Battle for the Palladium

The Battle for the Palladium was an annual college football rivalry matchup between the Middle Tennessee Blue Raiders and Troy Trojans. The history between Middle Tennessee and Troy dates back to 1936, which was the oldest rivalry in the Sun Belt Conference when both teams were in the same league together. In 1999, the rivalry was renewed after a 46-year hiatus. The lengthy period was a result of the two programs competing in different divisions. That all changed when Troy announced it would make the move from Division I-AA to I-A and join the Sun Belt Conference, allowing the two programs to compete annually.

Battle for the Palladium
First meetingOctober 9, 1936
Middle Tennessee 19, Troy State 0
Latest meetingNovember 24, 2012
Middle Tennessee 24, Troy 21
Next meetingSeptember 2020
TrophyThe Palladium
Statistics
Meetings total20
All-time seriesMiddle Tennessee leads 12–8
Largest victoryTroy, 45–7 (2007)
Longest win streakMiddle Tennessee, 8 (1936–1953)
Locations of Middle Tennessee and Troy

With both of the program's history dating back longer than any other in the conference, the proximity between the schools, and the intense recruitment for the same players, the rivalry quickly re-ignited from 1999 to 2001. The rivalry escalated when both teams unintentionally attended the same movie theater and a few verbal taunts were traded the night before the 2001 contest. In 2003, The Palladium Trophy was introduced in Murfreesboro, Tennessee. A year later, Troy officially joined the Sun Belt Conference.

In 2008, ESPN named The Battle for the Palladium as one of the Top 5 Group of 5 conference rivalries in college football.[1]

The Palladium

Greek mythology holds that The Palladium is a wooden statue that fell from the Heavens. It was kept at the Temple of Athena in the city of Troy. According to legend, as long as The Palladium was preserved within the walls of the city, Troy would be safe and could not be taken. However, a Raider by the name of Odysseus—also known as the Raider of Cities—stole the Palladium during the Trojan War leading to the fall of Troy. In the spirit of the Blue Raiders' and Trojans' link to Greek mythology, Middle Tennessee and Troy compete in the Battle for The Palladium whenever they meet in football. Legend dictates the winner of The Palladium gains an unknown and unexplainable advantage over the other making it more difficult to regain control during future battles. The history between the two schools dates back to 1936 with the Blue Raiders owning a 12–8 advantage in the series.

History of the trophy

In 2003, alumni from Middle Tennessee undertook a grassroots effort to engage fans, alums, and the Student Government Associations from both schools to capitalize on the escalating rivalry with a trophy. The Palladium became the perfect match due to the schools' Greek Mythology ties. Middle Tennessee's mascot, Lightning, is a Pegasus-like winged horse, and the city of Troy has forever been linked to Greek Mythology. Marcia Berkall, a wood carving artists who owns Whittlins and Wood, was commissioned to replicate the wooden statue of Athena and The Palladium was born. The Palladium is approximately three feet tall and is made of basswood. Gold leaf was applied to Athena's helmet, shield and to the tip of the spear.

History of the series

From 1936 to 1953, Middle Tennessee dominated the series winning eight consecutive matchups. In those early years, the games were generally lopsided as Middle Tennessee shutout Troy in five of the eight wins. Troy earned its first win when the series renewed in 1999. In a stretch from 2006 to 2011, Troy had won six straight and seven of the past eight meetings. The last game was played in 2012, with Middle Tennessee winning 24-21. Middle Tennessee currently leads the all-time series 12–8.

The most memorable game in the rivalry came in 2006. With Middle Tennessee undefeated in conference play on the final day of the regular season and Troy hoping to beat the Blue Raiders to gain a share of the conference championship, the Trojans scored 14 points in the final 2:19 to win 21–20 in what has been called the Miracle in Murfreesboro. Middle Tennessee appeared to have throttled the Trojans high-powered offense for the entire game and led comfortably when Troy took possession with just over two minutes left. However, Troy scored a quick touchdown followed by a successful onside kick. Troy then scored the game clinching touchdown with seconds remaining preventing Middle Tennessee from winning its first outright Sun Belt Championship. Troy and Middle Tennessee shared the conference championship, but it was Troy who went on to the New Orleans Bowl. Middle Tennessee was selected for the Motor City Bowl.

Game results

Middle Tennessee victoriesTroy victories
No.DateLocationWinnerScore
1 October 9, 1936 Murfreesboro Middle Tennessee 19–0
2 October 1, 1937 Troy Middle Tennessee 12–0
3 November 18, 1939 Murfreesboro Middle Tennessee 14–7
4 October 2, 1942 Murfreesboro Middle Tennessee 20–0
5 November 15, 1946 Murfreesboro Middle Tennessee 12–0
6 November 14, 1947 Troy Middle Tennessee 41–17
7 October 11, 1952 Murfreesboro Middle Tennessee 33–7
8 October 10, 1953 Troy Middle Tennessee 6–0
9 October 2, 1999 Murfreesboro Troy State 48–31
10 September 9, 2001 Murfreesboro Middle Tennessee 54–17
11 November 8, 2003 Murfreesboro Middle Tennessee 27–20
No.DateLocationWinnerScore
12 November 20, 2004 Troy Troy 37–17
13 November 26, 2005 Troy Middle Tennessee 17–7
14 November 25, 2006 Murfreesboro Troy 21–20
15 November 20, 2007 Troy Troy 45–7
16 August 28, 2008 Murfreesboro Troy 31–17
17 October 6, 2009 Troy Troy 31–7
18 October 5, 2010 Murfreesboro Troy 42–13
19 September 24, 2011 Troy Troy 38–35
20 November 24, 2012 Murfreesboro Middle Tennessee 24–21
Series: Middle Tennessee leads 12–8
gollark: More hats!
gollark: I mean, apart from government taxation, you *could* barter.
gollark: Just send it as two messages.
gollark: S̬ͯ̃ṵ̑̐b̟̕ͅm̜̎͠i̹ͯͅt̛͎̣ ̱͇͞ṯ̵͡ơ̵͝ ̞͚̉t̟ͣͮh͉̹̽e͉̳ͪ ̭̗̩U̱̺ͩn̡͚͡i͚ͩͬċ̞̃oͩͫ̈́d̰̉̋e͏̳̇ ͚̞̓C͔̀͜oͫͧͪn̾̉̍s͍̑̈ȯ̧̟r̶ͥͅt̝ͦͣi̸̙͜ů̴̎m͋҉͕.̼̲͆
gollark: H̤a̬v͂i̇n͟g͗ ̚ȑa͛n͝d̶o̩m̢ ͊t͊ěx̸t͒ ҉m͜a͛n͘i͘p̽u͏l̢ätͥi͇ỏn̝ ͆s͓c͐r͢i̍p̉t̟s͒ ͗ǐs͍ ̢v̜ër͐ý ̭c̀o̒n̕v͐e̳n̲i̘e̸n̶t͆.͖

See also

References

  1. Watson, Graham (August 22, 2008). "Top 5 non-BCS in-conference rivalries". ESPN. Retrieved June 20, 2017.
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