The Georgia Tech coach, John Heisman (yes, that Heisman), vowed revenge. He got it a year later on Oct. 7, 1916 - 90 years ago today - when the Georgia Tech football team, which he also coached, overran Cumberland, 222-0, in the most lopsided game in College Football history.
In that era, the Cumberland football team played teams like Mississippi, Tulane, South Carolina, Louisiana State and Tennessee. Cumberland discontinued football before the 1916 season, but forgot to tell Georgia Tech.
Heisman insisted that the game go on. If it did not, he said, he would hold Cumberland to a forfeit fee of $3,000, a large sum then.
Schedules were arranged by student managers then. The burden fell upon Cumberland's student manager, George Allen, later an adviser to United States presidents. He rounded up 13 students, many of them fraternity brothers, to go to Atlanta and play.
When the game began, Georgia Tech scored on its first play. Cumberland fumbled on the next play, and Tech returned it for a touchdown. Cumberland fumbled again on its first play, and Tech scored two plays later. And on and on.
After one quarter, Tech led, 63-0. At halftime, the score was 126-0. In a 1998 Georgia Tech alumni publication, Frank Burns, the Cumberland historian, quoted from Heisman's halftime pep talk:
"We're ahead, but you just can't tell what those Cumberland players have up their sleeves. They may spring a surprise. Be alert, men."
There was no surprise. As The Atlanta Journal wrote, "As a general rule, the only thing necessary for a touchdown was to give a Tech back the ball and holler, 'Here he comes' and 'There he goes.' "
Heisman finally showed mercy, agreeing to cut the second half to 15 minutes, but it mattered little. The game ended with no first downs for either team. Georgia Tech scored every time on its first, second or third play. Cumberland's only play of note was a 10-yard pass, little help since it came on fourth-and-22.
Among the game statistics:
Rushing: Georgia Tech 978 yards, Cumberland minus-42.
Passing: Georgia Tech 0 for 0. Cumberland 2 for 18 for 14 yards and 6 interceptions.
Turnovers: Georgia Tech 0, Cumberland 15.
You can read more about it in a 1983 book about the game, "You Dropped It, You Pick It Up," by Jim Paul. The book has 222 pages.
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On October 7, 1916 Georgia Tech out-scored Cumberland 222-0. The week before the game Cumberland had beaten Georgia Tech in Baseball 22-0. So there was bad blood between the two schools. And in the football game Georgia Tech scored on every play they touched the ball. Which was close to every play.
== == The 1916 game where Cumberland faced Georgia Tech was the most points scored in a college football game. Georgia Tech won 222 - 0.
== ==
The highest scoring game in college football was in 1916 between Georgia Tech and Cumberland. Georgia Tech won the game 222 to 0 and did not throw a single pass.
There is no such thing as an "NFL college game". It's either college or NFL... not both.
The second highest college football score was 127 total points scored, Akron (65) vs. E. Michigan (62). Three OT's. 24 November 2001. ------------------------------------- Actually the second highest scoring collegiate football game is still the highest Div IA scoring game. This game was played on October 2, 2004 between San Jose State and Rice. The score was 70 - 63 with no overtimes!
nineteen
Jerry Rice's highest reception total in a single season was 122 in the 1995 season for the San Francisco 49ers.
The highest total by a team in T20 international cricket is 278/3 by Afghanistan against Ireland in 2019.
yes, in college football. In the NFL sack yardage is taken away from the team passing total. It has no affect on rushing yards.