Battle for the Victor's Bell
SportAmerican football
TypeCollegiate
First meeting1895
Tie, 0–0
Latest meetingOctober 28, 1995
Pacific, 32–30
StadiumsSpartan Stadium and Stagg Memorial Stadium
TrophyThe Victor's Bell
Statistics
Meetings total68
All-time seriesSan Jose State leads, 43–23–6
Trophy seriesSan Jose State leads, 29–17–2
Largest victoryPacific, 46–0 (1923)
Longest win streakSan Jose State, 9 wins (1984–1992)
Locations of University of the Pacific and San José State University

The Battle for the Victor's Bell is the name given to the now defunct Pacific–San José State football rivalry. It was a college football rivalry between the Pacific Tigers football team of the University of the Pacific and the San José State Spartans football team of San José State University.

University of the Pacific was founded in 1851 in Santa Clara, California but soon moved to San Jose, California, and claims to be the first institution of higher education in California.[1] San José State University was founded in San Jose, California in 1857 and is California's first public institution of higher education. Due to the "private vs. public" institutional competitiveness and the close geographical proximity of the two schools, a natural "cross-town" rivalry was born.

The series ended in 1995, when Pacific dissolved its football team citing cost issues.[2] At the conclusion of the rivalry, San Jose State led the series, 43–23–6 for a total of 72 matches. Beginning in 1949 the winner of the game received The Victor's Bell.

Historical overview

The Pacific-San Jose 'Victory Bell'

The 100-year series between San José State and Pacific began in 1895 with a game held at Pacific, which ended in a 0–0 tie. The first victor of the series came in 1898 when San Jose State won 18–0 at home. Pacific's first win of the series was a 34–0 in 1921 at home.

Ahead of the 1949 game, members of Pacific's Alpha Kappa Phi fraternity commissioned a bell to serve as the trophy for the series.[3] The bell is two feet tall and waist-high on a rolling cart, it featured an orange "P" for Pacific on half, and blue with a gold "SJ" for San Jose on the other half.[4]

In 1969, San Jose State became a charter member of the Pacific Coast Athletic Association (which later became the Big West Conference),[5] Pacific joined for football only, becoming a full member two years later, allowing the series to be a conference match-up.[6]

In 1992, San Jose State had their ninth consecutive win, the longest win streak of the series. In 1995, Pacific's Board of Regents voted to disband the football team to save money for the athletic program, which was reported to have gone over $400,000 in debt.[2]

After the dissolution of the series, the Victor's Bell trophy was adopted and traded between the school's basketball teams, which happened until 2009. Since 2018, the Victor's Bell has been on loan from San Jose State to the San Francisco 49ers Museum at Levi's Stadium as a part of an exhibit on Bay Area college football.[4]

Statistics

Overall, the series is notable for its large amount of blowouts, through the first 66 years (37 games) of the series the losing team only managed to score more than 7 points three times.

Sources:[7][8]

San José State Pacific
Games played 72
Wins 43 23
Ties 6
Home wins 20 12
Road wins 23 11
Consecutive wins 9 7
Most total points in a game 111 (1991)
Most points in a win 64 (1991) 46 (1923)
Most points in a loss 47 (1991) 35 (1966)
Fewest total points in a game 0 (1895, 1935)
Largest margin of victory 41 (1970) 46 (1923)
Smallest margin of victory 1 (1953, 1979, 1992) 2 (1974, 1995)
Total points scored in series 1,472 1,242
Shut-outs of opposing team 12 (1898, 1899, 1932, 1934, 1936, 1941, 1942, 1946, 1951, 1961, 1982, 1984) 7 (1921, 1922, 1923, 1930, 1931, 1947, 1968)

Game results

San Jose State victoriesPacific victoriesTie games

See also

References

  1. "Pacific's Mission". University of the Pacific. Archived from the original on October 14, 2016. Retrieved October 13, 2016.
  2. 1 2 Archives, L. A. Times (1995-12-20). "Pacific Decides to Drop Football". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2023-11-02.
  3. "'Victory Bell' Held by Hungries for Five Years". Pacific Weekly. November 20, 1959. p. 1.
  4. 1 2 Mountjoy, Nicole Grady (2021-08-16). University of the Pacific. Arcadia Publishing. p. 117. ISBN 978-1-4671-0706-8.
  5. "California Colleges Form New conference". The San Bernardino Sun. San Bernardino, California. June 11, 1968. Retrieved December 2, 2016 via Newspapers.com. Free access icon
  6. Miles, Jerry (May 16, 1969). "Pacific Eight Gets New Rival". Progress Bulletin. Pomona, California. Retrieved December 2, 2016 via Newspapers.com. Free access icon
  7. 2023 San Jose State Football Record Book (PDF). San Jose State University. 2023.
  8. Pacific Football record Book. Pacific Athletic Media relations. 2002.
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