Sign in or create a free account to curate your search content.
Each year, the finest football players from West Virginia's northern high schools (including those in the Eastern Panhandle) come to Charleston to compete with their counterparts from southern high schools in the North-South Game. Each squad of 33 players includes many who go on to successful college sports careers, and some who make it to the National Football League. Among game alumni who have played in the professional ranks are Mike Barber and Walter Easley (both San Francisco 49ers), Rich Braham (Cincinnati Bengals), Carl Lee (Minnesota Vikings), Curt Warner (Seattle Seahawks), and Robert Alexander (Los Angeles Rams).
The first North-South Game attracted only a small crowd on New Year's Day, 1934, and ended in a scoreless tie. Charleston Gazette sports writer Frank Knight, who during the classic's 1940s and 1950s heyday was its biggest booster, called that first game "one of the greatest defensive combats in the history of scholastic sports in West Virginia." After the games were rescheduled for summer, under the lights at Charleston's Laidley Field, attendance soared.
Through 2011, the overall series stands at 36 wins for the South and 19 wins for the North, with three ties. The game was suspended from 1956 through 1975 due to an NCAA ruling on summer all-star contests. Recent games have not been so well attended because of competing TV sport shows and other summer events, but West Virginia towns still have their high school football heroes, and the annual North-South classic remains a traditional and exciting showcase for them.
Since 1983, a North-South boys basketball game has been played each year in the Kanawha Valley, except 1993, when the game was played in Paden City. As of 2011, South dominated the series, 23-6.
— Authored by Louis E. Keefer
Cite This Article
Keefer, Louis E. "The North-South Game." e-WV: The West Virginia Encyclopedia. 08 February 2024. Web. Accessed: 22 December 2024.
08 Feb 2024