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List of high school football rivalries

 
Wikipedia: List of high school football rivalries (100 years+)

High school football rivalries in the United States more than one hundred years old:

For a list of other long-standing rivalries see: List of high school football rivalries (less than 100 years old)
Raiders v Rockets (2005) Hunnewell Field in Wellesley
City v Poly (November, 2006) M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Md.
City v Poly (November, 2007) M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Md.
City v Poly (November, 2008) M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Md.
Series Leader Series Rival Series Record Series Began Notes References
Norwich Free Academy (Norwich, CT) New London High School (New London, CT) 1875 Annual Thanksgiving football game. The oldest high school football rivalry in the country, meeting for the 145th time in 2006. [1]
Phillips Academy (Andover, MA) Phillips Exeter Academy (Exeter, NH) 67-51-10 1878 Annual football game. This is one of the oldest preparatory school athletic rivalries in the nation. For more information see Exeter-Andover Rivalry.
Wellesley High School (Wellesley, MA) Needham High School (Needham, MA) 58-52-9 1882 Annual Thanksgiving Day game. First played Thanksgiving morning 1882 at Morton Field in Needham. The oldest public high school rivalry. [1]
Fordham Preparatory School (Bronx, NY) Xavier High School (New York, NY) 47-35-3 1883 Annual Thanksgiving football game. The oldest high school rivals in New York City, with the 86th meeting taking place in 2009. [2]
Noble and Greenough School (Dedham, MA) Milton Academy (Milton, MA) 1886 Annual football game. One of the oldest continual football rivalries in the nation. [3]


St. Mark's School (Southborough, MA) Groton School (Groton, MA) 1886 Annual football game. St. Mark's-Groton Rivalry


Boston Latin School (Boston, MA) English High School (Boston, MA) 72-36-13 1887 Annual Thanksgiving football game. Oldest continuous high school football rivalry in the U.S. [1][4][5]


William Penn Charter School (Philadelphia, PA) Germantown Academy (Fort Washington, PA) 78–33-11 1887 The football game record goes back to 1887 and the overall tally for 122 consecutive games. It is the oldest football rivalry in Pennsylvania and commonly referred to as the oldest consecutive football rivalry.
Lawrenceville School (Lawrenceville, NJ) The Hill School (Pottstown, PA) 59-42-5 1887 Annual football game. One of the oldest continual football rivalries in the nation. [6]
Baltimore Polytechnic Institute (Baltimore, MD) Baltimore City College (Baltimore, MD) 59-54-6 1889 The City-Poly game is now played at M&T Bank Stadium, normally home to the Baltimore Ravens, first Saturday in November after more than 75 years on Thanksgiving Day. Oldest continual football rivalry in Maryland. [7]
Hyde Park Career Academy (Chicago, IL) Englewood Technical Prep Academy (Chicago, IL) 56-46-6 1889 Called by one writer "The Greatest High School Football Rivalry in Illinois", Hyde Park and Englewood's first game took place in 1889. The winner of the annual game is awarded the Little Brown Shield, also known as The Lettermen Shield. [8]
The Haverford School (Haverford, PA) Episcopal Academy (Merion, PA) 53-44-2 1889 Annual EA Day or Episcopal-Haverford Day football game. The second oldest high school football rivalry in Pennsylvania.[citation needed] It is also the second oldest football rivalry in the InterAc League. They will play their 100th Game against one another on November 14, 2009.
Medford High School (Medford, MA) Malden High School (Malden, MA) 55-54-2 1889 Annual Thanksgiving Day game.
Saint Ignatius College Preparatory (San Francisco, CA) Sacred Heart Cathedral Preparatory (San Francisco, CA) 41-19-2 1891 The rivalry dates back to a rugby game on March 17, 1891, this lead to the establishment of the Bruce-Mahoney Trophy in 1947. The trophy is named after a graduate from each school that died in World War II. Each school plays each other in football, basketball and baseball. The trophy goes to whoever wins two out of the three sports. Oldest high school rivalry west of the Mississippi River. [9]

[10]

Beverly High School (Beverly, MA) Salem High School (Salem, MA) 52-49-7 1891 Annual Thanksgiving football game.
Newburyport High School (Newburyport, MA) Amesbury High School (Amesbury, MA) 44-33-6 1891 Annual Thanksgiving football game. Rivalry includes several unsanctioned games between 1891 and 1914.
Abilene High School (Abilene, KS) Chapman High School (Chapman, KS) 1892 Annual football game, often serving as the Homecoming game for each team in alternating years. This rivalry is also noted as being the oldest high school football rivalry West of the Mississippi River. In 2009, this rivalry was also picked by ESPN as the greatest rivalry in Kansas But see San Francisco's Saint Ignatius-Sacred Heart rivalry, which dates to 1891, making it older than this rivalry [1][11]
Louisville Male High School (Louisville, KY) DuPont Manual Magnet High School (Louisville, KY) 79-40-6 1892 Annual football game. Dubbed the "Old Rivalry" it is the oldest high school rivalry in Kentucky and the oldest rivalry west of the Appalachian Mountains. As of November 2, 2007, the rivalry game will be played at Papa John's Cardinal Stadium. The rivalry item is The Barrel. [12]
Northeast High School (Philadelphia, PA) Central High School (Philadelphia, PA) 52–51–10 1892 Annual Thanksgiving game. The Philadelphia area's most recognized Thanksgiving football tradition, the schools play each year for the wooden horse trophy. [13]
Cony High School (Augusta, ME) Gardiner High School (Gardiner, ME) 65-55-10 1892 Cony and Gardiner no longer play in the same division, as a result, the teams play after the regular and post-season has concluded for each team. Gardiner upset Cony in 2008 in the 131st meeting in 116 continuous years.


Central High School (Pueblo, Colorado) Centennial High School (Pueblo, Colorado) 54-45-9 1892 Annual football game. The oldest high school football rivalry west of the Mississippi river; the schools first played in 1892 and played 11 times (twice in 1900) until 1907. There were no games held from 1908-1920. The game resumed in 1921 and there have been multiple years in which the schools played twice (1932-1936, 1942, 1943, 1948, 1950), which accounts for the years versus record of games. The game is now played at Pueblo’s Dutch Clark Stadium and is now known as "The Bell Game" as the winning school takes possession of an old train bell which was donated as a trophy in 1950. [14][15]


Bradford Area High School (Bradford, PA) Olean High School (Olean, NY) 1893 The second-oldest interstate high school football rivalry in the country. [16]
B.M.C. Durfee High School (Fall River, MA) New Bedford High School (New Bedford, MA) 1893 Annual Thanksgiving football game. The oldest high school football rivalry in South Coast New England.
Pottsville High School (Pottsville, Pennsylvania) Reading High School (Reading, Pennsylvania) 43-37-8 1893 "Lump of Coal" Trophy (cut and polished Anthracite Coal). "The Rock" changed hands Sept 11, 2009 following 26-21 Pottsville victory. Annual Thanksgiving Day Game 1932-77. Cities separated by 34 miles. Years gone by, teams, band and fans traveled to game via Reading Railroad and then paraded through host city streets to stadium. Total points scored in series was dead even as recently as 2004. [17]<
Gonzaga College High School (Washington, DC) St. John's College High School (Washington, DC) 1893 The rivalry is considered the oldest between two Catholic High Schools in the U.S. But see Saint Ignatius-Sacred Heart rivalry above, which started in 1891.


Mount Carmel High School (Mount Carmel, Pennsylvania) Shamokin High School (Shamokin, Pennsylvania) 67-25-11 1893 This Pennsylvania Anthracite Coal Region rivalry began on October 28, 1893. Following a six-year hiatus from 1928-1933, the two teams have played each other every year since 1934. The game known as the "Coal Bucket Game", formerly played on Thanksgiving Day, began in 1951 (series record: 41-15-2). [18][19][20]


St. Johnsbury Academy (St. Johnsbury, VT) Lyndon Institute (Lyndon, VT) 57-40-6 1894 Annual football game. Played on the last Saturday of the regular season for Vermont High School football. The Vermont state legislature passed a resolution commemorating the 100th meeting between the schools in football and 110 years of the rivalry tradition in 2004. [21][22]
Marinette High School (Marinette, WI) Menominee High School (Menominee, MI) 49-44-7 1894 The oldest interstate rivalry between two public high schools (third overall), Menominee and Marinette are "twin towns" separated by less than a mile of water and a bridge, making the rivalry all the more intense. [16]
Massillon Washington High School (Massillon, OH) Canton McKinley High School (Canton, OH) 62-49-5 1894 Annual. The last game of the regular season at either Paul Brown Tiger Stadium in Massillon, or Fawcett Stadium, next to the Pro Football Hall of Fame, in Canton. This rivalry was featured in Go Tigers!, a documentary on the Massillon football program. This game gets listed on Vegas parlay sheets and has been featured in Sports Illustrated. [4][5][23]
Millville Senior High School (Millville, NJ) Vineland Senior High School South/Vineland Senior High School North (Vineland, NJ) 55-60-19 1894 Annual Thanksgiving football game, this rivalry is the 12th-oldest in the United States. In terms of games (136), it is the fourth-longest in the nation's history. Millville has dominated recently, winning 13 of the last 16 games. [1]
Fitchburg High School (Fitchburg, MA) Leominster High School (Leominster, MA) 59-57-9 1894 Annual Thanksgiving football game. "The Rivalry", also known by locals as the Turkey Bowl, met for the 103nd Thanksgiving and the 125th time overall in 2008. [24]
Newton North High School (Newton, MA) Brookline High School (Brookline, MA) 55-53-6 1894 Annual Thanksgiving football game.


Ottawa Township High School (Ottawa, IL) Streator High School (Streator, IL) 53-35-1 1895 The Ottawa Pirates and Streator Bulldogs are the 3rd longest football rivalry in the State of Illinois still active. Both teams entered into a newly formed Northern Illinos BIG 12 aka/ NIB 12 (Previous to this they were both in the North Central Illinois Conference Reagan known as the NCIC Reagan. (info as of 6/2009)


Ansonia High School (Ansonia, CT) Naugatuck High School (Naugatuck, CT) 1895 Annual Thanksgiving football game. Game regularly draws crowds of up to 10,000.


Sandusky High School (Sandusky, OH) Fremont Ross High School (Fremont, OH) 1895 Annual battle between the Sandusky Blue Streaks and the Ross Little Giants in the second oldest rivalry in Ohio.
Falmouth High School (Falmouth, MA) Barnstable High School (Hyannis, MA) 56-56-8 1895 Annual football game. Traditionally played on Thanksgiving Day, series played on Cape Cod in Massachusetts. Barnstable has a 39-38-4 edge in Thanksgiving games. [25]
Dover High School (Dover, OH) New Philadelphia High School (New Philadelphia, OH) 49-47-9 1896 Annual, last Friday in October. One of the oldest rivalries in the state. These two teams recently had their 100th meeting game in 2004, which coincidentally found rivalry's record tied at 45-45-9. In 2008, Dover took a 2 game lead in the series by defeating New Philadelphia to end the regular season and again the following week in the first round of the playoffs.
Adrian High School (Adrian, MI) Monroe High School (Monroe, MI) 1896 Annual game. Usually the last game of the season.
Lower Merion High School (Ardmore, PA) Radnor High School (Radnor, PA) 1897 Annual football game; played continually since inception. Radnor High School grants the students of the school a half-day on the next school day if the school beats Lower Merion. However, the students of Lower Merion do not enjoy any similar reward.
Middletown High School (Middletown, NY) Port Jervis High School (Port Jervis, NY) 68-55-7 1897 Annual football game; played for the Erie Bell from a railroad linking the two Orange County, NY cities. Middletown won the most recent meeting 7-3, snapping a Port Jervis 11-year streak. [26]
East Orange High School (East Orange, NJ) Barringer High School (Newark, NJ) 1897 Annual football game. Traditionally played on Thanksgiving Day. John Amos played in series, Dionne Warwick was a cheerleader in 1957. [27]
Piqua High School (Piqua, OH) Troy High School (Troy, OH) 59-60-6 1899 Annual football game. Has been played continuously since 1911 and after over 123 meetings, the series has remained remarkably close.
Westfield High School (Westfield, NJ) Plainfield High School (Plainfield, NJ) 52-44-7 1900 Annual Thanksgiving football game. Celebrated 100th game in 2005. (Plainfield won 9-0). Westfield won 2006 game 17-7.


Webster Groves High School (Webster Groves, MO) Kirkwood High School (Kirkwood, MO) 59-41-5 1901 The rivalry became a Thanksgiving Day game in 1907, it is the oldest current Turkey Day rivalry west of the Mississippi River with the winners being awarded the Frisco Bell, donated by the Frisco Railroad Company in 1952. [28]
Woodberry Forest School (Woodberry Forest, VA) Episcopal High School (Alexandria, VA) 52-48-8 1901 Annual football game. This is the longest consecutive high school rivalry in the South. [29]


Dunkirk High School (Dunkirk, NY) Fredonia High School (Fredonia, NY) 63-43-11 1901 Annual game. One of the longest running rivalries in Western New York.


Portsmouth High School (Portsmouth, OH) Ironton High School (Ironton, OH) 54-53-8 1902 This is the oldest rivalry in southern Ohio and the 5th oldest in the entire state. [30]
The Peddie School (Hightstown, NJ) Blair Academy (Blairstown, NJ) 48-50-5 1902 One of the oldest rivalries in New Jersey, has met every year since 1902, with the exception of one year due to a polio outbreak. The rivalry incorporates all fall varsity sports with the Potter-Kelley Cup.
Benedictine Military School (Savannah, GA) Savannah High School (Savannah, GA) 51-47-8 1902 The oldest high school football rivalry in the state of Georgia; it used to be played on Thanksgiving Day before 1960.
Marlborough High School (Marlborough, MA) Hudson High School (Hudson, MA) 60-40-4 1904 Annual Thanksgiving football game. It is one of the oldest rivalries in Central Mass. The games are played at either the Morgan Bowl in Hudson or Kelleher Field in Marlborough.
Shelton High School (Shelton, CT) Derby High School (Derby, CT) 52-42-7 1904 Annual Thanksgiving football game. It draws upwards of 10,000 people. The Derby/Shelton Rotary Club donates a competitive trophy that the winner of the game possesses for a year. Notable players from Shelton High School are Matt Gorlewski and Dan Orlovsky
Round Valley High School, (Eagar, AZ) St. Johns High School, (St. Johns, AZ) 1904
Green Bay East High School (Green Bay, WI) Green Bay West High School (Green Bay, WI) 51-39-3 1905 One of the oldest rivalries in Wisconsin. First unofficial game took place in 1895. Early games occasionally had more fans than Green Bay Packers games, who used to play at City Stadium. Notable players include Curly Lambeau, Arnie Herber, and Jim Crowley. Curly Lambeau also coached the Green Bay East football team (1919-1921).
Mount Carmel High School (Chicago, IL) St. Rita of Cascia High School (Chicago, IL) 56-27-0 1905 One of the oldest rivalries in the Chicago Catholic League. Games generally draw crowds of close to 10,000. Both schools have graduated a number of notable NFL players including Dennis Lick and Donavan McNabb. [31]
Baylor School (Chattanooga, TN) The McCallie School (Chattanooga, TN) 37-34-3 1905 The oldest rivalry in Tennessee. The rivalry was canceled in 1940 to be continued again in 1971. McCallie currently hold the longest winning streak with eleven straight wins, the most recent one being in 2008. In the 2009 annual Baylor vs. McCallie game, Baylor defeated McCallie, breaking their 11-win streak. This is called the "cross-river" rivalry because the two schools are separated by the Tennessee river in Chattanooga. Both schools use this game as their "homecoming" game, and it regularly attracts up to 10,000 people.
Easton Area High School (Easton, PA) Phillipsburg High School (Phillipsburg, NJ) 57-40-5 1906 Annual Thanksgiving football game. Game has drawn as many as 20,000 fans. The two cities are located in separate states, separated by a bridge that crosses the Delaware River. First nationally televised high school football game-1988. Televised on ESPN in 1988, ESPN2 in 2006. Oldest interstate Thanksgiving Day Game. Chosen for first ever Gatorade Replay game, resolving 1993 tie. Easton-Phillipsburg Game was featured on the third episode of "Timeless" on ESPN 2, hosted by Dhani Jones. [4][32]
Sherman High School (Sherman, TX) Denison High School (Denison, TX) 59-34-6 1906 The annual "Battle of the Ax" is the oldest continual high school football rivalry in the state of Texas. Since 1912, there have only been five years in which the game was not played, three of which were during World War I. 1949 was the first year in which the Ax was awarded to the winner of the game. [33][34]
Aberdeen High School (Aberdeen, WA) Hoquiam High School (Hoquiam, WA) 62-35-5 1906 The oldest high school football rivalry in the state of Washington. It had been the longest running football rivalry in the state until 1996 when Hoquiam High School cancelled the finall three weeks of the season due to drug and alcohol violations. The Aberdeen-Hoquiam game was one of the games that was cancelled. [35]
Auburn Senior High School (Auburn, WA) Kent-Meridian High School (Kent, WA) 47-47-13 1908 The second oldest high school football rivalry in Washington as well as the longest running rivalry. There have been 114 games played, but seven of the final scores are currently unknown. The winner of each year's game wins and displays the Taylor Trophy which was first presented by Dr. Owen Taylor in 1929. [36]
Santa Cruz High School (Santa Cruz, CA) Watsonville High School (Watsonville, CA) 1908
Portland High School (Portland, ME) Deering High School (Portland, ME) 53-37-7 1908 Annual Thanksgiving football game. This is the only annual Thanksgiving game in Maine.
Palmyra High School, (Palmyra, NJ) Burlington City High School, (Burlington, NJ) 50-44-12 1908 Annual Thanksgiving game; one of the oldest rivalries in New Jersey and the Philadelphia metropolitan area.

References

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  2. ^ "The Butler Did It". New York Post. http://www.nypost.com/p/blogs/dylan_butler/the_butler_did_it_Y6RIf83SAuR6pu3FiW9GTJ. 
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  6. ^ Ross, Rosemarie. "Hill ends season with key victory", Mercury (Pennsylvania), November 13, 2005. Accessed October 31, 2007. "In the game that annually means the most to them, it was near total Blues dominance as visiting Hill routed arch rival Lawrenceville, 41-18, Saturday to take home the silver trophy bowl for the second straight year.This was their 103rd showdown in a rivalry that started in 1887."
  7. ^ Patterson, Ted (2000). Football in Baltimore: History and Memorabilia. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 7. 
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  9. ^ https://www.shcp.edu/podium/default.aspx?t=121812
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  32. ^ Brady, Erik (2006-11-23). "Every year fields the game of the century". USA Today. http://www.usatoday.com/sports/preps/football/2006-11-21-1a-cover-centenary-game_x.htm. Retrieved 2007-10-30. 
  33. ^ Sayles, Damon (2004-10-15). "Ax facts". The Dallas Morning News. http://nl.newsbank.com/nl-search/we/Archives?p_product=DM&p_theme=dm&p_action=search&p_maxdocs=200&p_topdoc=1&p_text_direct-0=105C113AA78B1ECB&p_field_direct-0=document_id&p_perpage=10&p_sort=YMD_date:D&s_trackval=GooglePM. Retrieved 2007-10-30. "Jesse Jones, a bank president and former resident of Sherman, wanted Lewisville and Marcus to have a rivalry similar to the one between Sherman and Denison, which originated in 1912. That game also is dubbed the Battle of the Ax." 
  34. ^ "SHS Battle of the Ax". Sherman Independent School District. http://www.shermanisd.net/SHS/battle_of_the_ax.htm. Retrieved 2007-10-31. 
  35. ^ "HOQUIAM JUST SAYS NO TO REST OF SEASON DRUG, ALCOHOL USE CANCELS FOOTBALL.". The Seattle Times courtesy of The Free Library. http://www.thefreelibrary.com/HOQUIAM+JUST+SAYS+NO+TO+REST+OF+SEASON+DRUG%2c+ALCOHOL+USE+CANCELS...-a065041619. Retrieved 2009-09-21. 
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