Nothing to do with RC that I can see, but the story is interesting
in its own right and you probably won't find it on any other blog or  
website
with which any of us are familiar.
BR
 
 
 
 
WaybackMachine
 
 
 
 
 
222-0
The Story of The  Game of the Century
by G. Frank Burns, Cumberland University  Historian 
The world immediately  recognizes three sets of figures: 2001, December 7, 
and 222 to 0. The first is a  movie, the second is a day that lives in 
infamy, and the third is indissolubly  connected with Cumberland football, a 
veritable landmark of American sports. On  October 7, 1916, Georgia Tech played 
Cumberland in Atlanta. Tech won 222 to 0,  the worst walloping in the 
history of American college football. There was a  worse defeat in prep school 
records but the 227 to 0 win by Dickinson over  Haverford is suspect. 
>From the beginning of  football at Cumberland in 1894, an ambitious 
schedule had each season included  Southern football powers: Sewanee, 
Vanderbilt, 
the University of Mississippi,  Mississippi A. & M. (now Mississippi State), 
Alabama, Tulane, South  Carolina, Louisiana State, Tennessee, and Georgia 
Tech. In 1902 Cumberland's 16  to 5 win over A. & M. attracted attention. In 
1903 there was the 6-0 victory  over Vanderbilt, the five-day road trip that 
on November 14, 16, and 18  furnished consecutive victories over Tulane, 
Louisiana State, and Alabama, and  the post-season game with Clemson, arranged 
by Coach John Heisman for the  championship of the South, which ended with 
the score 11 to 11. Cumberland was  proclaimed the Southern champion. 
Incidentally, John  Heisman's Clemson team beat Georgia Tech 73 to 0 in 
1903; the next season  Heisman was coaching at Georgia Tech. 
The sport was dropped at  Cumberland in 1906, resumed in 1912, dropped in 
1915, and resumed briefly in  1916 when the memorable 222-0 game with Georgia 
Tech was played in  Atlanta. 
There is no such thing as  a true account of this game. There is a 
contemporary _play-by-play  record_ 
(http://web.archive.org/web/20080615203017/http://www2.cumberland.edu/about/gotc/pbp.html)
 , without color, in the files of 
an Atlanta newspaper. But no matter  who tells the story, the temptation to 
embroider is irresistible. 
Errors abound. It is said  that Cumberland's regular football players had 
left that fall to "go into the  trenches." Obviously the U.S. had not entered 
World War I in October 1916. There  were enough football players on campus 
even to have a scrub team which played  three games. George Allen, 
Cumberland student manager who led the troops to  Atlanta, in his book says the 
team 
that played Tech also played "four or five  games." There is a newspaper 
account of the 100 to 0 loss to Sewanee; also  contemporary newspaper reports 
of a game at Bowling Green - score not given, but  it may have been 0-0. 
Cumberland also played either a town team from Hartsville  or the Nashville 
Athletic Club. The newspaper article says: "There are two other  games 
scheduled 
to be played in Lebanon." 
Were there ringers? It  has been said that Allen "borrowed" some Vanderbilt 
players. This is not true,  although he may have tried. The manager did 
recruit some of his Kappa Sigma  brothers to go, and apparently one reporter 
for The Nashville Tennessean used a  phony name and made the trip. However, 
the names of most of those listed are  found in the university register. 
Robert Engler may have been the last survivor.  A student in the College of 
Arts 
& Sciences, he became a nationally  syndicated writer and attended college 
reunions regularly, receiving the Award  of the Phoenix in 1976. 
The players did not have  to borrow uniforms from Castle Heights, as has 
been said; a photo of Gentry  Dugat, made just before the Atlanta trip, shows 
him wearing the same kind of  uniform Cumberland used in 1913-15. Dugat was 
the only Cumberland player to stay  in the entire game. He later helped 
organize a 40-year reunion of the players of  both teams in Atlanta. 
Allen did not receive the  nickname "Fullback" after this game. In the 
yearbook of 1915, he is called by  this name. Another error is often repeated: 
Cumberland's longest gain was NOT a  two-yard loss; there was one forward 
pass completed for a ten-yard gain.  Unfortunately it was fourth and 22 at the 
time. The truth is bad enough. Neither  team made a first down. Cumberland 
couldn't, and Tech scored every time it got  the ball. 
Quarterbacks Morris  Gouger and Leon McDonald completed two passes out of 
eleven for fourteen yards.  But Cumberland's total net yardage was minus 28. 
Except for touchdown runs,  every play in the game was run by the Cumberland 
team. 
The second half was cut  short, by fifteen minutes. 
One story that is true  concerns a Cumberland fumble late in the game. It 
rolled toward B. F. "Bird'  Paty, later a prominent attorney. The fumbler 
shouted, "Pick it up!" Paty  replied, "Pick it up yourself, you dropped it." 
How did it  happen? 
John Burns, student  manager for 1915-16, wrote letters in the winter of 
1916, making out a schedule  for the coming season. At that time student 
managers were responsible for the  correspondence to schedule athletic 
contests. 
He lacked one course to graduate  in June 1916, but since he got a job he 
didn't return to school. (He finally  took the course in 1923, graduated and 
became a teacher and basketball coach).  President Samuel A. Coile resigned 
in the spring of 1916. Dr. Homer Hill, acting  president, and the board of 
trustees trimming the budget decided to eliminate  football. 
Allen, student manager of  the baseball team, was elected football manager 
in September, was told to write  schools with contracts and cancel. He did 
so, but overlooked Georgia Tech, which  insisted on performance of the 
contract, or a cash forfeiture. There was a  guarantee and Allen offered to 
take 
the team if he could get half of that sum.  (It is believed that the story 
that this was an "informal" team was a device to  justify cancellation of the 
schedule without penalty.) 
In a way the game was  revenge: the Cumberland baseball team had beaten 
Georgia Tech 22 to 0 in the  spring of 1915. That must have smarted. 
A book about the game,  You Dropped It, You Pick It Up by Marcel and Jim 
Paul, contains exactly  222 pages. 
Cumberland resumed  football in the fall of 1919.

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