Minnesota–Penn State football rivalry

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

SportFootball
First meetingSeptember 4, 1993
No. 17 Penn State 38–20
Latest meetingNovember 22, 2022
No. 16 Penn State 45–17
Next meetingNovember 23, 2024 in Minneapolis
Stadiums
TrophyGovernor's Victory Bell
Statistics
Meetings total16
All-time seriesPenn State leads 10–6 (.625)
Largest victoryPenn State, 56–3 (1994)
Longest win streakPenn State, 4 (1993–1998, 2005–2010)
Minnesota, 4 (1999–2004)
Current win streakPenn State, 1 (2022–present)

The Minnesota–Penn State football rivalry is an American college rivalry game between the Minnesota Golden Gophers of the University of Minnesota (UMN), and the Penn State Nittany Lions of the Pennsylvania State University (PSU). The winner of the game is awarded the Governor's Victory Bell.

Locations of Minnesota and Penn State

History[edit]

The Governor's Victory Bell was first presented in 1993 to commemorate Penn State's entry into the Big Ten Conference, with their first league game coming against Minnesota.[1] Penn State won the trophy during the first four matchups, Minnesota the next four, and Penn State the next four after that. In 2008, Penn State recorded the first shutout of the series when they beat Minnesota 20–0; the previous low score for each team was 3 for Minnesota in 1994 and 7 for Penn State in 2004.

In 2010, after the University of Nebraska–Lincoln joined the Big Ten as its 12th member, the conference was split into two divisions. Penn State and Minnesota were placed in different divisions[2] and thus, beginning in 2011, the rivalry would be held only four times every ten years. In 2014, the University of Maryland, College Park and Rutgers University joined the Big Ten and in 2016, the conference increased its schedule to nine games. Currently, the two schools will play each other at least twice during every six-year scheduling cycle. Penn State leads the series 10–6.

In 2019, both teams were undefeated with Penn State ranked #4 and Minnesota #17. This was the first matchup in which both teams were ranked. The game went down to the wire and ended with a dramatic interception by the Gophers in their own end zone to win 31–26. Unlike the 1999 game, there was no post-game collapse by Penn State, their only remaining loss was to cross-state rival Ohio State.

Game results[edit]

Rankings are from the AP Poll.

Minnesota victoriesPenn State victoriesTie games
No.DateLocationWinnerScore
1 September 4, 1993 University Park, PA No. 17 Penn State 38–20
2 September 3, 1994 Minneapolis, MN No. 9 Penn State 56–3
3 October 18, 1997 University Park, PA No. 1 Penn State 16–15
4 October 10, 1998 Minneapolis, MN No. 13 Penn State 27–17
5 November 6, 1999 University Park, PA Minnesota 24–23
6 October 7, 2000 Minneapolis, MN Minnesota 25–16
7 September 27, 2003 University Park, PA No. 24 Minnesota 20–14
8 October 2, 2004 Minneapolis, MN No. 18 Minnesota 16–7
9 October 1, 2005 University Park, PA Penn State 44–14
No.DateLocationWinnerScore
10 October 7, 2006 Minneapolis, MN Penn State 28–27OT
11 October 17, 2009 University Park, PA No. 14 Penn State 20–0
12 October 23, 2010 Minneapolis, MN Penn State 33–21
13 October 9, 2013 Minneapolis, MN Minnesota 24–10
14 October 1, 2016 University Park, PA Penn State 29–26OT
15 November 9, 2019 Minneapolis, MN No. 17 Minnesota 31–26
16 November 22, 2022 University Park, PA No. 16 Penn State 45–17
Series: Penn State leads 10–6[1][3]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "The Governor's Victory Bell - Minnesota vs. Penn State". Gophersports.com. May 21, 2018. Retrieved May 15, 2024.
  2. ^ "Big Ten Announces Football Division Alignments and 2011 and 2012 Conference Schedules - BIG TEN CONFERENCE Official Athletic Site". Archived from the original on February 12, 2013. Retrieved September 3, 2010.
  3. ^ "Football History vs University of Minnesota from Sep 4, 1993 - Oct 22, 2022". gopsusports.com. Retrieved May 15, 2024.