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Horned Frog Athletics
Scott & Wes Frog Fan Forum
TCU-KSU Home Field Advantage
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<blockquote data-quote="tjcoffice" data-source="post: 3223964" data-attributes="member: 72793"><p>Yea, i would have said the same thing in 1975 or so. Then I went to TCU, worked in the library, stumbled on all these old TCU yearbooks and found out what TCU glory looked like. Its not about football prowess. Its about a small school running with the big boys. About a short quarterback who did not know what "quit" meant - about what some cowboy from out west showed to the smarter, better educated, better "mannered" Eastern folks and folks at the big schools could do. TCU's competitors in 1938 included bigger schools like Oklahoma and A&M. That lesson is as relevant today as it was in 1938.</p><p></p><p>Watch the video. Its surprising to me how sophisticated TCU's offense was in 1938. Dutch was not just a grouchy, tough-talking coach. He knew his x's and o's.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="tjcoffice, post: 3223964, member: 72793"] Yea, i would have said the same thing in 1975 or so. Then I went to TCU, worked in the library, stumbled on all these old TCU yearbooks and found out what TCU glory looked like. Its not about football prowess. Its about a small school running with the big boys. About a short quarterback who did not know what "quit" meant - about what some cowboy from out west showed to the smarter, better educated, better "mannered" Eastern folks and folks at the big schools could do. TCU's competitors in 1938 included bigger schools like Oklahoma and A&M. That lesson is as relevant today as it was in 1938. Watch the video. Its surprising to me how sophisticated TCU's offense was in 1938. Dutch was not just a grouchy, tough-talking coach. He knew his x's and o's. [/QUOTE]
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Which team did TCU defeat in the College Football Playoffs?
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