| "Rockets" Nickname Origin |
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When The University of Toledo played
then-powerful Carnegie Institute of Technology in football on September 29,
1923, Pittsburgh sports writers were surprised to learn that UT did not have a
nickname. Though an underdog, Toledo fought formidably, recovering a series of
embarrassing fumbles by favored Tech. Pittsburgh writers pressed James E. Neal,
a UT junior pharmacy student who was working in the press box, to come up with a
nickname for his school's team. Despite UT's 32-12 loss, the student labeled
the team "Skyrockets," obviously impressed by his alma mater's flashy
performance against a superior team. William B Hook, who started as an unknown
substitute guard and ended a hero, grabbed a Carnegie fumble out of the air and
raced 99 yards for a touchdown. A sportswriters remarked that Hook looked more
like a rocket than a skyrocket as Carnegie Tech players failed to overtake him.
Other writers began using the name "Rockets" with quotation marks in their
stories, but after one week the quotation marks were dropped and The University
of Toledo's nickname remained the Rockets. Toledo had short-term nicknames such as Fighters. |