Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

The Rivalry (Lafayette–Lehigh)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American college football rivalry

The Rivalry
SportFootball
First meetingOctober 25, 1884
Lafayette 56, Lehigh 0
Latest meetingNovember 22, 2025
Lehigh 42, Lafayette 32
Next meetingNovember 21, 2026
Fisher Stadium,Easton, Pennsylvania
Statistics
Meetings total161 (most incollege football)
All-time seriesLafayette: 82–74–5
Largest victoryLehigh: 78–0 (1917)
Longest win streakLafayette: 10 (1919–1928)
Current win streakLehigh: 2 (2024–present)
Map
About OpenStreetMaps
Maps: terms of use
7km
4.3miles
Lehigh
Lafayette
Locations in Lehigh Valley

The Rivalry is an Americancollege footballrivalry game played annually between thePatriot League teams: theLafayette Leopards football ofLafayette College and theLehigh Mountain Hawks football ofLehigh University.It is the most-played football rivalry in the nation and is thelongest uninterrupted rivalry game.[1][2][3][4]

As of 2025, The Rivalry has been played 161 times since 1884 with only two interruptions, one in 1896 due to a dispute over a Lafayette player also playing professional baseball, and in 2020 due toCOVID-19 issues. The colleges' football teams met twice annually until 1901 (except 1891, when they played three games, and 1896, when they did not play at all). The two institutions are located seventeen miles apart in theLehigh Valley in easternPennsylvania.

Despite popular belief,Harvard andYale did not playThe Game in four separate years during The Rivalry's streak of 159 consecutive games. Furthermore, Lehigh and Lafayette met twice per season in 1943 and 1944 duringWorld War II. The Rivalry is so old that it predates football trophies; the winning team instead keeps the game ball. These are painted with the score and kept at the winning institution's campus. Lehigh displays its game balls in its athletic hall of fame, and Lafayette keeps its game balls at the official residence of its president. The evolution of the shape of the football can be seen in the displays of past game balls, since the early ones predate even the invention of the forward pass.

The game has inspired books and aPBS television documentary narrated byHarry Kalas. In 2006,ESPNU ranked The Rivalry No. 8 in their Top Ten College Football Rivalries, andSports Illustrated has told its readers that seeing it "is something you have to do once in your life."[5] In 2018, The Rivalry was ranked amongAthlon Sports top 25 rivalries in the history of college football.[6]

The 150th game, on November 22, 2014, was played atYankee Stadium inNew York City.[7] The game was broadcast live nationally onCBS Sports Network.

Series history

[edit]

Early days

[edit]
Further information:Lafayette Leopards football andLehigh Mountain Hawks football
The Lafayette–Lehigh MVP Trophy plaque in February 2011

Although they did not meet on the football field until 1884, an anecdote from David Bishop Skillman's history ofLafayette College reveals that bad blood existed between the two places even beforeLehigh University was founded. WhenAsa Packer first moved to Mauch Chunk in present-dayJim Thorpe, Pennsylvania as an uneducated carpenter, he followed his family's footsteps in joining a localPresbyterian church. However, he did not fit in well with the other more strait-laced members of the congregation, and so he left and joined anEpiscopalian congregation that was more welcoming to him.

After Packer had risen to affluence and before he founded Lehigh University,Ario Pardee, a coal baron fromHazleton, approached Judge Packer in connection with the addition of an engineering wing to Lafayette College. While eager at first in the proposition, Packer's enthusiasm turned sour when Pardee mentioned that the school would be under the control of thePresbyterian Church. Packer let him know that he would have nothing to do with any school run by the Presbyterians.[8] Packer later enlisted the help of the Episcopal Bishop of Philadelphia,William Bacon Stevens, in founding Lehigh University.

First athletic events

[edit]

Lafayette records indicate that the first athletic meeting between the two schools was a series ofbaseball games played in Easton and Bethlehem in October 1869. The first game was a 45–45 tie, and Lafayette won the second meeting 31–24.[9]

The first joint athletictrack and field event held between the two institutions was on May 14, 1881, on the grounds of Lehigh University. The meet consisted of fourteen events: a 100-yard dash, a half-mile run, a hammer throw, high jump, 440-yards dash, mile walk, shotput, broad jump, 220-yard dash, mile run, pole vaulting, 120-yard hurdle race, bicycle race, a standing high jump, and tug of war. Lehigh won the event decisively, winning ten of the fourteen events.[10]

As a sign of the intense rivalry that was already developing between the two schools, an article in Lafayette's student newspaper, theLafayette College Journal, called Lafayette's loss to Lehigh a "defeat in our recent contest with Lehigh University, -a defeat, too, doubly humiliating, coming, as it did, from an adversary in every other respect our inferior."[11]

Early football

[edit]

Lafayette football began in 1882. The game was closer torugby back then and even the goals and touchdowns were recorded separately in the scores. After football rules were standardized in 1883, Lafayette's manager Theodore L. Welles approached Lehigh and offered to play them. Lehigh thus formed its first team in 1884, managed byRichard Harding Davis, which gamely played and lost twice to the more experienced Lafayette team.

The Lehigh freshmen were dismayed by the lack of support that the administration showed the team. They thought the rickety stands built for the 1887 event inBethlehem were a disgrace and set them on fire at the end of the game to celebrate Lehigh's first win.[12] Thus, the tradition of exuberance surrounding the game was started.[13]

Since the start in 1884, only in one season (1896) have the teams not met. Because few schools were playing football at the time and travel was more difficult in the horse and buggy era, Lehigh and Lafayette played each other twice in the early years with each school hosting one of the games. This continued until the development of modern football in 1902, when the current annual game was established.

Only twice have Lafayette and Lehigh played somewhere other than in Easton or Bethlehem. In 1891, the teams played a third game inWilkes-Barre, before 3,000 spectators. A newspaper report stated: "... by far the largest crowd that ever witnessed a football game in Wilkes-Barre, and the cheering of the students seemed to startle the natives."[14] That was one of three Lafayette-Lehigh games that year; Lehigh won all three. The next meeting outside the Lehigh Valley did not take place until 2014, when the schools played at Yankee Stadium to commemorate the 150th game in the series.[13]

20th century

[edit]
A plaque on theLafayette College campus inEaston commemorating The Rivalry

The Rivalry's football game was postponed only twice during the 20th century.[15] The first postponement occurred in 1904 because of the death of Dr. Henry S. Drown, president of Lehigh and former faculty member at Lafayette.[16] The only other postponement was in 1963 when the game was moved from November 23 to 30 following the assassination of PresidentJohn F. Kennedy.[15][17]

DuringWorld War II, the war restricted travel to other opponents and Lehigh was hosting officer training programs which limited sports programs. Thus, to fill out their schedules, the nearby schools played two football games again in 1943 and 1944, with Lehigh students forming ad hoc teams just to keep The Rivalry tradition alive.[18] Between November 1943 and November 1947, Lafayette won six games in a row by a combined score of 193–0, but by the early 1950s Lehigh was winning in lopsided shutouts.

The combination of only missing one year of play since 1884, plus 19 years with two games and one year with three, has led to The Rivalry becoming the most played in college football.

Prior to 1991, when new rules and game start times were imposed, it was traditional for the fans to tear down the temporary wooden goalposts that the schools erected for the event.[19][20] The pieces were kept as souvenirs in the fraternities of each school. Eventually, taking down the goalposts got out of hand with students fighting for the torn down goal posts, and with each other, as early as before the third quarter. New rules were implemented for the 1991 game played at Lehigh when H-shaped steel goalposts anchored 10 feet into the ground were first used. The fans who rushed the field were frustrated by the new changes and showed this by tearing up and throwing pieces of sod at the security guards and police who were surrounding the posts. Only one fan actually was able to climb the posts, and when he was pulled down, he was maced and handcuffed.[20]

21st century

[edit]
Fisher Stadium's scoreboard inEaston followingLafayette College's victory overLehigh in the 142nd edition of "The Rivalry" in 2006

Starting in the 2000s, the regular season ending game has often become a factor in deciding the winner of thePatriot League. During the 2004 and 2006 meetings, Lehigh came into Fisher Stadium leading Lafayette by one game. Due to tie breaking rules, the winner of the game would be crowned the League champion.[21] The second runner-up during this period wasColgate University, which had beaten Lafayette or Lehigh that year.

Following nine years of consecutive Lehigh victories, Lafayette earned a four-year parade of Lafayette victories from 2004 to 2007 wherein the Lehigh Class of 2008 witnessed no football victory against Lafayette at all. This was then reversed by Lehigh, with Lehigh running a five-year streak from 2008 to 2012, making the Lafayette Classes of 2012 and 2013 winless. The tide changed in 2013, when, for the first time since 2006, The Rivalry was played with a Patriot League championship on the line.[22] Much like in 2006, the Leopards jumped out to a large lead, fought off a Lehigh rally, and pulled away down the stretch, winning 50-28 and claiming the Patriot League crown outright, this time on their rival's home turf. Quarterback Drew Reed took MVP honors, becoming the first Lafayette freshman in almost 25 years to do so.[22]

150th meeting

[edit]

The 150th meeting of The Rivalry took place in 2014 atYankee Stadium inthe Bronx.[23][13] While this was the first neutral-site game in more than a century, Lafayette was the designated home team. The stadium was much larger than either school's regular venue, and likely larger than any venue where all but a tiny number of players from either side would ever play. Each team debuted special uniforms with Lafayette sporting a plain gray jersey, while Lehigh paid tribute to the stadium and usual home team by sporting a pinstripe jersey.

While Lafayette had won the last meeting, and had a slightly better record than their competitor, Lehigh's chances were vastly improved as Lafayette's starting and backup quarterbacks were injured in the previous game and in practice respectively, leaving third string senior Zach Zweizig to lead the team. Lafayette still won, defeating Lehigh 27–7.[23][24][25]

COVID-19 postponement

[edit]

The game was originally canceled in 2020 for the first time in 124 years due to theCOVID-19 pandemic and the cancellation of fall sports by the Patriot League. A decision was later made to move the Patriot League fall 2020 season to spring 2021, thereby allowing the Rivalry to remain uninterrupted in the school calendar year. Lafayette and Lehigh were originally scheduled to play on April 3, but the game was postponed due to COVID-19 issues within the Lafayette program.[26] The teams eventually played on April 10, with Lafayette winning 20–13.[27]

Schedule deviation

[edit]

The two schools announced on May 25, 2023, that the venues for the games in 2024 and 2025 were swapped. Lehigh hosted the matches in 2023 and 2024, with the contests moving to Lafayette in 2025 and 2026. The change was to accommodate Lafayette's bicentennial celebration in the 2025–26 academic year in honor of the school's 1826 founding. The Rivalry will revert to its regular venue schedule in 2027.[28]

Memorable moments

[edit]

No game in 1896

[edit]

The only season, and first calendar year, in which there was no game was 1896, when Lehigh refused to play Lafayette over a dispute about the eligibility of their best running back, George Barclay, who had played professional baseball atChambersburg, Pennsylvania, the previous summer. The question of his eligibility centered around whether Barclay had received more than reimbursement of travel expenses.[29]

Longest run in 1918

[edit]

During a 17–0 Lehigh victory in 1918, it is rumored that Lehigh halfback Raymond B. "Snooks" Dowd ran 115 yards for a touchdown. As Lehigh Athletic Media Relations relate the story, "Dowd ran the wrong way, circled his own goalposts," and then ran the length of the field for the touchdown eluding Lafayette's All-American linebacker Zac "Baker" Howes in the process.[30] Some reports have been exaggerated to credit the length of the run to as much as 160 yards.[31]

Overtime catch in 1995

[edit]

In the 1995 game, the first year in which the Patriot League used overtime, the game was decided in the second overtime session. Following a 30–30 regulation score and a scoreless first possession of overtime, Lehigh wide receiver Brian Klingerman caught a pass with one hand from quarterback Bob Aylsworth in the back of the end zone. The catch not only won the game for Lehigh, which trailed 30–14 midway in the fourth quarter, but led them to clinch the Patriot League championship.[30][32]

Lafayette's catch in 2005

[edit]

In the 2005 game played at Lehigh, Lafayette backup quarterback Pat Davis threw a 37-yard TD pass to running back Jonathan Hurt on 4th-and-10 with 38 seconds left to give the Leopards a 23–19 win. The victory gave Lafayette the second of three straight Patriot League championships and NCAA Division I-AA (FCS) Playoff appearances. Davis entered the game after Lafayette starting quarterback Brad Maurer, the MVP of wins in 2004 (24–10) and later 2006 (49–27), was injured on the game's first series.[33]

Lehigh's goalpost in 2024

[edit]
The aftermath of the 160th meeting of The Rivalry with Lehigh studentsstorming the field after a win

In the 160th meeting played in 2024 Lehigh would defeat Lafyatte 38–13 at home in front of a sellout 16,000 crowd, earning Lehigh its first winning season since 2016, and its 13th Patriot League championship and entry into the Division I FCS Playoffs.[34] After the game ended, Lehigh students stormed the field and tore down a goalpost, marching it more than four miles overSouth Mountain to throw it into theLehigh River at theFahy bridge.[35] This would be the first time that goalposts would come down at Lehigh since 1989.[36] Tearing down the goal posts after a rivalry game had been a tradition at both schools until 1989 when Lafayette won at Bethlehem and a fight broke out between Lehigh fans attempting to defend their goal-posts, and Lafayette students attempting to tear them down, afterwards both schools agreed to make their goal posts out of reinforced steel with a concrete base to prevent future tear-downs.[a][37] Despite this Lehigh students were still able to take down the metal goal-posts.[37] Northampton County district attorney Stephen Baratta, a Lafayette alumnus, stated that the act constituted "criminal code violations" and that "this is not behavior that we can really sanction."[38]

Football record

[edit]

Summary

[edit]

161 meetings since 1884

Lafayette–Lehigh game results
from 1884 to 2024
Games won byLafayette
82
Games won byLehigh
74
Games tied
5

Game results

[edit]
Lafayette victoriesLehigh victoriesTie games
No.DateLocationWinning teamLosing team
1 October 25, 1884 Easton Lafayette56 Lehigh0
2 November 12, 1884 Bethlehem Lafayette34 Lehigh4
3 October 31, 1885 Bethlehem Lafayette6 Lehigh0
4 November 21, 1885 EastonTie6Tie6
5 November 6, 1886 Easton Lafayette12 Lehigh0
6 November 24, 1886 Bethlehem Lafayette4 Lehigh0
7 October 29, 1887 Bethlehem Lehigh10 Lafayette4
8 November 23, 1887 Easton Lafayette6 Lehigh0
9 November 17, 1888 Easton Lehigh6 Lafayette4
10 November 27, 1888 Bethlehem Lehigh16 Lafayette0
11 October 30, 1889 Bethlehem Lehigh16 Lafayette10
12 November 16, 1889 EastonTie6Tie6
13 November 1, 1890 Easton Lehigh30 Lafayette0
14 November 15, 1890 Bethlehem Lehigh66 Lafayette6
15 November 4, 1891 Bethlehem Lehigh22 Lafayette4
16 November 11, 1891 Easton Lehigh6 Lafayette2
17 November 25, 1891 Wilkes-Barre Lehigh16 Lafayette2
18 November 5, 1892 Easton Lafayette4 Lehigh0
19 November 19, 1892 Bethlehem Lehigh15 Lafayette6
20 November 8, 1893 Bethlehem Lehigh22 Lafayette6
21 November 18, 1893 Easton Lehigh10 Lafayette0
22 November 14, 1894 Easton Lafayette28 Lehigh0
23 November 24, 1894 Bethlehem Lehigh11 Lafayette8
24 November 9, 1895 Bethlehem Lafayette22 Lehigh12
25 November 23, 1895 Easton Lafayette14 Lehigh0
26 October 30, 1897 Easton Lafayette34 Lehigh0
27 November 25, 1897 Bethlehem Lafayette22 Lehigh0
28 November 5, 1898 Bethlehem Lehigh22 Lafayette0
29 November 24, 1898 Easton Lafayette11 Lehigh5
30 November 4, 1899 Easton Lafayette17 Lehigh0
31 November 25, 1899 Bethlehem Lafayette35 Lehigh0
32 November 3, 1900 Bethlehem Lafayette34 Lehigh0
33 November 24, 1900 Easton Lafayette18 Lehigh0
34 November 1, 1901 Easton Lafayette29 Lehigh0
35 November 23, 1901 Bethlehem Lafayette41 Lehigh0
36 November 22, 1902 Easton Lehigh6 Lafayette0
37 November 21, 1903 Bethlehem Lehigh12 Lafayette6
38 November 24, 1904 Easton Lafayette40 Lehigh6
39 November 15, 1905 Bethlehem Lafayette53 Lehigh0
40 November 24, 1906 Easton Lafayette33 Lehigh0
41 November 23, 1907 Bethlehem Lafayette22 Lehigh5
42 November 21, 1908 Easton Lehigh11 Lafayette5
43 November 20, 1909 Bethlehem Lafayette21 Lehigh0
44 November 19, 1910 Easton Lafayette14 Lehigh0
45 November 25, 1911 Bethlehem Lafayette11 Lehigh0
46 November 23, 1912 Easton Lehigh10 Lafayette0
47 November 22, 1913 Bethlehem Lehigh7 Lafayette0
48 November 21, 1914 Easton Lehigh17 Lafayette7
49 November 20, 1915 Bethlehem Lafayette35 Lehigh6
50 November 25, 1916 Easton Lehigh16 Lafayette0
51 November 24, 1917 Bethlehem Lehigh78 Lafayette0
52 November 23, 1918 Easton Lehigh17 Lafayette0
53 November 22, 1919 Bethlehem Lafayette10 Lehigh6
54 November 20, 1920 Easton Lafayette27 Lehigh7
55 November 19, 1921 Bethlehem Lafayette28 Lehigh6
56 November 25, 1922 Easton Lafayette3 Lehigh0
57 November 24, 1923 Bethlehem Lafayette13 Lehigh3
58 November 22, 1924 Easton Lafayette7 Lehigh0
59 November 21, 1925 Bethlehem Lafayette14 Lehigh0
60 November 20, 1926 Easton Lafayette35 Lehigh0
61 November 19, 1927 Bethlehem Lafayette43 Lehigh0
62 November 24, 1928 Easton Lafayette38 Lehigh14
63 November 23, 1929 Bethlehem Lehigh13 Lafayette12
64 November 22, 1930 Easton Lafayette16 Lehigh6
65 November 21, 1931 Bethlehem Lafayette13 Lehigh7
66 November 19, 1932 Easton Lafayette25 Lehigh6
67 November 25, 1933 Bethlehem Lafayette54 Lehigh12
68 November 24, 1934 Easton Lehigh13 Lafayette7
69 November 23, 1935 Bethlehem Lehigh48 Lafayette0
70 November 21, 1936 Easton Lehigh18 Lafayette0
71 November 20, 1937 Bethlehem Lafayette6 Lehigh0
72 November 19, 1938 Easton Lafayette6 Lehigh0
73 November 25, 1939 Bethlehem Lafayette29 Lehigh13
74 November 23, 1940 Easton Lafayette46 Lehigh0
75 November 22, 1941 Bethlehem Lafayette47 Lehigh7
76 November 21, 1942 EastonTie7Tie7
77 October 23, 1943 Easton Lafayette39 Lehigh7
78 November 27, 1943 Bethlehem Lafayette58 Lehigh0
79 October 21, 1944 Bethlehem Lafayette44 Lehigh0
80 November 18, 1944 Easton Lafayette64 Lehigh0
81 November 24, 1945 Bethlehem Lafayette7 Lehigh0
No.DateLocationWinning teamLosing team
82 November 23, 1946 Easton Lafayette13 Lehigh0
83 November 22, 1947 Bethlehem Lafayette7 Lehigh0
84 November 20, 1948 Easton Lafayette23 Lehigh13
85 November 19, 1949 Bethlehem Lafayette21 Lehigh12
86 November 18, 1950 Easton Lehigh38 Lafayette0
87 November 17, 1951 Bethlehem Lehigh32 Lafayette0
88 November 22, 1952 Easton Lehigh14 Lafayette7
89 November 21, 1953 Bethlehem Lafayette33 Lehigh13
90 November 20, 1954 Easton Lafayette46 Lehigh0
91 November 19, 1955 Bethlehem Lafayette35 Lehigh6
92 November 17, 1956 Easton Lehigh27 Lafayette10
93 November 23, 1957 Bethlehem Lehigh26 Lafayette13
94 November 22, 1958 EastonTie14Tie14
95 November 21, 1959 Bethlehem Lafayette28 Lehigh6
96 November 19, 1960 Easton Lehigh26 Lafayette3
97 November 18, 1961 Bethlehem Lehigh17 Lafayette14
98 November 17, 1962 Easton Lehigh13 Lafayette6
99 November 30, 1963 Bethlehem Lehigh15 Lafayette8
100 November 21, 1964 EastonTie6Tie6
101 November 20, 1965 Bethlehem Lehigh20 Lafayette14
102 November 19, 1966 Easton Lafayette16 Lehigh0
103 November 18, 1967 Bethlehem Lafayette6 Lehigh0
104 November 23, 1968 Easton Lehigh21 Lafayette6
105 November 22, 1969 Bethlehem Lehigh36 Lafayette19
106 November 21, 1970 Easton Lafayette31 Lehigh28
107 November 20, 1971 Bethlehem Lehigh48 Lafayette19
108 November 18, 1972 Easton Lehigh14 Lafayette6
109 November 17, 1973 Bethlehem Lehigh45 Lafayette13
110 November 23, 1974 Easton Lehigh57 Lafayette7
111 November 22, 1975 Bethlehem Lehigh40 Lafayette14
112 November 20, 1976 Easton Lafayette21 Lehigh17
113 November 19, 1977 Bethlehem Lehigh35 Lafayette17
114 November 18, 1978 Easton Lehigh23 Lafayette15
115 November 17, 1979 Bethlehem Lehigh24 Lafayette3
116 November 22, 1980 Easton Lehigh32 Lafayette0
117 November 21, 1981 Bethlehem Lafayette10 Lehigh3
118 November 20, 1982 Easton Lafayette34 Lehigh6
119 November 19, 1983 Bethlehem Lehigh22 Lafayette14
120 November 17, 1984 Easton Lafayette28 Lehigh7
121 November 23, 1985 Bethlehem Lehigh24 Lafayette19
122 November 22, 1986 Easton Lafayette28 Lehigh23
123 November 21, 1987 Bethlehem Lehigh17 Lafayette10
124 November 19, 1988 Easton Lafayette52 Lehigh45
125 November 18, 1989 Bethlehem Lafayette36 Lehigh21
126 November 17, 1990 Easton Lehigh35 Lafayette14
127 November 23, 1991 Bethlehem Lehigh36 Lafayette18
128 November 21, 1992 Easton Lafayette32 Lehgh29
129 November 20, 1993 Bethlehem Lehigh39 Lafayette14
130 November 19, 1994 Easton Lafayette54 Lehigh20
131 November 18, 1995 Bethlehem Lehigh37 Lafayette30
132 November 23, 1996 Easton Lehigh23 Lafayette19
133 November 22, 1997 Bethlehem Lehigh43 Lafayette31
134 November 21, 1998 Easton Lehigh31 Lafayette7
135 November 20, 1999 Bethlehem Lehigh14 Lafayette12
136 November 18, 2000 Easton Lehigh31 Lafayette17
137 November 17, 2001 Bethlehem Lehigh41 Lafayette6
138 November 23, 2002 Easton Lafayette14 Lehigh7
139 November 22, 2003 Bethlehem Lehigh30 Lafayette10
140 November 20, 2004 Easton Lafayette24 Lehigh10
141 November 19, 2005 Bethlehem Lafayette23 Lehigh19
142 November 18, 2006 Easton Lafayette49 Lehigh27
143 November 17, 2007 Bethlehem Lafayette21 Lehigh17
144 November 22, 2008 Easton Lehigh31 Lafayette15
145 November 21, 2009 Bethlehem Lehigh27 Lafayette21
146 November 20, 2010 Easton Lehigh20 Lafayette13
147 November 19, 2011 Bethlehem Lehigh37 Lafayette13
148 November 17, 2012 Easton Lehigh38 Lafayette21
149 November 23, 2013 Bethlehem Lafayette50 Lehigh28
150 November 22, 2014The Bronx, NY Lafayette27 Lehigh7
151 November 21, 2015 Bethlehem Lehigh49 Lafayette35
152 November 19, 2016 Easton Lehigh45 Lafayette21
153 November 18, 2017 Bethlehem Lehigh38 Lafayette31
154 November 17, 2018 Easton Lehigh34 Lafayette3
155 November 23, 2019 Bethlehem Lafayette17 Lehigh16
156 April 10, 2021[b] Easton Lafayette20 Lehigh13
157 November 20, 2021 Bethlehem Lehigh17 Lafayette10
158 November 19, 2022 Easton Lafayette14 Lehigh11
159 November 18, 2023 Bethlehem Lafayette49 Lehigh21
160 November 23, 2024 Bethlehem Lehigh38 Lafayette14
161 November 22, 2025 Easton Lehigh42 Lafayette32
Series: Lafayette leads 82–74–5

All Sports Trophy

[edit]

The Rivalry was further cemented by the creation of the "All Sports Trophy" in 1968. The trophy is held by the school which wins the most varsity sports meetings during a school year. One point is awarded per victory. At the year end, points are totaled to determine the overall champion.

All Sports Trophy record

[edit]
Men's sports
  • Years won by Lehigh – 34
  • Years won by Lafayette – 2
  • Ties – 6
Women's sports
  • Years won by Lafayette – 12
  • Years won by Lehigh – 10
  • Ties – 0

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^The goal posts had previously been made of wood, to make them easier for students to tear down.
  2. ^November 21, 2020, game was postponed to April 10, 2021, due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Lopresti, Mike (September 19, 2017)."7 of the most-played college football rivalries of all time". NCAA.com. RetrievedOctober 25, 2017.
  2. ^"Lehigh-Lafayette rivalry makes history". Lehigh Valley Live. November 15, 2012. RetrievedOctober 25, 2017.
  3. ^""The Rivalry" that transcends the game".cfbhall.com. College Football Hall of Fame. November 19, 2014. RetrievedOctober 25, 2017.
  4. ^"'The Rivalry' Pauses as Patriot League Cancels Fall Sports".Lehigh University. July 23, 2020. RetrievedMarch 31, 2021.
  5. ^"Lafayette-Lehigh Rivalry to be Featured by ESPN".Lafayette Athletics. Lafayette College. October 11, 2006. Archived fromthe original on October 7, 2011. RetrievedJuly 7, 2023.
  6. ^"Ranking the Top 25 Rivalries in College Football History". November 27, 2022.
  7. ^"150th Lafayette-Lehigh Meeting to be Played at Yankee Stadium in 2014".Lafayette Athletics. Patriot League. RetrievedNovember 17, 2012.
  8. ^Whelan, Frank; Metz, Lance (1990).The Diaries of Robert Hersham Sayre. Lehigh University.
  9. ^March, Francis A. (1926).Athletics at Lafayette College. Easton, PA: Lafayette College.
  10. ^Bowen, Catherine Drinker (1924).History of Lehigh University. The Lehigh Alumni Bulletin.
  11. ^"At no other time…".Lafayette College Journal.6 (9):1–2. June 1881. RetrievedMarch 19, 2009.
  12. ^"Most-Played Football Rivalry in History". Lafayette College. September 15, 2017. RetrievedOctober 23, 2017.
  13. ^abcGolditch, Mitch (November 19, 2014)."Rivalry Earns Its Pinstripes".The New York Times. RetrievedOctober 23, 2017.
  14. ^The Lafayette Weekly, Volume 18. 1891. p. 95. RetrievedOctober 23, 2017.
  15. ^ab"The Lafayette-lehigh Football Rivalry By The Numbers 0 -- * Scoreless Ties". The Morning Call. November 22, 1996. RetrievedOctober 22, 2017.
  16. ^The School Journal, Vol 69. 1904. pp. E.L. Kellogg & Co. RetrievedOctober 22, 2017.
  17. ^Russo, Ralph D. (November 21, 2014)."Lehigh-Lafayette rivalry reaches 150 on big stage".The San Diego Union-Tribune. RetrievedOctober 22, 2017.
  18. ^"Lehigh vs Lafayette Football History".Lehigh Athletics. RetrievedOctober 23, 2017.
  19. ^Hiserman, Mike (November 19, 2011)."In many ways, 'The Rivalry' between Lehigh, Lafayette is unrivaled".Los Angeles Times. RetrievedOctober 23, 2017.
  20. ^ab"Post-game Melee and New Concern".The New York Times. December 1, 1991. RetrievedOctober 23, 2017.
  21. ^"Lafayette 24, Lehigh 10". ESPN. November 20, 2004. Archived fromthe original on October 23, 2017. RetrievedOctober 23, 2017.
  22. ^ab"149th Lafayette-Lehigh Game will Decide Patriot League Title". The Lafayette. November 19, 2013. RetrievedOctober 23, 2017.
  23. ^abRawlins, John (November 20, 2014)."Lafayette vs. Lehigh rivalry 150 years in the making". 6abc. RetrievedOctober 23, 2017.
  24. ^"Lafayette Leopards win storied rivalry anniversary game against Lehigh". The Morning Call. November 22, 2014. RetrievedOctober 23, 2017.
  25. ^Joyce, Greg (November 22, 2014)."Lafayette football team runs past Lehigh in 150th Rivalry game at Yankee Stadium". Lehigh Valley Live.
  26. ^"Saturday's Lehigh–Lafayette Clash Postponed" (Press release). Lehigh Mountain Hawks. March 30, 2021. RetrievedApril 14, 2021.
  27. ^Groller, Keith (April 11, 2021)."Lehigh finally reaches end zone, but not enough in a 20-13 loss to Lafayette".The Morning Call. Allentown, PA. RetrievedApril 14, 2021.
  28. ^"Football Rivalry Sites to Shift in Upcoming Seasons Due to Lafayette Bicentennial," Lehigh University Athletics, Thursday, May 25, 2023. Retrieved May 25, 2023.
  29. ^March, Francis A. (1926).Athletics at Lafayette College. Easton, Pennsylvania: Lafayette College. pp. 150–151.
  30. ^ab"Lehigh Football Game Notes, Lehigh vs. Lafayette, 139th Meeting"(PDF). RetrievedNovember 25, 2009.
  31. ^Rappaport, Ken; Wilner, Barry (2007).Football Feuds: The Greatest College Football Rivalries. Globe Pequot.ISBN 978-1-59921-014-8.
  32. ^Blockus, Gary R. (November 19, 1995)."Klingerman, Aylsworth Go Out Champs".The Morning Call. Archived fromthe original on October 24, 2012. RetrievedNovember 25, 2009.
  33. ^"Davis Heave to Hurt Beats Lehigh 23-19".goleopards.com. November 19, 2005. RetrievedNovember 25, 2013.
  34. ^"WATCH: Lehigh fans tear down goalpost after win over Lafayette. See where it ended up".The Morning Call. RetrievedNovember 25, 2024.
  35. ^Werner, Barry."Lehigh fans throw goalposts in river after winning Patriot League title".touchdownwire.USA Today. RetrievedNovember 25, 2024.
  36. ^Blake, Corky."Lehigh football plows through rival Lafayette for Patriot League title in No. 160".The Express-Times. RetrievedNovember 25, 2024.
  37. ^abSmith, Jai."Lehigh's victory against Lafayette revives 30-year-old goalpost tradition".Lehigh Daily. RetrievedFebruary 23, 2025.
  38. ^Deegan, Jim."Bad news for Lehigh goalpost revelers: The county prosecutor is a Lafayette alum".Lehigh Valley News. RetrievedDecember 2, 2024.

External links

[edit]
Academics
Athletics
Sports
Facilities
Rivalries
Spirit
History
Places
Venues
Bowls & rivalries
People
Seasons
National championship seasons in bold
People
Athletics
Campus life
Venues
  • The Quad (1882–1893)
  • March Field (1894–1925)
  • Fisher Stadium (1926–present)
Bowls & rivalries
Culture & lore
People
Seasons
National championship seasons in bold
Patriot League football rivalries
Conference
Non-conference
States
Counties
Cities
Cities and towns
100k-250k
Cities and towns
50k-99k
Cities and towns
10-50k
Colleges and universities
Culture and history
Geography
Hospitals and health networks
Media
People
Recreation and events
Shopping
Sports
Transportation
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Rivalry_(Lafayette–Lehigh)&oldid=1323740595"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp