Lafayette Leopards

Lafayette Leopards
Logo
UniversityLafayette College
ConferencePatriot League
NCAADivision I (FCS)
Athletic directorSherryta Freeman
LocationEaston, Pennsylvania
Varsity teams23 teams
Football stadiumFisher Stadium
Basketball arenaKirby Sports Center
Baseball stadiumKamine Stadium
Soccer stadiumMike Bourger '44 Field at Oaks Stadium
Lacrosse stadiumFisher Stadium
MascotRoary
NicknameLeopards
Fight songOn, Lafayette!
ColorsMaroon and white[1]
   
Websitewww.goleopards.com

The Lafayette Leopards represent the 23 Division I varsity athletic teams of Lafayette College and compete in the Patriot League. There are 11 men's teams, 11 women's teams, and one co-ed team. The club teams also compete as the Leopards. Though not a varsity sport, crew and ice hockey are very competitive at Lafayette and play in intercollegiate club leagues.

Lafayette's primary rival in every sport is the Lehigh Mountain Hawks of nearby Lehigh University. Bucknell University is also a major rival and other league and school rivalries exist on an individual sport level.

Lafayette's student-athletes generally lead the NCAA in academic performance. In 2011, 16 of Lafayette's 23 teams academic performance scored within the top ten percent of their respective sport. Lafayette led the Patriot League, which placed second behind the Ivy League.[2]

Lafayette's first recorded athletic event outside of the student body was a baseball game against Easton amateurs, a 44–11 win on November 8, 1865. The first recorded intercollegiate match was a 45–45 tie in a baseball game against Lehigh in October 1869.[3] In 1883, Lafayette won the intercollegiate tug of war championship, held at the annual track and field championship meet.[4]

  1. ^ Lafayette College Full-Color Representations (PDF). Retrieved June 30, 2016.
  2. ^ "Lafayette Sets Bar in Patriot League Academic Performance". Lafayette Athletics. Lafayette College. 17 May 2011. Retrieved August 9, 2011.
  3. ^ March, Francis A. (1926). Athletics at Lafayette College. Easton, PA: Lafayette College. p. 272.
  4. ^ Official Handbook of the Inter-Collegiate Association of Amateur Athletes of America 1910, p. 44-45. 1910. Retrieved 2010-04-12.