The Farmville Cup
Published 5:20 pm Thursday, November 15, 2018
- The Sigma Chi intramural flag football team from Hampden-Sydney College celebrates with the trophy it earned after defeating Phi Kappa Tau of Longwood University 28-18 in the recent Farmville Cup at Lancer Park. The game pits the champions of each school’s intramural leagues against each other to determine a town champion. Joined by fans behind the fence, Sigma Chi team members pictured include, from left, front row, Niko Thurman, Stewart Thames, Kevin Hood, Aaron Damato, Andres Pipenburg, Patrick Neale, Zachary Carpenter; back row, Peter Allocca, Garrett Whitley, Andrew Blankenship and Nick Kasperzak.
Farmville is rich with intercollegiate athletics, but it is also a hub of intramural athletics, and it is in this latter category that one will discover the Farmville Cup — a unique event that brings the two-college town together.
“It was originally started in 2009 by Robbie Bell, from Longwood, and Ricky Talman, from Hampden-Sydney,” said Robert Stevens, coordinator of sports programs in Longwood University’s Intramurals and Campus Recreation Department. “And they were friends and had talked about doing something between the two schools, decided that the winners of the intramural championships for flag football and basketball at each school would play each other for a trophy that would stay with whoever won the game for each semester.”
The 2018 flag football Farmville Cup took place Oct. 25 at Lancer Park and featured two fraternity teams. Sigma Chi of Hampden-Sydney College (H-SC) advanced through the 12-team field at H-SC to reach the Cup and face Phi Kappa Tau, which advanced through the 10-team field at Longwood. Sigma Chi ended up winning 28-18 in front of a crowd that Stevens said included well more than one hundred people.
Stevens said he would like to think H-SC quarterback Niko Thurman was the game’s MVP, leading his team in both rushing and passing.
The tradition of the Farmville Cup stopped for a couple of years, but Stevens helped bring it back when he came back last fall.
“It’s always a friendly rivalry between the two schools,” he said, and the participants are not intercollegiate athletes but simply students looking for athletic opportunities at a level that is less time-intensive.
H-SC Club and Intramural Sports Director Matt Griswold, who thanked Longwood for hosting the latest Cup, said those competing in it and the intramural leagues can “still have fun, recreational, competitive times with their friends and classmates and without it being the time commitment that a varsity sport would be.”