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Nov. 26, 2009 12:01 AM PT _This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts._ Reporters from around the Tribune
family tackle the question of the day, then you get a chance to chime in and tell them why they are wrong. CHRIS DUFRESNE, LOS ANGELES TIMES UCLA-USC is closer in proximity, Stanford-Cal is
more scenic, Oregon-Oregon State has more trees, Arizona-Arizona State is more heated (literally) and Texas-Texas A&M has more cattle, but the best college football in-state rivarly in
the Iron Bowl between Alabama and Auburn. Main reason? In a state that has no professional sports and where football is religion, Alabama-Auburn is the argument that keeps on giving. Former
Alabama Coach Gene Stallings once said: ‘It’s the only game I’ve ever heard of where people talk about it 365 days a year. And if you don’t live here, you couldn’t possibly understand.’ A
dispute in 1908 over the use of illegal players--on both sides!--led to discontinuation of the series until 1948 on the insistence of the state legislature. Alabama got so mad over losing
its fourth straight to Auburn in 1957 that Tuscaloosa sent a delegation to bone dry Texas to hire, by whatever means necessary, Paul ‘Bear’ Bryant, who won six national titles and beat
Auburn 19 times in the next 25 years. Take THAT! ANDREA ADELSON, ORLANDO SENTINEL There is no in-state rivalry that comes close to Alabama-Auburn, not when the hatred between these schools
goes way beyond one game in November. You can have Miami vs. Florida State, and Texas vs. Texas A&M. But if you lose the Iron Bowl, your entire year is wrecked. You have to wait 365 days
for a chance to take revenge, all while getting taunted and harassed at work or at school or standing in line at the grocery store. That might go double for Auburn fans, who have taken a
backseat to Alabama as the Tide built football dynasties under Bear Bryant and are doing it again under Nick Saban. The Tigers have had nice seasons, but nothing compared to their hated
rivals. To put it simply, this game is more than a rivalry. It is a way of life. PAUL REINHARD, ALLENTOWN MORNING CALL So, what’s the measure of a great rivalry, anyway? Rabid fans who seem
to genuinely hate one another? Lehigh-Lafayette has them. They sometimes refer to the enemy as Laughayette or Chicken Squawks. Players who could care less about sportsmanship? No postgame
handshakes between Lafayette and Lehigh. In fact, the most recent game produced over-the-top vulgarity. Heightened national media attention? Got it. The crowds don’t match up with some of
the others, but the fact that the two Pennsylvania schools are less than 10 miles apart stokes the fires. The 145-game series -- most in the nation -- is packed with “remember when …?”
moments. Old-timers will brag about seeing 50 or 60 of them. You have the regular season and you have Lehigh-Lafayette week. One counts for 10 weeks, the other is remembered forever. NICK
MATTHEWS, NEWPORT NEWS DAILY PRESS The phrase “in-state” in our question here limits our options severely. The best rivalries in college football know no boundries. Ohio State-Michigan,
Army-Navy, Southern Cal-Notre Dame, Oklahoma-Texas — shoot, even, Harvard-Yale. None an in-state clash. However, there is one “in-state” clash always listed among the best college football
rivalries. Auburn-Alabama. The Iron Bowl. It has everything. Excellence, tradition, and, most important in an intense rivalry, hatred. There was animosity from the start, even when Auburn
was known as Agricultural and Mechanical College of Alabama. Auburn won 32-22 in the series’ first game on Feb. 22, 1893. The odd game date caused testiness immediately, as Alabama wanted to
count the matchup as the final game of the 1892 season, while Auburn wanted to count it as the first in the 1893 season. They have been bitter rivals since.