A timeline of UC's athletics logo
![]() | Early logos encompassed a block C. |
![]() | Playing off the efforts of UC's fullback Leonard "Teddy" Baehr during a 1914 game against Kentucky, cheerleader Norman "Pat" Lyon created the chant: "They may be Wildcats but we have a Baehr-cat." Game coverage in the student newspaper included this cartoon of a bear-like cat. |
![]() | This Bearcat head emerged on uniforms in the 1940s. |
![]() | The crowned "gingerbread man" Bearcat appeared in the early 1960s in recognition of UCs back-to-back national titles. |
![]() | A fiercer Bearcat showed up in the mid-'60s. |
![]() | This rounder, smoother creature made its way into the logo in the 1970s. |
![]() | The 1980s brought fans the angry Bearcat head. |
![]() | By the end of the '80s, UC teams were marked by the dueling horseshoes. |
![]() | The C-paw surfaced as the official athletic logo in 1990. |
![]() | By the mid-'90s, the hanging Bearcat became popular on UC wear. |
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The C-paw was revised in 2005 to strengthen the mark, coinciding with the move to the Big East Conference. |










