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| current_win_streak = Case Western Reserve, 5 (2007–present)
| current_win_streak = Case Western Reserve, 5 (2007–present)
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{{Location map+ | Ohio
| caption = Locations in [[Ohio]]
| width = 295
| places =
{{Location map~ | Ohio
| label = '''Case Western Reserve'''
| position = left
| mark = Blue pog.svg
| marksize = 7
| link = Case Western Reserve University
| lat_deg = 41.504
| lon_deg = -81.608
}}
{{Location map~ | Ohio
| label = '''Wooster'''
| position = bottom
| mark = Black pog.svg
| marksize = 7
| link = College of Wooster
| lat_deg = 40.81167
| lon_deg = -81.935494
}}
}}
The '''Baird Brothers Trophy''' is awarded the winner of the annual college football game between the [[Case Western Reserve Spartans football|Spartans]] of [[Case Western Reserve University]] and the [[College of Wooster#Football|Fighting Scots]] of [[The College of Wooster]]. The idea for the trophy originated with brothers Bob and Bill Baird, economics professors at Case and Wooster, respectively, for whom the trophy is named. The winning school gets to keep the trophy, a distinctive chain of brass fish representing each game played in the rivalry, and gets to add a new fish to the chain to represent that year's game. A four-inch blue gill signified the first 21–14 narrow win for [[Case Western Reserve Spartans football|Case Western Reserve]]. Other fish represented on the trophy include a northern pike, a flounder, a carp, a walleye, a catfish, a rainbow trout, a sturgeon, a sucker, a crappie, a muskie, a sheepshead, a gar, a largemouth bass, and a smallmouth bass.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xa4EAQAAQBAJ|title=College Sports Traditions: Picking Up Butch, Silent Night, and Hundreds of Others|first1=Stan|last1=Beck|first2=Jack|last2=Wilkinson|date=19 September 2013|publisher=Scarecrow Press|via=Google Books}}</ref>
The '''Baird Brothers Trophy''' is awarded the winner of the annual college football game between the [[Case Western Reserve Spartans football|Spartans]] of [[Case Western Reserve University]] and the [[College of Wooster#Football|Fighting Scots]] of [[The College of Wooster]]. The idea for the trophy originated with brothers Bob and Bill Baird, economics professors at Case and Wooster, respectively, for whom the trophy is named. The winning school gets to keep the trophy, a distinctive chain of brass fish representing each game played in the rivalry, and gets to add a new fish to the chain to represent that year's game. A four-inch blue gill signified the first 21–14 narrow win for [[Case Western Reserve Spartans football|Case Western Reserve]]. Other fish represented on the trophy include a northern pike, a flounder, a carp, a walleye, a catfish, a rainbow trout, a sturgeon, a sucker, a crappie, a muskie, a sheepshead, a gar, a largemouth bass, and a smallmouth bass.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=xa4EAQAAQBAJ|title=College Sports Traditions: Picking Up Butch, Silent Night, and Hundreds of Others|first1=Stan|last1=Beck|first2=Jack|last2=Wilkinson|date=19 September 2013|publisher=Scarecrow Press|via=Google Books}}</ref>



Revision as of 12:23, 2 October 2018

Baird Brothers Trophy
Teams
Baird Brothers Trophy is located in Ohio
Case Western Reserve
Case Western Reserve
Wooster
Wooster

The Baird Brothers Trophy is awarded the winner of the annual college football game between the Spartans of Case Western Reserve University and the Fighting Scots of The College of Wooster. The idea for the trophy originated with brothers Bob and Bill Baird, economics professors at Case and Wooster, respectively, for whom the trophy is named. The winning school gets to keep the trophy, a distinctive chain of brass fish representing each game played in the rivalry, and gets to add a new fish to the chain to represent that year's game. A four-inch blue gill signified the first 21–14 narrow win for Case Western Reserve. Other fish represented on the trophy include a northern pike, a flounder, a carp, a walleye, a catfish, a rainbow trout, a sturgeon, a sucker, a crappie, a muskie, a sheepshead, a gar, a largemouth bass, and a smallmouth bass.[1]

In 1996, Sports Illustrated recognized the Baird Brothers Trophy as one of the most distinctive in college football.[2] In October 2012, the trophy was highlighted on ESPN College GameDay.[3]

Wooster leads the series with 13–11.[4]

The teams last met on October 22, 2011 at Wooster, a 24–21 overtime victory for the Spartans.

Game results

# Date Winner Score Location
1  September 22, 1984  Case Western Reserve  21–14  Wooster
2 September 21, 1985 Case Western Reserve 37–0  Cleveland 
3 October 26, 1986 Case Western Reserve 17–0 Cleveland
4 October 25, 1987 Case Western Reserve 20–13 Wooster
5 October 15, 1988 Case Western Reserve 38–27 Cleveland
6 October 14, 1989  Wooster  35–14 Wooster
7 September 29, 1990 Wooster 22–15 Cleveland
8 October 5, 1991 Wooster 23–20 Wooster
9 October 15, 1994 Case Western Reserve 40–23 Cleveland
 10  October 14, 1995 Wooster 14–13 Wooster
11 September 28, 1996 Wooster 21–7 Wooster
 12   September 27, 1997   Wooster   21–14   Cleveland 
 
# Date Winner Score Location
13 November 7, 1998 Wooster 42–16 Wooster
14 November 6, 1999 Wooster 31–27 Cleveland
15 September 28, 2002 Wooster 27–22 Wooster
16 September 27, 2003 Wooster 62–33 Cleveland
17 September 25, 2004 Wooster 49–7 Wooster
18 September 24, 2005 Wooster 38–21 Cleveland
19 September 23, 2006 Wooster 21–7 Wooster
20 September 22, 2007 Case Western Reserve 30–17 Cleveland
21 October 11, 2008 Case Western Reserve 28–7 Cleveland
22 October 10, 2009 Case Western Reserve 53–32 Wooster
23 October 23, 2010 Case Western Reserve 28–14 Cleveland
24 October 22, 2011 Case Western Reserve 24–21 (OT) Wooster

References

  1. ^ Beck, Stan; Wilkinson, Jack (19 September 2013). "College Sports Traditions: Picking Up Butch, Silent Night, and Hundreds of Others". Scarecrow Press – via Google Books.
  2. ^ "SPARTAN SPORTS INFORMATION – BAIRD TROPHY..." Case Western University athletics. Archived from the original on 2009-10-16.
  3. ^ http://athletics.case.edu/sports/fball/2012-13/releases/20121021sx35ey
  4. ^ "Case Western Reserve vs Wooster (OH)". College Football Data Warehouse. Retrieved 2009-10-04.