Middle Tennessee Rupe Smith was Middle Tennessee teammates with future Vanderbilt teammates
Jess Neely and
P. V. Overall on the
1917 Middle Tennessee State football team. Smith was also
captain of the
1919 Middle Tennessee team.
Vanderbilt 1921 Rupe was a prominent
halfback and the leading scorer for
Dan McGugin's
1921 Vanderbilt Commodores football team. In the seventh week of play, Vanderbilt faced the defending
SIAA champion
Georgia Bulldogs at home on Curry Field. The game was to be the highlight of Vandy's schedule this year, deciding the conference champion. It was described by
The New York Times as an "important clash." Sporting editor for the
Birmingham News "Zipp" Newman had written weeks ago, "Stegeman has a powerful team and with all the regulars in the game, the team has a chance of going through the season undefeated unless it be Vanderbilt that stops her." The Bulldogs were the favorite to win this meeting of the two schools, first since
1912, in part because the Bulldogs may have outplayed
Harvard and defeated
Auburn earlier in the season. Georgia had the greatest line in the
South, featuring four men deemed
All-Southern in guard
Puss Whelchel, center
Bum Day, tackle
Artie Pew, and end
Owen Reynolds. Not one team all year scored on Georgia through its line. Soon after the start of the fourth quarter, Jess Neely intercepted a pass, weaving for a return of 25 yards to Georgia's 40-yard line before being brought down by Jim Reynolds. Two long pass attempts failed, and Thomas Ryan lined up to punt. Rupert Smith snuck in behind Ryan, and rushed to recover the 25-yard
onside kick. Smith jumped up to get the ball off the bounce among a hoard of Bulldogs, after they had let it bounce, including the outstretched arms of the Bulldogs' Hartley, and raced for a 15-yard touchdown. He added his own extra point and the game ended as a tie, 7–7, giving both schools a claim to the conference title. ==References==