MSNBC: The Border War never mattered more
Kansas City, where thousands of Jayhawks and Tigers manage to co-exist, is ground zero for one of the most passionate rivalries in sports. Fitting then, that the biggest football game in the history of the Border War — Saturday's primetime clash between No. 2 Kansas (11-0) and No. 3 Missouri (10-1) — will be at Arrowhead Stadium, a split crowd that expects to be as loud as a jet.
It's setting up to be a glorious chapter in the history of the two schools. One team will be soaring in happiness when it's all done. The other will be crushed.
In case you've missed it, the University of Kansas Jayhawks square off against the University of Missouri Tigers this Saturday in Kansas City, MO, in an annual game "affectionately" known as "The Border War." Neither of these teams has been that outstanding for most of their pasts, and the intense rivalry has mainly been a regional affair. But with their #2 and #4 rankings, they're going primetime.
For those unfamiliar with Kansas City geography and history, the Border War refers to events in the 1850s leading up to the American Civil War. Missouri was a slave state, while the neighboring territory of Kansas attempted to enter the union as a free state. Missourians would flood into Kansas to vote against free state status in Kansas elections. Vigilante groups sprung up on both sides of the state line to launch attacks on each other and defend their home turf. Unlike in the East, where formal armies were marching against each other on battlefields, this was true guerilla warfare with neighbor fighting neighbor and families dividing against each other.
The Kansas City metropolitan area is split in half by the state line running north and south through the city. KU is about fifty miles west of Arrowhead Stadium (home to the NFL Chiefs) in Kansas City, MO, on Interstate 70. A little more than 100 miles to the east is MU, also on I-70. The game will be played at Arrowhead Stadium this year, and the stadium is sold out.
Now I'm not a big fan of either of these schools. I live .4 miles from the state line on the Missouri side. However, I attended graduate school at Kansas State University in Manhattan, KS. My dad and brother have graduate degrees from KU. My brother-in-law went to KU. My niece is a freshman there now. KU fanatics surround me. It is my sworn duty as a Silo Tech (KSU) member to do all in my power to ensure that Snob Hill (KU) doesn't win. Therefore, I've had a born-again experience of becoming a MU Tiger fan (at least for this week). If KU wins and goes on to win the BCS Championship game, their fans will be insufferable. I'm counting on MU to put an end to this nonsense. If they fail, there is still one more chance to knock off KU at the Big 12 Championship game. But let's get it done now!
Go Tigers!!!
Update: Also check out this article in the Wall Street Journal, The New Powers In College Football Carry Old Baggage
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