Arkansas State is renewing a football series with a longtime rival.

Athletic directors at both ASU and Memphis have signed a contract for a four-year home-and-home series beginning in 2020, according to the contract and ASU Athletic Director Terry Mohajir.

ASU future nonconference football schedules 2016 Sept. 3;Toledo Sept. 10;at Auburn Sept. 17;at Utah State Sept. 24;Central Arkansas 2017 Sept. 2;at Nebraska Sept. 9;Miami Sept. 16;Arkansas-Pine Bluff Sept. 23;at SMU 2018 Sept. 1;UNLV Sept. 8;at Alabama Sept. 15;at Tulsa 2019 Aug. 31;SMU 2020 Sept. 5;at Memphis Sept. 19;Tulsa 2021 Sept. 11;Memphis 2022 Sept. 3;at Memphis 2023 Sept. 8;Memphis

The series will include games in 2020 and 2022 at the Liberty Bowl in Memphis and in 2021 and 2023 at Centennial Bank Stadium in Jonesboro. The first game, scheduled for Sept. 5, 2020, will be the first time the teams have played since 2013 and will end the longest break in the series in more than four decades.

Mohajir said Friday he is pleased to rekindle a series between schools that have played 57 times since 1914 and 24 times since 1980. He said fans consistently have asked about the series since Memphis declined to continue it in 2013.

"It's probably the most talked about and popular opponent when it comes to scheduling," Mohajir said. "I think it's good for their fan base; I think it's good for our fan base. It's a really good regional matchup."

The teams last played Sept. 21, 2013 -- a 31-7 Memphis victory at the Liberty Bowl. A 10-year series that Mohajir was seeking was turned down by Memphis Athletic Director Tom Bowen.

At the time, Memphis was in its first season in the American Athletic Conference and had a desire to build a schedule on "national opponents," Wren Baker, then an associate athletic director for external affairs at Memphis, told the Democrat-Gazette in 2013.

Mohajir said he thinks Memphis and Bowen changed their tune based partly on the benefit of those national games -- Memphis beat Kansas and Ole Miss last year but had lost its three previous games to Power 5 schools -- and ASU's stance that it can serve as a boon to ticket sales. Bowen couldn't be reached for comment Friday, and Memphis has yet to publicly acknowledge the series that was agreed upon March 16.

The contract stipulates the visiting team for each game will receive 5,000 tickets, and if ticket revenue for the visiting team does not exceed $50,000, the host school will pay the difference.

"They need to look at what's best for their organizations, ticket sales, regional matchups, budgets, all that stuff," Mohajir said. "I think that when they start looking at teams that were farther away and the history between us, and strong ticket sales, I think Tom realized it was a no-brainer."

Mohajir's ability on a shuffle board table didn't hurt in getting the deal done, either.

Mohajir said he and Bowen, who both served on the college football advisory board, were in Phoenix for meetings about a year ago. They were playing shuffle board when Mohajir again brought up his desire to get the series revived.

"I said, 'If I beat you we'll play; if you beat me, I'll never ask you again,' " Mohajir said.

Mohajir won, ran into Bowen again in Phoenix a few months later for meetings, brought it up again and the contract was drawn up last month.

Mohajir hopes the series can bring large crowds to Centennial Bank Stadium. The last time Memphis visited Jonesboro, 28,041 watched ASU win 33-28 on Sept. 8, 2012. Memphis games account for four of the top 12 crowds at the stadium.

Mohajir, who was hired at ASU two weeks after Memphis' last visit to Jonesboro, said he expects the same type of crowd when the series returns.

"This has been the most talked about opponent to play. We worked really hard on it after the series ended in fall 2013," Mohajir said. "I've spent a lot of time working on it, because our fan base has made it very clear that they'd like to see it back on the schedule. Now, I only control one side of it. But, I hope and expect to see a full stadium."

Sports on 04/02/2016