Lambert-Meadowlands Trophy

Annual award given to the best team in Division I FBS college football
Lambert Trophy
The Lambert Trophy on display in the Army Sports Hall of Fame at the United States Military Academy in 2019.
Awarded forthe best team in the East in Division I FBS (formerly I-A) college football.
Eastern championship[1][2]
LocationEastern United States
CountryUnited States
Presented byMetropolitan New York Football Writers
History
First award1936
Most recentArmy[3] – 9th time

The Lambert Trophy was an annual award given to the best team in the East in Division I FBS (formerly I-A) college football. In affiliation with the Metropolitan New York Football Writers (founded 1935), the Lambert Trophy was established by brothers Victor A. and Henry L. Lambert in memory of their father, August V. Lambert.[4] The Lamberts were the principals in a distinguished Madison Avenue jewelry house and were prominent college football boosters.

By the time the “Lambert Trophy” was established in 1936, major schools in other regions of the country had formed their own leagues (i.e., SEC, Big Ten, Big Eight, Pacific Coast Conference, etc.) and Division I FBS (formerly I–A) schools located in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions remained independent, with the exception of the 1954 formation of the Ivy League.[5][6] Emblematic of the "Eastern championship",[7][8] the Lambert Trophy, voted on by a panel of sports writers in New York, became the de facto conference championship for those schools.[9]

Since 1936, there have been 19 different winners in Division I-A/FBS. To be eligible for the Lambert Award, a school must be located in the "East." Teams in the "East" include teams located in New York, New Jersey, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, West Virginia, Delaware and the District of Columbia (although there are no FBS teams in Delaware nor Washington D.C., there are teams that compete at lower levels that can win the various Lambert Cup awards for their levels). Additionally, while the Big East Conference was a football conference, members of that conference outside of the "East" were also made eligible if at least half their schedule was against Lambert-eligible teams.

A set of parallel trophies collectively known as the Lambert Cup use to be awarded to teams in Division I FCS (formerly I-AA), Division II, and Division III. The Metropolitan New York Football Writers, owned and operated by American Football Networks, Inc., took the administration of the Lambert Meadowlands Awards back from the New Jersey Sports & Exhibition Authority in 2011.

Lambert Trophy winners

By year

Year School Record Final AP Rank Bowl
1936 Pittsburgh 8–1–1 #3 Won Rose
1937 Pittsburgh 9–0–1 #1 No bowl
1938 Carnegie Tech 7–2 #6 Lost Sugar
1939 Cornell 8–0 #4 No bowl
1940 Boston College 11–0 #5 Won Sugar
1941 Fordham 8–1 #6 Won Sugar
1942 Boston College 8–2 #8 Lost Orange
1943 Navy 8–1 #4 No bowl
1944 Army 9–0 #1 No bowl
1945 Army 9–0 #1 No bowl
1946 Army 9–0–1 #2 No bowl
1947 Penn State 9–0–1 #4 Tied Cotton
1948 Army 8–0–1 #6 No bowl
1949 Army 9–0 #4 No bowl
1950 Princeton 9–0 #6 No bowl
1951 Princeton 9–0 #6 No bowl
1952 Syracuse 7–3 #14 Lost Orange
1953 Army 7–1–1 #14 No bowl
1954 Navy 8–2 #5 Won Sugar
1955 Pittsburgh 7–4 #11 Lost Sugar
1956 Syracuse 7–2 #8 Lost Cotton
1957 Navy 8–1–1 #5 Won Cotton
1958 Army 8–0–1 #3 No bowl
1959 Syracuse 11–0 #1 Won Cotton
1960 Navy 9–2 #4 Lost Orange
Yale 9–0 #14 No bowl
1961 Penn State 8–3 #17 Won Gator
1962 Penn State 9–2 #9 Lost Gator
1963 Navy 9–2 #2 Lost Cotton
1964 Penn State 6–4 NR No bowl
Year School Record Final AP Rank Bowl
1965 Dartmouth 9–0 NR No bowl
1966 Syracuse 8–3 NR Lost Gator
1967 Penn State 8–2–1 #10 Tied Gator
1968 Penn State 11–0 #2 Won Orange
1969 Penn State 11–0 #2 Won Orange
1970 Dartmouth 9–0 #14 No bowl
1971 Penn State 11–1 #5 Won Cotton
1972 Penn State 10–2 #10 Lost Sugar
1973 Penn State 12–0 #5 Won Orange
1974 Penn State 10–2 #7 Won Cotton
1975 Penn State 9–3 #10 Lost Sugar
1976 Pittsburgh 12–0 #1 Won Sugar
1977 Penn State 11–1 #5 Won Fiesta
1978 Penn State 11–1 #4 Lost Sugar
1979 Pittsburgh 11–1 #7 Won Fiesta
1980 Pittsburgh 11–1 #2 Won Gator
1981 Penn State 10–2 #3 Won Fiesta
1982 Penn State 11–1 #1 Won Sugar
1983 Boston College 9–3 #19 Lost Liberty
1984 Boston College 10–2 #5 Won Cotton
1985 Penn State 11–1 #3 Lost Orange
1986 Penn State 12–0 #1 Won Fiesta
1987 Syracuse 11–0–1 #4 Tied Sugar
1988 West Virginia 11–1 #5 Lost Fiesta
1989 Penn State 8–3–1 #15 Won Holiday
1990 Penn State 9–3 #11 Lost Blockbuster
1991 Penn State 11–2 #3 Won Fiesta
1992 Syracuse 10–2 #6 Won Fiesta
1993 West Virginia 11–1 #7 Lost Sugar
1994 Penn State 12–0 #2 Won Rose
Year School Record Final AP Rank Bowl
1995 Virginia Tech 10–2 #10 Won Sugar
1996 Penn State 11–2 #7 Won Fiesta
1997 Penn State 9–3 #16 Lost Citrus
1998 Penn State 9–3 #17 Won Outback
1999 Virginia Tech 11–1 #2 Lost Sugar
2000 Miami (FL) 11–1 #2 Won Sugar
2001 Miami (FL) 12–0 #1 Won Rose
2002 Miami (FL) 12–1 #2 Lost Fiesta
2003 Miami (FL) 11–2 #5 Won Orange
2004 Boston College 9–3 #21 Won Continental Tire
2005 Penn State 11–1 #3 Won Orange
2006 Louisville 12–1 #5 Won Orange
2007 West Virginia 11–2 #6 Won Fiesta
2008 Penn State 11–2 #8 Lost Rose
2009 Penn State[10] 11–2 #9 Won Capital One
2010 Connecticut 8–5 NR Lost Fiesta
2011 West Virginia 10–3 #17 Won Orange
2012 Cincinnati 10–3 NR Won Belk
2013 Penn State 7–5 NR No Bowl
2014 Rutgers 8–5 NR Won Quick Lane
2015 Navy 11–2 #18 Won Military
2016 Penn State 11–3 #7 Lost Rose
2017 Penn State 11–2 #8 Won Fiesta
2018 Army[11] 11–2 #19 Won Armed Forces
2019 Penn State[3] 11–2 #9 Won Cotton
2020 Army[3] 9–3 NR Lost Liberty

By team

School Total Years won
Penn State 32 1947, 1961, 1962, 1964, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1977, 1978, 1981, 1982, 1985, 1986, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1994, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2005, 2008, 2009, 2013, 2016, 2017, 2019
Army 9 1944, 1945, 1946, 1948, 1949, 1953, 1958, 2018, 2020
Syracuse 6 1952, 1956, 1959, 1966, 1987, 1992
Pittsburgh 6 1936, 1937, 1955, 1976, 1979, 1980
Navy 1943, 1954, 1957, 1960 (½), 1963, 2015
Boston College 5 1940, 1942, 1983, 1984, 2004
Miami (FL)* 4 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003
West Virginia 4 1988, 1993, 2007, 2011
Dartmouth^ 2 1965, 1970
Princeton^ 2 1950, 1951
Virginia Tech 2 1995, 1999
Carnegie Tech 1 1938
Cincinnati* 1 2012
Connecticut 1 2010
Cornell^ 1 1939
Fordham^ 1 1941
Louisville* 1 2006
Rutgers 1 2014
Yale^ ½ 1960 (½)

^ Now a member of the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision (FCS).
† Now a member of NCAA Division III.

* No longer eligible to win Lambert Trophy

Lambert Cup

Football Championship Subdivision (Division I-AA)

Year Team Record Playoff results
1982 Delaware 12–2 Championship Game
1983 Holy Cross 9–2–1 First Round
1984 Rhode Island 10–3 Semifinals
1985 Rhode Island 10–3 Quarterfinals
1986 Holy Cross 10–1 Did not play (Patriot)
1987 Holy Cross 11–0 Did not play (Patriot)
1988 Holy Cross 9–2 Did not play (Patriot)
1989 Holy Cross 10–1 Did not play (Patriot)
1990 William & Mary 10–3 Quarterfinals
1991 Delaware 10–2 First Round
1992 Villanova 9–3 First Round
1993 Boston University 12–1 Quarterfinals
1994 James Madison 10–3 Quarterfinals
1995 Delaware 11–2 Quarterfinals
1996 William & Mary 10–3 Quarterfinals
1997 Delaware 12–2 Semifinals
1998 UMass 12–3 National Champions
1999 Hofstra 11–2 Quarterfinals
2000 Delaware 12–2 Semifinals
Year Team Record Playoff results
2001 Lehigh 11–1 Quarterfinals
2002 Villanova 11–4 Semifinals
2003 Delaware 15–1 National Champions
2004 James Madison 13–2 National Champions
2005 New Hampshire 11–2 Quarterfinals
2006 UMass 13–2 Championship Game
2007 Delaware 11–4 Championship Game
2008 James Madison 12–2 Semifinals
2009 Villanova 14–1 National Champions
2010 Delaware 12–3 Championship Game
2011 Lehigh 11–2 Quarterfinals
2012 Old Dominion 11–2 Quarterfinals
2013 Towson 13–3 Championship Game
2014 New Hampshire 12–2 Semifinals
2015 Dartmouth/Harvard/Penn 9–1/9–1/7–3 Did not play (Ivy)
2016 James Madison 14–1 National Champions
2017 James Madison 14–1 Championship Game
2018 Colgate[11] 10–2 Quarterfinals
2019 James Madison[3] 14–2 Championship Game
Year Team Record Playoff results
2020 James Madison[3] 7–1 Semifinals

NOTE: The Ivy League, and until 1997, the Patriot League, do/did not participate in the NCAA Division I Football Tournament.

[12]

Most FCS Lambert Cups

Team Total Years won
Delaware 8 1982, 1991, 1995, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2007, 2010
James Madison 7 1994, 2004, 2008, 2016, 2017, 2019, 2020
Holy Cross 5 1983, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989
Villanova 3 1992, 2002, 2009
Lehigh 2 2001, 2011
UMass 2 1998, 2006
New Hampshire 2 2005, 2014
Rhode Island 2 1984, 1985
William & Mary 2 1990, 1996
Boston University 1 1993
Colgate 1 2018
Fordham 1 2015
Hofstra 1 1999
Old Dominion 1 2012
Towson 1 2013

† Now a member of the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS).
‡ Discontinued football

Division II

Year Team Record Playoff results
1957 Lehigh 8–1 No playoffs
1958 Buffalo 8–1 Tangerine Bowl (refused)
1959 Delaware 8–1 No playoffs
1960 Bucknell 7–2 No playoffs
1961 Lehigh 7–2 No playoffs
1962 Delaware 7–2 No playoffs
1963 Delaware 8–0 No playoffs
1964 Bucknell 7–2 No playoffs
1965 Maine 8–2 Tangerine Bowl (L)
1966 Gettysburg 7–2 No playoffs
1967 West Chester 10–1 Tangerine Bowl (L)
1968 Delaware 8–3 Boardwalk Bowl
1969 Delaware 9–2 Boardwalk Bowl
Wesleyan 8–0 No playoffs
1970 Delaware 9–2 Boardwalk Bowl
1971 Delaware 10–1 National Champions
1972 Delaware 10–0 National Champions
1973 Delaware 8–4 Quarterfinals
Lehigh 7–4–1 Quarterfinals
1974 Delaware 12–2 Championship Game
1975 Lehigh 9–3 Quarterfinals
1976 Delaware 8–3–1 Quarterfinals
1977 Lehigh 12–2 National Champions
1978 UMass 9–4 I-AA Championship Game
1979 Delaware 13–1 National Champions
1980 Lehigh 9–1–2 I-AA Semifinals
1981 Shippensburg 12–1 Div II Semifinals
1982 East Stroudsburg 9–2 No playoffs
1983 Towson State 10–2 Quarterfinals
1984 Towson State 9–4 Semifinals
1985 Bloomsburg 12–1 Semifinals
1986 Towson State 8–3–1 Quarterfinals
Year Team Record Playoff results
1987 IUP 10–2 Quarterfinals
1988 Millersville 10–2 Quarterfinals
1989 IUP 11–2 Semifinals
1990 IUP 12–2 Championship Game
1991 IUP 12–1 Semifinals
1992 New Haven 12–1 Semifinals
1993 IUP 13–1 Championship Game
1994 IUP 10–3 Semifinals
1995 New Haven 10–1–1 Quarterfinals
1996 Clarion 11–3 Semifinals
1997 New Haven 12–2 Championship Game
1998 Slippery Rock 12–2 Semifinals
1999 IUP 9–4 Semifinals
2000 Bloomsburg 12–3 Championship Game
2001 IUP 8–2 First Round
2002 IUP 11–2 Quarterfinals
2003 IUP 10–1 No playoffs
2004 West Chester 11–4 Semifinals
2005 East Stroudsburg 11–3 Semifinals
2006 West Chester 9–4 Second Round
2007 California (PA) 13–1 Semifinals
2008 West Chester 9–4 Second Round
2009 California (PA)[10] 11–4 Semifinals
2010 Mercyhurst 10–3 Quarterfinals
2011 New Haven 11–2 Quarterfinals
2012 IUP 12–2 Quarterfinals
2013 West Chester 13–2 Semifinals
2014 Bloomsburg 11–2 Quarterfinals
2015 Shepherd 13–1 Championship Game
2016 Shepherd 13–1 Semifinals
2017 IUP 13–1 Semifinals
2018 LIU Post[11] 10–1 First Round
Year Team Record Playoff results
2019 West Chester[3] 9–3 First Round

Most D-II Lambert Cups

School Total Years won
IUP 12 1987, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1994, 1999, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2012, 2017
Delaware 11 1959, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1969(½), 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973(½), 1974, 1976, 1979
West Chester 6 1967, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2013, 2019
Lehigh 1957, 1961, 1973 (½), 1975, 1977, 1980
New Haven 4 1992, 1995, 1997, 2011
Bloomsburg 3 1985, 2000, 2014
Towson State 3 1983, 1984, 1986
Bucknell 2 1960, 1964
California (PA) 2 2007, 2009
East Stroudsburg 2 1982, 2005
Shepherd 2 2015, 2016
Buffalo 1 1958
Clarion 1 1996
Gettysburg ^ 1 1966
LIU Post 1 2018
Maine 1 1965
UMass 1 1978
Mercyhurst 1 2010
Millersville 1 1988
Shippensburg 1 1981
Slippery Rock 1 1998
Wesleyan ^ ½ 1969 (½)

‡ Now a member of the Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS).
† Now a member of the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS).
^ Now a member of Division III.

Division III

Year Team
1966 Wilkes
1967 Wagner
1968 Wilkes
1969 Merchant Marine
1970 Edinboro
1971 Alfred
1972 Franklin & Marshall
1973 C. W. Post
1974 Ithaca
1975 Ithaca
1976 C. W. Post
1977 Westminster (PA)
1978 Ithaca
1979 Carnegie Mellon
1980 Ithaca
1981 Widener
1982 Plymouth State
Year Team
1983 Hofstra
1984 Union (NY)
Ithaca
1985 Ithaca
1986 Salisbury State
1987 Wagner
1988 Ithaca
1989 Union (NY)
1990 Allegheny
1991 Ithaca
1992 Washington & Jefferson
1993 Rowan
1994 Washington & Jefferson
1995 Rowan
1996 Rowan
1997 Lycoming
1998 Rowan
Year Team
1999 Rowan
2000 Widener
2001 Rowan
2002 Brockport
2003 RPI
2004 Rowan
2005 Rowan
2006 St. John Fisher
2007 Wesley
2008 Cortland
2009 Wesley[10]
2010 Wesley
2011 Wesley
2012 Hobart
2013 St. John Fisher
2014 Wesley
2015 Wesley
Year Team
2016 Alfred
2017 Brockport
2018 Johns Hopkins[11]
2019 Muhlenberg[3]

Most D-III Lambert Cups

Team Total Years won
Rowan 8 1993, 1995, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2001, 2004, 2005
Ithaca 1974, 1975, 1978, 1980, 1984 (½), 1985, 1988, 1991
Wesley 6 2007, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2014, 2015
Alfred 2 1971, 2016
Brockport 2 2002, 2017
C. W. Post 2 1973, 1976
St. John Fisher 2 2006, 2013
Wagner 2 1967, 1987
Washington & Jefferson 2 1992, 1994
Widener 2 1981, 2000
Wilkes 2 1966, 1968
Union (NY) 1984 (½), 1989
Allegheny 1 1990
Carnegie Mellon 1 1979
Cortland 1 2008
Edinboro 1 1970
Franklin & Marshall 1 1972
Hobart 1 2012
Hofstra ^ 1 1983
Johns Hopkins 1 2018
Lycoming 1 1997
Merchant Marine 1 1969
Muhlenberg 1 2019
Plymouth State 1 1982
RPI 1 2003
Salisbury 1 1986
Westminster (PA) 1 1977

† Now a member of the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS).
‡ Now a member of Division II.
^ Discontinued football

References

  1. ^ "Boys' Life". November 1968.
  2. ^ Dartmouth College Football: Green Fields of Autumn. Arcadia. 2004. ISBN 9780738536118.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g "ECAC Announces 2020 and 2019 Lambert Awards". ECACsports.com. June 18, 2021. Retrieved July 26, 2021.
  4. ^ "Get Lambert Award". Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph. December 1, 1936. p. 26. Retrieved June 28, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^ "Remember What It Took to Get Here". 11 April 2016.
  6. ^ "What happened to college football in the Northeast?". 4 August 2022.
  7. ^ "Boys' Life". November 1968.
  8. ^ Dartmouth College Football: Green Fields of Autumn. Arcadia. 2004. ISBN 9780738536118.
  9. ^ "Remember What It Took to Get Here". 11 April 2016.
  10. ^ a b c Mackall, Dave (January 5, 2010). "Penn State finishes atop MNYFW poll". Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. Archived from the original on January 10, 2010. Retrieved January 5, 2010.
  11. ^ a b c d "ECAC Announces 2018 Football Teams of the Year and Lambert Awards". ECACsports.com. January 15, 2019. Retrieved January 15, 2019.
  12. ^ "American Football Networks, Inc. - Lambert FCS Cup". Archived from the original on Jun 29, 2016. Retrieved June 14, 2016.