This is a list ofrecentblack college football classics that have taken place betweenhistorically black colleges and universities that compete incollege football in theUnited States. Unlikebowl games, classics take place during college football'sregular season; they differ from standard regular season games in that they are often accompanied by entertainingbattle of the bands,parades,tailgate parties, social events,concerts,job fairs, and are often played at touristic neutral sites. Football classics annually attract large crowds of alumni,fans, and spectators in general, along with high media interest and corporate sponsorships.[1]
Special games pairing HBCUs have existed since at least 1915 whenWiley University played Homer College in aLouisianaState Fair-sponsored game[2] (most recently called the "Red River State Fair Classic") inShreveport, Louisiana. The earliest known use of the term "classic" toinformally describe a black college football game occurred in 1919 onThanksgiving Day, for a game betweenHoward andLincoln (PA).[3] The earliest documented use of "classic" as part of an annual black college football game'sformal name dates to the Thanksgiving, 1921 "Colored Foot Ball Classic," played inPhiladelphia between Howard and Lincoln (PA).[4]
ThoughGrambling State'sEddie Robinson did not invent classic games, he is widely regarded as having perfected them as revenue-generating social events, and a chapter of his autobiography details his efforts at doing so.[5] He was particularly proud of the success of theBayou Classic, starting from its very first game with 76,000 patrons in attendance.[6] It also developed a national television audience onNBC.[7] As a result of Robinson's efforts, and its proximity to Grambling, Shreveport had established itself as the epicenter of black football classics, hosting at least five in the past (Red River State Fair Classic, Sugar Cup Classic,[8] Red River Classic,[9] Shreveport Football Classic,[10] and Port City Classic[11]). At present, however,Durham, North Carolina is a host to three annual classics and a fourth informal classic that is held there during even-numbered years; it also formerly used to host one called the Midway Classic[12] and another called the Labor Day Classic[13] (not to be confused with theexisting classic of the same name based inHouston).
Football classics come in three different kinds of formats. They can pair the same tworivals year after year, or they can feature a single host school with rotating opponents—most famously done duringFlorida A&M's association with theOrange Blossom Classic. Other classics, particularly those based in thenorthern andwestern U.S. where there are fewer HBCUs, simply invite two different schools every season.
Classics that do double as annual rivalry games sometimes consider the first game played under a classic-format as separate from the actual first game of the series, due to the pronounced differences in ambience surrounding the games. For example, Grambling and Southern first clashed in 1932 but today rarely acknowledge their games played prior to the formal creation of the Bayou Classic ofNew Orleans in 1974; indeed, the series even seems to have intensified since it has become more of a media spectacle—Southern initially won a solid 60% of the games in the series through 1973, but after it was reconfigured as a classic the following year, the series has been largely locked dead even (currently split at 24–24–0, through the 2021 season). One of the more noteworthy annual games that later converted into a classic was the Southern–Tennessee State series. Known as the Buck–Boar Classic starting with the 1958 contest, the losing school was required to hunt wild game that was to serve as the main course of the winning school's meal at their annual sports banquet—if SU lost, it was to hunt fordeer in Louisiana'sswamps and deliver thevenison to TSU's banquet; if TSU lost, it was to hunt forwild boars in theTennesseemountains and deliver theham to SU's banquet.[14] ALouisiana-based Turkey Day Classic betweenDillard andXavier played for "the 'Bone of Contention'—literally, the hind-femur of abull, mounted on a plaque" during the 1940s and 1950s.[15]
Among games that feature a permanent host with a rotating opponent, the Prairie View Bowl (first held in 1928) normally pittedPrairie View A&M against a school deemed to have had a worthy enough year to play in the season-ending game.[16] Florida A&M's similar Orange Blossom Classic began in 1933 as a black equivalent to thesegregatedOrange Bowl (which was founded the year before as theFestival of Palms Bowl and was originally automatically hosted each season by theUniversity of Miami). By the same token the Sugar Cup Classic—which was hosted yearly by Grambling, initially in New Orleans—offered an alternative to the segregatedSugar Bowl.
The third kind of classic—those featuring two different opponents each season—often occur outside of thesouthern U.S., where there are fewer HBCUs. These games have long appealed to those who were part of theGreat Migration and were nostalgic to see teams from their home states.
As participants of the Great Migration have begun to age, it remains to be seen if their descendants (and others from completely different demographic groups) can sustain games that focus on teams from regions of the country that they are less familiar with. Indeed, several classics that were held in the North[17] and West[18] have ceased since 2000.
In addition, the schools themselves have also been forced to weigh the benefits of maintaining their historical ties with classics or to accept the changes of modern game scheduling. Improvements to allmodes of transportation and the end of segregation have greatly increased the scheduling options of HBCUs. Also, HBCUs are increasingly scheduling "guarantee games"—roadtrips againstNational Collegiate Athletic AssociationDivision I Football Bowl Subdivision schools that can guarantee high payouts but are also very difficult to win[19] (all HBCUs compete in the NCAA'sFootball Championship Subdivision level or below in football). Because of the commitments of some universities—especiallySouthwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) schools—toseason-finale classic games, they may forgo the opportunity to participate in the FCS playoffs. The Bayou Classic andAlabama-basedTurkey Day Classic, for example, are closely associated with Thanksgiving weekend—which directly conflicts with the playoffs' opening round.Labor Day weekend, with its season-opening games, is now the biggest weekend for classics—including the John A. Merritt Classic, theTexas-basedLabor Day Classic, theMEAC/SWAC Challenge, and the Palmetto Capital City Classic.[20]
Listed below are black college football classics played since 2000. Classics listed inboldface remained active through the 2017 or 2018 seasons. In the cases where classics have shared the same exact name—there have been multiple "Capital City," "Labor Day," "Port City,"[21] "River City," "State Fair," and "Turkey Day" classics completely unrelated to each other, for example—the state of origin is also listed to differentiate between them. In the cases where classics have informal names, only those not outright opposed by both schools—such as the "Murk City Classic"—are listed.
| Classic Name | Location | Year Established | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| A. G. Gaston Labor Day Classic[22] | Birmingham, AL | 2001[23] | |
| AME Classic[22](informal name)[24] | Kingsland, GA | 2002[24] | See theRalph J. Bunche Hornets Classic. |
| Aggie–Eagle Classic(informal name[25]) | Durham, NC &Greensboro, NC | 1994 | Annual game betweenNorth Carolina A&T andNorth Carolina Central. The series, which began in 1924, rotated between Durham and Greensboro, North Carolina until 1992,[26] although for part of that time (starting in 1949) the series was played in a classic format and known as theCarolina Classic.[27] It was moved toCarter–Finley Stadium inRaleigh, North Carolina and returned to a classic-style format between 1994 and 2005. After its association with Raleigh was discontinued, the series ceased before later being revived as an on-campus event in 2007. It is still informally called theAggie–Eagle Classic by fans but not officially by the participating schools.[25][28][29] In 2016, the game was televised onESPN3.[30] |
| Angel City Classic | Los Angeles, CA | 2007[18] | Formerly an annual game. The event was canceled after the 2008 season.[18] |
| Arkansas Classic[23] | Pine Bluff, AR | ||
| Atlanta Football Classic | Atlanta, GA | 1981[31][32] | Formerly an annual game between twoNCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision teams. The event was canceled after the 2014 season to make way for theCelebration Bowl. |
| Atlanta Labor Day Classic[13] | Atlanta, GA | ||
| Augusta City Classic | Augusta, GA | 1992 | Annual game that, prior to 2010, was known as theCSRA Football Classic (named after theCentral Savannah River Area). |
| Azalea City Classic[22] | Mobile, AL | ||
| Battle for Greater Baltimore[33] | Towson, MD | 1979 | Annual classic betweenMorgan State and—unusually—a predominantly white institution,Towson. Because Towson plays in a major FCS conference, and Morgan State plays in the MEAC, a conference that does not participate in the NCAA Tournament, it is typically one sided. |
| Battle of I-40 Football Classic[13] | Greensboro, NC | ||
| Battle of the Bay | Hampton, VA &Norfolk, VA | 1962 | Annual game between two schools in different portions of theHampton Roads area—Hampton on the"Peninsula" andNorfolk State on the"Southside". The event was canceled after the 2017 season withHampton joining the Big South Conference, but has since renewed as of the 2021 season. |
| Battle of the Firsts—Wade Wilson Classic | Philadelphia, PA | 2009 | See theBattle of the Firsts. |
| Battle of the Firsts | Philadelphia, PA | 2009 | Formerly an annual game betweenCheyney andLincoln (PA), held the first week of the season. The "first" referred to the schools being among the first HBCUs; Cheyney was the first four-year institution established forAfrican Americans, and Lincoln was the third. It originally featured Cheyney as its only permanent team and was part of theWade Wilson Classic series until 2008 before spinning off to include Lincoln the following year.[34] The event was canceled after the 2017 season with Cheyney disbanding its football program.[35] |
| Battle of the Real HU[33] | Hampton, VA | 2017 | Game between Hampton andHoward. The series was played inWashington, DC in a classic format until 2016 and known as theNation's Football Classic[36] (see below). The event was canceled after the 2017 season with Hampton joining the Big South Conference. |
| Bayou Classic | New Orleans, LA | 1974 | Annual game betweenGrambling State andSouthern, held on the Saturday afterThanksgiving Day at theMercedes-Benz Superdome. The series, which began in 1932, is televised onNBCSN. The Bayou Classic is the largest HBCU football classic.[37] |
| Big Easy Classic | New Orleans, LA | 2000[38] | Formerly an annual game that, since 2002, had featuredJackson State and Southern. It originally featured Southern and—unusually—anNCAA Division I-A school,Tulane. The event was canceled after the 2004 season.[38] JSU and SU now compete in theBoomBox Classic (see below). |
| Biker's Classic | Nashville, TN | 2006 | Annual game featuringTennessee State. |
| Black College Football Hall of Fame Classic | Canton, OH | 2019[39] | Began with the relocation of the Black College Football Hall of Fame fromAtlanta to Canton. |
| Black Wall Street Classic[33] | Tulsa, OK | ||
| Blues Classic[22] | Fayetteville, NC | 2002 | |
| BoomBox Classic(informal name) | Baton Rouge, LA &Jackson, MS | 2010[40] | Annual game between Jackson State and Southern. The series, which began in 1929,[41] was played inNew Orleans in a classic format in 2002 and 2004 and known as theBig Easy Classic[38] (see above). After its permanent association with New Orleans was discontinued, the series began to rotate betweenMississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium inJackson, Mississippi and Southern'sA. W. Mumford Stadium in 2005.[41] It was later informally dubbed a name by fans that was never officially adopted by the participating schools; the fans derived its moniker from a combination of the names of themarching bands of the two schools—JSU'sSonic Boom of the South and SU'sHuman Jukebox. |
| Bluff City Kickoff Classic | Memphis, TN | 2018 | |
| Bull City Gridiron Classic[33] | Durham, NC | Annual game featuring North Carolina Central. | |
| CME Classic[33] | Tyler, TX | ||
| CSRA Football Classic | Augusta, GA | 1992 | See theAugusta City Classic. |
| Capital City Classic(South Carolina)[33] | Columbia, SC | ||
| Capital City Classic(Mississippi) | Jackson, MS | 1993 | Formerly an annual game betweenAlcorn State and Jackson State. The series, which began in 1927, rotated between Jackson andLorman, Mississippi until 1992,[42] although for part of that time the series was played in a classic format and known as theDixie Classic.[43] It was moved toMississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium in Jackson in a classic-style format between 1993 and 2011. After its permanent association with Jackson was discontinued, the series began to rotate between there and Alcorn'sJack Spinks Stadium in 2012.[44] In a document published on the Alcorn website, President M. Christopher Brown II and interim athletic director Dwayne White informally dubbed the game theSoul Bowl,[45] apparently because the game would no longer be played annually in the capital city as the previously existing name suggested—and, also, because classics held inColumbia, South Carolina andSacramento, California have been using similar names. However, the classic's new name was never officially adopted by JSU and has already been in use with other football-related events in theDeep South for some time now.[46][47] Likewise, it could prove difficult to revert to the oldDixie Classic name, since it has also been used by other events more recently.[48][49][50] |
| Capital City Football Classic | Sacramento, CA | 2008 | Annual game held in September. |
| Capital City Freedom Classic[23] | Topeka, KS | ||
| Carolinas Classic | Charlotte, NC | 1995[31] | |
| Chicago Football Classic | Chicago, IL | 1997 | Annual game held in September and played atSoldier Field. |
| Circle City Classic | Indianapolis, IN | 1983 | Annual game held on the first weekend in October. |
| Cleveland Classic | Cleveland, OH | 2011 | Annual game held in September and played atFirstEnergy Stadium. |
| Commemorative Classic | Charlotte, NC | 2009[51] | Annual game betweenJohnson C. Smith andLivingstone College. The series, which began in 1892, featured thefirst black college football game, and for part of that time (as early as 1927[52]) the series was played in a classic format and known as theTurkey Day Classic[53][54] (not to be confused with the existing classic of the same name—see below). It returned to a classic-style format in 1976 as theBicentennial Football Classic and was recognized byPresidentGerald Ford.[55] It returned to a classic-style format in the 1990s as part of theStatesville Classic.[12] |
| Dallas Lone Star Classic | Dallas, TX | 2008 | Formerly an annual game betweenArkansas–Pine Bluff andTexas Southern, held on the Saturday after Thanksgiving Day at theCotton Bowl stadium in Dallas.[56] The event was canceled after the 2009 season. |
| Dayton Classic | Dayton, OH | 2005 | Annual game featuringCentral State. |
| Delta Classic 4 Literacy | Little Rock, AR | 2006 | Formerly an annual game featuring Arkansas–Pine Bluff. The event was canceled after the 2012 season.[57] |
| Derby City Classic | Louisville, KY | 2009[58] | |
| Detroit Football Classic | Detroit, MI | 2003[59] | Formerly an annual game. The event was canceled after the 2006 season.[60] |
| Down East Viking Football Classic | Rocky Mount, NC | 1998 | Annual game featuringElizabeth City State. |
| Druid City Classic | Tuscaloosa, AL | 2003[22] | Annual game featuringStillman College. |
| Eddie McGirt Classic | Charlotte, NC | 2000[61] | Annual game featuring Johnson C. Smith in its home opener that, through 2002, was played in Memorial Stadium before being discontinued for nine years.[61] |
| FAMU/FIU Orange Blossom Classic | Miami, FL | 1933 | See theOrange Blossom Classic. |
| F. E. Whitney Classic | Hopkinsville, KY | 2018 | |
| 5th Quarter Classic | Mobile, AL | 2016[62] | Annual game. |
| Fish Bowl Classic | Norfolk, VA | 1948 | Annual game featuring Norfolk State. |
| Florida Classic | Orlando, FL | 1979 | Annual game betweenBethune–Cookman and Florida A&M. Televised onESPNU. |
| Fountain City Classic | Columbus, GA | 1990[12] | Annual game betweenAlbany State andFort Valley State. |
| Gateway Classic | Jacksonville, FL | 1953 | Annual game featuring Bethune–Cookman. The 2004 game was canceled due toHurricane Frances.[63] |
| Gateway Football Classic | St. Louis, MO | 1993[31] | Annual game. |
| Gold Bowl Classic | Richmond, VA | 1981 | Annual game inspired by theGold Bowl postseason game, which featured schools from theCentral Intercollegiate Athletic Association andMid-Eastern Athletic Conference[64] from 1977–80.[65] It has featured Virginia Union andBowie State orVirginia State.[64] |
| Gold Coast Classic | San Diego, CA | 1997[12] | |
| Greater LaGrange Classic[31] | LaGrange, GA | ||
| Greenville HBCU Classic[13] | Greenville, SC | 2005[66] | Annual game. |
| Gulf Coast Challenge | Mobile, AL | 2018 | |
| Gulf Coast Classic | Mobile, AL | 1974 | Formerly an annual game featuringAlabama State. The event was canceled after the 2009 season.[67] |
| Hall of Fame Game Classic[22] | Houston, TX | ||
| Harvey Moore Azalea City Classic | Valdosta, GA | 2006[66] | |
| Heart ofTexas Football Classic[23] | Waco, TX | ||
| Inaugural Classic | Montgomery, AL | 2014[68] | Game between Alabama State and Tennessee State.[68] |
| Iris Classic | Griffin, GA | 2013[69] | Game betweenClark Atlanta and Fort Valley State. The series was formerly played in a classic format starting in 1961 and known as theTextile Football Classic.[69] |
| Jake Gaither Classic[33] | Tallahassee, FL | ||
| Joe Turner Classic | Savannah, GA | 1994[23] | Annual game featuringSavannah State. |
| John A. Merritt Classic | Nashville, TN | 1999 | Annual game featuring Tennessee State, held in early September, and played atNissan Stadium. |
| Kickoff Classic | Jefferson City, MO | 2009[58] | |
| LU Classic[33] | Jefferson City, MO &Langston, OK[70][71] | 2015[70] | Annual game betweenLangston andLincoln (MO).[70][71] |
| Labor Day Classic(Florida)[23] | Orlando, FL | ||
| Labor Day Classic(Georgia)[31] | Albany, GA | ||
| Labor Day Classic(North Carolina)[13] | Durham, NC | ||
| Labor Day Classic(Texas) | Houston, TX &Prairie View, TX | 1985 | Annual game betweenPrairie View A&M and Texas Southern. The series, which began in 1946, is played onLabor Day weekend and was played in a classic format in 1947 and between 1952–54 and 1956-57 as part of thePrairie View Bowl.[72] |
| Labor Day Classic(Virginia) | Norfolk, VA | 1991[73] | Annual game featuring Norfolk State. |
| Labor Day Classic: A Marion Nine Invitational[33] | Montgomery, AL | 2017 | |
| Labor Day Golden Classic | Birmingham, AL | 2007[58] | |
| Las Vegas Classic | Las Vegas, NV | 2003 | Game between North Carolina A&T and Southern. The game replaced theSilver Dollar Classic (see below).[74] |
| Lexington Heritage Classic | Lexington, KY | 2002[22] | |
| Louis Crews Classic[33] | Huntsville, AL | 2010[75] | Annual game featuringAlabama A&M.[75] |
| Low Country Classic[13] | Charleston, SC | ||
| Lucille M. Brown Community Youth Bowl[13] | Richmond, VA | 2002 | Annual game featuringVirginia Union. |
| MEAC/SWAC Challenge | Atlanta, GA | 2005 | Annual game between a MEAC team and aSouthwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) team, formerly the defending conference champions, held on Labor Day weekend. The event was formerly played inBirmingham, Alabama,Orlando, Florida, andDaytona Beach, Florida. Televised onESPN2. |
| Magic City Classic | Birmingham, AL | 1940[76] | Annual game between Alabama State and Alabama A&M. The series began in 1924.[77] |
| Masonic Bowl[78] | Fayetteville, NC | ||
| Masonic Bowl Classic[23] | Richmond, VA | ||
| McGee Classic[13] | Tulsa, OK | ||
| Memphis Blues City Classic[31] | Memphis, TN | ||
| Miami Dade Football Classic | Miami, FL | 2008[79] | Annual game featuring Howard.[79] |
| Midway Classic | Durham, NC | 1998[31] | |
| Midwest Classic | Columbus, OH | 2003[22] | |
| Music City Classic | Macon, GA | 1998[31] | |
| Nation's Football Classic | Washington, DC | 2011 | Formerly an annual game that most recently had featured Hampton and Howard. The event was canceled after the 2016 season.[80] Hampton and Howard now compete in theBattle of the Real HU (see above). |
| New York Urban League Football Classic | East Rutherford, NJ | 1971[81] | Formerly an annual game, formerly known as theWhitney M. Young Jr. Memorial Football Classic, and held atMetLife Stadium. The event was canceled after the 2015 season.[17] |
| OKC Classic[33] | Oklahoma City, OK | ||
| Ohio Classic[63] | Cleveland, OH | ||
| Okeefenokee Classic | Waycross, GA | 2016[82] | The event was suspended after the 2016 season due toHurricane Irma.[83] |
| Orange Blossom Classic | Miami Gardens, FL | 1933 | Formerly an annual game betweenFlorida A&M andFlorida International. The game was formerly known as theFAMU/FIU Orange Blossom Classic and was canceled after the 1978 season but was revived in the 1990s.[21][12] It originally featured Florida A&M against another HBCU school, but the recently revived version included—unusually—a predominantly white institution, FIU. The event was again canceled after the 2005 season but revived again in 2021. |
| Orange Blossom–Palmetto Classic[31] | Jacksonville, FL | ||
| Palmetto Capital City Classic | Columbia, SC | 2001 | Annual game featuringBenedict College. |
| Peach State Classic | Atlanta, GA | 2002[22] | |
| Peach State Kick-off Classic[23] | Macon, GA | ||
| Pete Richardson Classic | Baton Rouge, LA | 2018 | |
| Planters Bank South Classic[31] | Jackson, TN | ||
| Port City Classic(Louisiana) | Shreveport, LA | 2002[11] | Formerly an annual game that, since 2010, had featured Grambling State, and was held on Labor Day weekend. It originally featured Southern and was part of the revivedLouisiana State Fair Classic series in 2001,[84] before spinning off to become an early September game of its own the following year.[11] The event was canceled after the2012 season. This game is not to be confused with the oldPort City Classic game between Elizabeth City State andFayetteville State.[21] |
| Port City Classic–State Fair Game | Shreveport, LA | 2001[84] | See thePort City Classic and theRed River State Fair Classic. |
| Pre-Labor Day Classic[31] | Columbia, SC | ||
| Prince George's Classic | Bowie, MD | 2004[13] | The first PG Classic was played by Alcorn State and Howard. The second was played by Morgan State and North Carolina A&T. Subsequent games (2006, 2007, and 2008) featured Bowie State as the home team. |
| Prince Hall Americanism Football Classic[33] | Fairfield, AL | ||
| Prince Hall Shriners Diabetes Classic[33] | Durham, NC | ||
| Raleigh Classic[33] | Durham, NC | ||
| Ralph J. Bunche Hornets Classic | Kingsland, GA[58] | 2002[24] | Annual game betweenAllen University andEdward Waters College.[24] |
| Red River Classic | Grambling, LA | 1981[9] | Annual game, formerly played in Shreveport, Louisiana, that features Grambling State and a SWAC opponent. The 1999 and 2002 games were part of the revivedLouisiana State Fair Classic series. The event was cancelled after the 2003 season,[85] but the revived version began in 2017.[86] |
| Red River State Fair Classic | Shreveport, LA | 1915 | Annual game that, since 2015, has featured Grambling State and a SWAC opponent, and is held during theState Fair ofLouisiana. The game was formerly known as theLouisiana State Fair Game, theLouisiana State Fair Classic, thePort City Classic—State Fair Game, and, more recently, theShreveport Classic and originally featured Southern. The event was canceled after the 2016 season due to Grambling's desire to play an additional game inEddie Robinson Stadium after the completion of its multi-million dollar renovation.[86] |
| Richard Allen Classic[22] | Atlanta, GA | Annual game formerly played inPhiladelphia.[31] | |
| Rivalry Classic | Charlotte, NC | 2003[87] | Annual game between North Carolina A&T andSouth Carolina State. |
| River City Classic(Kentucky) | Louisville, KY | 1990[12] | |
| River City Classic(Tennessee)[22] | Chattanooga, TN | ||
| Riverfront Classic | Cincinnati, OH | 1999[31] | |
| Rose City Classic[13] | Tyler, TX | ||
| Shreveport Classic | Shreveport, LA | 2010[88] | See theRed River State Fair Classic. |
| Silver Dollar Classic | Carson, CA | 2002[89] | Annual game, formerly played inLas Vegas.[90] The game was replaced by theLas Vegas Classic in 2003 (see above),[74] so it was suspended and then moved toCarson, California in 2004.[91] |
| Skyway College Football Classic | Chicago, IL | 2003[22] | |
| Soul Bowl(informal name) | Lorman, MS | 2012[45] | Biennial game between Alcorn State and Jackson State. The series, which began in 1927, rotated between Jackson and Lorman, Mississippi until 1992, although for part of that time the series was played in a classic format and known as theDixie Classic. It was moved to Mississippi Veterans Memorial Stadium in Jackson in a classic-style format between 1993 and 2011. After its permanent association with Jackson was discontinued, the series began to rotate between there and Alcorn's Jack Spinks Stadium in 2012. However, the classic's new name was never officially adopted by JSU and odd-numbered year games in Jackson are not played under any moniker. |
| South Florida Classic[22] | Fort Lauderdale, FL | ||
| South Georgia Heritage Classic | Valdosta, GA | 2009[58] | |
| Southern Alabama Heritage Classic[13] | Dothan, AL | ||
| Southern Heritage Classic | Memphis, TN | 1990[92] | Annual game between Jackson State and Tennessee State, held at the beginning of football season, and played atLiberty Bowl Memorial Stadium. |
| Stan Lomax Gold Coast Football Classic | Brunswick, GA | 2009[58] | |
| State Fair Classic(Texas) | Dallas, TX | 1925 | Annual game, formerly known as theAl Lipscomb State Fair Classic, that, since 1993, has been between Grambling State and Prairie View A&M and is held during theState Fair of Texas. The series, which began in 1946,[93] was also played in a classic format between 1959 and 1961 as part of theLouisiana State Fair Classic series. |
| State Fair Football Showdown | Dallas, TX | 2018[94] | Annual game between Southern and Texas Southern during the third weekend of the State Fair of Texas.[94] The series, which began in 1947,[95] was later informally dubbed theMurk City Classic by fans between 2011 and 2017[96] but was never officially adopted by the participating schools. |
| Statesville Classic | Statesville, NC | Annual game featuring Livingstone College.[97] | |
| Steel City Classic | Birmingham, AL | 2001[23] | Annual game betweenMiles College andStillman College. |
| T. M. "Tim" Crisp Classic[22] | Oklahoma City, OK | 1996[98] | |
| Textile Football Classic[31] | Griffin, GA | 1961[69] | Formerly an annual game between Clark Atlanta and Fort Valley State. The series was also played in a classic format in 2013 and known as theIris Classic (see above).[69] |
| The Classic | Charlotte, NC | 2006[99] | Game between Bowie State and Livingstone College.[99] |
| Tiger Paw Classic[23] | Houston, TX | Annual game, formerly played inSan Antonio, between Grambling State and Texas Southern.[31] | |
| Turkey Day Classic(Alabama) | Montgomery, AL | 1924 | Annual game between Alabama State andTuskegee and held on Thanksgiving Day. This game is sometimes referred to as the first black college football classic with 1924 considered its inaugural year,[63] but it likely did not adopt theTurkey Day Classic name initially as it was not played on Thanksgiving Day until 1932. This game is not to be confused with the oldTurkey Day Classic game between Johnson C. Smith and Livingstone College (see theCommemorative Classic above). |
| Tuskegee–Morehouse Football Classic | Columbus, GA | 1936[100] | Annual game betweenMorehouse andTuskegee. The series began in 1902.[100] |
| Two Rivers Classic | Fayetteville, NC &Pembroke, NC | 2009[101] | Annual classic between Fayetteville State and—unusually—a historicallyNative American school,UNC–Pembroke.[101] |
| VanPort Football Classic | Portland, OR | 2002[22] | |
| W. C. Gorden Classic | Jackson, MS | 2008 | Annual game featuring Jackson State.[92] |
| Wade Wilson Classic | Cheyney, PA | 1980[21] | Formerly an annual game that was also formerly played in Philadelphia,[102] and featured Cheyney. It returned to a classic-style format in 2009 as part of theBattle of the Firsts—Wade Wilson Classic as an annual game between Cheyney and Lincoln (PA).[34] |
| West End Classic | Salisbury, NC | 2014[103] | Annual game featuring Livingstone College. |
| Western Virginia Education Classic[13] | Salem, VA | 2000[104] | |
| White Water Classic[33] | Phenix City, AL | 2014[105] | |
| Willard Bailey Classic | Richmond, VA | 2017 | Annual game featuring Virginia Union.[106] |
| Willie E. Gary Classic | Jacksonville, FL | 2002[66] | Formerly an annual game between Edward Waters College andShaw. |
| Winston-Salem Classic[33] | Winston-Salem, NC | 2016 | Annual game featuringWinston-Salem State. |
| Wiregrass Football Classic | Dothan, AL | 2009[58] |
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