Wyoming's 1949 record

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fromolwyoming
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http://www.databasefootball.com/College ... eason=1949
Notice the game with Northern Colorado. A blowout of unprecedented proportions by any means.
Last edited by fromolwyoming on Sun Jan 31, 2010 11:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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MrTitleist
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I think you meant Northern Colorado. :)
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fromolwyoming
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MrTitleist wrote:I think you meant Northern Colorado. :)
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pokesfan52
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The score still stands as the biggest blowout in major college football since WWII. The definition of "major college football' is somewhat subjective. Wyoming played in the skyline conference, also known as the Mountain States Conference, which i believe was a member of the "University Division," the precursor to modern Division 1. In any event, since WWII, Houston defeated Tulsa 100-6 in 1968. Prior to WWII, George Tech defeated Cumberland 222-0 in 1916. More recently, in 2003, Rockford Collge defeated Trinity Bible College 105-0, but thats obviously not "major" college football.

So whats the point of these useless facts? For those that play college football on playstation, x-box, etc...you can find the Wyoming-Northern Colorado score in the records section. :)
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fromolwyoming
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pokesfan52 wrote:The score still stands as the biggest blowout in major college football since WWII. The definition of "major college football' is somewhat subjective. Wyoming played in the skyline conference, also known as the Mountain States Conference, which i believe was a member of the "University Division," the precursor to modern Division 1. In any event, since WWII, Houston defeated Tulsa 100-6 in 1968. Prior to WWII, George Tech defeated Cumberland 222-0 in 1916. More recently, in 2003, Rockford Collge defeated Trinity Bible College 105-0, but thats obviously not "major" college football.

So whats the point of these useless facts? For those that play college football on playstation, x-box, etc...you can find the Wyoming-Northern Colorado score in the records section. :)
I thought that Cumberland was a D-II program (comparitively speaking for modern day terms of course), and would only count for overall?
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