Crosstown_Shootout

Crosstown Shootout

Crosstown Shootout

American college basketball rivalry


The Crosstown Shootout is an annual men's college basketball game played between the University of Cincinnati Bearcats and Xavier University Musketeers. The two schools are separated by 3 miles (4.8 km) in Cincinnati, making the archrivalry one of the closest major rivalries in the country. The game was first played in 1927, and has been played every year since 1946. In recent years, the game has been sponsored by Skyline Chili.

Quick Facts Sport, First meeting ...
Locations of Cincinnati and Xavier

Throughout its history, the game has been played at six different venues including the Armory Fieldhouse and Fifth Third Arena on the UC campus; and the Schmidt Field House and Cintas Center on the Xavier campus. However, the majority of the games have been played at two other sites—Cincinnati Gardens and US Bank Arena. The Gardens has served as the regular home court for both schools at different times, and was even shared by both teams from 1987 to 1989. US Bank Arena was UC's home court from 1976 to 1987 when it was known as Riverfront Coliseum.

From 1989 to 2011, the game alternated between the schools' on-campus arenas. After the 2011 Crosstown Shootout brawl at the Cintas Center, the series was moved to US Bank Arena as a neutral site for two seasons before resuming as an on-campus series.

History

The history of the Crosstown Shootout dates back to 1928, when the University of Cincinnati helped St. Xavier College dedicate its brand new, $350,000 Schmidt Fieldhouse, which had a capacity of 4,500. Xavier won the game, 29–25, and the two teams didn't meet again until the 1942–43 season. The teams began playing on an annual basis starting in 1945–46, and from 1948 to 1958, they played each other twice a year.

One unique aspect is player and coach Tay Baker, who was a player and longtime assistant at Cincinnati before taking over as Head Coach from 1965 to 1972. After resigning from UC with a 125–60 record, Baker moved across town where he coached Xavier from 1973 to 1979.

The rivalry between Cincinnati and Xavier is regarded as one of the best in the game. The two schools' short distance apart has distinguished it as a proximity rivalry. From 1990 through 2011 and again since 2015, the game alternates between Xavier's and Cincinnati's campus arenas on a yearly basis.[1] ESPN's Jay Bilas was quoted as saying, "Cincinnati and Xavier have created a rivalry that is unparalleled when it comes to outright passion and civic division."[2]

In 1990 a local TV station refused to interrupt their coverage of the Cincinnati–Xavier game for the 1990 State of the Union address.[3]

The game is widely regarded as one of the hottest tickets in Cincinnati every year. The game is also regularly attended by local legends and sports icons Pete Rose and basketball great and former Bearcat Oscar Robertson.

2011 brawl and changes

The 2011 game, a 76–53 Xavier victory, was disrupted at the end by a bench-clearing brawl. As a result of this brawl, Cincinnati and Xavier suspended 4 players each for a various number of games.[4] The Cincinnati Enquirer reported on May 22, 2012, that due to the brawl, the game would be held at U.S. Bank Arena for the next two seasons. The continuation of the series beyond the 2013–14 season would depend on the behavior of the players and fans.[5] On June 14, 2012, both schools held a joint press conference at the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center announcing that the annual rivalry will now be called "Skyline Chili Crosstown Classic."[6]

On May 13, 2014, after a two-year series at U.S. Bank Arena, the two rivals announced at a joint press conference that they would return to playing their annual men's basketball game on-campus, ditching the moniker of Classic in the process and returning the series to its previous name of the Skyline Crosstown Shootout.[7] The agreement for the alternating home-and-home series was for ten years. The first game of the resumed series was held on February 18, 2015, during ESPN's Rivalry Week when Xavier hosted Cincinnati on December 12, 2015, at the Cintas Center.

Crosstown "Tipoff"

In 2021 during the coronavirus pandemic fans competed to leave bigger tips for restaurant workers in a "Crosstown tipoff", a nod to the annual shootout, starting with a tip of $1000 on a $54 carryout order at Zip's Cafe in early January 2021 and accompanied by a note reading "Go Xavier!"[8][9] UC fans responded with tips of increasing size, and fans of both teams bid up the largest tips; by early February $2000 tips were received at a downtown Skyline Chili and an Oakley pub and a $2500 tip was left at a Loveland tavern, all in support of UC.[9][10][11] WKRC estimated that by early February there had been more than $25,000 in tips over $1000, along with many tips over $100, in support of both teams.[11]

Notable Games

More information Cincinnati, Xavier ...

February 27, 1946: Despite two prior meetings, this matchup marked the "official" start to the annualized series that would take the city by storm. The Bearcats would emerge victorious, 53–39.

March 1, 1962: The reigning NCAA champion Bearcats came into the game at the Cincinnati Gardens confident against the Musketeers. Cincinnati would hold a series of leads, but Xavier would continue to fight back led by Billy Kirvin. With an eleven-point lead and 2:06 remaining, the Bearcats gave up nine points to Xavier, but time prevented the upset and Cincinnati won 61–58.[12]

February 26, 1963: After the No. 1 Bearcats defeated Xavier 72–61, Bearcat center George Wilson was hit with a thrown cowbell while exiting the court.[13]

March 4, 1964: A series-high 45 points were scored by Xavier's Steve Thomas in a losing effort as Cincinnati defeated Xavier 94–92.[14]

March 3, 1967: The 1966 overtime contest—the last of 12 straight Cincinnati wins—resulted in 57 fouls and saw Musketeer Joe Pangrazio grab a crutch from a fan in the stands so he could throw it at Bearcat Raleigh Wynn.[15]

January 23, 1986: In what was a typically close and heated contest, Xavier would win 80–76. During the game Cincinnati player Myron Hughes punched Xavier's Eddie Johnson, knocking him to the ground. However, the punch was away from the action and no foul was called.[16]

January 29, 1992: Cincinnati's Terry Nelson proclaimed that the Bearcats would win a "blowout", making newspaper headlines. Anthony Buford and the Final Four bound Cincinnati proved Nelson's words winning 93–75.[17]

January 19, 1994: After a hard-fought 82–76 overtime win for Xavier, Cincinnati head coach Bob Huggins refused to shake his XU counterpart Pete Gillen's hand post-game and instead verbally confronted him, causing much controversy. This was to be Gillen's final Crosstown Shootout.

November 26, 1996: The Cincinnati Bearcats were ranked #1 in the country and were largely considered frontrunners for the national championship by several media outlets, including Sports Illustrated. Xavier's Lenny Brown made a running one-hander at the buzzer to propel Xavier to a 71–69 win.[14]

December 18, 1999: Again the Bearcats were ranked #1 in the country. And again Xavier defeated Cincinnati 66–64 in the final moments of the game.[14]

February 3, 2004: Xavier came into the game a huge underdog against #10 Cincinnati, but pulled off the upset over the Bearcats 71–69 at the Cintas Center. This would lead Xavier on a 16-2 stretch the rest of the season, culminating in the program's first ever appearance in the Elite 8.[18]

December 10, 2011: Xavier, ranked #8 in the country, handily beat the Bearcats 76–53, but the focus of the game was the bench-clearing brawl that resulted in the game ending with 9.4 seconds left and the subsequent suspensions of four Bearcat players and four Musketeer players.

December 19, 2012: The newly renamed "Crosstown Classic" was played at U.S. Bank Arena for the first time since the brawl in 2011. After a back and forth 1st half, the #11 Bearcats dominated in the second half, soundly defeating Xavier 60–45 to improve to 11–0.[19]

January 26, 2017: Xavier came to Fifth Third Arena searching for a record 4th straight win in the series. Trevon Bluiett would contribute 40 points, but No. 19 Cincinnati and 21 points from Jacob Evans would outlast No. 24 Xavier 86–78.[20]

Results

Rankings are from the AP Poll (1936–present)

Cincinnati victoriesXavier victoriesTie games
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Source[21] [22]

Wins by venue

More information Category, Cincinnati ...

References

  1. "Crosstown Shootout: A Cincinnati Tradition". Retrieved 17 April 2012.
  2. "Cincinnati, Xavier both suspend four after brawl". ESPN.com. 2011-12-11. Retrieved 2020-02-26.
  3. Koch, Bill (May 22, 2012). "Exclusive: Crosstown Shootout set for U.S. Bank Arena". The Cincinnati Enquirer. Retrieved May 22, 2012.
  4. "Crosstown Shootout Gets New Name, Venue". WLWT. 14 June 2012. Archived from the original on 9 February 2013.
  5. Goheen, Kevin. "Crosstown Shootout will return home". Retrieved 13 May 2014.
  6. Staff, WLWT Digital (2021-01-11). "Customer leaves $1,000 tip for pandemic-stricken employees at Zip's Cafe". WLWT. Retrieved 2021-02-06.
  7. Bentley, Quinlan. "Crosstown tip-off: Which team is in the lead now?". The Enquirer. Retrieved 2021-02-06.
  8. "'Tip-off' challenge continues: UC fan leaves $2K tip at R.P. McMurphy's". fox19. Archived from the original on 2021-02-05. Retrieved 2021-02-06.
  9. "Starting to look like a blowout: UC takes huge lead in Crosstown 'Tip-Off'". local12.com. Archived from the original on 2021-02-06. Retrieved 2021-02-06.
  10. Quimby, Allen (8 Mar 1962). "Cincy Edges Xavier, 61-58 In Fierce Garden Tussle" (PDF). University of Cincinnati News Record. UC Libraries. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  11. "Cowbells Yet?" (PDF). University of Cincinnati News Record. UC Libraries. 7 Mar 1963. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  12. "Best rivalries: Cincinnati-Xavier". Archived from the original on 2012-01-11. Retrieved 2012-04-17.
  13. Michael Thomas. "Rivalry Breakdown: Xavier vs. Cincinnati". UC News Record.
  14. "2018-19 Men's Basketball Guide" (PDF). Amazon Web Services. Xavier Athletics. Retrieved 14 May 2020.
  15. "2019-20 University of Cincinnati Basketball Media Guide". issuu.com. GoBearcats. Retrieved 14 May 2020.

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