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Horned Frog Athletics
Scott & Wes Frog Fan Forum
TCU Tennis
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<blockquote data-quote="Jared7" data-source="post: 2401102" data-attributes="member: 7831"><p>TCU has been in the elite of college tennis since the 1970's when Tut Bartzen took over as our coach. Until 2002, TCU's all-time record against Baylor was 32-4. TCU has been an annual (virtually) NCAA participant for 40+ years, making 4 semi-finals and TCU players have frequently made semis (and finals) in singles and doubles. By contrast, Baylor was an utter doormat until 1998 when Coach Knoll was hired and the school used unearned BCS monies to improve their facilities. Throughout the entire SWC era, Baylor was terrible at tennis. TCU still leads the all-time record against Baylor 34-20. You've got the histories mixed-up - Baylor is the recent upstart who only arose in the 21st century; TCU's success extends well into last century. Baylor acts like tennis history only just began; TCU has a long storied history in the sport. Why are you not aware of this? I suspect it's because you didn't follow college tennis until the contemporary era. Your point applies to Baylor tennis; not TCU.</p><p></p><p>Most conferences have named their year-long awards but not the Big12 as yet. I'm projecting Coach Roditi as Coach of the Year and Cam Norrie as Player of the Year (he should also win the national award too). But the all-Tourney teams were announced and Cam was Most Outstanding player and named #1 in singles, Alex Rybakov was #2, Trevor Johnson was #5, Reese Stalder was #6, Nunez/Rybakov were #2 in doubles and Norrie/Johnson were #3. (Sadly, because they washed out in the first round, no Baylor players made the list.)</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jared7, post: 2401102, member: 7831"] TCU has been in the elite of college tennis since the 1970's when Tut Bartzen took over as our coach. Until 2002, TCU's all-time record against Baylor was 32-4. TCU has been an annual (virtually) NCAA participant for 40+ years, making 4 semi-finals and TCU players have frequently made semis (and finals) in singles and doubles. By contrast, Baylor was an utter doormat until 1998 when Coach Knoll was hired and the school used unearned BCS monies to improve their facilities. Throughout the entire SWC era, Baylor was terrible at tennis. TCU still leads the all-time record against Baylor 34-20. You've got the histories mixed-up - Baylor is the recent upstart who only arose in the 21st century; TCU's success extends well into last century. Baylor acts like tennis history only just began; TCU has a long storied history in the sport. Why are you not aware of this? I suspect it's because you didn't follow college tennis until the contemporary era. Your point applies to Baylor tennis; not TCU. Most conferences have named their year-long awards but not the Big12 as yet. I'm projecting Coach Roditi as Coach of the Year and Cam Norrie as Player of the Year (he should also win the national award too). But the all-Tourney teams were announced and Cam was Most Outstanding player and named #1 in singles, Alex Rybakov was #2, Trevor Johnson was #5, Reese Stalder was #6, Nunez/Rybakov were #2 in doubles and Norrie/Johnson were #3. (Sadly, because they washed out in the first round, no Baylor players made the list.) [/QUOTE]
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Which team did TCU defeat in the College Football Playoffs?
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