by Bryan Whitledge
In 1924, the Central Michigan Normal School held our first
homecoming football game. And even from the first game, it was important to
establish traditions. Some of the traditions that Central students and alumni have
known through the years include Homecoming Mums (1930s-80s), the Homecoming
Queen (1946-96), the Homecoming King (1982-96), the Homecoming 5K(1987-present) and the Homecoming Medallion Hunt (2003-present). In 1924, the
first tradition started by Centralites (we weren’t the Chippewas until 1941 and
we weren’t even the Bearcats until 1927), aside from the game, was the menacing
dragon that trotted out at halftime to intimidate the opposing Alma team and
inspired our gridiron boys to victory. According to the 1925 yearbook, the
dragon “symbolized that the visiting eleven was helpless against the
dragon-like power of the Maroon and Gold fighters.”
The following year, the second homecoming was planned. Among
the highlights of the Friday-night pep rally, was “the traditional Central
Normal dragon,” which “wound its
way among the crowd encircling the bonfire while the red lights shooting out
from its gaping mouth were portents of the ordeal that Albion must undergo on
the morrow.” The dragon also made an appearance at halftime the following day when
the Central team held the strong Albion squad to a draw. Clearly the
fire-breathing dragon had become a homecoming tradition.
Through all this time, Central still did not have a nickname
for the athletics teams. It should come as no surprise then, in June of 1926,
when a Central Normal Life sportswriter was lamenting the lack of a snappy name
for the team, that “Dragons” would be suggested as a nickname for Central’s
teams. The writer noted that the fire-breathing dragon was Central’s “outstanding
pep innovation of recent years.”
Through that fall and spring, the Central Normal Life was full
of headlines like, “Dragons Smash Thru for Four Touchdowns,” and “MIAA Champs
Vanquished, 13-2, Bv Terrific Drive of the Dragons.” But alas, the Dragons would last only one year. By August 1927,
students were calling for a new mascot to compete in the world of Bulldogs,
Bears, and Tigers. An early suggestion was Wildcats, but by October, Bearcats
was the name that was chosen. As the Central State Life noted at the time, “the
expression [Bearcats] is one that is used much in this section of the state to
signify that a team or an individual is a topnotcher, a fighter, and a winner.”
It’s not often that
a school’s Homecoming tradition gives rise to a team mascot, but such is the
case for Central’s short-lived fire-breathing dragon that rallied students and intimidated
opponents.