This article is from the archives of the UB Reporter.
Flashback

50 years ago

UB awarded Lambert Cup

This has been a great year for UB football. The Bulls play in the Mid-American Conference championship game tomorrow, and for the first time in 50 years, there are bowl invitations to consider. In 1958, UB won eight games and defeated then-powerhouses Columbia and Harvard, making UB the top small college football program in the East and winner of the Lambert Cup.

The Lambert Cup was awarded in New York City on Dec. 14, 1958. The team’s co-captains, Nick Bottini and Lou Reale, accepted the cup, with Chancellor Clifford C. Furnas, athletic director Jim Peele, coach Dick Offenhamer and members of the Lambert family looking on. There was a dinner at Toots Shor’s and an appearance on the popular Sunday night television program “The Ed Sullivan Show.” With the Lambert Cup and an invitation to play Florida State in the Tangerine Bowl in Orlando, it was arguably UB’s best season in 102 years of football. What happened next also made it one of the university’s finest hours.

When the university was informed that the team’s two African-American players, Willie Evans and Mike Wilson, would not be welcome in Orlando, the team unanimously rejected the bowl invitation.

“Those of us who thrilled to their performances recognize them as fine football players, gentlemen and worthy representatives of the university,” Furnas said. “We have never been concerned with the color of their skins, nor do we think that should be made a point of issue by anyone else.”

John Edens, University Archives