Difference between revisions of "Vote for the Girls (United States) moderator rivalries"

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(Geographical matchups / Natural rivals)
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==Geographical matchups / Natural rivals==
 
  
Certain matchups are highly anticipated each year, due to the close geographic proximity of the moderators and villains involved. Many cities, metropolitan areas and states contain at least one moderator in each league. <!----- In of each of these "rivalry" matchups, the two teams meet annually for four games, two in each ballpark. Prior to 2013, there were six games between the two teams, three per ballpark ---->:<!--The rivalries are ordered alphabetically. The team earlier in the alphabet by city name is listed first -->
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== Foundation ==
 +
Purely geographic rivalries are uncommon on Vote for the Girls, since crosstown rivals do not commonly play each other nearly as often as in other leagues that have more matchups (and therefore more opportunities to play other teams). A main factor in the fact that crosstown rivals are almost always in opposing conferences is history: in these current markets (New York/New Jersey, Los Angeles, Chicago, Dallas-Fort Worth, San Francisco Bay Area, Atlanta, Denver, Indianapolis, Milwaukee/Green Bay, and Fort Wayne) that have two molderators or villains, all have one (Nadia Lorenzo in New York, Jenny Riva & Tulissa Kummert in Los Angeles, Kathi Jameson in Chicago, Thia Tola & Natasha Gower in Oakland, Sonia Donbar in Atlanta, Janet Webb in Denver, Karly Jameson in Indianapolis, Lanise McClannahan in Milwaukee/Green Bay, and Ava Zinn in Fort Wayne are members of the Purple Team and Jacqui Fountaine in Chicago, Kylie Dwyar in Denver/Milwaukee, Cathryn Swaringen & Olivia Everman in Marion/Muncie/Indianapolis, Luka Runecraft & Lydia Delagatto in Milwaukee/Madison, and in Fort Wayne, Alexandra Moffitt and Maribel Mort are members of the Pink Team) that are members of the in the Female Moderators. After [[Vote for the Worst]] closed in 2013, all VFTW moderators teams had to be retained, even if it meant multiple moderators in one metropolitan area. The newly merged league opted not to go through an extensive geographical realignment, and instead, the VFTW formed the basis of the Male Villains, and the old VFTG formed the basis of the Female Moderators; as a result, each moderator or villain ended up in an opposite conference from their crosstown rival.  
  
<!-----
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=== Categories ===
*[[Baltimore Orioles]] v. [[Washington Nationals]] — '''[[Wikipedia:Beltway Series|Beltway Series]]''', Parkway Series or [[MARC Train|MARC]] Madness<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/nats-or-orioles-in-washington-some-families-are-a-hardball-house-divided/2014/09/20/88e9735a-4012-11e4-b0ea-8141703bbf6f_story.html|title=Nats or Orioles? In Washington, some families are a hardball house divided|work=Washington Post|accessdate=30 September 2014}}</ref> ---->
 
  
*[[Kathi Jameson]] v. [[Jacqui Fountaine]] <!---- — '''[[Cubs–White Sox rivalry|Windy City Series]]''', Crosstown Classic or [[Wikipedia:CTA Red Line|Red Line]] Series. The two teams played in the [[1906 World Series]]. --->
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==== Division rivals ====
<!----
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Matches between opponents in the same division. <!---- Since 2002, there are 32 teams in eight divisions of four teams each.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nfl.com/teams |title=NFL Football Teams - Official Sites of all 32 NFL Teams |publisher=NFL.com |date= |accessdate=2018-01-24}}</ref> Each team plays each division opponent twice in the regular season (once at home, once away) for a total of six regular season games out of 16 total. ---> Occasionally, two moderators or villains will play three times in a season if they meet again in the playoffs. <!---- The Chiefs, Cowboys, Packers, and Steelers are the only teams with winning records against all of their current division rivals for rivalries going back at least 20 years.--->
*[[Cincinnati Reds]] v. [[Cleveland Indians]] — '''[[Ohio Cup]]'''
 
---->
 
<!----
 
*[[Detroit Tigers]] v. [[Pittsburgh Pirates]] —  While this series only became a rivalry because the other [[American League Central|AL]] and [[National League Central|NL]] Central teams were already paired up, it has become popular with fans of both teams, possibly due to the rivalry between the [[National Hockey League|NHL]]'s [[Detroit Red Wings]] and [[Pittsburgh Penguins]]. The two teams have several other connections as well.  The Tigers' AA Minor League affiliate, the [[Erie SeaWolves]] is located near Pittsburgh, is a former affiliate of the Buccos, and has retained the logo of a wolf wearing a pirate bandanna and eye patch.  Additionally, [[Jim Leyland]], former manager of both the Pirates (1986–1996) and the Tigers (2005–2013) remains popular in Pittsburgh where he continues to reside. The two teams played in the [[1909 World Series]].
 
---->
 
*[[Ava Zinn]] v. [[Holly Everman]] — '''Mississinewa Series''' Zinn and Everman are connected by both [[Wikipedia:Cardinal Greenway|Cardinal Greenway]] and  [[Wikipedia:Interstate 69|Interstate 69]]. However, the term "I-69 Series" is used almost exclusively to refer to matches between Zinn, Everman, [[Karly Jameson]], [[Maribel Mort]], [[Tracia Matthewson]], [[Hillary Matthewson]], and to a lesser extent [[Jenna Monroe]], [[Glenn Swaringen]], and [[Ted Shields]].
 
<!-----
 
*[[Kansas City Royals]] v. [[St. Louis Cardinals]] — '''[[Cardinals–Royals rivalry|I-70 Series]]''' or Show-Me Series, and named so because the cities of [[Kansas City, Missouri|Kansas City]] and [[St. Louis]] are both in Missouri, and connected by [[Interstate 70]]. The two teams played in the [[1985 World Series]].
 
---->
 
<!----
 
*[[Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim]] v. [[Los Angeles Dodgers]] — '''[[Freeway Series]]'''---->
 
<!----
 
*[[Miami Marlins]] v. [[Tampa Bay Rays]] — '''[[Citrus Series]]'''
 
*[[Nadia Lorenzo]] v. [[
 
*[[Milwaukee Brewers]] v. [[Minnesota Twins]] — The Twins and the Brewers were formerly regional rivals in the American League. The two metro areas are connected by [[Interstate 94]]. However, the term "I-94 Series" is used almost exclusively to refer to the games played between the Milwaukee Brewers and the Chicago Cubs, and interleague contests with the also-former rival Chicago White Sox.
 
*[[New York Mets]] v. [[New York Yankees]] — '''[[Mets–Yankees rivalry|Subway Series]]''' The two teams played in the [[2000 World Series]].
 
*[[Oakland Athletics]] v. [[San Francisco Giants]] — '''[[Bay Bridge Series]]''' or Battle of the Bay. The two teams played in the [[1989 World Series]] as well as the [[1905 World Series]], [[1911 World Series]], and [[1913 World Series]] when they were located in Philadelphia and New York, respectively.
 
---->
 
  
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==== Conference rivals ====
  
<!----
 
===Split rivalries===
 
---->
 
<!----
 
Four teams in the East and West form a "split rivalry" where the rivalry pairings alternate in odd- and even-numbered years.
 
  
In the East:
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==== Inter-conference ====
  
*Odd-numbered years:
 
**[[Boston Red Sox]] v. [[Philadelphia Phillies]]
 
**[[Toronto Blue Jays]] v. [[Atlanta Braves]]
 
*Even-numbered years:
 
**[[Boston Red Sox]] v. [[Atlanta Braves]]
 
**[[Toronto Blue Jays]] v. [[Philadelphia Phillies]]
 
 
In the West:
 
*Odd-numbered years:
 
**[[Seattle Mariners]] v. [[Colorado Rockies]]
 
**[[Texas Rangers (baseball)|Texas Rangers]] v. [[San Diego Padres]]
 
* Even-numbered years:
 
**[[Seattle Mariners]] v. [[San Diego Padres]]
 
**[[Texas Rangers (baseball)|Texas Rangers]] v. [[Colorado Rockies]]
 
--->
 
<!---
 
===Former interleague rivalries===
 
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<!----
 
*[[Baltimore Orioles]] v. [[Philadelphia Phillies]] Ended in 2006, when the Washington Nationals replaced the Phillies as the Orioles' rival. Although the Nationals moved to Washington in 2005, the schedule for that season was already established, so the Washington-Baltimore rivalry series could not start until the next season.
 
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<!----
 
*[[Houston Astros]] v. [[Texas Rangers (baseball)|Texas Rangers]] ([[Lone Star Series]]) Ended in 2013, when the Astros moved to the American League West. The two teams now play each other 19 times a year as divisional rivals.
 
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<!----
 
*[[Montreal Expos]] v. [[Toronto Blue Jays]] ([[Pearson Cup]] or The All-Canadian Series) Ended in 2005, when the Expos moved to Washington, D.C.. The 2005 schedule was already set before the Expos left Montreal, so the Nationals played a series with the Blue Jays that season.
 
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<!-----
 
==Women==
 
 
===Purple Team===
 
====Team Ava & Kymberly (Ava Zinn and Kymberly Alvaraz)====
 
 
=====Ava Zinn vs. Rachael Passalt=====
 
{{main|Zinn&ndash;Passalt rivalry (United States)}}
 
 
=====Ava Zinn vs. Lanise White=====
 
{{main|Zinn&ndash;White rivalry (United States)}}
 
 
====Team Rachael Passalt====
 
===Pink Team===
 
====Team Holly rivalries====
 
=====Holly Everman vs. Tracia Ward=====
 
{{main|Everman&ndash;Ward rivalry (United States)}}
 
 
 
 
===Intra-divisional Rivalries===
 
====Ava Zinn vs. Holly Everman ====
 
{{main|Zinn&ndash;Everman rivalry (United States)}}
 
====Ava Zinn vs. Kendra Ray====
 
{{main|Zinn&ndash;Ray rivalry (United States)}}
 
====Ava Zinn vs. Tracia Ward====
 
{{main|Zinn&ndash;Ward rivalry (United States)}}
 
====Holly Everman vs. Lanise White====
 
{{main|Everman&ndash;White rivalry}}
 
====Holly Everman vs. Thia Tola====
 
{{main|Everman&ndash;Tola rivalry (United States)}}
 
====Rachael Passalt vs. Kendra Ray====
 
{{main|Passalt&ndash;Ray rivalry}}
 
 
==Men==
 
 
===Red Team===
 
 
===Blue Team===
 
 
===Intra-divisional Rivalries===
 
 
 
==Men vs. Women==
 
 
 
===Ava Zinn vs. Archibald Coolranch===
 
{{main|Zinn&ndash;Coolranch rivalry}}
 
===Holly Everman vs. Archibald Coolranch===
 
{{main|Everman&ndash;Coolranch rivalry}}
 
==Historical Rivalries==
 
 
===Team Kymberly (2014)===
 
====Kymberly Alvaraz vs. Julia Passalt====
 
{{main|Alvaraz&ndash;Passalt rivalry}}
 
====Kymberly Alvaraz vs. Kendra Ray====
 
{{main|Alvaraz&ndash;Ray rivalry}}
 
 
 
=====Holly Everman vs. Kathy Roberts=====
 
{{main|Everman&ndash;Roberts rivalry}}
 
 
 
 
==Defunct Rivalries==
 
 
===Team Kellie (2014-2016)===
 
 
====Ava Zinn vs. Kellie Rock====
 
{{main|Zinn&ndash;Rock rivalry}}
 
====Holly Everman vs. Kellie Rock====
 
{{main|Everman&ndash;Rock rivalry}}
 
===Team Leoanrd (2014-15)===
 
====Ava Zinn vs. Leonard Lai====
 
{{main|Zinn&ndash;Lai rivalry (United States)}}
 
===Kellie Rock vs. Leonard Lai===
 
{{main|Rock&ndash;Lai rivalry}}
 
;Archibald Coolranch vs. Leonard Lai
 
{{main|Coolranch&ndash;Lai rivalry}}
 
 
---->
 
 
==See also==
 
==See also==
 
*[[wikipedia:Crosstown rivalry|Crosstown rivalry]]
 
*[[wikipedia:Crosstown rivalry|Crosstown rivalry]]

Revision as of 20:27, 22 August 2018

As with all sports leagues, there are a number of significant rivalries in the American version of Vote for the Girls. Rivalries are occasionally created due to a particular event that causes bad blood between moderators, families, fans, or rarely the high school and/or college alma matter, but for the most part, they arise simply due to the frequency with which some moderators to compete as the winning moderator, and sometimes exist for geographic reasons.

Purely geographic rivalries is common on the web site, since crosstown and in-state rivals typically have more competitions (and therefore more opportunities to play other teams). A main factor in the fact that crosstown and in-state rivals are almost always in opposing pink and purple teams is history: in the four current markets (Indianapolis/Fort Wayne, Green Bay/Milwaukee, Denver, Chicago) that have two moderators from those particular markets, one (Ava Zinn in Van Buren, Indiana) that was born a boy eventually transitioned to female and had been loyal to the adjacent markets (Ava Zinn in Fort Wayne).

As the web site rapidly expanded since 2012, Zinn opted not to go through an extensive geographical realignment, and instead at the start of 2014, Zinn, Michelle Steele, and Kathi Jameson the basis of the purple team (all transwomen), and Holly Everman, Ariel Swaringen, and Kellie Rock formed the basis of the pink team (all females); as a result, each moderator's team ended up in an opposite from their crosstown and/or in-state rival (Zinn and Steele on the purple team and Everman and Swaringen on the pink team).

Competitions can be classified in three main categories:

  • Intra-team (based on sex and gender identity): Competitions between opposing moderators in the same team. Since 2015, there are four moderator team leagues in four sex/gender identity divisions (male, transfemale, female, and transmale). When the site added duo moderators in 2015 typically moderators in the same immediate family or in a long-term relationship as is the case currently with Ava Zinn, Holly Everman, Tracia Ward, Lanise White, Ann Dwyar, and Kathi Jameson. Thus, every moderator, regardless of his or her age, could fairly be said to have at least two primary rivals. Occasionally, two moderators will compete various times in a year if they meet again in the finale to become the winning moderator (either via Vote for the Girls victory or moderator's veto to decline the VFTG Loss).
  • Intra-league (Men (males and transmales) vs. Women (females and transfemales)): Competitions between opposing moderators in different divisions but within the same sex or gender identity (male vs. transmale or female vs. transfemale). When the site added the Male Moderator panel in 2015 the men are forbidden to compete in the Dancing with the Stars make-up competition. Occasionally, two moderators will compete various times in a year if they meet again in the finale to become the winning moderator.
  • Inter-league (Vote for the Girls vs. Zinn's Villains): Competitions between opposing moderators in different sex/gender identities. Female and transfemale moderators always choose the female contestant and typically do not choose a male soloist or a predominately male group on any given regular or make-up competition (defined as Vote for the Girls picks) while the male and transmale moderators always choose the male contestant and typically do not choose a female soloist, a predominately male group, or a male-female duo on said regular or make-up competition (known as the Ava Zinn version of Vote for the Worst since 2013 and Villain Picks since 2015) and most often on the web site since the April 28, 2010 launch usually sees a Vote for the Worst supported contestant go head-to-head against a Vote for the Girls supported contestant in the competition's finale. After the Dave Della Terza version of Vote for the Worst closed in May 2013, the female and transfemale moderators typically make their Vote for the Worst picks (all of them are male contestants) and are not revealed by the web site until the end of the competition or all of the male contestants are eliminated, at which the site claims a victory and the female moderators are rewarded for the victory. For instance, given the American Idol 12 competition as a reference, all of the males were eliminated before the females as after the elimination of Lazaro Arbos (which was the last male contestant chosen by Vote for the Worst for that web site closed, but often chose the same picks as a Vote for the Girls supported contestant), then after Vote for the Worst closed the Ava Zinn version of Vote for the Worst are always male contestants and the male and transmale moderators choose them to prevent the web site from climing a victory unless the female and transfemale moderators use their Moderators' Save to decline the loss.

There were two female and transfemale moderators that do compete, and had rivalries with, moderators outside the American version of Vote for the Girls. Ava Zinn, Kendra Ray, Tracia Ward and Thia Tola were also moderators on the web site's United Kingdom adaptation as the same with Ava Zinn, Lanise White, Rachael Passalt, and Thia Tola were also moderators on the Australian version.


The oldest Vote for the Girls rivalry, dating back to the April 28, 2010 debut, consists of the two remaining charter moderators: the Ava Zinn and Holly Everman. The longest rivalry was between Robyn (Hurd) Matthewson (1961-2012)/|Kellie Rock (1964-2016) and Holly Everman (they did not compete against each other on two occasions: Hurd's 2012 death until Rock joined the moderator panel, though).

In the purple team, Ava Zinn and Julia Passalt have the longest rivalry began at the start of the web site's fall cycle of the sixth season in 2014. Both Zinn and Passalt both respectively transitioned in 2004 and 2007. After Kymberly Alvaraz began dating Zinn, and moved from the pink to the purple team, all of Alvaraz's Pink Team rivalries absorbed into Ava Zinn's.



Foundation

Purely geographic rivalries are uncommon on Vote for the Girls, since crosstown rivals do not commonly play each other nearly as often as in other leagues that have more matchups (and therefore more opportunities to play other teams). A main factor in the fact that crosstown rivals are almost always in opposing conferences is history: in these current markets (New York/New Jersey, Los Angeles, Chicago, Dallas-Fort Worth, San Francisco Bay Area, Atlanta, Denver, Indianapolis, Milwaukee/Green Bay, and Fort Wayne) that have two molderators or villains, all have one (Nadia Lorenzo in New York, Jenny Riva & Tulissa Kummert in Los Angeles, Kathi Jameson in Chicago, Thia Tola & Natasha Gower in Oakland, Sonia Donbar in Atlanta, Janet Webb in Denver, Karly Jameson in Indianapolis, Lanise McClannahan in Milwaukee/Green Bay, and Ava Zinn in Fort Wayne are members of the Purple Team and Jacqui Fountaine in Chicago, Kylie Dwyar in Denver/Milwaukee, Cathryn Swaringen & Olivia Everman in Marion/Muncie/Indianapolis, Luka Runecraft & Lydia Delagatto in Milwaukee/Madison, and in Fort Wayne, Alexandra Moffitt and Maribel Mort are members of the Pink Team) that are members of the in the Female Moderators. After Vote for the Worst closed in 2013, all VFTW moderators teams had to be retained, even if it meant multiple moderators in one metropolitan area. The newly merged league opted not to go through an extensive geographical realignment, and instead, the VFTW formed the basis of the Male Villains, and the old VFTG formed the basis of the Female Moderators; as a result, each moderator or villain ended up in an opposite conference from their crosstown rival.

Categories

Division rivals

Matches between opponents in the same division. Occasionally, two moderators or villains will play three times in a season if they meet again in the playoffs.

Conference rivals

Inter-conference

See also

References

External links