Sat, Sep 3 Final
Football
7 Wis. Lutheran
42 vs. Lake Forest
Sat, Sep 10 Final
Football
55 Lake Forest
0 at Lawrence
Sat, Sep 17 Final
Football
14 Knox
48 vs. Lake Forest
Sat, Oct 1 Final
Football
41 Lake Forest
10 at Cornell
Sat, Oct 8 Final
Football
7 Illinois Col.
40 vs. Lake Forest
Sat, Oct 15 Final
Football
16 Ripon
14 vs. Lake Forest
Sat, Oct 22 Final
Football
0 Grinnell
49 vs. Lake Forest
Sat, Oct 29 Final
Football
14 Monmouth
31 vs. Lake Forest
Sat, Nov 5 Final
Football
36 Lake Forest
3 at Beloit
Sat, Nov 12 Final
Football
13 Lake Forest
7 at Chicago
Sat, Nov 19 Final
Football
0 Lake Forest
50 at #1 North Central
Sat, Sep 2 Final
Football
24 Lake Forest
0 at Wis. Lutheran
Sat, Sep 9 Final
Football
37 Lake Forest
6 at Illinois Col.
Sat, Sep 16 Final
Football
7 Cornell
41 vs. Lake Forest
Sat, Sep 30 Final
Football
50 Lake Forest
0 at Knox
Sat, Oct 7 Final
Football
0 Lawrence
76 vs. Lake Forest
Sat, Oct 14 Final
Football
0 Grinnell
47 vs. Lake Forest
Sat, Oct 21 Final
Football
0 Lake Forest
12 at Ripon
Sat, Oct 28 Final
Football
0 Beloit
41 vs. Lake Forest
Sat, Nov 4 Final
Football
14 Lake Forest
16 at Monmouth
Sat, Nov 11 Final
Football
15 Chicago
14 vs. Lake Forest
Composite Calendar

Sam Mulford Named a Semifinalist for William V. Campbell Trophy

Photo by Kyra Vidas
Photo by Kyra Vidas

Lake Forest College's Sam Mulford was included as the National Football Foundation (NFF) and College Hall of Fame announced Thursday the 156 semifinalists for the 2016 William V. Campbell Trophy, presented by Fidelity Investments®. The award recognizes an individual as the absolute best football scholar-athlete in the nation and is prominently displayed inside its official home at the New York Athletic Club.

Mulford, a senior, has played in 30 of a possible 34 games during his career. After two years as a tailback, he moved to H-back in 2015. He has amassed 191 yards on the ground and 124 as a receiver during his career and scored a rushing touchdown as a sophomore in 2014. While majoring in history, as well as sociology and anthropology, Mulford has maintained a 3.26 cumulative grade point average and earned Academic All-Midwest Conference honors. He has also taken on numerous leadership roles on campus and participated in several community service initiatives.

(from footballfoundation.org)

The NFF will announce 12-14 finalists on November 1, and each of them will receive an $18,000 postgraduate scholarship as a member of the NFF National Scholar-Athlete Class, presented by Fidelity Investments. The finalists will travel to New York City for the 59th NFF Annual Awards Dinner on December 6, where their accomplishments will be highlighted in front of one of the most powerful audiences in all of sports. At the event, one member of the class will be declared the winner of the 27th William V. Campbell Trophy and have his postgraduate scholarship increased to $25,000.

Named in honor of the late Bill Campbell, former chairman of Intuit, former player and head coach at Columbia University and the 2004 recipient of the NFF's Gold Medal, the Campbell Trophy is a 25-pound bronze trophy and increases the amount of the recipient's grant by $7,000 for a total postgraduate scholarship of $25,000. This year's postgraduate scholarships will push the program's all-time distribution to more than $11.1 million.

Nominated by their schools, which are limited to one nominee each, candidates for the awards must be a senior or graduate student in their final year of eligibility, have a GPA of at least 3.2 on a 4.0 scale, have outstanding football ability as a first team player or significant contributor and have demonstrated strong leadership and citizenship. The class is selected each year by the NFF Awards Committee, which is comprised of a nationally recognized group of media, College Football Hall of Famers and athletics administrators.

The past recipients of the William V. Campbell Trophy include: Air Force's Chris Howard (1990); Florida's Brad Culpepper (1991); Colorado's Jim Hansen (1992); Virginia's Thomas Burns (1993); Nebraska's Rob Zatechka (1994); Ohio State's Bobby Hoying (1995); Florida's Danny Wuerffel (1996); Tennessee's Peyton Manning (1997); Georgia's Matt Stinchcomb (1998); Marshall's Chad Pennington (1999); Nebraska's Kyle Vanden Bosch (2000); Miami (Fla.)'s Joaquin Gonzalez (2001); Washington University in St. Louis (Mo.)'s Brandon Roberts (2002); Ohio State's Craig Krenzel (2003); Tennessee's Michael Munoz (2004); LSU's Rudy Niswanger (2005); Rutgers' Brian Leonard (2006); Texas' Dallas Griffin (2007); California's Alex Mack (2008); Florida's Tim Tebow (2009); Texas' Sam Acho (2010); Army West Point's Andrew Rodriguez (2011); Alabama's Barrett Jones (2012); Penn State's John Urschel (2013); Duke's David Helton (2014); and Oklahoma's Ty Darlington (2015).

National Football Foundation Release