash Media, LCC. Retrieved January 15, 2018. Although they are no longer conference companions, Maryland and Virginia remain unbreakable rivals in men’s soccer because of their common recruiting territory and bounty of championships.
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