The Liberty Cup

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The Liberty Cup
Sport Football
First meeting October 25, 1890
Columbia 40, Fordham 0
Latest meeting September 19, 2015
Fordham 44, Columbia 24
Trophy The Liberty Cup
Statistics
Meetings total 24
All-time series Tied, 12–12
Largest victory Columbia, 45–0 (1902) & Fordham, 52–7 (2013)
Longest win streak Fordham, 6 (2010–2015)
Current win streak Fordham, 6 (2010–2015)
The Liberty Cup is located in New York City
Columbia University
Columbia University
Fordham University
Fordham University
Locations in New York City

The Liberty Cup was awarded annually to the winner of the college football game between Columbia University and Fordham University, the oldest remaining and two of the only three National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I football programs in New York City (Wagner College in the borough of Staten Island is the third). The trophy was dedicated in 2002, a year after the Columbia-Fordham game was postponed due to the attacks of September 11, 2001. [1] At least 43 Columbia alumni and 39 Fordham alumni and students[1] died at the World Trade Center,[2] including two former Fordham football players: Nick Brandemarti '00 and Kevin Szocik '97.

Background

Despite their proximity and long football histories, the schools met only three times in the 100 years from 1890 until 1991 (1890, 1902, and a Division III Fordham team was fielded in 1972), with Columbia shutting out Fordham each time. However, for 35 of those years the Rams did not have a Division 1 team to field against the Lions. Fordham folded its football program in 1954 citing financial concerns, until 1970 when it was re-introduced at the Division III level. The Rams would not play at the Division I level again until 1989. Fordham won the fourth meeting, in 1991, 20-16.

The teams had played annually since 2000. The Liberty Cup game typically opened Columbia's season and was usually the third game on Fordham's schedule. Columbia announced plans to end the series before the 2015 matchup.[original research?] There has been no word of any future resumption and the series closed with Fordham holding a 10-4 lead.

Origin Of the Liberty Cup

The 10th meeting between Fordham and Columbia originally was scheduled for September 15, 2001. In the days following the September 11, 2001 attacks, Major League Baseball, the National Football League and many NCAA Division I teams canceled games for the following weekend. But Fordham and Columbia—two of the three Division I football teams in New York City—debated as late as Friday, September 14, 2001 about the possibility of playing. Fordham officials wanted to send a message about American resilience in the face of the attacks, but Columbia officials argued that it was too soon after the attacks to think about playing a football game. "The question was, should we not play and mourn and honor our dead, or was normalcy in the face of this disaster the best response?" said the Rev. Joseph A. O'Hare, president of Fordham at that time.[2]

The schools decided against playing on Sept. 15, but later in the season agreed to meet on Thanksgiving morning (November 22, 2001). Fordham thumped Columbia 41-10 before a near capacity crowd although according to official box scores that crowd may have been underreported. Afterwards, O'Hare said it had been the right decision to reschedule. "Oh, absolutely," he said. "I think we had put sports in perspective -- and we played great."[2]

Less than 10 months after that game, the underdog Lions gained their revenge, holding Fordham close for 59 minutes and winning with a 37-yard field goal with 10.5 seconds to play. This was the inaugural Liberty Cup game. The 13-11 victory would be Columbia’s only win of the 2002 season; Fordham would finish 10-3, gaining a share of the Patriot League title and reaching the second round of the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision playoffs.

Columbia Band's altar boy joke controversy

The Columbia University Marching Band drew protests from Fordham and Roman Catholics generally with an off-color double entendre reference to the priest abuse scandal during its halftime performance at the inaugural 2002 Liberty Cup game, when the Columbia band's self-appointed "Poet Laureate" read from a script over the stadium's public address system: [2]:

"As well as the Mets' season going up in smoke, Fordham tuition going down like an altar boy, and the Fordham football team with a threat rating of a cute, neon pink, the band now presents an all-star gala halftime salute to more Columbia news."

In reporting the incident, The New York Times, the Associated Press, and most of the mainstream media found the reference to be too insensitive or offensive and refused to print it.[3] Columbia President Lee C. Bollinger apologized for the band's remark. The author of the joke refused to apologize.[4]

Recent history

The 2003 game was a thriller, with Fordham coming out on top in a wild 37-30 game. Jerry Glanville was the color broadcaster for that game for TV as a part of the now-defunct Football Network. After CBS executives saw his work on that game, he was offered a chance to call an NFL game the following week, the Detroit Lions/San Diego Chargers game.

Columbia took the 2006 meeting, 37-7, in the most lopsided result of the cup series until Fordham defeated Columbia 52-7 in 2013. The 2006 win was the Lions' second consecutive victory over Fordham, and made Norries Wilson the first Columbia coach since Aldo T. "Buff" Donelli to win his debut. Fordham responded by winning 8 of the next 9.

The Liberty Cup results

As of the 2015 season Fordham became the first team to earn six consecutive victories, leading the series 10-4. Fordham has led the series for eight seasons and counting, Columbia for two.

Year Winning Team Losing Team Location Attendance Series Summary
2002 Columbia 13 Fordham 11 Manhattan 3,865 COL 1–0 Recap
2003 Fordham 37 Columbia 30 The Bronx 6,895 1–1 Recap
2004 Fordham 17 Columbia 14 Manhattan 2,176 FOR 2–1 Recap
2005 Columbia 23 Fordham 17 The Bronx 6,912 2–2 Recap
2006 Columbia 37 Fordham 7 Manhattan 4,454 COL 3–2 Recap
2007 Fordham 27 Columbia 10 The Bronx 3,721 3–3 Recap
2008 Fordham 29 Columbia 22 Manhattan 2,304 FOR 4–3 Recap
2009 Columbia 40 Fordham 28 The Bronx 6,449 4–4 Recap
2010 Fordham 16 Columbia 9 Manhattan 4,454 FOR 5–4 Recap
2011 Fordham 21 Columbia 14 The Bronx 6,820 FOR 6–4 Recap
2012 Fordham 20 Columbia 13 Manhattan 4,318 FOR 7–4 Recap
2013 Fordham 52 Columbia 7 The Bronx 7,026 FOR 8–4

Recap

2014 Fordham 49 Columbia 7 Manhattan 4,805 FOR 9–4 Recap
2015 Fordham 44 Columbia 24 The Bronx 8,052 FOR 10–4 Recap

Results of all previous meetings

Including meetings going back to the 19th century, before the Liberty Cup was dedicated:

  • 2001 Fordham 41, Columbia 10 - Attendance 3,715 (@ Fordham) [3]
  • 2000 Columbia 43, Fordham 26 - Attendance 5,007 (@ Columbia) [4]
  • 1996 Columbia 17, Fordham 10 - Attendance 5,713 (@ Fordham) [5]
  • 1994 Columbia 24, Fordham 13 - Attendance 5,266 (@ Fordham) [6]
  • 1993 Columbia 7, Fordham 0 - Attendance 3,325 (@ Columbia) [7]
  • 1992 Columbia 18, Fordham 9 - Attendance 3,521 (@ Fordham) [8]
  • 1991 Fordham 20, Columbia 16 - Attendance 3,650 (@ Columbia) ) [9]
  • 1972 Columbia 44, Fordham 0 - Attendance 6,845 (@ Columbia)
  • 1902 Columbia 45, Fordham 0 - Attendance 1,000 (@ Polo Grounds II, aka Columbia Field) [10] [11] [12]
  • 1890 Columbia 40, Fordham 0 - Attendance  ? (@ Polo Grounds III, aka Brotherhood Park) [13]

References

  1. Fordham University Remembers 9/11
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Berkow, Ira. "Reflections on Making the Proper Decision Over Postponing a Game." The New York Times Sept. 12, 2002.
  3. Wolper, Allan. The Joke Unfit to Print Editor & Publisher Journal. October 15, 2002.
  4. Wakin, Daniel J. "Columbia U. Head Apologizes To Fordham Over Public Gibe." The New York Times Sept. 25, 2002.