Friday, November 29, 2019

TCU-West Virginia 2019: Scoring Summary, Links for Highlights, Interviews




TCU (5-7, 3-6) vs West Virginia (5-7, 3-6)


                               1st     2nd      3rd     4th        Final

West Virginia       7          3           3         7            20
TCU                        7          3           7         0            17



1st Quarter
10:40: WVU - Leddie Brown, three-yard pass from Jarret Doege (Evan Staley kick)
05:16:  TCU - Sewo Olonilua, two-yard run (Jonathan Song kick

2nd Quarter
09:49: TCU - Jonathan Song, 30-yard field goal
05:18: WVU -Evan Staley, 40-yard field goal

3rd Quarter
10:32: TCU - Jalen Reagor, 70-yard punt return (Jonathan Song kick)
01:25: WVU - Evan Staley, 24-yard field goal

4th Quarter
02:10: WVU - Isaiah Esdale, 35-yard pass from Jarret Doege (Evan Staley kick)

Attendance: 40,126

TCU head coach Gary Patterson talks about the loss: here
West Virginia head coach Neal Brown talks about the win: here
Game highlights: here


Wednesday, November 27, 2019

2019 Horned Frog Football Week 14: TCU-West Virginia Gameday Information




Friday, November 29, is Go Purple Friday: Wear purple on Friday, November 29, and receive discounts and offers from Go Purple partners. More information: here 

Game 12 (final regular-season game) of the 2019 TCU Football Season: TCU Horned Frogs (5-6, 3-5) versus West Virginia (4-7, 2-6): Friday, November 29, 2019, at 3:15 pm (Central), Amon G. Carter Stadium, Fort Worth, Texas; TV: ESPN (TV talent: Brian Custer and Robert Smith); Radio -- WBAP 820 AM, KTCU 88.7, Sirius 113, XM 200 (Radio Talent: Brian Estridge, John Denton, Landry Burdine); Spanish Radio: KFZO 99.1 (Radio Talent: Miguel Cruz, Elvis Gallegos).
  • It is Senior Day! TCU's senior players will be honored, beginning at 3 pm.
  • In honor of Black Friday, it will be a Black Out at Amon G. Carter Stadium.
  • Members of TCU's 1998 Sun Bowl championship team will be honored at halftime. The Frogs, behind a dominating Gary Patterson-designed defense, defeated USC, 28-19, in the Sun. That victory has been credited with establishing the foundation on which the past 21 years of TCU football success has been built. Read an article about the game: here
  • Postgame fireworks show.

ESPN College GameDay Week 14: ESPN GameDay will be in Minneapolis, Minnesota, for the first time, on Saturday, November 30, for the game between No. Minnesota  and No. Wisconsin in TCF Bank Stadium. The game kicks off at 2:30 pm Central. ABC is broadcasting the game. The winner of the game receives Paul Bunyon's Axe and will play Ohio State in the Big 12 Championship game on December 7. During the college football season, GameDay airs live on ESPN on Saturdays, from 8 to 11 am Central. GameDay features Rece Davis, Kirk Herbstreit, Lee Corso, Desmond Howard, David Pollack and Maria Taylor.

TCU Gameday Information: here 

TCU-West Virginia Game Hype Video: here

TCU Head Coach Gary Patterson Talks about West Virginia: here

West Virginia Head Coach Neal Brown Talks about TCU: here

TCU-West Virginia Game Watching Party Locations: here
 
Fan Experience at Amon G. Carter Stadium:
  • Because of construction on the east side of the stadium, Frog Alley has moved to the area in front of Schollmaier Arena.
  • Beer is sold at all concession stands throughout Amon G. Carter Stadium, when gates open (two hours before kickoff), until the start of the fourth quarter. All beer is $7 and sold in aluminum bottles.
  • Available selections include Coors Light, Miller Lite, SOL, Revolver and Henry’s Hard Sparkling Water, along with other local brands depending on demand up to a total of eight brands. Each person can purchase two beers maximum per transaction.
  • In keeping with industry safety standards and due to the adaption of public beer sales, there is a new No Re-entry policy. If a patron needs to leave during the course of the game due to a medical situation, two gates will be open to accommodate this need. Gate 4 on the west and Gate 9 on the east side. Patrons will need to be scanned out so their ticket can be used for re-admission. Fans who leave Amon G. Carter during the game will need a new ticket to re-enter.
  • There are six beer carts, three on the upper concourse and three on the lower concourse.
  • There are beverage-only lines at the concession stands.
  • New Designated Driver program. There are four stands around the stadium where fans can make a pledge not to drink alcohol and receive a free Pepsi product at any concession stand.
  • Pre-game Happy Hour Concessions. Starting when the gates open and going until 30 minutes before kickoff, there will be special prices on some concession items inside the stadium, including: 44 oz Pepsi, $3; large popcorn, $3; peanuts, $3; nachos, $2.25; hot dog, $2; and $2 off all beer.
  • Before the frogs run onto the field, fans will see them getting hyped up thanks to new pregame tunnel cameras.
  • There is a new north-end videoboard, with a state-of-the-art sound system in Amon G. Carter Stadium. The videoboard measures 108-feet-by-48-feet. There also are new speakers in new locations throughout the stadium.
  • Construction continues, with completion scheduled for the 2020 season, on the stadium's $100-million premium seating expansion. The project includes two levels of luxury seating above the current upper deck on the east side of the stadium. There will be a new Legends Club, 22 new suites, 48 loge boxes, over 1,000 club seats and two private clubs. These enhancements are the first since the $164-million rebuild of Amon G. Carter Stadium was completed in 2012.
  • New timeout clocks allow fans to monitor the length of TV timeouts during the game. The new clocks will be located on the sideline.
  • New grab-and-go convenience stores are located around the stadium, with new food options.
  • Several giant cooling fans have been added to the concourses.
  • There is a new Social Media Center at The Carter. Interact at the social photo booth, meet and take pictures with special guests and post on social media.
  • There are new Fanthology Food Carts, offering new food options, including milkshakes, loaded waffle fries, chicken wings, street tacos and nachos.
  • There are some new food vendors in the stadium and in Frog Alley. They include Dwell Coffee & Biscuits, SeƱor Matador’s Tacos, Rudy’s BBQ, and Austin City Tacos.
  • Riff Ram App: Available in the Apple App Store or in Google Play. 

TCU's Previous Game: This is TCU’s 12th and final game of the 2019 season. The Frogs' previous game was a 28-24 loss, to then-No. 9 Oklahoma, in Norman, Oklahoma, on Saturday, November 23. 

West Virginia's Previous Game: This is West Virginia's 12th and final game of the 2019 season. On Saturday, November 23, West Virginia lost, 20-13, to Oklahoma State, in Morgantown, West Virginia.

Previous TCU-West Virginia Game: On November 10, 2018, West Virginia defeated TCU, 47-10, in Morgantown, West Virginia. 

TCU-West Virginia Rivalry: 

  • TCU and West Virginia joined the Big 12 together on July 1, 2012.
  • TCU and West Virginia have met eight times on the football field. Each team has four wins.
  • TCU and West Virginia first met in the 1984 Bluebonnet Bowl in Houston, Texas. The Mountaineers won that game, 31-14. It was TCU's first bowl game since 1965. The Frogs were in the Southwest Conference. The Mountaineers were a football Independent.
  • Since the two teams have been in the Big 12, they have met seven times. TCU has won four of those contests. 
  • TCU is 2-2 versus the Mountaineers in Morgantown, 2-1 in Fort Worth, and 0-1 at neutral sites.
  • TCU head coach Gary Patterson is 4-3 versus West Virginia.

TCU-West Virginia Connections:

  • TCU and West Virginia joined the Big 12 together on July 1, 2012.
  • West Virginia baseball coach Randy Mazey used to be an assistant coach on TCU's baseball team, under head coach Jim Schlossnagle. 
  • There are three players from Texas on the West Virginia football roster.
  • There are no players from West Virginia on the TCU football roster.

Frogs Missing in Action: TCU quarterback Mike Collins has entered his name into the NCAA transfer portal. He will be a graduate transfer, with one year of eligibility remaining. TCU graduate transfer quarterback Alex Delton has left the team. Redshirt freshman quarterback Justin Rogers, defensive tackle Karter Johnson and linebacker Jacoby Simpson have entered their names into the NCAA transfer portal. In the Baylor game, Van Zandt suffered what may be a season-ending injury. The Texas game was the last game for offensive tackle Lucas Niang. He has had season-ending surgery for a torn hip labrum. Receiver Dylan Thomas suffered a leg injury in the Iowa State game. The injury required surgery. Thomas most likely will miss the remainder of the season. Cornerback Noah Daniels suffered a season-ending injury during a summer practice session.

The Line: TCU opened as a 12.5- point favorite. As of Wednesday, November 27, TCU was a 13.5-point favorite. The over/under was 44 points.

Midnite's TCU-West Virginia Prediction: TCU 24, West Virginia 17

TCU Notables: 

  • TCU is 43-17 in regular-season games following a loss under head football coach Gary Patterson.
  • A win over West Virginia would make TCU bowl-eligible for the 17th time in Patterson's 19 years as TCU's head football coach.
  • With wins over Texas, Texas Tech and Kansas, TCU looks to continue a trend of beating Big 12 teams to which it lost last season. West Virginia defeated TCU, 47-10, in Morgantown in 2018.
  • Five of the Horned Frogs' six losses this season have been by seven points or less. 
  •  Safety Trevon Moehrig’s four interceptions are the most by a Horned Frog since Nick Orr had four in 2016.
  • TCU is second in the Big 12 in total defense (345.4 yards a game). 
  • TCU linebacker Garret Wallow leads the Big 12 with 113 total tackles, an average of 10.3 per game. He has 3.5 sacks.
  • Wide receiver Jalen Reagor's 22 touchdown catches are tied with Josh Boyce (22, 2010-12) for second on TCU's career list.  
  • Place-kicker Jonathan Song is 22-of-23 on field-goal attempts this season and 39-of-43 in his career. 
  • TCU is in its eighth season in the Big 12. 
  • Dating back to last year, TCU has won seven of its last 13 games and eight of its last 15 games. 
  • In six of the last eight odd-numbered years (2003, 2005, 2009, 2011, 2015, 2017), TCU has won at least 11 games. 
  • Over the last six seasons, TCU (52-25, 33-20) has the Big 12's second-best overall and conference records. 
  • TCU is one of just six programs nationally to finish in the top 10 of the final polls at least three times (2014, 2015, 2017) in the last five seasons. The others are Alabama, Clemson, Georgia, Ohio State and Oklahoma. 
  • TCU has five 11-win seasons this decade, equaling the combined number of the 11 other FBS programs in the state. 
  • Patterson is the nation's second-longest tenured head coach, trailing only Iowa's Kirk Ferentz (21st year). 
  • Under Patterson, TCU has posted seven top-10 finishes and 11 in the top 25. The Horned Frogs have won at least 10 games in 11 of the last 17 seasons. 
  • Patterson has accounted for 26.2 percent (172 of 656) of TCU's all-time football victories. 
  • Patterson has been a Coach of the Year in all three leagues he has guided TCU: Conference USA (2002), Mountain West (2005, 2009), and Big 12 (2014). 
  • TCU is 119-41 in Saturday contests since 2005 and 21-11 on other days of the week (1-0 on Sundays, 0-1 on Mondays, 2-0 on Tuesdays, 3-0 on Wednesdays, 7-8 on Thursdays and 8-2 on Fridays). 
  • Since 2001, Patterson’s first full season as TCU’s head coach, the Horned Frogs have been the most successful program in the state of Texas. Since 2005, TCU has the best record (140-51) in Texas among the 12 FBS programs. 
  • Since 2008, Patterson is second nationally among active head coaches in most Associated Press Top-10 finishes, with six. Nick Saban leads, with 11. 
  • TCU ranked No. 1 nationally last season for most offensive tackles (six) in the NFL.
  • Since 2005, TCU tops all private schools in victories and winning percentage (140-51).
  • Since the NCAA began tracking statistics in 1937, TCU trails only Alabama for the most times leading the nation in total defense. The Crimson Tide have been No. 1 seven times, while all five No. 1 rankings for the Horned Frogs are in the last 19 seasons.
  • With the exception of 2015, TCU has been first or second in the Big 12 in total defense each year. 
  • TCU has at least one sack in 78 of its last 81 contests. 
  • Since beginning Big 12 play in 2012, TCU leads the conference in most games with at least three sacks. 
  • TCU has the longest streak among Big 12 schools with 22 consecutive seasons with at least 25 sacks. 
  • Since beginning Big 12 play in 2012, TCU is tied for third nationally with five different players returning punts for touchdowns. 
  • At 344 games (November 16, 1991; Texas 32, TCU 0), TCU has the nation’s second-longest current streak for not being shut out. 
  • TCU’s streak of scoring in 344 consecutive games is fourth on the NCAA’s all-time list.
    In Patterson’s tenure as head coach, TCU has had 48 players drafted with 119 in NFL camps. 
  • TCU has 18 former players active in the NFL. Fourteen of them have earned their degrees.
  • On its 2019 roster, TCU has seven players who have earned their degrees: Shameik Blackshear, Nate Guyton, TreVontae Hights, Julius Lewis, Ryan McGee, Sewo Olonilua, and Jonathan Song. 
  • On this season's 120-player roster, TCU has 48 freshmen (true and redshirt). 
  • TCU has qualified for a bowl game in 19 of the last 21 seasons. The Horned Frogs have earned a bowl trip in 16 of Patterson’s 18 seasons as head coach. 
  • TCU running back Darius Anderson tops all current Horned Frogs with seven career 100-yard games. 
  • In the SMU game, Max Duggan became the second true freshman and third non-Texan to start at quarterback in the 19-season head coaching era of Patterson. In the Iowa State game, Duggan became the first quarterback in the Patterson-era to start a game in his home state that's not Texas.
  • Dan Sharp, the Horned Frogs' defensive line coach, has been on the TCU coaching staff for 28 years. He is the nation's second-most tenured assistant (Bud Foster, Virginia Tech, 33 years). 
  • TCU is 656-553-57 in its football history that began in 1896.

Lead On: A Campaign for TCU Video: here

TCU Football 2019 Hype Video: here 

TCU Football 2019 Intro Video: here 

TCU Riff-Ram Video from the TCU-Arkansas Pine Bluff Game on August 31: here 

TCU Riff-Ram Video from the TCU-SMU Game on September 21: here 

TCU Riff-Ram Video from TCU-Kansas Game on September 28: here 

TCU's "Hello, FunkyTown. The Frogs are back” Video: here and here 

TCU Earn the Chip Video: here 

TCU: The Chip Video: Game 7 vs Texas Video: here 

TCU Past, Present and Future Video: here

2019 TCU Football Fact Book: here 

2019 TCU Sports Fall Guide: here 

TCU Campus Tour Video: here

2019 West Virginia Football Guide: here

2019 West Virginia Football Video: here
Have Fun Tailgating Before and After Football Games: Donor parking lots open five hours prior to kickoff. For games that start before 2:30 pm Central, lots must be cleared by three hours after the games end. For games that start at 2:30 pm Central or later, lots must be cleared 90 minutes after games end, or by 11 pm Central (whichever comes first, due to city ordinance).  

Countdown to Kickoff: Three hours prior to kickoff: Frog Alley opens. Two-and-a-half hours prior to kickoff: Frog Walk begins. Two hours prior to kickoff: gates open; autographs by members of other TCU athletic teams. Forty-five minutes prior to kickoff: TCU Marching Band and Spirit parade. Thirty minutes prior to kickoff: Frog Alley closes and pre-game show begins.  

TCU Gameday Parking and Traffic Information: here  

Amon G. Carter Stadium: 

  • The stadium features a new north-end videoboard, with a state-of-the-art sound system. The videoboard measures 108-feet-by-48-feet. There also are new speakers in new locations throughout the stadium. 
  • Construction continues, with completion scheduled for the 2020 season, on the $100-million Amon G. Carter Stadium premium seating expansion. The project calls for two new levels of luxury seating above the current upper deck on the east side of the stadium. The new Legends Club and Suites will include 48 loge boxes with two private clubs, over 1,000 club seats and 22 luxury suites.  
  • These enhancements are the first since the $164-million rebuild of Amon G. Carter Stadium was completed in 2012. That project was funded entirely by donor support and featured a seating capacity of 45,000. The six new Founders Club suites, located at midfield on the concourse level, were sold at $15 million each to provide lead gifts totaling $90 million. On the west side of the stadium, there are 25 suites, all sold.  

Additional information about The Carter: here  

Information about stadium rules and regulations: here  

Important! Security measures at TCU Athletic Events:

Only the following items are permitted into TCU athletic facilities:

  • Bags that are clear plastic, vinyl or PVC and not exceeding 14 inches by 14 inches  
  • One-gallon clear plastic freezer bag (Ziploc bag or similar)  
  • One unopened bottle of water  
  • Small clutch bags, approximately the size of a hand, with or without a handle or strap can be taken into the stadium with one of the clear plastic bags.  
  • Exceptions are made for medically necessary items after proper inspection at the stadium gates. Backpacks, diaper bags and other similar bags are not be allowed.

2019 Game 13 for TCU: The West Virginia game is the 12th and  final 2019 regular-season game. If the Frogs beat West Virginia, they will qualify for a bowl game for the 17th time in the 19-year head coaching career of TCU head coach Gary Patterson. If the Frogs lose to the Mountaineers, they will miss a bowl game for only the third time in the Patterson-era. Participants for the bowl games will be announced in early December.

2020 TCU Football Schedule:

  • September 5: at California (Berkeley, California)
  • September 12: vs Prairie View A&M (Fort Worth, Texas)
  • September 26: at SMU (Dallas, Texas)
  • October 3: vs Oklahoma State (Fort Worth, Texas)
  • October 10: at West Virginia (Morgantown, West Virginia)
  • October 17: vs Kansas State (Fort Worth, Texas)
  • October 24: at Baylor (Waco, Texas)
  • October 31: vs Oklahoma (Fort Worth, Texas)
  • November 7: vs Iowa State (Fort Worth, Texas)
  • November 14: at Texas (Austin, Texas)
  • November 21: vs Texas Tech (Fort Worth, Texas)
  • November 28: at Kansas (Lawrence, Kansas)

*Times to be announced; dates may change


Tuesday, November 26, 2019

Midnite's Week 14 Big 12 Picks and Week 13 Results



Midnite's Record Through Week 13: 48-21

Midnite's Week 13 Big 12 Picks:
  • Midnite's Pick: Texas 21, Texas Tech 20
  • Midnite's Pick: TCU 24, West Virginia 17
  • Midnite's Pick: Baylor 32, Kansas 28
  • Midnite's Pick: Kansas State 24, Iowa State 21
  • Midnite's Pick: Oklahoma 34, Oklahoma State 31


Midnite's Week 13 Big 12 Picks Results: 4-1
  • Midnite's Pick: Oklahoma 52, TCU 27; Result: Oklahoma 28, TCU 24
  • Midnite's Pick: Iowa State 38, Kansas 16; Result: Iowa State 41, Kansas 31
  • Midnite's Pick: Texas 27, Baylor 26; Result: Baylor 24, Texas 10
  • Midnite's Pick: Oklahoma State 28, West Virginia 23; Result: Oklahoma State 20, West Virginia 13
  • Midnite's Pick: Kansas State 30, Texas Tech 27; Result: Kansas State 30, Texas Tech 27


Frogs Scare Sooners; Prepare To Sack Mountaineers

TCU’s worst offensive game of the 2019 season nearly turned out to be the Horned Frogs’ most noteworthy game of the year.

On Saturday, November 23, in Gaylord Family-Oklahoma Memorial Stadium, in Norman, Oklahoma, before an announced crowd of 82,241, TCU only scraped together 204 yards of total offense, but the Frogs nearly snuffed the College Playoff dreams of then-No. 9 and Big 12 first-place Oklahoma.

Thanks to a defensive stand late in the fourth quarter, the not-so-Boomer Sooners eked out a 28-24 win over the Horned Frogs on OU’s Senior Night and on prime-time television. It is the fifth of TCU's six losses this season that have been by seven points or less.

Tom "Midnite" Burke
The now No. 7 Sooners (10-1, 7-1 Big 12) are headed to their annual Bedlam game with No. 21 Oklahoma State, on November 30, and then to Arlington, Texas, where on Saturday, December 7, they will play Baylor, which is currently ranked ninth, in the Big 12 Championship Game.

Oklahoma will be seeking its fifth consecutive Big 12 Championship. Baylor will be seeking its first Big 12 Championship Game victory. 

Baylor and TCU were Big 12 co-champions in 2014, prior to the Big 12 re-launching in 2017 its championship game, which previously had been held from the conference’s formation in 1996 to 2010.

Meanwhile, the Horned Frogs (5-6, 3-5 Big 12), for the second consecutive season, are facing a do-or-die situation in their final regular-season game. On Friday, November 29, TCU must defeat West Virginia to qualify for a bowl game for the 17th time in Gary Patterson’s 19 years as head coach of the team. 

Kickoff in Amon G. Carter Stadium between the Frogs and Mountaineers is scheduled for 3:15 pm Central. Its a "Black-Out" game, and pregame ceremonies will include TCU’s senior football players being honored.

Last year, in its regular-season finale, on November 24, TCU defeated Oklahoma State, 31-24, to improve to 6-6 and qualify for a bowl. The Frogs beat California, 10-7 (OT), in a memorable Cheez-It Bowl the day after Christmas.

Barely into the second quarter, TCU’s game with Oklahoma certainly seemed destined to be a nightmarish blowout of the Frogs by the Sooners.

With TCU’s offense and defense failing to show up, Oklahoma easily and quickly built a 21-0 lead.

But just as quickly, behind a stellar effort by its defense and some gritty play by its true freshman quarterback, Max Duggan, TCU threw a scare into the Okies by outplaying and outscoring them 24-7 the remainder of the game.

In fact, a Boomer-Sooner victory was in doubt when TCU was driving for a go-ahead touchdown with less than two minutes remaining in the game.

Unfortunately for the purple-and-white, Oklahoma defensive back Brendan Radley-Hiles intercepted a fourth-down pass from Duggan that was intended for tight end Pro Wells.

After the interception, the Oklahoma offense was able to run out the clock, particularly when the Sooners received a generous spot on a third-and-one play that gave them a first down with about a minute-and-a-half left in the game.

The heroic defensive play by Radley-Hiles brought back bad memories for TCU fans of the 2015 game between No. 7 Oklahoma and No. 18 TCU in Norman.

In that game, TCU quarterback Bram Kohlhausen had rallied the Frogs from 17 points down in the fourth quarter to within 30-29 after a TCU touchdown with less than a minute to play in the game.

TCU went for the lead by attempting a two-point conversion. Kohlhausen had his pass to Emanual Parker batted down by Oklahoma defensive back Steven Parker. The Sooners' offense then ran out the clock for the victory.

Radley-Hiles’ play was a heart-breaker for the Frogs, especially for Patterson and his defensive unit, and for Duggan.

After the game, Patterson penned a song. Listen: here 

Oklahoma head coach Lincoln Riley, who improved his record against Patterson to 4-0, also penned a song after the game. Listen: here 

TCU’s defense limited Oklahoma's high-octane offense, led by quarterback Jalen Hurts, an Alabama graduate transfer, running back Kennedy Brooks and wide receiver CeeDee Lamb to four touchdowns. The 28 points is the least points the Sooners have scored in 11 games this season. 

Hurts, who is a finalist for the Maxwell Award and a semifinalist for the Davey O’Brien National Quarterback Award, completed only 11 of 21 passes against the Horned Frogs. He passed for 145 yards and two touchdowns. He was intercepted once and sacked once. 

Hurts did hurt the Frogs with his running. He ran 28 times for 173 yards and two touchdowns. He had a long run of 32 yards. He also lost one fumble. Combined with his 145 yards passing, Hurts accounted for 318 total yards against TCU.

Brooks ran 25 times for 149 yards against TCU. He had a long run of 31 yards.

Lamb, a finalist for the Biletnikoff Award, given to the nation’s top receiver, was held to two catches for 16 yards, and only one touchdown, a five-yard reception in the second quarter.

TCU’s big-play defense was led by junior linebacker Garret Wallow. He had 16 tackles, including two for a loss and one sack, to lead TCU in tackles for the ninth time in 11 games this season. Wallow reached double figures in tackles for the sixth time this season and the ninth time in his career.

Sophomore safety Trevon Moehrig forced a fumble by Oklahoma wide receiver Jadon Haselwood. The fumble was recovered by TCU senior safety Vernon Scott. In last week's TCU-Texas Tech game, Scott forced a fumble and Moehrig made the recovery.

Early in the fourth quarter, Scott intercepted a Hurts pass at the TCU two-yard line. Scott thwarted an Oklahoma drive and he returned the interception 98 yards for a TCU touchdown. 

As it would turn out, that touchdown was the final score of the game.

The interception was the second of Scott's career. 

The return was one yard short of a school record. Quincy Butler holds the TCU record with a 99-yard interception for a touchdown against Southern Mississippi in 2004.

The defensive score was the first of the season for the Frogs. Their last previous defensive touchdown came when Jawuan Johnson returned a fumble 15 yards for a touchdown in the 2018 regular-season finale against Oklahoma State. 

The interception for a touchdown was the first pick-six for TCU since Jeff Gladney's 94-yard interception for a touchdown at Texas Tech in 2017.

Another big defensive play was made by TCU freshman safety Nook Bradford. While tackling Hurts at the TCU seven-yard line, with 7:51 left in the game, he took the football away from Hurts.

In addition to the strip-fumble, which was his first career takeaway, Bradford had a career-best 13 tackles, including two tackles for loss.

TCU’s offense could not overcome its slow start and the slow start by the Frogs’ defense.

The Sooners’ defense frustrated Duggan, to say the least. He completed only seven of 21 passes for 65 yards. He threw no touchdown passes. Duggan was sacked twice and suffered 11 yards in losses.

The Frogs' 65 passing yards is the Frogs' fewest and the fewest by a Big 12 team this season. TCU's previous low this season was 75 passing yards against Purdue, in West Lafayette, Indiana. The Frogs won that game, 34-13.

Duggan had another strong game on the ground. He ran for 92 yards on 12 carries. He had one rushing touchdown, of 11 yards, in the third quarter. Duggan led the Frogs in rushing for the fourth time this season.

TCU senior running back Sewo Olonilua had a one-yard touchdown run in the second quarter to cut Oklahoma's lead to 21-7. But, he ran with the football only five times, for 19 yards. He caught only one pass, for minus-three yards. Olonilua's touchdown was his team-best seventh of the season and 17th of his career.

TCU senior running back Darius Anderson ran the ball only five times, for seven yards. He caught one pass for 15 yards.

TCU senior receiver Jalen Reagor had only 25 total yards against Oklahoma. He caught a nine-yard pass and had a 16-yard run.

TCU senior kicker Jonathan Song kicked a 24-yard field goal in the second quarter. The Lou Groza Award semifinalist and three-time Academic All-Big 12 recipient, is 22-of-23 on the season and 39-of-43 in his career. He is 38-of-39 on attempts of 40 yards and less.

On Black Friday, November 29, TCU will face a West Virginia team that will have nothing to lose, except for some extra pounds gained from their Thanksgiving feast.

Under first-year head coach Neal Brown (he replaced Dana Holgerson, who left for the head coaching job at the University of Houston prior to the 2019 season), the Mountaineers will be playing for pride. At 4-7 (2-6 Big 12), West Virginia will not be bowling this season.

The Mountaineers have beaten James Madison, North Carolina State, Kansas and Kansas State. They have lost to Missouri, Texas, Iowa State, Oklahoma, Baylor, Texas Tech and Oklahoma State.

Offensively, the Mountaineers are averaging 21 points a game, 72 yards rushing per game and 257 yards passing per game.

Through the first nine games, Oklahoma transfer Austin Kendall started at quarterback for the Mountaineers. In the ninth game, against Texas Tech, Kendall gave way to Jarret Doege, a junior transfer from Bowling Green.

Doege, who is from Lubbock, Texas, was the Mountaineers' starting quarterback in the team’s 10th and 11th games, against Kansas State and Oklahoma State, respectively. He is expected to start at quarterback against the Frogs.

Kendall has completed 187 of 304 passes for 1,989 yards. He has thrown 12 touchdowns and 10 interceptions.

Doege, who purposely was limited to playing in four games, so he would have two years of eligibility at West Virginia, has completed 59 of 85 passes for 660 yards. He has thrown five touchdowns and no interceptions.

In his first start as a Mountaineer, against Kansas State, Doege completed 20 of 30 passes for 234 yards and three touchdowns in West Virginia's 24-20 upset of the Wildcats in Manhattan. Doege's performance earned him Big 12 Newcomer of the Week honors.

In his latest start, on November 23, against Oklahoma State (a 20-13 loss in Morgantown), Doege completed 28 of 38 passes for a season-high 307 yards and a touchdown.

Against the West Virginia defense, opponents are averaging 30 points a game, 160 yards rushing a game and 249 yards passing a game.

The Mountaineers' defense is known for its ability to sack quarterbacks. WVU has recorded 31 sacks, which is second in the Big 12 and 24th nationally. West Virginia is averaging 2.8 sacks per game. In a 17-14 loss to Baylor, in Waco, on October 31, the West Virginia defense had eight sacks.

In addition to the sacks, the Mountaineers have 72 tackles for loss, which ranks fifth in the Big 12.

Safety Sean Mahone is the leading tackler for West Virginia. He has 74 tackles, five tackles for loss and two sacks.

Junior defensive lineman Darius Stills has 42 tackles, seven sacks and 13.5 tackles for loss.

Darius' younger brother, sophomore defensive lineman Dante Stills, has seven sacks and 10.5 tackles for loss.

While Darius, Dante, Austin, Jarret and the other Mountaineers will be at home this holiday season, this Friday Max, Sewo, Darius, Jalen, Garret, Vernon and the other Frogs will be looking to continue a TCU holiday tradition of going bowling.

Cheez-Its, once again, may be the perfect holiday snack!