Aggie-Eagle Classic
Encyclopedia
The Aggie-Eagle Classic was an annual regular season college football game between The North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University
North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University is a land-grant university located in Greensboro, North Carolina, United States. It is the largest publicly funded historically black college in the state of North Carolina.NC A&T is a constituent institution of the University of North...

 Aggies and The North Carolina Central University
North Carolina Central University
North Carolina Central University is a public historically black university in the University of North Carolina system, located in Durham, North Carolina, offering programs at the baccalaureate, master’s, professional and doctoral levels....

 Eagles. The name is a reference to the two school's mascots. The event was held every Labor Day
Labor Day
Labor Day is a United States federal holiday observed on the first Monday in September that celebrates the economic and social contributions of workers.-History:...

 weekend at Carter Finley Stadium, in Raleigh, NC. The game was first held in 1994 in Raleigh, NC. The game had sponsorship from the governments of Raleigh, NC and Wake County, NC and the Capital Area Sports Foundation as its primary sponsor since 2004.

Annual Attendance

The Aggie-Eagle Classic has drawn in excess of 250,000 fans since its inception, an average of 36,000 per year. The record for attendance at the game is 48,001, set in 1997.

History

College Comparison
School NC A&T  NCCU
North Carolina Central University
North Carolina Central University is a public historically black university in the University of North Carolina system, located in Durham, North Carolina, offering programs at the baccalaureate, master’s, professional and doctoral levels....

Established 1891 1910
Location Greensboro, NC  Durham, NC
Students 10,795 8,612
Conference MEAC
Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference
The Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference is a collegiate athletic conference of historically black colleges and universities in the Southeastern United States...

 
MEAC
Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference
The Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference is a collegiate athletic conference of historically black colleges and universities in the Southeastern United States...

Nickname Aggies Eagles
School Colors
Football Stadium Aggie Stadium  O'Kelly-Riddick Stadium
Stadium Capacity 21,500 10,000

The series between the two schools began with the inaugural game played in 1924, with the game ending in a 13-13 tie. Since 1924, the rivalry game has shifted from North Carolina Central and North Carolina A&T's campuses. A fight in the during the 1950s compelled the game to be moved to Wallace Wade Stadium
Wallace Wade Stadium
Wallace Wade Stadium is a stadium on the campus of Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, United States. Primarily used for American football, it is the home field of the Duke Blue Devils. It opened in 1929 with a game against Pitt, as the first facility in Duke's new west campus. The...

 on the campus of Duke University
Duke University
Duke University is a private research university located in Durham, North Carolina, United States. Founded by Methodists and Quakers in the present day town of Trinity in 1838, the school moved to Durham in 1892. In 1924, tobacco industrialist James B...

. It was at Wallace Wade, that a man drove his car onto the field during the game and parked at the 50-yard line. The series record stands right now with the Aggies of North Carolina A&T leading with a 45-28-5 record winning 14 of the last 16 meetings with the Eagles.

Rise of the Classic

North Carolina A&T won the first Aggie-Eagle Classic game in 1994, 38-9. North Carolina A&T held an 10-2 edge in the meetings since the instate rivalry moved from a home-and-home scenario to an annual neutral site game in Carter-Finley Stadium in 1994. North Carolina Central would not earn their first win of the series until 2002, with a 33-30 overtime win. There are two instances in the series in which the losing team was unable to score. The first was in 2001 where the Aggies of North Carolina A&T won with a 22-0 victory and the other ina 25-0 2003 win in which the Aggies went on the become the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference
Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference
The Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference is a collegiate athletic conference of historically black colleges and universities in the Southeastern United States...

champions.

The games with the closest margins of victory happened in 2004 and 2005. In 2004, the Aggies, who were on the verge of a 15-13 upset by the eagles, recovered a failed exchange with a little over a minute remaining. The Aggies progressed down the field and kicked a 50-yard field goal as time expired to win the game. The following year, the Eagles of North Carolina Central returned the favor by defeating the Aggies 23-22 in the final edition of the classic.

The Fall of The Classic

The series came to an end when the contract with the city of Raleigh was not renewed. This was caused in part to the Capital Area Sports Foundation, which guaranteed each school $150,000 for the 2005 game. failing to deliver on financial guarantees to both schools. In its tax return for that year, the foundation reported more than $160,000 in payouts to North Carolina A&T, but the university said it has received less than $100,000 and didn't expect to see anything more.
As a result of the collapse of the classic, The North Carolina A&T - North Carolina Central Rivalry was put on hold for the 2006 football season.

Rivalry renewed

{| class="wikitable" style="text-align: center;"

Since the ending of the classic, the annual games between the rivals have once again returned to the respective campuses of the two universities. The 2007 game marked the first time in years that these two universities met for a football game on a non-neutral site. The Eagles defeated the Aggies 22–27 on the Aggies' home field. Following the game, controversy erupted as a player from NCCU stomped on the NC A&T logo in the middle of Aggie Stadium. This celebratory action led to a fight between players from both schools.

In order to accommodate an anticipated crowd that exceeds the capacity of its own stadium, North Carolina Central University moved its 2008 home football game to the neutral Memorial Stadium in Charlotte, N.C. This meeting again spelled victory for the Eagles as they once again won 28–27.

On September 10, 2009, the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference announced that North Carolina Central University would rejoin the conference as its 13th member, effective July 1, 2010. With North Carolina Central's shift from a NCAA Division I independent school to a member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference, the storied rivalry between the two institutions would now have conference ramifications. In the 2009 meeting, the Aggies prevailed in a 23–17 double overtime win in front of 19,534 spectators at Aggie Stadium in Greensboro, NC.

Game results

North Carolina A&T victories are shaded in ██ blue. North Carolina Central victories are shaded in ██ maroon.

{| class="wikitable"
!style="background: #e3e3e3;"|Year
!style="background: #e3e3e3;" colspan=2|Winning team
!style="background: #e3e3e3;" colspan=2|Losing team
!style="background: #e3e3e3;"|Attendance
!style="background: #e3e3e3;"|Location
|-align=center style="background: #800000; color:#e3e3e3"
| 1981 ||align=left|NCCU || 35 || align=left|NC A&T|| 7 || || Greensboro
|-align=center style="background: #002659; color:#FFBC00"
| 1982 ||align=left|NC A&T || 13 || align=left|NCCU|| 7 || || Durham
|-align=center style="background: #808080; color:#e3e3e3"
| 1983 ||align=left|NCCU || 13 || align=left|NC A&T|| 13 || || Greensboro
|-align=center style="background: #800000; color:#e3e3e3"
| 1984 ||align=left|NCCU || 10 || align=left|NC A&T|| 48 || || Durham
|-align=center style="background: #002659; color:#FFBC00"
| 1985 ||align=left|NC A&T || 28 || align=left|NCCU|| 19 || || Greensboro
|-align=center style="background: #002659; color:#FFBC00"
| 1986 ||align=left|NC A&T || 35 || align=left|NCCU|| 12 || || Durham
|-align=center style="background: #800000; color:#e3e3e3"
| 1987 ||align=left|NCCU || 38 || align=left|NC A&T|| 19 || || Greensboro
|-align=center style="background: #800000; color:#e3e3e3"
| 1988 ||align=left|
NCCU || 2 || align=left|NC A&T|| 15 || || Charlotte
|-align=center style="background: #002659; color:#FFBC00"
| 1989 ||align=left|NC A&T || 24 || align=left|NCCU|| 6 || || Charlotte
|-align=center style="background: #002659; color:#FFBC00"
| 1999 ||align=left|NC A&T || 21 || align=left|NCCU|| 6 || 14,800 || Charlotte
|-align=center style="background: #002659; color:#FFBC00"
| 1991 ||align=left|NC A&T || 48 || align=left|NCCU|| 0 || || Greensboro
|-align=center style="background: #002659; color:#FFBC00"
| 1992 ||align=left|NC A&T || 49 || align=left|NCCU|| 7 || || Durham
|-align=center style="background: #002659; color:#FFBC00"
| 1994 ||align=left|NC A&T || 38 || align=left|NCCU|| 9 || 32,437 || Raleigh
|-align=center style="background: #002659; color:#FFBC00"
| 1995 ||align=left|NC A&T || 18 || align=left|NCCU|| 17 || 44,807 || Raleigh
|-align=center style="background: #002659; color:#FFBC00"
| 1996 ||align=left|NC A&T || 38OT || align=left|NCCU|| 31 || || Raleigh
|-align=center style="background: #002659; color:#FFBC00"
| 1997 ||align=left|NC A&T || 36 || align=left|NCCU|| 7 || 48,001 || Raleigh
|-align=center style="background: #002659; color:#FFBC00"
| 1998 ||align=left|NC A&T || 40 || align=left|NCCU|| 10 || || Raleigh
|-align=center style="background: #002659; color:#FFBC00"
| 1999 ||align=left|NC A&T || 20 || align=left|NCCU|| 7 || || Raleigh
|-align=center style="background: #002659; color:#FFBC00"
| 2000 ||align=left|NC A&T || 40 || align=left|NCCU|| 7 || 43,134 || Raleigh
|-align=center style="background: #002659; color:#FFBC00"
| 2001 ||align=left|NC A&T || 22 || align=left|NCCU|| 0 || 36,438 || Raleigh
|-align=center style="background: #800000; color:#e3e3e3"
| 2002 ||align=left|NCCU || 33OT || align=left|NC A&T|| 30 || 25,027 || Raleigh
|-align=center style="background: #002659; color:#FFBC00"
| 2003 ||align=left|NC A&T || 25 || align=left|NCCU|| 0 || 21,430 || Raleigh
|-align=center style="background: #002659; color:#FFBC00"
| 2004 ||align=left|NC A&T || 16 || align=left|NCCU|| 15 || 27,852 || Raleigh
|-align=center style="background: #800000; color:#e3e3e3"
| 2005 ||align=left|NCCU || 23 || align=left|NC A&T|| 22 || 35,000 || Raleigh
|-align=center style="background: #800000; color:#e3e3e3"
| 2007 ||align=left|NCCU || 27 || align=left|NC A&T|| 22 || 19,320 || Greensboro
|-align=center style="background: #800000; color:#e3e3e3"
| 2008 ||align=left|NCCU || 28 || align=left|NC A&T|| 27 || 20,180 || Charlotte
|-align=center style="background: #002659; color:#FFBC00"
| 2009 ||align=left|NC A&T || 23 || align=left|NCCU|| 17 || 19,534 || Greensboro
|-align=center style="background: #800000; color:#e3e3e3"
| 2010 ||align=left|NCCU || 27 || align=left|NC A&T|| 16 || 15,173 || Durham
|-align=center style="background: #002659; color:#FFBC00"
| 2011 ||align=left|NC A&T || 31 || align=left|NCCU|| 21 || 18,413 || Greensboro
|}

External links

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