- Platypus Trophy
Infobox award
name = Platypus Trophy
current_awards =
caption = Platypus Trophy after being restored
description = Winner of the annual Civil War football contest
presenter =
country = United States
location = Oregon
year = 1959
year2 =
website = The Platypus Trophy is a trophy awarded to the winner of the annual Civil War college football game between theUniversity of Oregon andOregon State University . The trophy depicts aplatypus , an animal which has features of both a duck (Oregon'smascot ) and a beaver (Oregon State's mascot). From 1959 to 1961, the trophy was awarded to the winning school. The trophy was lost for more than 40 years before being rediscovered in 2005 and re-established as the game's trophy in 2007.History
In 1959, University of Oregon director of public service Willard Thompson selected art student Warren Spady to create a trophy depicting a platypus to be presented to the winner of the upcoming Civil War. A platypus was chosen as the subject because with its
duck -like bill andbeaver -like tail, it resembles a combination of each school's mascot. Spady had only a month before the game to complete the trophy, which is carved frommaple and measures ft to m|2 wide and in to cm|18 tall. He submitted it unfinished, having not quite completed sculpting the feet.cite news|title=Trophy fits the bill|work=The Register-Guard |date=November 28 2007 |accessdate=2007-11-28|last=Baker|first=Mark| url=http://www.registerguard.com/csp/cms/sites/dt.cms.support.viewStory.cls?cid=28223&sid=1&fid=1]Oregon was heavily favored in the 1959 game, but Oregon State won 15-7 and took home the trophy, which they displayed in a case at
Gill Coliseum . During that year, Oregon students apparently stole the trophy, and kept it after the 1960 Civil War ended in a 14-14 tie. In 1961, Oregon State won 6-2 and Oregon returned the trophy to Oregon State immediately following the game.Theft and disappearance
Following the 1961 game, the trophy was stolen several more times and was eventually forgotten as the football game's trophy. In 1986, artist Spady, now an art teacher in Eugene, spotted the trophy in a case at Oregon's Leighton Pool. It had apparently been reappropriated as a trophy for the schools'
water polo Civil War, and was affixed with a brass plaque commemorating four consecutive Oregonwater polo victories from 1964 to 1968. Spady was unable to convince anyone to reacquire the trophy for use in the football game, and in 2000, the pool and its trophy cases were demolished as part of a renovation project.cite news|last=Canzano|first=John|authorlink=John Canzano|date=November 28 2007 |accessdate=2007-11-28|work=The Oregonian |title=Playpus trophy just doesn't get much respect|url=http://www.oregonlive.com/sports/oregonian/john_canzano/index.ssf?/base/sports/1196220331114070.xml&coll=7]Reappearance
In 2004, with the trophy long forgotten by nearly everyone, "Oregonian" sportswriter
John Canzano wrote a column lamenting the fact that unlike other college rivalry games, the Civil War apparently had no trophy.cite news|work=The Oregonian |last=Canzano|first=John|authorlink=John Canzano|date=November 20 2004 |title=To the victor needs to go some spoil] Spady contacted Canzano and informed him of the existence of the Platypus Trophy, and a follow-up Canzano column ignited a search for the missing trophy.cite news|work=The Oregonian |last=Canzano|first=John|authorlink=John Canzano|date=November 24 2004 |title=Civil War has trophy after all...or does it?] Led by Dan Williams, a UO administrator who had been thestudent body president who handed the trophy over to his OSU counterpart in 1961, the trophy was rediscovered in 2005 in a closet at the University of Oregon'sMcArthur Court .cite news|work=The Oregonian |last=Canzano|first=John|authorlink=John Canzano|date=March 25 2005 |title=Old Platypus Trophy newly found at last]After obtaining Spady's signature on the work, Williams returned the trophy to the Oregon Alumni Association so it could resume its role as a game trophy. However, despite initial interest from the schools' athletic directors to start awarding the trophy again, after viewing the abstract piece, they declined to do so. Instead, beginning with the 2007 Civil War, the trophy was presented to the winning school's
alumni association . Oregon State was the first recipient of the restored trophy after defeating Oregon 38-31 in double overtime.References
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