Cheves played without a helmet, because he claimed the headgear impaired his hearing.[8] He returned a kick blocked by Puss Whelchel for 87 yards, scoring a touchdown to defeat Alabama during the 1920 season.[9][10] The play was ranked fourth in the 2008 book The 50 Greatest Plays In Georgia Bulldogs Football History,[10] and still stands as one of the longest return touchdowns in Bulldogs history.[9]
A ballad dedicated to Cheves appeared in the student newspaper, Red and Black:[14]
O! Cheves! O! Cheves!
In south, thou art rough,
The enemy grieves
When thou show'st thy stuff,
Thou art like a hurricane,
Thou hittest them hard,
God pity the man
Whom thou dost guard.
In 1924, sportswriter Morgan Blake listed Cheves as the quarterback in his selection of the greatest football players from Atlanta.[15]
In 1945, Cheves was president of the Touchdown Club of Atlanta.[16] He was inducted into the Georgia Sports Hall of Fame in 1976.[12]
Outside of his sporting career, Cheves was involved in real estate from 1922 though his retirement in the 1980s.[4] He died in 1995, aged 96.[4]
Notes
^His surname appears as "Cheeves" in some publications, including contemporary Pandora yearbooks,[2]: 256 and the present-day Georgia Bulldogs media guide.[3]
^The term "ten second backfield" generally refers to players capable (or thought to be capable) of running a 100-yard dash in 10 seconds—that is, fast runners.[6]