Johns Hopkins–Navy lacrosse rivalry

The Johns Hopkins–Navy lacrosse rivalry is an intercollegiate lacrosse rivalry between the Johns Hopkins Blue Jays and Navy Midshipmen. While historical rivals in football, the lacrosse series has been the headlining competition between the two universities. The Maryland programs were both national powers prior to NCAA sponsorship of the sport, with 35 national titles for the Blue Jays and 17 for the Midshipmen. They both continue to rank one-two in the most total national championships of any program in collegiate lacrosse.[1] While both mainstays on the national stage in the modern era, Hopkins has dominated Navy head-to-head, winning 36 consecutive from 1975 to 2009. The series, annual since 1950 was halted in 2017 due to scheduling issues from conference realignment, as the longtime independents joined the Patriot League and Big Ten Conference respectively in the last decade. A 2020 renewal was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. As of 2020, Johns Hopkins leads the series 62–27–1.[2]

Johns Hopkins–Navy lacrosse rivalry
First meeting1908
Johns Hopkins 6, Navy 1
Latest meetingFebruary 7, 2017
Johns Hopkins 15, Navy 8
Statistics
Meetings total90
All-time seriesJohns Hopkins leads, 62–27–1
Largest victoryJohns Hopkins, 24–5 (1997)
Longest win streakJohns Hopkins, 36 (1975–2009)
Current win streakJohns Hopkins, 5 (2013–Present)

Series history

Early years (1900s to 1960s)

Johns Hopkins bested the Midshipmen in the inaugural meeting by a score of 6 to 1. Navy gained its first win in the series in 1910, as the game was played on a semi-annual basis through 1928. The Midshipmen defeated the Jays in 1928 and would share the USILA Gold Medal with Johns Hopkins, Maryland, and Rutgers.[3] The hiatus began with a relatively even series; Navy led 9–7–1. The two would reconcile in 1943 in Annapolis, before resuming the series in 1946 and playing annually from 1949 to 2017.[4]

Post-World War II resumption began with five consecutive Jays victories, their longest streak to that point. Notably, the state rivals did not meet during the 1949 campaign, as the Navy ended with an undefeated 11–0 record but had to settle for a split national championship with Hopkins. Navy would respond by reeling off four straight victories over Hopkins, but the Jays would counter by winning the next three. Up to this point, both teams were title contenders each season, with Hopkins winning five titles and Navy winning three since resumption. 1959 marked a crucial turning point. Johns Hopkins would claim the national title, but Navy downed the Jays 13–11 to deny them a perfect season. This was the first of eight consecutive Midshipmen victories under coach Willis Bilderback, their longest streak in the rivalry.[5] The last seven of these coincided with Navy national titles and preeminence over the sport. In 1967, Johns Hopkins broke the streak with a 9–6 defeat of Navy, but the teams would ultimately share the USILA championship with Maryland.[1] 1969 featured a three-goal victory for the Midshipmen in Baltimore, the most recent time that they have won the rivalry game on the road at Homewood Field.[6] In 1970, Navy and the Jays would again share the title, this time with Virginia, as Hopkins handed Navy their only defeat on the season.

Hopkins dominance (1970s through 2000s)

1971 marked the first year in the NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship era. Though a Division III program in most sports, Hopkins was grandfathered into Division I for men's lacrosse, enabling the Navy rivalry to continue. That 1971 season the teams played a rare neutral matchup, held in Houston, the first college lacrosse game ever played in the state of Texas.[7] Played in front of nearly 20,000 spectators at the Astrodome to set a single-game NCAA attendance record, the game has been credited for increasing Texan interest in the sport.[7] Navy felled the Jays, as they finished with a rare losing season at 3–7 and missed the inaugural tournament. Hopkins would win its first NCAA title in 1974 but dropped its regular season matchup with Navy. The #6 Midshipmen upset the #2 Jays 13–12 in Annapolis. The next year would not be as successful against Hopkins for Navy, losing 16–11, but the Midshipmen would end the season as the national runner-up.[8]

That matchup in 1974 would be the last for Navy against their in-state rivals for 36 years. The streak is further unprecedented by the fact that the Midshipmen were consistently good on the national stage. From the introduction of the USILA polls in 1973, all but one Hopkins–Navy meeting was between two Top 10 teams until the 1990 contest. All games were between ranked teams until 1996, when Navy entered unranked.[9] The nature of the streak carries comparisons with Navy's college football rivalry with Notre Dame, in which the Fighting Irish defeated the Midshipmen for 43 consecutive years, the longest streak between Division I opponents in NCAA history.[10] Navy ended that dubious distinction in 2007 with a 46–44 triple overtime victory and would finally end their losing steak against Hopkins several years later.

Recent years (2010–present)

2010 would mark the season that Navy finally got over the hump against their rivals. Prior to the game, longtime Midshipmen coach Richie Meade told his players "You’re Midshipmen at the Naval Academy, your future leaders and people’s lives are going to be in your hands. You understand the mission, you understand what you’re required to do, and now I want you to go out and get it done."[11] Navy rallied from an early five goal deficit, scoring six in the second quarter to take a narrow lead into haftime. After a spirited second half, the game went to overtime tied at eight. Since 2000, three Blue Jays victories came in overtime and 2010 would go down the same route. However, this time Navy prevailed in the extra session to win 9–8.[11]

Two seasons later, the Midshipmen put on a spectacular defensive display, holding Hopkins to just two goals in an 8–2 victory. The Jays would win the next five, including a double overtime victory in 2016. The 2017 contest was the first between Top 10 teams since 2008, as the Jays rolled to a comfortable seven goal victory. After that game, the series took a two-year hiatus due to scheduling concerns between the schools,[12] in part due to their recent decisions to join conferences, giving up their historical independent status.[13][14] A renewal was scheduled in 2020 but the game, along with the entire NCAA season, was cancelled due to concerns stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic.[15] The future of the series remains uncertain.

Rival accomplishments

The following summarizes the accomplishments of the two programs.[9][8]

TeamJohns Hopkins Blue JaysNavy Midshipmen
Pre-NCAA National Titles3517
NCAA National Titles90
NCAA Final Four Appearances298
NCAA Tournament Appearances4727
NCAA Tournament Record71–3817–27
Conference Tournament Titles25
Conference Championships28
Tewaarton Award Recipients10
Lt. Raymond Enners Award Recipients110
Consensus First Team All-Americans184105
All-time Program Record993–356–15807–366–14
All-time Winning Percentage.739.686

Game results

Johns Hopkins victoriesNavy victoriesTie games
No.DateLocationWinnerScore
1 1908 Baltimore, MD Johns Hopkins 6–1
2 1909 Baltimore, MD Johns Hopkins 7–2
3 1910 Baltimore, MD Navy 7–6
4 1911 Baltimore, MD Johns Hopkins 2–1
5 1913 Baltimore, MD Tie4–4
6 1914 Baltimore, MD Navy 5–2
7 1915 Baltimore, MD Johns Hopkins 4–2
8 1916 Baltimore, MD Johns Hopkins 6–3
9 1918 Baltimore, MD Navy 12–0
10 1919 Baltimore, MD Navy 5–3
11 1921 Baltimore, MD Navy 9–0
12 1922 Annapolis, MD Navy 9–1
13 1923 Annapolis, MD Navy 6–3
14 1924 Baltimore, MD Johns Hopkins 5–4
15 1925 Annapolis, MD Navy 8–1
16 1927 Baltimore, MD Johns Hopkins 6–5
17 1928 Baltimore, MD Navy 5–3
18 1943 Annapolis, MD Navy 7–4
19 1946 Annapolis, MD Johns Hopkins 12–9
20 1947 Baltimore, MD Johns Hopkins 14–7
21 1948 Annapolis, MD Johns Hopkins 9–8
22 1950 Annapolis, MD Johns Hopkins 8–4
23 1951 Baltimore, MD Johns Hopkins 13–10
24 1952 Annapolis, MD Navy 10–9
25 1953 Baltimore, MD Navy 7–4
26 1954 Annapolis, MD Navy 12–3
27 1955 Baltimore, MD Navy 13–3
28 1956 Annapolis, MD Johns Hopkins 8–6
29 1957 Baltimore, MD Johns Hopkins 15–6
30 1958 Annapolis, MD Johns Hopkins 14–7
31 1959 Baltimore, MD Navy 13–11
No.DateLocationWinnerScore
32 1960 Annapolis, MD Navy 15–7
33 1961 Baltimore, MD Navy 15–9
34 1962 Annapolis, MD Navy 16–11
35 1963 Baltimore, MD Navy 10–5
36 1964 Annapolis, MD Navy 15–3
37 1965 Baltimore, MD Navy 15–6
38 1966 Annapolis, MD Navy 12–7
39 1967 Baltimore, MD Johns Hopkins 9–6
40 1968 Annapolis, MD Johns Hopkins 11–3
41 1969 Baltimore, MD Navy 9–6
42 1970 Annapolis, MD Johns Hopkins 9–7
43 1971 Houston, TX Navy 9–6
44 1972 Annapolis, MD Johns Hopkins 17–3
45 1973 Baltimore, MD #1 Johns Hopkins 12–7
46 1974 Annapolis, MD #6 Navy 13–12
47 1975 Baltimore, MD #1 Johns Hopkins 16–11
48 1976 Annapolis, MD #5 Johns Hopkins 18–10
49 1977 Baltimore, MD #3 Johns Hopkins 17–11
50 1978 Annapolis, MD #2 Johns Hopkins 22–11
51 1979 Baltimore, MD #1 Johns Hopkins 17–10
52 1980 Annapolis, MD #2 Johns Hopkins 13–8
53 1981 Baltimore, MD #1 Johns Hopkins 9–6
54 1982 Annapolis, MD #3 Johns Hopkins 12–7
55 1983 Baltimore, MD #1 Johns Hopkins 13–8
56 1984 Annapolis, MD #2 Johns Hopkins 9–6
57 1985 Baltimore, MD #1 Johns Hopkins 24–10
58 1986 Annapolis, MD #1 Johns Hopkins 14–11
59 1987 Baltimore, MD #6 Johns Hopkins 10–9
60 1988 Annapolis, MD #2 Johns Hopkins 10–7
61 1989 Baltimore, MD #1 Johns Hopkins 7–5
62 1990 Annapolis, MD #11 Johns Hopkins 6–4
No.DateLocationWinnerScore
63 1991 Baltimore, MD #7 Johns Hopkins 15–11
64 1992 Annapolis, MD #6 Johns Hopkins 22–12
65 1993 Baltimore, MD #4 Johns Hopkins 11–8
66 1994 Annapolis, MD #6 Johns Hopkins 12–11
67 1995 Baltimore, MD #1 Johns Hopkins 16–8
68 1996 Annapolis, MD #5 Johns Hopkins 18–11
69 1997 Baltimore, MD #4 Johns Hopkins 24–5
70 1998 Annapolis, MD #3 Johns Hopkins 15–14
71 1999 Baltimore, MD #2 Johns Hopkins 11–1
72 2000 Annapolis, MD #8 Johns Hopkins 7–6OT
73 2001 Baltimore, MD #6 Johns Hopkins 13–11
74 2002 Annapolis, MD #2 Johns Hopkins 9–8
75 2003 Baltimore, MD #1 Johns Hopkins 17–3
76 2004 Annapolis, MD #1 Johns Hopkins 10–9OT
77 2005 Baltimore, MD #1 Johns Hopkins 9–8OT
78 2006 Annapolis, MD #12 Johns Hopkins 9–8
79 2007 Baltimore, MD #7 Johns Hopkins 10–9
80 2008 Annapolis, MD #7 Johns Hopkins 12–5
81 2008 Annapolis, MD #4 Johns Hopkins 10–4
82 2009 Baltimore, MD #9 Johns Hopkins 15–7
83 2010 Annapolis, MD Navy 9–8OT
84 2011 Baltimore, MD #2 Johns Hopkins 14–5
85 2012 Annapolis, MD Navy 8–2
86 2013 Baltimore, MD #11 Johns Hopkins 15–4
87 2014 Annapolis, MD #6 Johns Hopkins 6–5
88 2015 Baltimore, MD #17 Johns Hopkins 13–8
89 2016 Annapolis, MD #5 Johns Hopkins 12–112OT
90 2017 Baltimore, MD #8 Johns Hopkins 15–8
Series: Johns Hopkins leads 62–27–1
Source:[16]

References

  1. "Former Jay reflects on Homecoming's magic". The Johns Hopkins News-Letter. Retrieved 2020-05-10.
  2. "Johns Hopkins-Navy Men's Lacrosse Notes". Johns Hopkins University Athletics. Retrieved 2020-05-10.
  3. Scott, Bob. Lacrosse: Technique and Tradition. p. 13.
  4. "Hopkins-Navy Series Halted Due to Conference Scheduling Conflicts". www.uslaxmagazine.com. Retrieved 2020-05-10.
  5. "Lacrosse In The 1960s: Johns Hopkins Men's Lacrosse Defeated Navy 9-6 To Win 1967 National Championship And Bring Midshipmen's 8-Year Dynasty To An End (Sports Illustrated May 22, 1967)". LAXBUZZ. 2010-11-07. Retrieved 2020-05-10.
  6. Wagner, Bill. "Navy on a roll, Johns Hopkins reeling going into Saturday meeting". baltimoresun.com. Retrieved 2020-05-10.
  7. Demling, Tanner. "Hopkins-Navy Series Halted Due to Conference Scheduling Conflicts". www.uslaxmagazine.com. Retrieved 2020-05-10.
  8. "2019 Men's Lacrosse Media Guide (PDF)". Naval Academy Athletics. Retrieved 2020-05-10.
  9. "Men's Lacrosse Record Book (PDF)" (PDF). Johns Hopkins University Athletics. Retrieved 2020-05-10.
  10. "Navy vs. Notre Dame – Game Recap – November 3, 2007 – ESPN". ESPN.com. Retrieved 2020-05-10.
  11. Hoffman, Mike (April 26, 2010). "Navy shocks Hopkins to break 35-year losing streak". afteraction.militarytimes.com. Retrieved 2020-05-10.
  12. Wagner, Bill. "Loss of Hopkins-Navy lacrosse series just another sign of the times". capitalgazette.com. Retrieved 2020-05-10.
  13. Wagner, Bill. "Johns Hopkins-Navy men's lacrosse rivalry halted for at least two years". capitalgazette.com. Retrieved 2020-05-10.
  14. Lee, Edward. "Johns Hopkins men's lacrosse retaining annual game vs. Navy, but Loyola Maryland is question mark". baltimoresun.com. Retrieved 2020-05-10.
  15. "NCAA Announces Cancellation of Spring, Remaining Winter Championships". insidelacrosse.com. Retrieved 2020-05-10.
  16. "Johns Hopkins University Men's Lacrosse Record Book". Retrieved 10 March 2019.
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