Big Game - History and Tradition

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History and Tradition

What Stanford and Cal began on March 10, 1892, in San Francisco is now one of the greatest rivalries in college football. The Big Game - Stanford's annual war on the gridiron with the University of California - has now entered its third century.

The first Big Game was held before an overflow crowd of 20,000. Stanford manager Herbert Hoover, later to become the 31st President of the United States, printed 10,000 tickets for the 15,000-seat Haight Street baseball grounds in San Francisco. However, as the crowd filled the stadium, Hoover ran out of tickets and was forced to collect coins at the gate and put them in empty wash tubs and boxes. When the team captains were on the field and the referee asked for the ball, there was one small problem. No one remembered to bring the ball. After the game, Hoover and the Cal manager counted $30,000 in receipts - enough to finance the team for the next season. The Big Game was born.

Stanford leads the all-time series 59-45-11. The two teams are separated by 49 points (1847-1798). The Big Game is tied for the 10th longest rivalry in college football history.

The Big Game has been a series where "anything can happen, and usually does." Five Big Games have been decided on the final play, including the first overtime contest in 2000.

The 1982 game will forever be known as one of the classic contests in college football history, thanks to "The Play". Stanford had taken a 20-19 lead on a 34-yard field goal by Mark Harmon with just four seconds to play. On the ensuing kickoff, Cal scored a touchdown on an incredible five-lateral, 57-yard return that ended when the Bears' Kevin Moen bowled over Gary Tyrell, a trombonist in the Stanford band, and went into the end zone for a controversial game-winning touchdown.

In 1924, Stanford rallied from a 20-6 deficit to tie Cal's Wonder Team, 20-20. In the 50th Big Game in 1947, winless Stanford (0-8) led the 8-1 Bears, 18-14, before Cal scored on an 80-yard touchdown pass with less than three minutes remaining in the game.

The 1959 classic featured the Bears holding on to win 20-17 despite an NCAA-record performance by Stanford quarterback Dick Norman, who threw for 401 yards on 34-of-39 passing. Vince Ferragamo's eight-yard TD pass to Steve Sweeney on the game's final play gave Cal a 24-21 Big Game win in 1972. Two years later, Stanford won 22-20 when Mike Langford connected on a 50-yard field goal on the game's final play.

In 1976, Cal's Markey Crane fumbled the ball on his own two-yard line with 1:31 left in the game and his team on top, 24-19. Stanford's Ron Inge scored the game-winning TD moments later to give the Cardinal a 27-24 win. Tuan Van Le blocked a 20-yard field goal in the 1988 Big Game to preserve a 19-19 tie.

Stanford's answer to The Play occurred in 1990 when the Cardinal scored nine points in the final 12 seconds to pull out an improbable 27-25 victory. Quarterback Jason Palumbis connected with wide receiver Ed McCaffrey on a 19-yard TD with 12 seconds on the clock, lifting the Cardinal to within a point of Cal at 25-24. A two-point conversion, however, failed and the Bears celebrated a certain victory. But, Stanford recovered the ensuing onside kick and Cal was penalized 15 yards on the first play, setting the Cardinal up at the Bears' 22-yard line. Stanford kicker John Hopkins came on to hit a 37-yard field goal as time ran out and Stanford began celebrating its 27-25 win.

In 1999, Stanford clinched its first Rose Bowl trip in 28 years with a resounding 31-13 victory before more than 80000 fans at Stanford Stadium. In 2000, the teams made history by playing the first-ever overtime game in the series. The Cardinal won the contest in the first overtime on a 25-yard pass from Randy Fasani to Casey Moore for a 36-30 final score and third straight victory in Berkeley.

Nine years later, in 2009, Cal’s Michael Mohamed abruptly halted a momentous drive by #14 Stanford intercepting a pass by redshirt freshman quarterback Andrew Luck at the 3-yard line with 1:36 to go to save a 34-28 victory for the Golden Bears in front of thousands of heartbroken Cardinal fans. The next year, Stanford (ranked #6 at the time, one of its highest ever rankings) left nothing to chance, dismantling Cal at home 48-14 and tying a 1975 record by the Golden Bears for most points scored. Luck was nearly perfect throughout the game, as Stanford legend John Elway looked on from the sidelines, completing 16 of 20 passes for 235 yards, for two touchdowns and 72 rushing yards.

In 2011, Stanford clinched its second-straight win over the Golden Bears in a rainy back-and-forth game at Stanford Stadium, winning 31-28. The Cardinal capped off a seven-minute drive in the fourth quarter on the back of redshirt freshman kicker Jordan Williamson’s 35-yard field goal. The Big Game win gave Stanford back-to-back double digit win seasons for the first time in its proud history, and David Shaw became the first Stanford head coach to win 10 games or more in his first season.

In 2012, the Cardinal rode a then career-high 189 yards rushing from Stepfan Taylor and a dominating defensive performance to win 21-3, holding the Golden Bears to their lowest Big Game point total in almost 15 years.  A textbook game for Stanford's power philosophy, the Cardinal outrushed Cal 252-3 in the first game of the rivalry played in the remodeled Memorial Stadium in Berkeley.

Last season, the Cardinal clinched the Pac-12 North title with a record-breaking 63-13 rout of the Bears in Stanford Stadium, its fourth consecutive win in the series.  Led by receiver/returner Ty Montgomery's five touchdowns, all in the first half, the Cardinal were in complete control from the opening kickoff.    

To the winner of The Big Game goes the Stanford Axe, which first made its appearance at a Stanford-Cal baseball game on April 13, 1899. The Axe was used by Stanford students at the baseball game to decapitate a straw man dressed in blue and gold. Cal students grabbed the Axe during a post-game brawl. To better conceal the Axe, the handle was cut off and the remaining blade was safely brought back to Berkeley. Two law professors from each school ruled that the Axe was a prize by reason of conquest and, therefore, would remain in Berkeley.

The Immortal Twenty-One, a group of Stanford students, added to Big Game lore by stealing the Axe at Cal's annual Axe Rally on April 3, 1930. The Axe, which had been in a bank vault for 31 years, was now in possession of the Immortal Twenty-One. When the famous group of students returned to campus, the celebration began. Classes were canceled for two days and the University presented each member of the Immortal Twenty-One with a block "S" letter.

After three years of negotiating, the presidents of both student bodies agreed that the Axe would be a trophy given to the winner of The Big Game.

YearAway TeamScoreHome TeamScore
2013California13Stanford63
2012Stanford21California3
2011California28Stanford31
2010Stanford48California14
2009California34Stanford28
2008Stanford16California37
2007California13Stanford20
2006Stanford17California26
2005California27Stanford3
2004Stanford6California41
2003California28Stanford16
2002Stanford7California30
2001California28Stanford35
2000Stanford36California30
1999California13Stanford31
1998Stanford10California3
1997California20Stanford21
1996Stanford42California21
1995California24Stanford29
1994Stanford23California24
1993California46Stanford17
1992Stanford41California21
1991California21Stanford38