Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Midnite's Week 10 Big 12 Picks and Week 9 Results




Midnite's Record Through Week Nine: 36-16

Midnite's Week 10 Big 12 Picks:

  • TCU 30, Oklahoma State 28
  • Baylor 33, West Virginia 18
  • Kansas 34, Kansas State 33
  • Texas, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and Iowa State have byes

Midnite’s Big 12 Week 9 Picks/Results: 2-2
 
  • Midnite's Pick: TCU 27, Texas 24; Result: TCU 37, Texas 27
  • Midnite's Pick: Oklahoma 42, Kansas State 17; Result: Kansas State 48, Oklahoma 41
  • Midnite's Pick: Kansas 34, Texas Tech 31; Result: Kansas 37, Texas Tech 34
  • Midnite's Pick: Iowa State 34, Oklahoma State 24; Result: Oklahoma State 34, Iowa State 27
  • Baylor and West Virginia had byes

TCU Corrals Longhorns; Cowboys Await in Stillwater


The eyes of Texas, and the Big 12, have been upon Max Duggan. 

And much to the chagrin of native Texans, and Texas Longhorns fans, the true TCU freshman quarterback blossomed into a purple rose in Cowtown on Saturday, October 26.

That’s when the young gunslinger from Iowa led the Horned Frogs to a 37-27 Homecoming upset of 15th-ranked Texas in rockin' Amon G. Carter Stadium. 

Tom C. "Midnite" Burke
Although Duggan almost single-handedly destroyed what was left of the Longhorns’ season, he had help from a multitude of offensive and defensive Frogs, all of whom were for the first time clad in their Halloween-themed Nike Fierce Red uniforms.

The anthracite jersey and pants and fierce purple helmet with a red Horned Frog caused quite a stir, particularly among TCU loyalists.  Just as all Texas roses should be yellow, TCU’s colors should be purple and white, with, perhaps, a touch of black here and here. 

Prior to last Saturday, not many Horned Frogs fans knew how to spell or pronounce “anthracite,” much less knew that the color was defined as chalky and earthy, being near-black or very dark gray.

But, hey, all’s forgiven, since the Frogs won the “War of the Horns” in front of a crowd of 47,660, consisting of many returning TCU alums, who are being asked to generously support a $1-billion capital campaign, the largest in the history of TCU. 

And as we all know, there’s nothing like an exciting football victory, especially over the University of Texas, that makes TCU alums open their wallets and share their riches. 

The Horned Frogs have defeated the Longhorns in five of the last six seasons and are 6-2 against Texas since beginning Big 12 play in 2012.

TCU’s usually stoic head coach, Gary Patterson, let loose at the end of the tense game with a mild celebration on the sideline before heading to midfield to console a somber Texas head coach, Tom Herman, amid a sea of joyous TCU students and fans.

Patterson is 6-3 against Texas. Since 1996, he ranks No. 1 in the nation among all head coaches past and present (minimum five games) in career winning percentage (.667, 6-3) against Texas.

Patterson’s elation with the win led to him writing a song after the game. Listen: here 

With the win, Patterson’s Frogs improved to 4-3, 2-2 in the Big 12.

In the midst of another disappointing season, Herman also expressed his feelings through a song he wrote after the game. Listen: here

With the loss, Herman’s ‘Horns dropped to 5-3, 3-2 Big 12, and fell out of the Top 25. 

Despite throwing the first interception of his career, on his second attempt of the game, ending a streak of 143 passes without an interception, Duggan had the best day of his collegiate career against the Longhorns.

He led a strong aerial attack. He had career-best totals of 19 completions and 273 yards passing. Two of his completions went for touchdowns. Duggan ran the football 13 times for 72 yards and one touchdown. 

Max led TCU in rushing for the second straight game. He is the first TCU quarterback to lead the team in rushing in two consecutive games since Kenny Hill in 2017.

Also, Duggan became the first TCU quarterback to throw for at least 250 yards and multiple scores and rush for at least 70 yards and a touchdown in the same game since Trevone Boykin on October 29, 2015, versus West Virginia. 

Duggan has thrown for 1,147 yards, the first true freshman to top 1,000 yards in a season in the Gary Patterson head coaching era and the first since 1999 (Casey Printers, 1,213). He has 11 touchdown passes and just one interception in 169 attempts.

Duggan’s performance earned him multiple awards, including:

  • Big 12 Newcomer of the Week 
  • Davey O'Brien National Quarterback of the Week 
  • Davey O'Brien Award Great Eight of Week 9 
  • Manning Award Stars of the Week

Duggan was the best quarterback on the field that particular Saturday, as he outplayed Texas junior quarterback Sam Ehlinger. 

Ehlinger completed only 22 of 48 passes. He threw two touchdown passes, but the Frogs intercepted him four times and turned those turnovers into 13 points. Coming into the game, Ehlinger had only thrown three interceptions for the season. And, he had not thrown more than three interceptions in a game in his career.

Ehlinger ran for only 43 yards on nine carries against the Frogs’ defense. He was sacked once. 

Duggan alone did not slay the Longhorns. For the first time this season, his play was complemented by outstanding performances from several members of the Frogs’ receiving corps.

TCU wide receiver Taye Barber, who has returned to full-time status from injury, had five receptions for 94 yards and one touchdown. He had a long reception of 51 yards. 

Barber equaled a career-high with the team-best five receptions. The 94 receiving yards set a new personal best for him.

Duggan's 51-yard completion to Barber was a career-long for him, and Barber. It more than doubled Barber's previous career-long grab of 24 yards. 

The 51-yard reception by Barber came during a dramatic, nine-play, 75-yard drive that was climaxed by an 11-yard touchdown run by Duggan that put the Horns away late in the fourth quarter.

TCU wide receiver Jalen Reagor caught two passes for 55 yards, including a 44-yarder for a touchdown that was a one-play scoring drive, the first such drive of the season for the Frogs. 

Reagor’s touchdown reception was the 21st of his career, one behind Josh Boyce (22; 2010-12) for second on TCU's all-time list. Josh Doctson is TCU’s leader, with 29 (2013-15).

TCU tight end Pro Wells only caught one pass, but it was a 24-yarder for a touchdown. It was his fourth scoring grab on just eight catches this season. It was the longest reception of his career, nearly doubling his previous long of 13 yards. 

Wide receiver John Stephens Jr. had a career-best three receptions for 32 yards, tight end Artayvious Lynn had two receptions to tie a career-high and tight end Carter Ware had his first career reception.

The Frogs ran for 162 yards and two touchdowns against Texas, with Duggan’s 72 yards and one touchdown leading the way. Running back Sewo Olonilua had 48 yards and one touchdown on 16 carries. Running back Darius Anderson rushed for 27 yards on nine carries. Reagor had 15 yards on three carries. 

In somewhat of an oddity, TCU used five different players in the kicking game: Jonathan Song and Griffin Kell on field goals, Cole Bunce on kickoffs, and Jordy Sandy and Dillon Jones on punts. 

Song had field goals of 32 and 33 yards, which made him 13-of-14 on the season and 30-of-34 in his career. He is 29-of-30 on attempts inside 40 yards. 

Kell closed the first half with a career-best 52-yard field goal, the longest make by a Horned Frog since Jaden Oberkrom's 57-yard effort against West Virginia in 2015.

Kell missed badly on his first attempt at the 52-yarder, but the miss was nullified by a timeout that was called by Texas shortly before the football was snapped. 

Prior to his second attempt, Kell received some coaching from TCU kicker Jonathan Song, from the sideline. Song encouraged Kell to keep his head down and his eyes focused on the football. Kell's second attempt sailed through the middle of the uprights and narrowed Texas' lead to 17-13. 

Jones had a 58-yard punt on his first collegiate attempt. It was TCU's longest punt of the season and the longest by a TCU player since Adan Nunez's 58-yard punt at Iowa State on October 28, 2017. 

Defensively, TCU junior linebacker Garret Wallow again shined. He had his first career interception and a team-high nine tackles. Wallow has led TCU in tackles in all but one game this season.

Also intercepting passes were safeties Ar’Darius Washington, Trevon Moehrig and Innis Gaines. 

Washington’s interception was his team-best third of the season. His three picks are the most by a Horned Frog since Nick Orr had three in 2017. It's also the most by a freshman in the Patterson era. Washington has been named to the Midseason Football Writers Association of America (FWAA) Freshman All-America Watch List.

Moehrig’s interception was his second of the season and third of his career. 

Gaines recorded his first interception of the season and third of his career. The interception ended the Longhorns' final series.

TCU's four interceptions were its most in a regular-season game since recording four in a 48-10 win at Texas in 2014. 

Prior to their takeaways in the game against Texas, the Frogs had not had a takeaway in their previous three games.

TCU defensive tackle Corey Bethley had his first sack of the season and seventh of his career, the most among current Horned Frogs. TCU now has at least one sack in 74 of its last 77 games. 

True freshman linebacker Wyatt Harris had a career-best seven tackles.

Senior cornerback Jeff Gladney set a season-high with eight tackles, to go along with three pass breakups, tying his season best. 

As stingy as the Horned Frogs were on defense, several ‘Horns had stellar offensive performances, as Texas racked up 447 total yards of offense.

UT senior wide receiver Devin Duvernay had eight catches for 173 yards and a touchdown (a 47-yarder), with a long reception of 63 yards. 

Texas senior wide receiver Collin Johnson caught seven passes for 101 yards, with a long reception of 26 yards.

Sophomore Longhorn running back Keaontay Ingram rushed for 71 yards on 16 carries and he had a 17-yard touchdown reception among three catches. 

Texas sophomore kicker Cameron Dicker, who the week before had salvaged Texas a 50-48 win over Kansas with a 33-yard field goal as time expired, was good on two-of-three field goals against the Frogs. He made a 21-yarder and a 38-yarder. He missed a 26-yarder, only his third miss of the season.

There was a festive atmosphere in The Carter for the TCU-Texas game. There was a large crowd. It was Homecoming. And TCU played its first home game in nearly a month. 

After the victory, there was a party in The Carter. TCU students and fans stormed the field, gave high-fives, slapped one another on the back, mingled and sang the Alma Mater with TCU players and coaches.

It was a fun party, but a costly one. The Big 12 publicly reprimanded TCU and fined the university $25,000 for allowing the field to be stormed.

If the party is to continue, at whatever cost, in Horned Frogs Country, TCU must duplicate its strong offensive and defensive performances this Saturday, in Stillwater, Oklahoma, in a 2:30 pm (Central) game against Oklahoma State. 

The Cowboys will enter the contest 5-3, 2-3 in the Big 12. While TCU was beating No. 15 Texas on Saturday, the 26th, Oklahoma State was beating No. 23 Iowa State, 34-27, in Ames, Iowa.

This season, OSU also has beaten Oregon State, 52-36, McNeese, 56-14, Tulsa, 40-21, and Kansas State, 26-13. The ‘Pokes have lost to Texas, 36-30, Texas Tech, 45-35, and Baylor, 45-27. 

Oklahoma State is second in the Big 12 in total offense, averaging 505.7 yards per game; 250.7 yards rushing and 255 yards passing. The Cowboys are fourth in the conference in scoring offense, averaging 36.7 points a game.

The Frogs will have to focus on a trio of offensive Cowboys. 

Orchestrating the offense is quarterback Spencer Sanders (#3), a 6-2, 195-pound redshirt freshman from Denton Ryan High School in Denton, Texas. He has completed 134 of 214 passes, for 1,739 yards and 13 touchdowns. He has run the ball 107 times for 500 yards and two touchdowns.

Against Iowa State, Sanders completed 16 of 24 passes for 249 yards. He threw two touchdown passes and one interception. He ran the ball eight times for 43 yards. 

The star of the offense is running back Chuba Hubbard (#30), a 6-1, 207-pound redshirt sophomore.

Hubbard, who is one of 20 Maxwell Award semifinalists for Collegiate Player of the Year, leads the nation in rushing, yards-after-contact, and all-purpose yards. He has accumulated 1,381 yards rushing, for an overage of 172.6 yards per game. He is second nationally with 16 rushing touchdowns. 

Against Iowa State, Hubbard carried the ball 22 times for 116 yards. He scored two touchdowns.

The Frogs held Hubbard to 42 yards rushing on 13 carries in a 31-24 victory in the 2018 regular-season finale, in Fort Worth, on November 24. 

This season, only one player has topped the 100-yard rushing mark against the Frogs and it wasn’t a running back. It was Iowa State quarterback Brock Purdy, who had 102 yards rushing on 12 carries in a 49-24 victory over TCU on October 5 in Ames.

Oklahoma State junior wide receiver Tylan Wallace (#2), six-foot, 185 pounds, from Fort Worth South Hills, leads all Power Five conference players with 903 receiving yards this season. He is averaging nearly seven catches a game and 113 receiving yards a game. 

Since the beginning of the 2018 season, Wallace is the most productive receiver in the FBS. His 2,394 receiving yards since the beginning of last season leads the nation by 397 yards. No player in America has more 100-yard receiving games than Wallace over the past two seasons. He has 11 100-yard receiving games.

Against Iowa State, Wallace had eight receptions for 131 yards and one touchdown. He had a long reception of 71 yards. 

Against Iowa State, the Cowboys’ defense intercepted Cyclones quarterback Brock Purdy three times, but he completed 39 of 62 passes for 382 yards and one touchdown.

Stillwater is a rowdy, tough venue for visiting teams. 

TCU is 4-8 versus Oklahoma State in Stillwater, but the Frogs won there in 2017. Behind a career-high 160 yards rushing and three touchdowns by running back Darius Anderson, TCU posted a 44-31 win over the Cowboys, who at the time were the sixth-ranked team in the nation. 

So, the Frogs have a two-game winning streak against Oklahoma State. The last time TCU won three straight over OSU was from 1990-92.

Party on, Max!


Beer For Sale ... In TCU's Schollmaier Arena!





Starting this season, beer will be for sale in TCU's Schollmaier Arena during men’s and women’s basketball games.

Beer being sold in Schollmaier Arena joins beer sales in Amon G. Carter Stadium, for football games, and Lupton Stadium, for baseball games.

Cheers!



 

Monday, October 28, 2019

Oklahoma State 2019 Football Overview

2019 Oklahoma State Football Schedule: beat Oregon State, 52-36; beat McNeese, 56-14; beat Tulsa, 40-21; lost to Texas, 36-30; beat Kansas State, 26-13; lost to Texas Tech, 45-35; lost to Baylor, 45-27; beat Iowa State, 34-27; November 2, vs TCU; November 16, vs Kansas; November 23, at West Virginia; November 30, vs Oklahoma.

2018 Oklahoma State Football Results: beat Missouri State, 58-17; beat South Alabama, 55-13; beat Boise State, 44-21; lost to Texas Tech, 41-17; beat Kansas, 48-28; lost to Iowa State, 48-42; lost to Kansas State, 31-12; beat Texas, 38-35; lost to Baylor, 35-31; lost to Oklahoma, 48-47; beat West Virginia, 45-41; lost to TCU, 31-24; beat Missouri, 38-33, in the Liberty Bowl.


2019 Oklahoma State Football Media Guide: here
 
2019 Oklahoma State Football Video: here

Mike Gundy
2019 Oklahoma State Football: Any conversation about Oklahoma State football in 2019 has to begin with the Cowboy's Heisman Trophy candidate running back, Chubba Hubbard.
Hubbard (#30), a 6-1, 207-pound redshirt sophomore, leads the nation in nearly every statistical rushing category, including rushing yards, rushing yards per game, all-purpose yards, yards after contact, yards per carry, and more. His average of 172.6 rushing yards per game is nearly 34 yards more than second-place J.K. Dobbins of Ohio State.
Hubbard has carried the ball 216 times for 1,381 yards. He has scored 16 touchdowns and has a long run of 84 yards.
Oklahoma State's second-leading rusher is Spencer Sanders (#3), a 6-2, 195-pound redshirt freshman from Denton Ryan High School in Denton, Texas. He has run the ball 107 times for a net 500 yards. He has two rushing touchdowns and along run of 33 yards.
Running backs L.D. Brown (#7) and Micah Cooper (#26) have scored the 'Pokes other three rushing touchdowns, with Brown having two touchdowns to his credit.
Oklahoma State (5-3, 2-3 Big 12), which won its first three games of the year and then lost three of its next five games, is averaging 263.5 yards per game rushing.
Through the air, Sanders has accounted for another 1,739 yards. He has completed 134 of 214 passes, with a long completion of 90 yards. He has thrown 13 touchdown passes and 10 interceptions.
Redshirt senior Dru Brown (#6) is Sanders' backup. Brown has seen limited action. He has completed 10 of 13 passes. He has thrown two touchdown passes and has a long completion of 69 yards. 
Oklahoma State is averaging 241.6 yards per game through the air.
The Cowboys' leading receiver is wide receiver Tylan Wallace (#2), six-foot, 185 pounds. The junior from South Hills High School in Fort Worth has caught 53 passes for 903 yards, an average of 17 yards a catch and 112.88 yards per game. He has eight touchdown receptions and a long catch of 90 yards.
Wide receiver Dillon Stoner (#17), six-foot, 198 pounds, has caught 25 passes for 232 yards. The redshirt junior has not caught a touchdown pass. 
Receivers Braydon Johnson (#8), Jordan McCray (#12) and C.J. Moore (#35) each have caught two touchdown passes. Receiver Logan Carter (#87) has caught one touchdown pass.
Oklahoma State is averaging 505.1 yards per game offensively. The Cowboys are averaging 37.5 points a game. They have allowed 15 sacks and lost seven of 15 fumbles.
Defensively, OSU is allowing 436.7 yards per game and 29.6 points per game. The Cowboys have recorded 14 sacks and recovered four of 9 fumbles by their opponents.
Junior safety Malcom Rodriguez (#20), six-foot, 205 pounds, leads Oklahoma State with 66 tackles. He has 3.5 tackles for loss and one interception.
Redshirt junior linebacker Amen Ogbongbemiga (#11), 6-1, 225 pounds, has 58 tackles, 9.5 tackles for loss, 3.5 sacks and one interception.
Sophomore safety Kolby Harvell-Peel (#31), six-foot, 205 pounds, has 51 tackles, three tackles for loss, one sack and one interception.
Tre Sterling (#3), a 6-1, 202-pound redshirt sophomore, has 48 tackles, 5.5 tackles for loss, a half sack and one interception.
Cornerback A.J. Green (#4) has 37 tackles. The 6-1, 190-pound senior also has one interception.
Redshirt junior defensive tackle Cameron Murray (#92), 6-2, 290 pounds, has three tackles for loss and 2.5 sacks.
Freshman defensive end Trace Ford (#94), 6-3, 227 pounds, has two tackles for loss and two sacks.
Redshirt senior linebacker Philip Redwin-Bryant (#38), has an interception, and redshirt defensive end Mike Scott (#91) has 1.5 sacks.
Freshman Tom Hutton (#29) is Oklahoma State's punter. He has punted 37 times for an average of 38.87 yards per punt. He has a long punt of 55 yards and has not had a punt blocked.
Matt Ammendola (#49), a redshirt senior, is the field goal kicker. He has converted 12-of-12 attempts. He has a long field goal of 49 yards and has not have a kick blocked.
Kickoffs are handled by redshirt sophomore Jake McClure (#39).
 
Oklahoma State Football: Oklahoma State began playing football in 1901 when it posted a 2-3 record.

The football team originally was known as the Agriculturists, then the Aggies, sometimes the Farmers, and later, the Tigers. Eventually the team became the Cowboys.


The Oklahoma A&M Aggies joined their first conference for the start of the 1915 season, the Southwest Conference.

In 1925, Oklahoma A&M joined the Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Association (MVIAA). 

In 1928, the MVIAA split into the Big Six Conference and the Missouri Valley Conference (MVC). A&M was the only large school that joined the smaller MVC. 

In 1956, A&M announced it was joining (or rejoining) what had become the Big Seven for the 1958–59 academic year. As part of a transition period, the Cowboys went independent for two years. 

In 1958, the school became a part of the renamed Big Eight Conference.

In 1988, OSU and the NCAA released the results of an unusual joint investigation. The report detailed a staggering litany of misconduct dating to before the Jimmy Johnson era, principally involvement in a "bidding war" for high school phenom Hart Lee Dykes. The Cowboys were slapped with four years' probation, a three-year bowl ban and a two-year ban from live television. However, the most serious long-term sanction was a limit of 20 scholarships from 1989 to 1992 (as a result of the sanctions, the Cowboys only had one winning season from 1989 to 2001). In 1996, OSU joined with the other Big Eight schools and four schools from the old Southwest Conference to form the Big 12 Conference.

Jimmy Johnson coached Oklahoma State from 1979 to 1983. He left with a 29-25-3 record. Les Miles coached the Cowboys from 2001 to 2004. He compiled a 28-21 record before leaving to become LSU's head coach.

Current head coach Mike Gundy was named as Miles' successor and the 22nd head coach at Oklahoma State. He has compiled a 126-62 record at Oklahoma State since becoming head coach in 2005.

On October 29, 2016, Mike Gundy recorded his 100th victory as a head coach with a 37-20 win over # 10 West Virginia. Gundy is the only Oklahoma State football coach to record 100 victories.

Gundy is one of three head football coaches at Oklahoma State to have played for Oklahoma State, along with Jim Lookabaugh and Floyd Gass. Gundy played at Oklahoma Lite from 1990 to 1993. He was a wide receiver, then a record-setting quarterback. Prior to becoming the Cowboys' head coach, he was Oklahoma State's offensive coordinator from 1994 - 1995. In 1996, he was passing game coordinator at Baylor. From 1997 to 2000, he was passing game coordinator at Maryland From 2001 to 2004, he was Oklahoma State's assistant head coach and offensive coordinator, under Miles. Gundy is known for being emotional, including his infamous "I'm 40" outburst at a reporter. Watch: here  

After posting a 9–3 regular season record in 2008, Gundy received a new seven-year contract worth $15.7 million. 


Gundy's tenure as head coach of the Cowboys has seen the rise of Oklahoma State's football program. 

The Cowboys began the 2009 season ranked #9 in the country in the AP Top 25, but the dreams of a miracle season were crushed when the Pokes lost, 45-35, to the unranked Houston Cougars at home the following week, and later learned that star wide receiver Dez Bryant was ruled ineligible for the remainder of the season, for lying to the NCAA about having contact with Deion Sanders. 

In 2010, the Cowboys recorded the first 11-win season in Oklahoma State history. 

On December 3, 2011, the Cowboys won their first Big-12 Championship with a 44-10 victory over Oklahoma. The third-ranked Cowboys beat fourth-ranked Stanford in overtime, 41-38, on January 2, 2012, in the Fiesta Bowl.

The school has a 19-10 record for the 29 bowl games in which it has appeared. 

The Cowboys are 4-3 in the six major bowl games (Rose, Peach, Cotton, Sugar, Fiesta and Orange), with their biggest win being over Stanford in the 2012 Fiesta Bowl. 

One Cowboy, running back Barry Sanders, has won the Heisman Trophy (1988).

Oklahoma State Football Stadium: Oklahoma State plays in Boone Pickens Stadium. The stadium was built in 1919. It is the oldest FBS stadium west of the Mississippi. The stadium's field is positioned in an east-west configuration, to avoid the strong prevailing winds of northern Oklahoma. The stadium is one of a very few major college football stadiums with an east-west configuration.

In 2003, Oklahoma State alumnus T. Boone Pickens made an historic donation to the university for improvements to its athletic facilities, and it was announced that the stadium would be renamed in his honor. The latest renovation of the football stadium was completed in 2009, with the current capacity at 60,218. The surface is Field Turf. There are 111 suites and 3,500 club seats. In 2013, the 92,000-square-foot Sherman E. Smith Training Center and indoor practice facility was completed. The facility is surrounded by three new practice fields -- two grass fields and one artificial.


2019 TCU-Texas Gameday Experience Photos



TCU vs Texas, October 26, 2017; Amon G. Carter Stadium, Fort Worth, TX
The TCU vs Texas football game was a highlight of Homecoming 2019!
(photos above and below) Pilots of the four flyover planes are honored.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
SuperFrog shows off his Nike Fierce Red outfit.
 
 
 
 
 
 
The 2019 TCU Homecoming honorees are honored.
The 2019 female TCU Homecoming nominees.
The 2019 male TCU Homecoming nominees.
(photos above and below) The featured celebrity of the Riff-Ram video was TCU Letterman and Pro Football Hall of Famer Bob Lilly.
(photos above and below) Most Texas fans didn't stay for the "Party at the Carter," an impromptu celebration of  TCU's 37-27 victory over the Longhorns.