Series history The first game was played in November
1894 and resulted in a win for Washington State. The game in
1898 was not played because Idaho had an ineligible
ringer from
Lapwai, David McFarland, a recent
All-American from
Carlisle. The Vandals' first-ever
forward pass was attempted against the Cougars in
1907: it was completed for a touchdown from a drop-kick formation in the fourth quarter and led to a Washington State has dominated the local rivalry, holding a lead; the record since
1926 is even more dominant, with a advantage for the Cougars. The longest winning streak for Idaho was three games and has only five victories since that three-peat (
1954,
1964,
1965,
1999, &
2000) and two ties (
1927,
1950) to offset the 58 losses. The games were skipped in
1969 and
1971, notably for Idaho as the
1971 Vandals posted one of the best records in school history, while WSU The rivalry became increasingly one-sided as WSU dominated in the 1970s (except for
1974) and the original series ended, following the
1978 game. From 1979 to 1997, the game was played just twice (
1982,
1989) until the 10-year renewal from 1998–2007. Since their last wins in 1999 and 2000, Idaho has been physically outmatched in most of the ten games; the game has been played three times since
2007, in
2013,
2016, and
2022. As two schools are in close proximity, there was a tradition called
Walkathon from 1938 to 1968; a week following the game, students of the losing school walked from their campus to the winners', then received rides back home from the winning side. This has frequently been misreported as students walking back to their own campus immediately following the game. In
1954, the walk made national news when about 2,000 students from Washington State College made the trek east from Pullman to Moscow after the Cougars lost to Idaho for the first time in 29 years. In a span of less than five months, from November
1969 to April
1970, both schools' aged wooden stadiums (Idaho's
Neale Stadium and WSU's
Rogers Field) burned down due to suspected
arson. The WSU–Idaho game in 1970 was dubbed the
Displaced Bowl, which was held in
Joe Albi Stadium in
Spokane on September 19. The Cougars won the game (their only win that season), as well as the next ten against the Vandals. This was the first in the rivalry played on
AstroTurf, which was new to Joe Albi that season. In
1978, the
NCAA split
Division I football in two: I-A (now FBS) and I-AA (now FCS). Washington State was in Division I-A as part of the
Pac-10 Conference and Idaho downgraded to I-AA as part of the
Big Sky Conference, whose other football members moved up from
Division II. In the late 1970s, I-A football programs were allowed 50% more
scholarships and twice as many assistant coaches as I-AA teams.
Future of rivalry After ten years of the renewed rivalry, Vandal head coach
Robb Akey, previously WSU's defensive coordinator, said in
2008 that he preferred the game not be played every year, instead saying he would prefer it as a "once-in-a-while thing." Only one game was played during Akey's tenure, in his first season in
2007, and he was fired in October
2012. The meeting in
2013 on September 21 was a one-year revival, and WSU in
2016. Because of the difficulty of scheduling as an isolated
FBS independent, Idaho returned to FCS and the Big Sky in
2018. There was a meeting scheduled for
2020, but it was canceled due to complications arising from the
COVID-19 pandemic; the teams played next in
2022, a 24–17 Cougar win. Future meetings are currently scheduled for
2025, 2027, and 2029.
Game results • Both were members of the
Pacific Coast Conference; the Battle of the Palouse was a conference game from
1922 through
1958. • Idaho was a division below WSU in
1967–
68 (College division) and
1978–
95 (Division I-AA); Idaho returned to
FCS in
2018. • Prior to 1959, WSU was WSC. • The only one to serve as head coach for both programs is
Dennis Erickson, who lost to the Cougars twice while at Idaho (
1982,
2006);the game was not played when he was at WSU (
1987,
1988). • The
1918 game was non-varsity, composed of
Student Army Training Corps (SATC) After the
Armistice of November 11ending
World War I, a limited schedule was played;
Idaho defeated
Washington State's SATC team 7–6 in Moscow on December 7.
Coaching records Since 1919
Idaho • Won first attempt: Stahley (
1954), Musseau (
1965), Cable (
2000) • Won final attempt: Mathews (
1925), Andros (
1964), Tormey (
1999) • Only Idaho coach with more than one win was Mathews, with
three straight (
1923,
1924,
1925)
Washington State • Last tie was in
1950, overtime began in
1996 in Division I-A (none through 2025) • Two games were played in 1945; no games in 1943, 1944, 1969, 1971 • After
1978, except for resumption of 1998–2007, games were scheduled intermittently (1982, 1989, 2013, 2016, 2022, 2025,
2027) ==Men's basketball==