Playing for the platypus Oregon State at Oregon, Friday, 8:30 p.m., Fox The front page of the Eugene Register-Guard on Nov. 20, 1959, trumpeted two new additions to the festivities surrounding the next day's football game between Oregon and rival Oregon State. It was also homecoming weekend, and about 50 freshmen from what was then called Oregon State College planned a run from Corvallis to Eugene, though it's not clear if they made the whole 40-plus-mile trek. The second addition was the unveiling of a rivalry trophy. "Other traditional college rivals have 'little brown jugs' or 'old oaken buckets,' but there has never been a trophy for the UO-OSC 'civil war,'" Richard Baker wrote in the newspaper. So, naturally, the Platypus Trophy -- "with the head and bill of a duck and the tail of a beaver" -- filled the void. Oregon student Warren Spady sculpted the trophy from maple, and for three years, it was awarded to the winner of the game: Oregon State in 1959 and 1961; Oregon in 1960. And then, like that, it was gone. For four decades, the Platypus Trophy faded from public consciousness. Legend has it that it was stolen in the early '60s and reappropriated as a water polo trophy. Spady told the Register-Guard in 2007 that in 1986 he saw the trophy in a glass case at Oregon's Leighton Pool, but the full route of its journey following Oregon State's football win in 1961 is best left to the imagination. It wasn't until 2004, thanks to a column from John Canzano, writing for the Oregonian, that the trophy's existence was thrust back into the public eye. Like the Register-Guard story from 45 years earlier, Canzano's column noted the rare lack of a trophy for a college football rivalry game, only for him to be informed after publication that once upon a time one did exist. And it still might. So, in the same year "National Treasure" hit theaters, the search was on. The trophy was finally located in 2005 in a storage closet, and since 2007 has been entrusted to the winning school's alumni association for safekeeping after every Oregon-Oregon State football game. On Oregon's student alumni association website, the Platypus Trophy is described as "a symbol of pride and a long-forgotten history for the Civil War games." The website also says, "As every Duck knows -- Whether you live in Eugene or in New York, the Oregon State Beavers will always be our rival." Headed into this week's game, with Oregon set to depart for the Big Ten and Oregon State left with an uncertain future, the Platypus Trophy is more representative of what college football used to be: a quirky, regional sport that connected generations. It seems those days are just about over. https://www.espn.com/college-footba...tate-georgia-georgia-tech-oregon-oregon-state
Are we throwing mud? https://www.usatoday.com/in-depth/n...-rape-plays-different-ncaa-school/4366387002/
I'm not a fan of either team or really of college football but for the love of God don't lose the civil war game!
Did Betsy DeVos help remove the mention of student conduct with sheep off the OSU players transcripts as well?
After the oversensitive felt it necessary to change the name, it sort of died for me. Win or lose, Ducks can go away. The smugness will not be missed. Good luck to their future endeavors.
I like OSU's grit, but they can't hold up to Ducks stuff. I won't be shocked if it's 1,348,067 to 3 at halftime.