Iowa Big Four men's college basketball


The Hy-Vee Classic consisted of games between Iowa's four NCAA Division I men's basketball teams: Iowa, Iowa State, Northern Iowa, and Drake. For 2012–2018, the rivalry consisted of a one-day two game event at Wells Fargo Arena each December, originally called the Big Four Classic but now known as the Hy-Vee Classic, Iowa and Iowa State playing each other in an ongoing-home and home series, and Drake and Northern Iowa playing each other regularly as members of the Missouri Valley Conference. Grinnell College was previously considered a part of the Big Four prior to their demotion to NCAA Division III athletics when they were members of the MVIAA and Missouri Valley Conference.

History

For decades, Iowa and Iowa State had home-and-home series with in-state rivals Northern Iowa and Drake, with Iowa visiting Northern Iowa in odd-numbered years and Drake in even-numbered years and Iowa State visiting Northern Iowa in even-numbered years and Drake in odd-numbered years. Iowa State and Drake, in particular, played in 104 of 105 seasons.
In the 2000s, Iowa State, wanting to grow a greater presence in the Des Moines area, offered and played multiple games at Wells Fargo Arena against various teams. When they offered Drake the opportunity to move their rivalry to Wells Fargo Arena, Drake declined. Iowa and Iowa State also offered Northern Iowa and Drake money to play solely in Iowa City/Ames but both schools declined.
During the 2010/2011 seasons, Iowa and Iowa State began to feel pressure from both losing to Northern Iowa and Drake in their non-conference schedule and the need to allow for more games against Power 5 conference competition in hopes of building a stronger non-conference resume for consideration of at-large bids for future NCAA Tournaments. Northern Iowa and Drake did not want to lose the in-state match-ups. A neutral site concept was seen as the best for everyone involved and the Big Four Classic was born.
Hy-Vee signed on as the sponsor of the event. The initial contract ran from 2012–2015. It was later extended to 2017. As part of the 2019 extension, the event was renamed the Hy-Vee Classic.

Hy-Vee Classic

The event was held on the third Saturday of December. In 2013 the event was moved to the first Saturday of December, but attendance from students preparing for finals dropped considerably so the event was moved back to the third Saturday, although all four universities host December Commencement exercises on that same day.
The event consists of two games played back to back. Initially, in even numbered years, Iowa played Northern Iowa and Iowa State played Drake; in odd numbered years, Iowa played Drake and Iowa State played Northern Iowa. The even-odd rotation was switched as part of the 2016–2019 extension. The schools also rotate hosting duties in this order: Iowa, Drake, Iowa State, Northern Iowa.
Which game is first/second and at what times is largely determined by television. Initially there was hope for both games broadcasting to a national television audience; however, this has largely been unsuccessful to date due to both college football bowl games and other established basketball events falling on the same day. The Big Ten & Big XII have rights to the games that Iowa and Iowa State, respectively, compete in. If both conference TV partners pass on the game, ESPN can telecast through the Missouri Valley's deal with the network; otherwise, the games air locally on Mediacom. In 2015, the Northern Iowa-Iowa State game broadcast via ESPNU and the Drake-Iowa game was broadcast on ESPN3 marking the first national television broadcast from the event.
Financially, the four schools split revenue 25–25–25–25. This has resulted in Northern Iowa and Drake making a much larger profit than they previously did, although it has come at the expense of the loss of a major home game each year. The event did not sell out in its first year, but has each year since.
In addition to the loss of on-campus home games against in-state rivals, Northern Iowa and Drake play one of either Iowa or Iowa State in the same season. As UNI and DU cannot face each other in the classic, there is no way to formally determine an official champion between the four schools in a tournament-style format.

Regular season results

Key

Round-Robin era

Hy-Vee Classic era

Wells Fargo Arena
DateWinning
Team
ScoreLosing
Team
Attendance
December 15, 2012Iowa80–73Northern Iowa13,180
December 15, 2012Iowa State86–77Drake13,180
December 7, 2013Iowa State91–82 OTNorthern Iowa14,512
December 7, 2013Iowa83–66Drake14,512
December 20, 2014Iowa State83–54Drake15,124
December 20, 2014Northern Iowa56–44Iowa15,124
December 19, 2015Iowa70–64Drake15,424
December 19, 2015Northern Iowa81–79Iowa State15,424
December 17, 2016Iowa69–46Northern Iowa15,028
December 17, 2016Iowa State97–80Drake15,028
December 16, 2017Iowa90–64Drake13,828
December 16, 2017Iowa State76–65Northern Iowa13,828
December 15, 2018Iowa State77–68Drake12,236
December 15, 2018Iowa77–54Northern Iowa12,236

On-Campus Facilities
SeasonDrake – UNI
score
Drake – UNI
score
ISU – Iowa
score
2012–1385–5571–6480–71
2013–1476–6670–6785–82
2014–1564–4069–5390–75
2015–1677–4482–6683–82
2016–1779–6071–6378–64
2017–1868–5471–6484–78
2018–1957–5483–7798–84

Post Hy-Vee Classic era

Future match-ups

Iowa announced on June 14, 2018 that it was exercising its contractual right to leave the Hy-Vee Classic after the 2018 season, leaving the future of the Hy-Vee Classic in doubt. While Iowa and Iowa State have not ruled out further participation, comments by both schools indicate that they would prefer to not play games in Des Moines and would rather play home games at each school's respective home arena.

Outright Big Four Championships by team