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Sunflower Showdown

The Sunflower Showdown is the series of athletic contests between Kansas State University and the University of Kansas athletic programs, most notably football and men's basketball. The name is derived from a nickname for the state of Kansas as well as the state flower, the Sunflower State.

Sunflower Showdown
SportMultiple
First meeting1898 (baseball)
TrophyGovernor's Cup (football)
Locations of Kansas and Kansas State.

The two schools compete each year for the Governor's Cup in football. The football series dates back to 1902, and has been played every year since 1911, making it the fourth-longest active series in NCAA college football.[A 1] The University of Kansas built a large advantage in the series by 1923, and leads the overall series 64–51–5 or 65–50–5 (depending on whether a 1980 forfeit by KU is counted)[1] as of the end of the 2022 season.

The men's basketball series dates back to 1907, and is the most-played series in either school's history, and the sixth-most-played in NCAA history.[2] Kansas has dominated the all-time series and leads the men's basketball series 204–95 following the most recent game on January 31, 2023. This is the most victories by one school over another in NCAA Division I men's basketball.[3] Kansas has led in the all-time series since 1922, and since 1984, Kansas leads the series 86–13.

In football and men's basketball, despite some competitiveness in the rivalries in the past, both sports have dominated by one team in the rivalry since 1990. In football, Kansas State is 28–6 since 1990. In men's basketball, Kansas is 70–9, excluding three vacated wins.

In 2010, Dillons bought the naming rights and the series was re-branded "The Dillon's Sunflower Showdown".[4]

Origins edit

 
Charles Robinson

The rivalry between the two schools can be traced indirectly back to their creation in the 1860s. The towns of Manhattan, Kansas (now home to KSU) and Lawrence, Kansas (now home to KU) both competed to be the site of the state University – required in the Kansas Constitution – after Kansas achieved statehood in 1861. Manhattan would have become the home of the university in 1861, but the bill establishing the University in Manhattan was controversially vetoed by Governor Charles L. Robinson of Lawrence. An attempt to override the veto in the Legislature failed by two votes. In 1862, another bill to make Manhattan the site of the University failed by one vote. Finally, on the third attempt, on February 16, 1863, the Kansas Legislature designated Manhattan as home to the state's Land-grant university. Yet the legislature was not done. Prodded by former Governor Robinson, the Legislature distinguished this institution from the "University" in the Constitution, and on February 20 the Legislature named Lawrence as the home to the state university (provided Lawrence could raise $15,000 and acquire not less than 40 acres (160,000 m2) of land). When Lawrence met these conditions, the University of Kansas was established there in 1865.[5]

The first recorded meeting between the two institutions in athletic competition was a little more than thirty years after their founding, in a baseball game in 1898.

Football edit

Sunflower Showdown - Football

Kansas State Wildcats Kansas Jayhawks
Originated 1902
Continuity Continuous since 1911 (6th longest continuous sports rivalry)
Overall series leader Kansas (64–52–5)
Most recent winner Kansas State
 
Bill Snyder Family Football Stadium at Kansas State

History edit

 
The KSU Marching Band performs at halftime of the Sunflower Showdown in Lawrence in 2008

The two teams had a very long history prior to the inauguration of the Governor's Cup: they began play in 1902, with only a single interruption in 1910, and have now faced each other every season since 1911, making this the fifth-longest continuous series in college football history. The four longer active series are these: Lafayette-Lehigh (since 1897), Minnesota-Wisconsin (since 1906), Oklahoma-Oklahoma State (since 1910), and Wake Forest-North Carolina State (since 1910). It is the second-longest rivalry between two public universities in the same state featuring the names "University of _ vs. _ State University" (behind Oregon vs. Oregon State).

The two schools disagree on the overall series record, though both agree KU leads the series. The difference arises from the 1980 game, which KU won 20–18 on the field. However, the Big Eight Conference ordered KU to forfeit the game after a player was ruled ineligible.[1][6] As a result, KU claims to lead the overall series 65–51–5, and KSU reports that KU leads 64–52–5.[7] KU cites NCAA policy to explain its refusal to recognize the 1980 game as a KSU win. The policy states that NCAA schools must acknowledge forfeits imposed by the NCAA or those dictated by the rules of the game, without specifically referencing conference-imposed penalties.[8][9]

The Governor's Cup is the third trophy associated with the rivalry. In 1902, in the first match-up, a "Governor's Trophy" was given to the winning team. Then, beginning in the 1940 football season, the winner of the KU-KSU contest received the "Peace Pact Trophy", which was miniature bronze goalposts. The trophy was intended to keep the winning team's student body from tearing down the loser's goalposts. These trophies were forgotten in time.

The series was largely dominated by Kansas until 1992 with the Jayhawks owning a 61–24–5 lead through the 1992 season. Since 1993, the Wildcats have dominated the series with a 27–4 record including an active 15 game win streak, the longest by either team in the series history.

Series overview edit

Statistic Kansas Kansas State
Games played 121
Wins 64 52
Ties 5 (1916, '22, '23, '66, '87)
Disputed 1 (1980)
Home wins 37 29
Road wins 27 23
Total points scored in the series 2138 1999
Most points scored in a game by one team 55 (1947) 64 (2002)
Most points scored in a game by both teams 80 (2011 – KSU 59, KU 21)
Fewest points scored in a game by both teams 0 (1916, 1923)
Fewest points scored in a game by one team in a win 5 (1909) 6 (4 times)
Most points scored in a game by one team in a loss 27 (2022, 2023) 29 (1968)
Largest margin of victory 55 (1947) 64 (2002)
Longest winning streak 10 (1956–65) 15 (2009–present)

(11 - 1993-2003)

Notable games edit

1910: The cancelled game edit

Kansas and Kansas State have played each other in football every year since 1902, except for 1910.[10] The 1910 game was cancelled after the two teams were unable to agree to eligibility rules for the contest.[10] KU coach A. R. Kennedy tried to compel Kansas State to play the game by publishing provocative comments in the Lawrence newspaper in May 1910, but Kansas State coach Mike Ahearn refused to change his school's rules.[10]

1927–1933: Road wins edit

For seven straight years, from 1927 to 1933, the two teams alternated wins, with the visiting team winning every game in contrast to the usual home field advantage in sports. In the six games from 1928 to 1933, every game was also won by shutout. The streak was ended when KSU won at home in 1934 (another shutout).

1969: First Governor's Cup game edit

Kansas State won the first contest in the Governor's Cup series 26–22 on October 11, 1969, in Lawrence, Kansas. The game was a classic in the series, contested by two high-quality teams. Kansas was coming off an appearance in the Orange Bowl the previous season, led by future Pro Football Hall of Fame running back John Riggins, while Kansas State in 1969 was an offensive juggernaut led by quarterback Lynn Dickey and running back Mack Herron. The game was not decided until the final play, when two K-State defenders jarred the ball loose from a KU receiver in the end zone. The loss sent KU's season into an irreversible tailspin, and the Jayhawks, suffering greatly from the loss of Bobby Douglass and John Zook to the NFL, finished the season 1–9, culminating with a 69-21 loss to Big Eight Conference champion Missouri at home.

Following the game, Kansas State fans tore down the goalposts in KU's stadium – an act with a long history in the rivalry, and that K-State fans would repeat in 1994 after ending an 11-game losing streak in Lawrence.

1980: The forfeit edit

On November 1, 1980, Kansas defeated Kansas State 20–18 in Manhattan, Kansas to take a 9–3 lead in the first dozen years the Governor's Cup was awarded. However, it was later determined that Kerwin Bell, a running back for Kansas in that game, was a partial qualifier despite his high school transcripts indicating otherwise and he was ruled academically ineligible at the time of the 1980 season.[11] In 1982 the Big Eight Conference ordered Kansas to forfeit three conference wins and one tie from the 1980 season, including its victory in the 1980 Governor's Cup game.[1][12] As a result, the two schools now dispute the overall record in both the Sunflower Showdown and more recent Governor's Cup series, with each school claiming victory in the 1980 game.

1987: The Toilet Bowl edit

The lone tie during the Governor's Cup era took place on November 7, 1987, in Manhattan, and is the most infamous game in the history of the series. Dubbed "The Toilet Bowl" and "The Futility Bowl" by national commentators, the game featured 1–7 KU and 0–8 K-State; the contest lived down to expectations and resulted in a 17–17 tie, which was secured when Kansas blocked a field goal as time expired.[13][14]

Following the tie, both teams lost their last two games of the season, with KU coach Bob Valesente being fired following the season. While his counterpart, Stan Parrish, kept his job, he was fired in 1988 after the Wildcats posted a 0–11 season to extend their winless streak to 28 games. Parrish's firing led to the hiring of Bill Snyder, who would shift the direction of the series in favor of the Wildcats.

1995: Two ranked teams edit

The first match-up in history of the rivalry while both teams were ranked occurred on October 28, 1995, in Manhattan.[15] The University of Kansas came into the game 7–0 and ranked #6 in the AP Poll, while Kansas State University was 5–1 and ranked #14. Both teams would finish the season ranked in the top ten, but this day belonged to Kansas State. KSU started strong and maintained the advantage throughout for a decisive 41–7 victory.

2002: 64–0 edit

Kansas State, 6–2 and ranked #14 in the AP Poll, routed Kansas in the largest margin of victory in the series by either team, 64–0, in Lawrence. The Wildcats built a 30–0 lead at the end of the 1st quarter and lead 43–0 at halftime. Wildcat quarterback Ell Roberson ran for 3 touchdowns and threw for another as the Wildcats outgained the Jayhawks 494–115. The Jayhawks also committed 7 turnovers in the loss. KSU went on to finish the season 11–2 and beat Arizona State in the Holiday Bowl, while the Jayhawks, under first year head coach Mark Mangino, finished the season at 2–10 and winless in conference play.

2004: Streak buster edit

An 11-year winning streak by KSU that began in 1993 – at that time, the longest by either team in the series – was broken on October 9, 2004, when KU won a back-and-forth 31–28 thriller in Lawrence.[16] The head coach of the Jayhawks was Mark Mangino, a former Wildcat assistant under KSU coach Bill Snyder. Mangino bested his mentor in Snyder's final visit to Memorial Stadium during Snyder's first term as KSU coach.

2007: KU wins in Manhattan edit

In 2007, KU won in Manhattan for the first time since 1989 (as of the end of the 2023 season, KU has not won in Manhattan since 2007), and also posted its only victory over a ranked KSU team. KU entered the game 4–0 while KSU had a 3–1 record, but KSU was favored in the contest and ranked 24th in the AP Poll. Kansas overcame several mistakes through the course of the first half, tying the contest 14–14 at halftime. Following a strong second-half performance by KU, the visitors from Lawrence posted a 30–24 victory. KU went on to build an 11–0 record on the season before losing to Missouri, and secured an at-large bid to the 2008 Orange Bowl.

2010: A century straight edit

For the 100th consecutive season, KU and KSU faced each other on the football field on October 14, 2010, in Lawrence. It was only the seventh college football rivalry in history played for a century straight. (Other series have subsequently reached the mark of 100 straight years or more). The game was the second since Bill Snyder returned to coach KSU and was reminiscent of earlier blowout Wildcat victories during Snyder's first tenure, with KSU claiming a 59–7 victory over KU.

2023: First ranked matchup in 28 years edit

The 2023 edition of the Sunflower Showdown was played in Lawrence and featured both teams being ranked for the first time since 1995 and the first time ever in the College Football Playoff poll era. Kansas entered the game ranked No. 25 in the College Football Playoff poll while Kansas State was No. 21. Both teams were 7-3 entering the game. Kansas State won the back-and-forth game 31–27.

Game results edit

Kansas victoriesKansas State victoriesTie games
No.DateLocationWinnerScore
1 October 7, 1902 Lawrence Kansas 16–0
2 October 3, 1903 Lawrence Kansas 34–0
3 November 18, 1904 Manhattan Kansas 41–4
4 November 25, 1905 Lawrence Kansas 28–0
5 November 23, 1906 Manhattan Kansas State 6–4
6 October 26, 1907 Lawrence Kansas 29–10
7 October 10, 1908 Lawrence Kansas 12–6
8 October 16, 1909 Manhattan Kansas 5–3
9 October 21, 1911 Manhattan Kansas 6–0
10 October 26, 1912 Lawrence Kansas 19–6
11 October 25, 1913 Manhattan Kansas 26–0
12 October 24, 1914 Lawrence Kansas 27–0
13 October 23, 1915 Manhattan Kansas 19–7
14 October 28, 1916 Lawrence Tie0–0
15 November 3, 1917 Manhattan Kansas 9–0
16 November 28, 1918 Lawrence Kansas 13–7
17 November 1, 1919 Lawrence Kansas 16–3
18 October 30, 1920 Manhattan Kansas 14–0
19 October 29, 1921 Lawrence Kansas 21–7
20 October 28, 1922 Manhattan Tie7–7
21 October 27, 1923 Lawrence Tie0–0
22 October 18, 1924 Manhattan Kansas State 6–0
23 October 17, 1925 Lawrence Kansas State 14–7
24 October 16, 1926 Manhattan Kansas State 27–0
25 October 15, 1927 Lawrence Kansas State 13–2
26 October 20, 1928 Manhattan Kansas 7–0
27 October 19, 1929 Lawrence Kansas State 6–0
28 October 18, 1930 Manhattan Kansas 14–0
29 October 17, 1931 Lawrence Kansas State 13–0
30 November 19, 1932 Manhattan Kansas 19–0
31 October 28, 1933 Lawrence Kansas State 6–0
32 October 20, 1934 Manhattan Kansas State 13–0
33 October 26, 1935 Lawrence Kansas 9–2
34 October 24, 1936 Manhattan Kansas State 26–6
35 November 13, 1937 Lawrence Kansas State 7–0
36 October 29, 1938 Manhattan Kansas 27–7
37 November 4, 1939 Lawrence Kansas State 27–6
38 October 26, 1940 Manhattan Kansas State 20–0
39 November 15, 1941 Lawrence Kansas 20–16
40 October 24, 1942 Manhattan Kansas 19–7
41 October 30, 1943 Lawrence Kansas 25–2
42 November 11, 1944 Manhattan Kansas State 24–18
43 November 23, 1945 Lawrence Kansas 27–0
44 November 16, 1946 Manhattan Kansas 34–0
45 November 1, 1947 Lawrence Kansas 55–0
46 November 13, 1948 Manhattan Kansas 20–14
47 October 29, 1949 Lawrence Kansas 38–0
48 November 18, 1950 Manhattan Kansas 47–7
49 October 27, 1951 Lawrence Kansas 33–14
50 November 1, 1952 Manhattan No. 9 Kansas 26–6
51 November 7, 1953 Lawrence Kansas State 7–0
52 October 30, 1954 Manhattan Kansas State 28–6
53 November 5, 1955 Lawrence Kansas State 46–0
54 November 3, 1956 Manhattan Kansas 20–15
55 November 9, 1957 Lawrence Kansas 13–7
56 November 1, 1958 Manhattan Kansas 21–12
57 October 16, 1959 Lawrence Kansas 33–14
58 September 23, 1960 Manhattan Kansas 41–0
59 November 11, 1961 Lawrence Kansas 34–0
60 November 3, 1962 Manhattan Kansas 38–0
61 November 2, 1963 Lawrence Kansas 34–0
62 October 31, 1964 Manhattan Kansas 7–0
No.DateLocationWinnerScore
63 October 30, 1965 Lawrence Kansas 34–0
64 October 29, 1966 Manhattan Tie3–3
65 November 4, 1967 Lawrence Kansas 17–16
66 November 16, 1968 Manhattan No. 7 Kansas 38–29
67 October 11, 1969 Lawrence Kansas State 26–22
68 October 10, 1970 Manhattan Kansas 21–15
69 October 9, 1971 Lawrence Kansas 39–13
70 October 13, 1972 Manhattan Kansas State 20–19
71 October 13, 1973 Lawrence No. 19 Kansas 25–18
72 October 12, 1974 Manhattan No. 19 Kansas 20–13
73 November 1, 1975 Lawrence Kansas 28–0
74 October 23, 1976 Manhattan Kansas 24–14
75 November 5, 1977 Lawrence Kansas 29–21
76 November 18, 1978 Manhattan Kansas State 36–20
77 November 3, 1979 Lawrence Kansas 36–28
78 November 1, 1980 Manhattan Kansas† 20–18
79 October 24, 1981 Lawrence Kansas 17–14
80 October 23, 1982 Manhattan Kansas State 36–7
81 October 15, 1983 Lawrence Kansas 31–3
82 October 12, 1984 Manhattan Kansas State 24–7
83 October 19, 1985 Lawrence Kansas 38–7
84 October 18, 1986 Manhattan Kansas State 29–12
85 November 7, 1987 Manhattan Tie17–17
86 November 5, 1988 Lawrence Kansas 30–12
87 October 28, 1989 Manhattan Kansas 21–16
88 October 27, 1990 Lawrence Kansas 27–24
89 October 12, 1991 Manhattan Kansas State 16–12
90 October 10, 1992 Lawrence Kansas 31–7
91 October 9, 1993 Manhattan Kansas State 10–9
92 October 6, 1994 Lawrence No. 19 Kansas State 21–13
93 October 28, 1995 Manhattan No. 14 Kansas State 41–7
94 November 9, 1996 Lawrence No. 13 Kansas State 38–12
95 November 8, 1997 Manhattan No. 11 Kansas State 48–16
96 October 31, 1998 Lawrence No. 3 Kansas State 54–6
97 October 9, 1999 Manhattan No. 9 Kansas State 50–9
98 October 7, 2000 Lawrence No. 4 Kansas State 52–13
99 October 27, 2001 Manhattan Kansas State 40–6
100 November 2, 2002 Lawrence No. 14 Kansas State 64–0
101 October 25, 2003 Manhattan Kansas State 42–6
102 October 9, 2004 Lawrence Kansas 31–28
103 October 8, 2005 Manhattan Kansas State 12–3
104 November 18, 2006 Lawrence Kansas 39–20
105 October 7, 2007 Manhattan Kansas 30–24
106 November 1, 2008 Lawrence Kansas 52–21
107 November 7, 2009 Manhattan Kansas State 17–10
108 October 14, 2010 Lawrence Kansas State 59–7
109 October 22, 2011 Lawrence No. 12 Kansas State 59–21
110 October 6, 2012 Manhattan No. 7 Kansas State 56–16
111 November 30, 2013 Lawrence Kansas State 31–10
112 November 29, 2014 Manhattan No. 11 Kansas State 51–13
113 November 28, 2015 Lawrence Kansas State 45–14
114 November 26, 2016 Manhattan Kansas State 34–19
115 October 28, 2017 Lawrence Kansas State 30–20
116 November 10, 2018 Manhattan Kansas State 21–17
117 November 2, 2019 Lawrence No. 22 Kansas State 38–10
118 October 24, 2020 Manhattan No. 20 Kansas State 55–14
119 November 6, 2021 Lawrence Kansas State 35–10
120 November 26, 2022 Manhattan No. 12 Kansas State 47–27
121 November 18, 2023 Lawrence No. 21 Kansas State 31–27
Series: Kansas leads 65–51–5
† K-State claims victory due to the Big Eight's determination that Kansas used an ineligible player in the game[17]

Men's basketball edit

Sunflower Showdown - Basketball

Kansas State Wildcats Kansas Jayhawks
Originated 1907
Continuity Continuous since 1912
Overall series leader Kansas (201–95)
Most recent winner Kansas

The two schools have had a strong rivalry in basketball for several decades, peaking in the 1950s. Recently, the University of Kansas has been dominant in the series, including a winning streak of 31 games over K-State that lasted from 1994 to 2005. Despite the lopsided record, the rivalry has become more relevant again in recent years, with both teams ranked in the AP Top 25 for many of the match-ups.[18]

Jeff Sagarin's rankings of the nation's top programs by decade in the ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia nicely track the history of the rivalry.[19] In the 1950s, when the rivalry was at its peak, Kansas State finished the decade ranked as the #3 program in the nation and KU was ranked as #4.[19] In the 1960s KU was ranked #9 for the decade and KSU was ranked #11. In the 1970s, the programs were again nearly even, with Kansas State ranked at #24 and KU at #25. In the 1980s some separation appeared, as KU finished the decade ranked at #19 and Kansas State at #31. The big difference appeared in the 1990s and 2000s when KU was ranked at #4 and #2 for the decades, while Kansas State does not appear anywhere in the top 40.[19]

Even when the schools are at different levels, upsets are always a possibility in the rivalry, as when Kansas State upset a KU team that was ranked #1 in the AP Poll on January 17, 1994, or when KU pulled the upset on a K-State team ranked #1 on January 17, 1953. Most recently, K-State beat a #1 KU team on February 14, 2011 in Manhattan. Over the decades, the rivalry has seen a number of notable coaches match wits, including Jack Gardner, Tex Winter, Lon Kruger and Jack Hartman at Kansas State, and James Naismith, Phog Allen, Larry Brown, Roy Williams and Bill Self at KU.

Early years edit

The teams were fairly even up until the 1930s, with the series standings at 31–27 in favor of Kansas entering the decade. During the 1930s and 40s, Kansas gained a large lead in the standings with a number of win streaks, including 22 in a row from 1938 to 1947. In 1935 Kansas tied an NCAA record by beating Kansas State five times in the same calendar year, a feat that was only accomplished one other time, when Kansas beat Nebraska five times in 1909.[2]

1950s edit

Both schools were national title contenders in the 1950s, with Kansas State starting the decade in the title game of the 1951 NCAA tournament, and KU winning the title at the 1952 NCAA tournament. One of the more notable games of the 1951–1952 season was a 90–88 overtime victory by #4 KU over #8 K-State in the 1951 Big Seven Holiday Tournament. KU returned to the national title game in the 1953 NCAA tournament missing back to back titles by 1 point, claiming the league title along the way over a KSU team that had earlier been the top-ranked basketball team in the country.

The rivalry heated up further with the arrival of Bob Boozer at Kansas State and Wilt Chamberlain at KU in the middle of the decade. In the 1955–1956 season, Kansas State split the season series with KU and won the Big Seven Conference title. The following year, Chamberlain led KU to the league title and a triple-overtime loss to North Carolina in the title game of the 1957 NCAA tournament. Kansas and Kansas State played another classic the following season, when Boozer scored 32 points in a 79–75 double-overtime victory at KU on February 3, 1958, while KSU was ranked #4 and KU was ranked #2. (When the two teams had previously met that season on December 30, 1957, they were ranked #2 and #3 in the country.) Following that season, KSU made another appearance in the Final Four. To close the decade, Kansas State swept the season series from KU on the way to a 25–2 record and a #1 ranking in the final AP Poll for 1959.

 
Allen Fieldhouse, home of the Jayhawks since 1955

During the 1950s, the two schools also engaged in one-upsmanship in facilities. In prior decades, Kansas State had played their games in Nichols Hall, which doubled as a gymnasium, livestock pavilion, and pool.[20] In the late-1940s the state Legislature approved and paid for the construction of a new and much larger basketball facility. In 1950 Kansas State opened Ahearn Field House, one of the largest basketball facilities in the country at the time, which seated 14,000 spectators. Meanwhile, KU still played their home games on a converted stage in Hoch Auditorium with a seating capacity of 5,500. In response to the construction of Ahearn, the University of Kansas successfully lobbied the Legislature to approve the construction of Allen Fieldhouse, which would seat 17,000.[21] KU opened the facility with a 77–66 victory over Kansas State on March 1, 1955.

This period also saw the beginning of the 'Sunflower Doubleheader', with two non-conference teams visiting the state to play KU and K-State at one venue one night, then switching venues and opponents the following evening. This event was held from 1957 to 1968, and featured national powerhouses such as UCLA, Xavier, San Francisco, St. Joseph's, Cal, and Marquette.

1960s and 1970s edit

The basketball rivalry between the two schools continued unabated through the 1960s and 1970s, with the two schools competing annually for the Big Eight Conference championship (see chart below). In Dick Harp's last two seasons as the KU coach, the Jayhawks plummeted to losing records of 7–18 in 1962 and 12–13 in 1963. Nevertheless, in the championship game of the Big Eight Holiday Tournament in December 1962, KU posted a surprising 90-88 quadruple-overtime victory over K-State. Also, on February 20, 1965, one of the classic pranks in the series was perpetrated when a pair of 6x12 banners saying "Go Cats, Kill Snob Hill Again" unfurled on the east and west sides of the Allen Fieldhouse scoreboard with eight minutes left in the first half. Unfortunately for the Cats, this did not come to pass, as KU beat K-State 88–66. Another popular "prank" perpetrated by Kansas State students throughout the years is throwing live chickens, painted blue and red, on the court during pre-game introductions, as a taunt at the Kansas mascot, the Jayhawk. For years the Kansas State administration has attempted to stop this practice, and following a nationally televised game on February 19, 2007, PETA complained about it in a letter to KSU President Jon Wefald.

 
Bramlage Coliseum, home of the Wildcats since 1988

1980s edit

The 1980s saw the return of star power to the schools and arguably the rivalry's most high-profile game. At the start of the decade, Rolando Blackman at Kansas State and Darnell Valentine at KU squared off in some classic match-ups. To close the decade, it was Mitch Richmond (K-State) and Danny Manning (KU) battling.

With Richmond and Manning in their senior years, the 1987–1988 season proved to be eventful in the rivalry. In the first matchup of the season, on January 30, 1988, Richmond scored 35 points to lead Kansas State to a 72-61 win to halt KU's then-record 55-game home winning streak. On February 18, KU turned the tables, prevailing 64–63 in Ahearn Field House to deny K-State a victory over KU in the old field house's last year. In what was supposed to be the rubber game, in the 1988 Big Eight Conference tournament, Kansas State won a decisive victory by a 69–54 score.

Both teams qualified for the NCAA tournament, and after three wins apiece in the tournament they faced each other on March 27 in Pontiac, Michigan, for the right to advance to the Final Four. Led by Manning's 20 points, KU turned a tight game into a runaway and prevailed 71–58. They eventually advanced to claim the school's second NCAA tournament championship.[22] That game in the Pontiac Silverdome was the first ever meeting between the 'Hawks and the 'Cats not played in Lawrence, Manhattan, or Kansas City, Missouri.

The 1990s and 2000s edit

The rivalry slipped in significance after the 1988 season, as K-State slowly declined in the Big 8 and Big 12 conferences and KU saw sustained success under new coach Roy Williams. During Williams' tenure at Kansas, the Jayhawks went 50–6 against the Wildcats. Only occasionally would K-State make some noise, such as the 68–64 win over then-#1 KU in Allen Fieldhouse in 1994.

From 1994 to 2005, KU won 31 straight games against K-State, the longest streak for either school in the series. Also, from 1984 to 2007, KU won 24 straight games on the Wildcats' home floor, the third longest win-streak on an opponent's home court in NCAA history.[2] During the latter streak, K-State won seven games against KU, but all were away from Manhattan: four games in Lawrence (1988, 1989, 1994, 2006) and three games in the Big Eight Tournament in Kansas City (1988, 1989, 1993). The streak began in Ahearn Field House, where KU won the final five meetings, and carried over into Bramlage Coliseum, where KU won the first 19 contests. KU's streak at Bramlage Coliseum came to an end on January 30, 2008, when #22-ranked Kansas State upset previously-unbeaten #2 Kansas 84–75.[23]

 
Michael Beasley, before the 2008 Sunflower Showdown

2006–present edit

When Kansas State hired coach Bob Huggins to replace Jim Wooldridge in the 2006 off-season, Huggins sought to reinvigorate the rivalry. At K-State's "Madness in Manhattan" celebration to start the 2006–2007 season, Huggins referred to KU's 23-game winning streak in Manhattan and said that "February 19th is when we break the streak."[24] However, KU swept the season series from Kansas State, and Huggins departed following the season to coach his alma mater, West Virginia University.

The 2007–2008 season presented a contrast between youth and experience. KU was led by the experienced coach Bill Self and retained a lineup of experienced players. Kansas State was led by a first-year head coach, Frank Martin, and featured one of the top-rated groups of freshman players in the nation. Prior to the season, Kansas State freshman phenom Michael Beasley boasted that "We're gonna beat KU at home. We're gonna beat 'em at their house. We're gonna beat 'em in Africa. Wherever we play we're gonna beat 'em."[25] KU came into the first match-up of the season, on January 30, 2008, with a 20–0 record and a #2 national ranking, but Kansas State prevailed 84–75, ending KU's long winning streak in Manhattan. On Kansas State's trip to Lawrence later that year, though, Kansas won 88–74, leaving Beasley's prophecy unfulfilled. Both schools advanced to the NCAA tournament at the conclusion of the 2008 regular season, and Kansas went on to win its third NCAA tournament championship.

The rivalry featured three high-profile match-ups during the 2009–2010 season. In the first game on January 30, 2010, in Manhattan with ESPN's College GameDay broadcasting live from the game, Kansas came into the game ranked #2, while Kansas State was ranked #11. KU prevailed in overtime 81–79, in a game that ESPN described as a "classic."[26][27] After the game, Kansas center Cole Aldrich said, "You're going to get done playing basketball, and you're going to look back and say, 'I loved playing that game.'"[26] The Wichita Eagle wrote that the "rivalry is back."[18] The second match-up on March 3, 2010 was the first time since 1958 that both teams were ranked in the top 5 with Kansas at #2 and KSU at #5. With number one seed implications on the line, Frank Martin called it "the biggest game we've ever played at K-State".[28] Kansas went on to win 82–65 and secure sole possession of the Big 12 Championship. The two teams met again in the 2010 Big 12 men's basketball tournament championship game with KU ranked #1 in the nation and KSU ranked #9. The Jayhawks won 72–64, completing a three-game sweep of the Wildcats and winning the Big 12 Tournament title.

 
Coach Bill Self (third from left), on the KU bench

After Frank Martin left K-State in 2012 to take the coaching job with the South Carolina Gamecocks, he was replaced by Bruce Weber, former Illinois head coach. Weber led his first Kansas State team to a co-conference championship with KU in 2013. For Kansas, it was the ninth straight league title and eleventh in twelve seasons; for Kansas State, it was the first regular season conference title since winning the Big Eight in 1977. During the regular season, Kansas swept Kansas State with a 59–55 victory in Manhattan and an 83–62 victory in Lawrence. The two teams met a third time in the finals of the 2013 Big 12 Tournament, where Kansas bested Kansas State 70–54 for the three-game sweep.

The 2013-2014 season saw a season split between the rivals. Kansas won 86–60 in the first meeting in Lawrence, and Kansas State won in Manhattan in overtime, 85–82, with ESPN's College GameDay again broadcasting from the game. After winning in Manhattan again in 2015, Kansas State had won four of the last eight at home since ending KU's 24-game winning streak in Manhattan in 2008. Kansas State has since dropped 6 of the last 7 at home.

One of the ugliest moments in the rivalry's history took place in January 2020 in Allen Fieldhouse, when a brawl erupted between KU and KSU players near the end of an 81-60 Jayhawk win over the Wildcats. The brawl started after KU's Silvio De Sousa had the ball stolen from him by KSU's DaJuan Gordon while attempting to dribble out the last few seconds of the game with a 21-point lead. De Sousa recovered to block a layup attempt and then stood over Gordon. In response to a perceived taunt, the Kansas State bench cleared followed quickly by Kansas' bench, and punches were thrown. The brawl went into the handicap seating area, knocking over fans. At one point De Sousa picked up a chair over his head, but dropped it seeing only KU players in front of him.[29] The brawl resulted in a KU assistant coach suffering a broken arm, multiple school enforced player suspensions, and separate suspensions being handed down from the Big 12.

Conference basketball supremacy edit

From 1946 through 1978, Kansas and Kansas State made the competition for the basketball title for their conference (known as the Big Six, Big Seven and Big Eight during this time) virtually a two-way affair. During this 33-year period, KU or KSU won or shared the title 26 times. The following chart shows the conference titles captured by the Sunflower Showdown schools during this span of time. Since 1991 Kansas has won or shared the Big 8[30] and Big 12 titles[31] 24 of the 30 years. Kansas and Kansas State shared the Big 12 regular-season title for the 2012–2013 season.[31]

Team Season Conference
Kansas 1945–1946 Big Six Conference
Kansas State 1947–1948 Big Seven Conference
Kansas 1949–1950
Kansas State
Kansas State 1950–1951
Kansas 1951–1952
Kansas 1952–1953
Kansas 1953–1954
Kansas State 1955–1956
Kansas 1956–1957
Kansas State 1957–1958
Kansas State 1958–1959 Big Eight Conference
Kansas State 1959–1960
Kansas
Kansas State 1960–1961
Kansas State 1962–1963
Kansas State 1963–1964
Kansas 1965–1966
Kansas 1966–1967
Kansas State 1967–1968
Kansas State 1969–1970
Kansas 1970–1971
Kansas State 1971–1972
Kansas State 1972–1973
Kansas 1973–1974
Kansas 1974–1975
Kansas State 1976–1977
Kansas 1977–1978

Baseball edit

 
Tointon Family Stadium at Kansas State University
 
Hoglund Ballpark at The University of Kansas

The schools first met on the baseball field in 1898. The all-time series record is disputed between the two schools, with the KU media guide[32] listing the Jayhawks ahead 185-176-1, while the KSU media guide[33] list the series with KSU ahead 178-169-1 (following the 2017 regular season). The discrepancy is likely the result of highly inaccurate records by both schools for the early years of the series, with games missing from both record books. For example, in the 1912 season the KU media guide states that the teams met four times with KU winning three of four. On the other hand, the KSU media guide lists only one matchup, with KSU the victor. A four-game series was the standard at the time, as both record books reflect a four-game series in 1911 and 1913. Another example is in the 1914 season where the KU record books reflect four matchups with each team winning two, while the KSU books show only two matchups and KSU the winner of both. In the 1916 season the KSU record books show a four-game series with KU winning all four, while KU books do not reflect having played KSU at all. These sort of discrepancies are frequent until the late 20s when both schools books begin to coincide.

Series standings edit

The schools compete annually in football, men's basketball, women's basketball, women's volleyball, baseball, cross country, track and field, women's tennis, rowing, men's golf, and women's golf. Kansas State does not currently sponsor fast-pitch softball and neither sponsor men's tennis. Below are the series records in the major sports that both schools currently compete in. Kansas leads the active series in all sports combined 630–505–9 according to KU or 615–510–9 according to K-State.

Sport Series record Last Result
Football KU leads 64–52–5 or 65–51–5 31-27 KSU win on November 18, 2023
Men's Basketball KU leads 204–95 90-78 KU win on January 31, 2023
Women's Basketball KSU leads 78-50 85-72 KU win on January 29, 2023
Baseball KU leads 192–182–1[34] or KSU leads 187–177–1[35] 7-1 KSU win on May 26, 2023
Women's Volleyball KSU leads 66–58–1 3–0 KU win on November 2, 2022
Women's Soccer KU leads 4-2-2 1–1 Draw on October 21, 2022
Women's Tennis KU leads 44-15 4-3 KU win on April 8, 2023
Women's Rowing KSU leads 21–15* 17-5 KSU win on April 30, 2023

† - As recorded in the K-State record books.
‡ - As recorded in the KU record books.
* From 1997 to 2012 there were two meets per year, a Fall Sunflower Showdown (KSU 7-5) and a Spring Kansas Cup (KSU 8-5). Starting in 2012 there has been a Spring Sunflower Showdown (TIED 5-5) that awards the Kansas Cup trophy.

Notes edit

  1. ^ The three longer active series are: Lafayette-Lehigh (since 1897); Oklahoma-Oklahoma State (since 1910), and Wake Forest-North Carolina State (since 1910).

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Sports People". New York Times. August 27, 1982. Retrieved 2006-10-20.
  2. ^ a b c http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/m_basketball_RB/2012/DI.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  3. ^ http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/m_basketball_RB/2017/D1.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  4. ^ "Kansas Jayhawks". Kansas Jayhawks.
  5. ^ Griffin, C.S. "The University of Kansas and the Years of Frustration, 1854-64" (English). Retrieved 2006-10-06.
  6. ^ "On Campus". Pittsburgh Press. August 27, 1982. Retrieved November 18, 2019.
  7. ^ "KSU-KU Postgame Notes" (PDF) (Press release). Kansas State University. November 18, 2006. Retrieved December 30, 2006.[permanent dead link]
  8. ^ NCAA Statistics' Policies & Guidelines (PDF), NCAA, 2013, retrieved December 30, 2013
  9. ^ Haskins, Kevin (October 24, 2006). . The Capital-Journal. Archived from the original on November 5, 2013. Retrieved December 30, 2013.
  10. ^ a b c Olson, Kevin (December 2, 2014). "1910: The lost year of the Sunflower Showdown". The Manhattan Mercury. Retrieved November 14, 2017.
  11. ^ "Lawrence Journal-World - Google News Archive Search". google.com.
  12. ^ "Forfeits and Vacated Games". College Football at Sports-Reference.com. Retrieved 2022-11-27.
  13. ^ "Jayhawks, K-State Battle to 17-17 Deadlock". Lawrence Journal-World. November 8, 1987. Retrieved October 3, 2007.
  14. ^ "Plunge Into History". Lawrence Journal-World. October 3, 2007. Retrieved October 3, 2007.
  15. ^ "Showdown Comes With High Expectations". Topeka Capital-Journal. October 4, 2007. Retrieved October 5, 2007.
  16. ^ "At Last!". Lawrence Journal-World. October 10, 2004. Retrieved October 3, 2007.
  17. ^ "Football History vs University of Kansas". Kansas State University Athletics. Retrieved 2022-12-03.
  18. ^ a b . The Wichita Eagle. Archived from the original (English) on February 5, 2010. Retrieved 2010-02-02.
  19. ^ a b c ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia (PDF). ESPN. 2009.
  20. ^ Nichols Hall
  21. ^ "Fieldhouse Built to Catch KSU, MU" (English). Lawrence Journal-World. Retrieved 2008-06-24.
  22. ^ "Rock Chalk Site" (English). Retrieved 2006-10-10.
  23. ^ "Kansas vs. Kansas State - Game Recap - January 30, 2008 - ESPN". ESPN.com.
  24. ^ . The Topeka Capital-Journal. Archived from the original (English) on 2011-09-27. Retrieved 2008-06-24.
  25. ^
  26. ^ a b "Kansas' 'Mr. Big Shot' Comes Through for KU Late" (English). ESPN. Retrieved 2010-02-01.
  27. ^ . Topeka Capital-Journal. Archived from the original (English) on 2011-06-06. Retrieved 2010-02-01.
  28. ^ "Kansas State vs. Kansas - Game Preview - March 3, 2010 - ESPN". ESPN.com.
  29. ^ "Kansas basketball fight vs. Kansas State: Brawl breaks out at end of Jayhawks' victory vs. Wildcats". CBSSports.com. 22 January 2020.
  30. ^ "bigeightsports.com - bigeightsports Resources and Information". bigeightsports.com.
  31. ^ a b "All-Time Big 12 Championships". big12sports.com.
  32. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2009-05-18.
  33. ^ KSU Baseball Season by Season Record[permanent dead link]
  34. ^ https://kuathletics.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/22_Record_Book.pdf
  35. ^ https://www.kstatesports.com/documents/2022/6/23/Series_History_UPDATED_6_23_22.pdf

External links edit

sunflower, showdown, series, athletic, contests, between, kansas, state, university, university, kansas, athletic, programs, most, notably, football, basketball, name, derived, from, nickname, state, kansas, well, state, flower, sunflower, state, kansaskansas,. The Sunflower Showdown is the series of athletic contests between Kansas State University and the University of Kansas athletic programs most notably football and men s basketball The name is derived from a nickname for the state of Kansas as well as the state flower the Sunflower State Sunflower ShowdownKansasKansas StateSportMultipleFirst meeting1898 baseball TrophyGovernor s Cup football Interactive fullscreen map nearby articles Locations of Kansas and Kansas State The two schools compete each year for the Governor s Cup in football The football series dates back to 1902 and has been played every year since 1911 making it the fourth longest active series in NCAA college football A 1 The University of Kansas built a large advantage in the series by 1923 and leads the overall series 64 51 5 or 65 50 5 depending on whether a 1980 forfeit by KU is counted 1 as of the end of the 2022 season The men s basketball series dates back to 1907 and is the most played series in either school s history and the sixth most played in NCAA history 2 Kansas has dominated the all time series and leads the men s basketball series 204 95 following the most recent game on January 31 2023 This is the most victories by one school over another in NCAA Division I men s basketball 3 Kansas has led in the all time series since 1922 and since 1984 Kansas leads the series 86 13 In football and men s basketball despite some competitiveness in the rivalries in the past both sports have dominated by one team in the rivalry since 1990 In football Kansas State is 28 6 since 1990 In men s basketball Kansas is 70 9 excluding three vacated wins In 2010 Dillons bought the naming rights and the series was re branded The Dillon s Sunflower Showdown 4 Contents 1 Origins 2 Football 2 1 History 2 2 Series overview 2 3 Notable games 2 3 1 1910 The cancelled game 2 3 2 1927 1933 Road wins 2 3 3 1969 First Governor s Cup game 2 3 4 1980 The forfeit 2 3 5 1987 The Toilet Bowl 2 3 6 1995 Two ranked teams 2 3 7 2002 64 0 2 3 8 2004 Streak buster 2 3 9 2007 KU wins in Manhattan 2 3 10 2010 A century straight 2 3 11 2023 First ranked matchup in 28 years 2 4 Game results 3 Men s basketball 3 1 Early years 3 2 1950s 3 3 1960s and 1970s 3 4 1980s 3 5 The 1990s and 2000s 3 6 2006 present 3 7 Conference basketball supremacy 4 Baseball 5 Series standings 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksOrigins edit nbsp Charles RobinsonThe rivalry between the two schools can be traced indirectly back to their creation in the 1860s The towns of Manhattan Kansas now home to KSU and Lawrence Kansas now home to KU both competed to be the site of the state University required in the Kansas Constitution after Kansas achieved statehood in 1861 Manhattan would have become the home of the university in 1861 but the bill establishing the University in Manhattan was controversially vetoed by Governor Charles L Robinson of Lawrence An attempt to override the veto in the Legislature failed by two votes In 1862 another bill to make Manhattan the site of the University failed by one vote Finally on the third attempt on February 16 1863 the Kansas Legislature designated Manhattan as home to the state s Land grant university Yet the legislature was not done Prodded by former Governor Robinson the Legislature distinguished this institution from the University in the Constitution and on February 20 the Legislature named Lawrence as the home to the state university provided Lawrence could raise 15 000 and acquire not less than 40 acres 160 000 m2 of land When Lawrence met these conditions the University of Kansas was established there in 1865 5 The first recorded meeting between the two institutions in athletic competition was a little more than thirty years after their founding in a baseball game in 1898 Football editSunflower Showdown FootballKansas State Wildcats Kansas JayhawksOriginated 1902Continuity Continuous since 1911 6th longest continuous sports rivalry Overall series leader Kansas 64 52 5 Most recent winner Kansas State nbsp Bill Snyder Family Football Stadium at Kansas StateHistory edit nbsp The KSU Marching Band performs at halftime of the Sunflower Showdown in Lawrence in 2008The two teams had a very long history prior to the inauguration of the Governor s Cup they began play in 1902 with only a single interruption in 1910 and have now faced each other every season since 1911 making this the fifth longest continuous series in college football history The four longer active series are these Lafayette Lehigh since 1897 Minnesota Wisconsin since 1906 Oklahoma Oklahoma State since 1910 and Wake Forest North Carolina State since 1910 It is the second longest rivalry between two public universities in the same state featuring the names University of vs State University behind Oregon vs Oregon State The two schools disagree on the overall series record though both agree KU leads the series The difference arises from the 1980 game which KU won 20 18 on the field However the Big Eight Conference ordered KU to forfeit the game after a player was ruled ineligible 1 6 As a result KU claims to lead the overall series 65 51 5 and KSU reports that KU leads 64 52 5 7 KU cites NCAA policy to explain its refusal to recognize the 1980 game as a KSU win The policy states that NCAA schools must acknowledge forfeits imposed by the NCAA or those dictated by the rules of the game without specifically referencing conference imposed penalties 8 9 The Governor s Cup is the third trophy associated with the rivalry In 1902 in the first match up a Governor s Trophy was given to the winning team Then beginning in the 1940 football season the winner of the KU KSU contest received the Peace Pact Trophy which was miniature bronze goalposts The trophy was intended to keep the winning team s student body from tearing down the loser s goalposts These trophies were forgotten in time The series was largely dominated by Kansas until 1992 with the Jayhawks owning a 61 24 5 lead through the 1992 season Since 1993 the Wildcats have dominated the series with a 27 4 record including an active 15 game win streak the longest by either team in the series history Series overview edit Statistic Kansas Kansas StateGames played 121Wins 64 52Ties 5 1916 22 23 66 87 Disputed 1 1980 Home wins 37 29Road wins 27 23Total points scored in the series 2138 1999Most points scored in a game by one team 55 1947 64 2002 Most points scored in a game by both teams 80 2011 KSU 59 KU 21 Fewest points scored in a game by both teams 0 1916 1923 Fewest points scored in a game by one team in a win 5 1909 6 4 times Most points scored in a game by one team in a loss 27 2022 2023 29 1968 Largest margin of victory 55 1947 64 2002 Longest winning streak 10 1956 65 15 2009 present 11 1993 2003 Notable games edit 1910 The cancelled game edit Kansas and Kansas State have played each other in football every year since 1902 except for 1910 10 The 1910 game was cancelled after the two teams were unable to agree to eligibility rules for the contest 10 KU coach A R Kennedy tried to compel Kansas State to play the game by publishing provocative comments in the Lawrence newspaper in May 1910 but Kansas State coach Mike Ahearn refused to change his school s rules 10 1927 1933 Road wins edit For seven straight years from 1927 to 1933 the two teams alternated wins with the visiting team winning every game in contrast to the usual home field advantage in sports In the six games from 1928 to 1933 every game was also won by shutout The streak was ended when KSU won at home in 1934 another shutout 1969 First Governor s Cup game edit Kansas State won the first contest in the Governor s Cup series 26 22 on October 11 1969 in Lawrence Kansas The game was a classic in the series contested by two high quality teams Kansas was coming off an appearance in the Orange Bowl the previous season led by future Pro Football Hall of Fame running back John Riggins while Kansas State in 1969 was an offensive juggernaut led by quarterback Lynn Dickey and running back Mack Herron The game was not decided until the final play when two K State defenders jarred the ball loose from a KU receiver in the end zone The loss sent KU s season into an irreversible tailspin and the Jayhawks suffering greatly from the loss of Bobby Douglass and John Zook to the NFL finished the season 1 9 culminating with a 69 21 loss to Big Eight Conference champion Missouri at home Following the game Kansas State fans tore down the goalposts in KU s stadium an act with a long history in the rivalry and that K State fans would repeat in 1994 after ending an 11 game losing streak in Lawrence 1980 The forfeit edit On November 1 1980 Kansas defeated Kansas State 20 18 in Manhattan Kansas to take a 9 3 lead in the first dozen years the Governor s Cup was awarded However it was later determined that Kerwin Bell a running back for Kansas in that game was a partial qualifier despite his high school transcripts indicating otherwise and he was ruled academically ineligible at the time of the 1980 season 11 In 1982 the Big Eight Conference ordered Kansas to forfeit three conference wins and one tie from the 1980 season including its victory in the 1980 Governor s Cup game 1 12 As a result the two schools now dispute the overall record in both the Sunflower Showdown and more recent Governor s Cup series with each school claiming victory in the 1980 game 1987 The Toilet Bowl edit The lone tie during the Governor s Cup era took place on November 7 1987 in Manhattan and is the most infamous game in the history of the series Dubbed The Toilet Bowl and The Futility Bowl by national commentators the game featured 1 7 KU and 0 8 K State the contest lived down to expectations and resulted in a 17 17 tie which was secured when Kansas blocked a field goal as time expired 13 14 Following the tie both teams lost their last two games of the season with KU coach Bob Valesente being fired following the season While his counterpart Stan Parrish kept his job he was fired in 1988 after the Wildcats posted a 0 11 season to extend their winless streak to 28 games Parrish s firing led to the hiring of Bill Snyder who would shift the direction of the series in favor of the Wildcats 1995 Two ranked teams edit The first match up in history of the rivalry while both teams were ranked occurred on October 28 1995 in Manhattan 15 The University of Kansas came into the game 7 0 and ranked 6 in the AP Poll while Kansas State University was 5 1 and ranked 14 Both teams would finish the season ranked in the top ten but this day belonged to Kansas State KSU started strong and maintained the advantage throughout for a decisive 41 7 victory 2002 64 0 edit Kansas State 6 2 and ranked 14 in the AP Poll routed Kansas in the largest margin of victory in the series by either team 64 0 in Lawrence The Wildcats built a 30 0 lead at the end of the 1st quarter and lead 43 0 at halftime Wildcat quarterback Ell Roberson ran for 3 touchdowns and threw for another as the Wildcats outgained the Jayhawks 494 115 The Jayhawks also committed 7 turnovers in the loss KSU went on to finish the season 11 2 and beat Arizona State in the Holiday Bowl while the Jayhawks under first year head coach Mark Mangino finished the season at 2 10 and winless in conference play 2004 Streak buster edit An 11 year winning streak by KSU that began in 1993 at that time the longest by either team in the series was broken on October 9 2004 when KU won a back and forth 31 28 thriller in Lawrence 16 The head coach of the Jayhawks was Mark Mangino a former Wildcat assistant under KSU coach Bill Snyder Mangino bested his mentor in Snyder s final visit to Memorial Stadium during Snyder s first term as KSU coach 2007 KU wins in Manhattan edit In 2007 KU won in Manhattan for the first time since 1989 as of the end of the 2023 season KU has not won in Manhattan since 2007 and also posted its only victory over a ranked KSU team KU entered the game 4 0 while KSU had a 3 1 record but KSU was favored in the contest and ranked 24th in the AP Poll Kansas overcame several mistakes through the course of the first half tying the contest 14 14 at halftime Following a strong second half performance by KU the visitors from Lawrence posted a 30 24 victory KU went on to build an 11 0 record on the season before losing to Missouri and secured an at large bid to the 2008 Orange Bowl 2010 A century straight edit For the 100th consecutive season KU and KSU faced each other on the football field on October 14 2010 in Lawrence It was only the seventh college football rivalry in history played for a century straight Other series have subsequently reached the mark of 100 straight years or more The game was the second since Bill Snyder returned to coach KSU and was reminiscent of earlier blowout Wildcat victories during Snyder s first tenure with KSU claiming a 59 7 victory over KU 2023 First ranked matchup in 28 years edit The 2023 edition of the Sunflower Showdown was played in Lawrence and featured both teams being ranked for the first time since 1995 and the first time ever in the College Football Playoff poll era Kansas entered the game ranked No 25 in the College Football Playoff poll while Kansas State was No 21 Both teams were 7 3 entering the game Kansas State won the back and forth game 31 27 Game results edit Kansas victoriesKansas State victoriesTie gamesNo DateLocationWinnerScore1October 7 1902LawrenceKansas16 02October 3 1903LawrenceKansas34 03November 18 1904ManhattanKansas41 44November 25 1905LawrenceKansas28 05November 23 1906ManhattanKansas State6 46October 26 1907LawrenceKansas29 107October 10 1908LawrenceKansas12 68October 16 1909ManhattanKansas5 39October 21 1911ManhattanKansas6 010October 26 1912LawrenceKansas19 611October 25 1913ManhattanKansas26 012October 24 1914LawrenceKansas27 013October 23 1915ManhattanKansas19 714October 28 1916LawrenceTie0 015November 3 1917ManhattanKansas9 016November 28 1918LawrenceKansas13 717November 1 1919LawrenceKansas16 318October 30 1920ManhattanKansas14 019October 29 1921LawrenceKansas21 720October 28 1922ManhattanTie7 721October 27 1923LawrenceTie0 022October 18 1924ManhattanKansas State6 023October 17 1925LawrenceKansas State14 724October 16 1926ManhattanKansas State27 025October 15 1927LawrenceKansas State13 226October 20 1928ManhattanKansas7 027October 19 1929LawrenceKansas State6 028October 18 1930ManhattanKansas14 029October 17 1931LawrenceKansas State13 030November 19 1932ManhattanKansas19 031October 28 1933LawrenceKansas State6 032October 20 1934ManhattanKansas State13 033October 26 1935LawrenceKansas9 234October 24 1936ManhattanKansas State26 635November 13 1937LawrenceKansas State7 036October 29 1938ManhattanKansas27 737November 4 1939LawrenceKansas State27 638October 26 1940ManhattanKansas State20 039November 15 1941LawrenceKansas20 1640October 24 1942ManhattanKansas19 741October 30 1943LawrenceKansas25 242November 11 1944ManhattanKansas State24 1843November 23 1945LawrenceKansas27 044November 16 1946ManhattanKansas34 045November 1 1947LawrenceKansas55 046November 13 1948ManhattanKansas20 1447October 29 1949LawrenceKansas38 048November 18 1950ManhattanKansas47 749October 27 1951LawrenceKansas33 1450November 1 1952ManhattanNo 9 Kansas26 651November 7 1953LawrenceKansas State7 052October 30 1954ManhattanKansas State28 653November 5 1955LawrenceKansas State46 054November 3 1956ManhattanKansas20 1555November 9 1957LawrenceKansas13 756November 1 1958ManhattanKansas21 1257October 16 1959LawrenceKansas33 1458September 23 1960ManhattanKansas41 059November 11 1961LawrenceKansas34 060November 3 1962ManhattanKansas38 061November 2 1963LawrenceKansas34 062October 31 1964ManhattanKansas7 0No DateLocationWinnerScore63October 30 1965LawrenceKansas34 064October 29 1966ManhattanTie3 365November 4 1967LawrenceKansas17 1666November 16 1968ManhattanNo 7 Kansas38 2967October 11 1969LawrenceKansas State26 2268October 10 1970ManhattanKansas21 1569October 9 1971LawrenceKansas39 1370October 13 1972ManhattanKansas State20 1971October 13 1973LawrenceNo 19 Kansas25 1872October 12 1974ManhattanNo 19 Kansas20 1373November 1 1975LawrenceKansas28 074October 23 1976ManhattanKansas24 1475November 5 1977LawrenceKansas29 2176November 18 1978ManhattanKansas State36 2077November 3 1979LawrenceKansas36 2878November 1 1980ManhattanKansas 20 1879October 24 1981LawrenceKansas17 1480October 23 1982ManhattanKansas State36 781October 15 1983LawrenceKansas31 382October 12 1984ManhattanKansas State24 783October 19 1985LawrenceKansas38 784October 18 1986ManhattanKansas State29 1285November 7 1987ManhattanTie17 1786November 5 1988LawrenceKansas30 1287October 28 1989ManhattanKansas21 1688October 27 1990LawrenceKansas27 2489October 12 1991ManhattanKansas State16 1290October 10 1992LawrenceKansas31 791October 9 1993ManhattanKansas State10 992October 6 1994LawrenceNo 19 Kansas State21 1393October 28 1995ManhattanNo 14 Kansas State41 794November 9 1996LawrenceNo 13 Kansas State38 1295November 8 1997ManhattanNo 11 Kansas State48 1696October 31 1998LawrenceNo 3 Kansas State54 697October 9 1999ManhattanNo 9 Kansas State50 998October 7 2000LawrenceNo 4 Kansas State52 1399October 27 2001ManhattanKansas State40 6100November 2 2002LawrenceNo 14 Kansas State64 0101October 25 2003ManhattanKansas State42 6102October 9 2004LawrenceKansas31 28103October 8 2005ManhattanKansas State12 3104November 18 2006LawrenceKansas39 20105October 7 2007ManhattanKansas30 24106November 1 2008LawrenceKansas52 21107November 7 2009ManhattanKansas State17 10108October 14 2010LawrenceKansas State59 7109October 22 2011LawrenceNo 12 Kansas State59 21110October 6 2012ManhattanNo 7 Kansas State56 16111November 30 2013LawrenceKansas State31 10112November 29 2014ManhattanNo 11 Kansas State51 13113November 28 2015LawrenceKansas State45 14114November 26 2016ManhattanKansas State34 19115October 28 2017LawrenceKansas State30 20116November 10 2018ManhattanKansas State21 17117November 2 2019LawrenceNo 22 Kansas State38 10118October 24 2020ManhattanNo 20 Kansas State55 14119November 6 2021LawrenceKansas State35 10120November 26 2022ManhattanNo 12 Kansas State47 27121November 18 2023LawrenceNo 21 Kansas State31 27Series Kansas leads 65 51 5 K State claims victory due to the Big Eight s determination that Kansas used an ineligible player in the game 17 Men s basketball editSunflower Showdown BasketballKansas State Wildcats Kansas JayhawksOriginated 1907Continuity Continuous since 1912Overall series leader Kansas 201 95 Most recent winner KansasSee also Kansas Kansas State men s basketball all time results The two schools have had a strong rivalry in basketball for several decades peaking in the 1950s Recently the University of Kansas has been dominant in the series including a winning streak of 31 games over K State that lasted from 1994 to 2005 Despite the lopsided record the rivalry has become more relevant again in recent years with both teams ranked in the AP Top 25 for many of the match ups 18 Jeff Sagarin s rankings of the nation s top programs by decade in the ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia nicely track the history of the rivalry 19 In the 1950s when the rivalry was at its peak Kansas State finished the decade ranked as the 3 program in the nation and KU was ranked as 4 19 In the 1960s KU was ranked 9 for the decade and KSU was ranked 11 In the 1970s the programs were again nearly even with Kansas State ranked at 24 and KU at 25 In the 1980s some separation appeared as KU finished the decade ranked at 19 and Kansas State at 31 The big difference appeared in the 1990s and 2000s when KU was ranked at 4 and 2 for the decades while Kansas State does not appear anywhere in the top 40 19 Even when the schools are at different levels upsets are always a possibility in the rivalry as when Kansas State upset a KU team that was ranked 1 in the AP Poll on January 17 1994 or when KU pulled the upset on a K State team ranked 1 on January 17 1953 Most recently K State beat a 1 KU team on February 14 2011 in Manhattan Over the decades the rivalry has seen a number of notable coaches match wits including Jack Gardner Tex Winter Lon Kruger and Jack Hartman at Kansas State and James Naismith Phog Allen Larry Brown Roy Williams and Bill Self at KU Early years edit The teams were fairly even up until the 1930s with the series standings at 31 27 in favor of Kansas entering the decade During the 1930s and 40s Kansas gained a large lead in the standings with a number of win streaks including 22 in a row from 1938 to 1947 In 1935 Kansas tied an NCAA record by beating Kansas State five times in the same calendar year a feat that was only accomplished one other time when Kansas beat Nebraska five times in 1909 2 1950s edit Both schools were national title contenders in the 1950s with Kansas State starting the decade in the title game of the 1951 NCAA tournament and KU winning the title at the 1952 NCAA tournament One of the more notable games of the 1951 1952 season was a 90 88 overtime victory by 4 KU over 8 K State in the 1951 Big Seven Holiday Tournament KU returned to the national title game in the 1953 NCAA tournament missing back to back titles by 1 point claiming the league title along the way over a KSU team that had earlier been the top ranked basketball team in the country The rivalry heated up further with the arrival of Bob Boozer at Kansas State and Wilt Chamberlain at KU in the middle of the decade In the 1955 1956 season Kansas State split the season series with KU and won the Big Seven Conference title The following year Chamberlain led KU to the league title and a triple overtime loss to North Carolina in the title game of the 1957 NCAA tournament Kansas and Kansas State played another classic the following season when Boozer scored 32 points in a 79 75 double overtime victory at KU on February 3 1958 while KSU was ranked 4 and KU was ranked 2 When the two teams had previously met that season on December 30 1957 they were ranked 2 and 3 in the country Following that season KSU made another appearance in the Final Four To close the decade Kansas State swept the season series from KU on the way to a 25 2 record and a 1 ranking in the final AP Poll for 1959 nbsp Allen Fieldhouse home of the Jayhawks since 1955During the 1950s the two schools also engaged in one upsmanship in facilities In prior decades Kansas State had played their games in Nichols Hall which doubled as a gymnasium livestock pavilion and pool 20 In the late 1940s the state Legislature approved and paid for the construction of a new and much larger basketball facility In 1950 Kansas State opened Ahearn Field House one of the largest basketball facilities in the country at the time which seated 14 000 spectators Meanwhile KU still played their home games on a converted stage in Hoch Auditorium with a seating capacity of 5 500 In response to the construction of Ahearn the University of Kansas successfully lobbied the Legislature to approve the construction of Allen Fieldhouse which would seat 17 000 21 KU opened the facility with a 77 66 victory over Kansas State on March 1 1955 This period also saw the beginning of the Sunflower Doubleheader with two non conference teams visiting the state to play KU and K State at one venue one night then switching venues and opponents the following evening This event was held from 1957 to 1968 and featured national powerhouses such as UCLA Xavier San Francisco St Joseph s Cal and Marquette 1960s and 1970s edit The basketball rivalry between the two schools continued unabated through the 1960s and 1970s with the two schools competing annually for the Big Eight Conference championship see chart below In Dick Harp s last two seasons as the KU coach the Jayhawks plummeted to losing records of 7 18 in 1962 and 12 13 in 1963 Nevertheless in the championship game of the Big Eight Holiday Tournament in December 1962 KU posted a surprising 90 88 quadruple overtime victory over K State Also on February 20 1965 one of the classic pranks in the series was perpetrated when a pair of 6x12 banners saying Go Cats Kill Snob Hill Again unfurled on the east and west sides of the Allen Fieldhouse scoreboard with eight minutes left in the first half Unfortunately for the Cats this did not come to pass as KU beat K State 88 66 Another popular prank perpetrated by Kansas State students throughout the years is throwing live chickens painted blue and red on the court during pre game introductions as a taunt at the Kansas mascot the Jayhawk For years the Kansas State administration has attempted to stop this practice and following a nationally televised game on February 19 2007 PETA complained about it in a letter to KSU President Jon Wefald nbsp Bramlage Coliseum home of the Wildcats since 19881980s edit The 1980s saw the return of star power to the schools and arguably the rivalry s most high profile game At the start of the decade Rolando Blackman at Kansas State and Darnell Valentine at KU squared off in some classic match ups To close the decade it was Mitch Richmond K State and Danny Manning KU battling With Richmond and Manning in their senior years the 1987 1988 season proved to be eventful in the rivalry In the first matchup of the season on January 30 1988 Richmond scored 35 points to lead Kansas State to a 72 61 win to halt KU s then record 55 game home winning streak On February 18 KU turned the tables prevailing 64 63 in Ahearn Field House to deny K State a victory over KU in the old field house s last year In what was supposed to be the rubber game in the 1988 Big Eight Conference tournament Kansas State won a decisive victory by a 69 54 score Both teams qualified for the NCAA tournament and after three wins apiece in the tournament they faced each other on March 27 in Pontiac Michigan for the right to advance to the Final Four Led by Manning s 20 points KU turned a tight game into a runaway and prevailed 71 58 They eventually advanced to claim the school s second NCAA tournament championship 22 That game in the Pontiac Silverdome was the first ever meeting between the Hawks and the Cats not played in Lawrence Manhattan or Kansas City Missouri The 1990s and 2000s edit The rivalry slipped in significance after the 1988 season as K State slowly declined in the Big 8 and Big 12 conferences and KU saw sustained success under new coach Roy Williams During Williams tenure at Kansas the Jayhawks went 50 6 against the Wildcats Only occasionally would K State make some noise such as the 68 64 win over then 1 KU in Allen Fieldhouse in 1994 From 1994 to 2005 KU won 31 straight games against K State the longest streak for either school in the series Also from 1984 to 2007 KU won 24 straight games on the Wildcats home floor the third longest win streak on an opponent s home court in NCAA history 2 During the latter streak K State won seven games against KU but all were away from Manhattan four games in Lawrence 1988 1989 1994 2006 and three games in the Big Eight Tournament in Kansas City 1988 1989 1993 The streak began in Ahearn Field House where KU won the final five meetings and carried over into Bramlage Coliseum where KU won the first 19 contests KU s streak at Bramlage Coliseum came to an end on January 30 2008 when 22 ranked Kansas State upset previously unbeaten 2 Kansas 84 75 23 nbsp Michael Beasley before the 2008 Sunflower Showdown2006 present edit When Kansas State hired coach Bob Huggins to replace Jim Wooldridge in the 2006 off season Huggins sought to reinvigorate the rivalry At K State s Madness in Manhattan celebration to start the 2006 2007 season Huggins referred to KU s 23 game winning streak in Manhattan and said that February 19th is when we break the streak 24 However KU swept the season series from Kansas State and Huggins departed following the season to coach his alma mater West Virginia University The 2007 2008 season presented a contrast between youth and experience KU was led by the experienced coach Bill Self and retained a lineup of experienced players Kansas State was led by a first year head coach Frank Martin and featured one of the top rated groups of freshman players in the nation Prior to the season Kansas State freshman phenom Michael Beasley boasted that We re gonna beat KU at home We re gonna beat em at their house We re gonna beat em in Africa Wherever we play we re gonna beat em 25 KU came into the first match up of the season on January 30 2008 with a 20 0 record and a 2 national ranking but Kansas State prevailed 84 75 ending KU s long winning streak in Manhattan On Kansas State s trip to Lawrence later that year though Kansas won 88 74 leaving Beasley s prophecy unfulfilled Both schools advanced to the NCAA tournament at the conclusion of the 2008 regular season and Kansas went on to win its third NCAA tournament championship The rivalry featured three high profile match ups during the 2009 2010 season In the first game on January 30 2010 in Manhattan with ESPN s College GameDay broadcasting live from the game Kansas came into the game ranked 2 while Kansas State was ranked 11 KU prevailed in overtime 81 79 in a game that ESPN described as a classic 26 27 After the game Kansas center Cole Aldrich said You re going to get done playing basketball and you re going to look back and say I loved playing that game 26 The Wichita Eagle wrote that the rivalry is back 18 The second match up on March 3 2010 was the first time since 1958 that both teams were ranked in the top 5 with Kansas at 2 and KSU at 5 With number one seed implications on the line Frank Martin called it the biggest game we ve ever played at K State 28 Kansas went on to win 82 65 and secure sole possession of the Big 12 Championship The two teams met again in the 2010 Big 12 men s basketball tournament championship game with KU ranked 1 in the nation and KSU ranked 9 The Jayhawks won 72 64 completing a three game sweep of the Wildcats and winning the Big 12 Tournament title nbsp Coach Bill Self third from left on the KU benchAfter Frank Martin left K State in 2012 to take the coaching job with the South Carolina Gamecocks he was replaced by Bruce Weber former Illinois head coach Weber led his first Kansas State team to a co conference championship with KU in 2013 For Kansas it was the ninth straight league title and eleventh in twelve seasons for Kansas State it was the first regular season conference title since winning the Big Eight in 1977 During the regular season Kansas swept Kansas State with a 59 55 victory in Manhattan and an 83 62 victory in Lawrence The two teams met a third time in the finals of the 2013 Big 12 Tournament where Kansas bested Kansas State 70 54 for the three game sweep The 2013 2014 season saw a season split between the rivals Kansas won 86 60 in the first meeting in Lawrence and Kansas State won in Manhattan in overtime 85 82 with ESPN s College GameDay again broadcasting from the game After winning in Manhattan again in 2015 Kansas State had won four of the last eight at home since ending KU s 24 game winning streak in Manhattan in 2008 Kansas State has since dropped 6 of the last 7 at home One of the ugliest moments in the rivalry s history took place in January 2020 in Allen Fieldhouse when a brawl erupted between KU and KSU players near the end of an 81 60 Jayhawk win over the Wildcats The brawl started after KU s Silvio De Sousa had the ball stolen from him by KSU s DaJuan Gordon while attempting to dribble out the last few seconds of the game with a 21 point lead De Sousa recovered to block a layup attempt and then stood over Gordon In response to a perceived taunt the Kansas State bench cleared followed quickly by Kansas bench and punches were thrown The brawl went into the handicap seating area knocking over fans At one point De Sousa picked up a chair over his head but dropped it seeing only KU players in front of him 29 The brawl resulted in a KU assistant coach suffering a broken arm multiple school enforced player suspensions and separate suspensions being handed down from the Big 12 Conference basketball supremacy edit From 1946 through 1978 Kansas and Kansas State made the competition for the basketball title for their conference known as the Big Six Big Seven and Big Eight during this time virtually a two way affair During this 33 year period KU or KSU won or shared the title 26 times The following chart shows the conference titles captured by the Sunflower Showdown schools during this span of time Since 1991 Kansas has won or shared the Big 8 30 and Big 12 titles 31 24 of the 30 years Kansas and Kansas State shared the Big 12 regular season title for the 2012 2013 season 31 Team Season ConferenceKansas 1945 1946 Big Six ConferenceKansas State 1947 1948 Big Seven ConferenceKansas 1949 1950Kansas StateKansas State 1950 1951Kansas 1951 1952Kansas 1952 1953Kansas 1953 1954Kansas State 1955 1956Kansas 1956 1957Kansas State 1957 1958Kansas State 1958 1959 Big Eight ConferenceKansas State 1959 1960KansasKansas State 1960 1961Kansas State 1962 1963Kansas State 1963 1964Kansas 1965 1966Kansas 1966 1967Kansas State 1967 1968Kansas State 1969 1970Kansas 1970 1971Kansas State 1971 1972Kansas State 1972 1973Kansas 1973 1974Kansas 1974 1975Kansas State 1976 1977Kansas 1977 1978Baseball edit nbsp Tointon Family Stadium at Kansas State University nbsp Hoglund Ballpark at The University of KansasThe schools first met on the baseball field in 1898 The all time series record is disputed between the two schools with the KU media guide 32 listing the Jayhawks ahead 185 176 1 while the KSU media guide 33 list the series with KSU ahead 178 169 1 following the 2017 regular season The discrepancy is likely the result of highly inaccurate records by both schools for the early years of the series with games missing from both record books For example in the 1912 season the KU media guide states that the teams met four times with KU winning three of four On the other hand the KSU media guide lists only one matchup with KSU the victor A four game series was the standard at the time as both record books reflect a four game series in 1911 and 1913 Another example is in the 1914 season where the KU record books reflect four matchups with each team winning two while the KSU books show only two matchups and KSU the winner of both In the 1916 season the KSU record books show a four game series with KU winning all four while KU books do not reflect having played KSU at all These sort of discrepancies are frequent until the late 20s when both schools books begin to coincide Series standings editThe schools compete annually in football men s basketball women s basketball women s volleyball baseball cross country track and field women s tennis rowing men s golf and women s golf Kansas State does not currently sponsor fast pitch softball and neither sponsor men s tennis Below are the series records in the major sports that both schools currently compete in Kansas leads the active series in all sports combined 630 505 9 according to KU or 615 510 9 according to K State Sport Series record Last ResultFootball KU leads 64 52 5 or 65 51 5 31 27 KSU win on November 18 2023Men s Basketball KU leads 204 95 90 78 KU win on January 31 2023Women s Basketball KSU leads 78 50 85 72 KU win on January 29 2023Baseball KU leads 192 182 1 34 or KSU leads 187 177 1 35 7 1 KSU win on May 26 2023Women s Volleyball KSU leads 66 58 1 3 0 KU win on November 2 2022Women s Soccer KU leads 4 2 2 1 1 Draw on October 21 2022Women s Tennis KU leads 44 15 4 3 KU win on April 8 2023Women s Rowing KSU leads 21 15 17 5 KSU win on April 30 2023 As recorded in the K State record books As recorded in the KU record books From 1997 to 2012 there were two meets per year a Fall Sunflower Showdown KSU 7 5 and a Spring Kansas Cup KSU 8 5 Starting in 2012 there has been a Spring Sunflower Showdown TIED 5 5 that awards the Kansas Cup trophy Notes edit The three longer active series are Lafayette Lehigh since 1897 Oklahoma Oklahoma State since 1910 and Wake Forest North Carolina State since 1910 References edit a b c Sports People New York Times August 27 1982 Retrieved 2006 10 20 a b c http fs ncaa org Docs stats m basketball RB 2012 DI pdf bare URL PDF http fs ncaa org Docs stats m basketball RB 2017 D1 pdf bare URL PDF Kansas Jayhawks Kansas Jayhawks Griffin C S The University of Kansas and the Years of Frustration 1854 64 English Retrieved 2006 10 06 On Campus Pittsburgh Press August 27 1982 Retrieved November 18 2019 KSU KU Postgame Notes PDF Press release Kansas State University November 18 2006 Retrieved December 30 2006 permanent dead link NCAA Statistics Policies amp Guidelines PDF NCAA 2013 retrieved December 30 2013 Haskins Kevin October 24 2006 Jayhawk Notebook The Capital Journal Archived from the original on November 5 2013 Retrieved December 30 2013 a b c Olson Kevin December 2 2014 1910 The lost year of the Sunflower Showdown The Manhattan Mercury Retrieved November 14 2017 Lawrence Journal World Google News Archive Search google com Forfeits and Vacated Games College Football at Sports Reference com Retrieved 2022 11 27 Jayhawks K State Battle to 17 17 Deadlock Lawrence Journal World November 8 1987 Retrieved October 3 2007 Plunge Into History Lawrence Journal World October 3 2007 Retrieved October 3 2007 Showdown Comes With High Expectations Topeka Capital Journal October 4 2007 Retrieved October 5 2007 At Last Lawrence Journal World October 10 2004 Retrieved October 3 2007 Football History vs University of Kansas Kansas State University Athletics Retrieved 2022 12 03 a b The Night The Rivalry Was Reborn The Wichita Eagle Archived from the original English on February 5 2010 Retrieved 2010 02 02 a b c ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia PDF ESPN 2009 Nichols Hall Fieldhouse Built to Catch KSU MU English Lawrence Journal World Retrieved 2008 06 24 Rock Chalk Site English Retrieved 2006 10 10 Kansas vs Kansas State Game Recap January 30 2008 ESPN ESPN com KU at K State 23 and counting The Topeka Capital Journal Archived from the original English on 2011 09 27 Retrieved 2008 06 24 Beasley ensures K state leaves no doubt a b Kansas Mr Big Shot Comes Through for KU Late English ESPN Retrieved 2010 02 01 Collins KU Win Epic Showdown Topeka Capital Journal Archived from the original English on 2011 06 06 Retrieved 2010 02 01 Kansas State vs Kansas Game Preview March 3 2010 ESPN ESPN com Kansas basketball fight vs Kansas State Brawl breaks out at end of Jayhawks victory vs Wildcats CBSSports com 22 January 2020 bigeightsports com bigeightsports Resources and Information bigeightsports com a b All Time Big 12 Championships big12sports com KU Baseball Season by Season Record PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2009 05 18 KSU Baseball Season by Season Record permanent dead link https kuathletics com wp content uploads 2022 02 22 Record Book pdf https www kstatesports com documents 2022 6 23 Series History UPDATED 6 23 22 pdfExternal links editSunflower Showdown football site Sunflower Showdown basketball site College Football in Kansas College Basketball in Kansas Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sunflower Showdown amp oldid 1189941489 Football, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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