Sunflower Letdown: Winless Kansas, struggling K-State prepare for low-stakes football rivalry
It takes a special type of person to love the Sunflower Showdown as a football rivalry.
Even the biggest fans may find it difficult to get fired up about it this season.
Winless Kansas will take on four-win Kansas State on Saturday at Memorial Stadium in a game with little at stake outside of the Governor’s Cup. One team is playing for pride. The other is dreaming of a low-tier bowl.
There is understandably no buzz surrounding the game, and a small crowd is expected. The rivalry hasn’t been in this bad of shape since the late 1980s, when Sports Illustrated dubbed it “The Futility Bowl.”
Things aren’t quite as bad as they were in 1987, when the Jayhawks had one victory, the Wildcats had none, and they fittingly played to a 17-17 tie in Manhattan, with Kansas blocking a late field-goal attempt to stay even. Or the following season when the only victory by either team was a 30-12 KU triumph over K-State.
But it’s on par with 1989, the year Bill Snyder joined the rivalry. That year, both teams combined for five victories. There is no guarantee they will top that this season.
“It would be neat if both teams were having great seasons and coming into this game with national relevance,” K-State quarterback Joe Hubener said. “That would be awesome to experience at some point. Obviously, that is not the situation this year.”
When KU coach David Beaty says, “You can throw the records out” for this game, he isn’t quoting a cliche. He would genuinely prefer not to focus on what both teams accomplished in their first 21 games.
The Jayhawks are in danger of going winless for the first time since 1954 and the Wildcats might miss a bowl for the first time since 2009.
Thanksgiving week is filled with great football rivalries, but this isn’t one of them. Kansas owned the rivalry before Snyder arrived and holds an overall advantage – 65-41-5 by KU’s count, 64-42-5 by K-State’s. The Wildcats have crushed the Jayhawks under Snyder, winning 19 of 23 and six straight.
Rarely have they been good at the same time. Would you believe the Jayhawks and Wildcats have met 111 times, but only once with both ranked?
Perhaps that is why Beaty and Snyder sounded like used car salesmen promoting the game earlier this week.
“This is one of the best rivalries, really, in all of college football,” Beaty said. “I am excited to be a part of it again. It’s a game you always look forward to … I know it is going to be a great, electric environment, and it should be a lot of fun.”
“I would never downplay the rivalry,” Snyder said, “because, as I have said so many times, it is so significant in the lives of so many people. With the fan base in the state of Kansas, it is something that has evolved from their birth.”
Hyperbole aside, it’s nice to see both sides taking the game so seriously.
For years, Snyder’s emphasis on the rivalry has given the Wildcats an undeniable edge over the Jayhawks. He is 18-1 against Kansas since 1993, with the only loss coming in 2004 on a back-and-forth game the Jayhawks won 31-28 under Mark Mangino.
In previous years, K-State motivated players for the Sunflower Showdown all year by placing the Governor’s Cup in a prominent trophy case in the front lobby of its football complex. It was the first thing players saw when they entered the facility.
On the rare occasions they lost the cup to Kansas, the trophy case remained empty for an entire year.
The cup is displayed less prominently in the lobby of K-State’s new facility, but players changed that this week by moving it into the locker room.
“That gives me extra motivation to want to continue that streak,” K-State senior defensive back Morgan Burns said. “Every day I see it, I want to have a good day of preparation in light of that game and to keep the trophy.”
Mangino briefly turned the tide in the rivalry when he led Kansas to three straight victories against Ron Prince, and Beaty served as an assistant for the 2008 win. But no KU coach has stood up to Snyder since his return in 2009.
K-State has won the last six meetings by an average of 32.6 points.
“It’s a reminder that we are the dominant football school in this state,” K-State defensive back Kendall Adams said. “They are known as a basketball school. We are known for football. We want to keep dominating them pretty bad.”
Many have said Saturday’s game will equate to the Super Bowl for Kansas. The Jayhawks have nothing to lose. A victory over the Wildcats would end a disappointing season on a positive note and create hope for the future.
There is some truth to that.
“This is such a pivotal game for our state,” Beaty said. “There is nothing like winning that game.”
Yet, K-State views the Sunflower Showdown the same way.
“I honestly think the Sunflower Showdown is the biggest game you can possibly play in,” K-State receiver/quarterback Kody Cook said. “We played Auburn last year, but we looked at KU as the bigger game. If you lose to Auburn and beat KU, you look at the season one way. If you beat Auburn and lose to KU, you look at the season way differently. You can’t lose that game.”
Kellis Robinett: @kellisrobinett
Kansas State at Kansas
- When: 3 p.m. Saturday
- Where: Memorial Stadium, Lawrence
- Records: KSU 4-6, 1-6 Big 12; KU 0-11, 0-8
- Radio: KQAM, 1480-AM; KWLS, 107.9-FM
- TV: FS1
Three things about Kansas
1. The Jayhawks are one loss away from their first winless season since 1954, when the program finished 0-10. To this date, that’s the only winless season in program history.
2. Kansas coach David Beaty is entering his first Sunflower Showdown as a head coach. Kansas first-year head coaches are 21-10 against K-State, but the last KU coach to beat K-State in his first try was Glen Mason in 1988.
3. Junior safety Fish Smithson, who leads the Jayhawks with 100 tackles, missed last week’s loss against West Virginia. If he is able to play Saturday, he needs 14 tackles to tie KU defensive coordinator Clint Bowen for the third most by a defensive back in school history. Bowen had 114 tackles in 1993.
Three things about Kansas State
1. Players say they are still riding the momentum from their dramatic 38-35 victory over Iowa State last weekend. Practices have been crisp all week, and the bad memories that came from a six-game losing streak have evaporated.
2. Bill Snyder must have taken his lone semi-recent loss to Kansas – 31-28 in 2004 – hard. Since his return in 2009, the Wildcats have won six straight in the series by an average of 32.6 points. The Jayhawks are on their fourth coach during that run.
3. Quarterback Joe Hubener may have finally found his passing groove. The junior from Cheney has thrown for 753 yards and five touchdowns in his past four games. He has completed 115 of 238 passes for 1,619 yards and nine touchdowns on the season.
Key matchup
K-State’s secondary vs. KU quarterback Ryan Willis. The Jayhawks have moved the ball well at times through the air with Willis at quarterback, but he has thrown nine interceptions. The Wildcats haven’t intercepted a pass since Oct. 10 against TCU. Something has got to give. If Willis avoids turnovers, KU will have a chance.
Kellis Robinett’s pick: K-State, 40-24
K-State isn’t good enough to clobber Kansas the way it has in recent years, but the Wildcats will take care of business in a rivalry game they always win under Snyder.
Rustin Dodd’s pick: K-State, 38-17
This is Kansas’ Super Bowl, and after 11 straight losses, it’s the Jayhawks’ last opportunity for a victory. On paper, it also might be their best chance to beat K-State since Snyder returned from retirement. The problem? Snyder is still coaching K-State.
This story was originally published November 26, 2015 at 9:28 AM with the headline "Sunflower Letdown: Winless Kansas, struggling K-State prepare for low-stakes football rivalry."