American football on Thanksgiving: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|American tradition}} |
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⚫ | [[American football]] is one of the many traditions in American culture that is associated with [[Thanksgiving (United States)|Thanksgiving Day]]. Virtually every level of football, from amateur and [[high school football|high school]] to [[college football|college]] and the [[NFL on Thanksgiving Day|NFL]] (including the [[Canadian Football League|CFL]] on [[Thanksgiving (Canada)|Canadian Thanksgiving]]), plays football on Thanksgiving Day (Thursday) or the immediately following holiday weekend (Friday, Saturday, and Sunday). |
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{{More citations needed|date=December 2017}} |
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⚫ | [[American football]] is one of the many traditions in [[American culture]] that is associated with [[Thanksgiving (United States)|Thanksgiving Day]]. Virtually every level of football, from amateur and [[high school football|high school]] to [[college football|college]] and the [[NFL on Thanksgiving Day|NFL]] (including the [[Canadian Football League|CFL]] on [[Thanksgiving (Canada)|Canadian Thanksgiving]]), plays football on Thanksgiving Day (Thursday) or the immediately following holiday weekend (Friday, Saturday, and Sunday). |
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==Early days== |
==Early days== |
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Thanksgiving Day football games in the United States are nearly as old as the game—and the organized holiday—themselves. The first Thanksgiving Day football game took place in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on Thanksgiving Day of 1869, less than two weeks after Rutgers defeated Princeton in New Brunswick, New Jersey in what is widely recognized as the first intercollegiate football game in the United States, and only six years after [[Abraham Lincoln]] declared the first fixed national Thanksgiving holiday in 1863. On November 17, 1869, the ''Evening Telegraph'' newspaper of Philadelphia published the following announcement: "Foot Ball: A foot-ball match between twenty-two players of the Young America Cricket Club and the Germantown Cricket Club will take place on Thanksgiving Day at 12 1/2 o'clock, on the grounds of the Germantown Club."<ref>{{cite news|url=http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83025925/1869-11-17/ed-1/seq-8/;words=FOOT+foot+ball+foot-ball?date1=1869&sort=date&sort=date&sort=date&date2=1870&searchType=basic&state=&rows=20&proxtext=foot+ball&y=15&x=10&dateFilterType=yearRange&page=2&page=3&index=3 |
Thanksgiving Day football games in the United States are nearly as old as the game—and the organized holiday—themselves. The first Thanksgiving Day football game took place in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on Thanksgiving Day of 1869, less than two weeks after Rutgers defeated Princeton in New Brunswick, New Jersey in what is widely recognized as the [[1869 Princeton vs. Rutgers football game|first intercollegiate football game]] in the United States, and only six years after [[Abraham Lincoln]] declared the first fixed national Thanksgiving holiday in 1863. On November 17, 1869, the ''Evening Telegraph'' newspaper of Philadelphia published the following announcement: "Foot Ball: A foot-ball match between twenty-two players of the Young America Cricket Club and the Germantown Cricket Club will take place on Thanksgiving Day at 12 1/2 o'clock, on the grounds of the Germantown Club."<ref>{{cite news|url=http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83025925/1869-11-17/ed-1/seq-8/;words=FOOT+foot+ball+foot-ball?date1=1869&sort=date&sort=date&sort=date&date2=1870&searchType=basic&state=&rows=20&proxtext=foot+ball&y=15&x=10&dateFilterType=yearRange&page=2&page=3&index=3 |
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|title= Foot Ball|access-date=November 23, 2012|newspaper=The Evening Telegraph|location=Philadelphia|date=November 17, 1869|edition=Fifth}}</ref> The proximity of Philadelphia to both Rutgers and Princeton invites speculation that this game may have been played under similar rules and perhaps involved some of the same participants, or at least people familiar with the game played at Rutgers, and a second match at Princeton, earlier that month. |
|title= Foot Ball|access-date=November 23, 2012|newspaper=The Evening Telegraph|location=Philadelphia|date=November 17, 1869|edition=Fifth}}</ref> The proximity of Philadelphia to both Rutgers and Princeton invites speculation that this game may have been played under similar rules and perhaps involved some of the same participants, or at least people familiar with the game played at Rutgers, and a second match at Princeton, earlier that month. |
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Princeton played Yale in the New York City area on Thanksgiving Day from 1876 through 1881.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030214/1876-11-30/ed-1/seq-1/;words=football?date1=1876&rows=20&searchType=basic&state=&date2=1876&proxtext=football&y=0&x=0&dateFilterType=yearRange&index=18|title=Telegraphic Notes: Princeton, N.J. Nov 29|access-date=November 25, 2012|newspaper=New-York Tribune|date=November 30, 1876}}</ref><ref name="Yale vs Princeton NJ">{{cite web|title=Yale vs Princeton (NJ) |publisher=College Football Data Warehouse |access-date=December 2, 2011 |url=http://cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/div_iaa/ivyleague/yale/opponents_records.php?teamid=2637 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131207020242/http://cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/div_iaa/ivyleague/yale/opponents_records.php?teamid=2637 |archive-date=December 7, 2013 }}</ref> The Thanksgiving Day football game became an institutionalized fixture of organized football in 1882, when the Intercollegiate Football Association determined to hold an annual collegiate championship game in New York City on Thanksgiving Day between the two leading teams in the association. Previously, the 'Champion' was to be determined by a team's records over the entire season against all members of the association. For at least the three previous years, the championship had been a matter of dispute as a result of Yale and Princeton playing to scoreless ties on three Thanksgiving Day games in a row.<ref>{{cite book|last=Davis|first=Parke H.|title=Football: The American Intercollegiate Game|year=1911|publisher=Charles Scribner's Sons|location=New York|pages=75–80}}</ref> |
Princeton played Yale in the New York City area on Thanksgiving Day from 1876 through 1881.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030214/1876-11-30/ed-1/seq-1/;words=football?date1=1876&rows=20&searchType=basic&state=&date2=1876&proxtext=football&y=0&x=0&dateFilterType=yearRange&index=18|title=Telegraphic Notes: Princeton, N.J. Nov 29|access-date=November 25, 2012|newspaper=New-York Tribune|date=November 30, 1876}}</ref><ref name="Yale vs Princeton NJ">{{cite web|title=Yale vs Princeton (NJ) |publisher=College Football Data Warehouse |access-date=December 2, 2011 |url=http://cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/div_iaa/ivyleague/yale/opponents_records.php?teamid=2637 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131207020242/http://cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/div_iaa/ivyleague/yale/opponents_records.php?teamid=2637 |archive-date=December 7, 2013 }}</ref> The Thanksgiving Day football game became an institutionalized fixture of organized football in 1882, when the Intercollegiate Football Association determined to hold an annual collegiate championship game in New York City on Thanksgiving Day between the two leading teams in the association. Previously, the 'Champion' was to be determined by a team's records over the entire season against all members of the association. For at least the three previous years, the championship had been a matter of dispute as a result of Yale and Princeton playing to scoreless ties on three Thanksgiving Day games in a row.<ref>{{cite book|last=Davis|first=Parke H.|title=Football: The American Intercollegiate Game|year=1911|publisher=Charles Scribner's Sons|location=New York|pages=75–80}}</ref> |
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On November 25, 1897, American students of the [[École des Beaux-Arts]] and the [[Académie Julian]] played a game in Paris, France. This is considered the first American football game ever played in Europe.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k284207p/f4.zoom.r=Football%20am%C3%A9ricain.langEN|publisher=Gallica|access-date=August 2, 2015|title=Football}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k2842082/f2.zoom.r=Football%20am%C3%A9ricain.langEN|title=Match de Football américain|publisher=Gallica|access-date=August 2, 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k5486336/f3.zoom.r=Football%20am%C3%A9ricain.langEN|publisher=Gallica|date=November 23, 1897|title=Le Football américain}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k548635z/f3.zoom.r=Football%20am%C3%A9ricain.langEN|publisher=Gallica|date=November 25, 1897|title=Football}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k548637q/f3.zoom.r=Football%20am%C3%A9ricain.langEN|publisher=Gallica|date=November 27, 1897|title=Football américain}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k235435n/f3.zoom.r=football%20am%C3%A9ricain.langEN|publisher=[[Gallica]]|date=November 27, 1897|title=Football américain}}</ref> |
On November 25, 1897, American students of the [[École des Beaux-Arts]] and the [[Académie Julian]] played a game in Paris, France. This is considered the first American football game ever played in Europe.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k284207p/f4.zoom.r=Football%20am%C3%A9ricain.langEN|publisher=Gallica|access-date=August 2, 2015|title=Football|date=November 24, 1897 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k2842082/f2.zoom.r=Football%20am%C3%A9ricain.langEN|title=Match de Football américain|date=November 25, 1897 |publisher=Gallica|access-date=August 2, 2015}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k5486336/f3.zoom.r=Football%20am%C3%A9ricain.langEN|publisher=Gallica|date=November 23, 1897|title=Le Football américain}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k548635z/f3.zoom.r=Football%20am%C3%A9ricain.langEN|publisher=Gallica|date=November 25, 1897|title=Football}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k548637q/f3.zoom.r=Football%20am%C3%A9ricain.langEN|publisher=Gallica|date=November 27, 1897|title=Football américain}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k235435n/f3.zoom.r=football%20am%C3%A9ricain.langEN|publisher=[[Gallica]]|date=November 27, 1897|title=Football américain}}</ref> |
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The introduction of Thanksgiving football is credited with encouraging the [[Southern United States]], which had historically rejected the celebration of Thanksgiving, to embrace the holiday. Robert Tracy McKenzie, a history professor at [[Wheaton College (Illinois)|Wheaton College]], remarked: "I joke—but also sort of mean it seriously—that one of the things that ultimately reconciles Southerners to Thanksgiving is the development of football (...) and well before 1900, the tradition of having football games on Thanksgiving Day is sweeping across the country. And Southerners find out that the holiday isn’t that bad after all."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.dailysignal.com/2018/11/22/the-surprising-story-of-the-first-thanksgiving/|title=The surprising story of the First Thanksgiving|author1=Katrina Trinko|author2=Daniel Davis|work=The Daily Signal|publisher=[[The Heritage Foundation]]|date=November 22, 2018|access-date=December 3, 2018}}</ref> |
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The tradition of playing football games on Thanksgiving continues to this day. At the high school level, the tradition is declining rapidly as schools drop their Thanksgiving games and shorten their regular season in favor of playoff tournaments and allowing players to focus on winter sports such as basketball.<ref name=disappearing_tradition/><ref name=endofwhiteplains/> |
The tradition of playing football games on Thanksgiving continues to this day. At the high school level, the tradition is declining rapidly as schools drop their Thanksgiving games and shorten their regular season in favor of playoff tournaments and allowing players to focus on winter sports such as basketball.<ref name=disappearing_tradition/><ref name=endofwhiteplains/> |
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===California=== |
===California=== |
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;San Jose Big Bone Game ''(no longer held on Thanksgiving)'': The only Thanksgiving high school rivalry game to be played west of the state of Missouri, this game dates to 1943 and is played in [[San Jose, California]] each Thanksgiving at 11 am. The game pits [[Abraham Lincoln High School (San Jose, California)|Abraham Lincoln High School]] against [[San Jose High School]]. The "Big Bone" in question is the [[femur]] of a cow that was retrieved from a butcher shop. Lincoln leads the series 38–24. The game is preceded the week prior with the "Little Bone Game", played between the two junior varsity teams. The game has been lopsided in |
;San Jose Big Bone Game ''(no longer held on Thanksgiving)'': The only Thanksgiving high school rivalry game to be played west of the state of Missouri, this game dates to 1943 and is played in [[San Jose, California]] each Thanksgiving at 11 am. The game pits [[Abraham Lincoln High School (San Jose, California)|Abraham Lincoln High School]] against [[San Jose High School]]. The "Big Bone" in question is the [[femur]] of a cow that was retrieved from a butcher shop. Lincoln leads the series 38–24. The game is preceded the week prior with the "Little Bone Game", played between the two junior varsity teams. The game has been lopsided in its last years, with Lincoln winning the last 22 contests in a row through its final playing in 2019.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.eastbaytimes.com/2019/11/28/big-bone-game-lincoln-san-jose/|title=Big Bone game: Lincoln turns back San Jose for 22nd time in a row|first=Darren|last=Sabedra|work=East Bay Times|date=November 28, 2019|access-date=December 3, 2019}}</ref> After Lincoln opted to enter a statewide playoff tournament, it announced in 2021 it would no longer contest the game on Thanksgiving and instead move the contest to [[Labor Day]].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.mercurynews.com/2021/08/09/high-school-football-big-bone-game-moves-from-thanksgiving-to-labor-day-weekend/ |title = Football: Big Bone game moves from Thanksgiving to Labor Day weekend| date=August 9, 2021 }}</ref> |
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;San Francisco Turkey Bowl: Also in the [[San Francisco Bay Area]], the Turkey Bowl in San Francisco dates back to 1924 and currently is played at [[Kezar Stadium]] each Thanksgiving at 11 am. The Turkey Bowl is the city's public high school championship game. [[Galileo High School]] has the most overall wins in the game (16) after breaking [[Abraham Lincoln High School (San Francisco, California)|Lincoln High School]]'s record four-game winning streak in 2009.<ref>Drumwright, Steve (November 27, 2008). [http://www.sfexaminer.com/sports/Turkey_Bowl_Lincoln_out_to_make_history.html Turkey Bowl: Lincoln out to make history] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110616140030/http://www.sfexaminer.com/sports/Turkey_Bowl_Lincoln_out_to_make_history.html |date=June 16, 2011 }}. [[San Francisco Examiner]]. Retrieved August 10, 2010.</ref><ref>Liepman, Dave (November 26, 2009). [http://www.sfexaminer.com/sports/Galileo-defeats-Lincoln-35-0-75226202.html Galileo defeats Lincoln 35–0] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110616140212/http://www.sfexaminer.com/sports/Galileo-defeats-Lincoln-35-0-75226202.html |date=June 16, 2011 }}. San Francisco Examiner. Retrieved August 10, 2010.</ref> Twice in the contest's 93-year history has the game been canceled: in 1963 because of the [[assassination of John F. Kennedy]], and in 2017 because of [[October 2017 Northern California wildfires|wildfires]] pushing the regular season and playoff schedule a week later.<ref>{{cite |
;San Francisco Turkey Bowl: Also in the [[San Francisco Bay Area]], the Turkey Bowl in San Francisco dates back to 1924 and currently is played at [[Kezar Stadium]] each Thanksgiving at 11 am. The Turkey Bowl is the city's public high school championship game. [[Galileo High School]] has the most overall wins in the game (16) after breaking [[Abraham Lincoln High School (San Francisco, California)|Lincoln High School]]'s record four-game winning streak in 2009.<ref>Drumwright, Steve (November 27, 2008). [http://www.sfexaminer.com/sports/Turkey_Bowl_Lincoln_out_to_make_history.html Turkey Bowl: Lincoln out to make history] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110616140030/http://www.sfexaminer.com/sports/Turkey_Bowl_Lincoln_out_to_make_history.html |date=June 16, 2011 }}. [[San Francisco Examiner]]. Retrieved August 10, 2010.</ref><ref>Liepman, Dave (November 26, 2009). [http://www.sfexaminer.com/sports/Galileo-defeats-Lincoln-35-0-75226202.html Galileo defeats Lincoln 35–0] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110616140212/http://www.sfexaminer.com/sports/Galileo-defeats-Lincoln-35-0-75226202.html |date=June 16, 2011 }}. San Francisco Examiner. Retrieved August 10, 2010.</ref> Twice in the contest's 93-year history has the game been canceled: in 1963 because of the [[assassination of John F. Kennedy]], and in 2017 because of [[October 2017 Northern California wildfires|wildfires]] pushing the regular season and playoff schedule a week later.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.sfgate.com/news/article/No-high-school-Turkey-Day-Game-at-Kezar-this-12372848.php|title=No high school Turkey Day Game at Kezar this season|newspaper=Sfgate |date=November 21, 2017 |last1=Stephens |first1=By Mitch }}</ref> |
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===Connecticut=== |
===Connecticut=== |
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Connecticut has at least 48 Thanksgiving games.<ref name="maxpreps">Askeland, Kevin (November 24, 2009). [http://www.maxpreps.com/news/K21FX9lCEd6UswAcxJTdpg/high-school-football-a-tradition-on-thanksgiving-day.htm High school football a tradition on Thanksgiving Day]. ''CBS Sports''. Retrieved November 6, 2010.</ref> Some of the better known ones are as follows: |
Connecticut has at least 48 Thanksgiving games.<ref name="maxpreps">Askeland, Kevin (November 24, 2009). [http://www.maxpreps.com/news/K21FX9lCEd6UswAcxJTdpg/high-school-football-a-tradition-on-thanksgiving-day.htm High school football a tradition on Thanksgiving Day]. ''CBS Sports''. Retrieved November 6, 2010.</ref> Some of the better known ones are as follows: |
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;Ansonia vs. Naugatuck: [[Ansonia High School (Connecticut)|Ansonia High School]] and [[Naugatuck High School]] have played each other since 1900. Ansonia leads the series, |
;Ansonia vs. Naugatuck: [[Ansonia High School (Connecticut)|Ansonia High School]] and [[Naugatuck High School]] have played each other since 1900. Ansonia leads the series, 72–35–11, as of 2016. The game is, as of 2015, broadcast on [[WATR]]. |
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;Branford v. East Haven: In the battle of two gritty, working-class Italian American towns each with a buzzing mascot, the Branford Hornets meet the East Haven Yellow Jackets in a rivalry that is must-see along the shoreline if for nothing more than East Haven marching band halftime performance. |
;Branford v. East Haven: In the battle of two gritty, working-class Italian American towns each with a buzzing mascot, the Branford Hornets meet the East Haven Yellow Jackets in a rivalry that is must-see along the shoreline if for nothing more than East Haven marching band halftime performance. |
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;Bristol Central vs. Bristol Eastern: [[Bristol Central High School]] and [[Bristol Eastern High School]] have played each other since 1959 in the annual "Battle for the Bell." |
;Bristol Central vs. Bristol Eastern: [[Bristol Central High School]] and [[Bristol Eastern High School]] have played each other since 1959 in the annual "Battle for the Bell." |
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;Darien vs. New Canaan: The Darien vs. New Canaan Thanksgiving matchup is generally considered the most competitive and significant rivalry game in the state, pitting Connecticut's two best teams against each other. The Darien Blue Wave and the New Canaan Rams have been rivals since 1928, their first meeting. The game has been played on Thanksgiving since 1994, with New Canaan leading the Turkey Bowl series 14-9-1 and the overall series |
;Darien vs. New Canaan: The Darien vs. New Canaan Thanksgiving matchup is generally considered the most competitive and significant rivalry game in the state, pitting Connecticut's two best teams against each other. The Darien Blue Wave and the New Canaan Rams have been rivals since 1928, their first meeting. The game has been played on Thanksgiving since 1994, with New Canaan leading the Turkey Bowl series 14-9-1 and the overall series 51–38–2. Recently, New Canaan went undefeated for 11 straight years from 2002 to 2011, but Darien won 5 straight from 2012 to 2016. The 2017 matchup, marred by the arrests of three Darien starters the day before (all three did not play), was won by New Canaan 27–0. Due to the large crowds that attend the game (up to 10,000 people), it is usually played either in New Canaan's Dunning Stadium (which needs to be temporarily expanded in order to fit the crowds) or Stamford's Boyle Stadium, which can hold 10,000 spectators. |
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;[[Fairfield Ludlowe High School|Fairfield Ludlowe]] vs. [[Fairfield Warde High School|Fairfield Warde]]: The two in-town rivals meet annually on Thanksgiving, often drawing the largest crowds of the season for each team, including students, families, and various town officials. The history of Fairfield Thanksgiving football dates back to 1975, when the two schools (then known as the Roger Ludlowe Flying Tigers and the Andrew Warde Crimson Eagles) fought to a 28-6 Warde victory. The rivalry endured a hiatus from 1985 to 2004, when the two schools merged, until they split again in 2005 to renew the matchup with a |
;[[Fairfield Ludlowe High School|Fairfield Ludlowe]] vs. [[Fairfield Warde High School|Fairfield Warde]]: The two in-town rivals meet annually on Thanksgiving, often drawing the largest crowds of the season for each team, including students, families, and various town officials. The history of Fairfield Thanksgiving football dates back to 1975, when the two schools (then known as the Roger Ludlowe Flying Tigers and the Andrew Warde Crimson Eagles) fought to a 28-6 Warde victory. The rivalry endured a hiatus from 1985 to 2004, when the two schools merged, until they split again in 2005 to renew the matchup with a 20–14 victory for the newly named Ludlowe Falcons over the Warde Mustangs. |
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;Guilford vs. Daniel Hand (Madison): Madison split out of what was East Guilford and since these two teams have begun playing annually Guilford has only won 7 of the match-ups, Guilford tends to be a below .500 team whereas Hand is typically a near perfect team. Hand is always favored, however Guilford always gets pumped up for this final game. |
;Guilford vs. Daniel Hand (Madison): Madison split out of what was East Guilford and since these two teams have begun playing annually Guilford has only won 7 of the match-ups, Guilford tends to be a below .500 team whereas Hand is typically a near perfect team. Hand is always favored, however Guilford always gets pumped up for this final game. |
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;Hamden vs. Notre Dame West Haven: The annual Green Bowl game that takes place every Thanksgiving. |
;Hamden vs. Notre Dame West Haven: The annual Green Bowl game that takes place every Thanksgiving. |
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;[[Hartford Public High School|Hartford Public]] vs. Weaver: Played annually at [[Dillon Stadium]] in [[Hartford, Connecticut|Hartford]]. |
;[[Hartford Public High School|Hartford Public]] vs. Weaver: Played annually at [[Dillon Stadium]] in [[Hartford, Connecticut|Hartford]]. |
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;Norwich Free Academy vs. New London High School: Is both the nation's oldest rivalry in the nation had the most games (155), if mergers are counted with their predecessors. The first game in what is now ''[[Ye olde|Ye Olde]] Ball Game''<ref name=usatoday2019/> was played in 1875 between NFA and the Bulkeley School for Boys in New London and continued until 1951 when Bulkeley merged with Chapman Tech to become New London High. NFA leads the series, NFA leads series, |
;Norwich Free Academy vs. New London High School: Is both the nation's oldest rivalry in the nation had the most games (155), if mergers are counted with their predecessors. The first game in what is now ''[[Ye olde|Ye Olde]] Ball Game''<ref name=usatoday2019/> was played in 1875 between NFA and the Bulkeley School for Boys in New London and continued until 1951 when Bulkeley merged with Chapman Tech to become New London High. NFA leads the series, NFA leads series, 78–65–11.<ref name=":0" /> |
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;Shelton vs. Derby: [[Shelton High School (Connecticut)|Shelton]] and Derby have played each other since 1904. |
;Shelton vs. Derby: [[Shelton High School (Connecticut)|Shelton]] and Derby have played each other since 1904. |
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;Staples vs. Greenwich |
;Staples vs. Greenwich |
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;Stonington vs. Westerly, Rhode Island: Tied with NFA-New London for the most games (155) with [[Stonington High School|Stonington]] leading [[Westerly High School|Westerly]] |
;Stonington vs. Westerly, Rhode Island: Tied with NFA-New London for the most games (155) with [[Stonington High School|Stonington]] leading [[Westerly High School|Westerly]] 74-72–17 as of 2023. However, when strictly looking at Thanksgiving Turkey day games Westerly leads 50–44–9.<ref name=":0">{{cite web|url=http://imnctnetwork.com/collinsville/files/2017/10/2017-CT-Football-Record-Book.pdf|title=Connecticut High School Football Record Book}}</ref> |
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;Wilbur Cross vs. Hillhouse: New Haven's two largest high schools, [[Hillhouse High School]] and [[Wilbur Cross High School]], meet every Thanksgiving in the "Elm City Bowl". |
;Wilbur Cross vs. Hillhouse: New Haven's two largest high schools, [[Hillhouse High School]] and [[Wilbur Cross High School]], meet every Thanksgiving in the "Elm City Bowl". |
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;Masuk vs. Newtown: This game has decided the winner of [[South West Conference|SWC championship]] the past two years, with [[Masuk High School|Masuk]] winning by a combined score of 88–7. |
;Masuk vs. Newtown: This game has decided the winner of [[South West Conference|SWC championship]] the past two years, with [[Masuk High School|Masuk]] winning by a combined score of 88–7. |
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;Stratford vs. Bunnell |
;Stratford vs. Bunnell |
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:In town rivalry, annual attendance of 3,000 or more people. A number of players involved in this game have gone on to NFL careers. Including [[Marcus Easley]] and [[Mark Harrison (American football)|Mark Harrison]] |
:In town rivalry, annual attendance of 3,000 or more people. A number of players involved in this game have gone on to NFL careers. Including [[Marcus Easley]] and [[Mark Harrison (American football)|Mark Harrison]] |
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;New Milford vs New Fairfield:Longtime rivals that have played each other for decades but have been playing each other on Thanksgiving morning since 2007. Winner of game is awarded the "Candlewood Cup" trophy which is named for the lake that separates the two towns. New Fairfield currently holds a |
;New Milford vs New Fairfield:Longtime rivals that have played each other for decades but have been playing each other on Thanksgiving morning since 2007. Winner of game is awarded the "Candlewood Cup" trophy which is named for the lake that separates the two towns. New Fairfield currently holds a 7–2 series lead on Thanksgiving. |
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===District of Columbia=== |
===District of Columbia=== |
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;District championship game:The [[District of Columbia Interscholastic Athletic Association]] holds its annual city high school championship game on Thanksgiving weekend.<ref>{{cite |
;District championship game:The [[District of Columbia Interscholastic Athletic Association]] holds its annual city high school championship game on Thanksgiving weekend.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://docs.newsbank.com/openurl?ctx_ver=z39.88-2004&rft_id=info:sid/iw.newsbank.com:NewsBank:WPIW&rft_val_format=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:ctx&rft_dat=115962E112A92D08&svc_dat=InfoWeb:aggregated5&req_dat=0D0CB579A3BDA420|title=Talking Turkey, Remembering Their Roots |access-date=July 29, 2009|date=November 23, 2006|newspaper=The Washington Post|author=Williams, Preston}}</ref> |
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;Gonzaga vs. St. John's:An annual game occurs between [[Gonzaga College High School]] and [[St. John's College High School]], two Catholic high schools in the Washington, D.C. area. The rivalry dates to 1893. |
;Gonzaga vs. St. John's:An annual game occurs between [[Gonzaga College High School]] and [[St. John's College High School]], two Catholic high schools in the Washington, D.C. area. The rivalry dates to 1893. |
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===Florida=== |
===Florida=== |
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;Plant v. Hillsborough ''(no longer played on Thanksgiving)'': [[Hillsborough High School (Tampa, Florida)|Hillsborough High School]] and [[Henry B. Plant High School]], two teams in [[Tampa, Florida]], used to play a rivalry game on Thanksgiving until 1974, after which the state playoffs forced the teams to move the game into season. At its peak the game was held at [[Tampa Stadium]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://tbo.com/sports/preps/hillsborough-terriers/plant-hillsborough-prepare-for-th-clash-31927|title=Plant, Hillsborough prepare for 79th clash|date=September 9, 2010|access-date=September 16, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140916060026/http://tbo.com/sports/preps/hillsborough-terriers/plant-hillsborough-prepare-for-th-clash-31927|archive-date=September 16, 2014|url-status=dead}}</ref> |
;Plant v. Hillsborough ''(no longer played on Thanksgiving)'': [[Hillsborough High School (Tampa, Florida)|Hillsborough High School]] and [[Henry B. Plant High School]], two teams in [[Tampa, Florida]], used to play a rivalry game on Thanksgiving until 1974, after which the state playoffs forced the teams to move the game into season. At its peak the game was held at [[Tampa Stadium]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://tbo.com/sports/preps/hillsborough-terriers/plant-hillsborough-prepare-for-th-clash-31927|title=Plant, Hillsborough prepare for 79th clash|date=September 9, 2010|access-date=September 16, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140916060026/http://tbo.com/sports/preps/hillsborough-terriers/plant-hillsborough-prepare-for-th-clash-31927|archive-date=September 16, 2014|url-status=dead}}</ref> |
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===Georgia=== |
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;Savannah v. Benedictine Military School ''(no longer played on Thanksgiving)'': An annual Thanksgiving Day game between [[Savannah High School (Georgia)|Savannah High School]] and [[Benedictine Military School]] was played at what is now [[Grayson Stadium]] from 1927 until 1959.<ref name="hist">{{cite web |title=History of Grayson Stadium|url=http://web.minorleaguebaseball.com/team1/page.jsp?ymd=20090303&content_id=518716&vkey=team1_t543&fext=.jsp&sid=t543 |website=sandgnats.com |publisher=Savannah Sand Gnats |date=March 3, 2009 |access-date=April 8, 2011 |archive-date=November 10, 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111110074657/http://web.minorleaguebaseball.com/team1/page.jsp?ymd=20090303&content_id=518716&vkey=team1_t543&fext=.jsp&sid=t543}}</ref> |
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===Maine=== |
===Maine=== |
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Maryland is home to one of the Oldest rivalries nationally, also known to be two of the oldest rivalries in the [[Southeastern United States]]. |
Maryland is home to one of the Oldest rivalries nationally, also known to be two of the oldest rivalries in the [[Southeastern United States]]. |
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[[File:Participants in the 'Turkey Bowl' (Thanksgiving morning, 2010, Herring Run Park, Baltimore).jpg|thumb|Participants in a Baltimore area TurkeyBowl included attorney Warren Brown and [[Curt Anderson]]]] |
[[File:Participants in the 'Turkey Bowl' (Thanksgiving morning, 2010, Herring Run Park, Baltimore).jpg|thumb|Participants in a Baltimore area TurkeyBowl included attorney Warren Brown and [[Curt Anderson]]]] |
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;Loyola Blakefield vs. Calvert Hall College:[[Calvert Hall College High School|Calvert Hall College]] and [[Loyola Blakefield]], both private high schools in Towson, Maryland have played an annual football game on Thanksgiving Day known as the "Turkey Bowl." The 100-year-old tradition is the oldest continuous Catholic prep-school football rivalry in the United States. The game is currently held at [[Johnny Unitas Stadium]] at Towson University (However, Previously played at M&T Bank Stadium), home of the Baltimore Ravens. |
;Loyola Blakefield vs. Calvert Hall College:[[Calvert Hall College High School|Calvert Hall College]] and [[Loyola Blakefield]], both private high schools in Towson, Maryland have played an annual football game on Thanksgiving Day known as the "Turkey Bowl." The 100-year-old tradition is the oldest continuous Catholic prep-school football rivalry in the United States. The game is currently held at [[Johnny Unitas Stadium]] at Towson University (However, Previously played at M&T Bank Stadium), home of the Baltimore Ravens. As of the 2023 edition, The Loyola Dons have the overall lead over the Calvert Hall Cardinals in the Turkey Bowl, with a record of 51–44–8. It is televised on the local ABC affiliate, [[WMAR]] 2. |
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;Baltimore Polytechnic Institute (Poly) vs. Baltimore City College (City) |
;Baltimore Polytechnic Institute (Poly) vs. Baltimore City College (City) |
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:In 1889, the game was played between [[Baltimore City College football|City]] and Poly, then located on Courtland Street just a short distance from City. This led to one of the [[List of high school football rivalries (100 years+)|longest continuous public high school American football rivalry]] in the nation. In the early 1900s the game was played on Thanksgiving Day and when [[Memorial Stadium (Baltimore)|Memorial Stadium]] was built in 1954 the game was played there until the stadium was demolished in 2000. The games played at Memorial stadium during the 1960s drew an average of 25,000 fans. In 1965, 27,500 fans saw quarterback [[Kurt Schmoke]] and team captain [[Curt Anderson]] lead City to a 52–6 win over Poly. The Thanksgiving tradition ended in 1993 when both City and Poly joined the [[Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association]] which held its playoffs during the Thanksgiving week, requiring both schools to move their rivalry to a date three weeks earlier. The game is now played at [[M&T Bank Stadium]], in downtown Baltimore the first week of November. Anderson (City) and Baltimore attorney Warren Brown (Poly) have kept the Turkey Day tradition alive between the two schools by sponsoring a flag football game at 9 am every Thanksgiving morning at Baltimore's Herring Run Park. For the past 30 years any former Poly student, football player or not, faces off against a team made up of former City students. Brown and Anderson no longer play, but their sons do. |
:In 1889, the game was played between [[Baltimore City College football|City]] and Poly, then located on Courtland Street just a short distance from City. This led to one of the [[List of high school football rivalries (100 years+)|longest continuous public high school American football rivalry]] in the nation. In the early 1900s the game was played on Thanksgiving Day and when [[Memorial Stadium (Baltimore)|Memorial Stadium]] was built in 1954 the game was played there until the stadium was demolished in 2000. The games played at Memorial stadium during the 1960s drew an average of 25,000 fans. In 1965, 27,500 fans saw quarterback [[Kurt Schmoke]] and team captain [[Curt Anderson]] lead City to a 52–6 win over Poly. The Thanksgiving tradition ended in 1993 when both City and Poly joined the [[Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association]] which held its playoffs during the Thanksgiving week, requiring both schools to move their rivalry to a date three weeks earlier. The game is now played at [[M&T Bank Stadium]], in downtown Baltimore the first week of November. Anderson (City) and Baltimore attorney Warren Brown (Poly) have kept the Turkey Day tradition alive between the two schools by sponsoring a flag football game at 9 am every Thanksgiving morning at Baltimore's Herring Run Park. For the past 30 years any former Poly student, football player or not, faces off against a team made up of former City students. Brown and Anderson no longer play, but their sons do. |
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===Massachusetts=== |
===Massachusetts=== |
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In Massachusetts, where high school football is not nearly the draw it is in other parts of the country, the Thanksgiving Day game is a long-standing tradition that brings out thousands of alumni and other fans. Virtually every school in the Bay State has a traditional rival and the holiday game is a focal point for all of them, no matter how unsuccessful the regular season may have been. |
In Massachusetts, where high school football is not nearly the draw it is in other parts of the country, the Thanksgiving Day game is a long-standing tradition that brings out thousands of alumni and other fans. Virtually every school in the Bay State has a traditional rival and the holiday game is a focal point for all of them, no matter how unsuccessful the regular season may have been. |
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;Abington vs. Whitman:[[Abington High School]] and [[Whitman-Hanson Regional High School]] have faced off on Thanksgiving Day since 1910. The 100th meeting between these two schools was played at Whitman in 2010. Whitman-Hanson has won 57 of the one hundred games played. |
;Abington vs. Whitman-Hanson:[[Abington High School]] and [[Whitman-Hanson Regional High School]] have faced off on Thanksgiving Day since 1910. The 100th meeting between these two schools was played at Whitman in 2010. Whitman-Hanson has won 57 of the one hundred games played. |
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;Agawam vs. West Springfield: Since 1924, the two schools have met every year but 1949. |
;Agawam vs. West Springfield: Since 1924, the two schools have met every year but 1949. |
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;Algonquin vs. Westboro |
;Algonquin vs. Westboro |
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;Athol vs Ralph C Mahar Regional: The public high schools of Athol and Orange, |
;Athol vs Ralph C Mahar Regional: The public high schools of Athol and Orange, MA first met on the football field in 1894. The rivalry has been continuous since 1944. Orange High School became Ralph C Mahar Regional School in 1957. |
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;Andover vs. North Andover:[[Andover High School (Massachusetts)|Andover High School]] and [[North Andover High School]] will start playing each other on thanksgiving in 2015 at North Andover. This ended Andovers classic thanksgiving rivalry with [[Central Catholic High School (Massachusetts)|Central Catholic High School]]. In which case Central winning the last battle in 2014. |
;Andover vs. North Andover:[[Andover High School (Massachusetts)|Andover High School]] and [[North Andover High School]] will start playing each other again on thanksgiving in 2015 at North Andover. These two were thanksgiving rivals up to 1970 when the rivalry ended when North Andover switched leagues. This ended Andovers classic thanksgiving rivalry with [[Central Catholic High School (Massachusetts)|Central Catholic High School]]. In which case Central winning the last battle in 2014. |
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;Archbishop Williams vs. Cardinal Spelman |
;Archbishop Williams vs. Cardinal Spelman |
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;Ashland vs. Hopkinton |
;Ashland vs. Hopkinton |
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;Attleboro vs. North Attleborough |
;Attleboro vs. North Attleborough |
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;Barnstable vs. Falmouth: [[Barnstable High School]] and [[Falmouth High School (Massachusetts)|Falmouth High School]] have played each other since 1895. |
;Barnstable vs. Falmouth: [[Barnstable High School]] and [[Falmouth High School (Massachusetts)|Falmouth High School]] have played each other since 1895. |
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;Bartlett vs. Southbridge: These two schools are regular Thanksgiving rivals; their game is broadcast on [[ |
;Bartlett (Webster) vs. Southbridge: These two schools are regular Thanksgiving rivals; their game is broadcast on [[WQVR]]. |
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;Bellingham vs. Norton |
;Bellingham vs. Norton |
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;Belmont vs. Watertown |
;Belmont vs. Watertown |
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;Beverly vs. Salem: [[Salem High School (Massachusetts)|Salem High School]] and [[Beverly High School]] have played each other since 1891. The 100th meeting between the two schools in 1998 at Hurd Stadium attracted over 11,000 fans. |
;Beverly vs. Salem: [[Salem High School (Massachusetts)|Salem High School]] and [[Beverly High School]] have played each other since 1891. The 100th meeting between the two schools in 1998 at Hurd Stadium attracted over 11,000 fans. |
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; |
;Durfee (Fall River) vs. New Bedford: [[New Bedford High School]] and B.M.C. Durfee of Fall River have contested this rivalry since 1893. [[WNBH]] currently holds broadcast rights. |
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;BC High vs. Catholic Memorial: [[Boston College High School]] vs. [[Catholic Memorial School]] rivalry, with both all-male schools drawing students from similar seas. The winner of the game wins the Pumpkin Trophy. |
;BC High vs. Catholic Memorial: [[Boston College High School]] vs. [[Catholic Memorial School]] rivalry, with both all-male schools drawing students from similar seas. The winner of the game wins the Pumpkin Trophy. |
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;Bedford vs. Burlington |
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;Braintree vs. Milton: [[Braintree High School]] and [[Milton High School (Massachusetts)|Milton High School]] have played each other on Thanksgiving since 1920. Milton leads 44-39-1. |
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; |
;Braintree vs. Milton: [[Braintree High School]] and [[Milton High School (Massachusetts)|Milton High School]] have played each other on Thanksgiving since 1920. Milton leads 44–39–1. |
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; |
;Billerica vs. Chelmsford: [[Chelmsford High School]] and [[Billerica Memorial High School]] have faced off against each other annually since 1927. |
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;Carver vs. Middleborough |
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;Chicopee vs. Holyoke: [[Chicopee High School]] and [[Holyoke High School]] no longer play on thanksgiving. Chicopee plays Chicopee Comprehensive and Holyoke battles South Hadley. |
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;Concord-Carlisle Regional vs. Lexington |
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;Cohasset vs. Hull: [[Cohasset High School]] and [[Hull High School]] have played each other on Thanksgiving since the 1920s. |
;Cohasset vs. Hull: [[Cohasset High School]] and [[Hull High School]] have played each other on Thanksgiving since the 1920s. |
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;Dennis-Yarmouth vs. Nauset |
;Dennis-Yarmouth vs. Nauset Regional |
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;Dedham vs. Norwood |
;Dedham vs. Norwood |
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;Dover-Sherborn vs. Medfield |
;Dover-Sherborn vs. Medfield |
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;English |
;Boston English vs. Boston Latin:[[English–Latin football rivalry|The rivalry]] between [[English High School of Boston]] and [[Boston Latin School]] dates to 1887. It is played annually at [[Harvard Stadium]]. |
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;Fairhaven vs. Dartmouth |
;Fairhaven vs. Dartmouth |
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;Fitchburg vs. Leominster: [[Leominster High School]] and Fitchburgh High School have played since 1894. As of |
;Fitchburg vs. Leominster: [[Leominster High School]] and Fitchburgh High School have played since 1894. As of 2021, it has been contested on Thanksgiving 125 times, out of 140 total matches. |
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;'''Franklin vs. King Philip Regional High School''' |
;'''Franklin vs. King Philip Regional High School''' |
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;Georgetown vs. Manchester-Essex Regional High School. |
;Georgetown vs. Manchester-Essex Regional High School. |
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;Gloucester vs. Danvers |
;Gloucester vs. Danvers |
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;Greenfield vs. Turners Falls Regional: They have faced each other every Thanksgiving since 1926. As of 2019, Turners Falls suspended its football program and Greenfield now host Turners Falls Regional along with Mohawk Trail Regional and Pioneer Valley Regional in a 4 team cooperate. |
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;Greenfield vs. Turners Falls: They have faced each other every Thanksgiving since 1926. As of 2013. Greenfield has won 59 of the match ups, and 8 of the 88 games have ended in a tie. Turners Falls has had the upper hand lately, winning 3 Turkey Day games in a row from 2011 to 2013. which has never happened before in the rivalry.<ref>{{Cite news|url=http://highschoolsports.masslive.com/news/article/5650476414300799109/greenfield-and-turners-falls-football-meet-for-87th-straight-year-on-thanksgiving/|title=Greenfield and Turners Falls football meet for 87th straight year on Thanksgiving|work=MassLive.com|access-date=December 22, 2017|language=en-US}}</ref> |
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;Hamilton-Wenham vs. Ipswich |
;Hamilton-Wenham vs. Ipswich |
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;Haverhill vs. Lowell: This game is one of the few to be broadcast live. It is carried on radio, and online, by [[WCAP (AM)|WCAP]], Lowell's radio station. |
;Haverhill vs. Lowell: This game is one of the few to be broadcast live. It is carried on radio, and online, by [[WCAP (AM)|WCAP]], Lowell's radio station. |
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;'''Lynn English vs. Lynn Classical''': Inter-city High School rivalry between the two [[Lynn, Massachusetts|Lynn]] public high schools |
;'''Lynn English vs. Lynn Classical''': Inter-city High School rivalry between the two [[Lynn, Massachusetts|Lynn]] public high schools |
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;Pioneer Valley vs. Franklin Technical: Teams have played each other since 2005. Pioneer leads series 5–3. The Wednesday before Thanksgiving each team has a bonfire for the community. |
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;Marlborough vs. Hudson: Marlborough High School and [[Hudson High School (Massachusetts)|Hudson High School]] have played since 1904. |
;Marlborough vs. Hudson: Marlborough High School and [[Hudson High School (Massachusetts)|Hudson High School]] have played since 1904. |
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;Medford vs. Malden: This rivalry has been contested since 1889. |
;Medford vs. Malden: This rivalry has been contested since 1889. |
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;Natick vs. Framingham |
;Natick vs. Framingham |
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;Needham vs. Wellesley: Since 1882, the Rockets and Raiders have been playing in the oldest public school football rivalry in the country. |
;Needham vs. Wellesley: Since 1882, the Rockets and Raiders have been playing in the oldest public school football rivalry in the country. |
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;Newburyport vs. Amesbury: These two teams have played each other |
;Newburyport vs. Amesbury: These two teams have played each other 107 times as of 2021 with Newburyport holding the edge 56–42–9. |
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;Newton North vs. Brookline: These two teams have been duking it out on Turkey Day since 1894, and is one of the oldest traditions in Massachusetts. As of |
;Newton North vs. Brookline: These two teams have been duking it out on Turkey Day since 1894, and is one of the oldest traditions in Massachusetts. As of 2021, Newton North leads the rivalry 68–54–6. |
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;Newton South vs. Lincoln-Sudbury |
;Newton South vs. Lincoln-Sudbury |
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;Old Colony RVT vs. Tri-County RVT. |
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;Pentucket vs. Triton: Teams have played since |
;Pentucket Regional vs. Triton Regional: Teams have played since 1971. Pentucket has won 36 of the 54 contests, including on the way to winning the Super Bowl in 1999. There has been only 1 tie. |
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;Plymouth North vs. Plymouth South |
;Plymouth North vs. Plymouth South |
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;Quincy vs. North Quincy: This game has brought the people of Quincy out since 1932 |
;Quincy vs. North Quincy: This game has brought the people of Quincy out since 1932. |
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;Stoneham vs. Reading "The Turkey Bowl": Teams have played since |
;Stoneham vs. Reading "The Turkey Bowl": Teams have played since 1899. Reading leads the series 69–27–8. |
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;Stoughton vs. Canton: Teams have played each since 1926, with Stoughton currently leading |
;Stoughton vs. Canton: Teams have played each since 1926, with Stoughton currently leading 54-45-4 as of the 2021 season. |
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;Taunton vs. Milford |
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;Taunton vs. Coyle & Cassidy: "The Game" between [[Taunton High School]] and [[Coyle and Cassidy High School]] has taken place since 1931. It was first contested on Thanksgiving Day in 1953. Thanksgiving play was suspended from 1982 through 1996, though the two schools continued to face each other on another date during the season. "The Game" was reinstated as a Thanksgiving Day tradition beginning in 1997. Taunton High School has won "The Game" 48 times, with Coyle & Cassidy triumphing on 36 occasions. "The Game" has twice ended in a tie. |
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;Tewksbury vs. Wilmington |
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;Wayland vs. Weston:These two teams have played each other |
;Wayland vs. Weston: These two teams have played each other 88 times as of 2021.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.westonschools.org/high/blog/2017/11/20/thanksgiving-day-football-game/|title=Thanksgiving Day Football Game!|last=shayj|date=November 20, 2017|website=Weston High School|language=en-US|access-date=December 1, 2019}}</ref> Wayland leads the series 55–30–3.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://waylandstudentpress.com/48729/articles/the-history-behind-the-wayland-weston-thanksgiving-football-rivalry/|title=The history behind the Wayland-Weston Thanksgiving football rivalry|last=Adelman|first=Lindsay|website=Wayland Student Press|access-date=December 1, 2019}}</ref> |
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;Westwood vs. Holliston |
;Westwood vs. Holliston |
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⚫ | ;Winchester vs. Woburn: [[Winchester High School (Massachusetts)|Winchester High School]] and [[Woburn Memorial High School]]'s football teams have played each other 120 times since their first meeting in 1891 in one of the oldest rivalries in the country, one that is largely a friendly one.<ref name=usatoday2019/> Winchester leads the all-time 55–53–12. Interestingly, six of the twelve ties have been scoreless, occurring in 1911, 1929, 1931, 1932, 1935, and 1965. |
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;Wilbraham-Hampden vs. Springfield: [[Minnechaug Regional High School]] and [[Springfield Central High School]] |
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⚫ | ;Winchester vs. Woburn: [[Winchester High School (Massachusetts)|Winchester High School]] and [[Woburn Memorial High School]]'s football teams have played each other |
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===Michigan=== |
===Michigan=== |
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===Missouri=== |
===Missouri=== |
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;Show-Me Bowl: The state championships of Missouri high school football are held on the Friday and Saturday following Thanksgiving under the name "Show Me Bowl." There are seven games, one to decide the championship for each class, ranging from "Class 1" to "Class 6" and an [[eight-man football]] class. Held at the [[Dome at America's Center]] in |
;Show-Me Bowl: The state championships of Missouri high school football are held on the Friday and Saturday following Thanksgiving under the name "Show Me Bowl." There are seven games, one to decide the championship for each class, ranging from "Class 1" to "Class 6" and an [[eight-man football]] class. Held at the [[Dome at America's Center]] in [[St. Louis]] until that stadium's primary tenant (the [[Los Angeles Rams|Rams]]) abandoned the stadium in 2016, future versions of the Show-Me Bowl will be held at rotating venues, with [[Plaster Sports Complex]] on the campus of [[Missouri State University]] hosting the 2016 contest and [[Faurot Field]] on the campus of the [[University of Missouri]] hosting in 2017; the eight-man class will from that point forward be held at a separate site. |
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;Webster Groves vs. Kirkwood Turkey Day Game:{{main|Missouri Turkey Day Game}} The contest between [[Kirkwood High School]]'s Pioneers and [[Webster Groves High School]]'s Statesmen, two teams based in the suburbs of |
;Webster Groves vs. Kirkwood Turkey Day Game:{{main|Missouri Turkey Day Game}} The contest between [[Kirkwood High School]]'s Pioneers and [[Webster Groves High School]]'s Statesmen, two teams based in the suburbs of St. Louis, has traditionally been played on Thanksgiving since 1907. |
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;Excelsior Springs Mineral Water Bowl (no longer a high school game or played on Thanksgiving): From 1948 to 1951, [[Excelsior Springs High School]] hosted other high school teams at its campus on Thanksgiving. As the state of Missouri did not officially sanction the contest out of concern for student-athletes' well-being, the event was forcibly canceled in 1951. These four games served as the beginning of the [[Mineral Water Bowl]], which in 1954 was switched to a small [[college football]] [[bowl game]] that |
;Excelsior Springs Mineral Water Bowl (no longer a high school game or played on Thanksgiving): From 1948 to 1951, [[Excelsior Springs High School]] hosted other high school teams at its campus on Thanksgiving. As the state of Missouri did not officially sanction the contest out of concern for student-athletes' well-being, the event was forcibly canceled in 1951. These four games served as the beginning of the [[Mineral Water Bowl]], which in 1954 was switched to a small [[college football]] [[bowl game]] that continued to be played, in December, each year in Excelsior Springs through 2019.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mineralwaterbowl.net/history.html|title=Excelsior Springs Mineral Water Bowl|website=www.mineralwaterbowl.net}}</ref> |
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===New Hampshire=== |
===New Hampshire=== |
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;Atlantic City vs. Holy Spirit: |
;Atlantic City vs. Holy Spirit: |
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;Asbury Park vs. Neptune: Known as the "[[Ghetto|'Hood]] Championship," this contest, dating to the 1920s, was canceled in 2017, following years of escalating tensions and threats of legitimate violence for that year's contest.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2017/11/22/neptune-asbury-park/|title=Threats Prompt Cancellation Of 90-Year-Old Thanksgiving Day Football Game|date=November 22, 2017}}</ref> |
;Asbury Park vs. Neptune: Known as the "[[Ghetto|'Hood]] Championship," this contest, dating to the 1920s, was canceled in 2017, following years of escalating tensions and threats of legitimate violence for that year's contest.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://newyork.cbslocal.com/2017/11/22/neptune-asbury-park/|title=Threats Prompt Cancellation Of 90-Year-Old Thanksgiving Day Football Game|date=November 22, 2017}}</ref> |
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;[[Hamilton High School West]] vs. [[Steinert High School]]: Played annually on Thanksgiving Day since 1958 as this is the crosstown rivalry in Hamilton Township (Mercer County). The game in odd numbered years is played at Hamilton West, and at Steinert during even numbered years, |
;[[Hamilton High School West]] vs. [[Steinert High School]]: Played annually on Thanksgiving Day since 1958 as this is the crosstown rivalry in Hamilton Township (Mercer County). The game in odd numbered years is played at Hamilton West, and at Steinert during even numbered years, the game traditionally starts at 10:30 a.m., and is streamed on [[WBCB (AM)|WBCB]]. |
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;[[Hackensack High School]] vs. [[Teaneck High School]]: have played annually every Thanksgiving morning since 1931.<ref>Amos, Darius. [http://www.northjersey.com/sports/111123519_From_the_Sidelines__Comets__senior_moments.html "From the Sidelines: Comets' senior moments"], ''Hackensack Chronicle'', December 1, 2010. Accessed March 27, 2012. "EIGHTEEN placards hung along the north fence at Della Torre Field, each marked in Hackensack gold with the name and number of a senior football player. The 79th annual Thanksgiving Day game against Teaneck was supposed to be a triumphant sendoff for one of the finest groups of seniors that Comets football has seen."</ref> |
;[[Hackensack High School]] vs. [[Teaneck High School]]: have played annually every Thanksgiving morning since 1931.<ref>Amos, Darius. [http://www.northjersey.com/sports/111123519_From_the_Sidelines__Comets__senior_moments.html "From the Sidelines: Comets' senior moments"], ''Hackensack Chronicle'', December 1, 2010. Accessed March 27, 2012. "EIGHTEEN placards hung along the north fence at Della Torre Field, each marked in Hackensack gold with the name and number of a senior football player. The 79th annual Thanksgiving Day game against Teaneck was supposed to be a triumphant sendoff for one of the finest groups of seniors that Comets football has seen."</ref> |
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;Don Bosco Prep vs. Paramus Catholic / Saint Joseph Regional High School: [[Don Bosco Preparatory High School]] in Ramsey, one of the top high school football programs in the United States, and [[Paramus Catholic High School]] were traditional Thanksgiving rivals until 2013.<ref>Halley, Jim (November 23, 2007). [https://www.usatoday.com/sports/preps/football/2007-11-22-Thanksgiving-rivalry_N.htm Kirkwood (Mo.) rings one up in Frisco Bell rivalry]. ''USA Today''. Retrieved December 25, 2010.</ref> [[Fox Sports 1]] carried the 2013 contest nationwide. Don Bosco Prep instead planned to host [[Saint Joseph Regional High School]] on Thanksgiving in 2014 (the contest was postponed to the following Saturday in any event, due to inclement weather). Due to numerous scheduling snafus, Don Bosco did not schedule any Thanksgiving game for 2015. |
;Don Bosco Prep vs. Paramus Catholic / Saint Joseph Regional High School: [[Don Bosco Preparatory High School]] in Ramsey, one of the top high school football programs in the United States, and [[Paramus Catholic High School]] were traditional Thanksgiving rivals until 2013.<ref>Halley, Jim (November 23, 2007). [https://www.usatoday.com/sports/preps/football/2007-11-22-Thanksgiving-rivalry_N.htm Kirkwood (Mo.) rings one up in Frisco Bell rivalry]. ''USA Today''. Retrieved December 25, 2010.</ref> [[Fox Sports 1]] carried the 2013 contest nationwide. Don Bosco Prep instead planned to host [[Saint Joseph Regional High School]] on Thanksgiving in 2014 (the contest was postponed to the following Saturday in any event, due to inclement weather). Due to numerous scheduling snafus, Don Bosco did not schedule any Thanksgiving game for 2015. |
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;Ridgewood vs. Paramus: [[Ridgewood High School (New Jersey)|Ridgewood High School]] and [[Paramus High School]] was played every Thanksgiving morning annually from 1984 to 2013. Paramus had played continuously every Thanksgiving from 1962 onward until deciding after the 2013 season not to partake in any more games on the holiday. The school determined that the contest interfered with their participation in the state championship and refused to compromise the integrity of the match by [[resting the starters]].<ref>[http://www.northjersey.com/sports/233034191_Final_Turkey_Day_game_between_Ridgewood__Paramus_is_Nov__28.html Final Turkey Day game between Ridgewood and Paramus is Nov. 28]. ''NorthJersey.com''. Retrieved November 23, 2013.</ref> |
;Ridgewood vs. Paramus: [[Ridgewood High School (New Jersey)|Ridgewood High School]] and [[Paramus High School]] was played every Thanksgiving morning annually from 1984 to 2013. Paramus had played continuously every Thanksgiving from 1962 onward until deciding after the 2013 season not to partake in any more games on the holiday. The school determined that the contest interfered with their participation in the state championship and refused to compromise the integrity of the match by [[resting the starters]].<ref>[http://www.northjersey.com/sports/233034191_Final_Turkey_Day_game_between_Ridgewood__Paramus_is_Nov__28.html Final Turkey Day game between Ridgewood and Paramus is Nov. 28]. ''NorthJersey.com''. Retrieved November 23, 2013.</ref> |
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;East Orange vs. Barringer: [[East Orange High School]] and [[Barringer High School]] have played since 1897. |
;East Orange vs. Barringer: [[East Orange High School]] and [[Barringer High School]] have played since 1897. |
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;[[Millville Senior High School|Millville]] vs. [[Vineland High School|Vineland]]: The state's oldest, this rivalry has been contested since 1893, with Vineland leading the series |
;[[Millville Senior High School|Millville]] vs. [[Vineland High School|Vineland]]: The state's oldest, this rivalry has been contested since 1893, with Vineland leading the series 64–63–19, heading into the 2017 game.<ref>Evans, Bill. [http://highschoolsports.nj.com/news/article/3190146368430225081/division-title-stellar-seniors-and-njs-longest-thanksgiving-rivalry-millville-vs-vineland/ "Millville vs. Vineland: Division title, stellar seniors and N.J.'s longest Thanksgiving rivalry"], NJ Advance media, November 21, 2017. Accessed November 21, 2017. "The season isn’t ending the way the Millville and Vineland High School football teams hoped back in August.... And in addition to the division crown, there’s the honor of playing in the state’s longest Thanksgiving rivalry – one that dates back to 1893 and in which Vineland took a one-game lead, 64-63-19, with a win last year."</ref> [[WMGM-TV]] carried the 2016 contest live, and the 2017 and 2018 contests were carried by [[WACP]] and sister station [[WSNJ]]; the game went unbroadcast in 2019. |
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;Westfield vs. Plainfield: [[Westfield High School (New Jersey)|Westfield]] and [[Plainfield High School (New Jersey)|Plainfield]] has been played since 1900 and celebrated its 100th game in 2005. |
;Westfield vs. Plainfield: [[Westfield High School (New Jersey)|Westfield]] and [[Plainfield High School (New Jersey)|Plainfield]] has been played since 1900 and celebrated its 100th game in 2005. |
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;Watchung Hills vs. Ridge: A game formally played the day before Thanksgiving, as the two rivals weren't in the same division for football. When they both became members of the same division in 2008, they began regular-season play. The venue alternated between the two schools' stadiums every year, with the last game in 2007 played at Ridge. |
;Watchung Hills vs. Ridge: A game formally played the day before Thanksgiving, as the two rivals weren't in the same division for football. When they both became members of the same division in 2008, they began regular-season play. The venue alternated between the two schools' stadiums every year, with the last game in 2007 played at Ridge. |
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;New Providence vs. Berkeley Heights: This rivalry has been contested for only a few years, but is very popular in the surrounding areas of New Providence, Summit, and Berkeley Heights. The Turkey Bowl is usually saved by NPHS stand out athlete Vincent Fuschetto. |
;New Providence vs. Berkeley Heights: This rivalry has been contested for only a few years, but is very popular in the surrounding areas of New Providence, Summit, and Berkeley Heights. The Turkey Bowl is usually saved by NPHS stand out athlete Vincent Fuschetto. |
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;Middletown South vs. Middletown North: [[Middletown High School South]] and [[Middletown High School North]] varsity teams play annually, with the home team alternating every year. 2010 marked the 35th game played between the two schools, with Middletown South beating Middletown North 20–7. Middletown South leads the rivalry with a record of 23–11–1 over Middletown North. |
;Middletown South vs. Middletown North: [[Middletown High School South]] and [[Middletown High School North]] varsity teams play annually, with the home team alternating every year. 2010 marked the 35th game played between the two schools, with Middletown South beating Middletown North 20–7. Middletown South leads the rivalry with a record of 23–11–1 over Middletown North. |
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;Montclair v. Bloomfield: [[Montclair, New Jersey|Montclair]] and [[Bloomfield, New Jersey|Bloomfield]] have met annually on Thanksgiving since 1937. The 1957 contest was notable for being televised nationwide, via the remains of the [[DuMont Television Network]] in a rare color telecast with [[Chris Schenkel]] on play-by-play.<ref name=disappearing_tradition>{{ |
;Montclair v. Bloomfield: [[Montclair, New Jersey|Montclair]] and [[Bloomfield, New Jersey|Bloomfield]] have met annually on Thanksgiving since 1937. The 1957 contest was notable for being televised nationwide, via the remains of the [[DuMont Television Network]] in a rare color telecast with [[Chris Schenkel]] on play-by-play.<ref name=disappearing_tradition>{{Cite web|url=https://www.northjersey.com/story/news/essex/montclair/2017/11/20/thanksgiving-football-games/879640001/|title=Thanksgiving football games a disappearing tradition|first=Steve|last=Tober|website=North Jersey Media Group|accessdate=August 28, 2023}}</ref> |
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;Toms River HS South vs Lakewood High School |
;Toms River HS South vs Lakewood High School |
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;Shawnee High School vs Lenape High School |
;Shawnee High School vs Lenape High School |
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;Haddonfield Memorial High school vs Haddon Heights High School; |
;Haddonfield Memorial High school vs Haddon Heights High School; |
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===New York |
===New York=== |
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;State championship weekend:The [[New York State Public High School Athletic Association]], which sanctions all public high school football in the state, holds its statewide football championships over Thanksgiving weekend at the [[Carrier Dome]] in [[Syracuse, New York|Syracuse]]. Five divisions (ranging from the largest schools outside the five major cities to the smallest districts) each have their own state title decided on the Saturday after Thanksgiving.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20080517065145/http://post-journal.com/page/category.detail/nav/5013.html Title Games To Be Televised Locally]. [[The Post-Journal]]. November 28, 2008.</ref> Buffalo Public Schools, representing the second-largest city in the state, joined the NYSPHSAA beginning in 2009, allowing them to contend for state championships |
;State championship weekend:The [[New York State Public High School Athletic Association]], which sanctions all public high school football in the state, holds its statewide football championships over Thanksgiving weekend at the [[Carrier Dome]] in [[Syracuse, New York|Syracuse]]. Five divisions (ranging from the largest schools outside the five major cities to the smallest districts) each have their own state title decided on the Saturday after Thanksgiving.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20080517065145/http://post-journal.com/page/category.detail/nav/5013.html Title Games To Be Televised Locally]. [[The Post-Journal]]. November 28, 2008.</ref> Buffalo Public Schools, representing the second-largest city in the state, joined the NYSPHSAA beginning in 2009, allowing them to contend for state championships but discontinuing their local Thanksgiving Day city championship (see below).<ref name="wgrz-hcend">McKinley, Dave (September 4, 2010). [http://www.wgrz.com/news/local/story.aspx?storyid=85117&catid=37 Buffalo Public Schools Unveil New $6 Million Stadium]{{Dead link|date=October 2018 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}. [[WGRZ]]. Retrieved September 4, 2010.</ref> |
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;Buffalo Harvard Cup ''( |
;Buffalo Harvard Cup ''(discontinued)'':In [[Western New York]], Thanksgiving was the day of the annual [[Harvard Cup]], the city of [[Buffalo, New York|Buffalo's]] high school football championship game. It ran for 106 years.<ref>Monnin, Mary Jo. [http://www.buffalonews.com/sports/highschool/story/507088.html Riverside showers itself in Cup victory]. [[The Buffalo News]]. November 28, 2008.</ref> Games were held at [[All-High Stadium]] on the campus of [[Bennett High School (Buffalo, New York)|Bennett High School]] in Buffalo and broadcast on local radio station [[WEBR|WJJL]].<ref>[http://www.WJJL.com/ Harvard Cup audio archives]. WJJL. Retrieved August 1, 2010.</ref> However, the Harvard Cup was discontinued after the 2009 season when Buffalo Public Schools joined the NYSPHSAA.<ref name="wgrz-hcend"/> |
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;Fordham Prep vs. Xavier High School:The Xavier/Fordham Prep annual "Turkey Bowl" is one of the oldest high school football rivalries in New York history. Their very first game against one another took place in the late 1800s when the game was called due to darkness and ended in a tie. Xavier and Fordham Prep used to play many of their famed Thanksgiving Day "Turkey Bowl" Games at Manhattan's Polo Grounds until it was demolished following the construction of Shea Stadium in the borough of Queens. For many years, the game was played in [[Downing Stadium]] (now [[Icahn Stadium]]) on [[Randall's Island]] or on the campus of [[Fordham University]] in the Bronx. Most recently, in years Fordham has the home-field advantage, the game is played at [[Jack Coffey Field]] on the campus of Fordham University. When Xavier has the advantage, the game is played at the [[Aviator Sports and Events Center]] on the grounds of [[Floyd Bennett Field]], part of the [[Gateway National Recreation Area]] in [[Brooklyn]]. |
;Fordham Prep vs. Xavier High School:The Xavier/Fordham Prep annual "Turkey Bowl" is one of the oldest high school football rivalries in New York history. Their very first game against one another took place in the late 1800s when the game was called due to darkness and ended in a tie. Xavier and Fordham Prep used to play many of their famed Thanksgiving Day "Turkey Bowl" Games at Manhattan's Polo Grounds until it was demolished following the construction of Shea Stadium in the borough of Queens. For many years, the game was played in [[Downing Stadium]] (now [[Icahn Stadium]]) on [[Randall's Island]] or on the campus of [[Fordham University]] in the Bronx. Most recently, in years Fordham has the home-field advantage, the game is played at [[Jack Coffey Field]] on the campus of Fordham University. When Xavier has the advantage, the game is played at the [[Aviator Sports and Events Center]] on the grounds of [[Floyd Bennett Field]], part of the [[Gateway National Recreation Area]] in [[Brooklyn]]. |
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;White Plains Turkey Bowl ''( |
;White Plains Turkey Bowl ''(discontinued)'': This game between the Catholic high school [[Archbishop Stepinac High School]] and public school [[White Plains Public Schools|White Plains High School]] was played continuously from 1971 to 2012; White Plains High School had played other teams from around the United States as an invitational contest from 1932 to 1970. The game was traditionally played at a "neutral" field in White Plains, Parker Stadium; the last five contests were held at Loucks Field on the campus of White Plains High School. White Plains, being a public school, forfeits any regional consolation playoff appearance it may have earned, due to a limit of 10 games for high school football teams in the NYSPHSAA, but does not have to forfeit its appearance in the state championship tournament.<ref>Devaney, Kevin Jr. (October 27, 2008). [http://varsityinsider.lohudblogs.com/2008/10/27/turkey-bowl-white-plains-vs-stepinac/ Turkey Bowl: White Plains vs. Stepinac] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101125080311/http://varsityinsider.lohudblogs.com/2008/10/27/turkey-bowl-white-plains-vs-stepinac/ |date=November 25, 2010 }}. ''The Journal News''. Retrieved October 5, 2010.</ref> The game nonetheless had to be canceled if Stepinac advanced to their respective state championship game or White Plains won a section champions; this did not happen until 2013, when White Plains won a Section 1 title, and it happened again in 2014 and 2015 when Stepinac advanced to the Catholic State Championship both years;<ref>Thomson, Josh (November 18, 2014). [http://www.lohud.com/story/sports/high-school/football/2014/11/18/white-plains-stepinac-turkey-bowl-canceled/19253147/ Turkey Bowl put on hold for second straight year]. ''LoHud.com''. Retrieved November 23, 2014.</ref> despite the repeated cancellations, the schools insisted the series would continue.<ref>[https://usatodayhss.com/2015/annual-white-plainsstepinac-turkey-bowl-canceled-again/ Annual White Plains-Stepinac Turkey Bowl canceled again]. ''LoHud.com''. Retrieved November 18, 2015.</ref> A change in the state Catholic championship tournament, which opened a [[bye (sports)|bye week]] during Thanksgiving weekend between the semifinals and the championship, allowed Stepinac to play the game in 2016 and continue to contest for the championship.<ref>[http://www.lohud.com/story/sports/high-school/lohud-varsity-insider/2016/11/17/threepeat-could-shorthanded-stepinacs-greatest-feat/93798698/ Threepeat could be shorthanded Stepinac's greatest feat]. Lohud.com (November 17, 2016). Retrieved November 18, 2016.</ref> Prior to the 2017 season, White Plains announced it would no longer play in the Turkey Bowl to allow its players to focus on winter sports, ending an over 90-year tradition of Thanksgiving football in [[Westchester County, New York]].<ref name=endofwhiteplains>{{Cite web|url=https://www.lohud.com/story/sports/columnists/josh-thomson/2017/11/22/thomson-turkey-bowls-westchester/876462001/|title=Thomson: Moments to savor from over 90 years of Turkey Bowls in Westchester|first=Josh|last=Thomson|website=The Journal News|accessdate=August 28, 2023}}</ref> |
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;Mt. St. Michael vs. Cardinal Hayes: Bronx Turkey Bowl: Mount St. Michael High School vs. Cardinal Hayes High School. It's been a tradition for the last 66 years. Since 1942 Mount St. Michael and Cardinal Hayes have met on each Thanksgiving Day a storied CHSFL rivalry showdown. |
;Mt. St. Michael vs. Cardinal Hayes: Bronx Turkey Bowl: Mount St. Michael High School vs. Cardinal Hayes High School. It's been a tradition for the last 66 years. Since 1942 Mount St. Michael and Cardinal Hayes have met on each Thanksgiving Day a storied CHSFL rivalry showdown. |
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;Iona Prep vs. New Rochelle ''( |
;Iona Prep vs. New Rochelle ''(discontinued)'': Played on Thanksgiving from 1949 to 2002, this rivalry contest was televised on New York City television, first by [[WABC-TV]], then [[WPIX]]. As with the White Plains contest, New Rochelle's advancing to the state championship in 2003 and 2004 was the primary reason for the contest's abolition.<ref name=endofwhiteplains/> |
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;Yonkers vs. Gorton ''( |
;Yonkers vs. Gorton ''(discontinued)'': The two schools were the first to play on Thanksgiving in Westchester County from the mid-1920s until 1984.<ref name=endofwhiteplains/> |
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;Roosevelt vs. Saunders ''( |
;Roosevelt vs. Saunders ''(discontinued)'': Another matchup in the city of [[Yonkers, New York|Yonkers]] also took place from the mid-1920s to 1984. Roosevelt High School withdrew from the contest after the 1984 game, in which the team won the state title but was then upset in the Thanksgiving game.<ref name=endofwhiteplains/> |
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===Pennsylvania=== |
===Pennsylvania=== |
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;Abington vs. Cheltenham: [[Abington Senior High School]] and [[Cheltenham High School]] play every year on Thanksgiving morning, unless one of the two schools is in the playoffs. The two schools, representing [[Abington Township, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania|Abington Township]] and [[Cheltenham Township]], are less than 2 miles apart and have been playing since 1915. The rivalry is the fifth-oldest public school rivalry in Pennsylvania, and seventh oldest of all schools. As of 2013, Abington holds the lead, |
;Abington vs. Cheltenham: [[Abington Senior High School]] and [[Cheltenham High School]] play every year on Thanksgiving morning, unless one of the two schools is in the playoffs. The two schools, representing [[Abington Township, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania|Abington Township]] and [[Cheltenham Township]], are less than 2 miles apart and have been playing since 1915. The rivalry is the fifth-oldest public school rivalry in Pennsylvania, and seventh oldest of all schools. As of 2013, Abington holds the lead, 54–33–6.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.ydr.com/gametimepa/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140201215456/http://www.gametimepa.com/mont-bucks/ci_24619940/football-cheltenham-rallies-past-abington-overtime|url-status=dead|title=Coverage of York County and Adams County Pa. high school sports from the York Daily Record|archive-date=February 1, 2014|website=York Daily Record}}</ref> |
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;Catasauqua vs. Northampton: [[Catasauqua High School]] and [[Northampton Area High School|Northampton High School]] play a non-league game against each other every Thanksgiving dating back to 1925. The two schools are no longer within the same league, and thus the game is not sanctioned and does not count as a win/loss for official standings with regard to playoff consideration within the [[PIAA]]. The game is always considered to be [[Homecoming]] for Catasauqua, regardless of whether the game is played at home or away from their perspective. |
;Catasauqua vs. Northampton: [[Catasauqua High School]] and [[Northampton Area High School|Northampton High School]] play a non-league game against each other every Thanksgiving dating back to 1925. The two schools are no longer within the same league, and thus the game is not sanctioned and does not count as a win/loss for official standings with regard to playoff consideration within the [[Pennsylvania Intescholastic Athletic Association|PIAA]]. The game is always considered to be [[Homecoming]] for Catasauqua, regardless of whether the game is played at home or away from their perspective. |
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;Chichester vs. Sun Valley: These two high schools from Delaware County have played each other a total of 83 times, and now the rivals face each other every Thanksgiving. Sun Valley narrowly has more wins than Chichester as the series record is currently 42–41. Sun Valley has won the past three years. |
;Chichester vs. Sun Valley: These two high schools from Delaware County have played each other a total of 83 times, and now the rivals face each other every Thanksgiving. Sun Valley narrowly has more wins than Chichester as the series record is currently 42–41. Sun Valley has won the past three years. |
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<!--For the Easton-Phillipsburg contest, see New Jersey under Phillipsburg.--> |
<!--For the Easton-Phillipsburg contest, see New Jersey under Phillipsburg.--> |
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;East Stroudsburg vs. Stroudsburg: [[East Stroudsburg |
;East Stroudsburg vs. Stroudsburg: [[East Stroudsburg High School Southl]] (formerly East Stroudsburg High School) and [[Stroudsburg High School]] have been playing annually since 1945 and began their Turkey Day tradition in 1953. With the advent of district playoffs, the game was moved to the regular season for four years, then the schools agreed to play once during the season and again on Thanksgiving if neither team is in the playoffs. A little more than 2 miles separate these public high schools which allows the victor to walk home with the ''Little Brown Jug Trophy.'' |
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;Emmaus vs. Whitehall ''(no longer played on Thanksgiving)'': [[Emmaus High School]] and [[Whitehall High School (Pennsylvania)|Whitehall High School]] played an annual game on Thanksgiving from 1927 until 1995. They still play each other annually, but the game is now contested during the regular season and not on Thanksgiving. |
;Emmaus vs. Whitehall ''(no longer played on Thanksgiving)'': [[Emmaus High School]] and [[Whitehall High School (Pennsylvania)|Whitehall High School]] played an annual game on Thanksgiving from 1927 until 1995. They still play each other annually, but the game is now contested during the regular season and not on Thanksgiving. |
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;Hatboro-Horsham vs. Upper Moreland: [[Hatboro-Horsham High School]] and [[Upper Moreland High School]] play each other on Thanksgiving, alternating between each school as the home team. The rivalry game was first played in 1933. |
;Hatboro-Horsham vs. Upper Moreland: [[Hatboro-Horsham High School]] and [[Upper Moreland High School]] play each other on Thanksgiving, alternating between each school as the home team. The rivalry game was first played in 1933. |
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;Mount Carmel vs. Shamokin ''(no longer played on Thanksgiving)'': [[Mount Carmel Area School District|Mount Carmel High School]] and [[Shamokin Area School District|Shamokin High School]] first played each other in 1893, and annually since 1934. They began playing each other on Thanksgiving in 1951. The rivalry continues, but the game is no longer contested on Thanksgiving and is instead played during the regular season. |
;Mount Carmel vs. Shamokin ''(no longer played on Thanksgiving)'': [[Mount Carmel Area School District|Mount Carmel High School]] and [[Shamokin Area School District|Shamokin High School]] first played each other in 1893, and annually since 1934. They began playing each other on Thanksgiving in 1951. The rivalry continues, but the game is no longer contested on Thanksgiving and is instead played during the regular season. |
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;Nazareth vs. Wilson ''(no longer played on Thanksgiving)'': [[Nazareth Area High School|Nazareth High School]] and [[Wilson Area High School|Wilson High School]] played annually on Thanksgiving morning from |
;Nazareth vs. Wilson ''(no longer played on Thanksgiving)'': [[Nazareth Area High School|Nazareth High School]] and [[Wilson Area High School|Wilson High School]] played annually on Thanksgiving morning from 1926 to 1975. From 1945 to 1968, the game was played at Easton's Cottingham Stadium as a neutral site, and from 1969 to 1973 it was played at [[Taylor Stadium (Lehigh)|Taylor Stadium]] on the campus of [[Lehigh University]]. In 1974 the game was played at Nazareth High School, and in 1975 it was played at Wilson High. The game has not been played on Thanksgiving since 1975 and the two schools have not met at all since 1993. Discussions between the two schools are in the works to renew this rivalry.<ref>{{cite web|author= Keith Groller |url=http://articles.mcall.com/2009-02-03/news/4301695_1_easton-thanksgiving-morning-thanksgiving-tradition |title=Nazareth and Wilson officials talking turkey once again – Morning Call |publisher=Articles.mcall.com |date=February 3, 2009 |access-date=November 11, 2012}}</ref> |
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;Northeast vs. Central: This game pits two schools from the city of Philadelphia, [[Northeast High School (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)|Northeast High School]] and [[Central High School (Philadelphia)|Central High School]], against each other; the rivalry dates to 1892. The Central Lancers won the most recent Thanksgiving game (2013) by defeating the Northeast Vikings 6–3 in overtime. The Vikings hold a narrow all-time edge on the Lancers, 56–52–10. |
;Northeast vs. Central: This game pits two schools from the city of Philadelphia, [[Northeast High School (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)|Northeast High School]] and [[Central High School (Philadelphia)|Central High School]], against each other; the rivalry dates to 1892. The Central Lancers won the most recent Thanksgiving game (2013) by defeating the Northeast Vikings 6–3 in overtime. The Vikings hold a narrow all-time edge on the Lancers, 56–52–10. |
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;Archbishop Ryan vs. George Washington High School: This game is a Northeast Philadelphia classic which pits the Ryan Raiders against the Washington Eagles. The two teams have met every Thanksgiving morning which can often be viewed as a second homecoming as so many alumni come back to watch the game. As of 2014, the Archbishop Ryan Raiders have a record of 28-9-1 in the series. |
;Archbishop Ryan vs. George Washington High School: This game is a Northeast Philadelphia classic which pits the Ryan Raiders against the Washington Eagles. The two teams have met every Thanksgiving morning which can often be viewed as a second homecoming as so many alumni come back to watch the game. As of 2014, the Archbishop Ryan Raiders have a record of 28-9-1 in the series. |
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;Pottsville vs. Reading ''(no longer played on Thanksgiving)'': [[Pottsville Area High School|Pottsville High School]] and [[Reading High School (Reading, Pennsylvania)|Reading High School]] have been playing each other since 1893, and played annually on Thanksgiving from 1923 to 1977. They no longer play on Thanksgiving, but still play each other during the regular season. |
;Pottsville vs. Reading ''(no longer played on Thanksgiving)'': [[Pottsville Area High School|Pottsville High School]] and [[Reading High School (Reading, Pennsylvania)|Reading High School]] have been playing each other since 1893, and played annually on Thanksgiving from 1923 to 1977. They no longer play on Thanksgiving, but still play each other during the regular season. |
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;Pottstown vs. Owen J. Roberts |
;Pottstown vs. Owen J. Roberts |
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;Pennridge vs. Quakertown: [[Pennridge–Quakertown Thanksgiving Day Football Classic|This rivalry game]] between [[Pennridge School District|Pennridge High School]] and [[Quakertown High School]] has been played on Thanksgiving morning since 1930. Carried on radio on [[WNPV]] until that station's shutdown.<ref>http://wnpv1440.com/2018-wnpv-high-school-football/</ref> |
;Pennridge vs. Quakertown: [[Pennridge–Quakertown Thanksgiving Day Football Classic|This rivalry game]] between [[Pennridge School District|Pennridge High School]] and [[Quakertown High School]] has been played on Thanksgiving morning since 1930. Carried on radio on [[WNPV]] until that station's shutdown.<ref>[http://wnpv1440.com/2018-wnpv-high-school-football/ High School Football] wnpv1440.com 2018 {{dead link|date=February 2024}}</ref> |
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;Upper Darby vs. Haverford: [[Upper Darby High School]] and [[Haverford High School]], two public schools that are located less than three miles apart, have contested a game since 1921. |
;Upper Darby vs. Haverford: [[Upper Darby High School]] and [[Haverford High School]], two public schools that are located less than three miles apart, have contested a game since 1921. |
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;South Philadelphia vs. Sts Neumann Goretti: [[South Philadelphia High School]] and [[Saints John Neumann and Maria Goretti Catholic High School]],(formerly St. John Neumann, South Catholic) have been playing each other since 1934. They have played every Thanksgiving except since 1934 except in 2001, 2011, & 2014. South Philadelphia won the last meeting in 2013. Neumann Goretti leads the all time |
;South Philadelphia vs. Sts Neumann Goretti: [[South Philadelphia High School]] and [[Saints John Neumann and Maria Goretti Catholic High School]],(formerly St. John Neumann, South Catholic) have been playing each other since 1934. They have played every Thanksgiving except since 1934 except in 2001, 2011, & 2014. South Philadelphia won the last meeting in 2013. Neumann Goretti leads the all time 55–20–3. |
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;West Chester East vs. Henderson''(no longer played on Thanksgiving)'': [[West Chester East High School]] and [[Henderson High School (Pennsylvania)]] previously played on Thanksgiving Day or Thanksgiving Eve in addition to regular season meetings between the crosstown schools. A number of Thanksgiving games were held at Farrell Stadium of [[West Chester University]]. The last Thanksgiving meeting between the schools was played in 2005. |
;West Chester East vs. Henderson''(no longer played on Thanksgiving)'': [[West Chester East High School]] and [[Henderson High School (Pennsylvania)]] previously played on Thanksgiving Day or Thanksgiving Eve in addition to regular season meetings between the crosstown schools. A number of Thanksgiving games were held at Farrell Stadium of [[West Chester University]]. The last Thanksgiving meeting between the schools was played in 2005. |
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;94 WIP Turkey Bowl: Each year, [[WIP-FM|Sports Radio 94 WIP]] hosts the Turkey Bowl, where Philadelphia area schools can enter to have their rivalry game played on Thanksgiving Day and broadcast live on the station by [[Joe DeCamara]] and [[Jon Ritchie]], the hosts of the station's morning show. The station holds a fan vote to determine which rivalry game will be played, and the winning schools receive $3,000 each for their athletic departments.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2021-03-05 |title=94 WIP Turkey Bowl V 2023 Voting |url=https://www.audacy.com/94wip/contests/94-wip-turkey-bowl-voting-2023 |access-date=2023-11-26 |website=www.audacy.com |language=en}}</ref> |
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===Rhode Island=== |
===Rhode Island=== |
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;Pilgrim vs. Warwick Veterans |
;Pilgrim vs. Warwick Veterans |
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;Rogers vs. Tiverton |
;Rogers vs. Tiverton |
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;[[St. Raphael Academy|Saint Raphael]] vs. [[William E. Tolman High School|Tolman]] ''(no longer played on Thanksgiving)'': This game was notable for being played at [[McCoy Stadium]] in [[Pawtucket, Rhode Island|Pawtucket]], a venue primarily used for baseball. The two teams play their regular season games at a field adjacent to McCoy Stadium. The rivalry ended in 2001, after 73 years, but a Thanksgiving Eve game is still held inside the stadium. Currently Saint Raphael hosts [[Moses Brown School]] on the even number years and Tolman hosts [[Shea High School]] on the odd number years. Saint Raphael led the holiday series |
;[[St. Raphael Academy|Saint Raphael]] vs. [[William E. Tolman High School|Tolman]] ''(no longer played on Thanksgiving)'': This game was notable for being played at [[McCoy Stadium]] in [[Pawtucket, Rhode Island|Pawtucket]], a venue primarily used for baseball. The two teams play their regular season games at a field adjacent to McCoy Stadium. The rivalry ended in 2001, after 73 years, but a Thanksgiving Eve game is still held inside the stadium. Currently Saint Raphael hosts [[Moses Brown School]] on the even number years and Tolman hosts [[Shea High School]] on the odd number years. Saint Raphael led the holiday series 38–31–4.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rihssports.com/Thanksgiving%20Football/Results/ST.R%20VS%20TOLM.htm |title=St. Raphael vs. Tolman |publisher=Rihssports.com |access-date=September 2, 2016}}</ref> |
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;Westerly vs. Stonington (CT)<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rihssports.com/Thanksgiving%20Football/Results/BAR%20VS.%20MT.%20H.htm |title=Barrington vs. Mt. Hope |publisher=Rihssports.com |access-date=November 11, 2012}}</ref> |
;Westerly vs. Stonington (CT)<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rihssports.com/Thanksgiving%20Football/Results/BAR%20VS.%20MT.%20H.htm |title=Barrington vs. Mt. Hope |publisher=Rihssports.com |access-date=November 11, 2012}}</ref> |
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===Texas=== |
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;Jack Yates vs. Phillis Wheatley ''(abolished)'': Played at a stadium on the site where [[TDECU Stadium]] now stands, the "Turkey Day Classic" between two schools in [[Houston, Texas]] was played from 1946 to 1966.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Boney |first=Jeffrey L. |date=2023-09-27 |title=Turkey Day Classic: More Than Just a Game |url=https://forwardtimes.com/turkey-day-classic-more-than-just-a-game/ |access-date=2023-10-05 |website=Forward Times |language=en-US}}</ref> |
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===Virginia=== |
===Virginia=== |
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*[[Minnesota Golden Gophers football|Minnesota Golden Gophers]] vs. [[Wisconsin Badgers football|Wisconsin Badgers]] ([[Minnesota–Wisconsin football rivalry|Paul Bunyan's Axe]]) |
*[[Minnesota Golden Gophers football|Minnesota Golden Gophers]] vs. [[Wisconsin Badgers football|Wisconsin Badgers]] ([[Minnesota–Wisconsin football rivalry|Paul Bunyan's Axe]]) |
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*[[North Carolina Tar Heels football|North Carolina Tar Heels]] vs. [[NC State Wolfpack football|NC State Wolfpack]] ([[North Carolina–NC State football rivalry]]) |
*[[North Carolina Tar Heels football|North Carolina Tar Heels]] vs. [[NC State Wolfpack football|NC State Wolfpack]] ([[North Carolina–NC State football rivalry]]) |
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*[[Iowa State Cyclones football|Iowa State Cyclones]] vs. [[Kansas State Wildcats football|Kansas State Wildcats]] ([[Iowa State–Kansas State football rivalry|Farmageddon]], irregularly scheduled, sometimes Thanksgiving weekend) |
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*[[Army Black Knights football|Army Black Knights]] vs. [[Navy Midshipmen football|Navy Midshipmen]] (the [[Army–Navy Game]]; by 2006, it had moved one week, then eventually two weeks after Thanksgiving weekend beginning in 2009, to maintain its status as the last game of the college football regular season) |
*[[Army Black Knights football|Army Black Knights]] vs. [[Navy Midshipmen football|Navy Midshipmen]] (the [[Army–Navy Game]]; by 2006, it had moved one week, then eventually two weeks after Thanksgiving weekend beginning in 2009, to maintain its status as the last game of the college football regular season) |
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The frequent changing of conferences stemming from the [[2010–13 NCAA conference realignment|early-2010s realignment of NCAA teams and conferences]] complicated the numerous rivalries that traditionally play Thanksgiving weekend. |
The frequent changing of conferences stemming from the [[2010–13 NCAA conference realignment|early-2010s realignment of NCAA teams and conferences]] complicated the numerous rivalries that traditionally play Thanksgiving weekend. |
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While collegiate games have been played on Thanksgiving Day itself (with perhaps the most notable being the [[1971 Nebraska vs. Oklahoma football game|Nebraska-Oklahoma game of 1971]]), the majority of the current traditional Thanksgiving weekend college football games listed above are played on the Friday or Saturday after the holiday, in part to avoid conflicts with the NFL. Texas, as previously mentioned, has had more or less of a permanent spot on the night of the holiday itself since at least 2008.<ref name="MSF2">[http://www.midwestsportsfans.com/2010/11/college-football-thanksgiving-day-tv-schedule-friday-texas-texas-am/ "College Football Thanksgiving Day and Weekend Schedule for 2010"] |
While collegiate games have been played on Thanksgiving Day itself (with perhaps the most notable being the [[1971 Nebraska vs. Oklahoma football game|Nebraska-Oklahoma game of 1971]]), the majority of the current traditional Thanksgiving weekend college football games listed above are played on the Friday or Saturday after the holiday, in part to avoid conflicts with the NFL. Texas, as previously mentioned, has had more or less of a permanent spot on the night of the holiday itself since at least 2008.<ref name="MSF2">[http://www.midwestsportsfans.com/2010/11/college-football-thanksgiving-day-tv-schedule-friday-texas-texas-am/ "College Football Thanksgiving Day and Weekend Schedule for 2010"] Midwest Sports Fans from November 8, 2010</ref> |
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==Professional football== |
==Professional football== |
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{{See also|NFL on Thanksgiving Day|Thanksgiving Day Classic}} |
{{See also|NFL on Thanksgiving Day|Thanksgiving Day Classic}} |
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Professional football teams and leagues have played on Thanksgiving from the start, with pro leagues and teams having played on Thanksgiving since the 1890s. It carried over when Buffalo and Rochester, two members of the [[New York Pro Football League]] which had held its championship on Thanksgiving 1919, and the [[Ohio League]], which traditionally held its marquee matchups on Thanksgiving, combined into the [[National Football League|NFL]] upon its founding in 1920, and as such, the NFL has played on Thanksgiving ever since. The [[Detroit Lions]] and the [[Dallas Cowboys]] have played home games on Thanksgiving since 1934 and 1966, respectively, in a [[NFL on Thanksgiving Day|traditional series of NFL games]]. Beginning in 2006, the NFL added a third game on Thanksgiving night with a rotating host team.<ref>[http://www.nfl.com/thanksgiving Thanksgiving games] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100403094240/http://www.nfl.com/thanksgiving |date=April 3, 2010 }} official page at NFL.com. Retrieved July 21, 2011.</ref> |
Professional football teams and leagues have played on Thanksgiving from the start, with pro leagues and teams having played on Thanksgiving since the 1890s. It carried over when Buffalo and Rochester, two members of the [[New York Pro Football League]] (NYPFL) which had held its championship on Thanksgiving 1919, and the [[Ohio League]], which traditionally held its marquee matchups on Thanksgiving, combined into the [[National Football League|NFL]] upon its founding in 1920, and as such, the NFL has played on Thanksgiving ever since. The [[Detroit Lions]] and the [[Dallas Cowboys]] have played home games on Thanksgiving since 1934 and 1966, respectively, in a [[NFL on Thanksgiving Day|traditional series of NFL games]]. Beginning in 2006, the NFL added a third game on Thanksgiving night with a rotating host team.<ref>[http://www.nfl.com/thanksgiving Thanksgiving games] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100403094240/http://www.nfl.com/thanksgiving |date=April 3, 2010 }} official page at NFL.com. Retrieved July 21, 2011.</ref> |
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The rival [[American Football League]] also played on Thanksgiving in the 1960s, as did the [[All-America Football Conference]] in the 1940s and the [[American Football League (1926)|original AFL]] in 1926. |
The rival [[American Football League]] also played on Thanksgiving in the 1960s, as did the [[All-America Football Conference]] in the 1940s and the [[American Football League (1926)|original AFL]] in 1926. |
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In the [[Canadian Football League]], where games are played on [[Thanksgiving (Canada)|Canadian Thanksgiving]], the CFL hosts two games in the [[Thanksgiving Day Classic]]; it is one of only two weeks each year in which the CFL plays on a Monday, the other being the [[Labour Day Classic]]. The difference between the Thanksgiving and Labour Day games is that the Thanksgiving Day games do not have the same matchups each year; however, like its American counterpart, one of the games has a regular host (in the CFL's case, the [[Montreal Alouettes]]). Coincidentally, both the [[Grey Cup]], the CFL's championship game, and the [[Vanier Cup]], the championship of Canadian college football, are both traditionally played on the fourth weekend in November, which amounts to the week before or the week after American Thanksgiving. |
In the [[Canadian Football League]], where games are played on [[Thanksgiving (Canada)|Canadian Thanksgiving]], the CFL hosts two games in the [[Thanksgiving Day Classic]]; it is one of only two weeks each year in which the CFL plays on a Monday, the other being the [[Labour Day Classic]]. The difference between the Thanksgiving and Labour Day games is that the Thanksgiving Day games do not have the same matchups each year; however, like its American counterpart, one of the games has a regular host (in the CFL's case, the [[Montreal Alouettes]]). Coincidentally, both the [[Grey Cup]], the CFL's championship game, and the [[Vanier Cup]], the championship of Canadian college football, are both traditionally played on the fourth weekend in November, which amounts to the week before or the week after American Thanksgiving. |
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The [[World Football League]] originally planned to hold its 1974 championship game, [[World Bowl (WFL)|World Bowl 1]], the day after Thanksgiving in [[1974 World Football League season|1974]]; the business failures of the 1974 season led to the league reorganizing the playoff structure and pushing the World Bowl one week back (although the WFL regularly played on Thursdays during the regular season, it instead split its semifinals between the day before Thanksgiving and the day after). Had the [[United States Football League]] completed its move to autumn for the [[1986 USFL season|1986 season]], it would have played one of its games on Thanksgiving (a game featuring the [[Tampa Bay Bandits]] at the [[Memphis Showboats]] was scheduled for that night),<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.oursportscentral.com/usfl/1986sked.php|title=1986 USFL Schedule - USFL (United States Football League)|website=www.oursportscentral.com}}</ref> but the league suspended operations prior to the season and, even if it had survived, the Bandits went bankrupt before the season would have been played. Similarly, the [[United Football League (2009–)|United Football League]], which began play in 2009, held its first two [[UFL |
The [[World Football League]] originally planned to hold its 1974 championship game, [[World Bowl (WFL)|World Bowl 1]], the day after Thanksgiving in [[1974 World Football League season|1974]]; the business failures of the 1974 season led to the league reorganizing the playoff structure and pushing the World Bowl one week back (although the WFL regularly played on Thursdays during the regular season, it instead split its semifinals between the day before Thanksgiving and the day after). Had the [[United States Football League]] completed its move to autumn for the [[1986 USFL season|1986 season]], it would have played one of its games on Thanksgiving (a game featuring the [[Tampa Bay Bandits]] at the [[Memphis Showboats]] was scheduled for that night),<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.oursportscentral.com/usfl/1986sked.php|title=1986 USFL Schedule - USFL (United States Football League)|website=www.oursportscentral.com}}</ref> but the league suspended operations prior to the season and, even if it had survived, the Bandits went bankrupt before the season would have been played. Similarly, the [[United Football League (2009–)|United Football League]], which began play in 2009, held its first two [[UFL championship game]]s over Thanksgiving weekend; both the truncated [[2011 UFL season]] and the [[2012 UFL season]] were cut short well before the Thanksgiving holiday due to financial shortfalls. The [[Fall Experimental Football League]] had scheduled its championship for the day before Thanksgiving Day 2014, in Brooklyn, but the game was cancelled after the season was shortened. |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{Reflist}} |
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{{reflist|colwidth=30em}} |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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*[http://www.TurkeyBowl.org Rancho Romero Turkey Bowl – Alamo, California] |
*[http://www.TurkeyBowl.org Rancho Romero Turkey Bowl – Alamo, California] |
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*[http://www.sportsshooter.com/news/1447 "Beyond Friday Night Lights" – SportsShooter.com] |
*[http://www.sportsshooter.com/news/1447 "Beyond Friday Night Lights" – SportsShooter.com] |
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*[ |
*[https://www.espn.com/highschool/rise/football/news/story?id=3717656 "Rivalry on Thanksgiving menu in Maine" – ESPNrise.com] |
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{{Thanksgiving}} |
{{Thanksgiving}} |
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⚫ | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:American football on Thanksgiving}} |
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[[Category:History of American football]] |
[[Category:History of American football]] |
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[[Category:NFL on Thanksgiving Day]] |
[[Category:NFL on Thanksgiving Day]] |
Revision as of 16:22, 19 August 2024
This article needs additional citations for verification. (December 2017) |
American football is one of the many traditions in American culture that is associated with Thanksgiving Day. Virtually every level of football, from amateur and high school to college and the NFL (including the CFL on Canadian Thanksgiving), plays football on Thanksgiving Day (Thursday) or the immediately following holiday weekend (Friday, Saturday, and Sunday).
Early days
Thanksgiving Day football games in the United States are nearly as old as the game—and the organized holiday—themselves. The first Thanksgiving Day football game took place in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on Thanksgiving Day of 1869, less than two weeks after Rutgers defeated Princeton in New Brunswick, New Jersey in what is widely recognized as the first intercollegiate football game in the United States, and only six years after Abraham Lincoln declared the first fixed national Thanksgiving holiday in 1863. On November 17, 1869, the Evening Telegraph newspaper of Philadelphia published the following announcement: "Foot Ball: A foot-ball match between twenty-two players of the Young America Cricket Club and the Germantown Cricket Club will take place on Thanksgiving Day at 12 1/2 o'clock, on the grounds of the Germantown Club."[1] The proximity of Philadelphia to both Rutgers and Princeton invites speculation that this game may have been played under similar rules and perhaps involved some of the same participants, or at least people familiar with the game played at Rutgers, and a second match at Princeton, earlier that month.
Princeton played Yale in the New York City area on Thanksgiving Day from 1876 through 1881.[2][3] The Thanksgiving Day football game became an institutionalized fixture of organized football in 1882, when the Intercollegiate Football Association determined to hold an annual collegiate championship game in New York City on Thanksgiving Day between the two leading teams in the association. Previously, the 'Champion' was to be determined by a team's records over the entire season against all members of the association. For at least the three previous years, the championship had been a matter of dispute as a result of Yale and Princeton playing to scoreless ties on three Thanksgiving Day games in a row.[4]
On November 25, 1897, American students of the École des Beaux-Arts and the Académie Julian played a game in Paris, France. This is considered the first American football game ever played in Europe.[5][6][7][8][9][10]
The tradition of playing football games on Thanksgiving continues to this day. At the high school level, the tradition is declining rapidly as schools drop their Thanksgiving games and shorten their regular season in favor of playoff tournaments and allowing players to focus on winter sports such as basketball.[11][12]
High school football
High school football games played on Thanksgiving are often called a Turkey Day Game or a Turkey Bowl (not to be confused with Turkey bowling), as Americans typically eat turkeys on Thanksgiving, although the title varies with each game. Most commonly these games are between high school football rivalries although in many cases, when poor weather requires a shorter season, the game can be the culmination of league play among a high-school league, in which the winners of this game will be the league champions for the year. (Statewide playoffs were generally rare until the 1970s and 1980s, which allowed for longer regular seasons.) The custom dates back more than 100 years and is particularly prevalent in the Northeast. In most cases, games are contested with kickoff times as early as 9 a.m., allowing the participants to have the rest of the holiday off.
This list is sorted alphabetically, first by state, and then by school, with team leading the series listed first wherever possible. State and regional championship tournaments are listed ahead of rivalries. If the rivalry involves two states, the rivalry is listed under the school whose state comes first alphabetically (e.g. a New Jersey-Pennsylvania rivalry is listed under New Jersey).
California
- San Jose Big Bone Game (no longer held on Thanksgiving)
- The only Thanksgiving high school rivalry game to be played west of the state of Missouri, this game dates to 1943 and is played in San Jose, California each Thanksgiving at 11 am. The game pits Abraham Lincoln High School against San Jose High School. The "Big Bone" in question is the femur of a cow that was retrieved from a butcher shop. Lincoln leads the series 38–24. The game is preceded the week prior with the "Little Bone Game", played between the two junior varsity teams. The game has been lopsided in its last years, with Lincoln winning the last 22 contests in a row through its final playing in 2019.[13] After Lincoln opted to enter a statewide playoff tournament, it announced in 2021 it would no longer contest the game on Thanksgiving and instead move the contest to Labor Day.[14]
- San Francisco Turkey Bowl
- Also in the San Francisco Bay Area, the Turkey Bowl in San Francisco dates back to 1924 and currently is played at Kezar Stadium each Thanksgiving at 11 am. The Turkey Bowl is the city's public high school championship game. Galileo High School has the most overall wins in the game (16) after breaking Lincoln High School's record four-game winning streak in 2009.[15][16] Twice in the contest's 93-year history has the game been canceled: in 1963 because of the assassination of John F. Kennedy, and in 2017 because of wildfires pushing the regular season and playoff schedule a week later.[17]
Connecticut
Connecticut has at least 48 Thanksgiving games.[18] Some of the better known ones are as follows:
- Ansonia vs. Naugatuck
- Ansonia High School and Naugatuck High School have played each other since 1900. Ansonia leads the series, 72–35–11, as of 2016. The game is, as of 2015, broadcast on WATR.
- Branford v. East Haven
- In the battle of two gritty, working-class Italian American towns each with a buzzing mascot, the Branford Hornets meet the East Haven Yellow Jackets in a rivalry that is must-see along the shoreline if for nothing more than East Haven marching band halftime performance.
- Bristol Central vs. Bristol Eastern
- Bristol Central High School and Bristol Eastern High School have played each other since 1959 in the annual "Battle for the Bell."
- Darien vs. New Canaan
- The Darien vs. New Canaan Thanksgiving matchup is generally considered the most competitive and significant rivalry game in the state, pitting Connecticut's two best teams against each other. The Darien Blue Wave and the New Canaan Rams have been rivals since 1928, their first meeting. The game has been played on Thanksgiving since 1994, with New Canaan leading the Turkey Bowl series 14-9-1 and the overall series 51–38–2. Recently, New Canaan went undefeated for 11 straight years from 2002 to 2011, but Darien won 5 straight from 2012 to 2016. The 2017 matchup, marred by the arrests of three Darien starters the day before (all three did not play), was won by New Canaan 27–0. Due to the large crowds that attend the game (up to 10,000 people), it is usually played either in New Canaan's Dunning Stadium (which needs to be temporarily expanded in order to fit the crowds) or Stamford's Boyle Stadium, which can hold 10,000 spectators.
- Fairfield Ludlowe vs. Fairfield Warde
- The two in-town rivals meet annually on Thanksgiving, often drawing the largest crowds of the season for each team, including students, families, and various town officials. The history of Fairfield Thanksgiving football dates back to 1975, when the two schools (then known as the Roger Ludlowe Flying Tigers and the Andrew Warde Crimson Eagles) fought to a 28-6 Warde victory. The rivalry endured a hiatus from 1985 to 2004, when the two schools merged, until they split again in 2005 to renew the matchup with a 20–14 victory for the newly named Ludlowe Falcons over the Warde Mustangs.
- Guilford vs. Daniel Hand (Madison)
- Madison split out of what was East Guilford and since these two teams have begun playing annually Guilford has only won 7 of the match-ups, Guilford tends to be a below .500 team whereas Hand is typically a near perfect team. Hand is always favored, however Guilford always gets pumped up for this final game.
- Hamden vs. Notre Dame West Haven
- The annual Green Bowl game that takes place every Thanksgiving.
- Hartford Public vs. Weaver
- Played annually at Dillon Stadium in Hartford.
- Norwich Free Academy vs. New London High School
- Is both the nation's oldest rivalry in the nation had the most games (155), if mergers are counted with their predecessors. The first game in what is now Ye Olde Ball Game[19] was played in 1875 between NFA and the Bulkeley School for Boys in New London and continued until 1951 when Bulkeley merged with Chapman Tech to become New London High. NFA leads the series, NFA leads series, 78–65–11.[20]
- Shelton vs. Derby
- Shelton and Derby have played each other since 1904.
- Staples vs. Greenwich
- Stonington vs. Westerly, Rhode Island
- Tied with NFA-New London for the most games (155) with Stonington leading Westerly 74-72–17 as of 2023. However, when strictly looking at Thanksgiving Turkey day games Westerly leads 50–44–9.[20]
- Wilbur Cross vs. Hillhouse
- New Haven's two largest high schools, Hillhouse High School and Wilbur Cross High School, meet every Thanksgiving in the "Elm City Bowl".
- Masuk vs. Newtown
- This game has decided the winner of SWC championship the past two years, with Masuk winning by a combined score of 88–7.
- Stratford vs. Bunnell
- In town rivalry, annual attendance of 3,000 or more people. A number of players involved in this game have gone on to NFL careers. Including Marcus Easley and Mark Harrison
- New Milford vs New Fairfield
- Longtime rivals that have played each other for decades but have been playing each other on Thanksgiving morning since 2007. Winner of game is awarded the "Candlewood Cup" trophy which is named for the lake that separates the two towns. New Fairfield currently holds a 7–2 series lead on Thanksgiving.
District of Columbia
- District championship game
- The District of Columbia Interscholastic Athletic Association holds its annual city high school championship game on Thanksgiving weekend.[21]
- Gonzaga vs. St. John's
- An annual game occurs between Gonzaga College High School and St. John's College High School, two Catholic high schools in the Washington, D.C. area. The rivalry dates to 1893.
Florida
- Plant v. Hillsborough (no longer played on Thanksgiving)
- Hillsborough High School and Henry B. Plant High School, two teams in Tampa, Florida, used to play a rivalry game on Thanksgiving until 1974, after which the state playoffs forced the teams to move the game into season. At its peak the game was held at Tampa Stadium.[22]
Georgia
- Savannah v. Benedictine Military School (no longer played on Thanksgiving)
- An annual Thanksgiving Day game between Savannah High School and Benedictine Military School was played at what is now Grayson Stadium from 1927 until 1959.[23]
Maine
Maine has only one Thanksgiving football game
- Portland High School vs. Deering High School
- This is the only annual Thanksgiving game played in Maine.[citation needed] First held in 1911, this annual game pits cross town rivals Deering High School Rams and Portland High School Bulldogs against each other at Fitzpatrick Stadium
Maryland
Maryland is home to one of the Oldest rivalries nationally, also known to be two of the oldest rivalries in the Southeastern United States.
- Loyola Blakefield vs. Calvert Hall College
- Calvert Hall College and Loyola Blakefield, both private high schools in Towson, Maryland have played an annual football game on Thanksgiving Day known as the "Turkey Bowl." The 100-year-old tradition is the oldest continuous Catholic prep-school football rivalry in the United States. The game is currently held at Johnny Unitas Stadium at Towson University (However, Previously played at M&T Bank Stadium), home of the Baltimore Ravens. As of the 2023 edition, The Loyola Dons have the overall lead over the Calvert Hall Cardinals in the Turkey Bowl, with a record of 51–44–8. It is televised on the local ABC affiliate, WMAR 2.
- Baltimore Polytechnic Institute (Poly) vs. Baltimore City College (City)
- In 1889, the game was played between City and Poly, then located on Courtland Street just a short distance from City. This led to one of the longest continuous public high school American football rivalry in the nation. In the early 1900s the game was played on Thanksgiving Day and when Memorial Stadium was built in 1954 the game was played there until the stadium was demolished in 2000. The games played at Memorial stadium during the 1960s drew an average of 25,000 fans. In 1965, 27,500 fans saw quarterback Kurt Schmoke and team captain Curt Anderson lead City to a 52–6 win over Poly. The Thanksgiving tradition ended in 1993 when both City and Poly joined the Maryland Public Secondary Schools Athletic Association which held its playoffs during the Thanksgiving week, requiring both schools to move their rivalry to a date three weeks earlier. The game is now played at M&T Bank Stadium, in downtown Baltimore the first week of November. Anderson (City) and Baltimore attorney Warren Brown (Poly) have kept the Turkey Day tradition alive between the two schools by sponsoring a flag football game at 9 am every Thanksgiving morning at Baltimore's Herring Run Park. For the past 30 years any former Poly student, football player or not, faces off against a team made up of former City students. Brown and Anderson no longer play, but their sons do.
Massachusetts
In Massachusetts, where high school football is not nearly the draw it is in other parts of the country, the Thanksgiving Day game is a long-standing tradition that brings out thousands of alumni and other fans. Virtually every school in the Bay State has a traditional rival and the holiday game is a focal point for all of them, no matter how unsuccessful the regular season may have been.
- Abington vs. Whitman-Hanson
- Abington High School and Whitman-Hanson Regional High School have faced off on Thanksgiving Day since 1910. The 100th meeting between these two schools was played at Whitman in 2010. Whitman-Hanson has won 57 of the one hundred games played.
- Agawam vs. West Springfield
- Since 1924, the two schools have met every year but 1949.
- Algonquin vs. Westboro
- Athol vs Ralph C Mahar Regional
- The public high schools of Athol and Orange, MA first met on the football field in 1894. The rivalry has been continuous since 1944. Orange High School became Ralph C Mahar Regional School in 1957.
- Andover vs. North Andover
- Andover High School and North Andover High School will start playing each other again on thanksgiving in 2015 at North Andover. These two were thanksgiving rivals up to 1970 when the rivalry ended when North Andover switched leagues. This ended Andovers classic thanksgiving rivalry with Central Catholic High School. In which case Central winning the last battle in 2014.
- Archbishop Williams vs. Cardinal Spelman
- Ashland vs. Hopkinton
- Attleboro vs. North Attleborough
- Barnstable vs. Falmouth
- Barnstable High School and Falmouth High School have played each other since 1895.
- Bartlett (Webster) vs. Southbridge
- These two schools are regular Thanksgiving rivals; their game is broadcast on WQVR.
- Bellingham vs. Norton
- Belmont vs. Watertown
- Beverly vs. Salem
- Salem High School and Beverly High School have played each other since 1891. The 100th meeting between the two schools in 1998 at Hurd Stadium attracted over 11,000 fans.
- Durfee (Fall River) vs. New Bedford
- New Bedford High School and B.M.C. Durfee of Fall River have contested this rivalry since 1893. WNBH currently holds broadcast rights.
- BC High vs. Catholic Memorial
- Boston College High School vs. Catholic Memorial School rivalry, with both all-male schools drawing students from similar seas. The winner of the game wins the Pumpkin Trophy.
- Bedford vs. Burlington
- Braintree vs. Milton
- Braintree High School and Milton High School have played each other on Thanksgiving since 1920. Milton leads 44–39–1.
- Billerica vs. Chelmsford
- Chelmsford High School and Billerica Memorial High School have faced off against each other annually since 1927.
- Carver vs. Middleborough
- Chicopee vs. Holyoke
- Chicopee High School and Holyoke High School no longer play on thanksgiving. Chicopee plays Chicopee Comprehensive and Holyoke battles South Hadley.
- Concord-Carlisle Regional vs. Lexington
- Cohasset vs. Hull
- Cohasset High School and Hull High School have played each other on Thanksgiving since the 1920s.
- Dennis-Yarmouth vs. Nauset Regional
- Dedham vs. Norwood
- Dover-Sherborn vs. Medfield
- Boston English vs. Boston Latin
- The rivalry between English High School of Boston and Boston Latin School dates to 1887. It is played annually at Harvard Stadium.
- Fairhaven vs. Dartmouth
- Fitchburg vs. Leominster
- Leominster High School and Fitchburgh High School have played since 1894. As of 2021, it has been contested on Thanksgiving 125 times, out of 140 total matches.
- Franklin vs. King Philip Regional High School
- Georgetown vs. Manchester-Essex Regional High School.
- Gloucester vs. Danvers
- Greenfield vs. Turners Falls Regional
- They have faced each other every Thanksgiving since 1926. As of 2019, Turners Falls suspended its football program and Greenfield now host Turners Falls Regional along with Mohawk Trail Regional and Pioneer Valley Regional in a 4 team cooperate.
- Hamilton-Wenham vs. Ipswich
- Haverhill vs. Lowell
- This game is one of the few to be broadcast live. It is carried on radio, and online, by WCAP, Lowell's radio station.
- Longmeadow vs. East Longmeadow
- Longmeadow High School and East Longmeadow High School
- Lawrence vs. Central Catholic
- Lynnfield vs. North Reading
- Lynnfield High School and North Reading High School
- Lynn English vs. Lynn Classical
- Inter-city High School rivalry between the two Lynn public high schools
- Marlborough vs. Hudson
- Marlborough High School and Hudson High School have played since 1904.
- Medford vs. Malden
- This rivalry has been contested since 1889.
- Medway vs. Millis
- Melrose vs. Wakefield
- Natick vs. Framingham
- Needham vs. Wellesley
- Since 1882, the Rockets and Raiders have been playing in the oldest public school football rivalry in the country.
- Newburyport vs. Amesbury
- These two teams have played each other 107 times as of 2021 with Newburyport holding the edge 56–42–9.
- Newton North vs. Brookline
- These two teams have been duking it out on Turkey Day since 1894, and is one of the oldest traditions in Massachusetts. As of 2021, Newton North leads the rivalry 68–54–6.
- Newton South vs. Lincoln-Sudbury
- Old Colony RVT vs. Tri-County RVT.
- Pentucket Regional vs. Triton Regional
- Teams have played since 1971. Pentucket has won 36 of the 54 contests, including on the way to winning the Super Bowl in 1999. There has been only 1 tie.
- Plymouth North vs. Plymouth South
- Quincy vs. North Quincy
- This game has brought the people of Quincy out since 1932.
- Stoneham vs. Reading "The Turkey Bowl"
- Teams have played since 1899. Reading leads the series 69–27–8.
- Stoughton vs. Canton
- Teams have played each since 1926, with Stoughton currently leading 54-45-4 as of the 2021 season.
- Taunton vs. Milford
- Tewksbury vs. Wilmington
- Wayland vs. Weston
- These two teams have played each other 88 times as of 2021.[24] Wayland leads the series 55–30–3.[25]
- Westwood vs. Holliston
- Winchester vs. Woburn
- Winchester High School and Woburn Memorial High School's football teams have played each other 120 times since their first meeting in 1891 in one of the oldest rivalries in the country, one that is largely a friendly one.[19] Winchester leads the all-time 55–53–12. Interestingly, six of the twelve ties have been scoreless, occurring in 1911, 1929, 1931, 1932, 1935, and 1965.
Michigan
- Michigan High School Athletic Association State Championships
- The state's high school football championships fall on Black Friday and the Saturday after Thanksgiving at Ford Field in Detroit. This coincides with the Detroit Lions' annual Thanksgiving Day game (see below). Eight championship games are played, one for each division (Division 1–8). Prior to the institution of state playoffs in 1975, many schools played rivalry games on Thanksgiving Day or the Friday following. A very few schools would play Thanksgiving Saturday, but this was rare due to efforts to avoid conflicts with the Michigan-Ohio State college game which historically dominated sporting attention in the state.
- Adrian High School Alumni
- Every Black Friday, the alumni of Adrian High School's varsity football program and other athletic teams meet at the center of the school track for an annual battle for (touch)football supremacy. This game has happened annually since November 1999.
Missouri
- Show-Me Bowl
- The state championships of Missouri high school football are held on the Friday and Saturday following Thanksgiving under the name "Show Me Bowl." There are seven games, one to decide the championship for each class, ranging from "Class 1" to "Class 6" and an eight-man football class. Held at the Dome at America's Center in St. Louis until that stadium's primary tenant (the Rams) abandoned the stadium in 2016, future versions of the Show-Me Bowl will be held at rotating venues, with Plaster Sports Complex on the campus of Missouri State University hosting the 2016 contest and Faurot Field on the campus of the University of Missouri hosting in 2017; the eight-man class will from that point forward be held at a separate site.
- Webster Groves vs. Kirkwood Turkey Day Game
- Kirkwood High School's Pioneers and Webster Groves High School's Statesmen, two teams based in the suburbs of St. Louis, has traditionally been played on Thanksgiving since 1907. The contest between
- Excelsior Springs Mineral Water Bowl (no longer a high school game or played on Thanksgiving)
- From 1948 to 1951, Excelsior Springs High School hosted other high school teams at its campus on Thanksgiving. As the state of Missouri did not officially sanction the contest out of concern for student-athletes' well-being, the event was forcibly canceled in 1951. These four games served as the beginning of the Mineral Water Bowl, which in 1954 was switched to a small college football bowl game that continued to be played, in December, each year in Excelsior Springs through 2019.[26]
New Hampshire
- Manchester city championship (Turkey Bowl)
- Gill Stadium in Manchester, New Hampshire hosts an annual turkey bowl between the city's two top ranked teams in the regular season. Manchester Central High School has appeared as the opponent in all but seven of the 38 contests played through 2019, with the matchup of Central against Trinity being the most frequent to appear.[19]
New Jersey
- Atlantic City vs. Holy Spirit
- Asbury Park vs. Neptune
- Known as the "'Hood Championship," this contest, dating to the 1920s, was canceled in 2017, following years of escalating tensions and threats of legitimate violence for that year's contest.[27]
- Hamilton High School West vs. Steinert High School
- Played annually on Thanksgiving Day since 1958 as this is the crosstown rivalry in Hamilton Township (Mercer County). The game in odd numbered years is played at Hamilton West, and at Steinert during even numbered years, the game traditionally starts at 10:30 a.m., and is streamed on WBCB.
- Hackensack High School vs. Teaneck High School
- have played annually every Thanksgiving morning since 1931.[28]
- Don Bosco Prep vs. Paramus Catholic / Saint Joseph Regional High School
- Don Bosco Preparatory High School in Ramsey, one of the top high school football programs in the United States, and Paramus Catholic High School were traditional Thanksgiving rivals until 2013.[29] Fox Sports 1 carried the 2013 contest nationwide. Don Bosco Prep instead planned to host Saint Joseph Regional High School on Thanksgiving in 2014 (the contest was postponed to the following Saturday in any event, due to inclement weather). Due to numerous scheduling snafus, Don Bosco did not schedule any Thanksgiving game for 2015.
- Dumont vs. Tenafly
- ...
- Phillipsburg vs. Easton, Pennsylvania
- Phillipsburg High School and Easton High School have been playing each other since 1905 in a rivalry billed as The State Line Game.[19] The first Thanksgiving Day meeting was in 1916 and the schools have played each other annually ever since. The winner of the game is presented with the Forks of the Delaware Trophy, as both schools are located from different states (Phillipsburg from NJ, Easton from PA) on opposite sides of the Delaware River. The game is played each year at Fisher Field located on the campus of Lafayette College as a neutral site.[18] The game was previously nationally televised (the 2006 contest was carried on ESPN's High School Showcase); as of 2015, it is carried on radio by WEEX and televised by WFMZ-TV. A rematch of the 1993 Easton-Phillipsburg Thanksgiving contest was the inaugural game in Gatorade's REPLAY the Series on April 26, 2009.
- Ridgewood vs. Paramus
- Ridgewood High School and Paramus High School was played every Thanksgiving morning annually from 1984 to 2013. Paramus had played continuously every Thanksgiving from 1962 onward until deciding after the 2013 season not to partake in any more games on the holiday. The school determined that the contest interfered with their participation in the state championship and refused to compromise the integrity of the match by resting the starters.[30]
- East Orange vs. Barringer
- East Orange High School and Barringer High School have played since 1897.
- Millville vs. Vineland
- The state's oldest, this rivalry has been contested since 1893, with Vineland leading the series 64–63–19, heading into the 2017 game.[31] WMGM-TV carried the 2016 contest live, and the 2017 and 2018 contests were carried by WACP and sister station WSNJ; the game went unbroadcast in 2019.
- Westfield vs. Plainfield
- Westfield and Plainfield has been played since 1900 and celebrated its 100th game in 2005.
- Watchung Hills vs. Ridge
- A game formally played the day before Thanksgiving, as the two rivals weren't in the same division for football. When they both became members of the same division in 2008, they began regular-season play. The venue alternated between the two schools' stadiums every year, with the last game in 2007 played at Ridge.
- North Plainfield vs. South Plainfield
- The game is played on Thanksgiving morning each year.
- East Brunswick vs. Old Bridge
- East Brunswick High School and Old Bridge High School compete annually in the Battle Of Route 18 football game. The rivalry began in 1994 when Cedar Ridge High School and Madison Central High School merged into Old Bridge High School, and has since played East Brunswick every year on Thanksgiving morning. The contests alternates home field advantage each year, and each side awards an offensive and defensive MVP.
- Palmyra High School and Burlington City High School
- have played on Thanksgiving since the 1930s; the rivalry began in 1908, and is one of the oldest high school rivalries in the Delaware Valley. Palmyra leads the series 52–45–12.
- Salem vs. Woodstown
- Played Thanksgiving Day every year at 10:30, started in 1911, next year will be the 100th anniversary.
- Madison vs. Millburn (abolished)
- Alternated fields each year. The mayors typically make bets, with the losing team providing the winners with a platter of sloppy joes. Also, the loser must wash the other team's cars without pants on. This contest ended after the 2017 competition.
- Red Bank Catholic vs. Rumson Fair-Haven
- Game played annually since 1921. Presents Peninsula Trophy to winner
- New Providence vs. Berkeley Heights
- This rivalry has been contested for only a few years, but is very popular in the surrounding areas of New Providence, Summit, and Berkeley Heights. The Turkey Bowl is usually saved by NPHS stand out athlete Vincent Fuschetto.
- Middletown South vs. Middletown North
- Middletown High School South and Middletown High School North varsity teams play annually, with the home team alternating every year. 2010 marked the 35th game played between the two schools, with Middletown South beating Middletown North 20–7. Middletown South leads the rivalry with a record of 23–11–1 over Middletown North.
- Montclair v. Bloomfield
- Montclair and Bloomfield have met annually on Thanksgiving since 1937. The 1957 contest was notable for being televised nationwide, via the remains of the DuMont Television Network in a rare color telecast with Chris Schenkel on play-by-play.[11]
- Toms River HS South vs Lakewood High School
- Shawnee High School vs Lenape High School
- Absegami High School vs Oakcrest High School
- Rancocas Valley Regional High School vs Burlington Township High School
- Haddonfield Memorial High school vs Haddon Heights High School;
New York
- State championship weekend
- The New York State Public High School Athletic Association, which sanctions all public high school football in the state, holds its statewide football championships over Thanksgiving weekend at the Carrier Dome in Syracuse. Five divisions (ranging from the largest schools outside the five major cities to the smallest districts) each have their own state title decided on the Saturday after Thanksgiving.[32] Buffalo Public Schools, representing the second-largest city in the state, joined the NYSPHSAA beginning in 2009, allowing them to contend for state championships but discontinuing their local Thanksgiving Day city championship (see below).[33]
- Buffalo Harvard Cup (discontinued)
- In Western New York, Thanksgiving was the day of the annual Harvard Cup, the city of Buffalo's high school football championship game. It ran for 106 years.[34] Games were held at All-High Stadium on the campus of Bennett High School in Buffalo and broadcast on local radio station WJJL.[35] However, the Harvard Cup was discontinued after the 2009 season when Buffalo Public Schools joined the NYSPHSAA.[33]
- Fordham Prep vs. Xavier High School
- The Xavier/Fordham Prep annual "Turkey Bowl" is one of the oldest high school football rivalries in New York history. Their very first game against one another took place in the late 1800s when the game was called due to darkness and ended in a tie. Xavier and Fordham Prep used to play many of their famed Thanksgiving Day "Turkey Bowl" Games at Manhattan's Polo Grounds until it was demolished following the construction of Shea Stadium in the borough of Queens. For many years, the game was played in Downing Stadium (now Icahn Stadium) on Randall's Island or on the campus of Fordham University in the Bronx. Most recently, in years Fordham has the home-field advantage, the game is played at Jack Coffey Field on the campus of Fordham University. When Xavier has the advantage, the game is played at the Aviator Sports and Events Center on the grounds of Floyd Bennett Field, part of the Gateway National Recreation Area in Brooklyn.
- White Plains Turkey Bowl (discontinued)
- This game between the Catholic high school Archbishop Stepinac High School and public school White Plains High School was played continuously from 1971 to 2012; White Plains High School had played other teams from around the United States as an invitational contest from 1932 to 1970. The game was traditionally played at a "neutral" field in White Plains, Parker Stadium; the last five contests were held at Loucks Field on the campus of White Plains High School. White Plains, being a public school, forfeits any regional consolation playoff appearance it may have earned, due to a limit of 10 games for high school football teams in the NYSPHSAA, but does not have to forfeit its appearance in the state championship tournament.[36] The game nonetheless had to be canceled if Stepinac advanced to their respective state championship game or White Plains won a section champions; this did not happen until 2013, when White Plains won a Section 1 title, and it happened again in 2014 and 2015 when Stepinac advanced to the Catholic State Championship both years;[37] despite the repeated cancellations, the schools insisted the series would continue.[38] A change in the state Catholic championship tournament, which opened a bye week during Thanksgiving weekend between the semifinals and the championship, allowed Stepinac to play the game in 2016 and continue to contest for the championship.[39] Prior to the 2017 season, White Plains announced it would no longer play in the Turkey Bowl to allow its players to focus on winter sports, ending an over 90-year tradition of Thanksgiving football in Westchester County, New York.[12]
- Mt. St. Michael vs. Cardinal Hayes
- Bronx Turkey Bowl: Mount St. Michael High School vs. Cardinal Hayes High School. It's been a tradition for the last 66 years. Since 1942 Mount St. Michael and Cardinal Hayes have met on each Thanksgiving Day a storied CHSFL rivalry showdown.
- Iona Prep vs. New Rochelle (discontinued)
- Played on Thanksgiving from 1949 to 2002, this rivalry contest was televised on New York City television, first by WABC-TV, then WPIX. As with the White Plains contest, New Rochelle's advancing to the state championship in 2003 and 2004 was the primary reason for the contest's abolition.[12]
- Yonkers vs. Gorton (discontinued)
- The two schools were the first to play on Thanksgiving in Westchester County from the mid-1920s until 1984.[12]
- Roosevelt vs. Saunders (discontinued)
- Another matchup in the city of Yonkers also took place from the mid-1920s to 1984. Roosevelt High School withdrew from the contest after the 1984 game, in which the team won the state title but was then upset in the Thanksgiving game.[12]
Pennsylvania
- Abington vs. Cheltenham
- Abington Senior High School and Cheltenham High School play every year on Thanksgiving morning, unless one of the two schools is in the playoffs. The two schools, representing Abington Township and Cheltenham Township, are less than 2 miles apart and have been playing since 1915. The rivalry is the fifth-oldest public school rivalry in Pennsylvania, and seventh oldest of all schools. As of 2013, Abington holds the lead, 54–33–6.[40]
- Catasauqua vs. Northampton
- Catasauqua High School and Northampton High School play a non-league game against each other every Thanksgiving dating back to 1925. The two schools are no longer within the same league, and thus the game is not sanctioned and does not count as a win/loss for official standings with regard to playoff consideration within the PIAA. The game is always considered to be Homecoming for Catasauqua, regardless of whether the game is played at home or away from their perspective.
- Chichester vs. Sun Valley
- These two high schools from Delaware County have played each other a total of 83 times, and now the rivals face each other every Thanksgiving. Sun Valley narrowly has more wins than Chichester as the series record is currently 42–41. Sun Valley has won the past three years.
- East Stroudsburg vs. Stroudsburg
- East Stroudsburg High School Southl (formerly East Stroudsburg High School) and Stroudsburg High School have been playing annually since 1945 and began their Turkey Day tradition in 1953. With the advent of district playoffs, the game was moved to the regular season for four years, then the schools agreed to play once during the season and again on Thanksgiving if neither team is in the playoffs. A little more than 2 miles separate these public high schools which allows the victor to walk home with the Little Brown Jug Trophy.
- Emmaus vs. Whitehall (no longer played on Thanksgiving)
- Emmaus High School and Whitehall High School played an annual game on Thanksgiving from 1927 until 1995. They still play each other annually, but the game is now contested during the regular season and not on Thanksgiving.
- Hatboro-Horsham vs. Upper Moreland
- Hatboro-Horsham High School and Upper Moreland High School play each other on Thanksgiving, alternating between each school as the home team. The rivalry game was first played in 1933.
- Mount Carmel vs. Shamokin (no longer played on Thanksgiving)
- Mount Carmel High School and Shamokin High School first played each other in 1893, and annually since 1934. They began playing each other on Thanksgiving in 1951. The rivalry continues, but the game is no longer contested on Thanksgiving and is instead played during the regular season.
- Nazareth vs. Wilson (no longer played on Thanksgiving)
- Nazareth High School and Wilson High School played annually on Thanksgiving morning from 1926 to 1975. From 1945 to 1968, the game was played at Easton's Cottingham Stadium as a neutral site, and from 1969 to 1973 it was played at Taylor Stadium on the campus of Lehigh University. In 1974 the game was played at Nazareth High School, and in 1975 it was played at Wilson High. The game has not been played on Thanksgiving since 1975 and the two schools have not met at all since 1993. Discussions between the two schools are in the works to renew this rivalry.[41]
- Northeast vs. Central
- This game pits two schools from the city of Philadelphia, Northeast High School and Central High School, against each other; the rivalry dates to 1892. The Central Lancers won the most recent Thanksgiving game (2013) by defeating the Northeast Vikings 6–3 in overtime. The Vikings hold a narrow all-time edge on the Lancers, 56–52–10.
- Archbishop Ryan vs. George Washington High School
- This game is a Northeast Philadelphia classic which pits the Ryan Raiders against the Washington Eagles. The two teams have met every Thanksgiving morning which can often be viewed as a second homecoming as so many alumni come back to watch the game. As of 2014, the Archbishop Ryan Raiders have a record of 28-9-1 in the series.
- Ridley vs. Interboro
- Ridley High School and Interboro High School play each other on Thanksgiving, alternating between each school as the home team. November 28, 2013 will be the 45th Thanksgiving Day football game played between these two schools This game is not held in years in which either team is currently in the playoffs on Thanksgiving Day.
- Pottsville vs. Reading (no longer played on Thanksgiving)
- Pottsville High School and Reading High School have been playing each other since 1893, and played annually on Thanksgiving from 1923 to 1977. They no longer play on Thanksgiving, but still play each other during the regular season.
- Pottstown vs. Owen J. Roberts
- Pennridge vs. Quakertown
- This rivalry game between Pennridge High School and Quakertown High School has been played on Thanksgiving morning since 1930. Carried on radio on WNPV until that station's shutdown.[42]
- Upper Darby vs. Haverford
- Upper Darby High School and Haverford High School, two public schools that are located less than three miles apart, have contested a game since 1921.
- South Philadelphia vs. Sts Neumann Goretti
- South Philadelphia High School and Saints John Neumann and Maria Goretti Catholic High School,(formerly St. John Neumann, South Catholic) have been playing each other since 1934. They have played every Thanksgiving except since 1934 except in 2001, 2011, & 2014. South Philadelphia won the last meeting in 2013. Neumann Goretti leads the all time 55–20–3.
- West Chester East vs. Henderson(no longer played on Thanksgiving)
- West Chester East High School and Henderson High School (Pennsylvania) previously played on Thanksgiving Day or Thanksgiving Eve in addition to regular season meetings between the crosstown schools. A number of Thanksgiving games were held at Farrell Stadium of West Chester University. The last Thanksgiving meeting between the schools was played in 2005.
- 94 WIP Turkey Bowl
- Each year, Sports Radio 94 WIP hosts the Turkey Bowl, where Philadelphia area schools can enter to have their rivalry game played on Thanksgiving Day and broadcast live on the station by Joe DeCamara and Jon Ritchie, the hosts of the station's morning show. The station holds a fan vote to determine which rivalry game will be played, and the winning schools receive $3,000 each for their athletic departments.[43]
Rhode Island
- Portsmouth vs. Middletown
- The two teams have played every year since 1965 with Portsmouth leading the all-time series 26–2–16–2. It is broadcast on WADK.
- East Providence vs. La Salle
- South Kingstown Rebels vs. North Kingstown Skippers[44]
- West Warwick vs. Coventry
- Barrington Eagles vs. Mount Hope Huskies (formerly Bristol)
- Burrillville vs. Ponaganset
- Central vs. Hope
- Central Falls vs. Lincoln
- Chariho vs. Exeter/West Greenwich
- Classical vs. Mount Pleasant
- Coventry vs. West Warwick
- Cranston East vs. Cranston West
- Cumberland vs. Woonsocket
- Carried on radio by WOON, Woonsocket's full-service radio station.
- East Greenwich vs. Narragansett
- Hendricken vs. Toll Gate
- North Providence vs. Smithfield Steelers vs Cowboys
- North Smithfield vs. Scituate
- Pilgrim vs. Warwick Veterans
- Rogers vs. Tiverton
- Saint Raphael vs. Tolman (no longer played on Thanksgiving)
- This game was notable for being played at McCoy Stadium in Pawtucket, a venue primarily used for baseball. The two teams play their regular season games at a field adjacent to McCoy Stadium. The rivalry ended in 2001, after 73 years, but a Thanksgiving Eve game is still held inside the stadium. Currently Saint Raphael hosts Moses Brown School on the even number years and Tolman hosts Shea High School on the odd number years. Saint Raphael led the holiday series 38–31–4.[45]
- Westerly vs. Stonington (CT)[46]
Texas
- Jack Yates vs. Phillis Wheatley (abolished)
- Played at a stadium on the site where TDECU Stadium now stands, the "Turkey Day Classic" between two schools in Houston, Texas was played from 1946 to 1966.[47]
Virginia
- Hampton vs. Newport News (abolished)
- From 1907 to 1970, Hampton High School's Crabbers and Newport News High School's Typhoon faced off against each other in one of the Hampton Roads region's most heated high school football rivalries. The imposition of a state championship tournament, coupled with the federally-ordered closure of Newport News High School for the purpose of desegregation, brought an end to the rivalry.[48]
- Woodberry Forest vs. Episcopal
- The longest-running high school football rivalry in the South takes place each year between Woodberry Forest and Episcopal High School of Alexandria, Virginia. The schools first played against each other in 1901 and have competed in over a hundred consecutive games. "The Game", as it is known, draws back many alumni and is considered the homecoming game for both schools. The 100th contest, which Woodberry won, took place in 2000, drew nearly 15,000 spectators, and was featured on ESPN.
"Turkey Bowl" games
Unorganized groups have also been known to partake in American football on Thanksgiving. These informal matches are usually known as a Turkey Bowl (not to be confused with some high school football games that also use the name "Turkey Bowl", see above, and with Turkey Bowling). These games are usually unofficiated with a flag football, street football, or touch football format.
While the games themselves are not generally nationally known, Turkey Bowls hold importance for those who participate and it is not uncommon for rivalries to last for decades.[49] Turkey Bowls are played by a variety of people including extended families,[50] college fraternities, volunteer fire departments, and local churches across the country which use the day and the game to have fun, exercise and renew old acquaintances.
College football
Thanksgiving weekend historically marks the end of the college football regular season, before conference championships and bowl games begin play in December (the Army–Navy Game is the lone exception). Today, this is only true for the top-level NCAA Division I Football Bowl Subdivision, where it has become a tradition to play a fierce rival on the last week of the regular season. At levels below the Bowl Subdivision, the NCAA begins its championship tournaments either on Thanksgiving weekend (for the Division I FCS championship) or the week before (in the cases of Divisions II and III; the NAIA, a separate body, also begins its tournament at that time). Other college football sanctioning bodies end their seasons well before Thanksgiving.
The University of Kansas and University of Missouri played the first of nineteen consecutive Thanksgiving Day football games in Kansas City, Missouri in 1892. After new conference rules that required all games to be played on college campuses, the Thanksgiving Day tradition was temporarily suspended in 1911, but then reinstituted in spurts starting in 1916 and continuing through the 1940s.
The University of Michigan made it a tradition to play annual Thanksgiving games, holding 19 such games from 1885 to 1905. The Thanksgiving Day games between Michigan and the Chicago Maroons in the 1890s have been erroneously cited as "The Beginning of Thanksgiving Day Football."[51] Since the Maroons no longer play at the Division I level, the Wolverines now play their modern-day archrivals, the Ohio State Buckeyes, during Thanksgiving weekend. Yale and Princeton began an annual tradition of playing against each other on Thanksgiving Day starting in 1876.[3] From 1945 to 1956, the Burley Bowl pitted two small colleges against each other in an unofficial bowl game.
From 1894 to 1953, Case Tech Rough Riders and Western Reserve University Red Cats played each other on Thanksgiving, playing at Cleveland Stadium. The two schools merged in 1970.
The Turkey Day Classic, a college football game between Alabama State University and Tuskegee University, has been played on Thanksgiving Day annually from 1924 to 2012 and again since 2016; as such, it has historically been known as the "Turkey Day Classic." It is also the oldest black college football classic, since the two colleges first played each other in 1901. Tuskegee University pulled out of the contest after 2012 (they were replaced by Stillman College in the 2013 contest), and Alabama State did the same from 2013 to 2015, deciding to move its homecoming to the Saturday before Thanksgiving; in both cases, the NCAA football tournaments prompted the schools to move the end of their seasons to before Thanksgiving so that they would be able to compete for the national championship should they qualify. The establishment of the Celebration Bowl for historically black schools allowed the Turkey Day Classic to resume; it was held against conference rivals Mississippi Valley State and Prairie View A&M in 2018 and 2019, respectively. Another popular black college football classic played on Thanksgiving weekend is the Bayou Classic between Grambling State University and Southern University, which is held the Saturday after Thanksgiving; for the 2017 season only, because of a hurricane earlier in the season, the Labor Day Classic between Texas Southern and Prairie View A&M was played on Thanksgiving weekend, and the two teams voluntarily agreed to hold that Classic on the same weekend in 2018. Alabama State, Mississippi Valley State, Prairie View A&M, Texas Southern, Southern and Grambling are all members of the Southwestern Athletic Conference.
Other prominent college football rivalries that take place over Thanksgiving weekend include:
- Auburn Tigers vs. Alabama Crimson Tide (the Iron Bowl)
- Ole Miss Rebels vs. Mississippi State Bulldogs (the Battle of the Golden Egg, played on Thanksgiving night from 1998 to 2003 and 2017 to 2019)
- LSU Tigers vs. Arkansas Razorbacks (the Battle for the Golden Boot), through 2013
- Arkansas has played Missouri on Thanksgiving weekend since 2014.
- Georgia Bulldogs vs. Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets (Clean, Old-Fashioned Hate)
- BYU Cougars vs. Utah Utes (the Holy War, to 2010, again in 2018)
- Colorado Buffaloes vs. Nebraska Cornhuskers (Colorado–Nebraska football rivalry, through 2010)
- Colorado Buffaloes vs. Utah Utes (Rumble in the Rockies, since 2011)
- Nebraska Cornhuskers vs. Iowa Hawkeyes (Heroes Game, since 2011)
- Oklahoma Sooners vs. Oklahoma State Cowboys (the Bedlam Series through 2016)
- This game was played earlier in the season in 2017 and 2018
- Texas Longhorns vs. Texas A&M Aggies (the Lone Star Showdown, played on Thanksgiving from 2008 until its end in 2011, also played on Thanksgiving many other times prior to 2008)
- Until 2015, Texas hosted a game on Thanksgiving night every year; after the end of the Lone Star Showdown, Texas played against TCU (for the Chancellor's Spurs) in even-numbered years and against Texas Tech in odd-numbered years.
- Texas A&M plays LSU during Thanksgiving week beginning in 2014, with the game being played on Thanksgiving night in 2014 and 2016. (see also: LSU–Texas A&M football rivalry)
- Florida Gators vs. Florida State Seminoles (the Sunshine Showdown)
- Notre Dame Fighting Irish vs. USC Trojans (the Jeweled Shillelagh); rivalry is played every year but only scheduled for Thanksgiving weekend when Southern Cal hosts; Southern Cal has hosted on Thanksgiving in even-numbered years since the 1960s. In odd-numbered years, USC typically plays UCLA, while Notre Dame typically plays Stanford.
- Clemson Tigers vs. South Carolina Gamecocks (the Palmetto Bowl)
- Virginia Tech Hokies vs. Virginia Cavaliers (the Commonwealth Cup, erratically scheduled)
- Kentucky Wildcats vs. Tennessee Volunteers (historically the Battle for the Bourbon Barrel; played annually but no longer on Thanksgiving weekend)
- Kentucky Wildcats vs. Louisville Cardinals (the Governor's Cup, moved to Thanksgiving weekend starting in 2014)
- University of South Florida vs. University of Central Florida (the War on I-4)
- Michigan Wolverines vs. Ohio State Buckeyes (The Game), played the Saturday after Thanksgiving.
- Arizona vs. Arizona State (Duel in the Desert), played the Friday or Saturday after Thanksgiving.
- Minnesota Golden Gophers vs. Wisconsin Badgers (Paul Bunyan's Axe)
- North Carolina Tar Heels vs. NC State Wolfpack (North Carolina–NC State football rivalry)
- Iowa State Cyclones vs. Kansas State Wildcats (Farmageddon, irregularly scheduled, sometimes Thanksgiving weekend)
- Army Black Knights vs. Navy Midshipmen (the Army–Navy Game; by 2006, it had moved one week, then eventually two weeks after Thanksgiving weekend beginning in 2009, to maintain its status as the last game of the college football regular season)
The frequent changing of conferences stemming from the early-2010s realignment of NCAA teams and conferences complicated the numerous rivalries that traditionally play Thanksgiving weekend.
While collegiate games have been played on Thanksgiving Day itself (with perhaps the most notable being the Nebraska-Oklahoma game of 1971), the majority of the current traditional Thanksgiving weekend college football games listed above are played on the Friday or Saturday after the holiday, in part to avoid conflicts with the NFL. Texas, as previously mentioned, has had more or less of a permanent spot on the night of the holiday itself since at least 2008.[52]
Professional football
Professional football teams and leagues have played on Thanksgiving from the start, with pro leagues and teams having played on Thanksgiving since the 1890s. It carried over when Buffalo and Rochester, two members of the New York Pro Football League (NYPFL) which had held its championship on Thanksgiving 1919, and the Ohio League, which traditionally held its marquee matchups on Thanksgiving, combined into the NFL upon its founding in 1920, and as such, the NFL has played on Thanksgiving ever since. The Detroit Lions and the Dallas Cowboys have played home games on Thanksgiving since 1934 and 1966, respectively, in a traditional series of NFL games. Beginning in 2006, the NFL added a third game on Thanksgiving night with a rotating host team.[53]
The rival American Football League also played on Thanksgiving in the 1960s, as did the All-America Football Conference in the 1940s and the original AFL in 1926.
In the Canadian Football League, where games are played on Canadian Thanksgiving, the CFL hosts two games in the Thanksgiving Day Classic; it is one of only two weeks each year in which the CFL plays on a Monday, the other being the Labour Day Classic. The difference between the Thanksgiving and Labour Day games is that the Thanksgiving Day games do not have the same matchups each year; however, like its American counterpart, one of the games has a regular host (in the CFL's case, the Montreal Alouettes). Coincidentally, both the Grey Cup, the CFL's championship game, and the Vanier Cup, the championship of Canadian college football, are both traditionally played on the fourth weekend in November, which amounts to the week before or the week after American Thanksgiving.
The World Football League originally planned to hold its 1974 championship game, World Bowl 1, the day after Thanksgiving in 1974; the business failures of the 1974 season led to the league reorganizing the playoff structure and pushing the World Bowl one week back (although the WFL regularly played on Thursdays during the regular season, it instead split its semifinals between the day before Thanksgiving and the day after). Had the United States Football League completed its move to autumn for the 1986 season, it would have played one of its games on Thanksgiving (a game featuring the Tampa Bay Bandits at the Memphis Showboats was scheduled for that night),[54] but the league suspended operations prior to the season and, even if it had survived, the Bandits went bankrupt before the season would have been played. Similarly, the United Football League, which began play in 2009, held its first two UFL championship games over Thanksgiving weekend; both the truncated 2011 UFL season and the 2012 UFL season were cut short well before the Thanksgiving holiday due to financial shortfalls. The Fall Experimental Football League had scheduled its championship for the day before Thanksgiving Day 2014, in Brooklyn, but the game was cancelled after the season was shortened.
References
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External links
- Webster Groves – Kirkwood Turkey Day Game Info
- Annual Grand Junction Pizza Turkey Day Game - Since 1980 - Dallas, Texas
- The Turkey Bowl – Cleveland, Ohio
- Rancho Romero Turkey Bowl – Alamo, California
- "Beyond Friday Night Lights" – SportsShooter.com
- "Rivalry on Thanksgiving menu in Maine" – ESPNrise.com