Skip to main content

What Are You Doing the Night of Lehigh's 2017 Home Opener?

I have this vision.

It's the weekend of the home opener at Murray Goodman Stadium, Labor Day weekend.  It could be a Thursday, Friday, or Saturday.

And it's 6:00 PM.

In 2018, the Lehigh football team will open the season with a big celebration of the football program - at Navy, Lehigh's first game against an FBS team in over a decade.

In 2017, why not, as a one-off opportunity, try to have one Lehigh football game, the home opener, be the first-ever night game at Murray Goodman Stadium?

Will it cost money?  Yes.  Will it be easy?  Probably not.

However, is it doable?  I've got to believe the answer is "yes".




Lehigh's unofficial 2017 schedule is as follows:

9/2 - Villanova
9/9 - at Monmouth
9/16 - Yale
9/23 - Penn
9/30 - at Wagner
10/7 - at Colgate
10/14 - Georgetown
10/28 - at Fordham
11/4 - at Bucknell
11/11 - Holy Cross
11/18 - Lafayette

The 2017 slate for your defending Patriot League Champions has six home games, including the mother of them all, the 153rd meeting of The Rivalry at Murray Goodman Stadium.

The Rivalry, of course, is always a big deal.  But what about the home opener?

Having no permanent lights at Murray Goodman Stadium, the options for when Lehigh's home opener can be played are limited.

In order to not conflict with class time, it has to be on a Saturday, and it has to be a day game with a 12:30 PM kickoff time.

The problem with this is that it's going to be Labor Day weekend.  Families will be traveling, or students might elect not to stay on campus.

There's also the matter of Penn State.  Fresh off of their Big 10 Championship and Rose Bowl appearance, Lehigh's home opener might be going up directly against the Nittany Lions' home opener vs. Akron, which is very likely to remain on Saturday and either have a noon start or a 3:30 PM start.

No matter how you slice it, the status quo is not ideal for celebrating Lehigh football on Labor Day.

But what if Lehigh could host a night game, with temporary lighting, for the Thursday night or Friday Night before Labor Day?

Suddenly, students are all on campus - without the burdens of the heavy workload to come during the semester - and able to watch a football game.  More families will be able to go, with no Penn State game to go up against and fewer family plans to mess them up.

It also would inject a little bit of excitement into the Murray Goodman game-day experience, something just a tiny bit different to shake things up.  Longer tailgates; a bit more pre-game hype before, say, a 6:00 PM kickoff; more food trucks to feed people dinners instead of lunches; there's a lot to possibly be done.

One-time events like this can get some more headlines and get Lehigh's football program to occupy the entire front page of the local sports section, rather than sharing it with Penn State.  These things matter.

Maybe the costs are prohibitive; I don't know.  Maybe logistically it's impossible; I'm not sure.

But I've got to believe costs for a one-time event like a Murray Goodman night game can be covered - even by fans.  Fundraisers, online and off, could be combined to cover the costs for a one-time deal - a large donation to the Football Athletic Partnership for a football event.

It would be nice to see what it would take to make this happen.

Comments

Anonymous said…
Fully agree. The football schedule needs to be shaken up a bit. It has been largely the same teams at the same venues year after year. If the Lehigh program is ever going to step up and truly challenge for the FCS championship (instead of getting into the playoffs via the Patriot League's automatic bid), it and the schedule need to be broadened beyond their current Patriot/Ivy focus.

Instead of the annual meaningless game against Monmouth, schedule a Navy, Vanderbilt, Rice or Northwestern. Such a game would bring great exposure (both athletically and academically), expand the recruiting base, enthuse alumni in the local market, pay handsomely (by Goodman Stadium standards) and, possibly, a great road win.
KG said…
Spot on. This year we have a meaningless game at Wagner added to the schedule - a non-event win or a catastrophic loss. The travel costs will be greater than any share of Wagner's pathetic 2500 person gate.

Per the prior comment, a game against an upper crust (academically) FBS team should be explored. Something to help sell recruits.

KG
Anonymous said…
You guys are on to something. Colgate just had a nice cross-country road trip win over #23 Cal-Poly on national television (ESPNU). Meanwhile, we are playing down the road Villanova (again).

Lehigh Lou

Popular posts from this blog

How The Ivy League Is Able To Break the NCAA's Scholarship Limits and Still Consider Themselves FCS

By now you've seen the results.  In 2018, the Ivy League has taken the FCS by storm. Perhaps it was Penn's 30-10 defeat of Lehigh a couple of weeks ago .  Or maybe it was Princeton's 50-9 drubbing of another team that made the FCS Playoffs last year, Monmouth.  Or maybe it was Yale's shockingly dominant 35-14 win over nationally-ranked Maine last weekend. The Ivy League has gone an astounding 12-4 so far in out-of-conference play, many of those wins coming against the Patriot League. But it's not just against the Patriot League where the Ivy League has excelled.  Every Ivy League school has at least one out-of-conference victory, which is remarkable since it is only three games into their football season.  The four losses - Rhode Island over Harvard, Holy Cross over Yale, Delaware over Cornell, and Cal Poly over Brown - were either close losses that could have gone either way or expected blowouts of teams picked to be at the bottom of the Ivy League. W

UMass 21, Lafayette 14, halftime

Are you watching this game? UMass had this game under control until about 3 minutes in the second quarter, and then got an interception, converted for a TD. Then the Leopards forced a fumble off the return, and then converted THAT for a TD, making this a game. It's on CN8. You really should be watching this.

Examining A Figure Skating Rivalry: Tonya and Nancy

It must be very hard for a millennial to understand the fuss around the Nancy Kerrigan and Tonya Harding figure skating scandal in the run-up to the 1994 Olympics. If you're of a certain age, though - whether you're a figure skating fan or not, and I am decidedly no fan of figure skating - the Shakespearean story of Harding and Kerrigan still engages, and still grabs peoples' attention, twenty years later. Why, though?  Why, twenty years later, in a sport I care little, does the story still grab me?  Why did I spend time out of my life watching dueling NBC and ESPN documentaries on the subject, and Google multiple stories about Jeff Gilooly , idiot "bodyguards", and the whole sordid affair? I think it's because the story, even twenty years later, is like opium. The addictive story, even now, has everything.  Everything.  The woman that fought for everything, perhaps crossing over to the dark side to get her chance at Olypic Gold, vs. the woman who