Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Rice–Texas football rivalry

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American college football rivalry

Rice–Texas football rivalry
First meetingOctober 17, 1914
Texas 41, Rice 0
Latest meetingSeptember 2, 2023
Texas 37, Rice 10
Next meetingTBA
Statistics
Meetings total97
All-time seriesTexas leads, 75–21–1[1]
Largest victoryTexas, 59–0 (1915)
Longest win streakTexas, 28 (1966–1993)
Current win streakTexas, 16 (1995–present)
Map
About OpenStreetMaps
Maps: terms of use
250km
155miles
Texas
Rice
Locations of Rice and Texas

TheRice–Texas football rivalry is an Americancollege footballrivalry between theRice Owls andTexas Longhorns.[2][3][4][5][6][7] Texas leads the series 75–21–1 through the 2023 season.[8] The teams were conference rivals for 81 seasons in theSouthwest Conference from 1915 through 1995. The Longhorns have largely dominated the series, as Rice has won only twice since 1960. 17 of the 21 Rice wins came between 1930 and 1960, a span over which it enjoyed a slight edge over the Longhorns.

Game results

[edit]
Rice victoriesTexas victoriesTie games
No.DateLocationWinnerScore
1 October 17, 1914 Austin, TX Texas41–0
2 October 16, 1915 Austin, TX Texas59–0
3 October 7, 1916 Austin, TX Texas16–2
4 October 27, 1917 Austin, TX Rice13–0
5 November 16, 1918 Houston, TX Texas14–0
6 November 1, 1919 Austin, TX Texas32–7
7 October 30, 1920 Houston, TX Texas21–0
8 October 29, 1921 Austin, TX Texas56–0
9 November 4, 1922 Houston, TX Texas29–0
10 November 3, 1923 Austin, TX Texas27–0
11 November 1, 1924 Houston, TX Rice19–6
12 October 24, 1925 Austin, TX Texas27–6
13 October 23, 1926 Houston, TX Texas20–0
14 October 22, 1927 Austin, TX Texas27–0
15 October 27, 1928 Houston, TX Texas13–6
16 October 26, 1929 Austin, TX Texas29–0
17 October 25, 1930 Houston, TX Rice6–0
18 October 10, 1931 Austin, TX Rice7–0
19 October 22, 1932 Houston, TX Texas18–6
20 October 28, 1933 Austin, TX Texas18–0
21 October 27, 1934 Houston, TX Rice20–9
22 October 26, 1935 Austin, TX Rice28–19
23 October 24, 1936 Houston, TX Rice7–0
24 October 23, 1937 Austin, TX Rice14–7
25 October 22, 1938 Houston, TX Rice13–6
26 October 28, 1939 Austin, TX Texas26–12
27 October 26, 1940 Houston, TX Rice13–0
28 October 25, 1941 Austin, TX#2 Texas40–0
29 October 24, 1942 Houston, TX#15 Texas12–7
30 October 23, 1943 Austin, TX#16 Texas58–0
31 October 28, 1944 Houston, TX Rice7–0
32 October 27, 1945 Austin, TX Rice7–6
33 October 26, 1946 Houston, TX#16 Rice18–13
34 October 25, 1947 Austin, TX#3 Texas12–0
35 October 23, 1948 Houston, TX Texas20–7
36 October 22, 1949 Austin, TX#9 Rice17–15
37 October 28, 1950 Houston, TX#7 Texas35–7
38 October 27, 1951 Austin, TX#10 Texas14–6
39 October 25, 1952 Houston, TX#20 Texas20–7
40 October 24, 1953 Austin, TX Rice18–13
41 October 23, 1954 Houston, TX Rice13–7
42 October 22, 1955 Austin, TX Texas32–14
43 October 27, 1956 Houston, TX Rice28–7
44 October 26, 1957 Austin, TX#19 Texas19–14
45 October 25, 1958 Houston, TX Rice34–7
46 October 24, 1959 Austin, TX#3 Texas28–6
47 October 22, 1960 Houston, TX#20 Rice7–0
48 October 28, 1961 Austin, TX#3 Texas34–7
49 October 27, 1962 Houston, TXTie14–14
No.DateLocationWinnerScore
50 October 26, 1963 Austin, TX#1 Texas10–6
51 October 24, 1964 Houston, TX#6 Texas6–3
52 October 23, 1965 Austin, TX Rice20–17
53 October 22, 1966 Houston, TX Texas14–6
54 October 28, 1967 Austin, TX Texas28–6
55 October 26, 1968 Houston, TX#13 Texas38–14
56 October 25, 1969 Austin, TX#2 Texas31–0
57 October 24, 1970 Houston, TX#2 Texas45–21
58 October 23, 1971 Austin, TX#16 Texas39–10
59 October 28, 1972 Houston, TX#10 Texas45–9
60 October 27, 1973 Austin, TX#19 Texas55–13
61 October 26, 1974 Houston, TX#13 Texas27–6
62 October 25, 1975 Austin, TX#8 Texas41–9
63 October 2, 1976 Houston, TX Texas42–15
64 October 1, 1977 Austin, TX#8 Texas72–15
65 September 16, 1978 Houston, TX#7 Texas34–0
66 October 6, 1979 Austin, TX#4 Texas26–9
67 October 4, 1980 Houston, TX#5 Texas41–28
68 September 12, 1981 Austin, TX#8 Texas31–3
69 October 2, 1982 Houston, TX#15 Texas34–7
70 October 1, 1983 Austin, TX#2 Texas42–6
71 October 6, 1984 Houston, TX#1 Texas38–13
72 October 5, 1985 Austin, TX#20 Texas44–16
73 October 4, 1986 Houston, TX Texas17–14
74 October 3, 1987 Austin, TX Texas45–26
75 October 1, 1988 Houston, TX Texas20–13
76 October 7, 1989 Austin, TX Texas31–30
77 October 6, 1990 Houston, TX Texas26–10
78 October 5, 1991 Austin, TX Texas28–7
79 October 3, 1992 Houston, TX Texas23–21
80 October 2, 1993 Austin, TX Texas55–38
81 October 16, 1994 Houston, TX Rice19–17
82 October 7, 1995 Austin, TX#20 Texas37–13
83 September 27, 1997 Houston, TX Texas38–31
84 September 26, 1998 Austin, TX Texas59–21
85 September 18, 1999 Austin, TX Texas18–13
86 September 20, 2003 Houston, TX#13 Texas48–7
87 September 25, 2004 Austin, TX#5 Texas35–13
88 September 17, 2005 Austin, TX#2 Texas51–10
89 September 16, 2006 Houston, TX#8 Texas52–7
90 September 22, 2007 Austin, TX#7 Texas58–14
91 September 20, 2008 Austin, TX#7 Texas52–10
92 September 4, 2010 Houston, TX#5 Texas34–17
93 September 3, 2011 Austin, TX#24 Texas34–9
94 September 12, 2015 Austin, TX Texas42–28
95 September 14, 2019 Houston, TX#12 Texas48–13
96 September 18, 2021 Austin, TX Texas58–0
97 September 2, 2023 Austin, TX#11 Texas37–10
Series: Texas leads 75–21–1[1]

John F. Kennedy speech

[edit]
Main article:We choose to go to the Moon

On September 12, 1962,Rice Stadium hosted the speech in which PresidentJohn F. Kennedy challenged Americans to meet his goal, set the previous year, to send a man to the Moon by the end of the decade. In the speech, he used a reference to the Rice-Texas rivalry to help frame his rhetoric:

But why, some say, the Moon? Why choose this as our goal? And they may well ask, why climb the highest mountain? Why, 35 years ago, fly the Atlantic?Why does Rice play Texas? We choose to go to the Moon! We choose to go to the Moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard, because that goal will serve to organize and measure the best of our energies and skills, because that challenge is one that we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and one which we intend to win, and the others, too.[9]

The soundbite proved to be rather prescient, as unranked and winless Rice would play undefeated #1 Texas to a 14 to 14 tie just over a month later in Houston. Rice would get their first win since the quote a few seasons later, upsetting #5 Texas in Austin. Following that victory however, Texas would win the next 28 games in the series, which is tied for theninth-longest streak in NCAA Division I history and tied for the sixth-longest between conference opponents. Rice would finally snap the streak in 1994 with a 19–17 victory. Two seasons later, the Southwest Conference dissolved and the rivals joined separate conferences (Texas to theBig 12 and Rice to theWAC). The teams have played intermittently since 1995, with Texas winning each of the 15 contests as of 2023[update].

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Winsipedia – Rice Owls vs. Texas Longhorns football series history".Winsipedia.
  2. ^Bill Durnal (October 16, 1938)."Southwest's Most Bitter Feud Due Saturday in U.T.-Rice Tilt".Austin American-Statesman. p. 10. RetrievedSeptember 10, 2018 – viaNewspapers.com.The Texas-Rice rivalry began in 1914 and has continued without interruption.Free access icon
  3. ^Weldon Hart (October 21, 1941)."Rice-Texas Rivalry Soon to Celebrate 12th Real Birthday, and It's No Genteel Ivy-Clad Business".Austin American-Statesman. p. P11. RetrievedSeptember 10, 2018 – viaNewspapers.com.It remains that Texas-Rice rivalry. In its adult status as reached in 1930, has been full of sound and fury, signifying a genuine grudgeFree access icon
  4. ^"More Fuel Heaped on Blaze of Rice-Texas Grid Rivalry".Austin American-Statesman. October 20, 1938. p. 17. RetrievedSeptember 10, 2018 – viaNewspapers.com.The Rice-Texas series has been one of bitter rivalry since the Owls rose up and bumped off the great '30 Texas team that later won the championship. They repeated in '31 to add fuel to the fire.Free access icon
  5. ^Bill Parker (October 26, 1935)."El Paso Times from el Paso, Texas on October 26, 1935 · 10".El Paso Times. Associated Press. p. 10. RetrievedSeptember 10, 2018 – viaNewspapers.com.Blistering rivalry exists between these two teams. Rice must win to retain a chance at the Conference bunting.Free access icon
  6. ^"More Fuel Heaped on Blaze of Rice-Texas Grid Rivalry".Austin American-Statesman. October 16, 1938. p. 17. RetrievedJuly 31, 2018 – viaNewspapers.com.Free access icon
  7. ^Feigen, Jonathan (September 11, 2015)."When Rice beat Texas: Oct.16, 1994".Houston Chronicle.After 28 consecutive losses to the Longhorns, and with their long rivalry taking its final steps toward extinction, the Owls pushed the Longhorns around for all the world – or at least all of it wired into ESPN – to see.
  8. ^"Winsipedia – Texas Longhorns vs. Rice Owls football series history".Winsipedia.
  9. ^"John F. Kennedy Moon Speech – Rice Stadium". NASA. RetrievedMarch 19, 2018.
Venues
Bowls & rivalries
Culture & lore
People
Seasons
Venues
Bowls & rivalries
Culture & lore
People
Seasons
National championship seasons in bold
Conference
Non-conference
Conference
Non-conference


Stub icon

Thiscollege football-related article is astub. You can help Wikipedia byexpanding it.

Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rice–Texas_football_rivalry&oldid=1316628474"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp