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by Hannelore Sudermann
The first contest between cross-state rivals Washington State
and the University of Washington took place on a muddy field in
Seattle in November 1900. The Washington Agricultural College
“Farmers,” as we were known then, made the 290-mile trek from
Pullman to Seattle to play the UW “Sun Dodgers” in the pouring
rain. The match ended in a five-to-five tie.
 Robert Hubner
Because the two teams will play their 100th game together this
year, we thought we'd take a look back at the history of that long
relationship.
Meeting up with the UW just after the turn of the century was a
spotty endeavor. After the first five annual matches--a tie, one
win, and three losses for Washington State--the rivalry went on
hold for two years. Then we met for another two years, but skipped
a few seasons through the early teens. It’s not that Washington
State didn’t have an organized team. In fact, during one missed
season, 1915-16, we went to the Rose Bowl. But in the early years,
the University of Washington always demanded we go to Seattle for
the game, says Dick Fry, retired director of WSU sports information
and author of The Crimson and the Gray, a history of the WSU
Cougars. Back in the early 1900s, Washington State’s athletic
director, Fred “Doc” Bohler, said, “Hey we’re not going to go over
there every year,” according to Fry, who says that the Cougs had no
trouble finding games, playing teams like Oregon, the University of
Southern California, and Montana.
The rivals skipped two more years starting in 1943, when
Washington State, along with Idaho, Oregon, and Oregon State,
cancelled football for the duration of World War II. The Cougars
didn’t see the Huskies again until 1945. The two teams haven’t
missed a contest with one another since.
Until 1962, the annual WSU-UW game was known as the Governor’s
Cup. Then Washington’s apple industry started a sponsorship, and
the historic contest was renamed. This year, Boeing joined the fun
with a four-year sponsorship of around $1 million.
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Click here to view film clips and
an audio slideshow of past Apple Cups.
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