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Boise State–Idaho football rivalry

American college football rivalry

Boise State–Idaho football rivalry

American college football rivalry

FieldValue
wideyes
nameBoise State–Idaho football rivalry
team1Boise State Broncos
team1logoBoise State "B" logo.svg
team2Idaho Vandals
team2logoIdaho Vandals logo.svg
sportFootball
firstmeetingSeptember 11, 1971
Boise State, 42–14
mostrecentNovember 12, 2010
Boise State, 52–14
total40
seriesBoise State, 22–17–1 ()
largestvictoryBoise State, 65–7 (2004)
longeststreak12, Boise State (1999–present)
12, Idaho (19821993)
currentstreak12, Boise State (1999–present)
trophyGovernor's (since 2001)

Boise State, 42–14 Boise State, 52–14 12, Idaho (19821993) | mark-coord1 = | label-pos1 = right | label-color1 = black | mark-coord2 = | label-pos2 = right | label-color2 = black The Boise State–Idaho football rivalry was an intrastate college football rivalry in Idaho between the Broncos of Boise State University and Vandals of the University of Idaho in Moscow. The game was played annually 1971–2010, and with the exception of the 2001–2004 games, the rivalry was a conference game (Big Sky 1971–1995, Big West 1996–2000, and WAC 2005–2010). Boise State moved from the WAC to the Mountain West Conference in 2011 and the rivalry went on hiatus, with no future games currently scheduled.

The teams had played for the Governor's Trophy since 2001, won by BSU every year. In 2009, the game was televised nationally for the first time on ESPNU from Bronco Stadium in Boise. The fortieth and most recent game in the rivalry in 2010 was televised live in prime time on ESPN2 on Friday, November 12, from the Kibbie Dome in Moscow.

Early games

The first meeting was in 1971, a season-opening night game at the year-old Bronco Stadium in Boise on September 11. The game was originally scheduled to be played in Moscow,

Idaho rented BSU's stadium and was the "home" team, but the "visiting" Broncos built a 28–7 lead at halftime and pulled off a convincing 42–14 upset before 16,123 for an instant rivalry. Tony Knap's Broncos went 10–2 in 1971 and won the Camellia Bowl, but their two losses were both in conference. Idaho went 8–3 for the best record to date in school history; Don Robbins' Vandals were Big Sky champions, won eight consecutive games (a school record), and had three players selected in the 1972 NFL draft.

The second game was played at the end of the 1972 season, again in Boise before 14,516 on the Saturday after Thanksgiving. The Vandals took a 7–0 halftime lead but Boise State responded in the third quarter with three touchdowns. Idaho returned an interception 75 yards for a touchdown and the Vandal freshman back-up quarterback ran for a touchdown with three minutes remaining to pull within a point; another run on the two-point conversion gave Idaho the win and evened the series at a game each. It was the first Big Sky home loss for the Broncos, who dropped to 7–4. Idaho finished 1972 at 4–7.

Bronco Stadium was expanded after the 1974 season and had the highest seating capacity in the Big Sky Conference. The rivalry contests with Idaho in Boise from 1976 through 1994 were the conferences' highest-attended games for those seasons.

Streaks

The Boise State–Idaho rivalry has been dominated by streaks. Upstart underdog Boise State College of the College Division (Division II) easily won the initial game over University Division (Division I) Idaho in the season opener in 1971; BSU became a university in 1974 and the Big Sky Conference moved to the new Division I-AA in 1978. BSU was 8–2–1 in the first eleven meetings with the Vandals, including five in a row (197781). Idaho immediately followed with twelve straight wins 198293, and won 15 of 17 thru 1998.

Boise State began its current 12-game winning streak in 1999, in which BSU has dominated the Vandals. The composite score for the most recent dozen games is 613–213, an average BSU victory margin of over 33 points per game, ranging from 14 to 58 points. Boise State has won 13 of 15 games over Idaho since both teams moved up to Division I-A (now FBS) in 1996. Idaho returned to FCS (and the Big Sky) in 2018.

Governor's Trophy

Moscow

When the Big West dropped football following the 2000 season, Boise State and Idaho joined different conferences. The Broncos moved up to the WAC, while Idaho joined the distant Sun Belt as a "football only" member (and remained in the Big West for all other sports). In an effort to keep the intrastate rivalry strong, then Governor Dirk Kempthorne, a UI alumnus (1975) and former student body president, commissioned the Governor's Trophy, a traveling trophy awarded to the winning team. Since its inception in 2001 for the 31st game, the trophy has yet to travel, as Boise State has won all ten games.

During the four seasons (2001–2004) as a non-conference game, it was played early in the season. Idaho joined the WAC in 2005 to return the rivalry to a late-season conference game. Idaho has never won the trophy; BSU has handily won all ten games played for it. Since the 2010 game, no games have been scheduled and none are scheduled for the immediate future.

A few months before the teams' most recent meeting in Moscow in 2010, BSU president Bob Kustra expressed his displeasure with the behavior of Idaho fans. He told the editorial board of the Idaho Statesman (Boise) that he and his wife no longer attended the series games in Moscow because Idaho fans had "a culture that is nasty, inebriated and civilly doesn't give our fans the respect that any fan should expect when visiting an away team." Subsequently, a Moscow bar sold T-shirts reading "Nasty, inebriated" for Idaho fans.

Accomplishments

TeamIdahoBoise State
Claimed National TitlesIdaho Vandals}}"0Boise State Broncos}}"2
Unclaimed National TitlesIdaho Vandals}}"0Boise State Broncos}}"2
Bowl appearancesIdaho Vandals}}"3Boise State Broncos}}"19
Postseason bowl recordIdaho Vandals}}"3–0
(1.00)Boise State Broncos}}"12–7
(.632)
Conference titlesIdaho Vandals}}"10Boise State Broncos}}"20
All-time program recordIdaho Vandals}}"460–614–26
(.430)Boise State Broncos}}"471–175–2
(.728)

Game results

| September 11, 1971 | Boise, ID | Boise State | 42 | Idaho | 14 | November 25, 1972 | Boise, ID | Boise State | 21 | Idaho | 22 | September 15, 1973 | Moscow, ID | Boise State | 47 | Idaho | 24 | November 23, 1974 | Boise, ID | #3 Boise State | 53 | Idaho | 29 | October 11, 1975 | Moscow, ID | #4 Boise State | 31 | Idaho | 31 | September 11, 1976 | Boise, ID | Boise State | 9 | Idaho | 16 | November 26, 1977 | Moscow, ID | #5 Boise State | 44 | Idaho | 14 | November 4, 1978 | Boise, ID | Boise State | 48 | Idaho | 10 | October 13, 1979 | Moscow, ID | Boise State | 41 | Idaho | 17 | October 11, 1980 | Boise, ID | Boise State | 44 | Idaho | 21 | November 21, 1981 | Moscow, ID | #4 Boise State | 45 | Idaho | 43 | October 30, 1982 | Boise, ID | Boise State | 17 | #17 Idaho | 24 | November 19, 1983 | Moscow, ID | Boise State | 24 | Idaho | 45 | November 17, 1984 | Boise, ID | Boise State | 0 | Idaho | 37 | November 23, 1985 | Moscow, ID | Boise State | 27 | #5 Idaho | 44 | November 22, 1986 | Boise, ID | Boise State | 14 | #20 Idaho | 21 | November 21, 1987 | Moscow, ID | Boise State | 34 | #5 Idaho | 40 | November 19, 1988 | Boise, ID | Boise State | 20 | #2 Idaho | 26 | November 18, 1989 | Moscow, ID | Boise State | 21 | #5 Idaho | 26 | November 17, 1990 | Boise, ID | Boise State | 14 | #14 Idaho | 21 | November 23, 1991 | Moscow, ID | Boise State | 24 | Idaho | 28 | November 21, 1992 | Boise, ID | Boise State | 16 | #5 Idaho | 62 | November 20, 1993 | Moscow, ID | Boise State | 16 | #11 Idaho | 49 | November 19, 1994 | Boise, ID | #6 Boise State | 27 | #3 Idaho | 24 | November 18, 1995 | Moscow, ID | Boise State | 13 | #25 Idaho | 33 | November 23, 1996 | Boise, ID | Boise State | 19 | Idaho | 64 | November 22, 1997 | Moscow, ID | Boise State | 30 | Idaho | 23OT | November 21, 1998 | Boise, ID | Boise State | 35OT | Idaho | 36 | November 20, 1999 | Pullman, WA | Boise State | 45 | Idaho | 14 | November 18, 2000 | Boise, ID | Boise State | 66 | Idaho | 24 | September 29, 2001 | Pullman, WA | Boise State | 45 | Idaho | 13 | August 31, 2002 | Boise, ID | Boise State | 38 | Idaho | 21 | September 13, 2003 | Moscow, ID | Boise State | 24 | Idaho | 10 | September 4, 2004 | Boise, ID | Boise State | 65 | Idaho | 7 | November 19, 2005 | Boise, ID | Boise State | 70 | Idaho | 35 | October 21, 2006 | Moscow, ID | #18 Boise State | 42 | Idaho | 26 | November 17, 2007 | Boise, ID | #17 Boise State | 48 | Idaho | 15 | November 15, 2008 | Moscow, ID | #9 Boise State | 45 | Idaho | 10 | November 14, 2009 | Boise, ID | #6 Boise State | 63 | Idaho | 25 | November 12, 2010 | Moscow, ID | #4 Boise State | 52 | Idaho | 14

Coaching records

Since first game in 1971

Boise State

Head coachTeamGamesSeasonsWinsLossesTiesPct.
Tony KnapBoise State519681975311
Jim CrinerBoise State719761982520
Lyle SetencichBoise State41983198604
Skip HallBoise State61987199206
Pokey AllenBoise State41993199613
Houston NuttBoise State1199710
Dirk KoetterBoise State31998200021
Dan HawkinsBoise State52001200550
Chris PetersenBoise State52006201350
Bryan HarsinBoise State020142020
Andy AvalosBoise State020212023
Spencer DanielsonBoise State02024

Idaho

Head coachTeamGamesSeasonsWinsLossesTiesPct.
Don RobbinsIdaho319701973120
Ed TroxelIdaho419741977121
Jerry DavitchIdaho419781981040
Dennis Erickson (a)Idaho41982198540
Keith GilbertsonIdaho31986198830
John L. SmithIdaho61989199451
Chris TormeyIdaho51995199932
Tom CableIdaho42000200304
Nick HoltIdaho22004200502
Dennis Erickson (b)Idaho1200601
Robb AkeyIdaho42007201204
Paul PetrinoIdaho020132021
Jason EckIdaho020222024
Thomas FordIdaho02024
  • Only tie was in 1975; the Big Sky enacted overtime for conference games in 1980, and all Division I games went to overtime in 1996.

References

References

  1. Bacharach, Sam A.. (September 12, 1971). "Broncos kick Vandals". Lewiston Morning Tribune.
  2. Payne, Bob. (September 12, 1971). "Boise stuns Idaho". Spokesman-Review.
  3. [http://www.govandals.com/ViewArticle.dbml?SPSID=87195&SPID=10352&DB_OEM_ID=17100&ATCLID=204913969 Go Vandals.com] – Vandals announce 2010 football schedule – March 22, 2010
  4. (February 15, 1970). "Boise, Idaho sign for 10 grid meetings". Lewiston Morning Tribune.
  5. (February 16, 1970). "Idaho, Boise sign for 10". Spokane Daily Chronicle.
  6. (August 27, 1971). "Idaho officials told stadium will be ready". Lewiston Morning Tribune.
  7. (September 11, 1971). "Vandals switch home to Boise for opening game against Broncos tonight". Lewiston Morning Tribune.
  8. Emerson, Paul. (November 26, 1972). "Comstock's runs lead Idaho past Boise State 22-21". Lewiston Morning Tribune.
  9. (November 26, 1972). "Vandals stun Boise 22-21". Spokesman-Review.
  10. (November 27, 1972). "Big Sky Conference final standings". Spokane Daily Chronicle.
  11. (September 11, 1971). "Vandals begin tonight". Spokane Daily Chronicle.
  12. Miedema, Laurence. (November 22, 1993). "Same old story: Idaho over BSU". Moscow-Pullman Daily News.
  13. Sahlberg, Bert. (November 21, 1993). "Vandals: 'Nuss said". Lewiston Morning Tribune.
  14. "Idaho opponents – BSU". College Football Data Warehouse.
  15. (1975). "ASUI Senate". Gem of the Mountains, University of Idaho yearbook.
  16. [http://www.idahostatesman.com/2014/10/03/3407402/boise-state-ready-for-stretch.html Boise State ready for stretch] ''[[Idaho Statesman]]'' October 3, 2014 {{dead link. (October 2023)
  17. Frank, Jared. (July 28, 2010). "BSU President: Vandal Culture is 'Nasty', 'Inebriated'". [[KHQ-TV]].
  18. Smith, Erick. (July 29, 2010). "Boise State president calls Idaho culture 'nasty' and 'inebriated'". [[USA Today]].
  19. (August 2, 2010). "Moscow Bar Has Market Cornered on Vandal T-Shirts". The Wiz of Odds.
  20. "Winsipedia - Boise State Broncos vs. Idaho Vandals football series history".
  21. Kasper, John. (September 25, 2013). "No. 48 Big Sky Innovation". Big Sky Conference.
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