It was a one-sided rivalry until it went away the first time, and its been fairly lopsided since it came back.It remains to be seen whether Charleston Southern or The Citadel will own a big edge on the field when they resume their now twice-interrupted series in 2018, but theres one aspect that will swing exclusively the Bulldogs way: the location.Johnson Hagood Stadium will host all four meetings between Charlestons two Division I college football programs when a series thats currently in the first of a two-year hiatus kicks off again. And thats perhaps as interesting a detail as the agreement to play at all, which was announced Monday by The Citadel athletic director Jim Senter.We are excited to renew this FCS matchup between our two schools, Senter said in a statement. This game is a no-brainer and makes sense for two great colleges in the Lowcountry representing two outstanding FCS conferences. We have been working on dates and finalizing the terms for a while now, and we are excited to resume this series in Johnson Hagood Stadium beginning in 2018.The Citadel won four of the first five meetings in a series that began in 2002 and lasted until 2007, with a scheduled 2004 meeting canceled due to Hurricane Frances. The rivalry renewed in 2012 with another Bulldogs rout, but the Buccaneers have beaten The Citadel four times in the last three seasons -- including a 14-6 win at home last December that was Charleston Southerns first FCS playoff victory.Bucs coach Jamey Chadwell had a lot to say about the then soon-to-be-defunct rivalry after his teams 33-20 September win over the Bulldogs, claiming theres probably not a chance that were ever going to play again as long as Im here. While the regional-based bracketing of the FCS playoffs and a bit of fate would prove that statement premature, much of the wedge between the two schools was due to The Citadels insistence that any future games be played exclusively at its 21,000-seat downtown stadium and not the relatively tiny Buccaneer Field in North Charleston.I feel like we should play every year, Chadwell said after the 2015 regular-season meeting at Johnson Hagood. Its a great rivalry, a great atmosphere. But we deserve a home game, a home and home. Weve earned that. And if certain people think that were beneath them, then were not going to come down here.Mondays agreement proved otherwise, but he didnt seem any more eager to amend his stance on Tuesdays Big South conference call.I really dont have a comment on it, to be honest with you, Chadwell said. Im focused on right now, not looking that far down the road. But thank you for asking.To Charleston Southern AD Hank Small, it was a matter of valuing the continuation of the series over turning it into a petty venue battle. To Senter, it was at least somewhat of a logistical issue. East Tennessee State rejoining the Southern Conference means The Citadel has an eight-game league slate obligation beginning this season. Coastal Carolinas exit from the Big South will drop CSUs to five.Thats what we could get, Small told STATS of his schools agreement to make the 17-mile trek down I-26. Well play you downtown, well play you in Sydney, Australia, well play you on the moon.The comments by Jamey (last year), I dont disagree with, whether he said them from a place of emotion or not, Small continued. The principle is correct. But at a certain point, you have to decide what you want to do. Us playing The Citadel in football is good for Lowcountry sports.Throw in the near certainty of drawing at least 10,000 fans to these rivalry games at The Citadels stadium -- something that potentially makes that venue more financially viable for both sides rather than venturing to the 4,000-seat Buccaneer Field -- and its clear that Senters school could swing a heavier hammer in the negotiations.Whether Chadwell, who was just 36 when he took over in 2013, is still hanging around campus by the time these Lowcountry powers go at it again is anyones guess. But with another top-10 team on his hands -- one that was a few feet from beating five-time defending champion North Dakota State in Fargo on a field goal at the end of regulation last week -- the opportunity to move to a bigger program seems inevitable.Thats exactly what Mike Houston did after guiding The Citadel to a share of its first Southern Conference title since 1992 last season. Hes now roaming the sidelines for 12th-ranked James Madison, a perennial power in the CAA, while Brent Thompson has taken over the 15th-ranked Bulldogs.Even if Chadwell doesnt make it to 2018 as the Bucs head coach, the strong possibility that both Charleston programs will make the playoffs means theres hardly a guarantee they wont see each other again in December.After all, hes been wrong before.Donte DiVincenzo Bucks Jersey . -- The Missouri Tigers might not have a roster full of superstars. George Hill Jersey . The visitors took a deserved lead in the 16th minute with midfielder Yohan Cabaye curling the ball beyond Adrian from inside the penalty area. http://www.nbabucksproshop.com/Authentic-Ersan-Ilyasova-Bucks-Jersey/ . Louis Cardinals. Victorino is batting sixth and playing right field after missing two games because of back tightness. Donte DiVincenzo Jersey . The 18th player to shoot 60 on the tour, Jamieson settled for par on the final hole when his 15-foot birdie chip grazed the edge of the hole and stayed out. After opening with rounds of 66 and 73 to make the cut by a stroke, he had 11 birdies in the bogey-free round. Brook Lopez Jersey . The head of USA Boxing came out swinging Tuesday with an open letter to Tyson -- a former Olympic hopeful himself -- that accuses the former heavyweight champion of trying to poach fighters who might be candidates for the U.NEW YORK -- Two well-defined American streaks collided Monday night in the first round of the US Open.Madison Keys, 21, who has the look of a future No. 1 player, has reached the second week of the past five Grand Slams. In 2015, Keys sailed into the semifinals of the Australian Open, losing to Serena Williams.Meanwhile, 26-year-old Alison Riske -- ranked No. 60 among WTA players -- had lost her first-round match in the past eight majors.Seems like an easy call, right?Well, for the longest time, this one was a fair fight. Keys, surviving some early instability, rallied with a tenacious 4-6, 7-6 (5), 6-2 victory.For the record, the match ended at 1:49 a.m. ET, the latest-ending womens match in US Open history. It surpassed the Samantha Stosur-Elena Dementieva battle that concluded at 1:35 a.m. ET six years ago.Im feeling pretty good, Keys said in her on-court interview. I just looked up and its almost 2 a.m. Who wants to go party?Keys will live to see another day in the city that never sleeps. Here are some quick late-night, early-morning takeaways from the match:Keys is on fire: She has now won 26 of her past 32 matches, which includes a run to the Montreal final, where she fell to Simona Halep in the championship match. Keys,, at No.dddddddddddd 8, was nearly the highest-seeded player to depart the tournament on its first day. After the fifth game of the second set, she needed a medical timeout when the WTA trainer worked on her right shoulder.Riske is not afraid of the big players:?At the 2013 US Open, she knocked off No. 10 Petra Kvitova, a two-time Grand Slam champion. Last year, she took down No. 10 Carla Suarez Navarro. But Keys improved her head-to-head record against Riske to 5-1.Keys might be a tad tired: Call it the Rio Effect. Keys played for the bronze medal in Rio, but lost to Kvitova. The following week she withdrew from the New Haven tournament with a neck injury. Through the first two sets, Riske seemed sharper and more engaged, but Keys found her rhythm in the crucial second-set tiebreaker and never looked back.New York is Riskes kind of town: She was born in Pittsburgh and now lives in Nashville, but New York seems to agree with her. That US Open three years ago, which included a trip to the fourth round, was her best Slam ever. However, ESPN analyst Chris Evert called this her best US Open match ever. ' ' '