The Heisman Trophy was originally called the DAC Trophy and was first awarded in 1935 to Jay Berwagner of the University of Chicago. Following the death of John Heisman in 1936, it was renamed the Heisman Memorial Trophy. It is now annually awarded to the top college football player in America. College football's largest margin of victory was 222-0 when Georgia Tech defeated Cumberland in 1916. In 1905, 18 men were killed and 159 were permanently injured in college football games, prompting President Theodore Roosevelt to threaten to ban the sport in 1906 over safety concerns.