Guilford scored first in the Quakers' college football game Thursday night against Davidson at the Wildcats' Richardson Stadium.
After that, however, Davidson went on a game-long offensive rampage, winning 91-61 and setting national and school records in the process.
The Wildcats (3-0) set two NCAA Football Championship Subdivision records and broke or tied six more program marks in the victory against the Division III Quakers. The FCS records were for total yards (964) and rushing yards (685).
"No, I've never been a part of anything like that," said first-year Wildcats coach Scott Abell. "We thought it was a game we should win and that we should execute at a high level. Obviously, a lot of good things happened for us."
Abell's "gun-spread" offense, which he brought with him from Washington & Lee (Va.), accounted for the big numbers. The Wildcats averaged an astounding 15.5 yards per play (a school record) and they're now averaging 58.0 points and 620.3 yards total offense in victories against teams from lower divisions (Guilford and Brevard are Division III, Chowan is Division II). Each of Davidson's 13 touchdowns came on an offensive play.
In the gun-spread, quarterback Tyler Phelps runs the option out of the shotgun, getting the ball to players like running backs Wesley Dugger (186 yards, three touchdowns) and Coy Williams (168 yards) and slot receiver William Wicks (161 all-purpose yards, three touchdown).
"We showed some flashes in the first two games," Abell said. "We had some explosive quarters and halves. But we hadn't put it all together like this."
Abell said he pulled most of his starters after the first series of the second half. And the obvious downside of the game for Davidson were the 61 points scored by the Quakers (1-1). Guilford, incidentally, also scored the same number of points in a season-opening 61-35 victory last week against Methodist.
Abell said that with only two days to prepare for the Quakers (the game was moved to Thursday because of Hurricane Florence), some of Davidson's backup defensive players got little practice time.
"Unfortunately, those guys don't get a ton of reps, especially in a short week," Abell said. "It really doesn't matter what level of football you're playing, if you're not comfortable with the scheme you're defending, it's going to be tough. It was almost an unfair experience for some of those young guys to be thrown out there."
It's a happy moment for a long-downtrodden program (the Wildcats haven't won as many as three games in a season since going 4-7 in 2011) that Abell was brought in to fix.
Things get tougher for the Wildcats, though. Davidson, which hasn't won a Pioneer Football League game since 2016, opens its conference schedule Sept. 22 at Dayton. The Flyers (1-1) play Duquesne on Saturday.