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College Football's 25 Greatest Mascots
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CollegeFootballNews.com Posted Nov 10, 2006
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Nothing like a little fluff on a Friday to take a bit of a breath before the big weekend. What are the 25 coolest, best, and most identifiable mascots in college football? Along with Colorado's Ralphie the Buffalo, here are CFN's choices for the 25 best in the game.
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Rip on a college
football fan's mother and you're asking for trouble. Rip on the mascot
of a college football fan's favorite team and you'd better be prepared
to throw down.
From intimidating animals to quirky traditions to goofy costumes, the
mascots across the college football landscape are as unique and revered
as anything identifiable with anything found in any other sport.
So how is it even possible to rank which mascots are the coolest?
Obviously it's all subjective, so the attempt is to find the ones most
synonymous with their schools and teams and which, at least with our
experiences, inspire the most passion. Compiled by the staff of
CollegeFootballNews.com, here are the 25 best mascots, or more to the
point, the most identifiable symbols in college football.
1.
Colorado - Ralphie
Some mascots
are cute, some mascots are funny, and some symbols get the crowd
roaring. Colorado's Ralphie the Buffalo is
the most
intimidating and the one that inspires the most awe from fans
and foes alike. Just before the start of the game and before the second
half, a 1,100 to 1,300-pound buffalo leads the team onto the field in a
semi-controlled 20-to-25 mile per hour sprint. The animal has handlers
who hang on for dear life and try to keep it somewhat contained, and
while it could probably tear off and do whatever it wanted if it was
inclined to do so, there's never been a problem. Five sophomores take it
on a run just before going onto the field just to make sure it's a
little bit cashed.
It all started in 1934 when when a group of students paid $25 to rent a
buffalo calf that required four handlers to keep it under control on the
sidelines in a 7-0 win at Denver. A live buffalo was used off and one
for several years, but it didn't become a regular part of Colorado games
until 1966 when a six-month old calf named Rraalph was donated to the
school. Soon after, when it was discovered that it was a she, the name
was changed to Ralphie and the tradition has gone on ever since. Now up
to Ralphie IV, the buffalo made its first ever regular season road trip
out of state
since 1989 when it traveled down to Georgia this year.
2. Georgia
- UGA
Georgia fans will certainly dispute UGA's number two ranking to any
mascot in any sport anywhere, but it gets beaten out here simply because
of the presentation of Ralphie, the Colorado Buffalo. UGA is an English
bulldog (although the first UGA was a goat) and is certainly the most
beloved and well-known mascot in college football, past UGAs have
flowers laid on their graves before every home game.
3. Texas - Bevo
From the nickname to the Hook 'em Horns hand gesture, no symbol is
more associated with a team than Bevo the longhorn steer is with
Texas. As the story goes, a group of Texas A&M fans actually sparked
the name. In 1915, a Texas student raised $100 to by what turned out
to be an uncontrollable steer that basically did whatever it wanted
to. A group of Aggie fans, as a prank, put a 13-0 brand on the
animal, the score of A&M's 1915 win over the Longhorns. The Texas
handler quickly turned the one and the three into a B, and the
fashioned an EVO to come up with the name. The first BEVO, too wild
to tame, was eventually eaten. In 1936, the tradition started up
again and now the school is now up to Bevo XIV. Bevo XIII died this
year.
4. Auburn - Tiger the eagle
Auburn's nickname is the Tigers, but the battle cry is "War
Eagle" as a majestic eagle soars onto the field before each home. To
make things even more confusing, the actual eagle that's used is War
Eagle VI, but its name is Tiger. Lost yet? How about this?
Auburn's mascot,
technically, is Aubie, a costumed tiger.
To take it even one
step further, the eagle doesn't even belong to Auburn, since federal
law doesn't allow anyone to own a bird of prey. Technically,
Auburn's main symbol belongs to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
although the Alpha Phi Omega Fraternity takes cars of it. The
legend, true or not, is that a confederate soldier, lying wounded on
the battlefield, could see only two living things, himself and a
baby eagle. He took the eagle with him when he went back to school
at Auburn, where he became part of the faculty. In the school's
first meeting with Georgia in 1892, after Auburn scored its first
touchdown, the eagle broke free, flew around the field, and later
died having done its part giving everything it had in the 10-0 win.
5. Oklahoma - Sooner Schooner
Now we get into a big of a grey area. While the Sooner Schooner
isn't really a mascot in the traditional sense, it is the football
team's symbol and identity. Technically named the school's mascot in
1980 and stared in 1964, a covered wagon is pulled by two Shetland
ponies after every Oklahoma score. Unfortunately, the Sooner
Schooner's most famous moment turned out to hurt the team. In the
1985 Orange Bowl, OU got hit with a 15-yard penalty after the
Schooner raced onto the field to celebrate a field goal that had
been waived off due to a penalty. Sooner PK Tim Lashar missed the
next attempt, and OU went on to lose to Washington 28-17.
6. Florida State - Chief Osceola
Second only to Colorado's Ralphie the Buffalo entrance in terms
of awe-inspiring moments, before every home game, Chief Osceola
rides into the stadium on a horse, Renegade, and plants a flaming
spear at midfield. The entire setup, outfit, and tradition have been
approved by the Seminole Indian Tribe of Florida.
7.
Wisconsin - Bucky Badger
A nod has to be given to the costumed mascots. A real badger
roamed the sidelines on a leash, but the school had to stop the
tradition in 1940 after the animal was too wild and mean. A cartoon
character, Buckingham U. Badger was created, and the rest is
history.
8.
Tennessee - Smokey
Looking for a mascot in 1953, Tennessee brought out several dogs
onto the field and let the fans pick which one they wanted by
cheering loudest for the one they liked the best. Blue Smokey fired
out a howl/bark that got the fans fired up, and ever since, a blue
tick bloodhound has been the team's sideline symbol. Most famously,
Smokey VI suffered heat exhaustion in the 1991 UCLA game and ended
up listed on the injury report the next week.
9.
Texas A&M - Reveille
Traditions and legends usually happen by chance. In 1931, a
group of Aggie students hit a dog while driving around campus. The
collie was nursed to health back in the dorms that night, and when
the bugler played "Reveille"
the next morning, the dog barked and howled like mad. The next fall,
it became the football team's mascot. It's commissioned as a
five-star general, and as the rule goes, if you sleep in the same
room with it, you sleep on the floor while the dog gets the bed.
10. Michigan State - Sparty
Michigan State's mascot has come a long way since 1909 when a
live bear named Brewer's Bruin was on the sideline. The look has
been changed several times, several way since 1955, and now it's
among the most recognizable college football symbols.
11. West Virginia - Mountaineer
Fine, so it's a guy in a beard and a coonskin hat, but he gets
to carry a gun. Picked from a cheer-off and after a long screening
process, the Mountaineer is selected for his work in the classroom
as well as his spirit.
12.
Air Force - Mach 1 Falcon
Since 1956, the Air Force has used two falcons with one flying
for flying around the stadium and one for show. It requires months
to properly train a falcon to be able to perform in front of big
crowds.
13. Washington - Huskie
The first mascot was Frosty I, started in 1920. Ten Alaskan
Malamute's later, "Spirit" leads the team onto the field before
every game and patrols the sideline.
14. Miami - Sebastian the Ibis
An ibis is a bird found in the Everglades that's known for its
ability to survive hurricanes. Sebastian the Ibis is a sometimes
bizarre, always present mascot who's always found celebrating under
the goalposts after every Miami extra point and field goal.
Considering how good the teams were during the late-1980s and early
1990s, he got more air time than Madonna. The name came from Miami's
San Sebastian Hall.
15. Army - Mule
While hardly intimidating, the Army mule is one of college
football's longest running mascots. Since 1899, 16 mules have been
used with Raider currently manning the post.
16.
USC - Traveler
Traveler I, a white horse in the 1961 Rose Parade, was brought
in to appear at USC home games. Several Travelers later, the horse
has now become the symbol of USC football and still rides in every
Rose parade.
17. Notre Dame - Leprechaun
The Notre Dame mascot used to be an Irish terrier until 1965.
Arguably the most annoying of all mascots for many fans, the
leprechaun is the ultimate Notre Dame football cheerleader.
18. Florida - Albert Gator
It used to be a lot cooler. In the 1960s, Florida had a real
alligator named Albert on the sidelines. When he died, the school
went to a costume with Albert Gator wearing an orange letter
sweater.
19.
Stanford - Tree
With no actual Cardinal mascot, the symbol on the school's seal
has been distorted to create
an irreverent, controversial, outside-the-norm mascot that's the
nation's most unique. It can be as annoying as it can be humorous.
20.
Syracuse - Otto Orange
It's the Stanford Tree without the edge. SU's mascot used to be Big
Chief Bill Orange, and then was booted in 1978 after protests from
the students. After several disastrous attempts to come up with
another mascot, the school settled on a lovable, cartoonish orange
named Otto.
21. Virginia Tech - Hokie
It's the story more than the actual bird costume. In 1902, the
football players were known for "gobbling" up food in massive
amounts eventually leading toe the Gobbler Club. In 1913, things got
really goofy with a student getting pulled in a wagon by an enormous
turkey, which was stopped, but led to the emergence of the Gobbler
costume roughly based on the big turkey. Morphed into more of a
cardinal, it eventually became the Hokie Bird it's known as today.
22. Purdue - Purdue Pete
Originally created as an ad for the school bookstore, Purdue
Pete has grown, literally, into a larger-than-life mascot with a
enormous head. The school also is known for a train symbol called
the Special.
23. LSU - Tiger
It would be much higher on the list if anyone outside of LSU,
and opposing players, actually knew it existed. "Mike" is kept in a
pen in the back of the stadium before it's rolled out in a cage
close to the visitor's locker room where the players have to pass by
him on the way to the field.
24. Texas Tech - Masked Raider
Depending on who you're a fan of, the Masked Rider either really
cool or slightly bizarre. Stared in 1935, the rider, mounted on a
palomino horse, is masked to hide his true identity. Now the school
also uses a Rader Red mascot, as well.
25. Ohio State - Brutus Buckeye
It doesn't have the history or legacy of other costumed mascots
started in 1965, but it's still as identifiable as any mascot in
college football. It's a student with a big buckeye nut on his head.
Thanks to each of the schools and their sports information
departments for their help and assistance
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