Skip to main content

List of 100 point games in NCAA college football

100 point games by one team in NCAA college football history are rare. This list provided is of current Division I-A football teams, but most of the losing teams are defunct. This list was garnered from the ESPN College Football Encyclopedia. Only Arizona, Georgia Tech, Oklahoma, and Tulsa have eclipsed 150-points in at least one game. Georgia Tech is the only team to ever record over 200 points in one game, occurring in 1916 against Cumberland. Yikes!!

University of Alabama vs. Marion Military Institute
Score: 111-0
Year: 1922

University of Arizona vs. New Mexico Military Institute
Score: 110-0
Year: 1921
and....vs.
Camp Harry Hones
Score: 167-0
Year: 1922

University of Arkansas vs. Southwest Missouri State
Score: 105-0
Year: 1911

University of California, Berkeley vs. St. Mary's (CA)
Score: 127-0
Year: 1920


University of Cincinnati vs. Kentucky Wesleyan
Score: 115-0
Year: 1921

University of Colorado vs. Regis University
Score: 109-0
Year: 1905

University of Florida vs. Florida Southern
Score: 144-0
Year: 1913

University of Georgia vs. Alabama Presbyterian
Score: 108-0
Year: 1913

University of Georgia vs. Locust Grove
Score: 101-0
Year: 1910

Georgia Institute of Technology vs. Mercer
Score:105-0
Year: 1914

George Institute of Technology vs. Cumberland
Score: 222-0
Year: 1916

Popular posts from this blog

12th Miracle of the World: The Broncos Smurf Turf.....

Some just wander through life trying to find out the answers to: why is the sky blue?...where do babies come from?...Will we be able to breath underwater in the year 2020?.....How did the world become the world?....and why in the name of... is the turf blue @ Boise State U? Well look no further all of life's mysterious answer's are right below...or @ least one of them... The mighty Broncos of Boise State University play on the world's only radical, other-worldly blue field. WHY??? The quality of color selection was affirmed by Mother Nature shortly after its installation in 1986 when passing flocks of migrating geese repeatedly landed in accidental mass suicides, apparently mistaking the field for a beautiful blue lake. Shortly thereafter the grounds keepers began covering the field when not in use, to prevent the aforementioned bird crash deaths and grisly clean-up efforts. No matter how many geese had to die, removing the beloved "Smurf Turf" was never considere

Happy Holidays from Hook-n-Ladder