"[2] The 1906 Vanderbilt team had one of the greatest seasons in school history, once rated by Innis Brown as the best the South ever had.
"The Indians had the poorest kind of accommodations at Nashville, and on account of the change of water every one of them became ill."[6] Frank Mount Pleasant had four field goal attempts, but missed them all.
Pleasant in his tracks on most of Blake's punts...I am still convinced that outside Yale and Princeton, the Commodores would have an even break with any other team in the country.
[8][9] Edwin Pope's Football's Greatest Coaches describes the game as the first intersectional triumph of the south.
Vanderbilt running back Honus Craig called this his hardest game, giving special praise to Albert Exendine as "the fastest end I ever saw.