I think it was 1983 when Nebraska blew out Minnesota 84-13. I remember the game because NU scored 3 TDs in each quarter, which I thought was pretty rare.
It was 83 & the craziest thing I remember about that is that we only had 5 completions, 3 by Gill & 2 by the backup & Irving Fryar had 2 catches for 138 yards & 2 TD, both in the 1st quarter, one for 68 & one for 70. 595 yards rushing & 790 yards total offense & we even had 3 TO.
Surprised you didn't have any older blowouts. The one that stands out in my mind is the one featured from the ESPN 30 for 30 episode, "Pony Excess" where Houston scored 95 points on SMU.
Fun fact about that Rutgers team in 2016. Michigan + Michigan State + Ohio State + Penn State? 0-224 combined. 0-78, 0-49, 0-58, 0-39 respectively. They had a good year that year.
Willy Milhouse, #85 who scored the last touchdown for West Virginia against Clemson, was the WRs coach for half a season of the Mainz Golden Eagles in Germany where I played. Later he played WR for the Darmstadt Diamonds against us and got ejected in that game. 😅
Nothing about the majority of these were crazy. When you have top ranked teams against unranked opponents, blowouts are expected. The WVU vs Clemson was a good one, but other than that, each of these games scores were pretty much expected. OSU Wisconsin in 2014 would have been phenomenal. Even Florida OSU 2007 or 2008 would have been good as well.
I watched that Michigan/Rutgers game live. Michigan ran the same off tackle right run play the entire second half and Rutgers still didn’t stop it. Apparently some of the Michigan players even told them it was going off right tackle. That last TD Michigan scored was one of the most lethargic and pathetic displays of defense I have ever seen.
I feel like he didn’t put it because Warner is NAIA which is on the same level as D3. SF Austin is D1 and most of the matches on these lists are D1 against D1
@@johnfisher7933 not really, Wisconsin and Michigan have been trading blows with each other for the last few years. Wisconsin is definitely not Michigans little brother, nice try though.
Another game I would like to see added was the Wisconsin Badgers vs Indiana Hoosiers. Badgers beat them 83-20 in 2010. Yeah the score is crazy was an ever crazier stat is that same day they scored more points than their own basketball team 😂
I remember years ago when my kids were playing high school football in a small town. One Friday night, our team beat a neighboring town 63 to 0. This was a situation where the towns were so close everyone knew everyone. A bunch of us parents went to eat at a local restaurant where a group from the other town came in. They were livid because they felt our coach had run up the score and humiliated their kids. It could have gotten ugly, but one of the fathers in our group who was a cool headed person, calmed them down. He told them that our coach was not only not playing his first string, he had benched all of them in the third quarter and was playing his second and third string. He was even letting kids play positions they had never played. He was trying not to score without actually telling the kids not to score. Unfortunately they were still scoring. The other folks apologized and went to their table saying they had not realized that. Remember in high school school they only play 12 minute quarters
I would think Ohio State's dismantling of Wisconsin 59-0 in the 2014 Big Ten Championship with their third-string QB would rank higher for people than several of these entries.
Agreed. These are generally teams that were expected to demolish the opposition. When you have ranked vs unranked... what do you expect other than a blowout?
The biggest win in college football history was Georgia Tech vs Cumberland 222-0 and no, im not joking i think it was in the 30s or the 40s cant remember
10:06 Just when I thought the only clips of Kansas in this video would be blowouts at our expense, they go and include the 2007 Nebraska game. Glorious.
1901 Michigan wolverines are the only team in college football history to go unscored on 550-0. The 1916 Georgia tech team has the highest margin of victory game in history 220-0. Yes the 1901 team was a few years before the forward pass was legal and the Tech game was against a team with mixed athletes( the opponent ended there football program the previous year so they played with other athletes to fulfill there obligation) but the records still count and stand as played.
Iowa was kind of trash last year... OSU PSU and Michigan are the only strong competitors in the Big 10... When was the last time the West division has won a championship? Googled it out of curiosity. Wisconsin won 2011 and 2012 (was given 2010 since OSU vacated) but the West hasn't been competitive since the 1990's and first two years of 2000's
@@lieutenantgothmog4370 Iowa also beat Penn State after that one of the top teams in the Big Ten. So yes, it was a quality win. They only lost to Wisconsin and Purdue before falling to Michigan.
I think if you make a sequel include Penn State blowing out Illinois 63-10 in 2005, it wasn't even _nearly_ that close. Penn State was up 56-3 at halftime with backups already subbed in (last TD before halftime came from the backups).
what does the winning coach even say to the losing coach during the handshake after a huge blowout? "good game coach. your team played well today" hahahaha
What about Missouri blowing out Delaware st the full game wasn't even played because both coaches decided to shorten the third and fourth quarters because it was such a blowout