About Sweepstakes

 
 

Often referred to as Buggy around Carnegie Mellon, Sweepstakes is the highlight of Spring Carnival.  The tradition began in 1920 as “pushmobile races” of Campus Week.  Buggies are essentially aerodynamic cylinders designed and built by student organizations throughout the year.  Each buggy holds a driver that steers and maneuvers around a 4,400-foot course.  Just an inch off the ground, the drivers speed through bends reaching speeds of nearly 35 miles per hour.  Teams consist of five pushers that push the buggies in a relay-style race up hills and to the finish line.


THE HISTORY

The annual University-wide party we now call Carnival started in 1914, not long after Carnegie Tech was founded. It started as "May Day," and back then, school spirit events were were limited to individual schools: Applied Science, Applied Design, the Trade Schools, and the Women's School (later Margaret Morrison Carnegie College). By 1920, those events had merged and expanded into a cohesive celebration called Campus Week.

 

The first Campus Week saw the birth of one of the most unique and recognizable aspects of Carnival and Carnegie Mellon in general: Sweepstakes (then popularly called "BlitzBuggy" or just "Buggy"). The first buggy race started at 9:30 am on May 14, 1920, with what a witness called "a conglomeration of rain barrels with bicycle wheels, four wheeled orange crates, and three wheeled ash cans." The first few years saw the essence of Sweepstakes change rapidly. The original buggies were propelled by two-man teams composed of a pusher and a driver. Not long after the sport was invented, a pit stop was added to the course. All buggies were required to make pit stops, during which the team would do two things: first, switch the right and left rear wheels, and second, switch places themselves, so that the original pusher would drive for the second half of the course and vice versa. In 1926, the first multi-day buggy competition was held, using the time trials/finals system still in place today. That year, the buggy record was set at 3:22. In 1927, a fifth pusher was added to buggy teams; the following year, the course was altered to even up pushers' workloads.

Non-fraternal organizations first regularly entered Sweepstakes during the 1950s with the running of a buggy from the men's dorms - though to no avail as most of the decade was dominated by Alpha Tau Omega (ATO). Though ATO lost their presence on campus several years ago, it remains among the most dominant single organizations in Carnival history. ATO brothers earned the first-place cup in Sweepstakes every year from 1953 to 1962 except for 1959, and managed to take second place as well in both 1953 and 1955.

The 1980s were the decade of the independent organization in Carnival competition. Organizations like Pioneers quickly adapted to Carnival and were taking silvers by the end of their second and third years. The infancy of such organizations during the '70s prepared them for it, but CIA's record-setting buggy victory in 1981 - the first such win by a non-Greek organization - was nevertheless unexpected. Their pace and a four-year streak for CIA women's was followed by the coming of SPIRIT in 1987, which won its first Sweepstakes on account of weather canceling the three final heats, even though Beta's finals time was better than SPIRIT's preliminary. SPIRIT returned the next year to place with a time of 2:06.2, setting a record that stood for 20 years.


TODAY

The evolution of buggies occurred amidst changing rules about safety requirements and the first relaxing of regulations in several decades. More innovation in buggy technology - advances in body design and the eventual standardization of most vehicles - was the major change during the early part of the decade. Despite these changes effectively leveling the playing field, PiKA and SPIRIT took every Sweepstakes championship from 1986 until 2000 because of those organizations' competitiveness in Sweepstakes, followed by Fringe in 2001.  PiKA has continued its success in the 2000s, winning the last seven years in a row, and setting the new course record of 2:04.35. Watch the video of that record setting time below.

SDC’s Men’s A team setting the men’s course record at 2:03.20 in 2009.

SDC’s Women’s A team setting the women’s course record at 2:25.20 in 2009.

PiKA’s Men’s A team setting the men’s course record at 2:04.35 in 2008, which stood for one year.

Spirit’s Men’s A team setting the men’s course record at 2:06.11 in 1988, which stood for 20 years.