Carthage Red Men vs Millikin Big Blue is the kind of college football matchup that splits living rooms and group chats. Whenever these two meet, the records get thrown out and the only thing that matters is who walks away with the bragging rights.
Both programs call the CCIW home, so this isn't just pride on the line — it's conference standing, head-to-head tiebreakers, and a direct say in who plays for a title. Every recruiting cycle, every transfer-portal swing, and every Saturday result feeds the same argument. When the Red Men face the Big Blue, the debate is never settled for long — last year's result just sets up next year's argument.
Below, Carthage Red Men and Millikin Big Blue fans make their cases in real time. Stake your claim, drop your prediction, and talk your trash before kickoff.
Built this program? Walk-ons. Kids from Decatur and Mattoon who showed up with nothing to prove and everything to earn. The 1987 team had six walk-ons in the two-deep. Now everyone wants a bag before they even strap a helmet on.
All this talk about stadium renovations and new facilities is just noise. The real soul of a place is in the old concrete and the echoes. I remember when our stadium was just wooden bleachers and the roar from the home side could shake the press box, long before anyone cared about luxury suites. You can't build that kind of history with a checkbook, and these new kids will never know what they're missing.
They're talking about the NFL Draft like it's a holiday, but it just reminds me of what we've lost. A player getting drafted used to be the culmintaion of a four-year journey you watched from start to finish. Now, half the names called spent one season at a school after two stops somewhere else. What are you even celebrating? The old Blue-Gray Game, the East-West Shrine Game, those meant something because you saw those seniors build a legacy. Now a kid plays in the Sun Bowl, enters the portal before the confetti's cleaned up, and you're supposed to care where he gets drafted? The connection is gone. The whole tradition of watching a program develop men for the next level has been replaced by a transactional highlight reel.
They're talking about a six hundred million dollar stadium renovation at Nebraska, and all I can think about is how we used to know every team in the CCIW like family. Now the map is redrawn every five years for TV money, and the soul of regional football is gone. You used to build a program to beat your neighbors, not to impress some network executive in Bristol.
The entire recruiting industry is sleeping on JUCO gems because they're too busy chasing composite stars, and that's how Carthage can steal a march on EVERY CCIW rival. While everyone else is fighting over the same high school croots, our staff should be building a pipeline to the top JUCO programs for immediate-impact trench players. That's the kind of sleeper pick that wins you a conference title when the portal window is closed.
The real position of need for every CCIW contender is a game-wrecking edge rusher, and the portal window closing means we're all stuck with what we've got until winter.
Stop pretending a high composite ranking is the only win. Our class ranking is steady, but the real bump is in average player rating. We're building quality, not just chasing stars lol.
Why is nobody talking about the fact that the new NIL rveenue sharing cap means our collective can now structure deals to guarantee multi-year commitments? Hearing noise that some top-tier D3 programs are already offering 4-year packages to lock down their priority croots before the big schools even notice. This is how we win battles against the Augustanas of the world.
Watching all these NFL Draft profiles drop for guys like Gennings Dunker and KC Concepcion, and it just hits different for a program like ours. That's the dream, right? A kid comes in, buys into the system, develops over four or five years, and leaves as a legit pro prospect with his degree. That's the model. But the noise is all about the portal circus and the five-star factories. Nobody is talking about the developmental programs that are the backbone of this sport.
I'm looking at our board for the 2027 class right now, and the crystal balls are quiet. That's fine. The dead period is a grind. But you know what I'm hearing? The staff is in on a couple of three-star guys from Wisconsin and Illinois who are pure football players. No flashy NIL auctions, no bagman drama. Just kids who want to be developed and play for something real. That's how you build a cutlure that lasts, not by flipping 50 guys from the portal in one winter because you panicked.
The big schools lose five guys to the draft and everyone acts like the sky is falling. For us, sending one guy to a pro day is a massive win. It proves the path works. It's what we sell on every single OV. You look at a guy like Dunker becoming a viral star at the combine from Iowa, that's the blueprint. It's not about the composite ranking on day one, it's about the player you are when you leave. That's the pitch. That's the only pitch that matters when you're building something sustainable in the CCIW.
Saw that story about the new Florida coach talking about waking a beast. It’s all just noise now. You know what used to wake a program up? A group of freshmen who grew up together, bled for the jersey, and stuck around for four years to build something. Now you just write a check and go shopping for a new offensive line in the portal. It’s a fantasy camp for millionaire boosters, not a football team.
I remember our 1985 Millikin squad that went 8-2. Those guys, most of them from right here in Illinois, they played for each other. They played for the guy next to them. There was no escape hatch, no bidding war waiting in December if you had a bad season. You dug in and fixed it. That’s how you build character, that’s how you build men. NIL has turned the whole thing into a transactional farce where loyalty is a weakness and the highest bidder gets your heart.
These kids at these big schools are just mercenaries. They talk about “building a culture” in spring ball while half the roster is brand new. You can’t build a culture in one offseason with rented players. It’s a facade. The beast isn’t sleeping, it’s been put down and replaced with a hollow, money-driven shell of what the sport used to be. The soul is gone, sold to the highest NIL collective.
The winter portal window is gone and the staff is locked in on the 2027 class, but I'm telling you, the lack of a spring window is going to create a massive, unprecedented wave of post-spring practice transfers next January. Guys who lose their battles now are stuck, and the frustration will boil over. We need to be ready to pounce when that dam breaks, because the CCIW arms race never stops.
The entire concept of a "rivalry" has been gutted and sold for parts, and anyone who thinks otherwise is lying to themselves. The soul of this sport was the annual blood feud you circled on the calendar the day the schedule came out, a game where you knew every name on the other sideline because they were the same kids you'd been hating for three years. Now? You need a damn media guide just to figure out who is wearing the uniform, and half of them will be gone next year, chasing a better NIL deal. This isn't rivalry, it's corporate brand warfare with temporary employees.
I remember what it felt like for us, for Millikin, when we'd gear up for Augustana or Wheaton. You didn't just play the team, you played the entire history. You played against the ghosts of their alumni and the weigth of every single meeting that came before. The kids on that field understood they were just the current chapter in a story that started decades before they were born. The 1998 game against Illinois Wesleyan, that double-overtime heartbreaker, meant something because the same two institutions, with players who chose to be there for four years, were battling it out. There was a fabric to it. Now the fabric is made of Velcro, easy to tear off and stick somewhere else.
Look at what they've done at the top. Conference realignment was the first sin, ripping apart Bedlam and the Border War and the Backyard Brawl for television dollars. They sold our heritage for cable subscription fees. And now the portal and NIL have finished the job. How can you hate a kid who just showed up three months ago from a school across the country? How can you build a genuine, lasting animosity toward a program when its entire two-deep is a revolving door of mercenaries? The news about Colorado bringing in 43 transfers, or Oklahoma State with 50, it's a farce. That's not building a team, that's assembling a fantasy football roster with no connection to the place, the people, or the opponent across the field.
The new "rivalries" they try to manufacture are just TV matchups between logos. They'll tell you Oregon vs. Georgia is some new epic clash. It's not. It's just two collections of five-star talent and portal acquisitions who happened to schedule each other. There's no shared pain, no stolen championships, no decades of regional pride on the line. It's a business transaction. And the kids playing in it? They're thinking about their draft stock and their next NIL deal, not about avenging a loss from last year to their archrival, because half of them weren't even there for that loss.
The proof is in the silence. The stories aren't passed down anymore because there's no continuity to pass them down to. When I was in school, the seniors would tell the freshmen about the hit that defined the rivalry game five years prior. Now, the senior might have been at three different schools. Who is he going to tell? What history does he carry? He carries his own highlight reel, not the legacy of the p...