59-0. 49-0. 48-0. Those were some halftime scores across college football on Saturday
News > Sports News

Audio By Carbonatix
2:50 PM on Saturday, September 6
By TIM REYNOLDS
Grambling State coach Mickey Joseph knew what was coming when his team faced No. 1 Ohio State.
Oh, he was right. And he wasn't alone Saturday.
There were plenty of one-sided college football scores in Week 2. These were halftime — yes, halftime — scores: Minnesota led Northwestern State 59-0, Florida State led East Texas A&M 49-0 and Texas Tech led Kent State 48-0.
As for Grambling State, well, it lost 70-0 to the defending national champion.
“It's no secret,” Ohio State coach Ryan Day said afterward. “This was not a matchup game.”
No, it wasn't, and Joseph let the world know it was probably going to be that way. He went viral for a midweek interview in which he pointed out that Grambling's band can hold its own with Ohio State's band — but on the field, it looked like a mismatch.
“They’ve got a great band and we have a great band, and we’re going to compete as a band,” Joseph said during the week. “I’m just joking right now. We understand what we’re getting into. We understand what’s going to happen. We understand it. It’s not balanced with the scholarships, it’s not balanced with what they have resources-wise and what we have resources-wise. We all know why we’re playing the game.”
That reason: money.
In the longstanding tradition of bigger programs offering guarantees to smaller programs for being willing to play as what typically is a huge underdog, Grambling State received $1 million from Ohio State for playing Saturday’s game.
“It was a great experience for my kids. It’s a great memory for them," Joseph said. “Everybody can’t say they played the No. 1 team in the country.”
Day tipped his cap to Joseph afterward.
“I've got a lot of respect for coach," Day said. “And I thought their team played hard in this game. They were outmatched, talent-wise, for sure. I think he expressed that. But I give them a lot of respect for playing hard and playing for four quarters, all the way to the end.”
According to Stats LLC, Saturday was the first day since Sept. 10, 2016, that three major college football teams had leads of 48 or more points by halftime on the same day. Those games stayed lopsided the rest of the way: Minnesota won a weather-shortened game 66-0, Texas Tech prevailed 62-14 and Florida State — fueled by seven touchdown plays of 35 yards or more — went on to win 77-3.
Minnesota used 76 players. "Mission accomplished,” Gophers coach P.J. Fleck said.
“The score is what it is,” Northwestern State coach Blaine McCorkle said. “You play these games, and sometimes these things get sideways in a hurry, but we didn’t do anything to help ourselves."
Other routs by halftime Saturday: No. 21 Alabama — smarting from a season-opening loss to Florida State — led Louisiana-Monroe 42-0 at the break, No. 22 Tennessee led East Tennessee State 48-7 on its way to a 72-17 victory, Florida Atlantic took a 39-0 halftime lead and beat Florida A&M 56-14, and No. 6 Oregon led Oklahoma State 41-3 before going on to win 69-3 — with the Ducks not even scoring in the fourth quarter.
“It's fun to win,” Oregon coach Dan Lanning said. “Tight games are a little bit more exhilarating.”
Added Oklahoma State coach Mike Gundy, after the worst loss of his tenure at the school — which came days after he raised eyebrows by discussing the NIL investment disparity between the programs: “Sometimes, you're going to play people that have the ability to run away from you.”
Lots of money was paid out for some Saturday romps.
Alabama paid Louisiana-Monroe nearly $2 million. Texas Tech paid Kent State $1.5 million, which probably didn't give the Golden Flashes a whole lot of consolation when they saw 48-0 on the scoreboard at halftime.
“Not the way we wanted to start. ... Proud of the resolve of the team and responding the way they did in the second half,” Kent State interim coach Mark Carney said.
A similar situation found Kent State last season, too. On Sept. 14, 2024, the halftime deficit the Golden Flashes faced was worse — Tennessee took a 65-0 lead at the break and won 71-0.
Tennessee paid East Tennessee State $575,000, Minnesota gave Northwestern State $500,000 and Florida State paid East Texas A&M $450,000.
“Obviously, it does a lot for your athletic department. ... This is an incredible opportunity for us,” ETSU coach Will Healy said.
Big payouts don't always guarantee one-sided scores. No. 8 Clemson, favored by 31 points according to BetMGM Sportsbook, paid Troy $1.5 million; Troy jumped out to a 16-0 lead in the second quarter, before Clemson settled in and won 27-16.
No. 2 Penn State paid FIU $1.6 million for their game in Happy Valley. FIU showed up ready to earn that money: Penn State led only 10-0 at the half and got a 34-0 win — getting its last 14 points in the final 3:29.
“Learned a lot about these guys today,” FIU coach Willie Simmons said. “I think a foundation was laid today that could help us propel through the rest of the season.”
___
Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here. AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-football