Editor’s note: This story has been updated to reflect聽Sen. Jon Tester represents Montana.聽
ARLINGTON, Va. 鈥撀燙ollege sports is built on the backs of its great rivalries. Every state seems to have at least one: Alabama-Auburn, Duke-North Carolina, Cal-Stanford. But there鈥檚 one rivalry celebrated each year around the country and beyond that you may never have heard of, and that is unique in the way it brings those on both sides together, rather than pitting them against one another.
It has recently been rebranded as the Brawl of the Wild, but most natives of Big Sky Country refer to it as Cat-Griz. The annual tilt between the Montana State Bobcats and Montana Grizzlies is one of the oldest rivalries in the country, with the 116th meeting between the two happening last Saturday.
鈥淭his is the main event in Montana,鈥 said Jayne Visser, president of the Montana State Society, which calls itself 鈥渁 place for Montanans who live in the Washington, D.C. area to celebrate our shared heritage.鈥
鈥淚 am born and raised in Missoula, and this is something that me and my family look forward to every year,鈥 Visser said.
While the schools are rivals, there is a shared sense of community and attachment to their shared home state among those watching. There is no booing, no jeering, no yelling at one another. They share tables and pitchers of beer with one another, watching the game together.
Over 200 graduates and native Montanans packed the top two floors of Crystal City Sports Pub, actually a slightly smaller crowd than usual. In many years it pushes 300, a standing room only gathering聽that represents one of the largest individual Cat-Griz gatherings of the .
鈥淔or years, we would try to do it in D.C., and we would run into the problem that when we would say that we get hundreds of people, no one would believe us,鈥 said Lyndsey Medsker, a Montana State graduate who helps organize the yearly watch party.
Medsker lived in New York before moving to Washington. If the bar owners she spoke with knew how hard-core Montanans were at the watch parties she attended in Manhattan, maybe they would have believed her.
鈥淔or three or four years I organized the one in New York, and at that time we couldn鈥檛 get the game on TV, so we would listen to it on the radio,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t was still Montanans getting together.鈥
It鈥檚 a passion that extends beyond the game itself, or even the two universities. For Great Falls native Genny Beltrone, who works for聽Montana Sen. Jon Tester but is a graduate of Gonzaga University, it鈥檚 a tradition that extends beyond sports.
鈥淭his is the only football game I watch all year,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 even watch the Super Bowl.鈥
Running since 1897, the rivalry has been played just one fewer time in its history than Army-Navy, and more times than 鈥淭he Game鈥 between Michigan and Ohio State or the Red River Rivalry between Texas and Oklahoma.
Montana has held the edge overall and the Grizzlies came into Saturday鈥檚 game better than two touchdown favorites. After a quick defensive three-and-out, they scored on their first offensive play and looked to be on their way to a fourth straight win within the rivalry. But the underdog Bobcats controlled most of the rest of the game, coming up with the big plays when it mattered to snag a 24-17 upset, much to the delight of Steven Foster. He grew up in Helena and played both tight end and right tackle for the Bobcats.
鈥淢y Dad鈥檚 a Cat, my mom was a Griz, so I get the whole thing,鈥 he said of the rivalry.
Foster, who works for Montana’s other Senator, Steve Daines, played in three Cat-Griz聽games. He found himself聽catching up with friends from both middle school and high school Saturday afternoon.
鈥淚 did know that there were watch parties all over, but I didn鈥檛 know it would be such a big deal here in D.C.,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut this is great. It鈥檚 better than I ever imagined.鈥