ATLANTA -- For Georgia Tech, it felt like a video game.

The option offense was working to perfection Saturday, and Kansas couldn't find the off switch.

Led by Orwin Smith, who had more than 100 yards rushing and receiving, the Yellow Jackets piled up a school-record 768 yards in a 66-24 rout of the Jayhawks.

Georgia Tech (3-0) also set a school mark with 604 yards rushing and played with a passion and focus that was missing a year ago in an mistake-plagued loss to Kansas.

"When we're making our blocks, it's like a video game," said Embry Peeples, who had a 63-yard touchdown run to spark a 42-point second half. "It's score after score after score."

The Yellow Jackets ran at will and mixed in three long passes against Kansas (2-1), which looked as if it had never seen the option offense.

"It's a bad position to be in when you can't adjust out of it," Kansas defensive coordinator Vic Shealy said. "You can't slow it down, and it snowballs on you."

Georgia Tech avenged a 28-25 upset by the Jayhawks last season, a bitter defeat that sent the Yellow Jackets spiraling to a losing season.

"We wanted to show them that last year was a fluke game," Peeples said. "The fun that they had was not going to be had today."

Georgia Tech also set a school record with 604 yards on the ground in its highest-scoring game since a 69-14 win over Samford in 2007. Roddy Jones also scored running and receiving, while David Sims had a pair of rushing TDs.