The Rivalry (Lehigh-Lafayette)
Encyclopedia
Lafayette vs. Lehigh | |
First meeting: | Lafayette 50, Lehigh 0 October 25, 1884 |
Last meeting: | Lehigh 37, Lafayette 13 November 19, 2011 |
Next meeting: | November 17, 2012, Easton, PA |
Total meetings: | 147 (most in college football) |
Series record | Lafayette: 76–66–5 |
Largest victory | Lehigh: 78–0 (1917) |
Longest streak | Lafayette: 10 (1919–1928) |
Current streak | Lehigh: 4 wins (2008–2011) |
Trophy: | None |
The Rivalry is the college rivalry
College rivalry
Pairs of schools, colleges and universities, especially when they are close to each other either geographically or in their areas of specialization, often establish a college rivalry with each other over the years. This rivalry can extend to both academics and athletics, the latter being typically...
between Lafayette College
Lafayette College
Lafayette College is a private coeducational liberal arts and engineering college located in Easton, Pennsylvania, USA. The school, founded in 1826 by James Madison Porter,son of General Andrew Porter of Norristown and citizens of Easton, first began holding classes in 1832...
and Lehigh University
Lehigh University
Lehigh University is a private, co-educational university located in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, in the Lehigh Valley region of the United States. It was established in 1865 by Asa Packer as a four-year technical school, but has grown to include studies in a wide variety of disciplines...
. It is the most-played football rivalry in the nation and the longest uninterrupted rivalry.http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_are_the_15_longest_college_football_rivalries As of 2011, "The Rivalry" has been played 147 times since 1884 and since 1897. The schools met twice annually (except 1896) until 1901. The two institutions are located 17 miles apart in eastern Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania
The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania is a U.S. state that is located in the Northeastern and Mid-Atlantic regions of the United States. The state borders Delaware and Maryland to the south, West Virginia to the southwest, Ohio to the west, New York and Ontario, Canada, to the north, and New Jersey to...
. Though primarily alluding to football, "The Rivalry" pertains to a meeting between the two schools in all sports and other endeavors.
Despite popular belief, Harvard
Harvard University
Harvard University is a private Ivy League university located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States, established in 1636 by the Massachusetts legislature. Harvard is the oldest institution of higher learning in the United States and the first corporation chartered in the country...
and Yale
Yale University
Yale University is a private, Ivy League university located in New Haven, Connecticut, United States. Founded in 1701 in the Colony of Connecticut, the university is the third-oldest institution of higher education in the United States...
did not play The Game in four separate years during "The Rivalry's" current streak of 121 consecutive games. Furthermore, Lehigh and Lafayette met twice per season in 1943 and 1944 during World War II. "The Rivalry" is so old that it predates football trophies; the winning team just gets to keep the game ball. These are painted with the score and displayed in winning institution's hall of fame or in the case of Lafayette, the President's house. The evolution of the shape of the football can be seen in the displays of past game balls.
The football game is usually sold out months in advance and has inspired books and a PBS television documentary narrated by the late Harry Kalas
Harry Kalas
Harry Norbert Kalas was an American sportscaster, best known for his Ford C. Frick Award-winning role as lead play-by-play announcer for Major League Baseball's Philadelphia Phillies...
. In 2006, ESPNU
ESPNU
ESPNU is a television channel that specializes in college sports, and is produced by, affiliated with and owned by parent network ESPN. ESPNU originates out of ESPN Regional Television's ESPNU (often referred to as The U) is a television channel that specializes in college sports, and is produced...
ranked The Rivalry #8 in their Top Ten College Football Rivalries and Sports Illustrated
Sports Illustrated
Sports Illustrated is an American sports media company owned by media conglomerate Time Warner. Its self titled magazine has over 3.5 million subscribers and is read by 23 million adults each week, including over 18 million men. It was the first magazine with circulation over one million to win the...
has told its readers that seeing it "is something you have to do once in your life."
Early Days
Although they did not meet on the football field until 1884, an anecdote from David Bishop Skillman's history of Lafayette College reveals that bad blood existed between the two places even before Lehigh was founded. When Asa PackerAsa Packer
Asa Packer was an American businessman who pioneered railroad construction, was active in Pennsylvania politics, and founded Lehigh University.-Early life:...
first moved to Mauch Chunk (now Jim Thorpe, Pennsylvania
Jim Thorpe, Pennsylvania
Jim Thorpe is a borough in Carbon County, Pennsylvania, USA. The population was 4,804 at the 2000 census. It is the county seat of Carbon County. The town has been called the "Switzerland of America" due to the picturesque scenery, mountainous location, and architecture; as well as the "Gateway to...
) as an uneducated carpenter, he joined the congregation of a local Presbyterian Church following his family's footsteps. However, he did not fit in well with the other more straight-laced members of the congregation, and so left and joined an Episcopalian congregation that welcomed him.
One day, after Asa Packer had risen into affluence and before he founded Lehigh University, Ario Pardee, a coal baron from Hazleton
Hazleton, Pennsylvania
Hazleton is a city in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 25,340 at the 2010 census, an increase of 8.6% from the 2000 census count .-Greater Hazleton:...
, approached Judge Packer in connection with the addition of an engineering wing to Lafayette College. While eager at first in the proposition, Judge Packer's enthusiasm turned sour when Pardee mentioned that the school would be under the control of the Presbyterian Church. Judge Packer let him know that he would have nothing to do with any school run by the Presbyterians.
Asa Packer later enlisted the help of the Episcopal Bishop of Philadelphia, William Bacon Stevens
William Bacon Stevens
The Rt. Rev. William Bacon Stevens was the fourth Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Pennsylvania. Born on July 13, 1815, Stevens was educated at Phillips Academy, Andover and later studied medicine at Dartmouth College and the Medical College of South Carolina...
, when
founding Lehigh University.
First athletic events
Lafayette records indicate that the first athletic meeting between the two schools was a series of baseball 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.The first joint athletic track and field event held between the two institutions was on May 14, 1881 on the grounds of the Lehigh University Athletic Association. The meet consisted of fourteen events; Hundred Yards Dash, Half-Mile Run, Throwing the Hammer, Running High Jump, 440 Yards Dash, Mile Walk, Putting the Shot, Running Broad Jump, 220 Yards Dash, Mile Run, Pole Vaulting, 120 Yards Hurdle Race, Bicycle Race, Standing High Jump, and Tug of War. Lehigh emerged with a decisive victory winning ten of the fourteen events.
As a sign of the intense rivalry that would develop between these two schools, an article in Lafayette's student newspaper, the Lafayette College Journal, called the loss 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."
Early football
Lafayette footballLafayette Leopards football
The Lafayette Leopards football program represents Lafayette College in college football. One of the oldest college football programs in the United States, Lafayette currently plays in the Patriot League at the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision level...
began in 1882. The game was closer to rugby
Rugby football
Rugby football is a style of football named after Rugby School in the United Kingdom. It is seen most prominently in two current sports, rugby league and rugby union.-History:...
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 by Richard Harding Davis
Richard Harding Davis
Richard Harding Davis was a journalist and writer of fiction and drama, known foremost as the first American war correspondent to cover the Spanish-American War, the Second Boer War, and the First World War. His writing greatly assisted the political career of Theodore Roosevelt and he also played...
, 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 in Bethlehem
Bethlehem, Pennsylvania
Bethlehem is a city in Lehigh and Northampton Counties in the Lehigh Valley region of eastern Pennsylvania, in the United States. As of the 2010 census, the city had a total population of 74,982, making it the seventh largest city in Pennsylvania, after Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Allentown, Erie,...
were a disgrace and set them on fire at the end of the game to celebrate Lehigh's first win. Thus the tradition of exuberance surrounding the game was started.
Since the start in 1884, only in one year (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 once have Lehigh and Lafayette played other than in Easton or Bethlehem. In 1891 the teams played a third game in Wilkes-Barre
Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania
Wilkes-Barre is a city in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania, the county seat of Luzerne County. It is at the center of the Wyoming Valley area and is one of the principal cities in the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre metropolitan area, which had a population of 563,631 as of the 2010 Census...
, 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." That was one of three Lehigh-Lafayette games that year; Lehigh won all three.
Modern era
The Rivalry's football game has been postponed only twice. The first postponement occurred in 1904 because of the death of Dr. Henry S. Drown, president of Lehigh and former faculty member at Lafayette. The only other postponement was in 1963 when the game was moved from November 23 to November 30 following the assassination of President John F. KennedyJohn F. Kennedy
John Fitzgerald "Jack" Kennedy , often referred to by his initials JFK, was the 35th President of the United States, serving from 1961 until his assassination in 1963....
.
During World War II
World War II
World War II, or the Second World War , was a global conflict lasting from 1939 to 1945, involving most of the world's nations—including all of the great powers—eventually forming two opposing military alliances: the Allies and the Axis...
, 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. The combination of only missing one year of play since 1884 plus 19 years with two games has led to The Rivalry becoming the most played in college football.
Before 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. 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.
In recent years, the regular season ending game has often become a factor in deciding the winner of the Patriot League
Patriot League
The Patriot League is a college athletic conference which operates in the northeastern United States. It participates in the NCAA's Division I) for a number of sports; in football, it participates in the Football Championship Subdivision...
. 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. The second runner-up during this period was Colgate University, that had beaten Lafayette or Lehigh that year. Following nine years of consecutive Lehigh victories, Lafayette earned a rare four year parade of Lafayette victories from 2004 through 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 four year streak from 2008 through 2011, making the Lafayette class of 2012 winless.
No game in 1896
The only year in which there was no game was 1896, when Lehigh refused to play Lafayette over a dispute about the eligibility of their best player, Charles "Babe" RinehartCharles Rinehart
Charles Ramsay Rinehart was an American football player, engineer and businessman. He was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 1964....
. The question of eligibility centered around Rinehart playing professional baseball the previous summer. A dominating lineman on Lafayette's national-champion 1896 team (who tied Princeton
Princeton University
Princeton University is a private research university located in Princeton, New Jersey, United States. The school is one of the eight universities of the Ivy League, and is one of the nine Colonial Colleges founded before the American Revolution....
and beat Penn
University of Pennsylvania
The University of Pennsylvania is a private, Ivy League university located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. Penn is the fourth-oldest institution of higher education in the United States,Penn is the fourth-oldest using the founding dates claimed by each institution...
), Rinehart was a Walter Camp
Walter Camp
Walter Chauncey Camp was an American football player, coach, and sports writer known as the "Father of American Football". With John Heisman, Amos Alonzo Stagg, Pop Warner, Fielding H. Yost, and George Halas, Camp was one of the most accomplished persons in the early history of American football...
All-American, and is considered one of the finest players of the first half-century. He is enshrined in the College Football Hall of Fame
College Football Hall of Fame
The College Football Hall of Fame is a hall of fame and museum devoted to college football. Located in South Bend, Indiana, it is connected to a convention center and situated in the city's renovated downtown district, two miles south of the University of Notre Dame campus. It is slated to move...
.
On this same Lafayette team was halfback George "Rose" Barclay, who in the same year was widely credited for inventing the football helmet
Football helmet
A football helmet is a protective device used primarily in American football and Canadian football. It consists of a hard plastic top with thick padding on the inside, a face mask made of one or more plastic bars, and a chinstrap. Some players add polycarbonate visors to their helmets, which are...
.
Longest run
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. Some reports have been exaggerated to credit the length of the run to as much as 160 yards.100th meeting
The 100th meeting of The Rivalry in 1964 didn't live up to the hype in Fisher FieldFisher Field
Fisher Field at Fisher Stadium is a 13,132-seat multi-purpose stadium in Easton, Pennsylvania, United States. It opened in 1926 and it is home to the Lafayette College Leopards football team. Fisher Field, this past year, was voted the best gameday atmosphere in the Patriot League. A popular...
in Easton. Ending in a 6-6 tie in a mistake-filled game, both teams' kickers missed extra points that would have given them the victory. Nick Leigh scored Lafayette's lone touchdown on a designed quarterback draw late in the 4th quarter with 6.9 seconds remaining. Coincidentally, this would be the last-ever tie in the football rivalry.
Overtime Catch
The 1995 game, the first year in which the Patriot League used overtime, 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. The overtime periods had to be run towards the end of the field with the scoreboard. Overtime was played at dusk, and with the waning daylight, lit advertisements below the scoreboard were the only light source.The Big Hurt
In 2005, Lafayette's Jonathan Hurt somehow got behind the Lehigh defenders and caught a miracle 37-yard touchdown heave as quarterback Pat Davis was smothered by Lehigh's defense on fourth-and-10 from the Lehigh 37 yard line with 38 seconds left. This gave Lafayette a 23-19 comeback win over Lehigh and a share of its second straight Patriot League championship in the 141st meeting of the nation's most-played rivalry. Lafayette's win also secured Colgate's co-Patriot League Championship, and gave Colgate the Patriot League's automatic berth to the playoffs. Based upon this win and their season record, Lafayette earned its first ever "At-Large" NCAA Division I-AA playoff bid. Hurt was named MVP of the game after running 18 times for 125 yards and a touchdown, and hauling in the game-winning score.The Pick
Entering the 2009 game, nationally ranked Lafayette was heavily favored over a Lehigh team struggling through a disappointing season. If the Leopards secured victory, they were all but a lock for postseason play. Throughout a back and forth affair, both teams were tied at 21 at the end of regulation. This marked only the second time in 147 games that "The Rivalry" would be decided in Overtime. Lehigh started with the ball, and on the second play quarterback J.B. Clark found his tight end in the corner of the end zone. The home crowd erupted in jubilation, only to see the ensuing PAT sail wide right. The mood in the stadium immediately turned dour until linebacker Al Pierce intercepted Lafayette quarterback Rob Curley on the Leopard's first overtime play, thus securing a Lehigh win. The 145th also procured Lehigh a 2 - 0 advantage over Lafayette in overtime games.Summary
147 meetings since 1884Record
- Lafayette - 76
- Lehigh - 66
- Ties - 5
Game | Year | Site | Winner | Score | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1884 | Easton | Lafayette | 50-0 | First Game - Standardized Football Rules only established previous year |
2 | 1884 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 34-4 | |
3 | 1885 | Easton | Lafayette | 6-0 | |
4 | 1885 | Easton | Tie | 6-6 | |
5 | 1886 | Easton | Lafayette | 12-0 | |
6 | 1886 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 4-0 | |
7 | 1887 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 10-4 | |
8 | 1887 | Easton | Lafayette | 6-0 | |
9 | 1888 | Easton | Lehigh | 6-4 | |
10 | 1888 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 16-0 | |
11 | 1889 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 16-10 | |
12 | 1889 | Easton | Tie | 6-6 | |
13 | 1890 | Easton | Lehigh | 30-0 | |
14 | 1890 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 66-6 | |
15 | 1891 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 22-4 | |
16 | 1891 | Wilkes-Barre | Lehigh | 6-2 | Only Neutral Ground game and only year with three games |
17 | 1891 | Easton | Lehigh | 16-2 | |
18 | 1892 | Easton | Lafayette | 4-0 | Lafayette breaks 9-game unbeaten streak by Lehigh |
19 | 1892 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 15-6 | |
20 | 1893 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 22-6 | |
21 | 1893 | Easton | Lehigh | 10-0 | |
22 | 1894 | Easton | Lafayette | 28-0 | |
23 | 1894 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 11-8 | |
24 | 1895 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 22-12 | |
25 | 1895 | Easton | Lafayette | 14-6 | |
1896 | Due to an eligibility dispute, only year teams did not play each other. Lafayette National Champions (co-champs with Princeton) |
||||
26 | 1897 | Easton | Lafayette | 34-0 | |
27 | 1897 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 22-0 | |
28 | 1898 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 22-0 | |
29 | 1898 | Easton | Lafayette | 11-5 | |
30 | 1899 | Easton | Lafayette | 17-0 | |
31 | 1899 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 35-0 | |
32 | 1900 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 34-0 | |
33 | 1900 | Easton | Lafayette | 18-0 | |
34 | 1901 | Easton | Lafayette | 29-0 | |
35 | 1901 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 41-0 | |
36 | 1902 | Easton | Lehigh | 6-0 | Modern era of one game per year |
37 | 1903 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 12-6 | Wright Brothers fly |
38 | 1904 | Easton | Lafayette | 40-6 | Delayed a week due to death of Henry Drown (Lehigh president) |
39 | 1905 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 53-0 | |
40 | 1906 | Easton | Lafayette | 33-0 | Forward Pass invented by future Lehigh coach |
41 | 1907 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 22-5 | |
42 | 1908 | Easton | Lehigh | 11-5 | |
43 | 1909 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 21-0 | Lafayette T Aaron Crane throws first-ever TD pass in series |
44 | 1910 | Easton | Lafayette | 14-0 | NCAA Established |
45 | 1911 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 11-0 | Dannehour outduels Pazzetti; est. 10,000 fans attended game |
46 | 1912 | Easton | Lehigh | 10-0 | Lehigh QB "Pat" Pazzetti throws first TD pass in series for Lehigh in victory |
47 | 1913 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 7-0 | |
48 | 1914 | Easton | Lehigh | 17-7 | |
49 | 1915 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 35-6 | |
50 | 1916 | Easton | Lehigh | 16-0 | 50th Meeting |
51 | 1917 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 78-0 | Largest margin of victory (Lehigh) |
52 | 1918 | Easton | Lehigh | 17-0 | |
53 | 1919 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 10-6 | |
54 | 1920 | Easton | Lafayette | 27-7 | |
55 | 1921 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 28-6 | Lafayette National Champions |
56 | 1922 | Easton | Lafayette | 3-0 | Game-winner kicked with 45 seconds remaining |
57 | 1923 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 13-3 | |
58 | 1924 | Easton | Lafayette | 7-0 | Last March Field game |
59 | 1925 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 14-0 | |
60 | 1926 | Easton | Lafayette | 35-0 | First Fisher Field game; Lafayette National Champions |
61 | 1927 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 43-0 | |
62 | 1928 | Easton | Lafayette | 38-14 | |
63 | 1929 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 13-12 | Substitute center Ayre blocks kicks to seal victory |
64 | 1930 | Easton | Lafayette | 16-6 | |
65 | 1931 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 13-7 | |
66 | 1932 | Easton | Lafayette | 25-6 | |
67 | 1933 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 54-12 | |
68 | 1934 | Easton | Lehigh | 13-7 | |
69 | 1935 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 48-0 | |
70 | 1936 | Easton | Lehigh | 18-0 | |
71 | 1937 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 6-0 | Lafayette undefeated; Tony Cavallo's TD only score |
72 | 1938 | Easton | Lafayette | 6-0 | |
73 | 1939 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 29-13 | |
74 | 1940 | Easton | Lafayette | 46-0 | Lafayette undefeated |
75 | 1941 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 47-7 | 75th Meeting |
76 | 1942 | Easton | Tie | 7-7 | |
77 | 1943 | Easton | Lafayette | 39-7 | Played two games due to wartime travel restrictions |
78 | 1943 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 58-0 | |
79 | 1944 | Easton | Lafayette | 44-0 | Played two games due to wartime travel restrictions |
80 | 1944 | Easton | Lafayette | 64-0 | Largest margin of victory (Lafayette)(Note that Lehigh's 1943-44 teams were ad hoc students due to wartime military training operations on campus) |
81 | 1945 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 7-0 | |
82 | 1946 | Easton | Lafayette | 13-0 | |
83 | 1947 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 7-0 | Game Played at Liberty HS Field |
84 | 1948 | Easton | Lafayette | 23-13 | Largest crowd to witness a game (21,000) |
85 | 1949 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 21-12 | Game Played at Liberty HS Field |
86 | 1950 | Easton | Lehigh | 38-0 | Lehigh Undefeated; breaks 15-game unbeaten Lafayette streak |
87 | 1951 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 51-0 | Game Played at Liberty HS Field |
88 | 1952 | Easton | Lehigh | 14-7 | |
89 | 1953 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 33-13 | |
90 | 1954 | Easton | Lafayette | 46-0 | |
91 | 1955 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 35-6 | |
92 | 1956 | Easton | Lehigh | 27-10 | |
93 | 1957 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 26-13 | |
94 | 1958 | Easton | Tie | 14-14 | |
95 | 1959 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 28-6 | |
96 | 1960 | Easton | Lehigh | 26-3 | |
97 | 1961 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 17-14 | |
98 | 1962 | Easton | Lehigh | 13-6 | |
99 | 1963 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 15-8 | Delayed a week due to the assassination of President John F. Kennedy John F. Kennedy John Fitzgerald "Jack" Kennedy , often referred to by his initials JFK, was the 35th President of the United States, serving from 1961 until his assassination in 1963.... |
100 | 1964 | Easton | Tie | 6-6 | 100th Meeting; Missed extra points seal tie; both teams combine for one win on year |
101 | 1965 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 20-14 | |
102 | 1966 | Easton | Lafayette | 16-0 | |
103 | 1967 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 6-0 | |
104 | 1968 | Easton | Lehigh | 21-6 | |
105 | 1969 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 36-19 | |
106 | 1970 | Easton | Lafayette | 31-28 | Rick Nowell kicks game-winning FG with 1:10 left |
107 | 1971 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 48-19 | |
108 | 1972 | Easton | Lehigh | 14-6 | |
109 | 1973 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 45-13 | |
110 | 1974 | Easton | Lehigh | 57-7 | |
111 | 1975 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 40-14 | |
112 | 1976 | Easton | Lafayette | 21-17 | |
113 | 1977 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 35-17 | Lehigh National Div II Champions |
114 | 1978 | Easton | Lehigh | 23-15 | |
115 | 1979 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 24-3 | Lehigh National Div 1-AA Runners-Up |
116 | 1980 | Easton | Lehigh | 32-0 | |
117 | 1981 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 10-3 | First live TV broadcast (WLVT-TV); Taylor Stadium attendance record (19,414) |
118 | 1982 | Easton | Lafayette | 34-6 | |
119 | 1983 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 22-14 | |
120 | 1984 | Easton | Lafayette | 28-7 | 100th anniversary of first meeting |
121 | 1985 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 24-19 | |
122 | 1986 | Easton | Lafayette | 28-23 | Colonial League Established |
123 | 1987 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 17-10 | Last Taylor Stadium Game |
124 | 1988 | Easton | Lafayette | 52-45 | Largest number of combined points scored, game (97). Lafayette Colonial League Champions (only team to dethrone Holy Cross during '86-'91 seasons when HC retained scholarships) |
125 | 1989 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 36-21 | First Goodman Stadium Game; 125th Meeting; 100th consecutive meeting |
126 | 1990 | Easton | Lehigh | 35-14 | Colonial League changes name to Patriot League |
127 | 1991 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 36-18 | |
128 | 1992 | Easton | Lafayette | 32-29 | Lafayette Patriot League Champions |
129 | 1993 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 39-14 | Lehigh Patriot League Champions; First national telecast; First college football game ever televised on ESPN2 |
130 | 1994 | Easton | Lafayette | 54-20 | Lafayette Patriot League Champions |
131 | 1995 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 37-30 | Lehigh Patriot League Champions |
132 | 1996 | Easton | Lehigh | 23-19 | First internet streamed game |
133 | 1997 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 43-31 | 100 years of an annual game |
134 | 1998 | Easton | Lehigh | 31-7 | Lehigh Patriot League Champions |
135 | 1999 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 14-12 | |
136 | 2000 | Easton | Lehigh | 31-17 | Lehigh Patriot League Champions |
137 | 2001 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 41-6 | Lehigh Patriot League Champions |
138 | 2002 | Easton | Lafayette | 14-7 | |
139 | 2003 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 30-10 | |
140 | 2004 | Easton | Lafayette | 24-10 | Game decided Patriot League champions (Lafayette & Lehigh); Lafayette wears black uniforms for the first time |
141 | 2005 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 23-19 | Game decided Patriot League champions (Lafayette & Colgate) |
142 | 2006 | Easton | Lafayette | 49-27 | First game in renovated Fisher Stadium. First game in series to be played on artificial turf Artificial turf Artificial turf is a surface manufactured from synthetic fibers made to look like natural grass. It is most often used in arenas for sports that were originally or are normally played on grass. However, it is now being used on residential lawns and commercial applications as well... and to use artificial illumination. Lehigh's broadcaster WFMZ-TV WFMZ-TV, virtual channel 69 , is a general interest independent television station in Allentown, Pennsylvania, which is part of the Philadelphia DMA. Its studio and transmitter are located on South Mountain in Allentown.-Background:... produced the game in high definition, making it the first Lafayette-Lehigh game aired in HD. Game decided Patriot League champions (Lafayette & Lehigh) |
143 | 2007 | Bethlehem | Lafayette | 21-17 | |
144 | 2008 | Easton | Lehigh | 31-15 | |
145 | 2009 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 27-21 | Overtime |
146 | 2010 | Easton | Lehigh | 20-13 | Lehigh Patriot League Champions |
147 | 2011 | Bethlehem | Lehigh | 37-13 | Lehigh Patriot League Champions; Lafayette wears retro 1960s uniforms |
All Sports Trophy
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
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
2007-2008 results
The following is the results from the All-Sports Trophy for the 2007-2008 academic year:Men's sports
Date | Sport | Winner |
---|---|---|
September 15 | Men's Cross Country | Lehigh |
September 29 | Men's Soccer | Lafayette |
November 16 | Men's Swimming and Diving | Lehigh |
November 17 | Football | Lafayette |
January 26 | Men's Basketball | Lehigh |
February 1 | Men's Indoor Track and Field | Lafayette |
February 23 | Men's Basketball | Lafayette |
March 29 | Men's Lacrosse | Lehigh |
April 5 | Men's Outdoor Track and Field | Lafayette |
April 12 | Baseball | Lehigh |
April 12 | Baseball | Lafayette |
April 13 | Baseball | Lehigh |
April 13 | Baseball | Lafayette |
April 17 | Men's Tennis | Lafayette |
2007-2008 Men's Totals:
- Lafayette - 8
- Lehigh - 6
Women's sports
Date | Sport | Winner |
---|---|---|
September 15 | Women's Cross Country | Lehigh |
September 28 | Volleyball | Lafayette |
October 6 | Field Hockey | Lafayette |
October 20 | Women's Soccer | Lehigh |
October 26 | Volleyball | Lafayette |
November 2 | Field Hockey | Lafayette |
November 16 | Women's Swimming and Diving | Lafayette |
January 26 | Women's Basketball | Lafayette |
February 1 | Women's Indoor Track and Field | Lafayette |
February 23 | Women's Basketball | Lafayette |
March 9 | Women's Lacrosse | Lehigh |
April 5 | Women's Outdoor Track and Field | Lafayette |
April 5 | Softball | Lehigh |
April 5 | Softball | Lafayette |
April 6 | Softball | Lehigh |
April 6 | Softball | Lafayette |
April 8 | Women's Tennis | Lehigh |
2007-2008 Women's Totals:
- Lafayette - 11
- Lehigh - 6