2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

88

description

2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

Transcript of 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

Page 1: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide
Page 2: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide
Page 3: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L G

AM

E N

OT

ES

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

1BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

BOWL GUIDE TABLE OF CONTENTSInfo Pages Bowl Game Notes 1-22Depth Chart/Two-Deep/Roster 23-26TCU Bowl Record Book 27Player Biographies 28-43Head Coach Gary Patterson 44-47Coaching and Support Staff 48-612010 Statistics 62-712010 Recaps 72-75TCU Bowl Game Recaps 76-84

NO. 3 TCU (12-0) VS. NO. 5 WISCONSIN (11-1) JAN. 1 • PASADENA, CALIF. • 2 P.M. (PACIFIC)

ROSE BOWL (88,500) • ESPN

ABOUT THE GAME • No. 3 TCU will face No. 5 Wisconsin in the 97th Rose Bowl Game presented by VIZIO.• The Horned Frogs, having posted their second consecutive undefeated regular season, will be making their first appearance in the Rose Bowl. It’s the second straight year TCU has played in a BCS game.• TCU is the first school from a non-automatic BCS qualifying conference to play in a BCS game in back-to-back seasons.• The Frogs are the first non-AQ team to play in the Rose Bowl.• TCU is tied for the nation’s second-longest current winning streak at 12 in a row and is one of three undefeated teams this season.• It’s the first time TCU has played in a bowl game with the two teams having a combined ranking this high since the 1938 Sugar Bowl, when the top-ranked Frogs defeated No. 5 Carnegie Tech, 15-7, to win the national championship. TCU is 5-5-1 when playing a bowl game with both teams ranked.• The Frogs and Badgers will be meeting for just the second time in their history. The first game between the teams was a 14-14 tie at Wisconsin during the 1970 campaign.• TCU is facing a Big Ten opponent for the first time since a 48-45 double-overtime victory over Northwestern in the 2004 season opener. Combined with a 48-24 win at Northwestern in 2002, the Frogs are 2-0 versus Big Ten opponents under head coach Gary Patterson.• TCU is 15-3 in its last 18 games versus teams from conferences with automatic BCS bids, including a 6-2 mark versus the Big 12 and a 4-0 record against the Pac-10.• The Rose Bowl will mark the 26th bowl appearance in TCU’s history. The Frogs are 11-13-1 in bowl games.• TCU is 7-4 in bowl games with head coach Gary Patterson on its coaching staff and 5-4 with him as head coach. Prior to Patterson’s arrival on campus in 1998, the Frogs had just four bowl wins in their history.• The Frogs will be making their 12th bowl appearance in the last 13 seasons. TCU is one of just 14 schools to play in at least 12 bowl games over the last 13 years.• With its trip to the Rose Bowl, TCU will have played in all four current bowl games (Rose, Fiesta, Orange, Sugar) that are part of the BCS.

NOTING THE HORNED FROGS • TCU won its second straight outright Mountain West Conference championship and third in six years. The Frogs have at least a share in 16 conference titles in their history.• TCU is 12-0 for its second straight undefeated regular season. It’s just the third unbeaten and untied regular season in TCU history. The Horned Frogs’ 1938 national championship squad was 10-0 in the regular season before a 15-7 win over Carnegie Tech in the Sugar Bowl.• TCU has posted the third 12-win campaign in its history, joining last year’s team and its 1935 national champions who were 12-1 after a 3-2 Sugar Bowl win over LSU.• TCU’s seniors have 43 victories in the last four years, making them the winningest class in school history. It’s the third consecutive season TCU will see its seniors graduate with a new win record for a class.• TCU has reached 10 wins for the seventh time in the last nine years, including six seasons with at least 11 victories and the last two years with 12 wins.• Over the last six seasons, TCU is 32-1 in day games and 58-4 in Saturday contests.

THE WIN COLUMN• The Frogs have a 25-game regular-season winning streak.• TCU has won 26 of its last 27 overall games and is 38-3 in its last 41 contests. • TCU has won its last 17 Mountain West Conference games and 25 of its last 26.• Since the start of the 2008 season, TCU is 35-3. The Frogs’ 35 wins trail only Boise State (37-2).• Sixteen of TCU’s last 19 victories have been by at least 27 points. Seventeen of the 19 wins are by 17 points or more.

TCU (12-0, 8-0 MOUNTAIN WEST)Day Opponent Time/ResultSept. 4 vs. No. 23 Oregon State # W, 30-21Sept. 11 Tennessee Tech W, 62-7Sept. 18 Baylor W, 45-10 Sept. 24 at SMU W, 41-24 Oct. 2 at Colorado State* W, 27-0Oct. 9 Wyoming* W, 45-0Oct. 16 BYU* W, 31-3Oct. 23 Air Force* W, 38-7 Oct. 30 at UNLV* W, 48-6Nov. 6 at No. 5 Utah* W, 47-7Nov. 13 San Diego State* W, 40-35Nov. 27 at New Mexico* W, 66-17Jan. 1 vs. No. 5 Wisconsin^ 2 p.m. PT#at Cowboys Stadium; *MWC game; ^Rose Bowl

WISCONSIN (11-1, 7-1 BIG TEN)Day Opponent Time/ResultSept. 4 at UNLV W, 41-21Sept. 11 San Jose State W, 27-14Sept. 18 Arizona State W, 20-19Sept. 25 Austin Peay W, 70-3Oct. 2 at No. 24 Michigan State* L, 24-34Oct. 9 Minnesota* W, 41-23Oct. 16 No. 1 Ohio State* W, 31-18Oct. 23 at No. 13 Iowa* W, 31-30Nov. 6 at Purdue* W, 34-13Nov. 13 Indiana* W, 83-20Nov. 20 at Michigan* W, 48-28Nov. 27 Northwestern* W, 70-23Jan. 4 vs. No. 3 TCU^ 2 p.m. PT*Big Ten game; ^Rose Bowl

THE COACHESTCU – Gary Patterson (Kansas St. ‘83)Record at TCU: 97-28 (10th year)Overall Record: 97-28 (10th year) WISCONSIN – Bret Bielema (Iowa ‘92)Record at Wisconsin: 49-15 (5th year)Overall Record: 49-15 (5th year)

TV/RADIOTV - ESPNTalent - Brent Musburger (PBP), Kirk Herbstreit (color), Erin Andrews (sideline)Radio - TCU Sports Network - WBAP 820 AM and 96.7 FM, KTCU-FM 88.7, GoFrogs.com (Yahoo)Talent - Brian Estridge (PBP), John Denton (color), Jeff Williams (sideline) Spanish Radio - AM 1270 Univision Talent - Miguel Cruz (PBP), Elvis Gallegos (color)Radio - ESPN National RadioTalent - Bill Rosinski (PBP), David Norrie (color), Joe Schad (sideline)

TCU MEDIA RELATIONSMark Cohen, TCU Director of Media Relations(817) 257-5394 office - (817) 343-2017 [email protected]

Page 4: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L GA

ME

NO

TE

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

2 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

ROAD WARRIORS • TCU’s MWC record 11-game road winning streak is currently the longest in the nation. The Frogs have also won 13 of their last 14 road contests.• TCU’s 38-14 mark (.731) in road and neutral-site games since 2003 is fourth nationally.

VERSUS THE BIG TEN• Outside of four games with Northwestern from 1999-04, TCU has not faced a Big Ten opponent since a 9-7 loss at Minnesota in 1974.• Included below is TCU’s all-time record versus each current member of the Big Ten:

Team Record Last Meeting Illinois 0-0 N/A Indiana 4-0 1972 Iowa 1-2 1968 Michigan 0-0 N/A Michigan State 0-1 1953 Minnesota 0-1 1974 Northwestern 3-1 2004 Ohio State 1-4-1 1973 Penn State* 1-3 1978 Purdue 0-2 1970 Wisconsin 0-0-1 1970 Totals 10-14-2 2004

*All games played before Penn State joined the Big Ten

FAMILIAR STADIUM• TCU tailback Aundre Dean is the lone Frog who has already played at the Rose Bowl.• Dean played his true freshman season at UCLA, whose home field is the Rose Bowl, before transferring to TCU.• A Parade All-American running back at Katy (Texas) High School, where he was a teammate of TCU quarterback Andy Dalton, Dean is fifth on the Frogs with 223 yards rushing on a 7.0 per carry mark.

WISCONSIN TIES• Former TCU wide receiver Derek Moore, a three-year letterman (2005-07), is believed to be the only Wisconsin native (Cedarburg) to ever play at TCU.• Moore’s signature moment as a Frog was a 16-yard touchdown reception for TCU’s first points of the game in a 17-10 win at No. 5 Oklahoma in 2005.

REMEMBER ME• TCU co-offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Justin Fuente is the only Frog who has played against Wisconsin.• After playing his first two seasons at Oklahoma, Fuente transferred to Murray State. He was the Racers’ starting quarterback in a 1999 contest at Wisconsin.

SCOREBOARD MATCHING• Both TCU and Wisconsin have scored 520 points this season.

LEADING THE WAY• TCU leads all FBS schools in average finish in the Associated Press poll since the end of the 2008 season.

Team 2010 2009 2008 Average 1. TCU 3 6 7 5.3 2. Ohio State 6 5 9 6.7 3. Alabama 15 1 6 7.3 4. Oregon 2 11 10 7.7 5. Boise State 10 4 11 8.3 6. Florida NR 3 1 10.0 7. Texas NR 2 4 10.7 8. Virginia Tech 12 10 15 12.3 9. Oklahoma 9 NR 5 13.3 10. Utah 20 18 2 13.3

DID YOU KNOW

• TCU’s total enrollment of 9,142 is 60 percent female.

• TCU has just 3,695 male students. With approximately 120 players on the football roster, 3.2 percent of all males at TCU are on the sideline in uniform during home games. If Ohio State had the same ratio of male students on the football team, the Buckeye roster would have over 1,000 players.

• The estimated annual cost, including housing, books and fees, to attend TCU is $41,100.

• TCU’s Neeley School of Business is ranked 32nd nationally by BusinessWeek for U.S. undergraduate business programs.

• TCU’s endowment is among the top 60 colleges in the United States.

• TCU has opened four new residence halls since Summer 2007. The Campus Commons project had an expense of $100 million.

• Thirty percent of TCU’s entering freshmen were in the top 10 of their high school graduating class.

• TCU’s campus contains seven different schools and colleges and is 268 acres.

• TCU students represent 54 countries.

• ESPN previously named the Horned Frog the nation’s No. 1 mascot. SuperFrog was one of 12 finalists in the 2009 Capital One All-America Mascot Challenge.

• The Horned Frog has been TCU’s mascot longer than TCU has been the university’s name. Four students helped make the decision in 1897, when AddRan Christian University (renamed TCU in 1902) was located in Waco.

• Famous TCU alumni include Betty Buckley (actress), Gordon England (Secretary of the U.S. Navy), Dan Jenkins (author/sportswriter), Eddie Bernice Johnson (congresswoman), Bob Lilly (Pro Football Hall of Fame member), Rod Roddy (Price is Right announcer), Bob Schieffer (CBS newsman and co-host of Face the Nation), LaDainian Tomlinson (NFL standout) and Tara Watson (Miss Texas 2000).

• The following companies are based in Fort Worth: Alcon Laboratories, AmeriCredit, American Airlines, Bell Helicopter-Textron, Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway, Cash America, Lockheed Martin, Pier 1 Imports, Radio Shack and Travelocity.com.

• An article in Men’s Health ranked Fort Worth second in the nation behind only Honolulu in prettiest females per capita in the United States.

• Men’s Fitness ranked TCU eighth in its list of the fittest college campuses.

• TCU’s campus is five miles from downtown Fort Worth.

• TCU’s mission statement is “To educate individuals to think and act as ethical leaders and responsible citizens in the global community.”

• Fort Worth is the 19th-largest city in the United States. Fort Worth was also named in the top 10 of America’s Most Liveable Communities.

• The Fort Worth/Dallas television market is ranked fifth in the United States.

Page 5: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L G

AM

E N

OT

ES

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

3BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

FROG HONOR ROLLTCU has five first-team All-Americans (Tank Carder, Wayne Daniels, Tejay Johnson, Jeremy Kerley and Jake Kirkpatrick) and a league-best 17 All-Mountain West Conference selections.

TCU*Tostitos Fiesta Bowl National Team of the Week, vs. Utah

Gary Patterson, Head Coach*Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year Award Finalist*Joseph V. Paterno Award Semifinalist

Dick Bumpas, Defensive Coordinator/Defensive Line Coach*Frank Broyles Award Finalist*Rivals.com National Coordinator of the Week, vs. Oregon State

Josh Boyce, WR*Second-Team Freshman All-American, Rivals.com*Honorable-Mention Freshman All-American, CollegeFootballNews.com

Tanner Brock, LB*Honorable-Mention All-American, SI.com*First-Team All-Mountain West Conference *MWC Defensive Player of the Week, vs. Utah

Marcus Cannon, OT*Third-Team All-American, Rivals.com*Honorable-Mention All-American, SI.com*First-Team All-Mountain West Conference *Ranked fifth among offensive tackles for the 2011 NFL Draft, ESPN’s Mel Kiper Jr.

Tank Carder, LB*First-Team All-American, American Football Coaches Association*Second-Team All-American, Associated Press*Second-Team All-American, CBSSports.com*Honorable-Mention All-American, SI.com*Mountain West Conference Defensive Player of the Year*First-Team All-Mountain West Conference

Andy Dalton, QB*Manning Award Finalist*Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award Finalist*Maxwell Award Semifinalist*Davey O’Brien Award Semifinalist*One of 15 “Players to Watch” for the Walter Camp Football Foundation Player of the Year Award*Honorable-Mention All-American, SI.com*Mountain West Conference Offensive Player of the Year *First-Team All-Mountain West Conference (unanimous selection)*Walter Camp Football Foundation National Offensive Player of the Week, vs. Utah*Rivals.com National Offensive Player of the Week, vs. Utah*ESPN.com Helmet Sticker, vs. Baylor*Manning Award Star of the Week, vs. Baylor*Manning Award Star of the Week, vs. Wyoming*Manning Award Star of the Week, vs. Utah*MWC Offensive Player of the Week vs. Baylor*MWC Offensive Player of the Week vs. BYU*MWC Offensive Player of the Week vs. Utah

Wayne Daniels, DE*First-Team All-American, Football Writers Association of America*Honorable-Mention All-American, SI.com*First-Team All-Mountain West Conference (unanimous selection)

Evan Frosch, TE*Honorable-Mention All-Mountain West Conference

Cory Grant, DT*Second-Team All-Mountain West Conference

Alex Ibiloye, S*MWC Defensive Player of the Week, vs. Tennessee Tech

Bart Johnson, WR*Second-Team ESPN Academic All-American

Tejay Johnson, S*Jim Thorpe Award Finalist*First-Team All-American, Walter Camp Football Foundation*First-Team All-American, Associated Press*First-Team All-American, SI.com*First-Team All-American, CBSSports.com*First-Team All-American, Rivals.com*First-Team All-Mountain West Conference

Colin Jones, S*Second-Team All-Mountain West Conference

Jeremy Kerley, PR/KR/WR*Paul Hornung Award Finalist*First-Team All-American, Rivals.com (kick returner)*Honorable-Mention All-American, SI.com (return specialist)*Mountain West Conference Special Teams Player of the Year*First-Team All-Mountain West Conference (return specialist)*Second-Team All-Mountain West Conference (wide receiver)*Honoree, Paul Hornung Award’s Most Versatile Performances of the Week, vs. Oregon State*Honoree, Paul Hornung Award’s Most Versatile Performances of the Week, vs. Baylor*Honoree, Paul Hornung Award’s Most Versatile Performances of the Week, vs. SMU*MWC Special Teams Player of the Week, vs. SMU*MWC Special Teams Player of the Week, vs. BYU*Rivals.com MWC Player of the Week, vs. San Diego State

Jake Kirkpatrick, C*Rimington Trophy Winner*Rotary Lombardi Award Finalist*First-Team All-American, Walter Camp Football Foundation*First-Team All-American, Sporting News*Second-Team All-American, Associated Press*Second-Team All-American, SI.com*Second-Team All-American, CBSSports.com*First-Team All-Mountain West Conference

Stansly Maponga, DE*Second-Team Freshman All-American, CollegeFootballNews.com*Second-Team All-Mountain West Conference

Jason Teague, CB*Second-Team All-Mountain West Conference

Ed Wesley, TB*Doak Walker Award Semifinalist*First-Team All-Mountain West Conference*MWC Offensive Player of the Week, vs. Air Force*Rivals.com MWC Offensive Player of the Week, vs. Air Force

D.J. Yendrey, DT*Honorable-Mention All-Mountain West Conference

Jimmy Young, WR*Honorable-Mention All-Mountain West Conference

Page 6: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L GA

ME

NO

TE

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

4 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

WORTH NOTINGSELECT COMPANY • TCU is one of just four schools to rank in the top 25 of the Associated Press poll and APR:

Team AP Rank APR Rank TCU 3 T21 Wisconsin 4 T21 Ohio State 6 T9 Boise State 10 T12

ACADEMIC SUCCESS• TCU has been recognized each of the last three seasons by the American Football Coaches Association for its graduation rate.

THE GRADUATES• TCU will take the field at the Rose Bowl with 17 players having already earned their degree:

May 2010 Graduates Curtis Clay, WR Cory Grant, DT Alex Ibiloye, S Kevin Sharples, PK Jimmy Young, WR

December 2010 Graduates Marcus Cannon, OT Andy Dalton, QB Jercell Fort, TB Evan Frosch, TE Bart Johnson, WR Colin Jones, S Jake Kirkpatrick, C Tyler Luttrell, S Billy Pizor, WR Zach Roth, OT Spencer Thompson, OG Josh Vernon, OG

• All 13 seniors on last year’s TCU football team graduated.

SENIOR WATCH• TCU has 26 seniors, third in the nation behind Hawaii and Louisville who both have 27. • Last season, the Frogs had just 13 seniors to tie for ninth fewest in the country.

AMONG THE BEST• Since 2001, the start of Gary Patterson’s first full season as TCU’s head coach, the Frogs rank sixth in winning percentage:

Team Record Pct. 1. Boise State 112-16 .875 2. Ohio State 105-22 .827 3. Texas 106-23 .822 4. Oklahoma 107-26 .805 5. USC 90-24 .789 6. TCU 97-27 .782 7. LSU 101-29 .777 8. Florida 97-32 .752 9. Virginia Tech 98-33 .748 10. Utah 92-31 .748

VERSUS THE AQ LEAGUES• Dating back to 2002, the Frogs are 15-3 in their last 18 games against teams from conferences with automatic BCS bids.• Included in the above total is a 6-2 record versus the Big 12 and a 4-0 mark against the Pac-10.• Since Gary Patterson arrived at TCU as defensive coordinator in 1998, the Frogs are 19-8 versus teams from AQ leagues. The 19 wins trail only Navy (20) and Utah (20).• Since 2003, TCU’s 14 wins over teams from conferences with automatic BCS bids are behind just Navy (18) and Utah (17).• Beginning with a season-opening victory at No. 5 Oklahoma in 2005 and concluding with a win over Baylor in 2007, TCU put together five straight triumphs over Big 12 teams. At the time, that run of five straight victories was the second-longest current winning streak over Big 12 foes behind only Oklahoma. • From 2005-07, TCU was 5-1 in a 27-game stretch that included six games against Big 12 competition. TCU allowed an average of just 13.0 points to Big 12 opponents in that span. • In a period of 15 games (Sept. 3, 2005 - Sept. 16, 2006), TCU went 4-0 against the Big 12. Only Texas, Texas Tech, Oklahoma and Colorado won more games against Big 12 opponents during that time. • Included below are TCU’s games, since 1998, versus opponents from conferences with automatic BCS bids:

Date Opponent Result SiteSept. 5, 1998 Iowa State W, 31-21 AwaySept. 12, 1998 Oklahoma L, 9-10 HomeOct. 3, 1998 Vanderbilt W, 19-16 (2 OT) HomeDec. 31, 1998 USC W, 28-19 El Paso*Sept. 5, 1999 No. 15 Arizona L, 31-35 HomeSept. 11, 1999 Northwestern L, 7-17 AwaySept. 16, 2000 Northwestern W, 41-14 HomeAug. 25, 2001 No. 4 Nebraska L, 7-21 AwayDec. 28, 2001 Texas A&M L, 9-28 Houston^Sept. 7, 2002 Northwestern W, 48-24 AwaySept. 20, 2003 Vanderbilt W, 30-14 HomeSept. 27, 2003 Arizona W, 13-10 (OT) Away Sept. 2, 2004 Northwestern W, 48-45 (2 OT) HomeSept. 18, 2004 Texas Tech L, 35-70 AwaySept. 3, 2005 No. 5 Oklahoma W, 17-10 Away Dec. 31, 2005 Iowa State W, 27-24 Houston%Sept. 3, 2006 Baylor W, 17-7 AwaySept. 16, 2006 No. 24 Texas Tech W, 12-3 HomeSept. 1, 2007 Baylor W, 27-0 HomeSept. 8, 2007 No. 7 Texas L, 13-34 AwayOct. 13, 2007 Stanford W, 38-36 AwaySept. 13, 2008 Stanford W, 31-14 HomeSept. 27, 2008 No. 2 Oklahoma L, 10-35 AwaySept. 12, 2009 Virginia W, 30-14 AwaySept. 26, 2009 Clemson W, 14-10 AwaySept. 4, 2010 No. 24 Oregon St. W, 30-21 Arlington$Sept. 18, 2010 Baylor W, 45-10 Home

* - Sun Bowl ^ - galleryfurniture.com Bowl % - Houston Bowl $ - Cowboys Stadium in Arlington

BEATING THE AQ’S• TCU has the longest streak in the nation, in terms of consecutive years (nine), for a school from a non-automatic qualifying conference to beat an opponent from an AQ league:

Team Consecutive Years 1. TCU 9 2. Navy 8 3. BYU 5 Toledo 5

Page 7: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L G

AM

E N

OT

ES

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

5BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

WORTH NOTING• Included below are the game-day locations for the TCU assistant coaches:

Press Box - co-offensive coordinator/quarterbacks coach Justin Fuente, wide receivers coach Rusty Burns, safeties coach Chad Glasgow, linebackers coach Tony Tademy

Field - co-offensive coordinator/running backs coach Jarrett Anderson, tight ends coach/special teams coordinator Dan Sharp, assistant head coach/offensive line coach Eddie Williamson, defensive coordinator/defensive line coach Dick Bumpas, cornerbacks coach Clay Jennings

• Eddie Williamson has resumed coaching duties after suffering a heart attack in the first quarter of the Nov. 13 win over San Diego State.

PLAYING AHEAD• TCU has trailed just four times this season and just once, for 1:32, in the second half.• After SMU took a 17-14 early third-quarter lead on Sept. 24, Jeremy Kerley returned the ensuing kickoff 83 yards to set up TCU’s go-ahead touchdown only three plays and 1:32 later.

THE UNDEFEATED• TCU is 12-0 for the second-straight season and second time in its history. • The Frogs posted their third undefeated regular season. The 1938 national champions were 10-0 before a 15-7 win over Carnegie Tech in the Sugar Bowl. WINNING CLASSES• TCU’s seniors have become the winningest class in school history for a third straight year.• This year’s class has won 43 games, breaking the mark set by the 2009 seniors who won 42 contests. The 2008 senior class recorded 41 wins.

Years Wins 1. 2007-10 43 2. 2006-09 42 3. 2005-08 41 4. 1932-35 40 5. 1933-36 39

THE BCS • TCU finished third in the 2010 BCS standings, setting a record for the second straight year for the highest finish by a team from a non-automatic qualifying league. The Frogs were fourth in the final 2009 BCS standings.• TCU has the longest current streak (12 weeks) in the nation for appearing in the top five of the BCS standings.• The Frogs have appeared in the BCS standings for 23 consecutive weeks. Only Ohio State (50) and Boise State (30) have longer streaks.• The Frogs (44) are second behind only Boise State (50) for most appearances in the BCS standings by a school playing in a conference without an automatic BCS bid.• If the current BCS rules were in effect in 2005, TCU would have been in a BCS bowl. The Frogs finished ahead of automatic-qualifier Florida State.

UNIFORM WATCH• Thanks to its special relationship with Nike, TCU has a multitude of uniform combos:

Date Opponent Uniform Sept. 4 Oregon State 2010 Nike Pro Combat uniform and helmetSept. 11 Tennessee Tech Purple jersey, black pants, regular helmetSept. 18 Baylor Black jersey, black pants, regular helmetSept. 24 SMU White jersey, white pants, regular helmetOct. 2 Colorado State White jersey, white pants, regular helmetOct. 9 Wyoming Purple jersey, black pants, regular helmetOct. 16 BYU Purple jersey, 2010 Pro Combat pants and helmetOct. 23 Air Force Black jersey, black pants, 2009 Pro Combat helmetOct. 30 UNLV White jersey, white pants, regular helmetNov. 6 Utah White jersey, white pants, regular helmetNov. 13 San Diego State* Purple jersey, white pants, regular helmetNov. 20 New Mexico White jersey, white pants, regular helmet *TCU wore a purple jersey with white pants for the first time since the 2001 season.

TCU BY THE NUMBERS

0Home games left in the original Amon G. Carter Stadium.

The $105 million renovation is underway.

2How many times (2009, 2010) TCU has sported a 12-0 record

in its history.

3Consecutive years TCU’s seniors have set a record for winningest

class in school history.

5Schools (Kansas State, Tennessee Tech, Utah State, Navy, TCU)

head coach Gary Patterson and defensive coordinator/defensive line coach Dick Bumpas have worked at together.

12Former TCU players currently on National Football League rosters.

31First-place votes received by TCU, out of a possible 31 votes, in the

official 2010 MWC preseason poll.

54Victories by TCU when ahead or even in turnover margin over

55 games the last six seasons.

122Wins by TCU, compared to 38 losses, since Gary Patterson arrived

as defensive coordinator in 1998.

Page 8: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L GA

ME

NO

TE

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

6 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

WORTH NOTINGCHECKING THE RANKINGS• Included below are TCU’s week-by-week rankings this season:

AP USA Today Harris BCS Preseason 6 7 -- -- Sept. 7 4 5 -- -- Sept. 12 4 5 -- -- Sept. 19 4 5 -- -- Sept. 26 5 5 -- -- Oct. 3 5 5 -- -- Oct. 10 4 5 4 -- Oct. 17 4 4 3 5 Oct. 24 4 4 4 4 Oct. 31 4 4 4 3 Nov. 7 3 3 3 3 Nov. 14 4 4 4 3 Nov. 21 4 4 4 3 Nov. 28 3 3 3 3 Dec. 5 3 3 3 3

• TCU has been ranked a school-record 40 consecutive weeks, appearing in every poll since Oct. 19, 2008.• The Frogs’ run of 40 consecutive weeks ranked is the fourth-longest current streak in the nation (Ohio State 99, Alabama 48, Boise State 44).• A No. 6 preseason ranking was the best in TCU history.• TCU has three top-10 final rankings in the last five seasons.• In 2009, the Frogs had their highest season-ending ranking (sixth) since they were also sixth in 1955. • TCU has back-to-back top-10 appearances in final polls for the first time since the 1958-59 campaigns. • TCU received four No. 1 votes in the final 2009 Harris Poll.• The Frogs had a lone first-place vote in the final 2010 Harris Poll.

FROG FEVER• TCU had three sellouts this season and has totaled four in its last eight home dates.• The Frogs set a single-season attendance record for the second straight year, averaging 42,466. Last year was 38,187.• Three of the top-six attendances in TCU’s history came this season. A standing-room only crowd of 47,393 for the Sept. 18 Baylor game ranks second. SRO crowds of 46,096 for Air Force (Oct. 23) and 45,694 against San Diego State (Nov. 13) place fifth and sixth, respectively.• Over its last eight home games, TCU has an average attendance of 43,355. It represents 97.7 percent of the capacity at 44,358-seat Amon G. Carter Stadium. • TCU sold a record 19,143 football season tickets in 2010. When including the student allotment, the total is 25,298. • The crowd of 50,307 for last year’s Utah contest set a TCU single-game home attendance record. An estimated 7,500 filled TCU’s Campus Commons earlier in the day for ESPN’s College GameDay.• Over 20,000 TCU fans made the trip to Arizona in January for the 2010 Fiesta Bowl.

THE BEST IN TEXAS• Since 2005, TCU has the best record among the 10 FBS teams in Texas:

Team W-L Pct. 1. TCU 65-11 .855 2. Texas 63-15 .808 3. Texas Tech 52-23 .693 4. Houston 47-30 .610 5. Texas A&M 40-32 .556 6. UTEP 32-39 .451 7. SMU 28-45 .384 8. Baylor 27-44 .380 9. Rice 27-45 .375 10. North Texas 13-58 .183

A NEW HOME• A $105 million renovation of the west side and north end zone of Amon G. Carter Stadium is underway to better enhance the football fan experience, upgrade amenities and transform the historic Fort Worth icon into the “Camden Yards” of collegiate football stadiums.• Completely funded by donor support, the renovation will be fully completed in 2012.• An implosion of the old press box side of the stadium occurred Dec. 5. The entire west side dropped in a process that took about 35 seconds.• After construction, Amon G. Carter Stadium will have a seating capacity of 40,000 that can be expanded to more than 50,000.

Page 9: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L G

AM

E N

OT

ES

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

7BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

TCU BOWL NOTABLESTCU BOWL HISTORY• Included below is a look at the Frogs’ postseason history: 1936 Sugar Bowl - TCU 3, LSU 2 1937 Cotton Bowl - TCU 16, Marquette 6 1939 Sugar Bowl - TCU 15, Carnegie Tech 7 1942 Orange Bowl - Georgia 40, TCU 26 1945 Cotton Bowl - Oklahoma A&M 34, TCU 0 1948 Delta Bowl - Mississippi 13, TCU 9 1952 Cotton Bowl - Kentucky 20, TCU 7 1956 Cotton Bowl - Mississippi 14, TCU 13 1957 Cotton Bowl - TCU 28, Syracuse 27 1959 Cotton Bowl - TCU 0, Air Force 0 1959 Bluebonnet Bowl - Clemson 23, TCU 7 1965 Sun Bowl - Texas Western 13, TCU 12 1984 Bluebonnet Bowl - West Virginia 31, TCU 14 1994 Independence Bowl - Virginia 20, TCU 10 1998 Sun Bowl - TCU 28, USC 19 1999 Mobile Alabama Bowl - TCU 28, East Carolina 14 2000 Mobile Alabama Bowl - Southern Miss 28, TCU 21 2001 galleryfurniture.com Bowl - Texas A&M 28, TCU 9 2002 AXA Liberty Bowl - TCU 17, Colorado State 3 2003 PlainsCapital Fort Worth Bowl - Boise State 34, TCU 31 2005 Houston Bowl - TCU 27, Iowa State 24 2006 Poinsettia Bowl - TCU 37, Northern Illinois 7 2007 Texas Bowl - TCU 20, Houston 13 2008 Poinsettia Bowl - TCU 17, Boise State 16 2009 Fiesta Bowl - Boise State 17, TCU 10 BOWLS BY THE APPEARANCE• TCU has played in the following bowl games: Cotton (6) Bluebonnet (2) Mobile Alabama (2) Poinsettia (2) Sugar (2) Sun (2) Rose (1) Delta (1) Fiesta (1) Fort Worth (1) galleryfurniture.com (1) Houston (1) Independence (1) Liberty (1) Orange (1) Texas (1)

SUPER SITES• TCU is playing its sixth straight bowl game in a facility that has hosted a Super Bowl:

Year Bowl Stadium Super Bowls Hosted 2005 Houston Reliant XXXVIII 2006 Poinsettia Qualcomm XXII, XXXII, XXXVII 2007 Texas Reliant XXXVIII 2008 Poinsettia Qualcomm XXII, XXXII, XXXVII 2009 Fiesta University of Phoenix XLII 2010 Rose Rose Bowl XXVII, XXI, XVII, XIV, XI

• XXXVIII - Carolina vs. New England, 2004• XXII - Denver vs. Washington, 1988• XXXII - Denver vs. Green Bay, 1998• XXXVII - Oakland vs. Tampa Bay, 2003• XLII - New England vs. New York Giants, 2008• XXVII - Buffalo vs. Dallas, 1993• XXI - Denver vs. New York Giants, 1987• XVII - Miami vs. Washington, 1983• XIV - Los Angeles vs. Pittsburgh, 1980• XI - Minnesota vs. Oakland, 1977

• This year’s Rose Bowl will mark TCU’s ninth contest in a 69-game stretch in a stadium that has hosted a Super Bowl. • During that span, the Frogs are a combined 7-1. TCU is 4-0 at Qualcomm Stadium, 2-0 at Reliant Stadium, 1-0 at Stanford Stadium and at 0-1 Univer-sity of Phoenix Stadium.

GOING BOWLING• Since Gary Patterson arrived at TCU, the Frogs are one of 14 teams to play in at least 12 bowl games the last 13 seasons:

13 -Florida, Florida State, Georgia, Georgia Tech, Virginia Tech 12 -TCU, Boston College, Miami (Fla.), Ohio State, Oklahoma, Oregon, Southern Miss, Texas, Wisconsin NEW YEAR’S DAY• TCU is playing on Jan. 1 for the first time since a scoreless tie with Air Force in the 1959 Cotton Bowl.• The Frogs played on Jan. 4 in last year’s Fiesta Bowl.

MVP, MVP• TCU quarterback Andy Dalton is a two-time bowl game Most Valuable Player.• Dalton was 22-of-35 for 197 yards while rushing for 84 yards in a 17-16 Poinsettia Bowl victory over Boise State in 2008.• As a redshirt freshman in 2007, Dalton received MVP honors in a 20-13 Texas Bowl win over Houston. He completed 21-of-30 passes for 249 yards. He added 17 yards rushing, including a 3-yard scoring run for the Frogs’ first points of the game.

Page 10: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L GA

ME

NO

TE

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

8 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

SENIOR QUARTERBACK ANDY DALTON JUST WIN, BABY• Andy Dalton is the nation’s leader in wins by an active quarterback:

Name Wins 1. Andy Dalton, TCU 41 2. Kellen Moore, Boise State 37 3. Tyrod Taylor, Virginia Tech 34 • Dalton also has the most wins by a quarterback in TCU history. Slingin’ Sammy Baugh (29, 1934-36) is second.

WEDDING BELLS• Since getting engaged Oct. 6, Andy Dalton is completing 67.4 percent of his passes with 20 touchdowns and just two interceptions:

Opponent Comp. Att. Pct. Yards TD Int. Wyoming 14 17 82.4 270 3 0 BYU 24 36 66.7 273 4 0 Air Force 11 20 55.0 185 1 1 UNLV 16 23 70.0 252 2 0 Utah 21 26 80.8 355 3 0 San Diego State 21 36 58.3 240 4 1 New Mexico 9 14 64.3 156 3 0 Totals 116 172 67.4 1,731 20 2

• Five of Dalton’s top-six games of the season in passing yards have come since he popped the question.• He posted two of the top seven single-game completion percentages in TCU history.• Dalton had a career-best 355 yards passing and 369 in total offense at Utah.• In the first game after his engagement, Dalton totaled a then season-high 312 yards of total offense in a 45-0 win over Wyoming. • Dalton rushed for a career-high 93 yards against Air Force, including a career-long 47-yard run.

IN DALTON’S FREE TIME ...• Vice-President of TCU’s American Marketing Association (AMA)• Founder of Ignite, a student led on-campus ministry that attracts an average of 600 students each Monday night for Christian worship• Part of a leadership team for Ignite that has raised close to $30,000• Leader of a student led Bible study• Volunteer at youth football camps in the Fort Worth area• Reads to local kids through TCU’s Reading Frogs program

EARNING RESPECT• Andy Dalton finished ninth in the 2010 Heisman Trophy voting, receiving four first-place votes.

WHAT THEY’RE SAYING ABOUT DALTON

“He’s one of the best quarterbacks in the country. He’s perfect for what they do offensively. He’s got the ability to beat you with his legs and with his arm.”

- Kyle Whittingham Head Coach, Utah

“He was just what everybody knew of him. He’s very confident, crafty and quick. He’s a quick decision maker and an impressive player. He really ran their offense.”

- Mike Riley Head Coach, Oregon State

“He is good. He was in rhythm and he had a lot of confidence. Every time he went out on the field, he knew he was going to work for it every time. We were never able to get him out of rhythm.”

- Art Briles Head Coach, Baylor

“He’s played a lot of snaps and is very experienced. He can throw and run, so that gives them some dimension back there.”

- Steve Fairchild Head Coach, Colorado State

Page 11: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L G

AM

E N

OT

ES

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

9BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

FROG OFFENSIVE NOTES THE TD STREAK• Andy Dalton has thrown a touchdown pass in 20 consecutive games, the longest streak in Mountain West Conference history.• Dalton passed for four touchdowns against San Diego State. It was the fourth time in his career that he’s thrown for four scores in a game. • Dalton had three first-quarter touchdown passes at New Mexico.

DALTON MILESTONE WATCH• Andy Dalton reached the following milestones in the regular-season finale at New Mexico: Category Current Total TCU’s Single-Season TD Pass Record 26 MWC’s Career Leader in Total Plays 1,698 MWC’s Career Total Offense Leader 11,678 yards 10,000 Career Passing Yards 10,095

• Dalton is TCU’s career leader in total offense.• Dalton had a career-best 369 yards of total offense at Utah.

FINDING TARGETS• In the last 10 games, Andy Dalton has put together three of the top seven single-game completion percentages (min. 15 attempts) in TCU history:

Name Completion Pct. Opponent 1. Andy Dalton 91.3 (21-of-23) Baylor, 2010 2. Jeff Ballard 87.0 (20-of-23) San Diego State, 2006 3. Max Knake 86.7 (13-of-15) Rice, 1994 4. Andy Dalton 82.4 (14-of-17) Wyoming, 2010 Casey Printers 82.4 (14-of-17) Navy, 2000 6. Andy Dalton 80.8 (21-of-26) Utah, 2010 Jeff Ballard 80.8 (21-of-26) Air Force, 2006

COMPLETIONS AND MORE COMPLETIONS• Andy Dalton is on pace to break Jeff Ballard’s career completion percentage record:

Name Completion Pct. Years 1. Andy Dalton .616 2007-present 2. Jeff Ballard .611 2003-06

• Dalton has a career-best 66.2 completion percentage (194-of-293) this season. It’s on pace to shatter TCU’s single-season mark of 61.9 by Ballard in 2006.• Dalton and Ballard were teammates in 2006, when Dalton was a redshirt.

TAKING CARE OF THE BALL• Andy Dalton is third among active quarterbacks in lowest interception percentage (min. 800 attempts): Name Int. Pct. Att./Int. 1. Kellen Moore, Boise State 1.52 1,181/18 2. Colin Kaepernick, Nevada 1.86 1,238/23 3. Andy Dalton, TCU 2.32 1,294/30

FLASHING THE WHEELS• Andy Dalton has run for first downs on 27 of his 77 carries (35.1 percent) this season. He rushed for eight first downs on 15 carries against Oregon State.• Dalton had seven rushing attempts for a career-high 93 yards against Air Force. His previous-best rushing total was 91 yards versus Stanford in 2008.• Dalton had a career-long 47-yard carry in the third quarter against Air Force, nearly doubling his previous career best of 24 yards versus Boise State in 2008. • Dalton’s 1,583 career rushing yards rank second among active TCU players.• Included below is a look at Dalton running the ball: Rushes Yards Avg. Per Carry TDs Avg./Game First 9 games 56 22 0.4 1 2.4 Last 39 games 348 1,561 4.5 20 40.0

TCU CAREER PASSING LEADERS No. Player Years Yards 1. Andy Dalton 07-pres. 10,095 2. Max Knake 92-95 7,370 3. Steve Stamp 78-81 5,123 4. Casey Printers 99-01 4,621 5. Jeff Ballard 03-06 4,204 6. Leon Clay 89-92 3,963 7. Steve Judy 69-71 3,886 8. Brandon Hassell 03-04 3,763 9. David Rascoe 85-88 3,696 10. Sam Baugh 34-36 3,384

TCU CAREER TOUCHDOWNS PASSES No. Player Years TD 1. Andy Dalton 07-pres. 70 2. Max Knake 92-95 49 3. Sam Baugh 78-81 40

TCU CAREER PASS COMPLETIONS No. Player Years Comps. 1. Andy Dalton 07-pres. 797 2. Max Knake 92-95 622 3. Steve Stamp 78-81 350 4. Jeff Ballard 03-06 330 5. Leon Clay 89-92 326

TCU CAREER PASS ATTEMPTS No. Player Years Atts. 1. Andy Dalton 07-pres. 1,294 2. Max Knake 92-95 1,115 3. Steve Stamp 78-81 674 4. Steve Judy 69-71 669 5. David Rascoe 85-88 655 TCU CAREER COMPLETION PCT. LEADERS No. Player Years Pct. 1. Andy Dalton 07-pres. 61.6 2. Jeff Ballard 03-06 61.1 3. Sean Stilley 99-02 57.9 4. Brandon Hassell 03-04 56.7 5. Casey Printers 99-01 56.1 ACTIVE TCU RUSHING LEADERS 1. Ed Wesley 1,718 2. Andy Dalton 1,583 3. Matthew Tucker 1,370 4. Waymon James 489 5. Jeremy Kerley 301 ACTIVE TCU RECEPTION LEADERS 1. Jimmy Young 142 2. Jeremy Kerley 114 3. Bart Johnson 84 4. Antoine Hicks 42 5. Curtis Clay 34 ACTIVE RECEIVING YARDS LEADERS 1. Jimmy Young 2,259 2. Jeremy Kerley 1,241 3. Bart Johnson 1,075 4. Antoine Hicks 718 5. Josh Boyce 602

Page 12: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L GA

ME

NO

TE

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

10 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

GETTING BETTER AND BETTER• Included below is a look at the yearly improvement in Andy Dalton’s passing efficiency: Year Rating NCAA Rank 2007 118.50 83rd 2008 129.19 50th 2009 151.83 8th 2010 167.39 5th

TOTING THE ROCK• Andy Dalton’s rushing yards per carry has improved each year at TCU:

Year Yards Per Carry Yards Per Game 2007 2.4 17.8 2008 3.8 39.3 2009 4.4 39.4 2010 5.3 33.9

RUSHING TO HISTORY• Andy Dalton’s 21 career rushing touchdowns are the most by a quarterback in TCU history and tied for seventh overall.• Next on the list, in sixth place, is Kenneth Davis with 23 (1982-85). Davis was fifth in the 1984 Heisman Trophy voting.

THE PROLIFIC ONE• Included below are Andy Dalton’s rankings all-time in the MWC and where he ranks for career numbers among active quarterbacks in the NCAA:

Category Number MWC Rank NCAA Rank Wins 41 1st 1st Total Offense 11,678 1st 5th Total Plays 1,698 1st 5th Touchdown Passes 70 3rd 8th Passing Yards 10,095 3rd 5th Completions 797 3rd 5th Attempts 1,294 4th 5th

SELECT COMPANY• Andy Dalton is one of just seven active quarterbacks with at least 1,000 career yards rushing and 5,000 passing. • The others are Austen Arnaud (Iowa State), Diondre Borel (Utah State), Robert Griffin III (Baylor), Colin Kaepernick (Nevada), Jake Locker (Washington), Terrelle Pryor (Ohio State) and Tyrod Taylor (Virginia Tech).

SCORE BY QUARTERS• TCU has scored in all but one quarter this season.• The only scoreless quarter was the third quarter against BYU.

HOW GOOD WAS HE• Andy Dalton completed 21-of-23 passes (91.3 percent) for 267 yards and two touchdowns against Baylor. • The 91.3 completion percentage set TCU and MWC single-game records. • Jeff Ballard previously held the TCU mark after completing 20-of-23 attempts (87.0 percent) versus San Diego State in 2006.• The former MWC mark of 90.9 (20-of-22) was set by BYU’s Max Hall against Wyoming last season. The NCAA record is 95.8 (23-of-24) by Tennessee’s Tee Martin versus South Carolina in 1998.• Dalton’s 91.3 completion percentage tied Sam Bradford (Oklahoma) and Jared Zabransky (Boise State) for highest by an FBS passer in a game (min. 20 attempts) since 2004.• Dalton’s 11 consecutive completions to start the game marked a career-best streak for him. It was also the second-best streak for completions in a game in TCU history, trailing only the 14 straight by Ballard against San Diego State in 2006.

MILESTONE WATCH• The Frogs have already set single-season school records for touchdowns (70) and points scored (520) and are nearing the following additional marks:

Category Number Needed Current Mark First Downs 3 311 (2009) Rushing Yards 108 3,241 (1987) Total Offense (Yards) 40 5,937 (2009)

THE CENTURY MARK• Three Frogs have rushed for 100 yards in a game this season. Ed Wesley has done it four times, while Matthew Tucker and Waymon James reached the feat against San Diego State.• Andy Dalton came close with 93 yards versus Air Force.• Against the Aztecs, Tucker (131) and James (102) became the first TCU tandem to rush for 100 yards in the same game since Lonta Hobbs (117) and Brandon Hassell (110) against Boise State in the 2003 Fort Worth Bowl.

MOVING THE STICKS• TCU has more than doubled (309-136) its opponents in first downs.• The Frogs need three first downs to set a single-season TCU record for the third straight year.• The Frogs had 311 first downs in 2009 and 308 in 2008.

IT’S ABOUT DEPTH• Despite two injured starters (left guard Kyle Dooley, right tackle Zach Roth) on the offensive line not starting during a three-game stretch (Oct. 23-Nov. 6), TCU still averaged 275.7 yards rushing and 550.0 in total offense.• The 377 yards rushing against Air Force was TCU’s best total since a 390-yard effort in last year’s 41-0 victory over UNLV.

IT’S A RUSH• TCU has won 51 in a row when rushing for at least 167 yards. • The Frogs have won 40 straight games when rushing for more yards than passing.• Under head coach Gary Patterson, TCU is 54-2 with 200 or more yards rushing.• TCU is eighth in the nation in rushing at 261.2 yards per game, the Frogs’ highest average since a 275.6 clip in LaDainian Tomlinson’s senior year of 2000.• The Frogs’ 39 rushing touchdowns are sixth in the nation.• TCU has topped 300 yards in rushing three times.• The Frogs are averaging 5.5 yards per carry with their top nine rushers sporting a mark of at least 4.6 yards per attempt. Four of the top nine are at 6.3 yards or better.

THIRD DOWNS AND RED ZONE• The Frogs are sixth in the nation in third-down conversion percentage at 52.3 (78-of-149). • TCU was 10-of-15 on third downs at Utah.• TCU is tops in the MWC and tied for 17th nationally in red-zone offense, scoring on 58-of-66 possessions (87.9 percent). The Frogs have 48 touchdowns and 10 field goals on their red zone scores.

FAST STARTS• TCU has scored on its opening possession of the game eight times (seven touchdowns, one field goal) this season.• TCU scored on its first five series for a 35-3 halftime lead on Baylor. Six of TCU’s seven scoring drives against Baylor were at least 73 yards.

A FLYIN’ FROG• Wide receiver Skye Dawson, who is tied for fifth on the Frogs with 12 receptions, is a sprinter on TCU’s track and field team.• Dawson has a personal-best time of 10.29 in the 100 meters.• Dawson won the Mountain West Conference Indoor Championship in the 60 meters with a mark of 6.69, the third-fastest time in MWC history.• Dawson has been involved in two of TCU’s eight-longest plays. He had a season-best 52-yard reception against Oregon State and a 43-yard grab versus Wyoming.

BORN TO BE A FROG• Tight end Evan Frosch was always meant for TCU. In German, Frosch means Frog.

Page 13: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L G

AM

E N

OT

ES

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

11BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

OFFENSIVE CONSISTENCY• The Frogs need just 40 yards in the Rose Bowl to set a single-season school record in total offense for the second straight year. • TCU has 5,898 yards of total offense. The school record, set last year, is 5,937.• Three of the top-four single-season totals have occurred in the last three years:

Total Offense Year 1. 5,937 2009 2. 5,898 2010 3. 5,581 2003 4. 5,477 2008

• TCU tops the MWC and is ninth nationally in total offense at 491.5 yards per game.• The Frogs have recorded six games with over 500 yards in total offense, including four of the last five contests.• TCU has had at least 375 yards in each game this season while topping 400 yards in 10 of 12 contests.

Opponent Rushing Passing Total Offense Oregon State 278 175 453 Tennessee Tech 270 182 452 Baylor 291 267 558 SMU 190 185 375 Colorado State 346 128 474 Wyoming 305 281 586 BYU 108 273 381 Air Force 377 185 562 UNLV 273 257 530 Utah 177 381 558 San Diego State 226 240 466 New Mexico 293 210 503

LONGEST PLAYS • Included below are TCU’s plays from scrimmage of at least 40 yards in 2010: Yards Play Game 93 (TD) Andy Dalton pass to Josh Boyce Utah54 (TD) Andy Dalton pass to Josh Boyce UNLV52 Andy Dalton pass to Skye Dawson Oregon State50 (TD) Andy Dalton pass to Jeremy Kerley Wyoming49 (TD) Ed Wesley run Baylor47 Andy Dalton run Air Force47 Matthew Tucker run Colorado State45 (TD) Andy Dalton pass to Jimmy Young New Mexico44 Ed Wesley run New Mexico43 Andy Dalton pass to Skye Dawson Wyoming41 Andy Dalton pass to Antoine Hicks SMU

• The 93-yard touchdown pass from Andy Dalton to Josh Boyce at Utah was the third-longest play in TCU history. The only longer plays were a 99-yard Scott Ankrom to James Maness completion against Rice in 1984 and a 98-yard connection from Brandon Hassell to Reggie Harrell versus Arizona in 2003.

MR. TOUCHDOWN• Luke Shivers has eight career touchdowns (seven rushing, one receiving) on 17 touches. • He has four touchdowns on 11 touches this season.• Shivers’ three receptions top the combined total of two from his first two seasons.

IN THE BULLPEN• Back-up quarterback Casey Pachall has completed 6-of-9 passes for 78 yards with a touchdown and no interceptions. • In the regular-season finale versus New Mexico, Pachall saw his most extensive action of the year and completed 4-of-6 passes. His first collegiate scoring toss was a 21-yard strike to tight end Logan Brock.• Pachall totaled career highs in passing yards (54) and rushing yards (31) against the Lobos.

TCU BY THE NUMBERS

5First-team All-Americans

(Tank Carder, Wayne Daniels, Tejay Johnson, Jeremy Kerley, Jake Kirkpatrick).

6Career 100-yard receiving games by Jimmy Young.

6.69Skye Dawson’s time in the 60 meters.

27Rushing first downs by quarterback

Andy Dalton this season.

31Consecutive starts by Andy Dalton, the longest

streak on the TCU offense.

40Consecutive victories by TCU when rushing

for more yards than passing.

41Career wins by Andy Dalton as a starting quarterback,

most in TCU history and the most in the nation among active players.

51Consecutive wins by TCU

when rushing for at least 167 yards.

71.4Jeremy Kerley’s career completion percentage (5-of-7).

Page 14: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L GA

ME

NO

TE

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

12 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

MR. 1,000• With 1,065 yards rushing, Ed Wesley is the first Frog since Robert Merrill in 2003 to top the 1,000-yard mark.• Wesley reached the milestone at New Mexico with a 44-yard run on his first carry of the game and TCU’s second play from scrimmage.• Wesley’s 1,065 yards are the most by a TCU back since Merrill’s 1,107 in 2003. • With 43 yards in the Rose Bowl, Wesley would have TCU’s highest single-season rushing total (1,108) since LaDainian Tomlinson led the nation with 2,158 yards in 2000.• Wesley ranks second in the MWC and 32nd nationally with his 88.8 yards per game mark. • He has four 100-yard games this year and five in his career.

HE’S PRETTY GOOD• Ed Wesley single-handedly outrushed (209-184) an Air Force team that entered the game as the nation’s leading ground attack at 346.9 yards per game.• Wesley had TCU’s first 200-yard game and the most yards by a Frog since Joseph Turner’s 226 at San Diego State in 2007.• Wesley had the 24th 200-yard game in TCU history and the 20th-best single-game total.

BREAKOUT BOYCE• Josh Boyce’s 33 receptions are second on TCU and the most by a TCU freshman since Cory Rodgers’ 37 in 2003.• Boyce’s team-high 602 receiving yards are a TCU freshman record.• With 126 yards receiving and two touchdowns on three catches at Utah, Boyce had his second 100-yard game of the season. He had eight catches for 127 yards and two scores in a 31-3 win over BYU. • Boyce’s first two catches at Utah were 26- and 93-yard TDs.• In two of the last four games, Boyce has been on the receiving end of TCU’s longest plays from scrimmage this season. His 93-yard touchdown reception at Utah was preceded by a 54-yard scoring catch at UNLV.• Boyce’s eight catches against BYU were the most in a game by a Frog since Donald Massey’s eight versus BYU in 2006.• Boyce totaled the most receiving yards (127) by a TCU freshman since Rodgers had 171 on six grabs at Houston in 2003.• Boyce’s performance versus BYU marked TCU’s first 100-yard receiving game since Antoine Hicks totaled 123 yards on five catches last year versus New Mexico.• Boyce had the most receiving yards by a Frog since Jimmy Young totaled a school-record 226 yards on five receptions against Wyoming on Oct. 25, 2008.

QUICK HITS FROM SALT LAKE CITY• TCU had three 1-play scoring drives at Utah.• TCU’s 237 yards of offense in the first quarter marked a season-best in any quarter this season. The previous best was 211 yards in the first quarter of a 45-10 win over Baylor.

PROTECTING THE QB• TCU has surrendered just nine sacks this season, tied for seventh nationally in fewest allowed (0.8 per game).

PURE STRENGTH• TCU’s starting offensive line averages 671 in their squat, 506 in the bench and 423 in the clean. • Two-time first-team offensive tackle Marcus Cannon has a 760 squat, 530 bench and 500 clean.• Return specialist Jeremy Kerley has a 38 inch vertical leap, 650 squat and 400 bench.• Defensive linemen Cory Grant and Wayne Daniels squat 760 and 730, respectively.

BREAKING THE PLANE • TCU tops the nation with 17 different players scoring a touchdown this season.

THE VERSATILE ONE• Jeremy Kerley has a team-high 50 catches, becoming the 13th player in TCU history to reach 50 receptions in a season and the first since Jimmy Young totaled 59 in 2008.• Kerley has tied Mike Renfro’s 1977 TCU record with 10 touchdown catches this season.• Kerley has had a career-high in receptions in two of the last three games.• Kerley totaled eight catches for 85 yards, including three first-half touchdowns, against San Diego State after recording seven grabs for 68 yards versus Utah.• Kerley had the first three-touchdown game of his career in the San Diego State contest.• Kerley is tied for eighth all-time at TCU with 12 touchdown receptions.• Kerley leads the MWC in all-purpose yards at 122.8 per game.• Kerley set a career high with 234 all-purpose yards at SMU. He had 172 yards on kickoff returns, 23 on punt returns, 33 yards receiving and six yards rushing. • Kerley had a 26-yard touchdown pass to Bart Johnson at Utah and is now 2-of-2 in the air for 37 yards this season. For his career, Kerley is 5-of-7 passing for 135 yards.• TCU is 19-0 when Kerley scores a touchdown.

CLIMBING THE CHARTS• Senior wide receiver and graduate student Jimmy Young is one of just three players (Mike Renfro, Stephen Shipley) in TCU history to rank in the top five all-time in receptions, receiving yards and touchdown catches:

Name Yards Years 1. Mike Renfro 2,739 1974-77 2. Jimmy Young 2,259 2007-present 3. Stephen Shipley 2,251 1989-92 4. Stanley Washington 2,209 1979-82 5. James Maness 2,171 1981-84

Name Receptions Years 1. Kelly Blackwell 181 1988-91 2. Mike Renfro 162 1974-77 3. Stephen Shipley 152 1989-92 4. Cory Rodgers 150 2003-05 5. Jimmy Young 142 2007-present Name TD Catches Years 1. Cory Rodgers 17 2003-05 2. Mike Renfro 17 1974-77 3. Stanley Washington 16 1979-82 4. Stephen Shipley 15 1989-92 5. Jimmy Young 13 2007-present LaTarence Dunbar 13 1999-02 Kelly Blackwell 13 1988-91 8. Jeremy Kerley 12 2007-present Phillip Epps 12 1978-81

THE STREAK• Bart Johnson has at least one reception in a career-high and team-best 34 consecutive games, a streak that is 14th nationally among active players.

FINDING THE TIGHT END• Logan Brock’s last two catches have resulted in touchdowns.• Brock had scoring grabs of 21 yards at New Mexico and 15 yards against San Diego State. They are the first touchdowns by a TCU tight end since Evan Frosch’s 4-yard catch at UNLV on Nov. 1, 2008.• TCU tight ends have just 10 receptions this season but are averaging 18.2 yards per catch.

Page 15: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L G

AM

E N

OT

ES

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

13BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

FROGS DEFENSIVE NOTESA DEFENSE THAT HUNTS• In eight MWC contests, TCU allowed just nine offensive touchdowns and 9.4 points per game. MWC opponents scored on just 11-of-100 possessions against TCU this season.

SETTING THE PACE• TCU tops the nation in scoring defense, total defense, pass defense and fewest first downs allowed per game.• The Frogs are second in opponent third-down conversion percentage and third in run defense.

Team Scoring Defense (PPG) 1. TCU 11.4 2. West Virginia 12.8 3. Ohio State 13.3

Team Total Defense (YPG) 1. TCU 215.4 2. Ohio State 250.6 3. West Virginia 251.3

Team Pass Defense (YPG) 1. TCU 126.3 2. Miami (Fla.) 146.3 3. Boise State 155.8

Team First Downs Allowed (PG) 1. TCU 11.3 2. West Virginia 13.1 3. Ohio State 13.8

Team Opponent Third Down Pct. 1. TCU 21.9 2. West Virginia 24.7 3. Nebraska 29.2

Team Run Defense (YPG) 1. Boston College 80.2 2. West Virginia 85.1 3. TCU 89.2

• Only two opponents have reached 100 yards rushing on TCU.

RISING UP• In each of its last two bowl games, both against Boise State, TCU held the Broncos to just one offensive touchdown.

POINTS OFF THE SCOREBOARD• TCU has held a nation’s-best seven opponents to single digits in scoring this season. Iowa and Boise State are second with five opponents scoring under 10 points. • Since 1990, the single-season high for number of games a team has held its opponent to less than 10 points is eight (USC, 2008; Miami, 2002; Kansas State, 1998).• The Frogs’ run of holding six straight opponents (Oct. 2-Nov. 6) to single digits was the longest in the NCAA since Alabama (seven) in 1990.• TCU is one of just seven teams since 1990 to hold opponents to single digits in five straight games. Two of those teams (Florida State, 1993; Miami, 2001) won national titles.

BELOW THE MENDOZA LINE• TCU is the only team in the nation to hold all but one opponent under 200 yards in passing.• Eighty-nine of the 120 FBS teams currently allow an average of 200 or more yards per game in the air.

MORE STINGINESS• TCU has held seven of its opponents under 200 yards in total offense (Tennessee Tech, 150; Colorado State, 161; Wyoming, 191; BYU, 147; UNLV, 197; Utah, 199; New Mexico, 130).• New Mexico’s 130 yards marked the lowest total by a TCU opponent since San Diego State had 87 yards in a 41-7 Frog victory on Oct. 4, 2008.• BYU was held to one first down in the first half.

STEPPING UP • This year’s 215.4 yards per game allowed by TCU is the best total in Gary Patterson’s 10 seasons as head coach. • The next-best mark was recorded by the 2008 team which led the nation by surrendering just 217.8 yads per game.

PUTTING UP A WALL• TCU has allowed just 18 touchdowns this season, tied with Alabama for the second-lowest total in the nation behind West Virginia (15).

OKTOBERFEST• Opponents scored two touchdowns on TCU in five October games.

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STARTERSTCU OffensePos. OSU TTU BAY SMU CSU WYO BYU AFA UNLV UTAH SDSU UNM WR Kerley Clay Kerley Kerley Kerley Kerley Kerley Kerley Hicks Kerley Kerley KerleyWR Young Young Young Young Young Young Johnson Boyce Young Boyce Young YoungTE Frosch Frosch Frosch Hicks (WR) Hicks (WR) Boyce (WR) Boyce (WR) Frosch Frosch Frosch Boyce (WR) Boyce (WR)LT Cannon Olson Cannon Cannon Cannon Cannon Cannon Cannon Cannon Cannon Cannon CannonLG Dooley Dooley Dooley Dooley Dooley Dooley Dooley Thompson Thompson Thompson Dooley DooleyC Kirkpatrick Kirkpatrick Kirkpatrick Kirkpatrick Kirkpatrick Kirkpatrick Kirkpatrick Kirkpatrick Kirkpatrick Kirkpatrick Kirkpatrick KirkpatrickRG Vernon Vernon Vernon Vernon Vernon Vernon Vernon Vernon Vernon Vernon Vernon VernonRT Roth Roth Roth Roth Roth Roth Roth Olson Olson Olson Roth RothTE Brock Brock Brock Johnson (WR) Dawson (WR) Dawson (WR) Tucker (TB) Brock Johnson (WR) Brock Johnson (WR) Johnson (WR)QB Dalton Dalton Dalton Dalton Dalton Dalton Dalton Dalton Dalton Dalton Dalton DaltonRB Wesley Wesley Wesley Wesley Wesley Wesley Wesley Wesley Wesley Wesley Wesley Wesley

TCU DefensePos. OSU TTU BAY SMU CSU WYO BYU AFA UNLV UTAH SDSU UNM DE Maponga Maponga Maponga Maponga Maponga Maponga Maponga Maponga Maponga Maponga Forrest MapongaNT Griffin Griffin Griffin Griffin Griffin Griffin Griffin Griffin Grant Grant Grant GrantDT Grant Grant Grant Grant Grant Grant Grant Grant Yendrey Yendrey Yendrey YendreyDE Daniels Daniels Daniels Daniels Daniels Daniels Daniels Daniels Daniels Daniels Daniels DanielsLB Carder Carder Carder Carder Carder Carder Carder Carder Carder Carder Carder CarderLB Brock Brock Brock Brock Brock Brock Brock Brock Brock Brock Brock BrockCB Teague Teague Teague Teague Teague Teague Teague Teague Teague Teague Teague TeagueWS Ibiloye Ibiloye Ibiloye Ibiloye Cuba Cuba Cuba Ibiloye Cuba Ibiloye Ibiloye CubaFS Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson JohnsonSS Luttrell Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones JonesCB McCoy McCoy McCoy McCoy McCoy McCoy McCoy McCoy McCoy McCoy McCoy McCoy

Page 16: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L GA

ME

NO

TE

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

14 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

STINGY D• TCU is looking to become just the third program in NCAA history to lead the nation in total defense in three consecutive seasons. The others are Toledo (1969-71) and Oklahoma (1985-87).• TCU has topped the nation in total defense each of the last two years and four times in the past 10 seasons.• Since the NCAA began tracking statistics in 1937, TCU is tied with Alabama and Auburn for the most No. 1 rankings in total defense at four. All four of the Frogs’ top marks (2000, 2002, 2008, 2009) are under Gary Patterson. • Since 2000, TCU’s first of four team defensive titles, Virginia Tech is the only other school to finish first more than once (2005, 2006). The Frogs, Hokies and Miami (1989, 1994) are the only teams to win the crown at least twice since 1989.

SHUTTING THEM DOWN• Included below is a look at TCU holding several opponents below their season marks in points and total offense:

Opponent PPG - YPG PTS - YDS vs. TCU Oregon State 24.4 - 326.5 21 - 255 Baylor 32.6 - 478.5 10 - 263 Air Force 32.3 - 437.4 7 - 231 Utah 35.6 - 404.8 7 - 199

• TCU held Air Force to a season-low 184 yards rushing, 162.9 below its nation-leading average of 346.9 entering the game.• Over the last five years, four of Air Force’s 10-lowest rushing totals are versus TCU.

A HAT TRICK OF EXCELLENCE• By holding Colorado State, Wyoming and BYU to a total of three points, TCU was just the second team since 1996 to allow a combined three points or less in a three-game stretch. North Texas allowed two points over three games in 2002.

ZEROS ON THE BOARD• In blanking Colorado State (27-0) and Wyoming (45-0), TCU recorded back-to-back shutouts for the first time since 1955.• The Frogs are the only team in the nation to post back-to-back shutouts this season.• TCU has eight shutouts in 10 seasons under Gary Patterson.• TCU has two shutouts in a season for the first time since 2007, when it blanked Baylor (27-0) and New Mexico (37-0).• The 27-0 win at Colorado State marked the first time in Gary Patterson’s 10 seasons as head coach that TCU recorded a shutout on the road.

STREAK OVER• A 27-yard field goal by BYU’s Mitch Payne (Oct. 16) with 1:14 to play in the third quarter were the first points TCU allowed in a span of 175:10. It covered four games dating back to a Sept. 24 contest at SMU. • TCU entered the game with back-to-back shutouts of Colorado State and Wyoming.• TCU was bidding to become the first team to record three straight shutouts since Boston College in 1992 and the first Frog squad since 1955.• The Frogs’ streak of holding opponents scoreless lasted 10 quarters, one shy of the MWC record of 11.

FROGS SHINE IN RED ZONE• Opponents have entered the TCU red zone just 16 times in 12 games for 42 total plays.• TCU allowed just seven red-zone touchdowns in eight MWC games and 10 on the season.

Opponent Red-Zone Chances No. of Plays Oregon State 1-1 (TD) 3 Tennessee Tech 1-1 (TD) 1 Baylor 0-1 4 SMU 2-3 (TD, FG) 8 Colorado State 0-0 0 Wyoming 0-1 3 BYU 1-1 (FG) 5 Air Force 1-1 (TD) 2 UNLV 1-1 (TD) 3 Utah 1-1 (TD) 1 San Diego State 2-2 (2 TDs) 3 New Mexico 3-3 (2 TDs, FG) 9

TCU ACTIVE CAREER DEFENSIVE LEADERSTackles 1. Tejay Johnson 169 2. Tank Carder 152 3. Tanner Brock 129 4. Alex Ibiloye 125 5. Colin Jones 114 6. Wayne Daniels 95 7. Tekerrein Cuba 78 8. Cory Grant 58 9. Kelly Griffin 56 10. Greg McCoy 55 Sacks 1. Wayne Daniels 13.0 2. Cory Grant 8.0 3. D.J. Yendrey 5.0 4. Tank Carder 4.5 5. Stansly Maponga 2.5 6. Tanner Brock 2.0 Jeremy Coleman 2.0 Colin Jones 2.0 Clarence Leatch 2.0 10. Kelly Griffin 1.5 Interceptions 1. Tejay Johnson 7 2. Greg McCoy 5 3. Jason Teague 4 4. Tank Carder 2 Colin Jones 2 Tyler Luttrell 2

McCOY ISLAND• TCU cornerback Greg McCoy has recorded an intercep-tion in two of the last three games.

ROOKIE WATCH• All three true freshmen to see action for TCU this season are on defense: cornerbacks Travaras Battle and Elisha Olabode and defensive end Matt Anderson.• Battle is second on TCU with 15 special teams tackles. He has totaled 16 stops overall.• Olabode has eight tackles.• Anderson has four stops, including one for loss, to go with a forced fumble.

KEEP IN MIND• At the age of 10, linebacker Tank Carder captured a world championship in BMX racing. The title came in a competition outside Paris, France. After staking claim as the world’s best, Carder decided to retire while on top.• Safety Tejay Johnson knows sign language and is a reha-bilitation of the deaf/hard of hearing major.• Johnson has made a team-best 37 consecutive starts.

Page 17: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L G

AM

E N

OT

ES

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

15BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

THREE-AND-OUTS• TCU tops the nation in forcing 6.4 three-and-outs per game. Ohio State is second at 5.8 with Nebraska third at 5.2.• TCU opponents have gone three-and-out on over half (51.7 percent) of their 149 possessions.• In the last two games, the Frogs have forced a three-and-out on 22-of-32 (68.8 percent) offensive series by their opponents.

Opponent Three-and-Outs Possessions Oregon State 4 11 Tennessee Tech 8 14 Baylor 4 11 SMU 6 13 Colorado State 8 12 Wyoming 4 10 BYU 8 13 Air Force 4 9 UNLV 4 11 Utah 5 13 San Diego State 12 16 New Mexico 10 16 Totals 77 149

• TCU led the nation in 2009 with 6.5 three-and-outs per game.

STAYING FRESH• TCU opponents average only 53.9 snaps per game.• San Diego State ran just 47 plays compared to TCU’s 90.• Utah had only 52 offensive snaps the game before.• Wyoming ran a TCU opponent-low 45 plays from scrimmage, while Air Force was held to 48 snaps. Oregon State had 51.• Ten of the 12 opponents have been held to 57 or fewer plays. • SMU ran only 64 plays, the most by a TCU opponent this year.• Last season, TCU opponents averaged 61.6 snaps per game. PLAYING LIKE A SENIOR• Wayne Daniels is tied for second in the MWC in sacks (0.5 per game) while placing third in tackles for loss (1.0 per game). • Daniels’ 12 tackles for loss surpass the total from his first three seasons combined (10).• His 6 1/2 sacks equal the total from his three years combined.• Daniels recorded both of TCU’s sacks against Oregon State for the first two-sack game of his career.

ANOTHER SENIOR MOMENT• All-MWC safety Colin Jones is second on TCU and tied for fourth in the MWC with 10 1/2 tackles for loss.• Jones’ 70 stops on the year place second on TCU to only Tanner Brock (97) and have surpassed the total of 44 tackles from his first three seasons combined.• Jones had his first two sacks of the season as part of eight tackles in the San Diego State game.

USING HIS HELMET• Tanner Brock, a first-team All-MWC selection in his first year as a starter, has a team-high 97 tackles this season.• With three more stops, Brock will become the second-straight Frog to reach 100 tackles in a season (Daryl Washington, 2009). Prior to Washington, no Frog had totaled 100 stops since 2004 (Martin Patterson, 131).• Brock has topped TCU in tackles in seven games while reaching double figures in stops in four of eight MWC contests.• Brock totaled a career-best 12 stops at Utah while adding his first career interception and a subsequent 57-yard return.

KEY NUMBERS UNDER PATTERSON• TCU is 53-3 in its last 56 games when allowing less than 333 yards of offense. • Only 21 of TCU’s last 38 opponents scored in double figures.• Just seven times in the last 39 contests has TCU surrendered more than 17 points.

CONTINUING THE PROGRAM• TCU’s No. 1 ranking in five defensive categories this season has come despite missing two players who were taken in the first two rounds of the 2010 NFL draft (Jerry Hughes, first round, Indianapolis; Daryl Washington, second round, Arizona) and the graduation of a pair of four-year starters (Rafael Priest, Nick Sanders) at cornerback.

DEFENDING THE PASS• TCU tops the nation in pass defense (126.2 yards) and in allowing just one opponent to reach 200 yards this season.• New Mexico was held to 34 yards passing, the lowest total by a TCU opponent since Air Force threw for 11 yards in 2008.• Four opponents have been held under 100 yards in the air.• TCU has two interceptions in three of the last four games.• TCU’s 126.2 yards per game allowed in the air is significantly lower than the last two years when the Frogs led the nation in total defense. It is 33.3 yards fewer than the 2009 mark (159.5) and 44.5 less than 2008 (170.7).• Last year’s 159.5 average was the lowest passing yards per game total under Patterson during his time as head coach.• TCU opponents complete only 48.0 percent of their passes:

Team Comp. Att. Int. Pct. Yds. Oregon State 10 26 0 38.5 182 Tennessee Tech 9 14 1 64.3 58 Baylor 16 30 0 53.3 164 SMU 14 35 1 40.0 169 Colorado State 17 29 0 58.6 116 Wyoming 11 17 1 64.7 116 BYU 14 30 2 46.7 91 Air Force 3 7 0 42.9 47 UNLV 15 32 2 46.9 128 Utah 16 35 2 45.7 148 San Diego State 11 26 2 42.3 262 New Mexico 9 21 1 42.9 34 Totals 145 302 12 48.0 1,515

PICK SIX• Dating back to last season, five of TCU’s last 14 interceptions have been returned for touchdowns.• Jason Teague (Tennessee Tech), Tejay Johnson (SMU) and Colin Jones (UNLV) have returned picks for scores in 2010.

NOSES FOR THE BALL• With a team-high three interceptions and threeforced fumbles, Tejay Johnson has produced six turnovers this season.• In addition to his 19-yard interception return for a touchdown, Johnson had a career-high three pass breakups at SMU.• Johnson forced two fumbles the next week at Colorado State.• Safety Alex Ibiloye accounted for three of the Frogs’ six forced fumbles in the Tennessee Tech game. His total was more than any Frog had the entire 2009 season.

A LOOK BACK AT SAN DIEGO STATE• TCU held San Diego State to one first down in the opening 42 minutes (a flea-flicker on the second play from scrimmage).• The Aztecs had just three first downs through three quarters and seven for the game. They were 2-of-11 on third downs.• San Diego State had 12 three-and-outs on 16 possessions and ran just 47 plays with a time of possesion of 19:09.• San Diego State had just 38 yards rushing, a season-low by a TCU opponent.

A LOOK BACK AT UTAH• The Utes, who entered the game with the nation’s third-ranked scoring offense (45.2 points per game), did not cross midfield until the fourth quarter with TCU leading 40-0.• Utah was held to 52 yards rushing and 199 in total offense. • Utah was 3-of-13 on third downs after having a 54.3 success rate in its opening eight contests.• The Utes ran just 52 plays and had the ball for only 20:54.

Page 18: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L GA

ME

NO

TE

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

16 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

TCU 2010 GAME-BY-GAME DEFENSIVELY

Opponent Rushing Passing Total Offense Oregon State 73 182 255 Tennessee Tech 92 58 150 Baylor 99 164 263 SMU 192 169 361 Colorado State 45 116 161 Wyoming 75 116 191 BYU 56 91 147 Air Force 184 47 231 UNLV 69 128 197 Utah 51 148 199 San Diego State 38 262 300 New Mexico 96 34 130

• TCU has held a nation’s-best seven opponents under 200 yards of offense. • Only one team (SMU, 361) topped 300 yards on the Frogs.• TCU has allowed just one opponent (San Diego State, 262) to pass for 200 yards.• Just two teams have reached 100 yards rushing on TCU.• In eight Mountain West Conference games, TCU opponents scored nine offensive touchdowns and totaled 75 points (9.4 per game).• San Diego State had just one first down in the opening 42 minutes, three first downs through three quarters and seven for the game.• BYU had 13 yards of offense in the first half in a 31-3 TCU victory.• Baylor was held to 87 yards in the first half as the Frogs built a 35-3 halftime lead.

THEN AND NOW• Included below is a comparison of TCU’s top-ranked defense the last two seasons and where it is in 2010:

2008 2009 2010 Points per Game 10.9^ 12.8 11.4* First Downs per Game 12.1* 12.4* 11.3* Rushing Yards per Game 47.1* 80.2# 89.2# Passing Yards per Game 170.7 159.5 126.2* Total Yards per Game 217.8* 239.7* 215.4*

* - 1st in the nation; ^ - 2nd in the nation; # - 3rd in the nation

SACK MASTERS• TCU is third in the MWC with 25 sacks (2.1 per game).• Ten players have at least one sack.• First-team FWAA All-American Wayne Daniels tops the Frogs with 6 1/2 sacks, matching his total from his first three seasons combined.• Colin Jones recorded his first two sacks of the season in the San Diego State game.• D.J. Yendrey is third on TCU with three sacks. At Edna (Texas) High School, Yendrey ran the first leg in the 4x100 meter regional-qualifying track and field team. • The Frogs had a season-best four sacks at Colorado State.• TCU has at least one sack in 11 of 12 games and at least two sacks in six contests.• The Frogs have at least one sack in 44 of their last 48 games.

NO FRIEND OF RUNNING BACKS • During his 125-game tenure as head coach, Gary Patterson has seen only 21 100-yard rushing games by opposing players.• Included below are a few backs TCU recently held below their season average:

Name Rush Atts.-Yds. Season Avg. Adrian Peterson, Oklahoma, 2005 22-63 100.4 Garrett Wolfe*, Northern Illinois, 2006 20-28 148.3 Anthony Alridge, Houston, 2007 15-29 122.8 Toby Gerhart, Stanford, 2008 15-45 94.7 Chris Brown, Oklahoma, 2008 13-27 87.1 DeMarco Murray, Oklahoma, 2008 13-23 77.1 Gartrell Johnson, Colorado State, 2008 16-30 113.5 Ian Johnson, Boise State, 2008 7-28 58.9 Shawnbrey McNeal, SMU, 2009 13-26 102.7 Eddie Wide, Utah, 2009 14-25 89.9 Jeremy Avery, Boise State, 2009 12-20 94.3 Jacquizz Rodgers, Oregon State, 2010 18-75 98.7 JJ Di Luigi, BYU, 2010 9-11 68.3 Asher Clark, Air Force, 2010 10-18 83.4 Matt Asiata, Utah, 2010 6-27 56.9 Eddie Wide, Utah, 2010 9-32 56.1 Ronnie Hillman, San Diego State, 2010 13-54 108.7

*NCAA’s leading rusher

ASSOCIATED PRESS TOP 25 1. Auburn (36) 13-0 1,473 2. Oregon (23) 12-0 1,462 3. TCU (1) 12-0 1,379 4. Wisconsin 11-1 1,289 5. Stanford 11-1 1,283 6. Ohio State 11-1 1,179 7. Michigan State 11-1 1,101 8. Arkansas 10-2 1,085 9. Oklahoma 11-2 976 10. Boise State 11-1 932 11. LSU 10-2 863 12. Virginia Tech 11-2 817 13. Nevada 12-1 759 14. Missouri 10-2 705 15. Alabama 9-3 628 16. Oklahoma State 10-2 622 17. Nebraska 10-3 608 18. Texas A&M 9-3 601 19. South Carolina 9-4 332 20. Utah 10-2 312 21. Mississippi State 8-4 288 22. West Virginia 9-3 283 23. Florida State 9-4 188 24. Hawaii 10-3 111 25. Connecticut 8-4 74

USA TODAY TOP 25

1. Oregon (34) 12-0 1,450 2. Auburn (24) 13-0 1,437 3. TCU (1) 12-0 1,348 4. Wisconsin 11-1 1,276 5. Stanford 11-1 1,239 6. Ohio State 11-1 1,200 7. Michigan State 11-1 1,104 8. Arkansas 10-2 1,008 8. Oklahoma 11-2 1,008 10. Boise State 11-1 914 11. Virginia Tech 11-2 900 12. LSU 10-2 826 13. Oklahoma State 10-2 718 14. Missouri 10-2 712 15. Nevada 12-1 640 16. Nebraska 10-3 607 17. Texas A&M 9-3 542 18. Alabama 9-3 521 19. Utah 10-2 375 20. South Carolina 9-4 345 21. West Virginia 9-3 261 22. Mississippi State 8-4 255 23. Florida State 9-4 156 24. UCF 10-3 143 25. Hawaii 10-3 98

(first-place votes in parentheses)

Page 19: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L G

AM

E N

OT

ES

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

17BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

FROG SPECIAL TEAMS NOTESA SIX-PEAT• TCU has had the first-team All-MWC return specialist all six seasons it has been in the league (Cory Rodgers, 2005; Brian Bonner, 2006-07; Jeremy Kerley, 2008-10).• Kerley has been named the MWC Special Teams Player of the Year the last two seasons. He’s only the second player in league history to be a two-time recipient of the honor.• At return specialist, Kerley is also just the seventh player to be a three-time first-team All-MWC selection.

THE HUMAN HIGHLIGHT FILM• All-American Jeremy Kerley is one of just two players in the nation to rank in the top 17 in both punt returns (12.9 yards) and kickoff returns (28.0 yards).• Kerley is tied for 14th in kickoff returns and is 17th in punt returns.

CHASING HISTORY • Kerley’s 1,299 career punt return yards rank second all-time at both TCU (Lindy Berry, 1,372, 1946-49) and the MWC (Dexter Wynn, Colorado State, 1,329, 2000-03).• Kerley totaled a season-best 195 return yards (172 kickoff, 23 punt) at SMU.

MOMENTUM CHANGER• Jeremy Kerley has had a flair for the dramatic in providing a big return when TCU needs it most.• After SMU took a 17-14 lead early in the third quarter, Kerley responded with a career-long 83-yard return on the ensuing kickoff. TCU scored three plays later to take the lead for good.• With the Oregon State game tied at 14-14 late in the first half, Kerley had a 34-yard punt return to the Beavers’ 23. The Frogs scored four plays later to take a 21-14 halftime lead.

DON’T FORGET HIM• Curtis Clay returned four punts for 87 yards against New Mexico, including a career-long 50-yard return.• Clay also had a 33-yard effort on his lone return versus San Diego State.• Clay averaged 24.0 yards on five punt returns.

BLOCK PARTIES• Greg Burks had a team-high two punt blocks last season.• The Frogs have totaled 20 blocked kicks, including 16 punt blocks, since 2002.

TAKING A BREAK• TCU did not punt against Air Force, marking its first game without a punt since a 45-14 victory at Colorado State on Nov. 25, 2006.

YES, HE’S THE PUNTER• TCU punter Anson Kelton is a 6-foot-4, 280-pound former high school defensive end.• Kelton has a career-best 42.2 average this season.• Kelton had arguably his top game at TCU in the Fiesta Bowl. He averaged 48.4 yards on eight punts with three inside the 20. Included in his total were 62- and 65-yard punts for the second- and third-longest boots of his career.• Kelton had a career-best 72-yard punt in freezing temperatures at Air Force last season.

THE KING OF THE COFFIN CORNER• Over the last two seasons, Anson Kelton has placed 34 punts inside the 20 with just five touchbacks.

ALMOST THE CENTURY MARK• Anson Kelton (280) weighs 95 more pounds than back-up punter Cale Patterson (185).

THE COVER GAME• Opponents have returned just 15 of 39 TCU punts for a total of 108 yards (7.2 avg.).

TACKLE TALLIES• Jurell Thompson has a team-best 16 tackles and two forced fumbles on special teams.• True freshman Travaras Battle is second on the Frogs with 15 special teams stops, including a TCU season-high four at New Mexico. • Below are TCU’s special teams tackles in 2010:

Name Tackles Jurell Thompson 16 (9 UT, 6 AT, 2 FF) Travaras Battle 15 (10 UT, 5 AT, 1 FF) Kenny Cain 12 (8 UT, 4 AT) Curtis Clay 9 (4 UT, 5 AT) Tanner Brock 7 (7 UT) Greg Burks 8 (4 UT, 4 UT) Malcolm Williams 10 (5 UT, 5 AT) Jercell Fort 5 (3 UT, 2 AT) Tyler Luttrell 5 (2 UT, 3 AT) Colin Jones 4 (2 UT, 2 AT) Tekerrein Cuba 3 (2 UT, 1 AT) Kris Gardner 3 (2 UT, 1 AT) Braylon Broughton 2 (1 UT, 1 AT) Johnny Fobbs 2 (2 AT) Tejay Johnson 2 (1 UT, 1 AT) Kevin Sharples 2 (1 UT, 1 AT) Alonzo Adams 1 (1 AT) Corey Fuller 1 (1 AT) Antoine Hicks 1 (1 UT) Chris Scott 1 (1 UT) Daniel Shelley 1 (1 AT) Luke Shivers 1 (1 AT) Jason Teague 1 (1 UT)

BOOMING THEM• Kickoff specialist Kevin Sharples has 14 touchbacks, nearly tripling his total of five from last season.• Sharples had a career-high tying four touchbacks versus Tennessee Tech.

RESUME AVAILABLE• Kevin Sharples interned this fall in TCU’s IMG Sports office. • IMG Sports is TCU’s multi-media rightsholder. Sharples worked with corporate sponsors and assisting in the Frogs’ community relations efforts.

SPLITTING THE UPRIGHTS• Ross Evans, who appeared on the 2010 Lou Groza Award Watch List, is 11-of-13 on field goals this season.• Over the last two years, Evans has made 26-of-31 attempts.• He is 42-of-51 on field goals in his career.• Evans had a season-long 43-yard field goal at Colorado State.

MAKING HISTORY• Only a junior, Ross Evans is already TCU’s career leader in both extra-points made (175) and attempted (188). • In the regular-season finale at New Mexico, Evans totaled a TCU single-game record nine extra points. The previous mark of eight PATs had been accomplished six times, including twice by Evans.

Page 20: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L GA

ME

NO

TE

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

18 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

FROG TIDBITSMAGIC NUMBER 17• Under head coach Gary Patterson, TCU is 71-2 when allowing 17 points or less.

THE TURNOVER STORY• Over the last six seasons, TCU is 54-1 when ahead (38-1) or even (16-0) in turnover margin and 11-10 when on the negative side.• TCU is plus-9 in turnover margin this season, tops in the MWC and tied for 19th nationally (+0.75 per game).• TCU was a season-best plus-3 at Utah.• The Frogs have not committed a turnover in four of their last 10 contests.• TCU has lost only seven fumbles this season• Since the start of the 2005 campaign, TCU is 65-11. In eight of the 11 defeats, the Frogs were minus-2 or worse in turnover margin. • The Frogs have posted at least one takeaway in 67 of their last 79 contests.

BALL CONTROL• TCU has won 52 of its last 54 games when leading in time of possession.• TCU is tops in the MWC and second in the nation with an average TOP of 34:34, trailing only Stanford (35:08).• TCU has had the time of possession edge in 11 of 12 games this season.• The Frogs had a 40:51 to 19:09 edge in time of possession on San Diego State.• TCU held the ball for over 39 minutes against Utah (39:06 - 20:54) and Oregon State (39:23 - 20:37) with a 36:07 to 23:53 advantage on Baylor.

PLAYING AHEAD• TCU has opened with a lead of at least 10-0 in 25 of its last 38 games.

PRIVATE SCHOOLS• Since 2005, TCU has the best record among the 17 private institutions in the FBS:

Team W-L Pct. 1. TCU 65-11 .855 2. USC 62-14 .816 3. BYU 55-21 .724 4. Boston College 54-23 .701 5. Tulsa 51-25 .671 6. Miami (Fla.) 43-31 .581 7. Notre Dame 42-32 .568 8. Northwestern 41-33 .554 9. Wake Forest 40-35 .533 10. Stanford 34-38 .472

• In addition to TCU, the other private schools are Baylor, Boston College, BYU, Duke, Miami (Fla.), Northwestern, Notre Dame, Rice, SMU, Stanford, Syracuse, Tulane, Tulsa, USC, Vanderbilt and Wake Forest.

FINDING THE SCOREBOARD• At 228 games, TCU has the nation’s third-longest current streak for not being shut out. The Frogs haven’t been blanked since a 32-0 loss at Texas on Nov. 16, 1991:

Team Games Last Shutout 1. Michigan 335 Oct. 20, 1984 at Iowa (26-0) 2. Florida 282 Oct. 29, 1988 vs. Auburn (16-0) 3. TCU 228 Nov. 16, 1991 at Texas (32-0) 4. Air Force 219 Dec. 31, 1992 vs. Mississippi (13-0) 5. Tennessee 209 Sept. 17, 1994 vs. Florida (31-0) • TCU’s streak of 228 games is 12th all-time. Florida State is 11th at 232 games (1988-06).• BYU is the all-time leader at 361 contests in a row (1975-03) without being shut out.

GOOD OMENS• A 27-0 win at Colorado State in this year’s Mountain West Conference opener was a sign of good things to come for the Frogs in league play.• In the four seasons (2005, 2008, 2009, 2010) they won their MWC opener, the Frogs posted a combined 31-1 league record.• In the two years (2006, 2007) it dropped its MWC opener, TCU had a combined league mark of 10-6.

TCU - WISCONSINBY THE NUMBERS

TCU WISPoints Scored 520 520Points Scored/Game 43.3 43.3Opp. Points Scored 137 246Opp. Points Scored/Game 11.4 20.5

First Downs 309 291Opp. First Downs 136 2023rd-Down Conversions Pct. 52.3 50.84th-Down Conversions Pct. 69.2 75.0Rushing Attempts 574 538Yards Rushing 3,134 2,968Yards Rushing/Game 261.2 247.3Opp. Rushing Attempts 345 397Opp. Yards Rushing 1,070 1,580Opp. Yards Rush/Game 89.2 131.7

Passes Attempted 308 255Passes Completed 203 190Completion Pct. 65.9 74.5Yards Passing 2,764 2,434Yards Passing/Game 230.3 202.8Opp. Passes Attempted 302 344Opp. Passes Completed 145 194Opp. Completion Pct. 48.0 56.4Opp. Yards Passing 1,515 2,302Opp. Yards Pass/Game 126.2 191.8

Total Offensive Plays 882 793Total Yards 5,898 5,402Total Yards/Game 491.5 450.2Avg. Yards/Play 6.7 6.8Opp. Offensive Plays 647 741Opp. Total Yards 2,585 3,882Opp. Total Yards/Game 215.4 323.5Opp. Avg. Yards/Play 4.0 5.2

Avg. Poss. Time/Game 34:34 32:39Opp. Avg. Poss. Time/Game 25:26 27:21

TCU - WISCONSINTALE OF THE TAPE

Average height and weight for both teams’ starting lineups: TCU WISOffensive Line 6-4, 317 6-5, 321Tight End 6-4, 265 6-4, 246Quarterback 6-3, 220 6-3, 205Running Back 5-11, 205 5-11, 223Wide Receiver 6-0, 201 6-1, 197Defensive Line 6-3, 279 6-4, 279Linebacker 6-3, 242 6-1, 229Secondary 6-0, 199 5-10, 197

Offensive System Multiple MultipleDefensive System 4-2-5 4-3

Page 21: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L G

AM

E N

OT

ES

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

19BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

FROG POWER• TCU was the only school in the nation last season to reach a BCS game in football, win at least one game at the College World Series in baseball and capture a national championship in another sport (rifle).

SELECT COMPANY• TCU is one of just 20 schools to have won multiple national championships (1935, 1938) and produce a Heisman Trophy winner (Davey O’Brien, 1938).• The other schools are Alabama, Army, Auburn, Florida, Florida State, Georgia, LSU, Miami (Fla.), Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, Notre Dame, Ohio State, Oklahoma, Penn State, Pittsburgh, SMU, Texas and USC.

PLAYING STRAIGHT THROUGH• For the third straight year and fourth time in six seasons, TCU played 11 consecutive weeks to open its season. • After being one of only two teams (Florida International) to have an open date the first weekend last season, TCU played 12 straight weeks.• At 11-0 the last two seasons, 9-2 in 2008 and 10-1 in 2005, TCU is a combined 41-3 the last four times it played 11 straight weeks to open a campaign.

HALF A CENTURY MARK• The 38-7 win over Air Force was the 50th home win in Gary Patterson’s 10-year tenure as head coach. He is now 51-6 at Amon G. Carter Stadium.

HOME SWEET METROPLEX• Seven of TCU’s opening eight games were in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex. Included in the total were five home contests, a road game at SMU in Dallas and a neutral-site meeting with Oregon State at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington.

BRING ON DAYLIGHT AND SATURDAYS• The Frogs are 32-1 in day games over the last six seasons and 33-10 at night. The NCAA constitutes a night game as starting at 5 p.m. or later.• TCU is 58-4 in Saturday contests dating back to the start of the 2005 campaign and 63-5 overall when playing on any day of the week other than Thursday. • During their run of success on Saturdays, the Frogs are 7-7 on other days of the week (1-0 on Sundays, 0-1 on Mondays, 2-0 on Tuesdays, 2-6 on Thursdays, 2-0 on Fridays).• Six of TCU’s 11 losses over the last six years have been on Thursdays. • TCU’s two wins on Tuesdays both came in the Poinsettia Bowl (2006 and 2008).

WINNING AMONG THE BEST• Since taking over as TCU’s head coach, Gary Patterson ranks seventh nationally in wins.

Name Wins Bob Stoops, Oklahoma 108 Mack Brown, Texas 106 Jim Tressel, Ohio State 105 Urban Meyer, Florida, Utah, Bowling Green 103 Brian Kelly, Notre Dame, Cincinnati, Central Mich. 101 Frank Beamer, Virginia Tech 99 Gary Patterson, TCU 97 Mark Richt, Georgia 96

TCU IN THE MWC AND NCAA RANKINGS

Number/ MWC NCAATeam Category Average Rank RankTotal Defense (yards per game) 215.4 1st 1stScoring Defense (points per game) 11.4 1st 1stPass Defense (yards per game) 126.2 1st 1stPass Defense Efficiency (rating) 93.1 1st 1stOpponent First Downs 136 1st 1stOpponent Third-Down Conversions 21.9% (33-of-151) 1st 1stTime of Possession 34:34 1st 2ndRushing Defense (yards per game) 89.2 1st 3rdScoring Offense (points per game) 43.3 1st T-4thPass Efficiency (rating) 167.4 1st 5thKickoff Returns (yards per attempt) 26.7 1st 5thFirst Downs 309 1st 6thTotal Offense (yards per game) 491.5 1st 9thFourth-Down Conversions 69.2% (9-of-13) 1st 15thRed Zone Offense (score %) 87.9% (58-of-66) 1st T-17thTurnover Margin +9 1st T-19thPunt Returns (yards per attempt) 14.8 2nd 5thThird-Down Conversions 52.4% (88-of-168) 2nd 6thRushing Offense (yards per game) 261.2 2nd 8thKickoff Coverage (net yards per kick) 45.7 2nd N/AOpponent Fourth-Down Conversions 40.0% (6-of-15) T-2nd T-18thPenalties (yards per game) 43.5 3rd T-33rdNet Punting (net yards per kick) 36.8 3rd 51stSacks By 140 3rd T-52ndPass Offense (yards per game) 230.3 3rd 53rdField Goals Percentage 84.6% (11-of-13) 3rd N/ASacks Against 9 T-3rd T-7thRed Zone Defense (score %) 81.2% (13-of-16) 4th T-53rd PAT Kicking Percentage 92.9% (65-of-70) T-7th N/AOpponent Penalties (yards per game) 38.8 8th N/A IndividualsAndy Dalton (pass efficiency rating) 167.0 1st 5thJeremy Kerley (all-purpose yards per game) 122.8 1st 43rdJeremy Kerley (kick return average per attempt) 28.0 2nd T-14thJeremy Kerley (punt return average per attempt) 12.9 2nd 17thAndy Dalton (total offense per game) 253.8 2nd 32ndEd Wesley (rushing yards per game) 88.8 2nd 37thRoss Evans (scoring per game) 8.2 2nd 39thRoss Evans (scoring by kick per game) 8.2 2nd N/AWayne Daniels (sacks per game) 0.54 T-2nd N/AWayne Daniels (tackles for loss per game) 1.00 3rd N/ARoss Evans (field-goal percentage) 84.6% (11-of-13) 3rd N/ATejay Johnson (interceptions) 3 T-3rd N/AJeremy Kerley (receptions per game) 4.17 T-3rd N/AWayne Daniels (fumbles recovered) 2 T-3rd N/ATanner Brock (fumbles recovered) 2 T-3rd N/AAlex Ibiloye (fumbles forced) 3 4th T-22ndAndy Dalton (passing yards per game) 219.8 4th 45thColin Jones (tackles for loss per game) 0.88 4th N/AJeremy Kerley (scoring by TD per game) 6.0 5th N/AJosh Boyce (receiving yards per game) 50.2 6th N/AEd Wesley (scoring by TD per game) 5.5 6th N/ATanner Brock (tackles per game) 8.1 8th N/AJeremy Kerley (scoring per game) 6.0 9th N/A

Page 22: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L GA

ME

NO

TE

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

20 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

PRESEASON PREDICTIONS• Included below is where TCU was picked and finished in preseason polls since Gary Patterson’s arrival in 1998:

Year Conference Prediction Finish 1998 WAC 6th, Mtn. Division T-5th, Mtn. Division 1999 WAC 1st T-1st 2000 WAC 1st T-1st 2001 C-USA 4th T-5th 2002 C-USA 4th T-1st 2003 C-USA 1st 2nd 2004 C-USA 4th T-7th 2005 MWC 6th 1st 2006 MWC 1st 2nd 2007 MWC 1st 5th 2008 MWC 3rd 2nd 2009 MWC 1st 1st 2010 MWC 1st 1st

• The 2010 Frogs were the first team in MWC history to be a unanimous first-place pick.• Over the last two seasons, TCU has become just the fourth and fifth teams in the MWC’s 12-year history to finish first after being the preseason pick to win the league.• The Frogs’ previous two conference championships (2005, 2002) came after they were picked no higher than fourth.

NFL DRAFT PICKS FROM MWC TEAMS• TCU 168, BYU 133, San Diego State 133, Utah 131, Colorado State 95, Wyoming 76, New Mexico 61, UNLV 42, Air Force 7.

FROGS AND THE NFL• In Gary Patterson’s tenure as head coach, TCU has had 24 players drafted with a total of 47 in NFL camps.• Twelve former Frogs are on NFL rosters:

Name NFL Team Years Lettered at TCU Aaron Brown, RB Detroit 2005-08 Quincy Butler, CB St. Louis 2004-05 Drew Coleman, CB New York Jets 2004-05 Clint Gresham, DS Seattle 2007-09 David Hawthorne, LB Seattle 2004-07 Robert Henson, LB Washington 2005-08 Jerry Hughes, DE Indianapolis 2006-09 Marshall Newhouse, OT Green Bay 2006-09 Jason Phillips, LB Baltimore 2005-08 Nic Richmond, OT San Diego 2006-09 LaDainian Tomlinson, RB New York Jets 1997-00 Daryl Washington, LB Arizona 2006-09

WINNING SUCCESS• Gary Patterson ranks third among the winningest active FBS coaches.

Name Record Pct. 1. Urban Meyer, Florida 103-22 .824 2. Bob Stoops, Oklahoma 128-31 .805 3. Gary Patterson, TCU 97-28 .776 4. Jim Tressel, Ohio State 240-79-2 .751 5. Joe Paterno, Penn State 401-134-3 .748 6. Mark Richt, Georgia 96-33 .744 7. Brian Kelly, Notre Dame 176-62-2 .738 8. Bobby Petrino, Arkansas 64-23 .736 9. Paul Johnson, Georgia Tech 132-52 .717 10. Steve Spurrier, South Carolina 186-73-2 .716

DID YOU KNOW?• TCU cornerback Greg McCoy (Woodrow Wilson in Dallas) is from one of only two high schools to produce two Heisman Trophy winners.• Davey O’Brien (1938, TCU) and Tim Brown (1987, Notre Dame) are also Woodrow Wilson graduates.• Mater Dei High School in Santa Ana, Calif., produced Heisman winners John Huarte (1964, Notre Dame) and Matt Leinart (2004, USC).

HOW TCU STACKS UP IN THE MOUNTAIN WESTTeam Overall Pct. MWC Pct.TCU 53-10 .841 33-7 .825Utah 94-39 .707 56-26 .683BYU 88-47 .652 59-23 .720Air Force 73-59 .553 42-40 .512Colorado St. 69-66 .511 41-41 .500New Mexico 62-72 .463 41-41 .500Wyoming 47-81 .367 24-58 .293UNLV 44-85 .341 22-60 .268San Diego St. 43-86 .333 30-52 .366

TCU has the top-overall and league winning percentage in Mountain West Conference history.

TOP RECORDS SINCE 1998(PATTERSON ARRIVAL AT TCU)No. Team Record Pct.1. Boise State 138-26 .8412. Ohio State 130-33 .7983. Texas 131-34 .7944. Oklahoma 131-37 .7805. Virginia Tech 128-38 .7716. TCU 122-38 .7637. Florida 125-39 .7628. USC 120-41 .7459. Georgia 121-44 .73310. Miami (Fla.) 117-44 .72711. Oregon 116-45 .72012. Wisconsin 117-47 .713 13. LSU 116-48 .70714. Florida State 117-50 .70115. Nebraska 115-51 .69316. Tennessee 111-52 .68117. Michigan 108-52 .67518. Auburn 109-53 .67319. Boston College 107-55 .66020. Louisville 103-56 .648

MOST WINS THE LAST EIGHT YEARS(2003-2010)No. Team Wins1. Boise State 932. USC 883. Ohio State 85 Oklahoma 855. LSU 836. Texas 827. TCU 81 Virginia Tech 819. Florida 79 Utah 7911. Auburn 76 West Virginia 76 Wisconsin 76 14. Georgia 7515. Boston College 71 Oregon 71 Texas Tech 71

Page 23: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L G

AM

E N

OT

ES

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

21BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

DEFENDING THEIR HOME• TCU has a school record 20-game home winning streak. • The streak is second all-time in Mountain West Conference history, trailing only Utah (21, 2007-10). The Utes’ streak was snapped by TCU’s 47-7 win on Nov. 6.• TCU’s 20 straight home wins rank third for the longest current streak in the nation (Oklahoma 36, Boise State 32). • Since 1999, TCU is 62-6 (.912) in its last 68 home games. • Under Gary Patterson as head coach, the Frogs have a 51-6 home record.• TCU hasn’t lost a Saturday home game since the 2004 season finale against Tulane.• In their last 10 home dates, the Frogs have allowed just 13 touchdowns and outscored their opponents 452-106 (an average margin of 45-11).• The Frogs have recorded five shutouts in their past 26 home dates.

BEST HOME RECORDS SINCE 2003• TCU is third nationally in home record (43-4, .915) over the last eight years:

Team W-L Pct. 1. Boise State 50-1 .980 2. Oklahoma 49-1 .980 (a 17-10 loss to TCU in 2005) 3. TCU 43-4 .915 4. Ohio State 52-5 .912 5. USC 42-5 .894 6. LSU 50-7 .877 7. Troy 34-5 .872 8. Virginia Tech 45-7 .865 9. Texas Tech 42-8 .840 10. Texas 41-9 .820 ROAD WARRIORS• TCU’s MWC record 11-game road winning streak is currently the longest in the nation. The Frogs have also won 13 of their last 14 road contests.• TCU’s 38-14 mark (.731) in road and neutral-site games since 2003 is fourth nationally: Team W-L Pct. 1. USC 46-9 .836 2. Texas 42-10 .808 3. Boise State 41-11 .788 4. TCU 38-14 .731 5. LSU 34-13 .723 6. Ohio State 31-12 .721 7. Florida 35-16 .686 8. Georgia 35-17 .673 9. Auburn 28-14 .667 10. Virginia Tech 33-18 .647

• TCU snapped Utah’s MWC-record 21-game home win streak with a 47-7 victory (Nov. 6).• With a 17-10 win in 2005, TCU gave Oklahoma its only home loss since 2001.• Two of BYU’s five home losses the last six seasons are to TCU. • The Frogs have gone undefeated in road games the last two seasons. Prior to 2009, TCU hadn’t accomplished the feat since 1955.

FROG HOPS • As TCU’s head coach, Gary Patterson is 10-7 against ranked teams.• TCU is 5-5 since the NCAA adopted overtime play in 1996.• The Frogs are 7-5 in short-week games under Patterson.• TCU is 19-6 in regular-season games following a loss under Patterson.• The Frogs have never lost three in a row under Patterson. • TCU hasn’t dropped three straight since a four-game skid in the 1998 campaign.

CHECKING THE LEDGER• After just three winning seasons in 13 years (1985-97), TCU has won 76.3 percent (122-38) of its games since 1998 when Gary Patterson arrived on campus as defensive coordinator. It’s the sixth-best mark nationally in that stretch.• TCU is 581-512-57 (.530) in its football history which began in 1896.

TCU BY THE NUMBERS

2Married players (Jake Kirkpatrick and Malcolm Williams)

on the TCU football team.

2National championships won by TCU (1935 and 1938).

4Top-10 rankings in the last six seasons for TCU.

25Suites to be added on the West side of

Amon G. Carter Stadium when the $105 million renovation occurs immediately after the 2010 season.

80Years that TCU has been playing its home

games at Amon G. Carter Stadium.

94Miles per hour on Jeremy Kerley’s fastball as a

member of the Hutto (Texas) High School baseball team.

114Years TCU has been playing football.

1873Year TCU was founded as AddRan Male and Female

Academy in Thorp Spring, Texas.

1896Year TCU played its first football game, an 8-6 win

over Toby’s Business College.

Page 24: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L GA

ME

NO

TE

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

22 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

2010 MOUNTAIN WEST STANDINGSTeam MWC Pct. Overall Pct.TCU 8-0 1.000 12-0 1.000Utah 7-1 .875 10-2 .833San Diego State 5-3 .625 8-4 .667Air Force 5-3 .625 8-4 .667BYU 5-3 .625 6-6 .500Colorado State 2-6 .250 3-9 .250UNLV 2-6 .250 2-11 .154Wyoming 1-7 .125 3-9 .250New Mexico 1-7 .125 1-11 .083

2010 MOUNTAIN WEST CONFERENCE BOWL SCHEDULENew Mexico BowlBYU vs. UTEPSaturday, Dec. 18Albuquerque, N.M.1 p.m. (CT) - ESPN

MAACO Las Vegas BowlNo. 20 Utah vs. No. 10 Boise StateWednesday, Dec. 22Las Vegas, Nev.7 p.m. (CT) - ESPN

San Diego County Credit Union Poinsettia BowlSan Diego State vs. NavyThursday, Dec. 23San Diego, Calif.7 p.m. (CT) - ESPN

AdvoCare V100 Independence BowlAir Force vs. Georgia TechMonday, Dec. 27Shreveport, La.4 p.m. (CT) - ESPN2

Rose Bowl Game presented by VIZIONo. 3 TCU vs. No. 5 WisconsinSaturday, Jan. 1Pasadena, Calif.4 p.m. (CT) - ESPN

CHARTING TCU’S 2010 OPPONENTSOpponent Record Bowl Game Oregon State 5-7 Season Over Tennessee Tech 5-6 Season Over Baylor 7-5 Texas Bowl - vs. Illinois SMU 7-6 Armed Forces Bowl - vs. ArmyColorado State 3-9 Season Over Wyoming 3-9 Season Over BYU 6-6 New Mexico Bowl - vs. UTEP Air Force 8-4 Independence Bowl - vs. Georgia Tech UNLV 2-11 Season Over No. 20 Utah 10-2 Las Vegas Bowl - vs. Boise State San Diego State 8-4 Poinsettia Bowl - vs. NavyNew Mexico 1-11 Season Over

TCU BY THE NUMBERS

1TCU players who know AP style when writing a

news release (Curtis Clay was a TCU media relations intern).

710-or-more win seasons in the last

nine years (includes six 11-win campaigns)

13Victories needed by Gary Patterson to surpass

Dutch Meyer as TCU’s all-time winningest coach.

24TCU players drafted by NFL teams during

Gary Patterson’s tenure as head coach.

60Percent of the TCU undergraduate student

population that’s female.

71Wins by TCU, compared to two losses, when allowing 17 or fewer points under Patterson.

406LaDainian Tomlinson’s NCAA single-game record

for rushing yards (Nov. 20, 1999 vs. UTEP).

9,971Songs downloaded into TCU football coach Gary Patterson’s iPod.

Page 25: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L G

AM

E N

OT

ES

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

23BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

TCU DEPTH CHARTTCU OFFENSELT 61 Marcus Cannon 6-6 350 Sr. 56 James Dunbar 6-6 305 RFr. LG 55 Kyle Dooley 6-3 315 Jr. 77 Spencer Thompson 6-4 305 Jr. C 76 Jake Kirkpatrick 6-3 305 Sr. 64 James Fry 6-3 290 So. 73 Eric Tausch 6-3 295 RFr. RG 78 Josh Vernon 6-2 300 Sr. 74 Ty Horn 6-5 320 RFr. RT 70 Zach Roth 6-6 316 Sr. 62 Jeff Olson 6-4 282 Jr. 75 John Wooldridge 6-5 310 RFr. TE 84 Evan Frosch 6-4 265 Sr. 80 Logan Brock 6-3 260 Jr. 86 Corey Fuller 6-6 255 So. FB 48 Luke Shivers 6-0 220 Jr. TB 34 Ed Wesley 5-9 200 So. 29 Matthew Tucker 6-1 210 So. 32 Waymon James 5-8 203 RFr. 30 Aundre Dean 6-0 215 So. QB 14 Andy Dalton 6-3 220 Sr. 4 Casey Pachall 6-4 208 RFr. 12 Yogi Gallegos 6-1 208 So. WR 2 Curtis Clay 6-0 193 Sr. 6 Bart Johnson 6-0 195 Sr. 81 Alonzo Adams 6-0 190 Sr. WR 13 Antoine Hicks 6-2 212 Jr. 82 Josh Boyce 6-0 203 RFr. 83 Jonathan Jones 6-4 215 Jr. WR 85 Jeremy Kerley 5-10 192 Sr. 11 Skye Dawson 5-10 175 So. WR 88 Jimmy Young 6-1 208 Sr. 81 Alonzo Adams 6-0 190 Sr.

TCU SPECIALISTSPK 37 Ross Evans 5-9 185 Jr. SN 50 Daniel Shelley 6-1 228 So. H 6 Bart Johnson 6-0 195 Sr. KO 38 Kevin Sharples 5-9 185 Sr. P 47 Anson Kelton 6-4 280 Jr. KR 85 Jeremy Kerley 5-10 192 Sr. 7 Greg McCoy 5-10 181 Jr. PR 85 Jeremy Kerley 5-10 192 Sr.

PRONUNCIATION GUIDETravaras Battle, CB TRUH-VAR-USBraylon Broughton, DE Bray-Lunn BROT-tunTekerrein Cuba, S Tuh-CARE-unEvan Frosch, TE FRAW-shYogi Gallegos, QB GUY-yeah-GOSEAlex Ibiloye, S ee-BEE-loy-yayTejay Johnson, S T.J.Elisha Olabode, CB EE-lie-SHUH O-LUH-BodeCasey Pachall, QB PAW-HALLZach Roth, OT ROETHLuke Shivers, FB SHIV-ursD.J. Yendrey, DT YEN-DREE

TCU DEFENSELE 90 Stansly Maponga 6-2 260 RFr. 99 Braylon Broughton 6-6 272 Jr. 95 Clarence Leatch 6-4 257 Sr. NT 57 Cory Grant 6-2 305 Sr. 93 Jeremy Coleman 6-2 290 So. DT 94 D.J. Yendrey 6-4 268 So. 99 Braylon Broughton 6-6 272 Jr. RE 96 Wayne Daniels 6-2 250 Sr. 91 Matt Anderson 6-3 235 Fr. 52 Ross Forrest 6-4 246 So. MLB 35 Tanner Brock 6-3 246 So. 33 Kris Gardner 6-1 238 Jr. 40 Greg Burks 6-1 222 So. SLB 43 Tank Carder 6-3 237 Jr. 51 Kenny Cain 6-1 210 So. SS 28 Colin Jones 6-0 208 Sr. 17 Tyler Luttrell 6-1 214 Sr. 16 Jurell Thompson 5-11 216 So. FS 3 Tejay Johnson 6-1 212 Sr. 21 Johnny Fobbs 6-1 203 Jr. WS 9 Alex Ibiloye 6-0 195 Sr. 1 Tekerrein Cuba 6-4 210 Jr. CB 27 Jason Teague 6-2 197 Sr. 15 Malcolm Williams 5-11 200 Sr. 18 Travaras Battle 6-0 180 Fr. CB 7 Greg McCoy 5-10 181 Jr. 6 Elisha Olabode 5-10 182 Fr.

CAREER STARTS BY TCU PLAYERS No. Player Starts 1. Andy Dalton, QB 48 2. Tejay Johnson, S 37 3. Marcus Cannon, OT 35 4. Kelly Griffin, NT 34 5. Jimmy Young, WR 32 6. Tank Carder, LB 25 Wayne Daniels, DE 25 Kyle Dooley, OG 25 Jake Kirkpatrick, C 25 10. Cory Grant, DT 24 11. Josh Vernon, OG 23 12. Evan Frosch, TE 22 13. Jeremy Kerley, WR 20 14. Alex Ibiloye, S 18 Bart Johnson, WR 18 16. Antoine Hicks, WR 17 17. Colin Jones, S 16 18. Greg McCoy, CB 14 Jason Teague, CB 14 Ed Wesley, TB 14 21. Tanner Brock, LB 12 22. Stansly Maponga, DE 11 23. Tyler Luttrell, S 9 Zach Roth, OT 9 25. Logan Brock, TE 8 Tekerrein Cuba, S 8 27. Josh Boyce, WR 6 28. D.J. Yendrey, DT 5 29. Jeff Olson, OT 4 30. Spencer Thompson, OG 3 31. Curtis Clay, WR 2 Skye Dawson, WR 2 Blaize Foltz, OG 2 34. Ross Forrest, DE 1 Jonathan Jones, WR 1 Matthew Tucker, TB 1

Page 26: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L GA

ME

NO

TE

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

24 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

TCU TWO-DEEP PLAYER BRIEFSTCU OFFENSELT 61 Marcus Cannon 6-6 350 Sr. Ranked by ESPN’s Mel Kiper Jr. as the fifth-best OT in 2011 NFL Draft; Two-time first-team All-MWC 56 James Dunbar 6-6 305 RFr. Former high school fullback who is one of three Frogs from Class A Maud (Texas) High School LG 55 Kyle Dooley 6-3 315 Jr. Former walk-on who made 20 consecutive starts before missing two games due to injury this season 77 Spencer Thompson 6-4 305 Jr. Started three games this season; Finance major, minoring in accounting and communications C 76 Jake Kirkpatrick 6-3 305 Sr. 2010 Rimington Trophy winner and Rotary Lombardi Award finalist; Can dunk a basketball 64 James Fry 6-3 290 So. Has seen action in eight games this season RG 78 Josh Vernon 6-2 300 Sr. In his second year as a starter; One of three Irving MacArthur (Texas) High School graduates on team 74 Ty Horn 6-5 320 RFr. Redshirted last season in his first year on campus RT 70 Zach Roth 6-6 316 Sr. In his first year as a starter; JC transfer limited to four games in 2009 due to injury 62 Jeff Olson 6-4 282 Jr. Has made four starts, three at right tackle and one at left tackle 75 John Wooldridge 6-5 310 RFr. A 2009 redshirt; Biology major who was an all-state wrestler in high school TE 84 Evan Frosch 6-4 265 Sr. Honorable-mention All-MWC the last two seasons; All 20 career receptions are in TCU victories 80 Logan Brock 6-3 260 Jr. Older brother of TCU LB Tanner Brock; Five starts in ‘10; Tops TCU TEs with six catches for 110 yards 86 Corey Fuller 6-6 255 So. Former high school cornerback with five picks as a junior; Has two receptions for 30 yards FB 48 Luke Shivers 6-0 220 Jr. Converted linebacker who has scored eight TDs on 17 career touches; Four rushing TDs in 2010 TB 34 Ed Wesley 5-9 200 So. Doak Walker Award semifinalist; Tops TCU with 1,065 yards; Frogs’ first 1,000-yard rusher since 2003 29 Matthew Tucker 6-1 210 So. Second on TCU with 694 yards rushing; 15 TDs in just 25 games; Season-best 131 yards vs. SDSU 32 Waymon James 5-8 203 RFr. His 489 yards (5.9 per carry) place third on TCU; Career-high 102 yards vs. SDSU; Four-star recruit 30 Aundre Dean 6-0 215 So. High school teammate of Andy Dalton and Parade All-American; 223 yards rushing (7.0 per carry) in ‘10 QB 14 Andy Dalton 6-3 220 Sr. Two-time MWC Offensive Player of the Year; Davey O’Brien and Maxwell Award semifinalist 4 Casey Pachall 6-4 208 RFr. Four-star recruit who spurned offers from Florida and Notre Dame for TCU; Has played in eight games 12 Yogi Gallegos 6-1 208 So. Played in two games in ‘10; 60.5 completion pct., 2,401 yards, 15 TDs as a senior at Irving HS WR 2 Curtis Clay 6-0 193 Sr. TCU media relations intern last two summers; Five catches this year; Career-high 18 receptions in ‘09 6 Bart Johnson 6-0 195 Sr. Avid fisherman; Second-team Academic All-American; Third on TCU with 30 catches this season WR 13 Antoine Hicks 6-2 212 Jr. 12 catches in ‘10; HS quarterback who originally signed with Texas; 10 TDs on just 32 touches in ‘09 82 Josh Boyce 6-0 203 RFr. Second on TCU with 33 receptions; Two 100-yard games in ‘10; 93-yard TD catch at Utah 83 Jonathan Jones 6-4 215 Jr. His father, Paul, was a TCU defensive end and three-year letterman (1982-84); Three catches in ‘09 WR 85 Jeremy Kerley 5-10 192 Sr. Tops TCU with 50 catches and 10 receiving TDs; Career-high 8 receptions with 3 TDs in SDSU game 11 Skye Dawson 5-10 175 So. Sprinter for TCU track and field team; 12 receptions on the year with four coming vs. Oregon State WR 88 Jimmy Young 6-1 208 Sr. Grad student; Fifth all-time at TCU in receptions (142) and receiving TDs (13), second in yards (2,259) 81 Alonzo Adams 6-0 190 Sr. Second in Houston area with 71 catches as a high school senior; Contributes on special teams

TCU DEFENSELE 90 Stansly Maponga 6-2 260 RFr. Added 31 pounds since coming to TCU; Second on Frogs’ defensive line with 29 tackles; 2 1/2 sacks 99 Braylon Broughton 6-6 272 Jr. Didn’t play football until junior year of HS; Had a TFL and PBU at Utah; Recorded a sack at CSU 95 Clarence Leatch 6-4 257 Sr. Nephew of former Frog and All-MWC safety Stephen Hodge; Has played in four games NT 57 Cory Grant 6-2 305 Sr. Grad student and two-time All-MWC pick; 5 TFL with 3 1/2 sacks in ‘10; 1 1/2 TFL with a sack vs. BYU 93 Jeremy Coleman 6-2 290 So. Six tackles in ‘10; Had sacks against Virginia and New Mexico to open and close ‘09 regular season DT 94 D.J. Yendrey 6-4 268 So. Has started the last four games; Third on TCU with three sacks; Ran on relay team in track in HS 99 Braylon Broughton 6-6 272 Jr. Didn’t play football until junior year of HS; Had a TFL and PBU at Utah; Recorded a sack at CSU RE 96 Wayne Daniels 6-2 250 Sr. First-team FWAA All-American; Unanimous first-team All-MWC; Team-high 12 TFL and 6 1/2 sacks 91 Matt Anderson 6-3 235 Fr. True freshman who was a high school running back last year, averaging 14.1 yards per carry 52 Ross Forrest 6-4 246 So. Made his first career start (LE) in SDSU game; Former walk-on who received a medical hardship in ‘09 MLB 35 Tanner Brock 6-3 246 So. First-team All-MWC; Tops TCU with 97 tackles; Career-high 12 stops with an Int. at Utah 33 Kris Gardner 6-1 238 Jr. Has aspirations of being a stand-up comedian; Nephew of TCU linebackers coach Tony Tademy 40 Greg Burks 6-1 222 So. Special teams star; Huge block on Jeremy Kerley PR vs. Baylor; Had both of TCU’s punt blocks in ‘09 SLB 43 Tank Carder 6-3 237 Jr. First-team AFCA All-American and MWC Defensive Player of the Year; Former BMX world champion 51 Kenny Cain 6-1 210 So. Has totaled 27 tackles this season; Third on TCU with 12 special teams stops SS 28 Colin Jones 6-0 208 Sr. A high school running back; Second-team All-MWC; Second on TCU with 70 stops and 10 1/2 TFL 17 Tyler Luttrell 6-1 214 Sr. Moved from fourth-team receiver to starting safety in ‘09 camp; Late Int. to preserve shutout vs. Wyo. 16 Jurell Thompson 5-11 216 So. Four-star signee; 22 tackles, including a sack, in ‘10; Tops TCU with 16 special teams stops FS 3 Tejay Johnson 6-1 212 Sr. Jim Thorpe Award finalist; Knows sign language; 56 stops are third on TCU; Team-high 3 Int. and 3 FF 21 Johnny Fobbs 6-1 203 Jr. Seven tackles in ‘10; Two stops with a TFL vs. Wyoming and AFA; Scout Team Defensive MVP in ‘07 WS 9 Alex Ibiloye 6-0 195 Sr. Grad student; Forced three fumbles vs. Tenn. Tech; Has 36 tackles with 4 1/2 TFL; Seven stops at Utah 1 Tekerrein Cuba 6-4 210 Jr. Seven career starts including four games in ‘10; Fifth on TCU with 45 tackles; Career-high 12 vs. Wyo. CB 27 Jason Teague 6-2 197 Sr. Originally an LSU signee; In his first year as a starter; Team-high 7 PBU with 2 Int. and 2 FF 15 Malcolm Williams 5-11 200 Sr. Moved this season from safety to cornerback; Four-star recruit who originally signed with Oklahoma 18 Travaras Battle 6-0 180 Fr. True freshman and early enrollee in the spring; Second on TCU with 15 special teams tackles CB 7 Greg McCoy 5-10 181 Jr. One of the fastest Frogs with a 4.32 in the 40; 25 tackles and five PBUs; Two picks in last three games 6 Elisha Olabode 5-10 182 Fr. True freshman who totaled five return TDs (three on punts) last year at Cedar Hill HS; Eight stops in ‘10

TCU SPECIALISTSPK 37 Ross Evans 5-9 185 Jr. 11-of-13 on FGs this season and 42-of-51 in his career; TCU’s all-time leader in PATs (175) H 6 Bart Johnson 6-0 195 Sr. In his second season as the holder; Has at least one reception in 34 consecutive games SN 50 Daniel Shelley 6-1 228 So. First year as the snapper; Last two TCU snappers (Jared Retkofsky, Clint Gresham) reached the NFL KO 38 Kevin Sharples 5-9 185 Sr. Grad student handling kickoff duties for the second straight year; Has 14 touchbacks this season P 47 Anson Kelton 6-4 280 Jr. Has a career-best 42.2 average this season; 34 punts inside 20 with five touchbacks the last two years KR 85 Jeremy Kerley 5-10 192 Sr. Two-time MWC Special Teams Player of the Year; Hornung Award finalist; Averaging 28.0 yards 7 Greg McCoy 5-10 181 Jr. 33.4 average this season; Had a TCU record 35.9 mark in ‘09, including an 81-yard TD at Wyoming PR 85 Jeremy Kerley 5-10 192 Sr. One of only two players nationally in the top 20 in PR and KR; Two punt returns for TDs last season

Page 27: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L G

AM

E N

OT

ES

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

25BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. Cl.-Exp. Hometown (Last School) 1 Tekerrein Cuba S 6-4 210 JR-2L Tyler, Texas (Robert E. Lee) 2 Curtis Clay WR 6-0 193 SR-3L Lockhart, Texas (Lockhart) 3 Tejay Johnson S 6-1 212 SR-3L Garland, Texas (South Garland) 4 Willie Leiss WR 6-1 180 SR-SQ Hurst, Texas (L.D. Bell) 4 Casey Pachall QB 6-4 208 FR-RS Brownwood, Texas (Brownwood) 6 Bart Johnson WR 6-0 195 SR-3L Brownwood, Texas (Brownwood) 6 Elisha Olabode CB 5-10 182 FR-HS Cedar Hill, Texas (Cedar Hill) 7 Logan Hodges WR 5-10 170 FR-HS Mansfield, Texas (Mansfield) 7 Greg McCoy CB 5-10 181 JR-2L Dallas, Texas (Woodrow Wilson) 9 Alex Ibiloye S 6-0 195 SR-3L Garland, Texas (South Garland) 9 Billy Pizor WR 6-0 185 SR-SQ Katy, Texas (Taylor)10 John Brown WR 6-3 200 SR-SQ Overland Park, Kan. (Blue Valley NW)10 Matt Brown QB 6-1 185 FR-HS Allen, Texas (Allen)11 Skye Dawson WR 5-10 175 SO-1L Mesquite, Texas (Dallas Christian)12 Brian Alexis CB 5-9 160 SO-SQ Fort Worth, Texas (Country Day)12 Yogi Gallegos QB 6-1 208 SO-SQ Irving, Texas (Irving)13 Antoine Hicks WR 6-2 212 JR-2L Arlington, Texas (Timberview)14 Andy Dalton QB 6-3 220 SR-3L Katy, Texas (Katy)15 Rick Settle QB 5-11 205 FR-RS Olathe, Kan. (Olathe East)15 Malcolm Williams CB 5-11 200 SR-1L Grand Prairie, Texas (S. Grand Prairie)/Trinity Valley CC16 Chris Atterberry WR 5-11 175 SO-SQ Forney, Texas (Forney)16 Jurell Thompson S 5-11 216 SO-1L Wichita Falls, Texas (Rider)17 Sam Carter QB 6-0 205 FR-HS Alief, Texas (Hastings)17 Tyler Luttrell S 6-1 214 SR-2L Weatherford, Texas (Weatherford)18 Travaras Battle CB 6-0 180 FR-HS San Antonio, Texas (John Jay)19 Antonio Graves S 6-1 210 FR-HS Texarkana, Texas (Plesant Grove)19 Garrett Winsett WR 5-9 180 JR-SQ Austin, Texas (McNeil)20 Ethan Grant TB/WR 5-10 175 FR-HS Coconut Creek, Fla. (North Broward)21 Johnny Fobbs S 6-1 203 JR-2L Fort Worth, Texas (Everman)21 Patrick McDonald WR 6-0 200 SO-SQ New Vernon, N.J. (Madison)22 Jercell Fort TB 5-11 195 JR-1L Los Angeles, Calif. (Hamilton)23 Johnny Catalano WR 5-10 170 FR-HS Plano, Texas (Trinity Christian Acacemy)23 Trenton Thomas S 6-0 190 FR-RS Brenham, Texas (Brenham)24 Danny Heiss S 6-0 199 FR-HS Aledo, Texas (Aledo)24 Dwight Smith TB 5-10 218 FR-HS Carthage, Texas (Carthage)25 Ryan Hightower FB 5-9 220 SR-SQ Albuquerque, N.M. (La Cueva)25 Kevin White CB 5-10 174 FR-HS Round Rock, Texas (Stony Point)26 Jai Cavness TB 5-8 205 JR-2L Houston, Texas (Thurgood Marshall)26 Devin Johnson CB 5-10 188 SO-SQ Oklahoma City, Okla. (Moore)27 Jason Teague CB 6-2 197 SR-1L Carthage, Texas (Carthage)/Tyler JC28 Colin Jones S 6-0 208 SR-3L Bridgeport, Texas (Bridgeport)29 Matthew Tucker TB 6-1 210 SO-1L Tyler, Texas (Chapel Hill)30 Aundre Dean TB 6-0 215 SO-TR Katy, Texas (Katy)/UCLA30 Geoff Hooker S 5-10 180 FR-HS Sherman, Texas (Sherman)31 Cale Patterson P 5-11 185 SO-SQ Kenilworth, Ill. (New Trier)31 Chris Scott S 5-10 185 SO-1L Baton Rouge, La. (Southern Lab)32 Waymon James TB 5-8 203 FR-RS Sherman, Texas (Sherman)33 Kris Gardner LB 6-1 238 JR-2L Arlington, Texas (Martin)34 Ed Wesley TB 5-9 200 SO-1L Irving, Texas (MacArthur)35 Tanner Brock LB 6-3 246 SO-1L Copperas Cove, Texas (Copperas Cove)35 Michael Dunn WR 5-11 170 FR-RS Nashville, Tenn. (Ensworth)36 Sam Hall WR 6-0 185 SO-HS Cleveland, Texas (The Woodlands Christian Acad.)36 Chris Kim S 5-9 175 FR-RS Newton, Mass. (Newton South)37 Ross Evans PK 5-9 185 JR-2L Burnet, Texas (Burnet)37 Kitt Livingston S 6-1 180 FR-RS La Jolla, Calif. (La Jolla)38 Kevin Sharples PK 5-9 185 SR-1L The Woodlands, Texas (Oak Ridge)38 Sam Shutt WR 6-0 190 SO-SQ Savannah, Tenn. (Hardin County)39 Joel Hasley S 6-1 205 FR-RS Aledo, Texas (Aledo)40 Greg Burks LB 6-1 222 SO-1L Houston, Texas (Spring Woods)40 Justin Rose TE 6-2 230 JR-SQ Houston, Texas (North Shore)/Texas Lutheran

No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. Cl.-Exp. Hometown (Last School)41 Jonathan Anderson S 6-1 196 FR-HS Corpus Christi, Texas (Carroll)42 Blake Roberts LB 6-4 225 FR-HS Tyler, Texas (Robert E. Lee)43 Tank Carder LB 6-3 237 JR-2L Sweeny, Texas (Sweeny)44 David Stoltzman LB 6-0 212 SO-SQ Southlake, Texas (Carroll)46 Ryan DeNucci PK 5-10 170 FR-HS Austin, Texas (L.C. Anderson)47 Anson Kelton P 6-4 280 JR-2L Fort Worth, Texas (Aledo)48 Luke Shivers FB 6-0 220 JR-2L Whitehouse, Texas (Whitehouse)49 Stephen Bryant TE 6-5 220 FR-HS New Deal, Texas (New Deal)50 Daniel Shelley SN 6-1 228 SO-SQ Austin, Texas (Hyde Park Baptist)51 Joseph Bates SN 6-2 240 JR-SQ Cherry Hill, N.J. (East)/Monmouth51 Kenny Cain LB 6-1 210 SO-1L Metairie, La. (John Curtis Christian)52 Ross Forrest DE 6-4 246 SO-1L Odessa, Texas (Permian)53 David Johnson DT 6-2 270 FR-HS Argyle, Texas (Argyle)54 Marcus Mallet LB 6-1 216 FR-HS Cleveland, Texas (Cleveland)55 Kyle Dooley OG 6-3 315 JR-2L Papillion, Neb. (La Vista)56 Christopher Cisi LB 5-9 195 FR-RS Thousand Oaks, Calif. (Westlake)56 James Dunbar OT 6-6 305 FR-RS New Boston, Texas (Maud)57 Cory Grant DT 6-2 305 SR-2L Houston, Texas (Alief Elsik)58 Bryant House DT 6-4 267 FR-RS Maud, Texas (Maud)58 Nick Tutcher OL 6-4 255 FR-RS Houston, Texas (St. John’s School)59 Logan Sligar LB 5-11 235 SO-1L Marietta, Ga. (Pope)60 Matt Johnston OT 6-5 300 FR-RS Flower Mound, Texas (Marcus)61 Marcus Cannon OT 6-6 350 SR-3L Odessa, Texas (Odessa)62 Jeff Olson OT 6-4 282 JR-1L McKinney, Texas (McKinney North)63 Justin Trejo OG 6-4 305 SO-SQ St. Paul, Minn. (Cretin-Derham Hall)64 James Fry C 6-3 290 SO-SQ Spring Branch, Texas (Smithson Valley)65 Sean Cady DL 6-3 200 FR-RS Austin, Texas (St. Michael’s)65 Michael Rosner C 6-3 295 SO-1L Sugar Land, Texas (Dulles)66 Blaize Foltz OG 6-4 310 SO-1L Derby, Kan. (Rose Hill)67 Michael Clifford OL 6-3 285 FR-RS Paris, Texas (Paris)68 Trevius Jones OT 6-3 310 SO-SQ Tyler, Texas (Robert E. Lee)69 Kelly Griffin NT 6-1 310 SR-3L Irving, Texas (MacArthur)70 Zach Roth OT 6-6 316 SR-SQ Garden City, Kan. (Holcomb)/Garden City CC71 Michael Thompson C 6-4 315 FR-HS Farmersville, Texas (Farmersville)73 Eric Tausch C 6-3 295 FR-RS Plano, Texas (Jesuit College Prep)74 Ty Horn OT 6-5 320 FR-RS McGregor, Texas (Midway)75 Steven Spencer DE 5-11 235 FR-HS Oceanside, Calif. (Vista)75 John Wooldridge OT 6-5 310 FR-RS Houston, Texas (Episcopal)76 Jake Kirkpatrick C 6-3 305 SR-3L Tyler, Texas (Robert E. Lee)77 Spencer Thompson OT 6-4 305 JR-1L Plainview, Texas (Plainview)78 Josh Vernon OG 6-2 300 SR-2L Irving, Texas (MacArthur)79 Nykiren Wellington OT 6-6 275 FR-HS San Antoino, Texas (Holmes)80 Logan Brock TE 6-3 260 JR-2L Copperas Cove, Texas (Copperas Cove)81 Alonzo Adams WR 6-0 190 SR-2L Houston, Texas (Westside)/Tyler JC82 Josh Boyce WR 6-0 203 FR-RS Copperas Cove, Texas (Copperas Cove)83 Jonathan Jones WR 6-4 215 JR-2L Fort Worth, Texas (Everman)84 Evan Frosch TE 6-4 265 SR-3L Midland, Texas (Robert E. Lee)85 Jeremy Kerley WR 5-10 192 SR-3L Hutto, Texas (Hutto)86 Corey Fuller TE 6-6 255 SO-1L La Vernia, Texas (La Vernia)87 Robert Deck TE 6-4 270 JR-2L Fort Worth, Texas (Nolan Catholic)88 Jimmy Young WR 6-1 208 SR-3L Monroe, La. (Ouachita Parish)89 Walker Dille TE 6-4 242 SO-1L Sugar Land, Texas (Clements)90 Stansly Maponga DE 6-2 260 FR-RS Carrollton, Texas (Hebron)91 Matt Anderson DE 6-3 235 FR-HS Vanderbilt, Texas (Industrial)92 Ray Burns NT 6-1 290 FR-RS New Boston, Texas (Maud)93 Jeremy Coleman NT 6-2 290 SO-1L Missouri City, Texas (Fort Bend Marshall)94 D.J. Yendrey DT 6-4 268 SO-1L Edna, Texas (Edna)95 Clarence Leatch DE 6-4 257 SR-2L Tatum, Texas (Tatum)96 Wayne Daniels DE 6-2 250 SR-3L Kilgore, Texas (Kilgore)97 Jon Koontz DL 6-2 230 FR-RS Aledo, Texas (Aledo)98 Clifton Murphy DE 6-4 230 FR-HS Little Elm, Texas (Little Elm)99 Braylon Broughton DE 6-6 272 JR-1L Dallas, Texas (Hillcrest)

TCU NUMERICAL ROSTER

Page 28: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

20

11 R

OS

E B

OW

L GA

ME

NO

TE

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

26 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. Cl.-Exp. Hometown (Last School) 81 Alonzo Adams WR 6-0 190 SR-2L Houston, Texas (Westside)/Tyler JC12 Brian Alexis CB 5-9 160 SO-SQ Fort Worth, Texas (Country Day)41 Jonathan Anderson S 6-1 196 FR-HS Corpus Christi, Texas (Carroll)91 Matt Anderson DE 6-3 235 FR-HS Vanderbilt, Texas (Industrial)16 Chris Atterberry WR 5-11 175 SO-SQ Forney, Texas (Forney)51 Joseph Bates SN 6-2 240 JR-SQ Cherry Hill, N.J. (East)/Monmouth18 Travaras Battle CB 6-0 180 FR-HS San Antonio, Texas (John Jay)82 Josh Boyce WR 6-0 203 FR-RS Copperas Cove, Texas (Copperas Cove)80 Logan Brock TE 6-3 260 JR-2L Copperas Cove, Texas (Copperas Cove)35 Tanner Brock LB 6-3 246 SO-1L Copperas Cove, Texas (Copperas Cove)99 Braylon Broughton DE 6-6 272 JR-1L Dallas, Texas (Hillcrest)10 John Brown WR 6-3 200 SR-SQ Overland Park, Kan. (Blue Valley NW)10 Matt Brown QB 6-1 185 FR-HS Allen, Texas (Allen)49 Stephen Bryant TE 6-5 220 FR-HS New Deal, Texas (New Deal)40 Greg Burks LB 6-1 222 SO-1L Houston, Texas (Spring Woods)92 Ray Burns NT 6-1 290 FR-RS New Boston, Texas (Maud)65 Sean Cady DL 6-3 200 FR-RS Austin, Texas (St. Michael’s)51 Kenny Cain LB 6-1 210 SO-1L Metairie, La. (John Curtis Christian)61 Marcus Cannon OT 6-6 350 SR-3L Odessa, Texas (Odessa)43 Tank Carder LB 6-3 237 JR-2L Sweeny, Texas (Sweeny)17 Sam Carter QB 6-0 205 FR-HS Alief, Texas (Hastings)23 Johnny Catalano WR 5-10 170 FR-HS Plano, Texas (Trinity Christian Acacemy)26 Jai Cavness TB 5-8 205 JR-2L Houston, Texas (Thurgood Marshall)56 Christopher Cisi LB 5-9 195 FR-RS Thousand Oaks, Calif. (Westlake) 2 Curtis Clay WR 6-0 193 SR-3L Lockhart, Texas (Lockhart)67 Michael Clifford OL 6-3 285 FR-RS Paris, Texas (Paris)93 Jeremy Coleman NT 6-2 290 SO-1L Missouri City, Texas (Fort Bend Marshall) 1 Tekerrein Cuba S 6-4 210 JR-2L Tyler, Texas (Robert E. Lee)14 Andy Dalton QB 6-3 220 SR-3L Katy, Texas (Katy)96 Wayne Daniels DE 6-2 250 SR-3L Kilgore, Texas (Kilgore)11 Skye Dawson WR 5-10 175 SO-1L Mesquite, Texas (Dallas Christian)30 Aundre Dean TB 6-0 215 SO-TR Katy, Texas (Katy)/UCLA87 Robert Deck TE 6-4 270 JR-2L Fort Worth, Texas (Nolan Catholic)46 Ryan DeNucci PK 5-10 170 FR-HS Austin, Texas (L.C. Anderson)89 Walker Dille TE 6-4 242 SO-1L Sugar Land, Texas (Clements)55 Kyle Dooley OG 6-3 315 JR-2L Papillion, Neb. (La Vista)56 James Dunbar OT 6-6 305 FR-RS New Boston, Texas (Maud)35 Michael Dunn WR 5-11 170 FR-RS Nashville, Tenn. (Ensworth)37 Ross Evans PK 5-9 185 JR-2L Burnet, Texas (Burnet)21 Johnny Fobbs S 6-1 203 JR-2L Fort Worth, Texas (Everman)66 Blaize Foltz OG 6-4 310 SO-1L Derby, Kan. (Rose Hill)52 Ross Forrest DE 6-4 264 SO-1L Odessa, Texas (Permian)22 Jercell Fort TB 5-11 195 JR-1L Los Angeles, Calif. (Hamilton)84 Evan Frosch TE 6-4 265 SR-3L Midland, Texas (Robert E. Lee)64 James Fry C 6-3 290 SO-SQ Spring Branch, Texas (Smithson Valley)86 Corey Fuller TE 6-6 255 SO-1L La Vernia, Texas (La Vernia)12 Yogi Gallegos QB 6-1 208 SO-SQ Irving, Texas (Irving)33 Kris Gardner LB 6-1 238 JR-2L Arlington, Texas (Martin)57 Cory Grant DT 6-2 305 SR-2L Houston, Texas (Alief Elsik)20 Ethan Grant TB/WR 5-10 175 FR-HS Coconut Creek, Fla. (North Broward)19 Antonio Graves S 6-1 210 FR-HS Texarkana, Texas (Plesant Grove)69 Kelly Griffin NT 6-1 310 SR-3L Irving, Texas (MacArthur)36 Sam Hall WR 6-0 185 SO-HS Cleveland, Texas (The Woodlands Christian Acad.)39 Joel Hasley S 6-1 205 FR-RS Aledo, Texas (Aledo)24 Danny Heiss S 6-0 199 FR-HS Aledo, Texas (Aledo)13 Antoine Hicks WR 6-2 212 JR-2L Arlington, Texas (Timberview)25 Ryan Hightower FB 5-9 220 SR-SQ Albuquerque, N.M. (La Cueva) 7 Logan Hodges WR 5-10 170 FR-HS Mansfield, Texas (Mansfield)30 Geoff Hooker S 5-10 180 FR-HS Sherman, Texas (Sherman)74 Ty Horn OT 6-5 320 FR-RS McGregor, Texas (Midway)58 Bryant House DT 6-4 267 FR-RS Maud, Texas (Maud) 9 Alex Ibiloye S 6-0 195 SR-3L Garland, Texas (South Garland)

No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. Cl.-Exp. Hometown (Last School)32 Waymon James TB 5-8 203 FR-RS Sherman, Texas (Sherman) 6 Bart Johnson WR 6-0 195 SR-3L Brownwood, Texas (Brownwood)53 David Johnson DT 6-2 270 FR-HS Argyle, Texas (Argyle)26 Devin Johnson CB 5-10 188 SO-SQ Oklahoma City, Okla. (Moore) 3 Tejay Johnson S 6-1 212 SR-3L Garland, Texas (South Garland)60 Matt Johnston OT 6-5 300 FR-RS Flower Mound, Texas (Marcus)28 Colin Jones S 6-0 208 SR-3L Bridgeport, Texas (Bridgeport)83 Jonathan Jones WR 6-4 215 JR-2L Fort Worth, Texas (Everman)68 Trevius Jones OT 6-3 310 SO-SQ Tyler, Texas (Robert E. Lee)47 Anson Kelton P 6-4 280 JR-2L Fort Worth, Texas (Aledo)85 Jeremy Kerley WR 5-10 192 SR-3L Hutto, Texas (Hutto)36 Chris Kim S 5-9 175 FR-RS Newton, Mass. (Newton South)76 Jake Kirkpatrick C 6-3 305 SR-3L Tyler, Texas (Robert E. Lee)97 Jon Koontz DL 6-2 230 FR-RS Aledo, Texas (Aledo)95 Clarence Leatch DE 6-4 257 SR-2L Tatum, Texas (Tatum) 4 Willie Leiss WR 6-1 180 SR-SQ Hurst, Texas (L.D. Bell)37 Kitt Livingston S 6-1 180 FR-RS La Jolla, Calif. (La Jolla)17 Tyler Luttrell S 6-1 214 SR-2L Weatherford, Texas (Weatherford)54 Marcus Mallet LB 6-1 216 FR-HS Cleveland, Texas (Cleveland)90 Stansly Maponga DE 6-2 260 FR-RS Carrollton, Texas (Hebron) 7 Greg McCoy CB 5-10 181 JR-2L Dallas, Texas (Woodrow Wilson)21 Patrick McDonald WR 6-0 200 SO-SQ New Vernon, N.J. (Madison)98 Clifton Murphy DE 6-4 230 FR-HS Little Elm, Texas (Little Elm) 6 Elisha Olabode CB 5-10 182 FR-HS Cedar Hill, Texas (Cedar Hill)62 Jeff Olson OT 6-4 282 JR-1L McKinney, Texas (McKinney North) 4 Casey Pachall QB 6-4 208 FR-RS Brownwood, Texas (Brownwood)31 Cale Patterson P 5-11 185 SO-SQ Kenilworth, Ill. (New Trier) 9 Billy Pizor WR 6-0 185 SR-SQ Katy, Texas (Taylor)42 Blake Roberts LB 6-4 225 FR-HS Tyler, Texas (Robert E. Lee)40 Justin Rose TE 6-2 230 JR-SQ Houston, Texas (North Shore)/Texas Lutheran65 Michael Rosner C 6-3 295 SO-1L Sugar Land, Texas (Dulles)70 Zach Roth OT 6-6 316 SR-SQ Garden City, Kan. (Holcomb)/Garden City CC31 Chris Scott S 5-10 185 SO-1L Baton Rouge, La. (Southern Lab)15 Rick Settle QB 5-11 205 FR-RS Olathe, Kan. (Olathe East)38 Kevin Sharples PK 5-9 185 SR-1L The Woodlands, Texas (Oak Ridge)50 Daniel Shelley SN 6-1 228 SO-SQ Austin, Texas (Hyde Park Baptist)48 Luke Shivers FB 6-0 220 JR-2L Whitehouse, Texas (Whitehouse)38 Sam Shutt WR 6-0 190 SO-SQ Savannah, Tenn. (Hardin County)59 Logan Sligar LB 5-11 235 SO-1L Marietta, Ga. (Pope)24 Dwight Smith TB 5-10 218 FR-HS Carthage, Texas (Carthage)75 Steven Spencer DE 5-11 235 FR-HS Oceanside, Calif. (Vista)44 David Stoltzman LB 6-0 212 SO-SQ Southlake, Texas (Carroll)73 Eric Tausch C 6-3 295 FR-RS Plano, Texas (Jesuit College Prep)27 Jason Teague CB 6-2 197 SR-1L Carthage, Texas (Carthage)/Tyler JC23 Trenton Thomas S 6-0 190 FR-RS Brenham, Texas (Brenham)16 Jurell Thompson S 5-11 216 SO-1L Wichita Falls, Texas (Rider)71 Michael Thompson C 6-4 315 FR-HS Farmersville, Texas (Farmersville)77 Spencer Thompson OT 6-4 305 JR-1L Plainview, Texas (Plainview)63 Justin Trejo OG 6-4 305 SO-SQ St. Paul, Minn. (Cretin-Derham Hall)29 Matthew Tucker TB 6-1 210 SO-1L Tyler, Texas (Chapel Hill)58 Nick Tutcher OL 6-4 255 FR-RS Houston, Texas (St. John’s School)78 Josh Vernon OG 6-2 300 SR-2L Irving, Texas (MacArthur)79 Nykiren Wellington OT 6-6 275 FR-HS San Antoino, Texas (Holmes)34 Ed Wesley TB 5-9 200 SO-1L Irving, Texas (MacArthur)25 Kevin White CB 5-10 174 FR-HS Round Rock, Texas (Stony Point)15 Malcolm Williams CB 5-11 200 SR-1L Grand Prairie, Texas (S. Grand Prairie)/Trinity Valley CC19 Garrett Winsett WR 5-9 180 JR-SQ Austin, Texas (McNeil)75 John Wooldridge OT 6-5 310 FR-RS Houston, Texas (Episcopal)94 D.J. Yendrey DT 6-4 268 SO-1L Edna, Texas (Edna)88 Jimmy Young WR 6-1 208 SR-3L Monroe, La. (Ouachita Parish)

TCU ALPHABETICAL ROSTER

Page 29: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

27BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

TC

U B

OW

L R

EC

OR

DS

2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

TEAM MOST POINTS SCORED37: vs. Northern Illinois, 2006 Poinsettia Bowl31: vs. Boise State, 2003 Fort Worth Bowl28: vs. East Carolina, 1999 Mobile Alabama Bowl28: vs. USC, 1998 Sun Bowl28: vs. Syracuse, 1957 Cotton Bowl

MOST POINTS ALLOWED63: vs. Centre College, 1921 Fort Worth Dixie Classic 40: vs. Georgia, 1942 Orange Bowl34: vs. Boise State, 2003 Fort Worth Bowl34: vs. Oklahoma A&M, 1945 Cotton Bowl

MOST YARDS TOTAL OFFENSE494: vs. Boise State, 2003 Fort Worth Bowl456: vs. Northern Illinois, 2006 Poinsettia Bowl410: vs. Iowa State, 2005 EV1.net Houston Bowl366: vs. Carnegie Tech, 1939 Sugar Bowl

MOST PLAYS TOTAL OFFENSE87: vs. Boise State, 2008 Poinsettia Bowl86: vs. Boise State, 2003 Fort Worth Bowl80: vs. Colorado State, 2002 AXA Liberty Bowl79: vs. Iowa State, 2005 EV1.net Houston Bowl78: vs. Texas Western, 1965 Sun Bowl

MOST FIRST DOWNS28: vs. Boise State, 2008 Poinsettia Bowl26: vs. Boise State, 2003 Fort Worth Bowl23: vs. Northern Illinois, 2006 Poinsettia Bowl21: vs. Iowa State, 2005 EV1.net Houston Bowl19: vs. Houston, 2007 Texas Bowl19: vs. Colorado State, 2002 Liberty Bowl

MOST YARDS RUSHING314: vs. USC, 1998 Sun Bowl280: vs. Boise State, 2003 Fort Worth Bowl275: vs. Boise State, 2008 Poinsettia Bowl233: vs. Mississippi, 1956 Cotton Bowl

MOST RUSHES61: vs. USC, 1998 Sun Bowl57: vs. Boise State, 2003 Fort Worth Bowl54: vs. Mississippi, 1956 Cotton Bowl52: vs. Colorado State, 2002 Liberty Bowl

MOST YARDS PASSING275: vs. Iowa State, 2005 EV1.net Houston Bowl272: vs. Boise State, 2009 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl258: vs. Northern Illinois, 2006 Poinsettia Bowl249: vs. Houston, 2007 Texas Bowl225: vs. Carnegie Tech, 1939 Sugar Bowl

MOST PASSES ATTEMPTED44: vs. Boise State, 2009 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl36: vs. Boise State, 2008 Poinsettia Bowl33: vs. Iowa State, 2005 EV1.net Houston Bowl30: vs. Houston, 2007 Texas Bowl30: vs. Texas A&M, 2001 galleryfurniture.com Bowl29: vs. Boise State, 2003 Fort Worth Bowl29: vs. Northern Illinois, 2006 Poinsettia Bowl

MOST PASSES COMPLETED25: vs. Boise State, 2009 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl21: vs. Houston, 2007 Texas Bowl21: vs. Iowa State, 2005 EV1.net Houston Bowl19: vs. Northern Illinois, 2006 Poinsettia Bowl17: vs. Carnegie Tech, 1939 Sugar Bowl16: vs. Colorado State, 2002 Liberty Bowl

MOST PASSES HAD INTERCEPTED6: vs. Georgia, 1942 Orange Bowl

MOST TIMES PUNTED14: vs. LSU, 1936 Sugar Bowl

BEST PUNTING AVERAGE49.8: vs. Texas A&M, 2001 galleryfurniture.com Bowl

MOST PENALTIES14: vs. Iowa State, 2005 EV1.net Houston Bowl11: vs. Houston, 2007 Texas Bowl11: vs. Texas A&M, 2001 galleryfurniture.com Bowl9: vs. Colorado State, 2002 Liberty Bowl

MOST YARDS PENALIZED134: vs. Iowa State, 2005 EV1.net Houston Bowl87: vs. Texas A&M, 2001 galleryfurniture.com Bowl85: vs. Houston, 2007 Texas Bowl80: vs. Mississippi, 1956 Cotton Bowl80: vs. East Carolina, 1999 Mobile Alabama Bowl80: vs. Northern Illinois, 2006 Poinsettia Bowl

MOST TOUCHDOWNS SCORED5: vs. Northern Illinois, 2006 Poinsettia Bowl4: vs. Boise State, 2003 Fort Worth Bowl4: vs. USC, 1998 Sun Bowl4: vs. Syracuse, 1957 Sun Bowl4: vs. Georgia, 1942 Orange Bowl FEWEST YARDS RUSHING BY AN OPPONENT-16: by East Carolina, 1999 Mobile Alabama Bowl-20; by Northern Illinois, 2006 Poinsettia Bowl-23: by USC, 1998 Sun Bowl

INDIVIDUALMOST YARDS TOTAL OFFENSE281: Andy Dalton vs. Boise State, 2008 Poinsettia Bowl277: Jeff Ballard vs. Northern Iowa, 2006 Poinsettia Bowl275: Jeff Ballard vs. Iowa State, 2005 EV1.net Houston Bowl270: Brandon Hassell vs. Boise State, 2003 Fort Worth Bowl266: Andy Dalton vs. Houston, 2007 Texas Bowl233: Davey O’Brien vs. Carnegie Tech, 1939 Sugar Bowl

MOST PLAYS TOTAL OFFENSE51: Andy Dalton vs. Boise State, 2008 Poinsettia Bowl49: Jeff Ballard vs. Iowa State, 2005 EV1.net Houston Bowl45: Brandon Hassell vs. Boise State, 2003 Fort Worth Bowl41: Andy Dalton vs. Houston, 2007 Texas Bowl40: Jeff Ballard vs. Northern Illinois, 2006 Poinsettia Bowl

MOST YARDS RUSHING185: Basil Mitchell vs. USC, 1998 Sun Bowl124: LaDainian Tomlinson vs. East Carolina, 1999 Mobile Alabama Bowl118: LaDainian Tomlinson vs. Southern Miss, 2000 GMAC Mobile Alabama Bowl117: Lonta Hobbs vs. Boise St., 2003 Fort Worth Bowl115: Bobby Jack Floyd vs. Kentucky, 1952 Cotton Bowl

MOST RUSHES36: LaDainian Tomlinson vs. East Carolina, 1999 Mobile Alabama Bowl28: LaDainian Tomlinson vs. Southern Miss, 2000 GMAC Mobile Alabama Bowl28: Patrick Batteaux vs. USC, 1998 Sun Bowl23: Lonta Hobbs vs. Boise St., 2003 Fort Worth Bowl

MOST YARDS PASSING275: Jeff Ballard vs. Iowa State, 2005 EV1.net Houston Bowl272: Andy Dalton vs. Boise State, 2009 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl258: Jeff Ballard vs. Northern Illinois, 2006 Poinsettia Bowl249: Andy Dalton vs. Houston, 2007 Texas Bowl225: Davey O’Brien vs. Carnegie Tech, 1939 Sugar Bowl225: Kent Nix vs. Texas Western, 1965 Sun Bowl

MOST PASSES ATTEMPTED44: Andy Dalton vs. Boise State, 2009 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl35: Andy Dalton vs. Boise State, 2008 Poinsettia Bowl33: Jeff Ballard vs. Iowa State, 2005 EV1.net Houston Bowl30: Andy Dalton vs. Houston, 2007 Texas Bowl30: Casey Printers vs. Texas A&M, 2001 galleryfurniture.com Bowl29: Jeff Ballard vs. Northern Illinois, 2006 Poinsettia Bowl

MOST PASSES COMPLETED25: Andy Dalton vs. Boise State, 2009 Fiesta Bowl22: Andy Dalton vs. Boise State, 2008 Poinsettia Bowl21: Andy Dalton vs. Houston, 2007 Texas Bowl21: Jeff Ballard vs. Iowa State, 2005 EV1.net Houston Bowl

19: Jeff Ballard vs. Northern Illinois, 2006 Poinsettia Bowl17: Davey O’Brien vs. Carnegie Tech, 1939 Sugar Bowl

MOST PASS RECEPTIONS7: Earl Clark vs. Carnegie Tech,1939 Sugar Bowl7: Adrian Madise vs. Texas A&M, 2001 galleryfurniture.com Bowl6: Walter Bryant vs. Boise State, 2008 Poinsettia Bowl6: Reggie Harrell vs. Boise State, 2003 Fort Worth Bowl6: Quentily Harmon vs. Northern Illinois, 2006 Poinsettia Bowl

MOST YARDS RECEIVING107: Reggie Harrell vs. Boise State, 2003 Fort Worth Bowl97: Michael DePriest vs. Iowa State, 2005 EV1.net Houston Bowl94: Quentily Harmon vs. Northern Illinois, 2006 Poinsettia Bowl90: James Maness vs. West Virginia, 1984 Bluebonnet Bowl

MOST PUNTS14: Sammy Baugh vs. LSU, 1936 Sugar Bowl

BEST PUNTING AVERAGE49.8: Joey Biasatti vs. Texas A&M, 2001 galleryfurniture.com Bowl

MOST POINTS SCORED18: Jeff Ballard vs. Northern Illinois, 2006 Poinsettia Bowl16: L.D. Meyer vs. Marquette, 1937 Cotton Bowl16: Bruce Alford vs. Georgia, 1942 Orange Bowl16: Jim Swink vs. Mississippi, 1956 Cotton Bowl

MOST TOUCHDOWNS SCORED3: Jeff Ballard vs. Northern Illinois, 2006 Poinsettia Bowl2: Cory Rodgers vs. Boise St., 2003 Fort Worth Bowl2: LaDainian Tomlinson vs. Southern Miss, 2000 Mobile Bowl2: LaDainian Tomlinson vs. East Carolina, 1999 Mobile Bowl2: Patrick Batteaux vs. USC, 1998 Sun Bowl2: Basil Mitchell vs. USC, 1998 Sun Bowl2: L.D. Meyer vs. Marquette, 1937 Cotton Bowl2: Bruce Alford vs. Georgia, 1942 Orange Bowl2: Jim Swink vs. Mississippi, 1956 Cotton Bowl

MOST PUNT RETURNS6: Brian Bonner vs. Northern Illinois, 2006 Poinsettia Bowl

MOST PUNT RETURN YARDS89: Brian Bonner vs. Northern Illinois, 2006 Poinsettia Bowl

MOST KICKOFF RETURNS5: LaDainian Tomlinson vs. USC, 1998 Sun Bowl

MOST KICKOFF YARDS RETURNS91: LaDainian Tomlinson vs. USC, 1998 Sun Bowl89: LaTarence Dunbar vs. Texas A&M, 2001 galleryfurniture.com Bowl

MOST INTERCEPTION RETURN YARDS50: Marvin Godbolt vs. Colorado State, 2002 Liberty Bowl

LONGEST INTERCEPTION RETURN50: Marvin Godbolt vs. Colorado State, 2002 Liberty Bowl

Andy Dalton was named MVP for both the 2007 Texas Bowl and 2008 Poinsettia Bowls while leading TCU to wins both years.

B OWL R ECOR DS

Page 30: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

BIO

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

28 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

2010 I REDSHIRT FRESHMAN SEASONRivals.com second-team freshman All-American ... CollegeFootballNews.com honorable-mention freshman All-American ... exploded onto the collegiate scene after a redshirting in 2009, pacing all TCU receivers with 602 receiving yards, playing in 12 games ... also leads all Frogs by averaging 50.2 receiving yards per game, ranking sixth in the Mountain West Conference ... his 33 receptions are second on the team and the most by a TCU freshman since Cory Rodgers’ 37 in 2003 ... earned starts in six of the last seven games for the Frogs ... ranks fourth among TCU offensive players in touchdowns (6) and scoring (36) ... recorded two 100+ yard performances ... totaled a career-high 127 yards on eight receptions against BYU, reaching the end zone on grabs of 20 and 35 yards ... his eight catches against BYU were the most in a game by a Frog since Donald Massey had eight in a 2006 and he totaled the most receiving yards by a TCU freshman since Rodgers had 171 on six catches at Houston in 2003 ... had a breakout game at Utah, pulling in three catches for 126 and two touchdowns ... had a 93-yard TD catch against the Utes that is listed as the third longest play from scrimmage in TCU history ... he tallied a 54-yard touchdown grab against UNLV ... recorded his first career score on a 24-yard pass in the Frogs’ 62-7 win over Tennessee Tech ... enjoyed multi-catch outputs in nine of TCU’s 12 games ... posted a reception in all but one game.

BOYCE’S CAREER STATSRECEIVING Year GP/S Rec Yds Avg TD Long2010 12/6 33 602 18.2 6 93Totals 12/6 33 602 18.2 6 93

2010 GAME-BY-GAME-STATSRECEIVING Opponent Rec Yds Avg TD LongOregon State 1 5 5.0 0 5Tennessee Tech 3 70 23.3 1 32Baylor 3 28 9.3 0 13SMU 1 8 8.0 0 8Colorado State 4 44 11.0 0 17Wyoming 0 0 0.0 0 0BYU 8 127 15.9 2 35Air Force 3 49 16.3 0 27UNLV 2 64 32.0 1 54Utah 3 126 42.0 2 93SDSU 2 31 15.5 0 19New Mexico 3 50 16.7 0 28Totals 33 602 18.2 6 93

BOYCE’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHS RECEIVINGReceptions: 8 vs. BYU in 2010 Long: 93 at Utah in 2010Yards: 127 vs. BYU in 2010 Touchdowns: 2, 2x; last at Utah in 2010

82 WIDE RECEIVERRS FRESHMAN I 6-0 I 203 I RS

COPPERAS COVE, TEXASCOPPERAS COVE HS

JOSH BOYCE

2010 I JUNIOR SEASONMade five starts while appearing in all 12 games … topped all TCU tight ends with six receptions for 110 yards … hauled in touchdown grabs in the last two games of the regular season ... his first collegiate touchdown reception was an 15-yard grab in the 40-35 win over San Diego State and the final game in the current Amon G. Carter Stadium … also scored on a 21-yard grab at New Mexico ... had a career-long 29-yard catch versus Baylor … recorded the first multi-catch game of his career with a pair against Wyoming ... also had a 23-yard reception at Utah.

BROCK’S CAREER STATSRECEIVING Year GP/S Rec Yds Avg TD Long 2008 13/0 0 0 0.0 0 02009 12/1 5 67 13.4 0 182010 12/5 6 110 18.3 2 29 Totals 37/6 11 177 16.1 2 29

80 TIGHT ENDJUNIOR I 6-3 I 260 I 2L

COPPERAS COVE, TEXASCOPPERAS COVE HS

LOGAN BROCK

2010 I SENIOR SEASONAppeared in all 12 games … his lone reception was an 11-yard grab in the Frogs’ 62-7 win against Tennessee Tech … contributed one tackle on special teams.

ADAMS’ CAREER STATSGames Played/Started: 38/0 (12/0 in 2010, 13/0 in 2009; 13/0 in 2008)Receptions: 1 for 11 yards in 2010, 1 for 5 yards in 2008

81WIDE RECEIVERSENIOR I 6-0 I 190 I 2L

HOUSTON, TEXASWESTSIDE HS / TYLER JC

ALONZO ADAMS

2010 | FRESHMAN SEASON One of three true freshmen to see action for TCU in 2010, joining defensive backs Travaras Battle and Elisha Olabode ... appeared in nine games, totaling four tackles ... recorded his first career stop against Oregon State ... amassed a season-high two tackles versus the Beavers ... earned his first tackle for loss and forced fumble in the Frogs’ 62-7 win over Tennessee Tech ... also posted tackles against MWC foes Air Force and UNLV.

ANDERSON’S CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2010 8/0 3 1 4 1.0-5 0-0 0 0 0 1Totals 8/0 3 1 4 1.0-5 0-0 0 0 0 1

91 DEFENSIVE ENDFRESHMAN I 6-3 I 235 I HS

VANDERBILT, TEXASINDUSTRIAL HS

MATT ANDERSON

2010 | FRESHMAN SEASON One of three true freshmen to see action for TCU in 2010, joining defensive end Matt Anderson and defensive back Elisha Olabode ... made an immediate impact for TCU at cornerback and on special teams coverage, appearing in all 12 games ... ranks second on the team in special teams tackles, totaling 14 stops ... posted his first career tackle against Baylor ... enjoyed a career-high four tackles and forced a fumble at New Mexico ... also made a pair of stops against Colorado State and Air Force.

BATTLE’S CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2010 12/0 10 6 16 0.0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1Totals 12/0 10 6 16 0.0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1

18 CORNERBACKFRESHMAN I 6-0 I 180 I HS

SAN ANTONIO, TEXASJOHN JAY HS

TR AVAR AS BAT T L E

Page 31: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

BIO

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

29BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

2010 I SOPHOMORE SEASONSI.com honorable-mention All-American ... earned first-team All-Mountain West Conference considerations after leading TCU’s defense in tackles (97) and fumble recoveries (2) ... SI.com Midseason All-American ... listed eighth overall in the MWC with an 8.1 average tackles per game ... recorded a career-high 12 tackles at Utah, earning MWC Defensive Player of the Week honors ... also hauled in his first career interception against the Utes, returning the ball 57 yards to the Utah 4 to set up a TCU touchdown ... led TCU in tackles seven times this season ... turned in a career-high eight solo stops against BYU ... also tallied seven solo tackles against Air Force and San Diego State ... recorded double-digit tackles in four of TCU’s eight MWC games (Colorado State, BYU, Utah, New Mexico) ... contributed seven stops on special teams ... enjoyed fumble recoveries against Tennessee Tech and Colorado State ... chipped in a tackle for loss in half of TCU’s 12 games ... posted sacks against Tennessee Tech, SMU and San Diego State.

BROCK’S CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2009 13/0 21 11 32 1.0-2 0.0-0 0 0 1 12010 12/12 53 44 97 5.5-15 2.0-9 1 3 2 0Totals 25/12 74 55 129 6.5-17 2.0-9 1 3 3 1

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSDEFENSE Opponent UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FFOregon State 3 3 6 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 1 0 0Tennessee Tech 2 7 9 1.5-7 0.5-4 0 0 1 0Baylor 3 1 4 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0SMU 2 2 4 1.0-2 1.0-2 0 1 0 0Colorado State 5 5 10 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 1 0Wyoming 3 4 7 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0BYU 8 3 11 1.0-1 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Air Force 7 1 8 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0UNLV 3 3 6 1.0-1 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Utah 6 6 12 0.0-0 0.0-0 1 1 0 0SDSU 7 2 9 0.5-3 0.5-3 0 0 0 0New Mexico 4 7 11 0.5-1 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Totals 53 44 97 5.5-15 2.0-9 1 3 2 0

BROCK’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSDEFENSETackles: 12 at Utah in 2010Solo Tackles: 8 vs. BYU in 2010Tackles for Loss: 1.5 vs. Tennessee Tech in 2010Sacks: 1.0 at SMU in 2010Interceptions: 1 at Utah in 2010Forced Fumbles: 1 vs. Texas State in 2009Fumble Recoveries: 1, 3x; last at Colorado State in 2010Pass Breakups: 1, 3x; last at Utah in 2010

35 LINEBACKERSOPHOMORE I 6-3 I 246 I 1L

COPPERAS COVE, TEXASCOPPERAS COVE HS

TANNER BROCK

2010 I JUNIOR SEASONGave TCU solid depth at the defensive end position … played in all 12 regular season games … registered 11 tackles, including five solo stops, during the year ... recorded his first career sack in the 27-0 win at Colorado State ... totaled 2.0 tackles for loss this fall ... set a single-game career-high with three tackles against SMU ... tallied two tackles, one for a loss, and recovered a fumble in the 62-7 win over Tennessee Tech ... contributed a stop in seven of TCU’s 12 games ... also notched a pair of pass deflections and pass breakups.

99 DEFENSIVE ENDJUNIOR I 6-6 I 272 I 1L

DALLAS, TEXASHILLCREST HS

BRAYLON BROUGHTON

2010 I SOPHOMORE SEASONA major contributor on special teams, while adding depth at linebacker … saw action in all 12 games... enjoyed a pair of tackles against Baylor, Wyoming and New Mexico ... has tacked on a stop in six of TCU’s 12 games this fall.

BURKS’ CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2009 13/0 2 1 3 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 02010 12/0 9 0 9 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Totals 25/0 11 1 12 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0

40 LINEBACKERSOPHOMORE I 6-1 I 222 I 1L

HOUSTON, TEXASSPRING WOODS HS

GREG BURKS

2010 I SOPHOMORE SEASONPlayed in all 12 games … 11 of his 27 season tackles came on special teams … exploded for a career-high five tackles in back-to-back games against Air Force and UNLV ... had three tackles, one for a loss, and recovered a fumble in the 62-7 win over Tennessee Tech ... tallied a stop in all but one game this season.

CAIN’S CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2009 8/0 2 2 4 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 02010 12/0 18 9 27 1.0-1 0.0-0 0 1 1 0Totals 20/0 20 11 31 1.0-1 0.0-0 0 1 1 0

51 LINEBACKERSOPHOMORE I 6-1 I 210 I 1L

METAIRIE, LA.JOHN CURTIS CHRISTIAN SCHOOL

KENNY CAIN

BROUGHTON’S CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2008 3/0 1 0 1 1.0-2 0.0-0 0 0 0 02009 13/0 3 5 8 0.5-0 0.0-0 0 1 1 02010 12/0 5 6 11 2.0-3 1.0-1 0 2 1 0Totals 28/0 9 11 20 3.5-5 1.0-1 0 3 2 0

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSDEFENSE Opponent UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FFOregon State 0 1 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Tennessee Tech 1 1 2 0.5-1 0.0-0 0 0 1 0Baylor 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0SMU 0 3 3 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 1 0 0Colorado State 1 0 1 1.0-1 1.0-1 0 0 0 0Wyoming 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0BYU 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Air Force 2 0 2 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0UNLV 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Utah 0 1 1 0.5-1 0.0-0 0 1 0 0SDSU 1 0 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0New Mexico 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Totals 5 6 11 2.0-3 1.0-1 0 2 1 0

BROUGHTON’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSDEFENSETackles: 3 at SMU in 2010Solo Tackles: 2 vs. Air Force in 2010Tackles for Loss: 1.0 at Colorado State in 2010Sacks: 1.0 at Colorado State in 2010Pass Breakups: 1, 3x; last at Utah in 2010Fumble Recoveries: 1, 2x; last vs. Tennessee Tech in 2010

Page 32: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

BIO

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

30 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

2010 I SENIOR SEASONSure-handed receiver and a major contributor on special teams ... one of only three Frogs to play in all 51 games in the last four seasons, joining fellow wide outs Bart Johnson and Jimmy Young ... hauled in five receptions for 44 yards this season ... enjoyed a two-catch performance against Tennessee Tech ... also had catches against Oregon State, Baylor and SMU ... tallied nine tackles on kick and punt coverage ... served as an impressive punt returner in the latter stages of the season, averaging 24.0 yards per return ... totaled 87 yards on four returns at New Mexico ... was recognized as the Fellowship of Christian Athletes TCU Athlete of the Year by the Greater Fort Worth Chapter of the FCA.

CLAY’S CAREER STATSRECEIVING Year GP/S Rec Yds Avg TD Long2007 13/0 2 24 12.0 0 132008 13/1 9 98 10.9 0 262009 13/0 18 241 13.4 3 472010 12/1 5 44 8.8 0 13Totals 51/2 34 407 12.0 3 47

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSRECEIVING Opponent Rec Yds Avg TD LongOregon State 1 13 13.0 0 13Tennessee Tech 2 12 6.0 0 6Baylor 1 11 11.0 0 11SMU 1 8 8.0 0 8Colorado State 0 0 0.0 0 0Wyoming 0 0 0.0 0 0BYU 0 0 0.0 0 0Air Force 0 0 0.0 0 0UNLV 0 0 0.0 0 0Utah 0 0 0.0 0 0SDSU 0 0 0.0 0 0New Mexico 0 0 0.0 0 0Totals 5 44 8.8 0 13

CLAY’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSRECEIVINGReceptions: 3, 2x; last vs. Colorado State in 2009Yards: 70 vs. Colorado State in 2009Long: 47 yards vs. Colorado State in 2009Touchdowns: 1, 3x; last vs. Boise State in 2009

2 WIDE RECEIVERSENIOR I 6-0 I 193 I 3L

LOCKHART, TEXASLOCKHART HS

CURTIS CLAY

2010 I SENIOR SEASONRivals.com third-team All-American ... SI.com honorable-mention All-American ... had a dominant season at left tackle … a first-team All-Mountain West Conference selection … ranked fifth among offensive tackles for the 2011 NFL Draft by ESPN’s Mel Kiper, Jr.started all 12 games … anchors an offensive line that led TCU to single-season records in touchdowns (70) and points scored (520) ... instrumental in TCU tying for seventh nationally in allowing just 0.75 sacks per game … has also helped the Horned Frogs rank fourth in scoring (43.3 points per game), seventh in the country in total offense (491.5 yards per game) and ninth in rushing (261.2 yards per game).

CANNON’S CAREER STATSGames Played/Started: 49/36 (12/12 in 2010; 13/13 in 2009; 11/11 in 2008; 13/0 in 2007)

61OFFENSIVE TACKLESENIOR I 6-6 I 350 I 3L

ODESSA, TEXASODESSA HS

MARCUS CANNON

2010 I JUNIOR SEASONAFCA first-team All-American ... Associated Press second-team All-American ... CBSSports.com second-team All-American ... SI.com honorable-mention All-American ... a first-team All-Mountain West Conference selection ... started all 12 games ... anchors a Frog defense that leads the nation in total defense (215.4 yards) ... totaled 54 tackles, including 6.5 for loss and 2.5 sacks ... sits behind only senior safety Tejay Johnson (167) on the career active tackles list with 148 stops ... matched his career-high with 10 tackles against UNLV, including one tackle for loss ... also led TCU in tackles against SMU with eight stops ... contributed sacks against Tennessee Tech, Colorado State and Air Force ... tallied his lone interception of the year against BYU ... recorded a tackle in all but one game (San Diego State) ... listed a tackle for loss in four of the Frogs’ final five games ... frustrated quarterbacks with a pass breakup in five games ... had a fumble recovery against New Mexico.

CARDER’S CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2008 11/0 4 5 9 1.0-1 0.0-0 0 1 0 02009 13/13 51 38 89 10.0-29 2.0-8 1 10 1 12010 12/12 31 23 54 6.5-19 2.5-12 1 5 1 0Totals 36/25 86 66 152 17.5-49 4.5-20 2 16 2 1

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSDEFENSE Opponent UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FFOregon State 3 0 3 1.0-1 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Tennessee Tech 3 2 5 0.5-5 0.5-5 0 0 0 0Baylor 5 1 6 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 1 0 0SMU 5 3 8 0.5-0 0.0-0 0 1 0 0Colorado State 5 1 6 1.5-2 1.0-1 0 0 0 0Wyoming 2 2 4 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 1 0 0BYU 1 0 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 1 1 0 0Air Force 2 0 2 1.0-6 1.0-6 0 0 0 0UNLV 3 7 10 1.0-2 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Utah 1 4 5 0.5-1 0.0-0 0 0 0 0SDSU 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 1 0 0New Mexico 1 3 4 0.5-2 0.0-0 0 0 1 0Totals 31 23 54 6.5-19 2.5-12 1 5 1 0

CARDER’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSDEFENSETackles: 10, 2x; last at UNLV in 2010Solo Tackles: 7 vs. New Mexico in 2009Tackles for Loss: 4.0-11 vs. New Mexico in 2009Sacks: 1.0, 4x; last vs. Air Force in 2010Pass Breakups: 2, 3x; last vs. UNLV in 2009Fumbles Forced: 1 at Wyoming in 2009Fumbles Recovered: 1, 2x; last at New Mexico in 2010Interceptions: 1, 2x; last vs. BYU in 2010

43 LINEBACKERJUNIOR I 6-2 I 237 I 2L

SWEENY, TEXASSWEENY HS

TANK CARDER

2010 I SOPHOMORE SEASONSaw extensive action on the defensive line, playing in 11 games ... totaled six tackles during the year ... recorded a multi-tackle performance, including a tackle for loss, in the 62-7 win against Tennessee Tech ... registered stops in four of the Frogs’ first five games.

COLEMAN’S CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2009 13/0 6 3 9 2.5-9 2.0-8 0 0 0 02010 11/0 2 4 6 0.5-1 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Totals 24/0 8 7 15 3.0-10 2.0-8 0 0 0 0

93 NOSE TACKLESOPHOMORE I 6-2 I 290 I 1L

MISSOURI CITY, TEXASFORT BEND MARSHALL HS

JEREMY COLEMAN

Page 33: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

BIO

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

31BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

COLEMAN’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSDEFENSE:Tackles: 2, 3x; last vs. Tennessee Tech in 2010Solo Tackles: 1, 8x; last vs. Baylor in 2010Tackles for Loss: 1.0, 2x; last vs. New Mexico in 2009Sacks: 1.0, 2x; last vs. New Mexico in 2009

2010 I JUNIOR SEASONAppeared in all 12 games, starting five ... ranks fifth on the TCU defense in tackles ... recorded a career-high 12 tackles, nine solo, against Wyoming ... followed that performance with nine total tackles at home against BYU ... contributed a tackle for loss in road wins at Colorado State and New Mexico ... his lone pass breakup of the season came at CSU ... also played a major part on special teams, tallying three tackles ... currently sits seventh among active TCU tackle leaders.

CUBA’S CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2008 7/0 7 5 12 0.5-1 0.0-0 0 0 0 02009 10/2 15 6 21 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 1 0 02010 12/5 30 15 45 2.0-3 0.0-0 0 1 0 0Totals 29/7 52 26 78 2.5-4 0.0-0 0 2 0 0

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSDEFENSE Opponent UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FFOregon State 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Tennessee Tech 1 0 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Baylor 1 0 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0SMU 0 1 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Colorado State 5 1 6 1.0-1 0.0-0 0 1 0 0Wyoming 9 3 12 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0BYU 5 4 9 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Air Force 1 0 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0UNLV 3 4 7 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Utah 2 0 2 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0SDSU 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0New Mexico 3 2 5 1.0-2 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Totals 30 15 45 2.0-3 0.0-0 0 1 0 0

CUBA’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSDEFENSETackles: 12 vs. Wyoming in 2010Solo Tackles: 9 vs. Wyoming in 2010Tackles for Loss: 1.0 at New Mexico in 2010Pass Breakups: 1, 2x at Colorado State in 2010

1 SAFETYJUNIOR I 6-4 I 210 I 2L

TYLER, TEXASROBERT E. LEE HS

TEKERREIN CUBA 2010 I SENIOR SEASONManning Award finalist ... Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award finalist ... Davey O’Brien Award semifinalist ... Maxwell Award semifinalist ... one of 15 “Players to Watch” for the Walter Camp Football Foundation Player of the Year Award ... Mountain West Conference Offensive Player of the Year ... SI.com honorable-mention All-American ... first-team All-Mountain West Conference ... finished ninth in Heisman Trophy voting, including four first-place votes ... Walter Camp Foot-ball Foundation National Offensive Player of the Week (at Utah) ... Rivals.com National Offen-sive Player of the Week (at Utah) ... earned an ESPN.com Helmet Sticker after his performance at Baylor ... a three-time Manning Award Star of the Week (Baylor, Wyoming, Utah) ... also a three-time MWC Offensive Player of the Week (Baylor, BYU, Utah) ... ranks fifth in the nation in passing efficiency with a 167.03 rating, boasting his second consecutive season in the top 10 ... has thrown for a TCU single-season record 26 touchdown passes with just six interceptions ... his 66.2 completion percentage is on pace to set another TCU single-season mark ... fourth on TCU in rushing with 407 yards on a career-best 5.3 per carry average ... produced three of the top-seven single-game completion percentages in TCU history ... completed 21-of-23 passes for 267 yards with two touchdowns and no interceptions in a 45-10 win over Baylor ... was 21-of-26 passing for a career-high 355 yards with three touchdowns and no interceptions in a 47-7 victory at No. 5 Utah ... has completed 67.4 percent (116-of-172) of his passes with 20 touchdowns and just two picks since getting engaged Oct. 6 ... has become the Mountain West Conference career leader in total offense (11,678 yards) and plays from scrimmage (1,698) ... thrown a touchdown pass in a Mountain West Conference record 20 consecutive games ... TCU’s career leader in every major passing record ... directs a TCU offense that ranks fourth na-tionally in scoring (43.3 points) and seventh in total offense (491.5 yards) ... TCU has set single-season school records for touchdowns (70) and points scored (520) ... the Frogs have scored in all but one quarter this season.

DALTON’S CAREER STATSPASSING RUSHINGYear GP/S C-A-I Pct Yds TD Lng Att Yds Avg TD Lng2007 13/12 222-371-11 59.8 2459 10 70 98 232 2.4 5 192008 11/11 182-307-5 59.3 2242 11 65 113 432 3.8 8 242009 13/13 199-323-8 61.6 2756 23 75 116 512 4.4 3 182010 12/12 194-293-6 66.2 2638 26 93 77 407 5.3 5 47Totals 49/48 797-1294-30 61.2 10095 70 93 404 1583 3.9 21 47

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSPASSING RUSHINGOpponent C-A-I Pct Yds TD Lng Att Yds Avg TD LngOregon State 17-27-2 63.0 175 1 52 15 64 4.3 2 12Tennessee Tech 15-21-0 71.4 182 1 32 5 23 4.6 1 19Baylor 21-23-0 91.3 267 2 37 4 26 6.5 0 13SMU 14-26-2 53.8 174 1 41 7 43 6.1 0 14Colorado State 11-24-0 45.8 109 1 39 10 67 6.7 0 16Wyoming 14-17-0 82.4 270 3 50 4 42 10.5 0 15BYU 24-36-0 66.7 273 4 35 7 16 2.3 0 20Air Force 11-20-1 55.0 185 1 38 7 93 13.3 1 47UNLV 16-23-0 69.6 252 2 54 6 30 5.0 1 18Utah 21-26-0 80.8 355 3 93 5 14 2.8 0 5SDSU 21-36-1 58.3 240 4 38 6 -3 -0.5 0 8New Mexico 9-14-0 64.3 156 3 45 1 -8 -8.0 0 -8Totals 194-27-6 66.3 2482 23 93 77 407 5.3 5 47

DALTON’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSPASSING Attempts: 45, 2x; vs. Air Force, vs. Utah in 2007Completions: 29 vs. Air Force in 2007Yards: 355 at Utah in 2010Touchdowns: 4, 4x; last vs. San Diego State in 2010Long Completion: 93 yards to Josh Boyce at Utah in 2010Completion Pct.: 91.3% vs. Baylor in 2010

RUSHING Attempts: 19 at Clemson in 2009Yards: 93 vs. Air Force in 2010Touchdowns: 2, 5x; last vs. Oregon State in 2010Long Gain: 47 yards vs. Air Force in 2010

14 QUARTERBACKSENIOR I 6-3 I 220 I 3L

KATY, TEXASKATY HS

ANDY DALTON

Page 34: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

BIO

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

32 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

2010 I SOPHOMORE SEASONProvided depth in the Horned Frog backfield, appearing in eight games ... recorded a career-high 223 yards on 32 carries ... concluded the regular season at New Mexico with his best output, totaling 55 yards on seven attempts, highlighted by his first career touchdown ... the score came on a 5-yard scamper ... ripped off a season-long rush of 35 yards at UNLV ... finished with 47 yards against the Rebels ... enjoyed six rushes for 39 yards versus Wyoming ... one of five Frogs with triple-digit rushing yardage.

DEAN’S CAREER STATSRUSHING Year GP/S Att Yds Avg TD Long2008 6/0 10 22 2.2 0 72009 Redshirted 2010 8/0 32 223 7.0 1 35Totals 14/0 42 245 5.8 1 35

DEAN’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSRUSHING Attempts: 7 at New Mexico in 2010Yards: 55 at New Mexico in 2010Long: 35 yards at UNLV in 2010Touchdowns: 1 at New Mexico in 2010

30 TAILBACKSOPHOMORE I 6-0 I 215 I TR

KATY, TEXASKATY HS / UCLA

AUNDRE DEAN

2010 I JUNIOR SEASONFormer walk-on who started nine games at left guard … instrumental in TCU tying for seventh nationally in allowing just 0.75 sacks per game … has also helped the Horned Frogs rank fourth in scoring (43.3 points per game), seventh in the country in total offense (491.5 yards per game) and ninth in rushing (261.2 yards per game).

DOOLEY’S CAREER STATSGames Played/Started: 33/27 (10/9 in 2010; 13/13 in 2009; 10/5 in 2008)

55 OFFENSIVE GUARDJUNIOR I 6-3 I 315 I 2L

PAPILLION, NEB.LA VISTA HS

KYLE DOOLEY

2010 I SENIOR SEASONFirst-team All-American by the FWAA ... SI.com honorable-mention All-American ... first-team All-Mountain West Conference in his second season as a starter … leads TCU with a career-high 6.5 sacks and 12.0 tackles for loss … also equals sophomore linebacker Tanner Brock for the team lead with two fumble recoveries ... his recoveries came against Tennessee Tech and Colorado State ... has recovered a fumble in all four seasons of action, six overall for his career ... ranks seventh on the squad with 33 stops … opened the season with a TFL in the first seven games ... all three tackles against Oregon State came from behind the line of scrimmage, highlighted by a pair of sacks ... Daniels also forced a fumble against the Beavers ... tallied a season-high five tackles against SMU ... posted four-tackle outputs against Tennessee Tech, BYU and New Mexico.

DANIELS’ CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2006 9/0 1 0 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 1 02007 Redshirt2008 12/0 8 3 11 1.0-5 1.0-5 0 0 1 02009 13/13 20 30 50 9.0-40 5.5-33 0 3 2 12010 12/12 17 16 33 12.0-46 6.5-35 0 1 2 2Totals 46/25 46 49 95 22.0-91 13.0-73 0 4 6 3

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSDEFENSE Opponent UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FFOregon State 3 0 3 3.0-12 2.0-10 0 0 0 1Tennessee Tech 1 3 4 2.0-13 1.5-12 0 0 1 0Baylor 2 0 2 1.0-1 0.0-0 0 0 0 0SMU 2 3 5 0.5-1 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Colorado State 2 1 3 1.0-3 1.0-3 0 0 1 0Wyoming 1 1 2 1.0-3 1.0-3 0 0 0 0BYU 1 3 4 0.5-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Air Force 1 0 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0UNLV 0 2 2 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 1 0 0Utah 1 0 1 1.0-7 1.0-7 0 0 0 1SDSU 1 1 2 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0New Mexico 2 2 4 2.0-6 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Totals 17 16 33 12.0-46 6.5-35 0 1 2 2

DANIELS’ SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHS DEFENSETackles: 8 at Clemson in 2009Solo Tackles: 4, 3x; last vs. Colorado State in 2009Tackles for Loss: 3.0-12 vs. Oregon State in 2010Sacks: 2.0 vs. Oregon State in 2010Pass Breakups: 1, 4x; last at UNLV in 2010Fumble Recoveries: 1, 6x; last at Colorado State in 2010Fumbles Forced: 1, 3x; last at Utah in 2010

96 DEFENSIVE ENDSENIOR I 6-2 I 250 I 3L

KILGORE, TEXASKILGORE HS

WAYNE DANIELS

2010 I SOPHOMORE SEASONA speedster on the outside that played in 11 games, starting in two ... exploded in the season-opener against Oregon State, recording a career-high four receptions for 69 yards ... enjoyed a season-long 52 yard grab against the Beavers to set up a TCU touchdown ... returned three kicks, including a career-long 44 yarder, in the Frogs’ 40-35 win against San Diego State ... contributed a reception in five of the Frogs’ first six games ... hauled in a 43-yard catch against Wyoming ... also snared a 24-yard reception at Utah ... a sprinter on the TCU track team, Dawson also carried the ball four times.

11 WIDE RECEIVERSOPHOMORE I 5-10 I 175 I 1L

MESQUITE, TEXASDALLAS CHRISTIAN HS

SKYE DAWSON

DAWSON’S CAREER STATSRUSHING RECEIVINGYear GP/S Att Yds Avg TD Long Rec Yds Avg TD Long2009 12/0 13 111 8.5 0 25 0 0 0.0 0 02010 11/2 4 4 1.0 0 5 12 170 14.2 0 52Totals 23/2 17 115 6.8 0 25 12 170 14.2 0 52

DAWSON’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSRUSHING Attempts: 3, 2x; last vs. Utah in 2009Yards: 47 vs. Colorado State in 2009Long Gain: 25 yards vs. Colorado State in 2009

RECEIVINGReceptions: 4, vs. Oregon State in 2010Yards: 69 vs. Oregon State in 2010Long: 52 yards vs. Oregon State in 2010

Page 35: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

BIO

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

33BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

2010 I REDSHIRT FRESHMAN SEASONPlayed in all 12 games, providing depth on the offensive line.

DUNBAR’S CAREER STATSGames Played/Started: 12/0 in 2010

56 OFFENSIVE TACKLERS FRESHMAN I 6-6 I 305 I RS

NEW BOSTON, TEXASMAUD HS

JAMES DUNBAR

2010 I JUNIOR SEASONAppeared on the watch list for the Lou Groza Award, honoring the nation’s top placekicker …ranks second in the Mountain West Conference in scoring with 98 points while tying for 40th nationally at 8.2 points per game … set a TCU single-game record with nine extra points in the 66-17 win at New Mexico … scored in double figures in the Frogs’ final three games ... accounted for ten points in the 40-35 win over San Diego State ... made his first eight field goal attempts of the season ... kicked a season-long 43-yard field goal at Colorado State … had a field goal in eight of the 12 games with three contests of multiple kicks made … 11-of-13 on field goals and 65-70 on PAT’s for the season.

EVANS’ CAREER STATSKICKING Year GP FG/A Pct. 1-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ Lng Blk PAT Pts2008 13 16-20 80.0 1-1 6-8 6-7 2-3 1-1 50 0 49-55 972009 13 15-18 83.3 0-0 8-9 4-4 3-5 0-0 48 0 61-63 1062010 12 11-13 84.6 1-1 5-6 4-4 1-2 0-0 43 0 65-70 98Totals 38 42-51 82.4 2-2 19-23 14-15 6-10 1-1 50 0 175-188 301

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSKICKINGOpponent FG/A Pct. 1-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ Lng Blk PAT PtsOregon St. 0-0 0.0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 4-4 4Tenn Tech 0-0 0.0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 8-9 8Baylor 1-1 100.0 0-0 1-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 23 0 6-6 9SMU 0-0 100.0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 5-6 5Colorado St. 2-2 100.0 0-0 1-1 0-0 1-1 0-0 43 0 3-3 9Wyoming 1-1 100.0 0-0 0-0 1-1 0-0 0-0 37 0 6-6 9BYU 1-1 100.0 0-0 1-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 20 0 4-4 7Air Force 1-1 100.0 0-0 0-0 1-1 0-0 0-0 30 0 5-5 8UNLV 0-0 0.0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 6-7 6Utah 2-2 100.0 0-0 2-2 0-0 0-0 0-0 24 0 5-6 11SDSU 2-4 50.0 0-0 0-1 2-2 0-1 0-0 36 0 4-5 10New Mexico 1-1 100.0 1-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 19 0 9-9 12Totals 11-13 84.6 1-1 5-6 4-4 1-2 0-0 43 0 65-70 98

EVANS’ SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSKICKINGField Goals: 3 at Virginia in 2009Field Goals Attempted: 3, 4x; last vs. Utah in 2009Long Field Goal: 50 yards at New Mexico in 2008PATs Made: 9 at New Mexico in 2010 (school record)PATs Attempted: 9, 2x, last at New Mexico in 2010 (tied school record)

37 PLACEKICKERJUNIOR I 5-9 I 185 I 2L

BURNET, TEXASBURNET HS

ROSS EVANS

2010 I JUNIOR SEASONAdded depth to the safety position … appeared in 10 games … two of his seven tackles came on special teams ... tallied two stops, including a tackle for loss, at home against Wyoming and Air Force ... other tackles came against Oregon State, Tennessee Tech and Utah.

FOBBS’ CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2008 8/0 3 0 3 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 02009 13/0 0 1 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 02010 10/0 4 3 7 2.0-3 0.0-0 0 1 0 0Totals 31/0 7 4 11 2.0-3 0.0-0 0 1 0 0

FOBBS’ SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSDEFENSETackles: 2, 3x, last vs. Air Force in 2010Solo Tackles: 2, 2x, last vs. Air Force in 2010

21 SAFETYJUNIOR I 6-1 I 203 I 2L

FORT WORTH, TEXASEVERMAN HS

JOHNNY FOBBS

2010 I SOPHOMORE SEASONPlayed in nine games, including a start against San Diego State ... tallied five tackles for the year ... recorded two stops against the Aztecs ... picked up his first career tackle versus Tennessee Tech ... also made a stop against Utah and New Mexico ... made tackles in the final three games of the season.

FORREST’S CAREER STATSGames Played/Started: 21/1 (9/1 in 2010; 1/0 in 2009; 11/0 in 2008)

52 DEFENSIVE ENDSOPHOMORE I 6-4 I 246 I 1L

ODESSA, TEXASPERMIAN HS

ROSS FORREST

2010 I SENIOR SEASONHonorable-mention All-Mountain West Conference for the second-straight season… tremendous blocker in the Frogs’ rushing attack ... had two receptions for the season ... caught a career-long 31-yard reception at SMU … other catch went for 11 yards the week before against Baylor.

FROSCH’S CAREER STATSRECEIVING Year GP/S Rec Yds Avg TD Long2007 13/3 5 35 7.0 0 92008 12/3 10 67 6.7 2 122009 13/8 3 33 11.0 0 152010 12/6 2 42 21.0 0 31Totals 50/20 20 177 8.9 2 31

FROSCH’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSRECEIVINGReceptions: 3, 2x; last at SMU in 2008Yards: 31 at SMU in 2010Long: 31 at SMU in 2010Touchdowns: 1, 2x; last at UNLV in 2008

84 TIGHT ENDSENIOR I 6-4 I 265 I 3L

MIDLAND, TEXASROBERT E. LEE HS

EVAN FROSCH

Page 36: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

BIO

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

34 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

2010 I SOPHOMORE SEASONAppeared in nine games, providing depth at center ... made his collegiate debut at home in the 62-7 win over Tennessee Tech.

FRY’S CAREER STATSGames Played/Started: 9/0 in 2010

64 CENTERSOPHOMORE I 6-3 I 290 I SQ

SPRING BRANCH, TEXASSMITHSON VALLEY HS

JAMES FRY

2010 I SOPHOMORE SEASONAppeared in 10 games … recorded his first career reception with a 19-yard grab at Colorado State ... followed up a week later with an 11-yard catch against Wyoming.

FULLER’S CAREER STATSGames Played/Started: 20/0 (10/0 in 2010; 10/0 in 2009)

86 TIGHT ENDSOPHOMORE I 6-6 I 255 I 1L

LA VERNIA, TEXASLA VERN IA HS

COREY FULLER

2010 I SOPHOMORE SEASONPlayed in two contests … completed his first career pass, connecting with Corey Fuller for 11 yards against Wyoming ... also saw action at New Mexico ... carried the ball twice for eight yards at UNM, scampering for a career-long five yards against the Lobos.

GALLEGOS’ CAREER STATSPASSING RUSHINGYear GP/S C-A-I Pct Yds TD Lng Att Yds Avg TD Lng2009 2/0 0-0-0 00.0 0 0 0 1 4 4.0 0 42010 2/0 1-4-0 25.0 11 0 11 2 8 4.0 0 5Totals 4/0 1-4-0 25.0 11 0 11 3 12 4.0 0 5

12 QUARTERBACKSOPHOMORE I 6-1 I 208 I SQ

IRVING, TEXASIRVING HS

YOGI GALLEGOS

2010 I JUNIOR SEASONSpecial teams standout who added depth to the linebacker position … three of his 12 tackles on the season came on special teams … recorded three stops versus Wyoming, including his lone tackle for loss and pass breakup on the year ... also tallied three tackles at New Mexico ... posted two stops against Tennessee Tech.

GARDNER’S CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2008 9/0 4 3 7 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 02009 13/0 10 9 19 2.0-8 1.0-7 0 0 1 12010 12/0 8 4 12 1.0-1 0.0-0 0 1 0 0Totals 34/0 22 16 38 3.0-9 1.0-7 0 1 1 1

33 LINEBACKERJUNIOR I 6-1 I 238 I 2L

ARLINGTON, TEXASMARTIN HS

KRIS GARDNER

2010 I SENIOR SEASONSecond-team All-Mountain West Conference for the second year … started all 12 games, posting 18 tackles … second on the squad with 3 ½ sacks for 23 yards, a career high in a single-season ... tied for fifth on the Horned Frogs with five tackles for loss … posted a season-best three tackles against BYU and at New Mexico, tallying a sack in each game ... pitched in on sacks against Tennessee Tech, Baylor and San Diego State ... had multi-tackle performances in six of TCU’s 12 games ... anchors a TCU defensive unit that ranks first in total defense (215.4 ypg) and pass defense (126.25 ypg), while boasting the third-best rushing defense (89.17 ypg).

GRANT’S CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2007 13/0 8 6 14 2.0-18 2.0-18 0 0 0 02008 3/0 1 0 1 1.0-1 0.0-0 0 0 0 02009 13/12 18 7 25 5.5-17 2.5-9 0 0 0 02010 12/12 8 10 18 5.0-29 3.5-23 0 0 0 0Totals 41/24 35 23 58 13.5-65 8.0-50 0 0 0 0

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSDEFENSE Opponent UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FFOregon State 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Tennessee Tech 0 1 1 0.5-2 0.5-2 0 0 0 0Baylor 1 1 2 1.5-9 0.5-4 0 0 0 0SMU 0 2 2 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Colorado State 0 1 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Wyoming 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0BYU 2 1 3 1.5-9 1.0-8 0 0 0 0Air Force 2 0 2 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0UNLV 0 1 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Utah 1 1 2 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0SDSU 0 1 1 0.5-2 0.5-2 0 0 0 0New Mexico 2 1 3 1.0-7 1.0-7 0 0 0 0Totals 8 10 18 5.0-29 3.5-23 0 0 0 0

GRANT’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSDEFENSETackles: 4 at Air Force in 2009Solo Tackles: 3 at Air Force in 2009Tackles for Loss: 2.0 at BYU in 2009Sacks: 2.0 at BYU in 2009

57 DEFENSIVE TACKLESENIOR I 6-2 I 305 I 2L

HOUSTON, TEXASALIEF ELSIK HS

CORY GRANT

2010 I JUNIOR SEASONPlayed in 11 games with three starts ... had three touchdowns on just 15 touches … posted 12 catches for 171 yards, ranking fifth for the Frogs in both categories ... reached the end zone once on the ground and once through the air against Wyoming, despite totaling only six yards for the game ... caught two balls for 26 yards and a score at New Mexico ... hauled in a season-long 41-yard reception at SMU ... had a catch in nine of his 11 games ... recorded one tackle on special teams ... one of nine Frogs to have at least three touchdowns.

HICKS’ CAREER STATSRECEIVING RUSHINGYear GP/S Rec Yds Avg TD Long Att Yds Avg TD Long2008 11/2 7 69 9.9 0 19 13 68 5.2 0 132009 13/12 23 478 20.8 6 75 9 20 2.2 4 52010 11/3 12 171 14.2 2 41 3 3 1.0 1 2Totals 35/17 42 718 17.1 8 75 25 91 3.6 5 13

13 WIDE RECEIVERJUNIOR I 6-2 I 212 I 2L

ARLINGTON, TEXASTIMBERVIEW HS

ANTOINE HICKS

Page 37: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

BIO

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

35BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSRECEIVING RUSHINGOpponent Rec Yds Avg TD Long Att Yds Avg TD LongOregon State 1 12 12.0 0 12 0 0 0.0 0 0Tennessee Tech Did Not Play Baylor 1 9 9.0 0 9 0 0 0.0 0 0SMU 1 41 41.0 0 41 0 0 0.0 0 0Colorado State 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0Wyoming 1 4 4.0 1 4 1 2 2.0 1 2BYU 2 20 10.0 0 10 0 0 0.0 0 0Air Force 2 47 23.5 0 38 0 0 0.0 0 0UNLV 1 5 5.0 0 5 1 0 0.0 0 0Utah 1 7 7.0 0 7 0 0 0.0 0 0SDSU 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0New Mexico 2 26 13.0 1 14 1 1 1.0 0 1Totals 12 171 14.2 2 41 3 3 1.0 1 2

HICKS’ SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHS RECEIVINGReceptions: 5 vs. New Mexico in 2009Yards: 123 vs. New Mexico in 2009Long: 75, 2x; last vs. UNLV in 2009Touchdowns: 2 vs. New Mexico in 2009

RUSHINGAttempts: 6, 2x; vs. Wyoming, at UNVL in 2008Yards: 38 at UNLV in 2008Long: 13 vs. Wyoming in 2008Touchdowns: 1, 5x; last vs. Wyoming in 2010

2010 I REDSHIRT FRESHMAN SEASONAppeared in eight games, providing depth on the offensive line ... made his collegiate debut in the 30-21 win over Oregon State at Cowboys Stadium.

HORN’S CAREER STATSGames Played/Started: 8/0 in 2010

74 OFFENSIVE GUARDRS FRESHMAN I 6-5 I 320 I RS

MCGREGOR, TEXASMIDWAY HS

TY HORN

2010 I SENIOR SEASONStarted seven of the 10 games he played … ranked sixth on TCU with 36 tackles … tied a career-high with nine stops against Tennessee Tech … also accounted for three of the Frogs’ six forced fumbles versus the Golden Eagles ... named Mountain West Conference Player of the Week for his performance against Tennessee Tech ... Ibiloye’s total was more than any Frog amassed during the entire 2009 season ... posted a tackle for loss in the first three games of the season against Oregon State, Tennessee Tech and Baylor ... had another tackle for loss at Air Force ... recorded seven tackles and recovered a fumble at Utah ... contributed a tackle in nine of the 10 games that he played and had multi-tackle outputs in seven games.

IBILOYE’S CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2007 13/0 5 1 6 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 02008 13/0 11 2 13 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 02009 12/11 39 31 70 0.5-1 0.0-0 0 1 0 02010 10/7 21 15 36 4.5-9 0.0-0 0 1 1 3Totals 48/18 76 49 125 5.0-9 0.0-0 0 2 1 3

9 SAFETYSENIOR I 6-0 I 195 I 3L

GARLAND, TEXASSOUTH GARLAND HS

ALEX IB ILOYE

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSDEFENSE Opponent UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FFOregon State 4 2 6 1.0-1 0.0-0 0 1 0 0Tennessee Tech 4 5 9 1.5-5 0.0-0 0 0 0 3Baylor 2 1 3 1.0-2 0.0-0 0 0 0 0SMU 2 2 4 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Colorado State Did Not Play Wyoming Did Not Play BYU 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Air Force 3 0 3 1.0-1 0.0-0 0 0 0 0UNLV 0 1 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Utah 4 3 7 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 1 0SDSU 2 0 2 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0New Mexico 0 1 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Totals 21 15 36 4.5-9 0.0-0 0 1 1 3

IBILOYE’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSDEFENSETackles: 9, 4x; last vs. Tennessee Tech in 2010Solo Tackles: 9 vs. SMU in 2009Tackles for Loss: 1.5-5 vs. Tennessee Tech in 2010Pass Breakups: 1, 2x; last vs. Oregon State in 2010Forced Fumbles: 3 vs. Tennessee Tech in 2010Fumble Recoveries: 1 at Utah in 2010

2010 I REDSHIRT FRESHMAN SEASONPlayed in 10 games in his redshirt freshman season ... third for TCU in carries (83), rushing yards (489) and average rushing yards per game (48.9) ... tied senior quarterback Andy Dalton for third on the team with five rushing touchdowns ... ranked fourth for TCU in all-purpose yards (58.0 ypg) and tied for fifth in scoring with 36 points ... finished the season with four-straight games with 55 yards or more ... rushed for more than 20 yards in nine of his ten games ... enjoyed a career performance in the final home game of the season, posting 102 rushing yards on 23 carries and a touchdown versus San Diego State ... teamed up with Mat-thew Tucker (131) to become the first TCU tandem to rush for 100 yards in the same game since Lonta Hobbs (117) and Brandon Hassell (110) against Boise State in the 2003 Fort Worth Bowl ... his previous career-high was 64 yards at Utah the week before ... made his college debut at home against Tennessee Tech, carrying the ball five times for 34 yards and a score ... barreled for 41 yards on eight carries and two touchdowns at SMU ... caught five passes for 91 yards (18.2 avg) ... hauled in two receptions, including a career-long 38-yard touchdown grab, at New Mexico ... also rushed for 46 yards against the Lobos to total 101 all-purpose yards.

JAMES’ CAREER STATSRUSHING RECEIVINGYear GP/S Att Yds Avg TD Long Rec Yds Avg TD Long2010 10/0 83 489 5.9 5 28 5 91 18.2 1 38Totals 10/0 83 489 5.9 5 28 5 91 18.2 1 38

JAMES’ SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSRUSHING Attempts: 23 vs. San Diego State in 2010Yards: 102 vs. San Diego State in 2010Long Gain: 28 vs. San Diego State in 2010Touchdowns: 2 at SMU in 2010

RECEIVINGReceptions: 2 at New Mexico in 2010Yards: 46 at New Mexico in 2010Long: 38 at New Mexico in 2010Touchdowns: 1 at New Mexico in 2010

32 TAILBACKRS FRESHMAN I 5-8 I 203 I RS

SHERMAN, TEXASSHERMAN HS

WAYMON JAMES

Page 38: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

BIO

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

36 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

2010 I SENIOR SEASONSecond-team ESPN Academic All-American ... one of only three players to play in all 51 games in the last four seasons, joining fellow wide outs Curtis Clay and Jimmy Young ... ranks third on TCU with 30 receptions for 396 yards and three touchdowns ... has 30 catches in each of the last two seasons ... had at least one catch in every game this season, extending his team-best streak to 34 contests in a row with a reception ... tallied multiple receptions in seven of TCU’s 12 games ... had at least three catches in the Frogs’ first four games ... tied a career-best reception total with seven grabs for 56 yards against Tennessee Tech ... hauled in a season-high three touchdowns, collecting scores against SMU, Wyoming and Utah ... posted catches of 20+ yards in six of the Frogs’ final six games ... his season-best 59 yards came on three grabs against BYU.

JOHNSON’S CAREER STATSRECEIVING Year GP/S Rec Yds Avg TD Long2007 13/1 6 63 10.5 2 182008 13/8 15 206 13.7 1 522009 13/4 33 410 12.4 2 442010 12/5 30 396 13.2 3 37Totals 51/18 84 1075 12.8 8 52

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSRECEIVING Opponent Rec Yds Avg TD LongOregon State 3 26 8.7 0 17Tennessee Tech 7 56 8.0 0 13Baylor 3 43 14.3 0 37SMU 3 29 9.7 1 11Colorado State 1 7 7.0 0 7Wyoming 1 31 31.0 1 31BYU 3 59 19.7 0 23Air Force 1 25 25.0 0 25UNLV 1 29 29.0 0 29Utah 2 33 16.5 1 26SDSU 4 54 13.5 0 29New Mexico 1 4 4.0 0 4Totals 30 396 13.2 3 37

JOHNSON’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSRECEIVINGReceptions: 7, 2x; vs. Texas State in 2009; vs. Tennessee Tech in 2010Yards: 70 vs. Texas State in 2009Touchdowns: 2 vs. New Mexico in 2009Long: 52 yards at Utah in 2008

6 WIDE RECEIVERSENIOR I 6-0 I 195 I 3L

BROWNWOOD, TEXASBROWNWOOD HS

BART JOHNSON

2010 I SENIOR SEASONFinalist for the Jim Thorpe Award, recognizing the top defensive back in the country ... Walter Camp first-team All-American ... Associated Press first-team All-American ... SI.com first-team All-American ... CBSSports.com first-team All-American ... Rivals.com first-team All-American ... First-team All-Mountain West Conference … leads TCU with three interceptions and tied for the most forced fumbles with fellow safety Alex Ibiloye … sits third on the Horned Frogs with 56 tackles … totaled a season-best eight stops with an interception in the win against BYU … tallied a tackle for loss against Baylor and Wyoming ... has been singled out by Horned Frog head coach Gary Patterson for his on-field leadership ... anchor of a TCU defense that leads the nation in total defense (223.2 yards) for the third straight season, representing all three years Johnson has been a starter ... the Frogs also rank first in scoring defense (10.9 points), pass defense (134.6 yards) and fewest first downs allowed per game (11.6).

3 SAFETYSENIOR I 6-1 I 212 I 3L

GARLAND, TEXASSOUTH GARLAND HS

TEJAY JOHNSON

JOHNSON’S CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2007 13/0 4 3 7 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 02008 12/12 34 13 47 4.0-13 1.0-9 1 10 0 12009 13/13 35 24 59 1.0-2 0.0-0 3 2 0 12010 12/12 34 22 56 1.5-3 0.0-0 3 3 0 3Totals 50/37 107 62 169 6.5-18 1.0-9 7 15 0 5

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSDEFENSE Opponent UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FFOregon State 0 2 2 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Tennessee Tech 4 2 6 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 1Baylor 5 2 7 0.5-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0SMU 1 1 2 0.0-0 0.0-0 1 3 0 0Colorado State 4 2 6 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 2Wyoming 4 0 4 1.0-3 0.0-0 0 0 0 0BYU 3 5 8 0.0-0 0.0-0 1 0 0 0Air Force 5 0 5 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0UNLV 3 3 6 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Utah 0 4 4 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0SDSU 3 1 4 0.0-0 0.0-0 1 0 0 0New Mexico 2 0 2 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Totals 34 22 56 1.5-3 0.0-0 3 3 0 3

JOHNSON’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSDEFENSETackles: 14 at BYU in 2009Solo Tackles: 7 vs. Boise State in 2009Tackles for Loss: 2.0, 2x; last vs. Wyoming in 2008Sacks: 1.0 at Colorado State in 2008Interceptions: 1, 7x; last vs. San Diego State in 2010Pass Breakups: 3 at SMU in 2010Forced Fumbles: 2 at Colorado State in 2010Touchdowns: 1 at SMU in 2010 (19-yard INT return)

2010 I SENIOR SEASONSecond-Team All-Mountain West Conference ... started 11 of the 12 games he played ... second on the team with a career-best 70 tackles and 10.5 tackles for loss ... matched a career-high with nine stops against UNLV ... also returned an interception 30 yards for a score against the Rebels ... recorded eight solo tackles versus San Diego State, highlighted by a pair of sacks ... tallied 3.5 sacks as part of a seven tackle output at Colorado State ... totaled seven stops in three-straight weeks (Baylor, SMU, CSU) ... ended the season with his first career fumble recovery and four stops at New Mexico.

JONES’ CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2007 12/0 5 3 8 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 02008 13/0 7 3 10 1.0-6 1.0-6 0 1 0 02009 7/5 14 12 26 1.5-2 0.0-0 1 2 0 02010 12/11 44 25 70 10.5-40 2.0-18 1 3 1 0Totals 44/16 70 43 114 13.0-48 3.0-24 2 6 1 0

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSDEFENSE Opponent UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FFOregon State 2 1 3 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Tennessee Tech 2 3 5 1.5-4 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Baylor 5 2 7 1.5-3 0.0-0 0 0 0 0SMU 5 2 7 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 1 0 0Colorado State 3 4 7 3.5-7 0.0-0 0 1 0 0Wyoming 3 3 6 1.0-6 0.0-0 0 0 0 0BYU 2 0 2 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Air Force 6 0 6 1.0-2 0.0-0 0 0 0 0UNLV 3 6 9 0.0-0 0.0-0 1 0 0 0Utah 2 4 6 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0SDSU 8 0 8 2.0-18 2.0-18 0 0 0 0New Mexico 3 1 4 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 1 0Totals 44 25 70 10.5-40 2.0-18 1 2 1 0

28 SAFETYSENIOR I 6-0 I 208 I 3L

BRIDGEPORT, TEXASBRIDGEPORT HS

COLIN JONES

Page 39: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

BIO

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

37BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

JONES’ SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSDEFENSETackles: 9, 2x; last at UNLV in 2010Solo Tackles: 8 vs. San Diego State in 2010Tackles for Loss: 3.5 at Colorado State in 2010Sacks: 2.0 vs. San Diego State in 2010Pass Breakups: 1, 6x; last at Colorado State in 2010Interceptions: 1, 2x; last at UNLV in 2010Touchdowns: 1 at UNLV in 2010 (30-yard INT return)

2010 I JUNIOR SEASONPlayed in 11 games at wide receiver ... did not have any receptions.

JONES’ CAREER STATSReceiving Year GP/S Rec Yds Avg TD Long2008 12/1 2 18 9.0 1 142009 8/1 3 30 10.0 0 192010 11/0 0 0 0.0 0 0Totals 31/2 5 48 9.6 1 19

83 WIDE RECEIVERJUNIOR I 6-4 I 215 I 2L

FORT WORTH, TEXASEVERMAN HS

JONATHAN JONES

2010 I JUNIOR SEASONPlaced 15 punts inside the opponent 20 with just four touchbacks on the season … turned in a career-best 42.2 yards per punt average ... also boomed a career-high eight punts for more than 50 yards despite kicking a career-low 38 punts ... ended the year with punts of 47, 52 and 53 yards at New Mexico ... his season-long punt of 58 yards came at home against BYU ... three of his four punts against Oregon State at Cowboys Stadium landed inside the 20 ... opponents have returned only 15 of TCU’s 38 punts for 108 yards (7.2 avg).

KELTON’S CAREER STATSPUNTING Year GP Att Yds Avg Lng Blk TB FC 50+ I202008 13 54 2230 41.3 58 1 7 4 6 302009 13 59 2213 37.5 72 0 1 18 6 192010 11 38 1602 42.2 58 0 4 13 8 15Totals 37 151 6045 42.4 72 1 12 35 20 64

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSPUNTINGOpponent Att Yds Avg Lng Blk TB FC 50+ I20Oregon State 4 169 42.2 56 0 0 2 1 3Tennessee Tech 3 127 42.3 47 0 0 2 0 0Baylor 3 138 46.0 51 0 1 0 1 2SMU 3 110 36.7 40 0 0 1 0 2Colorado State 4 167 41.8 51 0 0 1 1 1Wyoming 2 91 45.5 48 0 0 2 0 1BYU 6 248 41.3 58 0 2 2 1 3Air Force 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0UNLV 1 36 36.0 36 0 0 0 0 1Utah 3 128 42.7 50 0 0 0 1 1SDSU 5 199 39.8 51 0 0 2 1 0New Mexico 4 189 47.2 53 0 1 1 2 1Totals 38 1602 42.2 58 0 4 13 8 15

47 PUNTERJUNIOR I 6-4 I 280 I 2L

FORT WORTH, TEXASALEDO HS

ANSON KELTON

KELTON’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSPUNTINGPunts: 7, 2x; vs. Stanford, at Colorado State in 2008Average (3 or more atts): 46.0 yards/att (3 atts) vs. Baylor in 2010Long: 72 yards vs. Air Force in 200950+ Yard Kicks: 2, 2x; vs. Stanford, at Utah in 2008Kicks Inside Opponent’s 20: 5 at Oklahoma in 2008

2010 I SENIOR SEASONOne of three Paul Hornung Award finalists ... Rivals.com first-team All-American ... SI.com honorable-mention All-American ... ... Mountain West Conference Special Teams Player of the Year … second player in MWC history to earn the honor twice ... first-team All-MWC at return specialist, becoming the seventh player in MWC history to be a three-time first-team all-conference selection … was also a second-team selection at wide receiver … Midseason All-American by Phil Steele’s ... three-time Paul Hornung Award Most Versatile Performance of the Week recognition (vs. Oregon State, Baylor and SMU) ... two-time MWC Special Teams Player of the Week (vs. SMU and BYU) ... one of just two players in the nation to rank in the top 20 in punt returns and kickoff returns ... averaging a career-best 28.0 yards on kickoff returns ... led the Frogs with a career-high 50 receptions to rack up 517 yards ... only the 13th player in TCU history to reach 50 receptions in a season and the first since Jimmy Young totaled 59 in 2008 ... also paced the squad with 10 receiving touchdowns ... tied Mike Renfro’s 1977 TCU record with 10 touchdown receptions ... had at least five catches in six of TCU’s 12 games ... with the addition of his two rushing scores, Kerley leads the TCU offense with 12 combined touchdowns ... went 2-2 passing for 37 yards and a touchdown ... connected with Bart Johnson for a 26-yard score in the final seconds of the first quarter at Utah ... his other completion was a 11-yard dart to Johnson at SMU ... went out in style on senior night, hauling in a career-best eight receptions for 85 yards and three touchdowns ... was the first TCU player with three touchdown catches in a game since Jimmy Young versus Wyoming in 2008 ... set a career high with 234 all-purpose yards at SMU ... had 172 yards on kickoff returns, 23 on punt returns, 33 yards receiving and six yards rushing against the Mustangs ... led the MWC in all-purpose yards (122.8 avg), while tying for third in the league in receptions (4.2 avg) and seventh in receiving yards (43.1 avg) ... led the Frogs in receptions in six of his 12 games ... caught four passes for 69 yards and two touchdowns against Baylor ... opened the year with six grabs for 49 yards and a score in the 30-21 win over Oregon State at Cowboys Stadium ... led the team with seven receptions at Utah, totaling 68 yards (9.7 ypc).

KERLEY’S CAREER STATSRECEIVING RUSHINGYear GP/S Rec Yds Avg TD Lng Att Yds Avg TDs Lng2007 13/0 9 97 10.8 0 29 6 16 2.7 0 82008 11/3 11 95 8.6 0 15 25 143 5.7 3 242009 13/7 44 532 12.1 2 45 14 50 3.6 3 132010 12/10 50 517 10.3 10 50 16 92 5.8 2 19Totals 49/20 114 1241 10.9 12 50 61 301 4.9 8 24

KICKOFF RETURNS PUNT RETURNSYear No. Yds Avg. TD Long No. Yds Avg TD Long2007 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 02008 0 0 0.0 0 0 25 348 13.9 0 532009 18 479 26.6 0 52 39 563 14.4 2 712010 17 476 28.0 0 83 30 388 12.9 0 45Totals 35 955 27.3 0 83 94 1299 13.8 2 71

PASSING: 5-7-1-135, 1 TD (2-2-0-54 in 2007; 0-2-1-0 in 2008; 1-1-0-44 in 2009; 2-2-0-37, 1 TD in 2010)

85 WIDE RECEIVERSENIOR I 5-10 I 192 I 3L

HUTTO, TEXASHUTTO HS

JEREMY KERLEY

Page 40: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

BIO

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

38 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

2010 I SENIOR SEASONRimington Award winner, recognizing the top center in the country ... one of four finalists for the 2010 Rotary Lombardi Award, recognizing the nation’s top lineman ... listed as the lone offensive lineman among the four finalists ... Walter Camp First-team All-American ... AP, SI.com and CBSSports.com Second-Team All-American ... First-team All-Mountain West Conference … started all 12 games, extending his streak to 25-straight games … set the blocking scheme on every play … anchored a line that paves the way for the Horned Frogs to rank fourth in scoring (43.3 points per game), seventh in the country in total offense (491.5 yards per game) and ninth in rushing (261.2 yards per game) ... the Frogs’ line is tied for seventh nationally in allowing just 0.75 sacks per game … TCU set single-season records in touchdowns (70) and points scored (520) in 2010.

KIRKPATRICK’S CAREER STATSGames Played/Started: 46/25 (12/12 in 2010; 13/13 in 2009; 12/0 in 2008, 9/0 in 2007)

76 CENTERSENIOR I 6-3 I 305 I 3L

TYLER, TEXASROBERT E. LEE HS

JAKE KIRKPATRICK

2010 I SENIOR SEASONAppeared in five games, providing depth on the defensive line ... his lone tackle came in the Frogs’ 48-6 win at UNLV.

LEATCH’S CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2007 3/0 2 0 2 1.0-1 0.0-0 0 0 0 02008 7/0 2 0 2 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 02009 13/0 4 2 6 2.0-15 2.0-15 0 1 0 02010 5/0 1 0 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Totals 28/0 9 2 11 3.0-16 2.0-15 0 1 0 0

95 DEFENSIVE ENDSENIOR I 6-4 I 257 I 2L

TATUM, TEXASTATUM HS

CLARENCE LEATCH

KERLEY’S 2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSRECEIVING RUSHINGOpponent Rec. Yds Avg. TD Long Att Yds Avg TD LongOregon State 6 49 8.2 1 19 0 0 0.0 0 0Tennessee Tech 1 16 16.0 0 16 1 5 5.0 1 5Baylor 6 69 11.5 2 28 4 49 12.2 0 19SMU 4 33 8.3 0 25 1 6 6.0 0 6Colorado State 3 5 1.7 0 3 4 20 5.0 0 7Wyoming 3 65 21.7 1 50 1 3 3.0 0 3BYU 5 25 5.0 1 21 0 0 0.0 0 0Air Force 2 20 10.0 1 12 2 11 5.5 0 10UNLV 5 82 16.4 1 27 1 5 5.0 1 5Utah 7 68 9.7 0 25 1 -5 -5.0 0 -5SDSU 8 85 10.6 3 38 1 -2 -2.0 0 -2New Mexico 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0Totals 50 517 10.3 10 50 16 92 5.8 2 19

KICKOFF RETURNS PUNT RETURNSOpponent No. Yds Avg TD Long No. Yds Avg TD LongOregon State 5 105 21.0 0 24 3 42 14.0 0 34Tennessee Tech 1 20 20.0 0 20 1 12 12.0 0 12Baylor 0 0 0.0 0 0 4 84 21.0 0 45SMU 5 172 34.4 0 83 2 23 11.5 0 13Colorado State 0 0 0.0 0 0 3 35 11.7 0 16Wyoming 1 26 26.0 0 26 3 48 16.0 0 26BYU 2 81 40.5 0 52 4 56 14.0 0 17Air Force 2 46 23.0 0 25 0 0 0.0 0 0UNLV 0 0 0.0 0 0 2 -3 -1.5 0 1Utah 0 0 0.0 0 0 1 4 4.0 0 4SDSU 1 26 26.0 0 26 5 59 11.8 0 43New Mexico 0 0 0.0 0 0 2 28 14.0 0 28Totals 17 476 28.0 0 83 30 388 12.9 0 45

PASSING: 1-1-0-11 at SMU; 1-1-0-26 (TD) at Utah

KERLEY’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSRECEIVINGReceptions: 8 vs. San Diego State in 2010Yards: 87 at Wyoming in 2009Long: 50 yards vs. Wyoming in 2010TDs: 3 vs. San Diego State in 2010

PASSINGAttempts: 1, 7x; last at Utah in 2010Completions: 1, 5x; last at Utah in 2010Yards: 44 at BYU in 2009Long: 44 yards at BYU in 2009Touchdowns: 1 at Utah in 2010

RUSHINGAttempts: 9 vs. BYU in 2008Yards: 77 vs. BYU in 2008Long: 24 yards vs. BYU in 2008TDs: 1, 8x; last at UNLV in 2010

PUNT RETURNSAttempts: 6 vs. San Diego State in 2008Yards: 123 vs. SMU in 2009Long: 71 yards vs. SMU in 2009TDs: 1, 2x; last vs. Colorado St. in 2009

KICKOFF RETURNSAttempts: 5; 2x, last at SMU in 2010Yards: 172 at SMU in 2010Long: 83 at SMU in 2010

2010 I SENIOR SEASONConverted wide receiver that is a key player in TCU’s secondary … played in eight games, making his lone start in the season opener versus Oregon State at Cowboys Stadium... tallied a season-high four stops against the Beavers ... recorded eight tackles for the year ... missed the next three games due to injury ... picked his second-career interception in the Frogs’ 45-0 shutout over Wyoming.

LUTTRELL’S CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2007 0/0 Played Wide Receiver -- no catches2008 9/0 Played Wide Receiver -- no catches2009 13/8 22 13 35 2.0-8 1.0-2 1 2 0 12010 8/1 3 5 8 0.0-0 0.0-0 1 0 0 0Totals 30/9 25 18 43 2.0-8 1.0-2 2 2 0 1

17 SAFETYSENIOR I 6-1 I 214 I 2L

WEATHERFORD, TEXASWEATHERFORD HS

TYLER LUTTRELL

Page 41: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

BIO

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

39BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSDEFENSE Opponent UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FFOregon State 1 3 4 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Tennessee Tech Did Not Play Baylor Did Not Play SMU Did Not Play Colorado State 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Wyoming 2 0 2 0.0-0 0.0-0 1 0 0 0BYU 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Air Force 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0UNLV 0 1 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Utah 0 1 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0SDSU 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0New Mexico 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Totals 3 5 8 0.0-0 0.0-0 1 0 0 0

LUTTRELL’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSDEFENSETackles: 6, 2x; last vs. New Mexico in 2009Solo Tackles: 6 vs. New Mexico in 2009Tackles for Loss: 1.0, 2x; last vs. New Mexico in 2009Sacks: 1.0 at Virginia in 2009Interceptions: 1, 2x; last vs. Wyoming in 2010Pass Breakups: 2 vs. Texas State in 2009Forced Fumbles: 1 vs. Utah in 2009

2010 I REDSHIRT FRESHMAN SEASONSecond-team Freshman All-American selection by CollegeFootballNews.com ... second-team All-Mountain West Conference selection ... made an immediate impact on TCU’s defensive line, starting 10 of his 11 games played ... ranks ninth on the team and second on the defensive line with 29 tackles (13 solo) ... his 2.5 sacks ties with All-American linebacker Tank Carder for fourth-most on the squad ... made his first collegiate tackle with three assisted stops against Oregon State at Cowboys Stadium ... recorded his first solo stop and sack the following week versus Tennessee Tech ... chipped in four tackles, including an assisted sack in the 45-10 win over Baylor ... recorded a career-best five tackles at SMU, tying safety Colin Jones for the game high ... also forced a fumble and knocked down a pass against the Mustangs ... matched his five stop performance versus Air Force ... registered another solo sack as part of a three tackle output against BYU ... had seven multi-tackle games ... all but one of his stops behind the line of scrimmage was a sack.

MOPANGA’S CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2010 11/10 13 16 29 3.0-17 2.5-17 0 1 0 1Totals 11/10 13 16 29 3.0-17 2.5-17 0 1 0 1

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSDEFENSE Opponent UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FFOregon State 0 3 3 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Tennessee Tech 1 3 4 1.0-5 1.0-5 0 0 0 0Baylor 1 3 4 0.5-4 0.5-4 0 0 0 0SMU 2 3 5 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 1 0 1Colorado State 2 0 2 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Wyoming 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0BYU 3 0 3 1.0-8 1.0-8 0 0 0 0Air Force 3 2 5 0.5-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0UNLV 1 0 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Utah 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0SDSU Did Not Play New Mexico 0 2 2 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Totals 13 16 29 3.0-17 2.5-17 0 1 0 1

90 DEFENSIVE TACKLERS FRESHMAN I 6-2 I 260 I RS

CARROLLTON, TEXASHEBRON HS

STANSLY MAPONGA

2010 I JUNIOR SEASONContributed at both cornerback and special teams … started in all 12 games ... ranks 12th on the team with a career-high 25 total tackles ... tallied a season-best four stops and a pass breakup at Colorado State ... totaled a career-best five pass breakups ... recorded interceptions in back-to-back weeks at Utah and against San Diego State ... registered at least two tackles in TCU’s first five games and in eight of 12 games this season ... returned five kickoffs for 167 yards (33.4 avg) ... broke loose for a season-long 56 yard return at New Mexico.

McCOY’S CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2008 12/0 4 4 8 0.0-0 0.0-0 1 0 0 02009 13/2 18 4 22 0.0-0 0.0-0 2 4 0 02010 12/12 20 5 25 0.0-0 0.0-0 2 5 0 0Totals 37/14 42 13 55 0.0-0 0.0-0 5 9 0 0

KICKOFF RETURNS Year No. Yds Avg. TD Long2008 0 0 0.0 0 02009 10 359 35.9 1 812010 5 167 33.4 0 56Totals 15 526 35.1 1 81

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSDEFENSE Opponent UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FFOregon State 3 0 3 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 1 0 0Tennessee Tech 2 1 3 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Baylor 1 1 2 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0SMU 2 0 2 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 1 0 0Colorado State 4 0 4 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 1 0 0Wyoming 0 1 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0BYU 3 0 3 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Air Force 1 0 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0UNLV 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 1 0 0Utah 0 2 2 0.0-0 0.0-0 1 0 0 0SDSU 3 0 3 0.0-0 0.0-0 1 0 0 0New Mexico 1 0 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 1 0 0Totals 20 5 25 0.0-0 0.0-0 2 5 0 0

McCOY’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSDEFENSETackles: 7 vs. Boise State in 2009Solo Tackles: 7 vs. Boise State in 2009Interceptions: 1, 5x; last vs. San Diego State in 2010Pass Breakups: 1, 9x; last at New Mexico in 2010

KICKOFF RETURNSAttempts: 3 vs. Colorado State in 2009Yards: 104 at Wyoming in 2009Long: 81 yards at Wyoming in 2009 (touchdown)

7 CORNERBACKJUNIOR I 5-10 I 181 I 2L

DALLAS, TEXASWOODROW WILSON HS

GREG MCCOY

MAPONGA’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSDEFENSETackles: 5, 2x; last vs. Air Force in 2010Solo Tackles: 3, 2x; last vs. Air Force in 2010Tackles for Loss: 1.0, 2x; last vs. BYU in 2010Sacks: 1.0, 2x; last vs. BYU in 2010Pass Breakups: 1 at SMU in 2010Forced Fumbles: 1 at SMU in 2010

Page 42: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

BIO

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

40 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

2010 I JUNIOR SEASONContributed in 11 games, making four starts at right tackle ... his four starts came against Tennessee Tech, Air Force, UNLV and Utah ... TCU’s offense scored at least 38 points in all four starts and averaged 275 rushing yards.

OLSON’S CAREER STATSGames Played/Started: 20/4 (11/4 in 2010; 9/0 in 2009)

62 OFFENSIVE TACKLEJUNIOR I 6-4 I 282 I 1L

MCKINNEY, TEXASMCKINNEY NORTH HS

JEFF OLSON

2010 I REDSHIRT FRESHMAN SEASONAppeared in eight games for TCU this season ... threw for 78 yards and a touchdown on 6-of-9 passing ... also ran for 94 yards and two scores in 15 attempts ... racked up the bulk of his stats by leading the Frog offense in the second half at New Mexico ... scampered five times for 31 yards and a score, while enjoying 4-of-6 passing for 54 yards and a 21-yard touchdown pass to tight end Logan Brock against the Lobos ... connected on a career-long 28-yard pass with Josh Boyce at New Mexico ... rushed for an eight-yard touchdown versus UNLV ... had his longest rush for 22 yards against Tennessee Tech.

PACHALL’S CAREER STATSPASSING RUSHINGYear GP/S C-A-I Pct Yds TD Lng Att Yds Avg TD Lng2010 8/0 6-9-0 66.7 78 1 28 15 94 6.3 2 22Totals 8/0 6-9-0 66.7 78 1 28 15 94 6.3 2 22

PACHALL’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSPASSING Attempts: 6 at New Mexico in 2010Completions: 4 at New Mexico in 2010Yards: 54 at New Mexico in 2010Touchdowns: 1 at New Mexico in 2010Long Completion: 28 yards to Josh Boyce at New Mexico in 2010

RUSHING Attempts: 5 at New Mexico in 2010Yards: 31 at New Mexico in 2010Touchdowns: 1, 2x; last at New Mexico in 2010

4 QUARTERBACKRS FRESHMAN I 6-4 I 208 I RS

BROWNWOOD, TEXASBROWNWOOD HS

CASEY PACHALL

2010 I SENIOR SEASONStarted nine of his 10 games at right tackle ... anchored a line that paves the way for the Horned Frogs to rank fourth in scoring (43.3 points per game), seventh in the country in total offense (491.5 yards per game) and ninth in rushing (261.2 yards per game) ... the Frogs’ line is tied for seventh nationally in allowing just 0.75 sacks per game … TCU set single-season records in touchdowns (70) and points scored (520) in 2010.

ROTH’S CAREER STATSGames Played/Started: 14/9 (10/9 in 2010; 4/0 in 2009)

70 OFFENSIVE TACKLESENIOR I 6-6 I 316 I SQ

GARDEN CITY, KAN.HOLCOMB HS / GARDEN CITY CC

ZACH ROTH

2010 I SENIOR SEASONUtilized as the Horned Frogs’ kickoff specialist … blasted a career-best 14 touchbacks, includ-ing a career-high four against Tennessee Tech … averaged 66.1 yards on his 93 kickoffs … did not have a kickoff go out of bounds … totaled two tackles for the season, splitting the stops between Tennessee Tech and UNLV.

SHARPLES’ CAREER STATSGames Played: 27 (12 in 2010; 12 in 2009; 3 in 2008)

38 PLACE KICKERSENIOR I 5-9 I 185 I 1L

THE WOODLANDS, TEXASOAK RIDGE HS

KEVIN SHARPLES

2010 I SOPHOMORE SEASONHad an outstanding season in his first year as the Frogs’ deep snapper ... TCU did not have a kick or punt blocked ... recorded his lone tackle at New Mexico.

SHELLEY’S CAREER STATSGames Played: 13 (12 in 2010; 1 in 2009)

50 SNAPPERSOPHOMORE I 6-1 I 228 I SQ

AUSTIN, TEXASHYDE PARK BAPTIST HS

DANIEL SHELLEY

2010 I JUNIOR SEASONUtilized as a fullback and tight end … played in all 12 games … scored four touchdowns on his 11 touches for the year … has seven scores on 17 career touches ... rumbled for a pair of goal-line touchdowns at New Mexico ... had a two-yard score in the 45-10 win against Baylor ... followed a week later with a 4-yard touchdown rush at SMU, matching a career-long ... all three receptions resulted in TCU first downs ... his three receptions top the combined total of two from his first two seasons ... hauled in a career-long 10-yard grab in the 45-0 shutout over Wyoming ... caught a 9-yard catch at SMU ... also connected for a 6-yard reception against Air Force ... chipped in his lone tackle at New Mexico.

48 FULLBACKJUNIOR I 6-0 I 220 I 2L

WHITEHOUSE, TEXASWHITEHOUSE HS

LUKE SHIVERS

2010 | FRESHMAN SEASON One of three true freshman to see action for TCU in 2010, joining defensive back Travaras Battle and defensive end Matt Anderson ... made 10 appearances in the TCU secondary ... recorded eight tackles in his first year ... totaled career-best three stops in the regular season finale at New Mexico ... chipped in a pair of tackles against Wyoming ... also posted stops against Tennessee Tech, Colorado State and UNLV.

OLABODE’S CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2010 10/0 4 4 8 0.0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0Totals 10/0 4 4 8 0.0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0

6 CORNERBACKFRESHMAN I 5-10 I 182 I HS

CEDAR HILL, TEXASCEDAR H ILL HS

ELISHA OLABODE

Page 43: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

BIO

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

41BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

SHIVERS’ CAREER STATSRUSHING RECEIVINGYear GP/S Att Yds Avg TD Long Rec Yds Avg TD Long2008 12/0 2 6 3.0 2 3 1 5 5.0 0 52009 13/0 2 5 2.5 1 4 1 1 1.0 1 12010 12/0 8 13 1.6 4 4 3 25 8.3 0 10Totals 37/0 12 24 2.0 7 4 5 31 6.2 1 10

SHIVERS’ SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSRUSHINGAttempts: 3 at New Mexico in 2010Yards: 4, 2x; last at SMU in 2010 (touchdown)Touchdowns: 2 at New Mexico in 2010

RECEIVINGReceptions: 1, 5x; last at vs. Air Force in 2010Yards: 10 vs. Wyoming in 2010Touchdowns: 1 vs. SMU in 2009

2010 I REDSHIRT FRESHMAN SEASONAppeared in six games, providing depth at center in his first season.

TAUSCH’S CAREER STATSGames Played/Started: 6/0 in 2010

73 CENTERRS FRESHMAN I 6-3 I 295 I RS

PLANO, TEXASJESU IT COLLEGE PREP

ERIC TAUSCH

2010 I SENIOR SEASONSecond-team All-Mountain West Conference selection … played in all 12 games … tied defensive end Wayne Daniels for seventh on the squad with 33 tackles ... his 24 solo stops are sixth for TCU ... returned an interception 29 yards for a touchdown, forced a fumble and posted four tackles in the 62-7 win over Tennessee Tech … also had a pick and three tackles against UNLV ... forced a fumble and had two stops at Utah ... matched a season high five tackles against Baylor and at New Mexico ... his five solo stops versus the Bears were a career-best performance ... had a tackle for loss in back-to-back weeks versus BYU and Air Force … tallied a career-high seven pass breakups ... contributed a tackle in all but one game ... had multiple stops in 10 of 12 games.

TEAGUE’S CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2008 5/0 0 1 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 02009 13/2 17 5 22 1.5-4 0.0-0 2 3 1 02010 12/12 24 9 33 1.5-4 0.0-0 2 7 0 2Totals 30/14 41 15 56 3.0-8 0.0-0 4 10 1 2

27 CORNERBACKSENIOR I 6-2 I 197 I 1L

CARTHAGE, TEXASCARTHAGE HS / TYLER JC

JASON TEAGUE

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSDEFENSE Opponent UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FFOregon State 1 2 3 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 1 0 0Tennessee Tech 4 0 4 0.0-0 0.0-0 1 1 0 1Baylor 5 0 5 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0SMU 0 3 3 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Colorado State 1 0 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 1 0 0Wyoming 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0BYU 2 0 2 1.0-3 0.0-0 0 1 0 0Air Force 1 1 2 0.5-1 0.0-0 0 1 0 0UNLV 2 1 3 0.0-0 0.0-0 1 0 0 0Utah 2 0 2 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 1SDSU 3 0 3 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 2 0 0New Mexico 3 2 5 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Totals 24 9 33 1.5-4 0.0-0 2 7 0 2

TEAGUE’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSDEFENSETackles: 5, 2x; last at New Mexico in 2010Solo Tackles: 5 vs. Baylor in 2010Tackles for Loss: 1.0, 2x; last vs. BYU in 2010Interceptions: 1, 4x; last at UNLV in 2010Pass Breakups: 2 vs. San Diego State in 2010Fumbles Recovered: 1 at San Diego State in 2009Forced Fumbles: 1, 2x; last at Utah in 2010Touchdowns: 1 vs. Tennessee Tech in 2010 (29-yard interception return)

2010 I SOPHOMORE SEASONAppeared in all 12 games, contributing in the secondary and leading the team in special teams tackles … 15 of his 22 tackles and both forced fumbles came on special teams ... enjoyed a career-high six tackles and a forced fumble in the 66-17 win at New Mexico ... recorded a forced fumble along with three stops at Colorado State ... also had three takedowns at Utah ... tallied a sack against Tennessee Tech ... recorded a stop in 10 of TCU’s 12 games and had multiple tackles in six appearances.

THOMPSON’S CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2009 12/0 13 9 22 1.0-4 1.0-4 0 0 0 2Totals 12/0 13 9 22 1.0-4 1.0-4 0 0 0 2

16 SAFETYSOPHOMORE I 5-11 I 216 I 1L

WICHITA FALLS, TEXASRIDER HS

JURELL THOMPSON

2010 I JUNIOR SEASONContributed in 11 games, making three starts at left guard ... his three starts came against Air Force, UNLV and Utah ... TCU’s offense scored at least 38 points in all three starts and averaged 276 rushing yards.

THOMPSON’S CAREER STATSGames Played/Started: 24/3 (11/3 in 2010; 9/0 in 2009; 4/0 in 2008)

77 OFFENSIVE TACKLEJUNIOR I 6-4 I 305 I 1L

PLAINVIEW, TEXASPLAINVIEW HS

SPENCER THOMPSON

Page 44: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL 2 0 10 H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

BIO

S

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

42 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

2010 I SENIOR SEASONStarted all 12 games at right guard ... anchored a line that paves the way for the Horned Frogs to rank fourth in scoring (43.3 points per game), seventh in the country in total offense (491.5 yards per game) and ninth in rushing (261.2 yards per game) ... the Frogs’ line is tied for seventh nationally in allowing just 0.75 sacks per game … TCU set single-season records in touchdowns (70) and points scored (520) in 2010.

78 OFFENSIVE GUARDSENIOR I 6-2 I 300 I 2L

IRVING, TEXASMACARTHUR HS

JOSH VERNON

2010 I SOPHOMORE SEASONPlaced second on TCU with a career-best 694 yards rushing and seven touchdowns ... his 1,370 rushing yards in the past two seasons ranks him third among TCU’s active rushers, behind Ed Wesley (1,641) and Andy Dalton (1,591) ... averaged 4.8 yards per carry … has double-digit touches in eight of TCU’s 12 games ... his top rushing effort came in the final game at Amon G. Carter Stadium ... posted 131 yards on a career-high 22 carries with a long of 18 yards in the 40-35 win versus San Diego State ... Against the Aztecs, Tucker (131) and James (102) became the first TCU tandem to rush for 100 yards in the same game since Lonta Hobbs (117) and Brandon Hassell (110) against Boise State in the 2003 Fort Worth Bowl ... tallied 20 carries for 74 yards in the season opener against Oregon State at Cowboys Stadium ... after the opener, he scored in three straight weeks ... scored twice on the ground against Tennessee Tech, matching a career-high ... followed up to earn double digit carries versus Baylor (12) and at SMU (19), reaching the end zone in each game ... rumbled for 87 yards on just eight carries (10.9 avg.), highlighted by a season-long 47-yard run that moved the Frogs from their own 29 yard line to the Rams’ 24 and setting up a TCU touchdown ... that play serves as the seventh-longest play from scrimmage for TCU this season ... also caught eight passes for 97 yards (12.1 avg.) ... his biggest day through the air came against Wyoming, hauling in three grabs for 53 yards, highlighted by a career-long 31 yard snag.

TUCKER’S CAREER STATSRUSHING RECEIVINGYear GP/S Att Yds Avg TD Lng Rec Yds Avg TD Lng2009 13/0 105 676 6.4 8 48 3 19 6.3 0 92010 12/1 144 694 4.8 7 47 8 97 12.1 0 31Totals 25/1 249 1370 5.5 15 48 11 116 10.5 0 31

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSRUSHING RECEIVINGOpponent Att Yds Avg. TD Long Rec Yds Avg TD LongOregon State 20 74 3.7 0 13 0 0 0.0 0 0Tennessee Tech 9 53 5.9 2 16 0 0 0.0 0 0Baylor 12 34 2.8 1 14 1 6 6.0 0 6SMU 19 63 3.3 1 15 0 0 0.0 0 0Colorado State 8 87 10.9 0 47 0 0 0.0 0 0Wyoming 7 45 6.4 1 12 3 53 17.7 0 31BYU 10 31 3.1 0 8 1 6 6.0 0 6Air Force 12 63 5.2 1 15 0 0 0.0 0 0UNLV 7 28 4.0 0 10 2 21 10.5 0 13Utah 9 32 3.6 0 13 1 11 11.0 0 11SDSU 22 131 6.0 0 18 0 0 0.0 0 0New Mexico 9 53 5.9 1 14 0 0 0.0 0 0Totals 144 694 4.8 7 47 8 97 12.1 0 31

TUCKER’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSRUSHINGCarries: 22 vs. San Diego State in 2010Yards: 134 at Wyoming in 2009Long Rush: 48 yards at Wyoming in 2009 (touchdown)Touchdowns: 2, 3x; last vs. Tennessee Tech in 2010

RECEIVINGReceptions: 3 vs. Wyoming in 2010Yards: 53 vs. Wyoming in 2010Long Reception: 31 vs. Wyoming in 2010

29 TAILBACKSOPHOMORE I 6-1 I 210 I 1L

TYLER, TEXASCHAPEL H ILL HS

MATTHEW TUCKER

2009 I REDSHIRT FRESHMAN SEASONSemifinalist for the Doak Walker Award, recognizing the nation’s top running back ... First-team All-Mountain West Conference … his 1,065 yards rushing paces all Frogs as he became the first to rush for 1,000 on the season since Robert Merrill (1,107) in 2003 ... also leads the team with 11 rushing touchdowns, nearly tripling his output of four scores from a year ago ... leads all active TCU rushers with 1,733 yards in two seasons ... rushed for more than 100 yards four times and scampered into the end zone in eight of TCU’s 12 games ... enjoyed double-digit carry figures in 10 games ... averaged 6.6 rushing yards per carry and 88.8 yards on the ground per game … boasted runs of more than 10 yards in nine different games ... the 88.8 rushing yards per game ranks second in the MWC and 34th nationally ... had 11 rushing touchdowns … ran for a career-best and TCU season-high 209 yards, including two touchdowns, on 28 carries against Air Force … he single-handedly outrushed (209-184) an Air Force team that entered the game as the nation’s leading ground attack at 346.9 yards per game ... it was the 24th 200-yard game in TCU history and the 20th-best single-game total ... served as the most yards by a Frog since Joseph Turner’s 226 at San Diego State in 2007 ... received MWC Offensive Player of the Week honors, as well a weekly accolade from Rivals.com fr his performance against the Falcons ... ran 19 times for 165 yards versus Baylor, trotting into the end zone on runs of five and 49 yards ... his 49-yard touchdown run against the Bears is the longest rush from scrimmage for the Frogs this season ... also scored twice on 78 yards at Colorado State ... enjoyed 115 yards on 17 rushes against Wyoming ... wrapped the regular season with 77 yards, including a 44-yard scamper, at New Mexico ... also had a season-long 10-yard reception at New Mexico.

WESLEY’S CAREER STATSRUSHING RECEIVINGYear GP/S Att Yds Avg TD Lng Rec Yds Avg TD Lng2009 13/2 101 653 6.5 4 64 8 170 21.3 3 582010 12/12 162 1065 6.6 11 49 7 29 4.1 0 10Totals 25/14 263 1718 6.6 15 64 15 199 13.3 3 58

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSRUSHING RECEIVINGOpponent Att Yds Avg. TD Long Rec Yds Avg TD LongOregon State 17 134 7.9 1 16 1 1 1.0 0 1Tennessee Tech 11 85 7.7 1 19 0 0 0.0 0 0Baylor 19 165 8.7 2 49 0 0 0.0 0 0SMU 8 35 4.4 0 9 0 0 0.0 0 0Colorado State 15 78 5.2 2 13 1 9 9.0 0 9Wyoming 17 115 6.8 1 17 0 0 0.0 0 0BYU 10 53 5.3 0 16 2 -4 -2.0 0 0Air Force 28 209 7.5 2 22 0 0 0.0 0 0UNLV 13 64 4.9 1 15 1 8 8.0 0 8Utah 12 50 4.2 1 9 1 5 5.0 0 5SDSU 1 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0.0 0 0New Mexico 11 77 7.0 0 44 1 10 10.0 0 10Totals 162 1065 6.6 11 49 7 29 4.1 0 10

WESLEY’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSRUSHINGCarries: 28 vs. Air Force in 2010Yards: 209 vs. Air Force in 2010Long Rush: 64 yards vs. Utah in 2009Touchdowns: 2, 3x; last vs. Air Force in 2010

RECEIVINGReceptions: 3 vs. Colorado State in 2009Yards: 58 at Clemson in 2009Long Reception: 58 yards at Clemson in 2009Touchdowns: 1, 3x; last vs. UNLV in 2009

34 TAILBACKSOPHOMORE I 5-9 I 200 I 1L

IRVING, TEXASMACARTHUR HS

ED WESLEY

VERNON’S CAREER STATSGames Played/Started: 45/23 (12/12 in 2010; 12/11 in 2009; 12/0 in 2008; 9/0 in 2007)

Page 45: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

CO

AC

HE

S &

STA

FF

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL 2 0 10 H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL

TC U FO OTBALL : NAT I O N ’S 6TH-B E ST R E C O R D S I N C E 2 00 5 43

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

2010 I SENIOR SEASONContributed at safety and on special teams … nine of his 21 tackles came on special teams … totaled a season-best three stops at SMU and New Mexico … recorded two tackles in the 30-21 season opening win over Oregon State at Cowboys Stadium ... also made stops against Wyoming, UNLV and Utah.

WILLIAMS’ CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2009 13/0 6 4 10 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 1 02010 12/0 8 3 11 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 1 0 0Totals 25/0 14 7 21 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 1 1 0

WILLIAMS’ SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSDEFENSETackles: 3, 3x; last at New Mexico in 2010Solo Tackles: 3 vs. Texas State in 2009Fumbles Recovered: 1 vs. Utah in 2009

15 CORNERBACKSENIOR I 5-11 I 200 I 1L

GRAND PRAIRIE, TEXASSOUTH GRAND PRAIRIE HS / TRIN ITY VALLEY CC

MALCOLM WILLIAMS

2010 I REDSHIRT FRESHMAN SEASONAppeared in five games in his first season ... provides depth on the offensive line ... made his collegiate debut at home against Tennessee Tech ... also faced Wyoming, UNLV, Utah and New Mexico.

WOOLDRIDGE’S CAREER STATSGames Played/Started: 5/0 in 2010

75 OFFENSIVE TACKLERS FRESHMAN I 6-5 I 310 I RS

HOUSTON, TEXASEPISCOPAL HS

JOHN WOOLDRIDGE

2010 I SOPHOMORE SEASONHonorable-mention All-Mountain West Conference selection ... played in all 12 games, making four starts ... his three sacks are third-best on the team ... also tied for fifth on the squad with five tackles for loss ... tallied a tackle in the first five games of the season ... made a stop in nine of TCU’s 12 games ... posted a career-high five tackles, including a tackle for loss, at New Mexico ... recorded his first career fumble recovery at Utah ... the recovery came on Utah’s 26 yard line and led to a TCU touchdown on the first play from scrimmage ... boasted a tackle for loss in four-straight games against Tennessee Tech, Baylor, SMU and Colorado State ... his three sacks came at the expense of Baylor, Colorado State and BYU ... had four multi-tackle performances.

YENDREY’S CAREER STATSDEFENSE Year GP/S UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FF2009 13/0 6 7 13 3.0-24 2.0-23 0 0 0 02010 12/4 6 11 17 5.0-20 3.0-15 0 0 1 0Totals 25/4 12 18 30 8.0-44 5.0-38 0 0 1 0

94 DEFENSIVE ENDSOPHOMORE I 6-4 I 268 I 1L

EDNA, TEXASEDNA HS

DJ YENDREY

2010 I SENIOR SEASONHonorable-mention All-Mountain West Conference selection … one of only three players to play in all 51 games in the last four seasons, joining fellow wide outs Curtis Clay and Bart Johnson ... has moved into second place on TCU’s career receiving yards list (2,259), behind Mike Renfro (2,739) ... has 13 career touchdowns, tying him with LaTarence Dunbar (1999-02) and Kelly Blackwell (1988-91) for fifth all-time at TCU ... leads all active Frogs in receptions (142) and receiving yards (2,259) ... ranks fourth this season with 27 receptions and 429 yards … had at least one catch in 11 of the 12 games with multiple receptions in six contests, including the final six of the season … third on the team with four receiving touchdowns … had 39-yard score with his lone catch at Colorado State … had a season-high five catches for 84 yards and a touchdown at Utah … scored on a 14-yard reception as part of three catches in the 31-3 win versus BYU … recorded two receptions for 54 yards, including a season-long 45-yard grab in the 66-17 victory at New Mexico.

YOUNG’S CAREER STATSRECEIVING Year GP/S Rec Yds Avg TD Long2007 13/0 23 325 14.1 1 70 2008 13/11 59 988 16.7 5 652009 13/12 33 517 15.7 3 362010 12/9 27 429 15.9 4 45Totals 51/32 142 2259 15.8 13 70

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSRECEIVING Opponent Rec Yds Avg TD LongOregon State 0 0 0.0 0 0Tennessee Tech 1 17 17.0 0 17Baylor 3 53 17.7 0 29SMU 1 9 9.0 0 9Colorado State 1 39 39.0 1 39Wyoming 1 8 8.0 0 8BYU 3 40 13.3 1 15Air Force 2 38 18.0 0 21UNLV 4 43 10.8 0 13Utah 5 84 16.8 1 30SDSU 4 44 11.0 0 14New Mexico 2 54 27.0 1 45Totals 27 429 15.9 4 45

YOUNG’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSRECEIVINGReceptions: 7 vs. Stephen F. Austin in 2008Yards: 226 vs. Wyoming in 2008 (school record)Long: 70 yards at Stanford in 2007Touchdowns: 3 vs. Wyoming in 2008Yards Per Reception (min. 3 rec.): 45.2 yards vs. Wyoming in 2008

88 WIDE RECEIVERSENIOR I 6-1 I 208 I 3L

MONROE, LA.OUACHITA PARISH HS

JIMMY YOUNG

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STATSDEFENSE Opponent UT AT TT TFL QBS INT PBU FR FFOregon State 0 1 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Tennessee Tech 0 1 1 0.5-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Baylor 1 0 1 1.0-8 1.0-8 0 0 0 0SMU 1 2 3 0.5-1 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Colorado State 2 0 2 1.0-2 1.0-2 0 0 0 0Wyoming 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0BYU 1 0 1 1.0-5 1.0-5 0 0 0 0Air Force 1 0 1 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0UNLV 0 2 2 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Utah 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 1 0SDSU 0 0 0 0.0-0 0.0-0 0 0 0 0New Mexico 0 5 5 1.0-4 0.0-0 0 0 0 0Totals 6 11 17 5.0-20 3.0-15 0 0 1 0

YENDREY’S SINGLE-GAME CAREER HIGHSTackles: 5 at New Mexico in 2010Solo Tackles: 2, 2x; last at Colorado State in 2010Tackles for Loss: 1.0, 7x; last at New Mexico in 2010Sacks: 1.0, 5x; last vs. BYU in 2010

Page 46: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

CO

AC

HE

S &

STA

FF

44

2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

PATTERSON FILE

AGE: __________________50 (born Feb. 13, 1960)

BIRTHPLACE: __________________ Larned, Kan.

HOMETOWN: ____________________Rozel, Kan.

HIGH SCHOOL: ____ Pawnee Heights, Kan. (1978)

ALMA MATER: ____________ Kansas State (1983) Physical Education

MASTER’S DEGREE: _____ Tennessee Tech (1984) Educational Administration

PLAYING EXPERIENCE: __ Dodge City CC (1978-79) Kansas State (1980-81)

MARRIED: __________________________ Kelsey

CHILDREN: ________________ Josh, Cade, Blake

COACHING EXPERIENCE:1982 _____________Kansas State (Graduate Asst.)1983-84 __________ Tennessee Tech (Linebackers)1986 __________________UC Davis (Linebackers)1987 ______ Cal Lutheran (Defensive Coordinator)1988 ________Pittsburg State (Kan.) (Linebackers)1989-91 _________________ Sonoma (Calif.) State (Defensive Coordinator)1992 _________________ Oregon Lightning Bolts1992-94 _______________ Utah State (Secondary) 1995 ______________________ Navy (Secondary) 1996-97 ________________________ New Mexico (Defensive Coordinator/Safeties) 1998-00 ____ TCU (Defensive Coordinator/Safeties)2000-present _______________TCU (Head Coach)

BOWL GAMES:1982 ________ Independence Bowl (Kansas State) 1993 ______________Las Vegas Bowl (Utah State) 1997 __________ Insight.com Bowl (New Mexico) 1998 ________________ Norwest Sun Bowl (TCU)1999 _____________ Mobile Alabama Bowl (TCU)2000 ________GMAC Mobile Alabama Bowl (TCU)2001 __________ galleryfurniture.com Bowl (TCU)2002 _________________ AXA Liberty Bowl (TCU)2003 _______ PlainsCapital Fort Worth Bowl (TCU)2005 ___________________ Houston Bowl (TCU)2006 ___________________Poinsettia Bowl (TCU)2007 ______________________ Texas Bowl (TCU)2008 ___________________Poinsettia Bowl (TCU)2009 ______________________ Fiesta Bowl (TCU)2010 _______________________ Rose Bowl (TCU)

Since taking over the helm of the Horned Frogs in December 2000, Gary Patterson has become synonymous with TCU football.

In 2010, Patterson has guided the Horned Frogs to their second consecutive undefeated regular season and BCS appearance. The Horned Frogs, ranked third, will face Wisconsin in the Rose Bowl.

Patterson was selected for nine national coaching honors last season after leading TCU to a 12-1 record, No. 6 ranking and the Fiesta Bowl.

Patterson was named National Coach of the Year by the Walter Camp Football Foundation, Associated Press, American Football Coaches Association and Sporting News while also receiving the Bobby Dodd Award, Eddie Robinson Award, Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year Award, George Munger Award and Woody Hayes Award.

The No. 6 ranking in season-ending polls by the Associated Press and USA Today gave the Frogs their second straight top-10 finish and third in the last five years. TCU had its highest season-ending ranking since 1955, when it was also sixth, and has posted back-to-back top-10 appearances in final polls for the first time since the 1958-59 campaigns. The Frogs finished seventh in 2008.

In 2009, TCU posted just the second 12-win season in its history, matched only by its 1935 national championship team which also went 12-1. The Frogs had their first undefeated regular season since their 1938 national championship campaign.

TCU topped the nation in total defense for the second straight year and fourth time in 10 seasons. Despite losing seven starters to graduation, including three to the NFL, off 2008’s No. 1 defense, the Frogs again led the nation by allowing just 239.7 yards per game.

Since the NCAA began tracking statistics in 1937, TCU is tied with Alabama and Auburn for the most No. 1 rankings in total defense at four. All four of the Frogs’ top marks (2000, 2002, 2008, 2009) have come under Patterson.

Since 2000, TCU’s first of four team defensive titles, Virginia Tech is the only other school to finish first more than once (2005, 2006). The Frogs, Hokies and Miami, Fla. (1989, 1994) are the only teams to win the crown at least twice since 1989.

TCU and Florida were the only schools in 2009 to rank in the top 10 nationally in total offense and defense. The Frogs were seventh offensively at 456.7 yards per game.

The dean of Mountain West Conference coaches, Patterson has led TCU to at least 10 wins seven times in the last nine years, including six 11-win campaigns since 2003. No other coach in TCU history has more than two 10-win campaigns.

Patterson’s 97-28 (.776) record is the best mark of the four coaches at TCU to be on the sideline for at least 100 games. Patterson’s 97 wins are second on the Frogs’ career victory list, trailing only Dutch Meyer (109-79-13, .575). Meyer coached TCU to its 1935 and 1938 national championships.

Patterson’s .776 winning percentage is second among TCU coaches with more than 20 games under their belt and fifth among active coaches in the Football Bowl Subdivision (formerly called Division I-A).

The Frogs have won six conference titles with Patterson on staff in addition to posting eight of the school’s 12 10-win seasons. He was TCU’s defensive coordinator from 1998-00.

During his 13 years on campus, Patterson has seen TCU make 12 bowl appearances. From 2005-08, Patterson led the Frogs to four straight bowl victories for the first time in school history. During that stretch, TCU was one of just seven schools nationally to have a current bowl winning streak of at least four in a row.

TCU is 7-4 in bowl games with Patterson on its coaching staff and 5-4 with him as head coach. Prior to Patterson’s arrival on campus in 1998, the Frogs had just four bowl wins in their history.

The Frogs are 15-3 in their last 18 games against teams from leagues with automatic BCS bids, including a 6-2 mark versus the Big 12 and a 4-0 record against the Pac-10 the past six seasons.

The Frogs were fourth in the final BCS standings in 2009, marking the highest appearance ever by a team from a non-automatic qualifying conference.

In 10 seasons as a head coach, Patterson has coached 130 All-Conference selections, 13 first-team All-Americans, 11 Freshman All-Americans and two Academic All-Americans.

In five of its first six seasons in the Mountain West, TCU has set the pace on the all-conference teams. The Frogs had a school-record 20 selections in 2009, 18 in 2005 and 2008, 17 in 2010, 14 in 2006 and 11 in 2007.

As TCU’s head coach, Patterson has had 24 players drafted with a total of 47 in NFL camps.

In 2008, Patterson was one of 15 semifinalists for the George Munger National Coach of the Year Award by the Maxwell Football Club. He was also named to the Paul “Bear” Bryant Watch List for the College Football Coach of the Year.

Patterson guided TCU to an 11-2 record and a No. 7 ranking in the final AP and USA Today polls. It was the Frogs’ highest season-ending appearance in the polls since 1959. Included in the win total were victories over then-undefeated, top-10 teams BYU and Boise State. It was the first time since 1961 that TCU beat two top-10 opponents in the same season.

TCU led the nation in total defense (217.8 yards per game) in 2008 for the third time in nine seasons. No other school in the country has finished first in that category as many times as TCU in that span. The Frogs were also first in run defense (47.1 yards), fewest first downs allowed per game (12.1) and time of possession (35:10). TCU was second in scoring defense (11.3 points per game).

Patterson became the fastest TCU coach to reach 50 victories (70 games) with a 27-21 win at New Mexico on Nov. 11, 2006.

HEAD COACHKANSAS STATE, 1983

10TH SEASON AS TCU HEAD COACH13TH SEASON OVERALL AT TCU

GARY PAT T E R SON

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL

Page 47: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

CO

AC

HE

S &

STA

FF

45BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

FROGS UNDER PATTERSONSituation _________________________ RecordScore First __________________________ 71-15When Opp. Scores First _______________ 26-13Lead at the Half _______________________ 80-9Trail at the Half ______________________ 12-17Tied at the Half ________________________ 5-2Lead After 3 Quarters __________________ 83-8Trail After 3 Quarters __________________ 6-16Tied After 3 Quarters ___________________ 8-4Games Decided in OT ___________________ 4-4300+ yards of Offense ________________ 86-21100+ Rushing Yards __________________ 94-17200+ Rushing Yards ___________________ 54-2200+ Passing Yards ___________________ 49-18300+ Passing Yards ____________________ 11-5Win Time of Possession _______________ 78-13Opp. At or Under 300 Total Yards _________ 70-6Allow 300+ Total Yards ________________ 27-22Opp. Under 100 Rush Yds. ______________ 70-8

CAREER COACHING WINS AT TCUNo. __ Coach ________________________Wins1. ___ Dutch Meyer ____________________ 1092. ___ Gary Patterson ___________________ 973. ___ Abe Martin _______________________ 744. ___ Francis Schmidt ___________________ 475. ___ Jim Wacker _______________________ 40

CAREER GAMES COACHED AT TCUNo. __ Coach _______________________ Games1. ___ Dutch Meyer ____________________ 2012. ___ Abe Martin ______________________ 1453. ___ Gary Patterson __________________1254. ___ Jim Wacker ______________________ 1005. ___ Pat Sullivan ______________________ 676. ___ F.A. Dry __________________________ 667. ___ Francis Schmidt ___________________ 578. ___ Madison A. Bell ___________________ 55

CAREER RECORD BREAKDOWNvs. Conference Opponents _____________ 61-18vs. Non-Conference Opponents ________ 36-10vs. Ranked Opponents _________________ 10-7Home Games ________________________ 51-6Road Games ________________________ 40-18Neutral Site Games _____________________ 6-4August _______________________________ 1-1September __________________________ 31-9October _____________________________ 33-7November ___________________________ 25-7December ____________________________ 7-3January ______________________________ 0-1

Patterson was the 2002 Conference USA and 2005 Mountain West Conference Coach of the Year. He was a 2003 finalist for Eddie Robinson and Bobby Dodd National Coach of the Year honors. He also appeared on the 2006 Bobby Dodd Watch List.

An 11-2 record in 2006 included wins over Big 12 opponents Baylor and Texas Tech as well as a 37-7 victory over Northern Illinois in the Poinsettia Bowl.

The Frogs’ defense ranked second nationally in run defense (60.8 yards per game) and total defense (234.9 yards per game) while placing third in scoring defense (12.3 points per game).

TCU won its last eight games in 2006 for the fourth-best winning streak at the time in the nation, trailing only Boise State (13), BYU (10) and Wisconsin (9).

The Frogs’ eight consecutive wins were by an average margin of 24.4 points. During that stretch, the TCU defense allowed per game marks of 10.8 points, 59.6 yards rushing and 185.1 in total offense.

In 2005, Patterson led the Frogs to the Mountain West Conference championship in their first season of league play.

It was also TCU’s first outright conference championship since 1958. The Frogs posted an 11-1 record for just the fourth 11-win season in school history and the second in three years.

TCU also recorded its first undefeated league mark (8-0) dating back to 1938.

The Frogs opened and closed the 2005 season with victories over Big 12 teams. Following a 27-24 EV1.net Houston Bowl win over Iowa State, Patterson saw TCU climb to ninth in the USA Today poll and 11th in the Associated Press poll. It was TCU’s highest season-ending ranking since 1959.

TCU, picked to finish sixth in 2005 preseason MWC polls, opened the campaign with a 17-10 victory at No. 5 Oklahoma. It was TCU’s first win against an opponent ranked that high since a 6-0 victory over No. 1 Texas in 1961.

Patterson’s success in 2005 was achieved while playing a total of 21 redshirt or true freshmen, tying for fourth nationally in that category.

The 2005 Frog defense led the nation in turnover margin (+21), interceptions (26) and takeaways (40). The offense set a single-season school record with 50 touchdowns while its 398 points scored ranked second all-time at TCU.

Setting the pace nationally in defensive categories is nothing new for Patterson. His teams also led the country in defense during the 2000 and 2002 campaigns. In 2002, the Frogs allowed only 64.8 rushing yards per game - ranking first in that category as well.

TCU has been no stranger to the post-season in the Patterson era. The Frogs have emerged victorious seven times in their run of 12 bowl games in 13 seasons, including a 17-3 win over MWC champion Colorado State in the 2002 AXA Liberty Bowl.

In his first full season as head coach with the Frogs in 2001, Patterson was one of only eight coaches with no previous Division I head coaching experience to lead their teams to bowl appearances. He proceeded to take the Frogs to a bowl in each of his first three years.

Patterson’s 10-2 record and conference championship in the 2002 season earned him Conference USA Coach of the Year accolades. The Frogs finished the season ranked 22nd in the USA Today/ESPN Coaches Poll and 23rd in the Associated Press poll.

Eleven of Patterson’s career wins came in the Horned Frogs’ 2003 campaign, when TCU climbed as high as sixth in the BCS rankings - the highest ranking at that time for a school from a non-automatic qualifying conference.

Under Patterson’s guidance, the Frogs got off to a 10-0 start after opening the season ranked 25th in the Associated Press poll. They finished the season 11-2 and ranked in the top 25 for the second year in a row - the first time to happen at TCU since the 1950s. His leadership of the 2003 squad made him a finalist for both the Eddie Robinson and Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year honors. He was also named an assistant coach for the Hula Bowl.

H EAD C OAC H GARY PAT T E R SON

2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL

Page 48: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

CO

AC

HE

S &

STA

FF

46 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

PATTERSON’S HEAD COACHING RECORDYear School Won Lost Pct. Bowl2000 ____ TCU _________0_______ 1 ______ .000 __________ Mobile Alabama2001 ____ TCU _________6_______ 6 ______ .500 _______ galleryfurniture.com2002 ____ TCU ________ 10 ______ 2 ______ .833 __________________ Liberty2003 ____ TCU ________ 11 ______ 2 ______ .846 _______________ Fort Worth2004 ____ TCU _________5_______ 6 ______ .455 ________________________2005 ____ TCU ________ 11 ______ 1 ______ .917 _________________ Houston2006 ____ TCU ________ 11 ______ 2 ______ .846 ________________ Poinsettia2007 ____ TCU _________8_______ 5 ______ .615 ___________________ Texas2008 ____ TCU ________ 11 ______ 2 ______ .833 ________________ Poinsettia2009 ____ TCU ________ 12 ______ 1 ______ .923 ___________________ Fiesta2010 TCU 12 0 1.000 RoseTotals _______________ 97 _____ 28 _____ .776 ______________ (10 Years)

PATTERSON’S MILESTONE VICTORIES Win _____ Date ________Opponent ______ Site ___________________ Score 1 ______ 9/1/01 _______North Texas ______ Denton, Texas ___________ 19-5 25 ______ 11/5/03 ______Louisville ________ Fort Worth _____________ 31-28 50 ______ 11/11/06 _____New Mexico _____ Albuquerque, N.M. ______ 27-21 75 ______ 9/19/09 ______Texas State ______ Fort Worth _____________ 56-21

PATTERSON’S BOWL GAMESBowl _______________________Opponent ___________ W/L ________ Score2000 Mobile Alabama _________Southern Miss __________ L _________ 21-282001 galleryfurniture.com ______Texas A&M _____________ L __________ 9-282002 Liberty _________________Colorado State _________ W _________ 17-32003 Fort Worth ______________Boise State ____________ L _________ 31-342005 EV1.net Houston _________Iowa State _____________ W ________ 27-242006 Poinsettia _______________Northern Illinois ________ W _________ 37-72007 Texas ___________________Houston ______________ W ________ 20-132008 Poinsettia _______________Boise State ____________ W ________ 17-162009 Fiesta __________________Boise State ____________ L _________ 10-179 Bowls in 10 Years __________________________________ 5-4 Record (.555)

PATTERSON VS. RANKED OPPONENTSDate ___________Opponent __________________ W/L ____________ Score8/25/01 _________at Nebraska (4) _________________L _______________ 7-2111/23/01 ________vs Louisville (17) _______________ W _____________ 37-2212/31/02 ________Colorado State (23) _____________ W ______________ 17-312/23/03 ________vs Boise State (18) _______________L ______________ 31-3411/10/04 ________at Louisville (12) ________________L ______________ 28-559/03/05 _________at Oklahoma (5) _______________ W _____________ 17-109/16/06 _________vs Texas Tech (24) ______________ W ______________ 12-39/8/07 __________at Texas (7) ____________________L ______________ 13-349/27/08 _________at Oklahoma (2) ________________L ______________ 10-3510/16/08 ________vs. BYU (8) ____________________ W ______________ 32-711/6/08 _________at Utah (9) _____________________L ______________ 10-1312/23/08 ________vs. Boise State (9) ______________ W _____________ 17-1610/24/09 ________at BYU (16) ___________________ W ______________ 38-711/14/09 ________vs. Utah (16) __________________ W _____________ 55-281/4/10 __________vs. Boise State (6) _______________L ______________ 10-179/4/10 __________vs. Oregon State (24) ___________ W _____________ 30-2111/6/10 _________at Utah (5) ____________________ W ______________ 47-717 Games _________________________________________ 10-7 Record (.588)

PATTERSON VS. ALL OPPONENTSAir Force _______________________________________________________ 5-1Arizona ________________________________________________________ 1-0Army __________________________________________________________ 6-0Baylor _________________________________________________________ 3-0Boise State _____________________________________________________ 1-2BYU ___________________________________________________________ 4-2Cincinnati ______________________________________________________ 1-2Clemson _______________________________________________________ 1-0Colorado State __________________________________________________ 7-0East Carolina ____________________________________________________ 0-2Houston _______________________________________________________ 5-0Iowa State ______________________________________________________ 1-0Louisville _______________________________________________________ 3-1Memphis _______________________________________________________ 1-0Navy __________________________________________________________ 1-0Nebraska _______________________________________________________ 0-1New Mexico ____________________________________________________ 6-0North Texas _____________________________________________________ 2-0Northern Illinois _________________________________________________ 1-0Northwestern ___________________________________________________ 2-0Northwestern State ______________________________________________ 0-1Oklahoma ______________________________________________________ 1-1Oregon State____________________________________________________ 1-0San Diego State _________________________________________________ 6-0SMU ___________________________________________________________ 8-1Southern Miss ___________________________________________________ 3-2Stanford _______________________________________________________ 2-0Stephen F. Austin ________________________________________________ 1-0Tennessee Tech __________________________________________________ 1-0Texas __________________________________________________________ 0-1Texas A&M ______________________________________________________ 0-1Texas State _____________________________________________________ 1-0Texas Tech ______________________________________________________ 1-1Tulane _________________________________________________________ 2-2UAB ___________________________________________________________ 1-2UC Davis _______________________________________________________ 1-0UNLV __________________________________________________________ 6-0USF ___________________________________________________________ 1-1Utah __________________________________________________________ 3-3Vanderbilt ______________________________________________________ 1-0Virginia ________________________________________________________ 1-0Wyoming ______________________________________________________ 5-1Total ________________________________________________________ 97-28

PATTERSON’S ACCOLADESDate _______________________________________________________Honors2000 ______________ Frank Broyles National Assistant Coach of the Year finalist2002 _________________________________ Conference USA Coach of the Year2003 ___________________________ Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year finalist2003 ______________________________ Bobby Dodd Coach of the Year finalist2004 ______________________________________Assistant Coach – Hula Bowl2005 ________________________Mountain West Conference Coach of the Year2009 ________ Nine National Coach of the Year Awards/MWC Coach of the Year

In 2004, the Frogs finished in the top 20 in the nation in scoring offense, passing offense and total offense. The Patterson chapter of TCU football, however, has been dominated by a tradition of defense. Since 1999, the Frogs have been ranked in the top five nationally in total defense four times.

Patterson amassed 18 years as an assistant coach, including three with the Frogs, before taking the torch from Dennis Franchione prior to the 2000 GMAC Mobile Alabama Bowl.

In 1998, Patterson’s first season at TCU, the Horned Frogs scored a school-record six defensive touchdowns, intercepted 12 passes and allowed only 19.6 points per game - the fewest points per game in over 30 years. It was accomplished by a team that was 1-10 the previous season.

Patterson’s 1999 TCU defense ended the season ranked fifth in the country in total defense. The Frogs posted two shutouts and led the Western Athletic Conference in every major defensive category.

In 2000, the Frogs allowed only 245.0 total yards and 9.6 points per game, ranking first in the nation in both categories. Five of Patterson’s players earned first-team all-conference recognition and he was a finalist for the Frank Broyles National Assistant Coach of the Year award.

Prior to his arrival in Fort Worth, Patterson spent two seasons as the defensive coordinator and safeties coach at New Mexico. The Lobos collected 22 total takeaways and three defensive touchdowns in 1996. The next year, in Patterson style, New Mexico improved their total takeaways to 29, including 16 interceptions.

A true defensive specialist, Patterson had a similar impact at Navy. In just one season as the Midshipmen’s secondary coach in 1995, he helped elevate the defense in the national rankings. Navy finished 18th in total defense, 17th in scoring defense and 28th in pass defense efficiency.

Patterson’s defensive acumen dates back to his own playing days at Kansas State, where he played strong safety and outside linebacker for the Wildcats in 1980 and 1981.

He served as a graduate assistant in 1982 and received his bachelor’s degree in physical education in 1983. He took the linebacker coaching position at Tennessee Tech while earning a master’s degree in educational administration in 1984.

Patterson has been a member of 14 bowl staffs, including one each with Kansas State, Utah State and New Mexico. The other 11 have come at TCU. Aside from being an accomplished Division I head coach, Patterson is also a skilled guitar player. On several occasions, Patterson has entertained TCU fans with his guitar skills at pep rallies around the Fort Worth area.

A native of Rozel, Kansas, Patterson is married to the former Kelsey Hayes. He has three sons: Josh, Cade and Blake.

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

Page 49: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

CO

AC

HE

S &

STA

FF

47

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL

BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

TED HENDRICKS AWARD

Jerry Hughes (2009)

LOTT TROPHYJerry Hughes (2009)

RIMINGTON TROPHYJake Kirkpatrick (2010)

RUDY AWARDDrew Combs (2008)

FIRST TEAMALL-AMERICANNick Browne (2002)

LaMarcus McDonald (2002)Nick Browne (2003)Bo Schobel (2003)

Cory Rodgers (2005)Jerry Hughes (2008)Jerry Hughes (2009)

Jake Kirkpatrick (2009)Daryl Washington (2009)

Tank Carder (2010)Wayne Daniels (2010)Tejay Johnson (2010)Jeremy Kerley (2010)

Jake Kirkpatrick (2010)

FRESHMAN ALL-AMERICANLonta Hobbs (2002)Robert Merrill (2003)Cory Rodgers (2003)

Herb Taylor (2003)Tommy Blake (2004)Aaron Brown (2005)Jason Phillips (2005)Nick Sanders (2006)Andy Dalton (2007)Kelly Griffin (2007)

Tanner Brock (2009)Josh Boyce (2010)

Stansly Maponga (2010)

ACADEMIC ALL-AMERICAN

Nick Browne (2002-2003)

CONFERENCEOFFENSIVE PLAYER

OF THE YEARAndy Dalton (2009)Andy Dalton (2010)

CONFERENCEDEFENSIVE PLAYER

OF THE YEARLaMarcus McDonald (2002)

Tommy Blake (2005)Jerry Hughes (2008)Jerry Hughes (2009)Tank Carder (2010)

CONFERENCE SPECIAL TEAMS

PLAYER OF THE YEARNick Browne (2003)

Jeremy Kerley (2009)Jeremy Kerley (2010)

FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR

Lonta Hobbs (2002)Aaron Brown (2005)

FIRST TEAM ALL-CONFERENCE

Victor Payne (2001)Nick Browne (2002)Jason Goss (2002)

LaMarcus McDonald (2002)Jamal Powell (2002) Bo Schobel (2002)

Anthony Alabi (2003)Nick Browne (2003)Chad Pugh (2003)Bo Schobel (2003)

Anthony Alabi (2004)Marvin Godbolt (2004)

Cody McCarty (2004)Tommy Blake (2005)Quincy Butler (2005)

Chase Ortiz (2005)Cory Rodgers (KR, 2005)

Herb Taylor (2005)Michael Toudouze (2005)

Tommy Blake (2006)Brian Bonner (RS, 2006)

Chase Ortiz (2006)Jason Phillips (2006)Herb Taylor (2006)

Marvin White (2006)Brian Bonner (2007)Chase Ortiz (2007)

Robert Henson (2008)Stephen Hodge (2008)

Jerry Hughes (2008)Jeremy Kerley (2008)Jason Phillips (2008)

Blake Schlueter (2008)Marcus Cannon (2009)

Andy Dalton (2009)Ross Evans (2009)

Jerry Hughes (2009)Jeremy Kerley (2009)

Marshall Newhouse (2009)Rafael Priest (2009)Nick Sanders (2009)

Daryl Washington (2009)Tanner Brock (2010)

Marcus Cannon (2010)Tank Carder (2010)Andy Dalton (2010)

Wayne Daniels (2010)Tejay Johnson (2010)Jeremy Kerley (2010)

Jake Kirkpatrick (2010)Ed Wesley (2010)

SECOND TEAM ALL-CONFERENCE

Jason Goss (2001)LaMarcus McDonald (2001)

Chad Pugh (2001)LaTarence Dunbar (2002)Kenneth Hilliard (2002)

Chad Pugh (2002)John Turntine (2002)Reggie Harrell (2003)Chase Johnson (2003)Robert Merrill (2003)Mark Walker (2003)

Martin Patterson (2004)Drew Coleman (2005)Stephen Culp (2005)

Chris Manfredini (2005)Jeremy Modkins (2005)

Jason Phillips (2005)Ranorris Ray (2005)

Brian Bonner (S, 2006)Jeff Ballard (2006)

Aaron Brown (2006)Matty Lindner (2006)

Stephen Hodge (2007)Jason Phillips (2007)David Roach (2007)

Blake Schlueter (2007)Steven Coleman (2008)

Cody Moore (2008)Marshall Newhouse (2008)

Matt Panfil (2008)Rafael Priest (2008)Tank Carder (2009)

Wayne Daniels (2009)Cory Grant (2009)

Tejay Johnson (2009)Jake Kirkpatrick (2009)Joseph Turner (2009)

Cory Grant (2010)Colin Jones (2010)

Jeremy Kerley (2010)Stansly Maponga (2010)

Jason Teague (2010)

THIRD TEAM ALL-CONFERENCEMarvin Godbolt (2003)Robert Pollard (2003)Cory Rodgers (2003)Reggie Harrell (2004)Chase Johnson (2004)Cory Rodgers (2004)Mark Walker (2004)

HONORABLE MENTION ALL-CONFERENCE

Aaron Brown (2005)Jeff Ballard (2005)

Robert Henson (2005)Robert Merrill (2005)

Cory Rodgers (WR, 2005)Marvin White (2005)

Robert Henson (2006)Lonta Hobbs (2006)

Chris Manfredini (2006)Blake Schlueter (2006)Robert Henson (2007)

Chris Manfredini (2007)Marshall Newhouse (2007)

Rafael Priest (2007)Derek Wash (2007)

Aaron Brown (2008)Marcus Cannon (2008)

Andy Dalton (2008)Anson Kelton (2008)Nick Sanders (2008)James Vess (2008)

Jimmy Young (2008)Evan Frosch (2009)

Antoine Hicks (2009)Ed Wesley (2009)

Jimmy Young (2009)Evan Frosch (2010)D.J. Yendrey (2010)

Jimmy Young (2010)

CONFERENCE ALL-FRESHMAN TEAM

Marvin Godbolt (2001)Lonta Hobbs (2002)Ranorris Ray (2002)

Robert Merrill (2003)Cory Rodgers (2003)Herbert Taylor (2003)Tommy Blake (2004)

NFL CAMPSAnthony AlabiTommy BlakeBrian Bonner

Zach Bray Aaron BrownQuincy Butler

Drew ColemanMichael DePriest

LaTarence DunbarZarnell FitchJason Goss

Clint GreshamTye Gunn

Reggie HarrellDavid Hawthorne

Robert HensonKenneth HilliardStephen Hodge

Reggie HoltsJerry Hughes

Chase JohnsonMatty LindnerAdrian MadiseCody McCarty

LaMarcus McDonaldJeremy Modkins

Marshall NewhouseChase Ortiz

Martin PattersonJason PhillipsRobert PollardJamal PowellRafael PriestRanorris Ray

Jared RetkofskyNic RichmondDavid RoachCory Rodgers

Tyrone SandersBlake Schlueter

Bo SchobelMatt Schobel Herb Taylor

Michael Toudouze John Turntine

Daryl WashingotnMarvin White

TC U I N D I V I D UAL H O N O R S I N TH E PAT T E R SON E R A

2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

Page 50: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

CO

AC

HE

S &

STA

FF

48 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

After coming to TCU as a graduate assistant, Jarrett Anderson

is in his 13th year overall with the Horned Frogs.

In February 2009, Anderson was promoted to co-offensive

coordinator. He also became the running backs coach after

serving as wide receivers coach the previous eight seasons.

In 2010 and for the third-straight season, Anderson has

helped lead a TCU offense that shattered single-season

school records for points scored (520) and touchdowns (70).

The Frogs have scored in all but one quarter this year.

The Horned Frogs rank fourth nationally in scoring (43.3

points per game), seventh in total offense (491.5 yards per

game) and ninth in rushing (261.2 yards per game).

Sophomores Ed Wesley and Matthew Tucker have marched

for career-highs in yards and touchdowns. Tucker rumbled

for a career-best 694 yards for seven scores, while Wesley

scampered for 1,065 rushing yards and 11 touchdowns to

become the first Frog to rush for 1,000 on the season since

Robert Merrill (1,107) in 2003. Wesley garnered All-MWC first-

team considerations.

In 2009, the Horned Frogs established previous single-season

school marks for points scored (498), total offense (5,937

yards) and first downs (311).

TCU ranked fifth nationally in rushing offense (239.5 yards

per game) and scoring (38.3 points per game) while placing

seventh in total offense (456.7 yards per game) and eighth in

passing efficiency (154.1).

Anderson helped mentor Tucker and Wesley into being the

Frogs’ second- and third-leading rushers with 676 and 638

yards, respectively. Those totals represented the fifth- and

sixth-best rushing totals by a freshman in TCU history.

In 2008, Jimmy Young became the first TCU wide receiver to

be named All-Mountain West Conference. Young had 988

yards receiving to narrowly miss just the second 1,000-yard

season in TCU history. His 59 receptions tied for the fourth-

best total on the Frogs’ single-season chart.

Under Anderson’s tutelage, three TCU receivers in eight years

were drafted by NFL teams.

Cory Rodgers was a fourth-round pick by Green Bay in

2006. Adrian Madise and LaTarence Dunbar were selected

in the fifth and sixth rounds in 2003 by Denver and Atlanta,

respectively. All three finished their careers in the top 10 of

various TCU receiving categories.

Reggie Harrell, who signed as a free agent with Dallas,

became TCU’s first 1,000-yard receiver in 2003.

During his three-year career, Rodgers tied Mike Renfro’s

career TCU mark of 17 receiving touchdowns.

Both Harrell and Rodgers rank among the top 10 in school

history in career receptions and yards while earning all-

conference recognition.

In 2006, Quentily Harmon closed his career as TCU’s ninth-

leading receiver with 111 catches. In addition, Michael

DePriest was signed as a free-agent in 2007 by Indianapolis.

Prior to assuming his current duties, Anderson served on

the TCU coaching staff as a graduate assistant from 1998-00,

working primarily with the Frogs’ offensive line.

Anderson spent one season (1997) as an assistant coach

at Tyler Junior College, where he worked with the running

backs and receivers. He began his collegiate playing career at

Tyler before transferring to New Mexico. He lettered for the

Lobos in both 1992 and 1993.

Anderson graduated from New Mexico in 1993 with a

bachelor’s degree in university studies and earned a master’s

degree in TCU’s MLA program.

Anderson and his wife, Lisa, have two sons: Aidan and Eli.

ANDERSON FILE

AGE: __________________ 40 (born Dec. 7, 1970)

HOMETOWN: ___________________ Tyler, Texas

MARRIED: ____________________________ Lisa

CHILDREN: ___________________ Aidan and Eli

ALMA MATER: ____________ New Mexico (1993)

PLAYING EXPERIENCE: 1990-91 __________________Tyler Junior College1992-93 ________________________ New Mexico

COACHING EXPERIENCE:1994 _________New Mexico (Graduate Assistant)1997 _______________ Tyler J.C. (Running Backs/ Wide Receivers)1998-00 _____________ TCU (Graduate Assistant)2001-2008 ______________ TCU (Wide Receivers)2009 -present ___ TCU (Co-Offensive Coordinator/ Running Backs)

BOWL GAMES:1998 ________________ Norwest Sun Bowl (TCU)1999 _____________ Mobile Alabama Bowl (TCU)2000 _______ GMAC Mobile Alabama Bowl (TCU)2001 _________ galleryfurniture.com Bowl (TCU)2002 _________________AXA Liberty Bowl (TCU)2003 ______ PlainsCapital Fort Worth Bowl (TCU)2005 ___________________ Houston Bowl (TCU)2006 __________________ Poinsettia Bowl (TCU)2007 ______________________ Texas Bowl (TCU)2008 __________________ Poinsettia Bowl (TCU)2009 ______________________Fiesta Bowl (TCU)2010 ______________________ Rose Bowl (TCU)

CO-OFFENSIVE COORDINATOR/RUNNING BACKS

13TH SEASON AT TCUNEW MEXICO, 1993

JAR R ETT AN D E RSON

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

Page 51: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

CO

AC

HE

S &

STA

FF

49

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL

BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

Dick Bumpas joined TCU in February 2004 as the defensive coordinator and defensive line coach.

Bumpas first worked with Horned Frog coach Gary Patterson at Kansas State in the early 1980s. He was the Wildcats’ defensive line coach in 1981 when Patterson was a senior linebacker. Patterson then became a Kansas State graduate assistant in 1982 and joined Bumpas on staff. The duo also worked together at Utah State from 1992-94 and at Navy in 1995. At both places, Bumpas was the defensive coordinator while Patterson was the secondary coach.

In 2010, Bumpas was a finalist for the Broyles Award, recognizing the nation’s top assistant coach, for the third consecutive season. He has been a finalist for the honor four times in his career.

TCU currently tops the country in total defense (215.4 ypg), pass defense (126.3 ypg), scoring defense (11.4 ppg) and first downs allowed (136). Bumpas has an All-American on all three levels of his starting lineup in defensive end Wayne Daniels, linebacker Tank Carder and safety Tejay Johnson. Johnson was one of three finalists for the 2010 Jim Thorpe Award.

Bumpas mentored Horned Frog defensive end Jerry Hughes into being a two-time consensus All-American and the 2009 recipient of the Ted Hendricks Award and Lott Trophy. Hughes, who had never played on defense until arriving at TCU, was also a finalist for the Bronko Nagurski Trophy and Rotary Lombardi Award.

In 2008. TCU led the nation in total defense (217.8 yards per game), run defense (47.1 yards per game) and fewest first downs allowed per game (12.1) while placing second in scoring defense (11.3 points per game) and sacks (43) and fourth in pass efficiency defense (97.9).

All four of TCU’s starting defensive linemen in 2008 were named All-MWC. In addition to Hughes being a first-team selection, seniors Cody Moore and defensive end Matt Panfil enjoyed their best seasons in 2008 and were both second-team picks. Defensive tackle James Vess was an honorable-mention choice.

Bumpas coached defensive ends Tommy Blake and Chase Ortiz to first-team All-Mountain West Conference honors in 2005 and 2006. In 2007, Ortiz became TCU’s first three-time first-team all-conference player in 30 years (Mike Renfro, 1975-77). Ortiz signed a free-agent contract with the Cleveland Browns.

The 2006 TCU defense ranked second nationally in run defense (60.8 yards per game) and total defense (234.9 ypg.) while placing third in scoring defense (12.3 points per game).

TCU led the nation in 2005 in turnover margin (+21), interceptions (26) and takeaways (40). The Frogs topped the Mountain West Conference with 41 sacks and allowed just three touchdowns in their final three games, keeping their opponent out of the end zone for 10 quarters from Oct. 29 at San Diego State to the Dec. 31 EV1.net Houston Bowl.

In a coaching career that has spanned 30 years, Bumpas has won championships in four different conferences and coached at all three service academies. He has also coached in 15 bowl games.

Bumpas came to TCU after serving as Western Michigan’s defensive coordinator for one season.

Bumpas worked at the University of Houston from 1999-02, serving as assistant head coach and linebackers coach and later as co-defensive coordinator, installing the 4-2-5 defense in his initial season. Houston finished 25th in the nation in total defense that first year while ranking 20th against the run and 22nd in scoring defense. In 2001, Bumpas coached Wayne Rogers, the Conference USA Co-Defensive Player of the Year.

Prior to his stint at Houston, Bumpas worked four seasons at the U.S. Naval Academy as assistant head coach, defensive coordinator and defensive line coach. His 1997 Navy unit ranked sixth in total defense and turnover margin. At season’s end, he was invited to coach in the Blue-Gray All-Star Game. In 1996, Bumpas’ defense held California to just three second-half points in an Aloha Bowl victory.

Bumpas spent three seasons (1992-94) as assistant head coach and defensive coordinator at Utah State, helping the Aggies to a 1993 Big West Championship and a Las Vegas Bowl victory over Ball State. Other coaching stops include two seasons as defensive line coach at Notre Dame (1990-92), during which time he mentored 1990 Lombardi Award winner Chris Zorich. In 1989, Bumpas coached the defensive line at his alma mater, Arkansas, a team that went on to win a Southwest Conference title and advanced to the 1990 Cotton Bowl.

Bumpas coached seven years in the Volunteer state, splitting time between the University of Tennessee (1985-89) as linebackers coach/special teams coordinator and Tennessee Tech (1983-84) as assistant head coach and defensive coordinator. While with the Vols, Bumpas coached three bowl championship teams (1986 Sugar, 1986 Liberty, 1988 Peach) and was part of the Southeastern Conference championship in 1985.

Bumpas began his collegiate coaching career as a graduate assistant at Arkansas in 1977. From there, he went to the U.S. Military Academy and implemented a new defense under Homer Smith in 1978. Installing new defenses would become a trend for Bumpas, who did the same thing as defensive line coach at the Air Force Academy during a two-year tenure (1979-80) with the Falcons.

A native of Fort Smith, Ark., Bumpas received three varsity letters and was a captain for the Razorbacks. He was named SWC Defensive Player of the Year in 1970, earning consensus All-America honors at defensive tackle. He received a Bachelor’s degree in education from Arkansas in 1973. He went on to play tight end and linebacker professionally for the Memphis Southmen in the World Football League and the British Columbia Lions of the Canadian Football League.

Bumpas was a 2006 inductee into the University of Arkansas Sports Hall of Honor.

Bumpas is married to the former Gloria Surratt.

BUMPAS FILE

AGE: _________________ 61 (born Dec. 19, 1949)

HOMETOWN: _______________ Fort Smith, Ark.

MARRIED: __________________________ Gloria

ALMA MATER: _______________ Arkansas (1973)

PLAYING EXPERIENCE: 1969-70 ___________________________Arkansas1971 _____________________All-American Bowl1974 _________________ British Columbia Lions1974-76 _________________ Memphis Southmen

COACHING EXPERIENCE:1977 ___________ Arkansas (Graduate Assistant)1978 __________________ Army (Defensive Line)1979-80 _____________ Air Force (Defensive Line)1981-82 __________ Kansas State (Defensive Line)1983-84 _____________________ Tennessee Tech (Defensive Coordinator/Assistant Head Coach)1985-88 __Tennessee (Linebackers/Special Teams)1989 _______________ Arkansas (Defensive Line)1990-91 __________ Notre Dame (Defensive Line)1992-94 _________________________ Utah State (Defensive Coordinator/Assistant Head Coach)1995-98 ______________________________ Navy (Defensive Coordinator/ Assistant Head Coach /Defensive Line)1997 _______________ Blue-Gray All-Star Classic1999-02 ___________________________ Houston (Co-Defensive Coord./ Asst. Head Coach/Linebackers)2003 _____________________ Western Michigan (Defensive Coord./Linebackers)2004-present __________________________TCU (Defensive Coordinator/Defensive Line)

BOWL GAMES:1969 __________________Sugar Bowl (Arkansas)1970 __________________Sugar Bowl (Arkansas)1970 _____________ Blue-Gray Game (Arkansas)1977 ________________ Orange Bowl (Arkansas)1982 _______ Independence Bowl (Kansas State)1986 ________________ Sugar Bowl (Tennessee)1986 _______________ Liberty Bowl (Tennessee)1988 ________________ Peach Bowl (Tennessee)1990 _________________Cotton Bowl (Arkansas)1991 ______________Orange Bowl (Notre Dame)1992 _______________ Sugar Bowl (Notre Dame)1993 _____________ Las Vegas Bowl (Utah State)1996 _____________________ Aloha Bowl (Navy)2005 ___________________ Houston Bowl (TCU)2006 __________________ Poinsettia Bowl (TCU)2007 ______________________ Texas Bowl (TCU)2008 __________________ Poinsettia Bowl (TCU)2009 ______________________Fiesta Bowl (TCU)2010 ______________________ Rose Bowl (TCU)

DEFENSIVE COORDINATOR/DEFENSIVE LINE

7TH SEASON AT TCUARKANSAS, 1973

D I C K B U M PAS

2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

Page 52: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

CO

AC

HE

S &

STA

FF

50 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

Rusty Burns joined the TCU staff as wide receivers coach in

February 2009.

In 2010, Burns has tutored senior Jeremy Kerley to a career-

high 50-catch season, becoming the 13th player in program

history with at least 50 grabs in a season. Kerley has also

tied Mike Renfro’s 1977 TCU record with 10 touchdown

receptions. Kerley claimed second-team MWC honors, along

with honorable-mention member Jimmy Young.

Freshman Josh Boyce also exploded onto the scene in

2010, pacing all TCU receivers with 602 receiving yards

and averaging 50.2 receiving yards per game. Boyce’s 33

receptions are second on the team and the most by a TCU

freshman since Cory Rodgers (37) in 2003.

In his first season with the Horned Frogs, four of TCU’s top-six

receivers posted reception totals that surpassed their career

totals entering the season. Three TCU receivers, Antoine

Hicks, Jeremy Kerley and Jimmy Young, were named All-

Mountain West Conference, while Ryan Christian continued

his career professionally with the Toronto Argonauts of the

Canadian Football League.

Prior to arriving at TCU, Burns spent four seasons (2004-07) as

the offensive coordinator at SMU. The Mustangs set a school

record with 29 touchdown passes in 2006, while their 325

points scored ranked third all-time in SMU history.

Burns has also been an offensive coordinator at Cincinnati

(2002-03), Wyoming (1999-01), Memphis (1996-98) and

Connecticut (1980-88).

At Cincinnati, Burns directed a record-setting offensive attack

in 2002 that helped lead the Bearcats to the Conference USA

championship. Cincinnati set school marks for passing yards

(3,649 yards), total offense (5,565 yards) and points (409). The

Bearcats led C-USA in passing (260.6) and total offense (397.5)

per game.

It was Burns’ second stint at Cincinnati. He was the Bearcats’

quarterbacks coach from 1989-91. Burns also served three

seasons (1992-94) as an assistant coach at Georgia Tech.

In his final year at Wyoming, Burns had the most improved

offense in the Mountain West Conference.

Burns is a 1978 graduate of Springfield College, where he

played quarterback. He also has a master’s degree from

Springfield. His first coaching position came at his alma mater

as he served two seasons as offensive coordinator upon his

graduation.

Burns and his wife, Debra, have two daughters: Kelly and

Kirsten.

BURNS FILE

AGE: _________________55 (born Sept. 27, 1955)

HOMETOWN: _________________ Bourne, Mass.

MARRIED: __________________________ Debra

CHILDREN: ________________ Kelly and Kirsten

ALMA MATER: _____________ Springfield (1978)

PLAYING EXPERIENCE: 1974-77 _________________________ Springfield

COACHING EXPERIENCE:1978-79 _____ Springfield (Offensive Coordinator) 1980-88 ____ Connecticut (Offensive Coordinator/ Quarterbacks)1989-91 _____________ Cincinnati (Quarterbacks)1992-93 ___________ Georgia Tech (Quarterbacks)1994 ___________ Georgia Tech (Wide Receivers)1996-98 _______Memphis (Offensive Coordinator/ Quarterbacks)1999-01 ______ Wyoming (Offensive Coordinator/ Quarterbacks)2002-03 ______ Cincinnati (Offensive Coordinator/ Wide Receivers/Quarterbacks)2004-07 __________ SMU (Offensive Coordinator/ Quarterbacks)2009-present ____________TCU (Wide Receivers)

BOWL GAMES:2002 ___________ New Orleans Bowl (Cincinnati)2009 ______________________Fiesta Bowl (TCU)2010 ______________________ Rose Bowl (TCU)

WIDE RECEIVERS

2ND SEASON AT TCUSPRINGFIELD, 1978

R U STY B U R NS

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

Page 53: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

CO

AC

HE

S &

STA

FF

51

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL

BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

Justin Fuente joined the TCU football coaching staff in

February 2007 as running backs coach and was promoted to

co-offensive coordinator in February 2009. As part of his new

duties, he moved from running backs to quarterbacks coach.

In 2010, Fuente helped direct TCU to single-season records

in touchdowns (70) and points scored (520) and also helped

the Horned Frogs rank fourth nationally in scoring (43.3

points per game), seventh in total offense (491.5 yards per

game) and ninth in rushing (261.2 yards per game).

Under Fuente’s tutelage, senior quarterback Andy Dalton has

become TCU’s career leader in every major passing record.

Dalton is also the Mountain West Conference career leader

in total offense (11,678 yards) and plays from scrimmage

(1,698).

Dalton garnered 2010 MWC Offensive Player of the Year

honors, while also becoming a finalist for the Manning

Award and the Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award.

In his first season as co-offensive coordinator, Fuente helped

direct a record-setting 2009 TCU attack. The Horned Frogs

established single-season school marks for points scored

(498), total offense (5,937 yards) and first downs (311).

TCU ranked fifth nationally in rushing offense (239.5 yards

per game) and scoring (38.3 points per game) while placing

seventh in total offense (456.7 yards per game) and eighth in

passing efficiency (154.1).

Dalton received Mountain West Conference Offensive Player

of the Year and All-America honors. Dalton was also one of

10 finalists for the Manning Award as he set a single-season

TCU record with 2,756 yards passing.

The Horned Frogs defined running back by committee in

2008. TCU ranked 12th nationally in rushing despite not

having a player in the top-96 individually. TCU’s 220.2 yards

per game rushing was its highest mark since 2000, when

LaDainian Tomlinson keyed a Frog ground attack that

averaged 275.6 per game.

Fuente coached tailback Aaron Brown into being a sixth-

round selection by the Detroit Lions in the 2009 NFL draft.

Fuente came to TCU after spending the previous six seasons

as quarterbacks coach at Illinois State. His final three years

saw him double as the Redbirds’ offensive coordinator.

Fuente played two seasons (1996-97) at Oklahoma under

former TCU quarterbacks coach and then-Sooners offensive

coordinator Dick Winder. Fuente set an Oklahoma freshman

record with 11 touchdown passes. He transferred to Murray

State for his final two years of eligibility.

Fuente set 11 school records at Murray State, including total

offense and passing yards in a game and season. He was

the Ohio Valley Conference Offensive Player of the Year and

a finalist for the Walter Payton Award, given annually to the

nation’s top player in Division I-AA.

Under Fuente’s direction, Illinois State ranked in the top 10

nationally in total offense in 2005 and 2006. The Redbirds

placed eighth in 2006 with an average of 397.5 yards per

game after ranking fifth in both total offense (477.6 yards)

and scoring (39.2 points) in 2005.

Fuente coached Redbird quarterback Luke Drone to first-

team All-Gateway Conference honors as he led the league

in passing (227.8 yards) and total offense (231.6 yards).

Running back Pierre Rembert set an Illinois State single-

season record while ranking sixth nationally in rushing with

1,743 yards (134.1 per game).

Following his collegiate career, Fuente played professionally

with the Oklahoma Wranglers in the Arena League. A 1999

graduate of Murray State, Fuente is a native of Tulsa, Okla.

Fuente and his wife, Jenny, have a daughter: Cecilia Mae.

FUENTE FILE

AGE: _________________ 34 (born July 30, 1976)

HOMETOWN: ___________________ Tulsa, Okla.

MARRIED: __________________________ Jenny

CHILDREN: _____________________Cecilia Mae

ALMA MATER: ____________ Murray State (1999)

PLAYING EXPERIENCE: 1996-97 _________________________ Oklahoma 1998-99 _______________________ Murray State2000-01 _________________Oklahoma Wranglers

COACHING EXPERIENCE:2001-03 ___________ Illinois State (Quarterbacks) 2004-06 ________________________ Illinois State (Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks)2007-2008 _______________ TCU (Running Backs)2009-present ___ TCU (Co-Offensive Coordinator/ Quarterbacks)

BOWL GAMES:2007 ______________________ Texas Bowl (TCU)2008 __________________ Poinsettia Bowl (TCU)2009 ______________________Fiesta Bowl (TCU)2010 ______________________ Rose Bowl (TCU)

CO-OFFENSIVE COORDINATOR/QUARTERBACKS

4TH SEASON AT TCUMURRAY STATE, 1999

J U ST I N FU E NTE

2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

Page 54: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

CO

AC

HE

S &

STA

FF

52 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

Chad Glasgow, a member of Gary Patterson’s first staff at

TCU, is in his 10th year as the Horned Frogs’ safeties coach.

Glasgow has four safeties currently in the top-six in tackles

for the Frogs this season. Senior Colin Jones has enjoyed a

career year, tallying 70 stops and 10.5 tackles for loss. Senior

Tejay Johnson, a finalist for the Jim Thorpe Award, is third on

the team in tackles with 56 and garnered first-team Walter

Camp All-America honors.

With Johnson and Jones earning first and second-team

honors, respectively, Glasgow has now coached 14 all-

conference picks at safety for TCU.

Four TCU safeties in the last four years have signed National

Football League contracts.

After the graduation of two of three starters at safety from

2008’s top-ranked defense, Glasgow directed a unit that

again helped TCU rank No. 1 in the country for total defense

in 2009.

Stephen Hodge, who led the nation in sacks by a defensive

back with eight in 2007, was a sixth-round draft pick by the

Dallas Cowboys in 2009.

Hodge and David Roach earned All-MWC honors in 2007.

Roach and Brian Bonner signed 2008 free-agent contracts

with the New Orleans Saints and San Diego Chargers,

respectively.

In 2006, Marvin White was first-team All-MWC and later a

fourth-round draft pick of the Cincinnati Bengals. Bonner

was a second-team selection.

White and Jeremy Modkins were All-MWC in 2005.

Since arriving at TCU, Glasgow also tutored all-conference

safeties Kenneth Hilliard, a free-agent signee with the

Buffalo Bills, and Marvin Godbolt, who inked a professional

contract in the Canadian Football League.

Glasgow coached safeties, including 2000 Southland

Conference Player of the Year C.J. Carroll, at Southwest Texas

State from 1998-00.

Prior to his stint at Southwest Texas State, Glasgow spent

one year at Illinois State as the linebackers coach.

Glasgow also had coaching stops as a graduate assistant at

both Oklahoma State (1994-95) under Bob Simmons and

New Mexico (1996) with Dennis Franchione. Patterson was

the Lobos’ defensive coordinator that season.

A three-year letterwinner, Glasgow played linebacker at

Oklahoma State. He earned a bachelor’s degree from OSU in

business administration in 1995.

Glasgow and his wife, Maida, were married in March 2010.

The couple welcomed twin boys, Brance and Colt, in

November.

GLASGOW FILE

AGE: _________________ 38 (born Jan. 18, 1972)

HOMETOWN: ______________ Woodward, Okla.

WIFE: ______________________________ Maida

CHILDREN: ___________ Brance and Colt (twins)

ALMA MATER: ________ Oklahoma State (1995)

PLAYING EXPERIENCE:1990-93 _____________________Oklahoma State

COACHING EXPERIENCE:1994-95 _____________________Oklahoma State (Graduate Assistant)1996 __________________________ New Mexico (Graduate Assistant)1997 __________________________ Illinois State (Linebackers)1998-00 ____________________ Southwest Texas (Safeties)2001-present __________________________TCU (Safeties)

BOWL GAMES:2001 _________ galleryfurniture.com Bowl (TCU)2002 _________________AXA Liberty Bowl (TCU)2003 ______ PlainsCapital Fort Worth Bowl (TCU)2005 ___________________ Houston Bowl (TCU)2006 __________________ Poinsettia Bowl (TCU)2007 ______________________ Texas Bowl (TCU)2008 __________________ Poinsettia Bowl (TCU)2009 ______________________Fiesta Bowl (TCU)2010 ______________________ Rose Bowl (TCU)

SAFETIES

10TH SEASON AT TCUOKLAHOMA STATE, 1995

C HAD G LASGOW

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

Page 55: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

CO

AC

HE

S &

STA

FF

53

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL

BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

Clay Jennings joined the TCU football staff as cornerbacks

coach in January 2008.

In his three seasons with the Horned Frogs, TCU has led the

nation in total defense.

Jason Teague claimed 2010 second-team All-Mountain West

Conference honors, boasting 33 tackles, two interceptions,

nine passes defended and a pair of forced fumbles. Teague

returned one of his picks 29 yards for a touchdown against

Tennessee Tech.

Both Rafael Priest and Nick Sanders were first-team All-

Mountain West Conference selections in 2009. Priest was

ranked by Rivals.com as the nation’s sixth-best cornerback,

while Sanders was tabbed by Sporting News as the MWC’s

hardest hitter.

Jennings, who has coached five current NFL defensive backs,

came to the Horned Frogs after serving as the cornerbacks

coach at Baylor in 2007.

Jennings worked two seasons (2005-06) as safeties coach

at Houston. He helped the Cougars to back-to-back bowl

appearances and the 2006 Conference USA championship. In

2006, Cougars’ free safety Will Gulley earned Conference USA

Defensive Player of the Year honors while Brandon Brinkley

was named to the league’s all-freshman squad.

In his first season at Houston, Jennings saw Rocky Schwartz

earn Conference USA third-team all-league honors and

Kenneth Fontennette be named an honorable-mention

Freshman All-American by The Sporting News.

Prior to his two-year stint at Houston, Jennings spent two

seasons (2003-04) as the defensive backs coach at Louisiana-

Lafayette, where he helped the Ragin’ Cajuns to a No. 11

national ranking in pass defense. At Louisiana-Lafayette,

Jennings tutored current NFL players Antwain Spann (New

England Patriots), C.C. Brown (Houston Texans) and Michael

Adams (Arizona Cardinals).

Jennings also worked two years (2001-02) as secondary

coach and recruiting coordinator at Sam Houston State.

He helped the Bearkats to a share of the 2001 Southland

Conference championship and the quarterfinal round of the

NCAA Division I-AA playoffs. At SHSU, Jennings coached All-

American and Buck Buchanan Award finalist Keith Davis, who

just completed his fifth season with the Dallas Cowboys.

Jennings also coached the secondary at Southern Arkansas

(2000), Morningside College in Sioux City, Iowa (1999) and

Morehouse College in Atlanta (1998). At SAU, Jennings

mentored Jordan Babineaux of the Seattle Seahawks. At

Morningside, Jennings coached first-team All-American Matt

Walker.

A four-year letterwinner (1992-95) as a defensive lineman

and special teams standout at North Texas, Jennings was a

member of the Mean Green’s 1994 Southland Conference

championship team and the school’s first NCAA Division I-A

squad in 1995. He began his coaching career as a student

assistant (1996) and then graduate assistant (1997) at North

Texas before moving on to Morehouse.

Jennings is a 1992 graduate of Waco’s La Vega High School

and a 1996 North Texas alumnus (bachelor’s of science

in kinesiology). Jennings and his wife, Belinda, have two

children: son Kirby and daughter Kenzie.

JENNINGS FILE

AGE: __________________ 37 (born Nov. 3, 1973)

HOMETOWN: __________________ Waco, Texas

MARRIED: _________________________ Belinda

CHILDREN: ________________ Kirby and Kenzie

ALMA MATER: _____________North Texas (1996)

PLAYING EXPERIENCE: 1992-95 ________________________ North Texas

COACHING EXPERIENCE:1996 __________ North Texas (Student Assistant) 1997 _________ North Texas (Graduate Assistant)1998 ________________ Morehouse (Secondary)1999 _______________ Morningside (Secondary)2000 __________ Southern Arkansas (Secondary)2001-02 __________________ Sam Houston State (Secondary/Recruiting Coordinator)2003-04 _______ Louisiana-Lafayette (Secondary)2005-06 ___________________ Houston (Safeties)2007 ___________________ Baylor (Cornerbacks)2008-present ______________TCU (Cornerbacks)

BOWL GAMES2005 ______________ Fort Worth Bowl (Houston)2006 _________________ Liberty Bowl (Houston)2008 __________________ Poinsettia Bowl (TCU)2009 ______________________Fiesta Bowl (TCU)2010 ______________________ Rose Bowl (TCU)

CORNERBACKS

3RD SEASON AT TCUNORTH TEXAS, 1996

C LAY J E N N I N GS

2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

Page 56: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

CO

AC

HE

S &

STA

FF

54 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

One of the more popular players to ever don the Purple and White, Dan Sharp is in his 10th year during his second stint as an assistant coach at his alma mater. He doubles as the tight ends and special teams coach.

A 2005 inductee into the TCU Lettermen’s Hall of Fame, Sharp returned to the Frogs’ staff in 2001 as the tight ends coach and special teams coordinator. He previously coached nine seasons at TCU before heading to Tulsa in 1998.

Under Sharp’s tutelage in 2010, senior Jeremy Kerley is one of just two players in the nation to rank in the top-20 in punt returns and kickoff returns, averaging a career-best 28.0 yards on kickoff returns.

Kerley was named the Mountain West Conference Special Teams Player of the Year. TCU has had the first-team All-MWC return specialist all six seasons it has been in the league (Kerley, 2008-10; Brian Bonner, 2006-07; Cory Rodgers, 2005).

Junior placekicker Ross Evans ranks second in the MWC in scoring with 98 points while tying for 40th nationally at 8.2 points per game. Evans set a TCU single-game record with nine extra points in the 66-17 win at New Mexico. Kickoff specialist Kevin Sharples has a career-best 14 touchbacks in 2010.

TCU topped the nation in 2009 in kickoff-return average with a 29.2-yard mark. The Horned Frogs led the Mountain West Conference in kickoff and punt returns as they had three special teams touchdowns. Kerley returned two punts for scores and received All-America honors as a return specialist, while Greg McCoy returned a kickoff 81 yards for a touchdown en route to setting a single-season TCU record with a 35.9-yard average.

Sharp also coached first-team All-MWC placekicker Ross Evans, who was 15-of-18 on field-goal attempts while setting a single-season TCU record with 61 extra-points made.In 2008, Sharp mentored Evans and fellow freshman Anson Kelton as they handled the kicking game for TCU.

Kelton earned All-Mountain West Conference honors as 30 of his 54 punts (55.6 percent) were placed inside the opponent 20 with just seven touchbacks. He had a 41.3 average. Evans made 16-of-20 field goals, including a 50-yard effort on his first collegiate attempt. He was the only freshman among

the semifinalists for the Lou Groza Award as the nation’s top placekicker.

Sharp coached TCU placekicker and three-time All-Mountain West Conference selection Chris Manfredini to a 47-of-54 mark on field goals in three seasons (2005-07). Additionally, punter Derek Wash was an honorable-mention All-MWC choice in 2007 with a 42.5 average.

Placekicker Nick Browne and punter Joey Biasatti were semifinalists for the Lou Groza and Ray Guy Awards, respectively, during the 2002 campaign. Browne earned All-America honors and was the Conference USA Special Teams Player of the Year in 2003.

In the last four seasons, three tight ends (Chad Andrus, Brent Hecht, Shae Reagan) have been inducted into the National Football Foundation’s Hampshire Honor Society for academic excellence.

Under Sharp’s leadership, Matt Schobel was the second pick in the third round of the 2002 National Football League draft and the 67th player selected overall. In 2004, Cody McCarty garnered first-team all-league honors.

Sharp previously coached at TCU (1991-97) under both Jim Wacker and Pat Sullivan. He mentored the tight ends for five years and handled the defensive ends for two seasons. Before joining the TCU staff on a full-time basis, Sharp served as a graduate assistant under Wacker.

Sharp was a tight end on TCU’s 1984 team which went 8-3 and earned a trip to the Bluebonnet Bowl. He had a key touchdown reception in a 32-31 win at Arkansas, the Frogs’ first victory in Fayetteville in 29 years.

In addition to providing outstanding blocking for TCU’s vaunted running game, Sharp earned All-Southwest Conference honors in 1984 as he caught 42 passes for 596 yards and seven touchdowns. He spent two years in the NFL with the Atlanta Falcons before returning to TCU in 1988.

He received his bachelor’s degree in secondary education from TCU in 1985 and his master’s in liberal arts in 1992.

Sharp and his wife, Cindy, both natives of Boerne, Texas, are the parents of two daughters: Alexandra and Andrea.

SHARP FILE

AGE: __________________ 48 (born Feb. 5, 1962)

HOMETOWN: _________________ Boerne, Texas

MARRIED: __________________________ Cindy

CHILDREN: ___________ Alexandra and Andrea

ALMA MATER: ___________________ TCU (1985)

MASTER’S DEGREE: ______________ TCU (1992)

PLAYING EXPERIENCE: 1981-84 _______________________________TCU1986-87 _____________________ Atlanta Falcons

COACHING EXPERIENCE:1989-90 _____________ TCU (Graduate Assistant)1991 __________________ TCU (Defensive Ends)1992-96 ____________________ TCU (Tight Ends)1997 __________________ TCU (Defensive Ends)1998-00 _______ Tulsa (Tight Ends/Special Teams)2001-present ___ TCU (Tight Ends/Special Teams)

BOWL GAMES:1984 _________________Bluebonnet Bowl (TCU)1994 ______________ Independence Bowl (TCU)2001 _________ galleryfurniture.com Bowl (TCU)2002 _________________AXA Liberty Bowl (TCU)2003 ______ PlainsCapital Fort Worth Bowl (TCU)2005 ___________________ Houston Bowl (TCU)2006 __________________ Poinsettia Bowl (TCU)2007 ______________________ Texas Bowl (TCU)2008 __________________ Poinsettia Bowl (TCU)2009 ______________________Fiesta Bowl (TCU)2010 ______________________ Rose Bowl (TCU)

TIGHT ENDS/SPECIAL TEAMS

10TH SEASON AT TCUTCU, 1985

DAN SHAR P

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

Page 57: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

CO

AC

HE

S &

STA

FF

55

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL

BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

Tony Tademy joined the TCU football staff in June 2005.

Tademy has coached at least two All-Mountain West

Conference selections each of his six years at TCU. Four

Horned Frog linebackers in the last three seasons have

reached the National Football League.

Daryl Washington was a 2010 second-round draft pick of the

Arizona Cardinals, while David Hawthorne was the Seattle

Seahawks’ leading tackler last year. In 2008, Jason Phillips and

Robert Henson were both first-team All-MWC and NFL draft

selections. Phillips was the first pick in the fifth round by the

Baltimore Ravens, while Henson was a sixth-round choice by

the Washington Redskins.

In 2010, junior Tank Carder was named an AFCA All-American

and MWC Defensive Player of the Year. Sophomore Tanner

Brock, the Frogs’ leader in tackles with 97 stops, also garnered

first-team MWC accolades in his first year as a starter.

The 2009 campaign saw Washington and Carder, in their first

season as starters, earn first- and second-team All-Mountain

West Conference honors, respectively. Washington was

named to four All-America teams in addition to being a

Butkus Award semifinalist.

Phillips became the first defensive player in MWC history to

be a first- or second-team all-conference selection in four

consecutive seasons. Henson was an honorable-mention

pick his first three years before becoming a first-team

honoree as a senior.

Phillips was named by Dave Campbell’s Texas Football as the

state’s Best Linebacker in 2007, while Hawthorne, a three-

year starter (2005-07), signed a free-agent contract with the

Seahawks.

In 2005, Tademy’s first season, TCU’s top three linebackers

featured a pair of redshirt freshmen (Phillips and Henson) and

a sophomore (Hawthorne). The Frogs were still able to post

an 11-1 record with a defensive unit that led the nation in

turnover margin (+21), interceptions (26) and takeaways (40).

Phillips became the first freshman defensive player in MWC

history to be named first- or second-team all-conference. He

was also a Freshman All-American.

Prior to arriving at TCU, Tademy spent two seasons as the

defensive coordinator at McKinney (Texas) High School.

Tademy has been in the coaching profession since earning his

bachelor’s degree in general studies from Louisiana Tech in

1983. While an undergrad, he played linebacker and helped

the Bulldogs to a pair of Independence Bowl appearances.

Tademy’s first full-time assistant coaching stint came at VMI

from 1985-86 when current TCU assistant head coach and

offensive line coach Eddie Williamson was the Keydets’ head

coach.

Tademy coached the 1987 season at Louisiana Tech, serving

as the inside linebackers coach. He later became the offensive

line and specialists coach at Howard University, where he also

coached linebackers and was the recruiting coordinator.

Tademy spent three seasons (1994-96) at the University of

Houston, working with the defensive ends under coach Kim

Helton and helping the Cougars to the 1996 Liberty Bowl.

Tademy returned to the high school ranks as an assistant

coach at Texas City (Texas) High School from 1997-98,

before taking over as the defensive coordinator at Louisiana-

Lafayette from 1999-01. He spent one season as the defensive

coordinator at Blinn College before becoming the defensive

coordinator at McKinney in 2003.

A Jacksonville, Ark., native, Tademy and his wife, Maria, have

two sons: A.J. and Victor.

TADEMY FILE

AGE: ________________ 51 (born March 1, 1959)

HOMETOWN: ______________ Jacksonville, Ark.

MARRIED: __________________________ Maria

CHILDREN: __________________ A.J. and Victor

ALMA MATER: __________ Louisiana Tech (1983)

PLAYING EXPERIENCE: 1977-80 ______________________ Louisiana Tech

COACHING EXPERIENCE:1981-82 ________ Louisiana Tech (Student Coach)1983-84 ________ Mississippi (Graduate Assistant)1985 _____________________ VMI (Linebackers) 1986 ___________________ VMI (Defensive Line)1987 _______ Louisiana Tech (Inside Linebackers)1989 _______ Howard (Specialists/Offensive Line)1990-91 ________________ Howard (Linebackers)1992 ______Northeast Louisiana (Defensive Line)1993 __________ Suitland (Md.) HS (Head Coach)1994-96 _____________Houston (Defensive Ends)1997-98 _______Texas City (Texas) HS (Tight Ends)1999-01 __________________ Louisiana-Lafayette (Defensive Coordinator/Linebackers)2002 _________________________ Blinn College (Defensive Coordinator/ Linebackers)2003-04 _________________ McKinney (Texas) HS (Defensive Coordinator)2005-present ______________ TCU (Linebackers)

BOWL GAMES:1977 ______Independence Bowl (Louisiana Tech)1978 ______Independence Bowl (Louisiana Tech)1996 _________________ Liberty Bowl (Houston)2005 ___________________ Houston Bowl (TCU)2006 __________________ Poinsettia Bowl (TCU)2007 ______________________ Texas Bowl (TCU)2008 __________________ Poinsettia Bowl (TCU)2009 ______________________Fiesta Bowl (TCU)2010 ______________________ Rose Bowl (TCU)

LINEBACKERS

6TH SEASON AT TCULOU ISIANA TECH, 1983

TO NY TAD E MY

2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

Page 58: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

CO

AC

HE

S &

STA

FF

56 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

A veteran of the collegiate coaching ranks, Eddie Williamson is in his 10th season at TCU as the offensive line coach. He was given the title of assistant head coach in 2002.

Williamson has coached 16 All-Mountain West Conference selections over the last six seasons. Four of his former TCU linemen are active in the National Football League.

Williamsons’ 2010 offensive line helped lead TCU to single-season records in touchdowns (70) and points scored (520), while serving instrumental in tying for seventh nationally in allowing just 0.75 sacks per game. The Horned Frogs also rank fourth nationally in scoring (43.3 points per game), seventh in total offense (491.5 yards per game) and ninth in rushing (261.2 yards per game).

Center Jake Kirkpatrick was a Walter Camp first-team All-American selection and won the 2010 Rimington Trophy, recognizing the nation’s top center. He also joined senior Marcus Cannon on the All-MWC first team. Kirkpatrick, who only played one year of high school football, is in his second season as TCU’s starting center.

Three of TCU’s five starters received postseason accolades in 2009, including first-team All-MWC tackles Cannon and Marshall Newhouse. Newhouse was drafted in the fifth round by the Green Bay Packers. Kirkpatrick received first-team All-America honors and was one of six finalists for the Rimington Award.

The 2009 TCU offensive line ranked sixth nationally in allowing only 12 sacks (0.9 per game). The Horned Frogs established single-season school marks for points scored (498), total offense (5,937 yards) and first downs (311). TCU ranked fifth nationally in rushing offense (239.5 yards per game) and scoring (38.3 points per game) while placing seventh in total offense (456.7 yards per game) and eighth in passing efficiency (154.1).

In 2008, center Blake Schlueter was a first-team All-MWC

pick and a seventh-round draft pick of the Denver Broncos. Newhouse and Cannon earned second-team and honorable-mention honors, respectively. They helped TCU lead the nation in time of possession (35:10) while setting school records for points scored (437) and touchdowns (56).

Tackle Herb Taylor was a two-time first-team All-MWC selection (2005-06) before the Kansas City Chiefs made him a sixth-round draft pick. Michael Toudouze, also a tackle, was first-team All-MWC in 2005 and a fifth-round selection of the Indianapolis Colts. He earned a Super Bowl championship ring as a rookie and was also on the Colts’ roster during their 2009 Super Bowl run. Anthony Alabi was a fifth-round pick of the Miami Dolphins in 2005.

With four new starters on the offensive line in 2006, TCU allowed just 13 sacks. It was the lowest total in the MWC and tied for the sixth-best mark nationally. In 2005, with three new starters, the Frogs surrendered the league’s second-fewest sacks.

Williamson came to TCU from Wake Forest, where he served as the offensive coordinator and offensive line coach. He joined the WFU staff in January 2000.

Williamson also served as an assistant coach at Texas Southern, Baylor, North Carolina, Wake Forest, South Carolina, Georgia, Duke and Furman.

Williamson also has experience as a head coach, serving in that role at VMI from 1985-88.

A part of 16 bowl teams, Williamson’s college coaching career began soon after graduating from Davidson College in 1974.

A native of Pendleton, S.C., Williamson was a standout linebacker at Davidson (1971-73). He graduated in 1974 and went on to earn his master’s degree from Furman in 1976.

Williamson and his wife, Patty, have three children: Eddie III, Carrie Beth and Tricia.

WILLIAMSON FILE

AGE: _________________ 59 (born Dec. 11, 1951)

HOMETOWN: ________________Pendleton, S.C.

MARRIED: ___________________________ Patty

CHILDREN: _____ Eddie III, Carrie Beth and Tricia

ALMA MATER: _______________Davidson (1974)

MASTER’S DEGREE: ___________ Furman (1976)

PLAYING EXPERIENCE: 1971-73 __________________________ Davidson

COACHING EXPERIENCE:1974-75 ____________________________Furman (Graduate Assistant/Linebackers)1976 _____ North Carolina (Academic Counselor)1977 ________________ Furman (Offensive Line)1978-82 ________________ Duke (Offensive Line)1983 _________________ Baylor (Offensive Line)1984 ________________ Georgia (Offensive Line)1985-88 ___________________ VMI (Head Coach)1989-90 ________ South Carolina (Offensive Line)1991-92 ________________________ Wake Forest (Offensive Coordinator/Offensive Line)1993-97 ______________________ North Carolina (Assistant Head Coach/Offensive Line)1998 _______________________________ Baylor (Offensive Coord./Quarterbacks)1999 _______________________ Texas Southern (Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks)2000 __________________________ Wake Forest (Offensive Coordinator/Offensive Line)2001 ___________________ TCU (Offensive Line)2002-present __________________________TCU (Assistant Head Coach/Offensive Line)

BOWL GAMES:1976 _____________ Peach Bowl (North Carolina)1983 _______________ Bluebonnet Bowl (Baylor)1984 ___________________Citrus Bowl (Georgia)1992 ________Independence Bowl (Wake Forest)1993 _____________ Gator Bowl (North Carolina)1994 _______________ SunBowl (North Carolina)1995 __________ CarQuest Bowl (North Carolina)1997 _____________ Gator Bowl (North Carolina)1998 _____________ Gator Bowl (North Carolina) 2001 _________ galleryfurniture.com Bowl (TCU)2002 _________________AXA Liberty Bowl (TCU)2003 ______ PlainsCapital Fort Worth Bowl (TCU)2005 ___________________ Houston Bowl (TCU)2006 __________________ Poinsettia Bowl (TCU)2007 ______________________ Texas Bowl (TCU)2008 ___________________ Poinsetia Bowl (TCU)2009 ______________________Fiesta Bowl (TCU)2010 ______________________ Rose Bowl (TCU)

ASSISTANT HEAD COACH/OFFENSIVE LINE

10TH SEASON AT TCUDAVIDSON, 1974

E D D I E WI L L I AMSON

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

Page 59: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

CO

AC

HE

S &

STA

FF

57

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL

BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

Don Sommer is in his 10th year as TCU’s head strength and

conditioning coach after arriving on campus in January

2001. He was named the 2008 National Strength and

Conditioning Coach of the Year by footballscoop.com.

In his capacity, Sommer is responsible for the overall

direction, design and implementation of strength and

conditioning programs for all 20 sports at TCU.

In the 2005-06 athletics season, TCU led the nation with

five football players and a total of 10 student-athletes

receiving All-America honors from the National Strength and

Conditioning Association (NSCA).

Sommer came to TCU after serving in a similar capacity at

the University of Missouri for two years. He had been part

of the Tiger program since 1989, serving first as a graduate

assistant for two years before assuming the assistant

strength and conditioning coaching post in 1991.

Sommer was one of 10 individuals to receive the prestigious

certification of “Master Strength & Conditioning Coach”

at the 2003 Collegiate Strength & Conditioning Coaches

Association (CSCCA) national conference. He joined the

existing 26 Master Strength & Conditioning Coaches,

bringing the total number of MSCCs in the world to 36 at the

time of his certification.

Sommer is a graduate of the University of Texas-El Paso

with a bachelor’s degree in education. He was a four-year

letterman and starter for the Miners’ football squad before

playing professionally with the Buffalo Bills and Indianapolis

Colts.

Sommer returned to the classroom following his playing

career and earned his master’s degree in health education

from Missouri.

Sommer and his wife, Cindy, have two children: Dayne and

Kaylin.

SOMMER FILE

AGE: __________________ 46 (born Feb. 1, 1964)

HOMETOWN: _________________Bellaire, Texas

MARRIED: __________________________ Cindy

CHILDREN: ________________Dayne and Kaylin

ALMA MATER: __________________ UTEP (1987)

MASTER’S DEGREE: __________ Missouri (1991)

PLAYING EXPERIENCE: 1982-85 ______________________________UTEP1986-88 ________________________ Buffalo Bills1988 _____________________ Indianapolis Colts

COACHING EXPERIENCE:1989 ____________ Missouri (Graduate Assistant)1991-99 ___________________________ Missouri (Assistant Strength & Conditioning)1999-01 ___________________________ Missouri (Strength & Conditioning Coach)2001-present __________________________TCU (Strength & Conditioning Coach)

BOWL GAMES:1997 _________________Holiday Bowl (Missouri)1998 _____________ Insight.com Bowl (Missouri)2001 _________ galleryfurniture.com Bowl (TCU)2002 _________________AXA Liberty Bowl (TCU)2003 ______ PlainsCapital Fort Worth Bowl (TCU)2005 _____________EV1.net Houston Bowl (TCU)2006 __________________ Poinsettia Bowl (TCU)2007 ______________________ Texas Bowl (TCU)2008 __________________ Poinsettia Bowl (TCU)2009 ______________________Fiesta Bowl (TCU)2010 ______________________ Rose Bowl (TCU)

HEAD STRENGTH &CONDITION ING COACH

10TH SEASON AT TCUUTEP, 1987

D O N SOM M E R

2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

Page 60: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

CO

AC

HE

S &

STA

FF

58 BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

Mike Sin que field is in his 10th season as the director of

football operations and 16th year overall at TCU.

Sinquefield’s broad range of responsibilities include office

management and administration, game day responsibilities,

liaison with various athletic and university departments,

team travel and recruiting visitations.

Sinquefield previously served as the athletics equipment

man ger at TCU. In that role, he was responsible for

maintaining and requisitioning athletic equipment for

outfitting the Horned Frog student-athletes.

Prior to his arrival in Fort Worth, Sin que field spent three

years in a similar capacity at East Caro li na University in

Greenville, N.C.

As an un der grad u ate, Sinquefield served as a stu dent

equipment man ag er and student ath let ic train er at LSU. He

earned his bachelor of general studies degree from LSU in

1992.

Sinquefield is a native of LaPlace, La. He and his wife, Alisa,

have two sons: Kaleb and Levi.

SINQUEFIELD FILE

AGE: __________________ 42 (born Oct. 7, 1968)

HOMETOWN: ___________________LaPlace, La.

MARRIED: ___________________________ Alisa

CHILDREN: __________________ Kaleb and Levi

ALMA MATER: __________________ LSU (1992)

EXPERIENCE: 1992-94 _____East Carolina (Equipment Manager)1995-00 ____________ TCU (Equipment Manager)2001-present ____ TCU (Director of Football Ops)

BOWL GAMES:1986 ______________________ Sugar Bowl (LSU)1987 ______________________ Gator Bowl (LSU)1988 ________________ Hall of Fame Bowl (LSU)1994 ______ St. Jude Liberty Bowl (East Carolina)1998 ________________ Norwest Sun Bowl (TCU)1999 _____________ Mobile Alabama Bowl (TCU)2000 _______ GMAC Mobile Alabama Bowl (TCU)2001 _________ galleryfurniture.com Bowl (TCU)2002 _________________AXA Liberty Bowl (TCU)2003 ______ PlainsCapital Fort Worth Bowl (TCU)2005 _____________EV1.net Houston Bowl (TCU)2006 __________________ Poinsettia Bowl (TCU)2007 ______________________ Texas Bowl (TCU)2008 __________________ Poinsettia Bowl (TCU)2009 ______________________Fiesta Bowl (TCU)2010 ______________________ Rose Bowl (TCU)

DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS

16TH SEASON AT TCULSU, 1992

M I KE S I N QU E F I E LD

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

Page 61: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

CO

AC

HE

S &

STA

FF

59

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL

BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

Brandon Lechtenberg is in his third year at TCU and first as the graduate assistant working with the Horned Frogs’ defense. His first two seasons were spent as a graduate assistant in video.

Lechtenberg came to TCU after serving as the defensive coordinator at Central City (Neb.) High School, helping the Bison to the playoffs for the first time in 19 seasons.

Before his year at Central City, Lechtenberg served two seasons (2005-06) as the defensive line coach and special teams coordinator at North Star High School in Lincoln. He was instrumental in the Gators making their first playoff appearance in school history.

Lechtenberg is a 2005 graduate of Nebraska, receiving his degree in education and social studies.

As a senior at Butte High School, Lechtenberg was the state’s Defensive Player of the Year in leading the Wildcats to the state title. Also a standout on the track, he was part of a state gold medal winning 4x400 team.

GRADUATE ASSISTANTDEFENSE

1ST SEASON AS GA, 3RD SEASON OVERALL AT TCUNEBRASKA, 2005

BRANDON LECHTENBERG

Russ Plager is in his first year at TCU and is the graduate assistant for the Horned Frogs’ offense.

Plager will work with the offensive line in addition to assisting with video breakdown.

Plager comes to TCU after working the last five years as the running backs and defensive backs coach at North Star High School in Lincoln, Neb.

As an undergraduate at the University of Nebraska, Plager worked as a student assistant with the Cornhuskers’ football team. His degree is in education.

Plager lettered in football, basketball and golf at Table Rock (Neb.) High School.

GRADUATE ASSISTANTOFFENSE

1ST SEASON AT TCUNEBRASKA, 2005

RUSS PLAGER

Danielle Bartelstein joined the TCU football staff in September 2010 as the assistant director of football operations.

In addition to helping coordinate team travel, Bartelstein organizes and maintains the recruiting database while serving as the contact for high schools and junior colleges. She is also the liaison to pro scouts.

Bartelstein came to TCU after serving two years in the football program and athletics department at Stanford. Her myriad of responsibilities included summer camps, video and marketing.

A 2006 Dean’s List graduate of Illinois, Bartelstein worked with the Illini’s football program as an undergraduate. She assisted with recruiting, camps and administrative duties.

ASSISTANT D IRECTOR OF OPERATIONS

1ST SEASON AT TCUI LLINO IS, 2006

DANIELLE BARTELSTEIN

D O N NA B I ASAT T IAdministrative Assistant

to Coach Patterson

DAV I D GAB LEHead Football Trainer

G I S E LE KATE SAdministrative Assistant

MATT L EW I SEquipment Manager

J E R E M IAH F I S CUSGraduate Assistant—

Video

T I M AL LMONAssistant Video

Coordinator

M I KE MAPLE SVideo Coordinator

MAR K M I L L E RAssistant Equipment

Manager

MATT PAR K E RAssociate Strength Coach

C H R I S UCHACZDirector of Athletic Academic Services

RYAN MC I N E R N EYGraduate Assistant—

Video

FO OTBALL S U PPORT S TA F F

2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

Page 62: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

2 0 10 H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL

60

UN

IVE

RS

ITY

AD

MIN

IST

RA

TIO

N

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL

BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

As Chancellor of Texas Christian University since 2003, Dr. Victor J. Boschini, Jr., has had the privilege of leading the university through an extraordinary period. TCU has made unprecedented investments in scholarships, facilities and technology, academic programs, and new faculty and staff, all for one purpose: providing a world-class, values-centered university experience for TCU’s almost 9,000 students.

Reflecting his background in higher education administration and the familiarity with undergraduates that comes from teaching a class in the College of Education each year, Chancellor Boschini knows it’s a 24/7 world for this generation of Horned Frogs. And he’s determined that TCU maximizes all the opportunities for learning.

That’s why the new Campus Commons is open day and night. With four residence halls, the Brown-Lupton University Union, and our newest academic building Scharbauer Hall, the Commons is becoming the center of a vibrant social, cultural and intellectual life for students, faculty and staff. The Campus Commons concept grew from Vision in Action, a major strategic planning effort Dr. Boschini launched soon after becoming TCU’s 10th chancellor. Among the results of Vision in Action are 10 new facilities opened in recent years; significant increases in scholarships and financial aid funds; the addition of a substantial number of faculty and instructional positions, resulting in a low 15:1 student/faculty ratio; several endowed chairs and professorships; and the creation of the John V. Roach Honors College. Underwriting these achievements is The Campaign for TCU, which has raised more than $273 million, two years ahead of its original $250 million goal.

Chancellor Boschini maintains a high profile in the world of higher education. As a past chair of the Board of Directors of the National Association of Independent Colleges & Universities (NAICU), he advocated for 1,000 independent colleges and universities across the nation. As past chair, he continues his work for NAICU, which is often described as “the voice of private higher education.” Chancellor Boschini is also past chair of the Mountain West Conference’s Executive Board and is a member of the Independent Colleges and Universities of Texas (ICUT).

In spite of these responsibilities, the Chancellor teaches one course every academic year. This year he is teaching a course called The American University Experience in our great College of Education here on campus. The overarching theme of his course considers the question, “Is higher education a driving force for positive social change in the United States?” It’s a natural fit since he not only holds the rank of professor of education, but also brings an extensive background in higher education administration to the classroom.

Since TCU is Fort Worth’s “home team,” the Chancellor takes an active role in as many community ventures as possible. He serves on the board of directors of the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra and the Van Cliburn Foundation.

Chancellor Boschini and his wife Megan have given TCU two Horned Frogs: Elizabeth, a 2009 graduate, and Mary, a junior. Future Frogs Edward and Margaret attend All Saints Episcopal School in Fort Worth.

TCU BOARD OF TRUSTEES OFFICERS OF THE BOARDCHAIRMAN ____________________ J. Luther King, Jr.VICE CHAIRMAN ___________Clarence Scharbauer III SECRETARY _____________________ Karen M. BakerTREASURER ___________________ Brian G. Gutierrez Term Expires Spring 2011J. Kelly Cox (Midland) Alan D. Friedman (Dallas) Ann M. Jones (Albany) Mary Ralph Lowe (Fort Worth)Matthew K. Rose (Fort Worth)Patricia Penrose Schieffer (Washington, D.C.)F. Howard Walsh, Jr. (Fort Worth)

Term Expires Spring 2012Amy R. Bailey (Fort Worth)Marcia Fuller French (Fort Worth)Rafael G. Garza (Fort Worth)Charlie L. Geren (Fort Worth)Nick A. Giachino (Chicago, IL) J. Luther King, Jr. (Dallas) G. Malcolm Louden (Fort Worth) Kit Tennison Moncrief (Fort Worth) Roger A. Ramsey (Houston)Trevor D. Rees-Jones (Dallas)Joan G. Rogers (Fort Worth)Edgar H. Schollmaier (Fort Worth)Rick L Wittenbraker (Houston)Kimbell Fortson Wynne (Fort Worth)

Term Expires Spring 2013Peter L. Bermont (Miami, Fla.)John F. Davis III (Dallas) A.R. “Buddy” Dike (Fort Worth)Kenneth J. Huffman (Newtown, Pa.) Bruce W. Hunt (Dallas) Ronald C. Parker (Dallas) Billy Rosenthal (Fort Worth)Clarence Scharbauer III (Midland) Duer Wagner III (Dallas/Fort Worth) Lissa N. Wagner (Midland) Robert J. Wright (Dallas)

Term Expires Spring 2014Leanne Acuff (Colorado Springs, Colo.)Allie Beth Allman (Dallas)Brenda A. Cline (Fort Worth)Ronald W. Clinkscale (Fort Worth)Lou Hill Davidson (Washington, D.C.)G. Hunter Enis (Fort Worth)Mark L. Johnson (Fort Worth)J. Roger King (Fort Worth)John H. Pinkerton (Fort Worth)Jerry J. Ray (Austin)Roy C. Snodgrass III (Austin)William E. Steele III (Fort Worth)J. Roger Williams (Fort Worth) Ex-Officio MembersDani L. Cartwright, Regional Minister, Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in the Southwest (Fort Worth)Jan Harlin Ramsey, Alumni Association Representative (Dallas)Colby D. Siratt, Alumni Association Representative (Fort Worth)Jan Tucker Scully, President, TCU Alumni Association (Fort Worth)

U N I V E R S IT Y ADM I N I S TR AT I O N

CHANCELLOR8TH YEAR AT TCU

Working to Provide a World-Class, Values-Centered University Experience

DR. V I CTOR J. BOSCH I N I , J R .

Page 63: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

61

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

AT

HLE

TIC

S A

DM

INIS

TR

AT

ION

Chris Del Conte was appointed TCU’s athletics director on Oct. 21, 2009.

In just over a year on the job, Del Conte has seen the TCU football team make a pair of BCS appearances (2010 Fiesta Bowl, 2011 Rose Bowl), the Horned Frog baseball team reach the College World Series, the rifle team win a national championship, $125 million raised for the renovation of Amon G. Carter Stadium and Big East Conference membership for all sports in 2012.

TCU set a single-season school record last year with six conference championships (football, men’s swimming and diving, women’s basketball, men’s tennis, women’s tennis and baseball). Fifteen of 20 sports were represented in NCAA postseason play and 12 teams were nationally ranked.

It was an overall historic year for the Horned Frogs as the football team made its first appearance in a BCS game and the baseball team reached the College World Series for the first time in program history. TCU was the only school in the nation in 2009-10 to play in a BCS game and win at least one game at the CWS.

The momentum continued into the summer. In just six months, $105 million was raised for the renovation of Amon G. Carter Stadium. Work began immediately following the 2010 football season. An implosion of the press box side of the stadium took place Dec. 5. The renovation will be fully completed in 2012.

Additionally, a TCU record $4.4 million in Frog Club donations was received over the last year.

TCU was one of just three institutions in 2009-10 to have multiple National Coaches of the Year in Gary Patterson (football) and Jim Schlossnagle (baseball). Patterson and Schlossnagle were part of five TCU coaches (Darryl Anderson, men’s indoor track and field; Jeff Mittie, women’s basketball; Angie Larkin, women’s golf ) to receive Mountain West Conference Coach of the Year accolades.

The success on the playing field carried over to the classroom. In the Fall 2009 and Spring 2010 semesters, TCU student-athletes recorded their highest cumulative grade-point average since tracking began in 1998. Fifteen of 20 sports have team GPAs over 3.0.

The partnership between TCU and the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex was never more evident than the 2009-10 athletics campaign. Football, baseball, soccer and volleyball set single-season attendance marks. A record in season-ticket sales helped the Horned Frogs establish another TCU attendance mark in the 2010 football campaign.

Del Conte, recipient of the 2010 Bobby Dodd Division I-A Athletic Director’s Award, joined the Horned Frog family after serving four years as the director of athletics for Rice University.

During his tenure at Rice, Del Conte had responsibility for 16 intercollegiate programs, 350 student-athletes, along with coaches and staff. Del Conte also designed, developed and managed the Rice Vision for the Second Century Campaign, which raised over $90 million. He secured significant funds to build athletic facilities such as the Tudor Fieldhouse and Youngkin Center for Student-Athlete Excellence, and also raised $4 million for upgrades to the football stadium. Del Conte also secured a marketing sponsorship and broadcast rights contract for Rice and maintained a focus on student-athlete academic achievement, resulting in numerous public recognition awards from the NCAA for the academic progress rate of student-athletes.

Prior to Rice, Del Conte was the senior associate athletics director for external operations and sports programs at the University of Arizona (2000-06). In that role, Del Conte had responsibility for the planning, management and oversight of the day-to-day operation for the department of intercollegiate athletics. He also functioned as the chief financial officer; managed external operations; had oversight and management of all contracts, ticket sales, broadcast rights fees, corporate sponsorships, and trademarks and licensing; and oversight of all facility construction.

Del Conte also served as an assistant athletics director for external operations at both Washington State (1998-99) and Cal Poly (1994-98).

Del Conte serves on the North Texas Super Bowl XLV Host Committee as well as the Davey O’Brien Foundation Board and National Sports Marketing Network Board. His other professional committee involvement and associations include the Division I-A Athletics Directors Association and the National Association of Directors of Athletic Development.

Del Conte received a bachelor’s of arts degree in sociology from UC Santa Barbara and a master’s of education, administration and supervision from Washington State.

Del Conte is married to Dr. Robin Ward and has two daughters.

ATH LET I C S ADM I N I S TR AT I O N

ASSOCIATE A.D.12TH YEAR AT TCU

DAV IS BABBDIRECTOR OF INTERCOLLEG IATE ATHLETICS2ND YEAR AT TCU

Selected to Lead TCU into the Future as the Frogs’ Seventh Director of Athletics

CHR IS DEL CONTE

ASSOCIATE A.D.33RD YEAR AT TCU

ROSS BAI LEY

FACULTY ATHLETICSREPRESENTATIVE

21ST YEAR AT TCU12TH YEAR AS FAR

RHONDA HATCHER

ASSOCIATE A.D.23RD YEAR AT TCU

JACK HESSELBROCK

ASSOCIATE A.D./ SWA3RD YEAR AT TCU

KIM JOHNSON

ASSOCIATE A.D.6TH YEAR AT TCU

SCOTT KULL

ASSOCIATE A.D.4TH YEAR AT TCU

ANDREA NORDMANN

Page 64: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

62

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

20

10 S

EA

SO

N R

EV

IEW

2010 TCU FOOTBALL RESULTS (12-0 OVERALL, 8-0 MOUNTAIN WEST CONFERENCE)DATE OPPONENT RESULT SCORE OVERALL CONFERENCE TV ATTEN Sept. 4 No. 22 Oregon State$ W 30-21 1-0 0-0 ESPN 46,138Sept. 11 Tennessee Tech W 62-7 2-0 0-0 -- 37,117Sept. 18 Baylor W 45-10 3-0 0-0 VERSUS 47,393Sept. 24 at SMU W 41-24 4-0 0-0 ESPN 35,481Oct. 2 at Colorado State* W 27-0 5-0 1-0 The Mtn. 22,553Oct. 9 Wyoming* W 45-0 6-0 2-0 CBS College 38,081Oct. 16 BYU* W 31-3 7-0 3-0 VERSUS 40,416Oct. 23 Air Force* W 38-7 8-0 4-0 CBS College 46,096Oct. 30 at UNLV* W 48-6 9-0 5-0 CBS College 16,745Nov. 6 at No. 5 Utah* W 47-7 10-0 6-0 CBS College 46,522Nov. 13 San Diego State* W 40-35 11-0 7-0 VERSUS 45,694Nov. 27 New Mexico* W 66-17 12-0 8-0 VERSUS 18,640

* - Denotes Mountain West Conference game $-at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington

SCORING BY QUARTERS 1st 2nd 3rd 4th OT TOTALTCU 147 145 110 118 -- 520 Opponents 45 33 31 28 -- 137 TEAM STATISTICS TCU OPP SCORING 520 137 Points Per Game 43.3 11.4 FIRST DOWNS 309 136 Rushing 179 65 Passing 121 58 Penalty 9 13 RUSHING YARDAGE 3134 1070 Yards gained rushing 3324 1336 Yards lost rushing 190 266 Rushing Attempts 574 345 Average Per Rush 5.5 3.1 Average Per Game 261.2 89.2 TDs Rushing 39 7 PASSING YARDAGE 2764 1515 Comp-Att-Int 203-308-6 145-302-12 Average Per Pass 9.0 5.0 Average Per Catch 13.6 10.4 Average Per Game 230.3 126.2 TDs Passing 28 10 TOTAL OFFENSE 5898 2585 Total Plays 882 647 Average Per Play 6.7 4.0 Average Per Game 491.5 215.4 KICK RETURNS: #-Yards 28-747 79-1621 PUNT RETURNS: #-Yards 36-533 15-108 INT RETURNS: #-Yards 12-164 6-72 KICK RETURN AVERAGE 26.7 20.5 PUNT RETURN AVERAGE 14.8 7.2 INT RETURN AVERAGE 13.7 12.0 FUMBLES-LOST 18-7 21-10 PENALTIES-Yards 64-522 58-466 Average Per Game 43.5 38.8 PUNTS-Yards 39-1623 89-3858 Average Per Punt 41.6 43.3 Net punt average 36.8 35.3 TIME OF POSSESSION/Game 34:34 25:26 3RD-DOWN Conversions 78/149 33/151 3rd-Down Pct 52% 22% 4TH-DOWN Conversions 9/13 6/15 4th-Down Pct 69% 40% SACKS BY-Yards 25-140 9-64 MISC YARDS 0 0 TOUCHDOWNS SCORED 70 18 FIELD GOALS-ATTEMPTS 11-13 4-5 ON-SIDE KICKS 0-0 0-0 RED-ZONE SCORES 58-66 88% 13-16 81% RED-ZONE TOUCHDOWNS 48-66 73% 10-16 63% PAT-ATTEMPTS 65-70 93% 17-18 94% ATTENDANCE 254797 139941 Games/Avg Per Game 6/42466 5/27988 Neutral Site Games 1/46138

RUSHINGPLAYER GP ATT GAIN LOSS NET AVG TD LONG YPGWesley, Ed 12 162 1080 15 1065 6.6 11 49 88.8 Tucker, Matthew 12 144 719 25 694 4.8 7 47 57.8 James, Waymon 10 83 500 11 489 5.9 5 28 48.9 Dalton, Andy 12 77 481 74 407 5.3 5 47 33.9 Dean, Aundre 8 32 225 2 223 7.0 1 35 27.9 Pachall, Casey 8 15 107 13 94 6.3 2 22 11.8 Kerley, Jeremy 12 16 99 7 92 5.8 2 19 7.7 Fort, Jercell 11 14 64 0 64 4.6 0 12 5.8 Hightower, Ryan 4 1 16 0 16 16.0 1 16 4.0 Shivers, Luke 12 8 13 0 13 1.6 4 4 1.1 Gallegos, Yogi 2 2 8 0 8 4.0 0 5 4.0 Dawson, Skye 11 4 9 5 4 1.0 0 5 0.4 Hicks, Antoine 11 3 3 0 3 1.0 1 2 0.3 Team 9 13 0 38 -38 -2.9 0 0 -4.2Total 12 574 3324 190 3134 5.5 39 49 261.2 Opponents 12 345 1336 266 1070 3.1 7 31 89.2

RECEIVINGPLAYER GP NO. YDS AVG TD LONG YPGKerley, Jeremy 12 50 517 10.3 10 50 43.1 Boyce, Josh 12 33 602 18.2 6 93 50.2 Johnson, Bart 12 30 396 13.2 3 37 33.0 Young, Jimmy 12 27 429 15.9 4 45 35.8 Hicks, Antoine 11 12 171 14.2 2 41 15.5 Dawson, Skye 11 12 170 14.2 0 52 15.5 Tucker, Matthew 12 8 97 12.1 0 31 8.1 Wesley, Ed 12 7 29 4.1 0 10 2.4 Brock, Logan 12 6 110 18.3 2 29 9.2 James, Waymon 10 5 91 18.2 1 38 9.1 Clay, Curtis 12 5 44 8.8 0 13 3.7 Shivers, Luke 12 3 25 8.3 0 10 2.1 Frosch, Evan 11 2 42 21.0 0 31 3.8 Fuller, Corey 10 2 30 15.0 0 19 3.0 Adams, Alonzo 11 1 11 11.0 0 11 1.0 Total 12 203 2764 13.6 28 93 230.3 Opponents 12 145 1515 10.4 10 53 126.2 PASSING PLAYER GP EFFIC CMP-ATT-INT PCT YDS TD LNG YPG Dalton, Andy 12 167.0 194-293-6 66.2 2638 26 93 219.8 Pachall, Casey 8 176.1 6-9-0 66.7 78 1 28 9.8 Gallegos, Yogi 2 48.1 1-4-0 25.0 11 0 11 5.5 Kerley, Jeremy 12 420.4 2-2-0 100.0 37 1 26 3.1 Total 12 167.4 203-308-6 65.9 2764 28 93 230.3 Opponents 12 93.1 145-302-12 48.0 1515 10 53 126.2

OVE R ALL S TAT I S T I C S

Page 65: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

63

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

20

10 S

EA

SO

N R

EV

IEWO V E R A LL S TAT I S T I C S

TOTAL OFFENSEPLAYER GP PLAYS RUSH PASS TOTAL YPG Dalton, Andy 12 370 407 2638 3045 253.8 Wesley, Ed 12 162 1065 0 1065 88.8 Tucker, Matthew 12 144 694 0 694 57.8 James, Waymon 10 83 489 0 489 48.9 Dean, Aundre 8 32 223 0 223 27.9 Pachall, Casey 8 24 94 78 172 21.5 Kerley, Jeremy 12 18 92 37 129 10.8 Fort, Jercell 11 14 64 0 64 5.8 Gallegos, Yogi 2 6 8 11 19 9.5 Hghtower, Ryan 4 1 16 0 16 4.0 Shivers, Luke 12 8 13 0 13 1.1 Dawson, Skye 11 4 4 0 4 0.4 Hicks, Antoine 11 3 3 0 3 0.3 Team 9 13 -38 0 -38 -4.2 Total 12 882 3134 2764 5898 491.5 Opponents 12 647 1070 1515 2585 215.4

SCORING I-----------------PATS----------------IPLAYER TD FGS KICK RUSH RCV PASS DXP SAF PTS Evans, Ross 0 11-13 65-70 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 98 Kerley, Jeremy 12 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 72 Wesley, Ed 11 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 66 Tucker, Matthew 7 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 42 Boyce, Josh 6 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 36 James, Waymon 6 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 36 Dalton, Andy 5 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 30 Young, Jimmy 4 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 24 Shivers, Luke 4 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 24 Hicks, Antoine 3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 18 Johnson, Bart 3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 18 Brock, Logan 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 12 Pachall, Casey 2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 12 Hightower, Ryan 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6 Johnson, Tejay 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6 Teague, Jason 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6 Jones, Colin 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6 Dean, Aundre 1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 6 Team 0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0-0 0 1 2 Total 70 11-13 65-70 0-0 0 0-0 0 1 520Opponents 18 4-5 17-18 0-0 0 0-0 0 0 137

PUNT RETURNSPLAYER NO. YDS AVG TD LONGKerley, Jeremy 30 388 12.9 0 45 Clay, Curtis 5 120 24.0 0 50 Dawson, Skye 1 25 25.0 0 25 Total 36 533 14.8 0 50 Opponents 15 108 7.2 0 29

KICK RETURNSPLAYER NO. YDS AVG TD LONGKerley, Jeremy 17 476 28.0 0 83 McCoy, Greg 5 167 33.4 0 56 Shivers, Luke 3 17 5.7 0 8 Dawson, Skye 3 87 29.0 0 44 Total 28 747 26.7 0 83 Opponents 79 1621 20.5 0 45 INTERCEPTION RETURNSPLAYER NO. YDS AVG TD LONGJohnson, Tejay 3 50 16.7 1 29 Teague, Jason 2 29 14.5 1 29 McCoy, Greg 2 -2 -1.0 0 0 Thompson, Jurrell 1 0 0.0 0 0 Luttrell, Tyler 1 0 0.0 0 0 Carder, Tank 1 0 0.0 0 0 Brock, Tanner 1 57 57.0 0 57 Jones, Colin 1 30 30.0 1 30 Total 12 164 13.7 3 57 Opponents 6 72 12.0 0 32

Freshman wide receiver Josh Boyce is second on the team in receptions with 33, including a 93-yard touchdown grab in a 47-7 win at Utah.

Senior signal-caller Andy Dalton has gotten it done with his arm and legs this season, throwing for 26 TDs and rushing for another five.

Page 66: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

64

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

20

10 S

EA

SO

N R

EV

IEW

ALL-PURPOSE YARDAGEPLAYER G RUSH REC PR KOR IR TOT YPGKerley, Jeremy 12 92 517 388 476 0 1473 122.8 Wesley, Ed 12 1065 29 0 0 0 1094 91.2 Tucker, Matthew 12 694 97 0 0 0 791 65.9 Boyce, Josh 12 0 602 0 0 0 602 50.2 James, Waymon 10 489 91 0 0 0 580 58.0 Young, Jimmy 12 0 429 0 0 0 429 35.8 Dalton, Andy 12 407 0 0 0 0 407 33.9 Johnson, Bart 12 0 396 0 0 0 396 33.0 Dawson, Skye 11 4 170 25 87 0 286 26.0 Dean, Aundre 8 223 0 0 0 0 223 27.9 Hicks, Antoine 11 3 171 0 0 0 174 15.8 McCoy, Greg 12 0 0 0 167 -2 165 13.8 Clay, Curtis 12 0 44 120 0 0 164 13.7 Brock, Logan 12 0 110 0 0 0 110 9.2 Pachall, Casey 8 94 0 0 0 0 94 11.8 Fort, Jercell 11 64 0 0 0 0 64 5.8 Brock, Tanner 12 0 0 0 0 57 57 4.8 Shivers, Luke 12 13 25 0 17 0 55 4.6 Johnson, Tejay 12 0 0 0 0 50 50 4.2 Frosch, Evan 11 0 42 0 0 0 42 3.8 Jones, Colin 12 0 0 0 0 30 30 2.5 Fuller, Corey 10 0 30 0 0 0 30 3.0 Teague, Jason 12 0 0 0 0 29 29 2.4 Hightower, Ryan 4 16 0 0 0 0 16 4.0 Adams, Alonzo 11 0 11 0 0 0 11 1.0 Gallegos, Yogi 2 8 0 0 0 0 8 4.0 TEAM 9 -38 0 0 0 0 -38 -4.2 Total 12 3134 2764 533 747 164 7342 611.8Opponents 12 1070 1515 108 1621 72 4386 365.5

PUNTING PLAYER NO. YDS AVG LONG TB FC I20 BLKD Kelton, Anson 38 1602 42.2 58 4 13 15 0 Dalton, Andy 1 21 21.0 21 0 0 1 0Total 39 1623 41.6 58 4 13 16 0 Opponents 89 3858 43.3 74 9 24 21 0

KICKOFFS PLAYER NO. YDS AVG TB OB RETN NET YDLN Sharples, Kevin 93 6151 66.1 14 0 -- -- --Total 93 6151 66.1 14 0 20.5 45.7 24 Opponents 35 2207 63.1 7 0 26.7 37.7 32

FIELD GOALS PLAYER FGM-A PCT 01-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50+ LG BLK Evans, Ross 11-13 84.6 1-1 5-6 4-4 1-2 0-0 43 0

FG SEQUENCE GAME TCU OPPONENT Oregon State - 47 Tennessee Tech - - Baylor (23) (48) SMU - (26) Colorado State (29),(43) - Wyoming (37) - BYU (20) (27) Air Force (30) - UNLV - - Utah (24),(23) - San Diego State 47,(36),25,(31) - New Mexico (19) (27)

Numbers in (parentheses) indicate field goal was made.

OVE R ALL S TAT I S T I C S

RED-ZONE ANALYSISTCUOpponent No. TDs FG Score Pct. TD Pct. TO Dwn. EOH MFGOregon State 6 4 0 .666 .666 1 0 1 0Tennessee Tech 7 7 0 1.000 1.000 0 0 0 0Baylor 5 4 1 1.000 .800 0 0 0 0SMU 5 5 0 1.000 1.000 0 0 0 0Colorado State 4 2 1 .750 .500 0 0 1 0Wyoming 5 4 1 1.000 .800 0 0 0 0BYU 2 1 1 1.000 .500 0 0 0 0Air Force 6 5 1 1.000 .833 0 0 0 0UNLV 6 4 0 .666 .666 1 0 1 0Utah 4 2 2 1.000 .500 0 0 0 0San Diego State 9 4 2 .666 .444 1 0 1 1New Mexico 7 6 1 1.000 .857 0 0 0 0Totals 66 48 10 .879 .727 3 0 4 1

OPPONENTSTeam No. TDs FG Score Pct. TD Pct. TO Dwn. EOH MFGOregon State 1 1 0 1.000 1.000 0 0 0 0Tennessee Tech 1 1 0 1.000 1.000 0 0 0 0Baylor 1 0 0 .000 .000 0 1 0 0SMU 3 1 1 .667 .333 0 1 0 0Colorado State 0 0 0 .000 .000 0 0 0 0Wyoming 1 0 0 .000 .000 1 0 0 0BYU 1 0 1 1.000 .000 0 0 0 0Air Force 1 1 0 1.000 1.000 0 0 0 0UNLV 1 1 0 1.000 1.000 0 0 0 0Utah 1 1 0 1.000 1.000 0 0 0 0San Diego State 2 2 0 1.000 1.000 0 0 0 0New Mexico 3 2 1 1.000 .667 0 0 0 0Totals 16 10 13 .812 .625 1 2 0 0

TO: Turnover; Dwn.: Loss of possession on downs; EOH: End of half/game; MFG: Missed field goal

SPECIAL TEAMS TACKLESPlayer UA A TTThompson, Jurell 10 6 16Battle, Travaras 10 5 15Cain, Kenny 8 3 11Williams, Malcolm 6 3 9Clay, Curtis 4 5 9Burks, Greg 4 4 8Brock, Tanner 7 0 7Fort, Jercell 3 2 5Luttrell, Tyler 2 3 5Jones, Colin 2 2 4Cuba, Tekerrein 2 1 3Gardner, Kris 2 1 3Broughton, Braylon 1 1 2Fobbs, Johnny 0 2 2Johnson, Tejay 1 1 2Sharples, Kevin 1 1 2Adams, Alonzo 0 1 1Hicks, Antoine 1 0 1Scott, Chris 1 0 1Teague, Jason 1 0 1Shelley, Daniel 0 1 1Shivers, Luke 0 1 1Fuller, Corey 0 1 1

Page 67: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

65

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

20

10 S

EA

SO

N R

EV

IEWD E F E N S I V E S TAT I S T I C S

DEFENSIVE STATISTICSPLAYER GP Solo Ast Total TFL/Yds Sacks Int-Yds PBU PD QBH FR/Yds FF BLK Saf Brock, Tanner 12 53 44 97 5.5/15 2.0/9 1/57 3 4 1 2/0 - - -Jones, Colin 12 44 26 70 10.5/40 2.0/18 1/30 2 3 1 1/0 - - -Johnson, Tejay 12 34 22 56 1.5/3 - 3/50 3 6 - - 3 - - Carder, Tank 12 31 23 54 6.5/19 2.5/12 1/0 5 6 1 1/7 - - - Cuba, Tekerrein 12 30 15 45 2.0/3 - - 1 1 - - - - -Ibiloye, Alex 10 21 15 36 4.5/9 - - 1 1 - 1/3 3 - -Daniels, Wayne 12 17 16 33 12.0/46 6.5/35 - 1 1 - 2/0 2 - - Teague, Jason 12 24 9 33 1.5/4 - 2/29 7 9 - - 2 - - Maponga, Stansly 11 13 16 29 3.0/17 2.5/17 - 1 1 1 - 1 - - Cain, Kenny 12 18 9 27 1.0/1 - - 1 1 - 1/0 - - - McCoy, Greg 12 20 5 25 - - 2/-2 5 7 - - - - -Thompson, Jurrell 12 13 9 22 1.0/4 1.0/4 1/0 - 1 - - 2 - - Grant, Cory 12 8 10 18 5.0/29 3.5/23 - - - - - - - - Yendrey, D.J. 12 6 11 17 5.0/20 3.0/15 - - - - 1/0 - - - Battle, Travaras 12 10 6 16 - - - - - - - 1 - - Gardner, Kris 12 8 4 12 1.0/1 - - 1 1 - - 1 - - Williams, Malcolm 12 8 3 11 - - - 1 1 - - - - - Broughton, Braylon 11 5 6 11 2.0/3 1.0/1 - 2 2 - 1/0 - - -Clay, Curtis 12 4 5 9 - - - - - - - - - -Burks, Greg 12 9 - 9 - - - - - - - - - -Olabode, Elisha 10 4 4 8 - - - - - - - - - -Luttrell, Tyler 8 3 5 8 - - 1/0 - 1 - - - - -Fobbs, Johnny 10 4 3 7 2.0/3 - - 1 1 - - - - -Coleman, Jeremy 11 2 4 6 0.5/1 - - - - - - - - -Fort, Jercell 11 3 2 5 - - - - - - - - - -Forrest, Ross 9 2 3 5 - - - - - - - - - -Griffin, Kelly 8 3 2 5 2.5/8 1.0/6 - - - - - - - -Anderson, Matt 8 3 1 4 1.0/5 - - - - - - 1 - -Sharples, Kevin 12 1 1 2 - - - - - - - - - -Hicks, Antoine 11 1 - 1 - - - - - - - - - -Adams, Alonzo 11 - 1 1 - - - - - - - - - -Fuller, Corey 10 - 1 1 - - - - - - - - - -Frosch, Evan 11 1 - 1 - - - - - - - - - -Shivers, Luke 12 - 1 1 - - - - - - - - - -Olson, Jeff 10 1 - 1 - - - - - - - - - -Shelley, Daniel 11 - 1 1 - - - - - - - - - -Brock, Logan 12 1 - 1 - - - - - - - - - -Leatch, Clarence 4 1 - 1 - - - - - - - - - -Wesley, Ed 12 1 - 1 - - - - - - - - - - Scott, Chris 3 1 - 1 - - - - - - - - - -TEAM 9 - - - - - - - - - - - - 1Total 12 408 283 691 68/231 25/140 12/164 35 47 4 10/10 15 - 1Opponents 12 512 438 950 41/136 9/64 6/72 24 30 2 7/53 6 - -

Defensive end Wayne Daniels has filled the void left by 2009 All-American Jerry Hughes, racking up 33 tackles and 6.5 sacks.

Linebackers Tanner Brock (left) and Tank Carder have patrolled the middle of the field for Gary Patterson’s top-ranked TCU defense. Brock leads the team with 97 total tackles.

Page 68: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

66

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

20

10 S

EA

SO

N R

EV

IEW

|---------RUSHING-----------| |-------RECEIVING-------| |-------------PASSING-------------| |---------KICK RET----------| |---------PUNT RET---------| TOTOPPONENT NO. YDS TD LG NO. YDS TD LG C-A-I YDS TD LG NO. YDS TD LG NO. YDS TD LG OFFOregon State 54 278 3 16 17 175 1 52 17-27-2 175 1 52 5 105 0 24 3 42 0 34 453TENNESSEE TECH 41 270 7 22 15 182 1 32 15-21-0 182 1 32 2 47 0 23 1 12 0 12 452BAYLOR 48 291 4 49 21 267 2 37 21-23-0 267 2 37 2 39 0 31 4 84 0 45 558at SMU 46 190 4 15 15 185 1 41 15-27-2 185 1 41 5 172 0 83 2 23 0 13 375at Colorado State 49 346 2 47 12 128 1 39 12-25-0 128 1 39 0 0 0 0 3 35 0 16 474WYOMING 46 305 3 17 15 281 3 50 15-18-0 281 3 50 1 26 0 26 3 48 0 26 586BYU 38 108 0 20 24 273 4 35 24-36-0 273 4 35 2 81 0 52 4 56 0 17 381AIR FORCE 51 377 4 47 11 185 1 38 11-20-1 185 1 38 2 46 0 25 0 0 0 0 562at UNLV 52 273 4 35 17 257 2 54 17-25-0 257 2 54 2 28 0 26 2 -3 0 1 530at Utah 45 177 2 13 22 381 4 93 22-27-0 381 4 93 0 0 0 0 1 4 0 4 558SAN DIEGO STATE 54 226 1 28 21 240 4 38 21-36-1 240 4 38 4 113 0 44 6 92 0 43 466at New Mexico 50 293 5 44 13 210 4 45 13-23-0 210 4 45 3 90 0 56 7 140 0 50 503 TCU Totals 574 3134 39 49 203 2764 28 93 203-308-6 2764 28 93 28 747 0 83 36 533 0 50 5898 Opponent 345 1070 7 31 145 1515 10 53 145-302-12 1515 10 53 79 1621 0 45 15 108 0 29 2585

GAMES PLAYED: 12 PASS EFFICIENCY: 167.39 ALL PURPOSE AVG/GAME: 611.8 AVG PER RUSH: 5.5 KICK RET AVG: 26.7 TOTAL OFFENSE AVG/GM: 491.5 AVG PER CATCH: 13.6 PUNT RET AVG: 14.8 |-----------------------TACKLES-----------------------| |----FUMBLES----| |------------Kicks--XPTS------------|OPPONENT SOLO AST TOTAL TFL-YDS SACKS-YDS FF FR-YDS INT-YDS QBH PBU KICK ATT-MADE RUN RCV SAF PTSOregon State 24 24 48 5.0 -14 2.0 -10 1 0 -0 0 -0 0 4 0 4-4 0 0 1 30TENNESSE TECH 39 32 71 13.0 -53 5.0 -32 6 4 -0 1-29 0 1 0 8-9 0 0 0 62BAYLOR 41 14 55 8.0 -33 3.0 -22 0 0 -0 0 -0 0 1 0 6-6 0 0 0 45at SMU 28 32 60 3.0 -5 1.0 -2 1 0 -0 1-19 0 9 0 5-6 0 0 0 41at Colorado State 40 20 60 9.0 -16 4.0-7 3 2 -0 0 -0 1 4 0 3-3 0 0 0 27WYOMING 35 20 55 6.0-16 1.0-3 0 0-0 1-0 0 2 0 6-6 0 0 0 45BYU 38 18 56 6.0-26 3.0-21 0 0-0 2-2 0 3 0 4-4 0 0 0 31AIR FORCE 47 4 51 5.0-11 1.0-6 0 0-0 0-0 0 1 0 5-5 0 0 0 38at UNLV 24 41 65 2.0-3 0.0-0 0 0-0 2-30 0 4 0 6-7 0 0 0 48at Utah 22 34 56 2.0-9 1.0-7 2 2-3 2-55 0 2 0 5-6 0 0 0 47SAN DIEGO STATE 33 6 39 3.0-23 3.0-23 0 0-0 2-29 0 3 0 4-5 0 0 0 40at New Mexico 37 38 75 6.0-22 1.0-7 2 2-7 1-0 3 1 0 9-9 0 0 0 66TCU Totals 408 283 691 68.0-231 25.0-140 15 10-10 12-164 4 35 0 65-70 0 0 1 520Opponent 512 438 950 41.0-136 9.0-64 6 7-53 6-72 2 24 0 17-18 0 0 0 137

|-----------------------------------------PUNTING------------------------------------------------------| |---------FIELD GOALS---------| |----------------KICKOFFS----------------------|OPPONENT NO. YDS AVG LONG BLKD TB FC 50+ I20 ATT-MADE LG BLKD NO. YDS AVG TB OBOregon State 4 169 42.2 56 0 0 2 1 3 0-0 0 0 5 326 65.2 0 0TENNESSEE TECH 3 127 42.3 47 0 0 2 0 0 0-0 0 0 10 650 65.0 4 0BAYLOR 3 138 46.0 51 0 1 0 1 2 1-1 23 0 8 535 66.9 1 0at SMU 3 110 36.7 40 0 0 1 0 2 0-0 0 0 7 467 66.7 2 0at Colorado State 5 188 37.6 51 0 0 1 1 2 2-2 43 0 6 404 67.3 1 0WYOMING 2 91 45.5 48 0 0 2 0 1 1-1 37 0 8 533 66.6 2 0BYU 6 248 41.3 58 0 2 2 1 3 1-1 20 0 6 385 64.2 0 0AIR FORCE 0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1-1 30 0 7 458 65.4 0 0at UNLV 1 36 36.0 36 0 0 0 0 1 0-0 0 0 8 499 62.4 0 0at Utah 3 128 42.7 50 0 0 0 1 1 2-2 24 0 9 622 69.1 2 0SAN DIEGO STATE 5 199 39.8 51 0 0 2 1 0 2-4 36 0 8 532 66.5 1 0at New Mexico 4 189 47.2 53 0 1 1 2 1 1-1 19 0 11 740 67.3 1 0TCU Totals 39 1623 41.6 58 0 4 13 8 16 11-13 43 0 93 6151 66.1 14 0Opponent 89 3858 43.3 74 0 9 24 27 21 4-5 48 0 35 2207 63.1 7 0

GAM E-BY-GAM E T EAM S TAT I S T I C S

2010 GAME-BY-GAME STARTERSTCU OFFENSEPos. OSU TTU BAY SMU CSU WYO BYU AFA UNLV UTAH SDSU UNMWR Kerley Clay Kerley Kerley Kerley Kerley Kerley Kerley Hicks Kerley Kerley KerleyWR Young Young Young Young Young Young Johnson Boyce Young Boyce Young BoyceTE Frosch Frosch Frosch Hicks (WR) Hicks (WR) Boyce (WR) Boyce (WR) Frosch Frosch Frosch Boyce (WR) Young (WR)LT Cannon Olson Cannon Cannon Cannon Cannon Cannon Cannon Cannon Cannon Cannon CannonLG Dooley Dooley Dooley Dooley Dooley Dooley Dooley Thompson Thompson Thompson Dooley RosnerC Kirkpatrick Kirkpatrick Kirkpatrick Kirkpatrick Kirkpatrick Kirkpatrick Kirkpatrick Kirkpatrick Kirkpatrick Kirkpatrick Kirkpatrick KirkpatrickRG Vernon Vernon Vernon Vernon Vernon Vernon Vernon Vernon Vernon Vernon Vernon VernonRT Roth Roth Roth Roth Roth Roth Roth Olson Olson Olson Roth RothTE Brock Brock Brock Johnson (WR) Dawson (WR) Dawson (WR) Tucker (TB) Brock Johnson (WR) Brock Johnson (WR) Johnson (WR)QB Dalton Dalton Dalton Dalton Dalton Dalton Dalton Dalton Dalton Dalton Dalton DaltonRB Wesley Wesley Wesley Wesley Wesley Wesley Wesley Wesley Wesley Wesley Wesley Wesley

TCU DEFENSEPos. OSU TTU BAY SMU CSU WYO BYU AFA UNLV UTAH SDSU UNMDE Maponga Maponga Maponga Maponga Maponga Maponga Maponga Maponga Maponga Maponga Forrest MapongaNT Griffin Griffin Griffin Griffin Griffin Griffin Griffin Griffin Grant Grant Grant GrantDT Grant Grant Grant Grant Grant Grant Grant Grant Yendrey Yendrey Yendrey YendreyDE Daniels Daniels Daniels Daniels Daniels Daniels Daniels Daniels Daniels Daniels Daniels DanielsLB Carder Carder Carder Carder Carder Carder Carder Carder Carder Carder Carder CarderLB Brock Brock Brock Brock Brock Brock Brock Brock Brock Brock Brock BrockCB Teague Teague Teague Teague Teague Teague Teague Teague Teague Teague Teague TeagueWS Ibiloye Ibiloye Ibiloye Ibiloye Cuba Cuba Cuba Ibiloye Cuba Ibiloye Ibiloye CubaFS Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson Johnson JohnsonSS Luttrell Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones Jones JonesCB McCoy McCoy McCoy McCoy McCoy McCoy McCoy McCoy McCoy McCoy McCoy McCoy

Page 69: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

67

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

20

10 S

EA

SO

N R

EV

IEW

GAME-BY-GAME RUSHING (ATT-YDS/TD) OSU TTU BAY SMU CSU WYO BYU AFA UNLV UTAH SDSU UNMWesley, Ed 17-134/1 11-85/1 19-165/2 8-35/0 15-78/2 17-115/1 10-53/0 28-209/2 13-64/1 12-50/1 1-0/0 11-77/0 Tucker, Matthew 20-74/0 9-53/2 12-34/1 19-63/1 8-87/0 7-45/1 10-31/0 12-63/1 7-28/0 9-32/0 22-131/0 9-53/1 James, Waymon DNP 5-34/1 3-13/0 8-41/2 6-55/0 6-43/0 5-21/0 DNP 9-61/0 11-64/1 23-102/1 7-55/0 Dalton, Andy 15-64/2 5-23/1 4-26/0 7-43/0 10-67/0 4-42/0 7-16/0 7-93/1 6-30/1 5-14/0 6--3/0 1--8/0 Dean, Aundre DNP 5-23/0 1-3/0 DNP 2-25/0 6-39/0 2-9/0 DNP 5-47/0 4-22/0 DNP 7-55/1 Pachall, Casey DNP 2-28/0 1-3/0 DNP 1-12/0 DNP 1-2/0 - 2-18/1 3-0/0 DNP 5-31/1 Kerley, Jeremy - 1-5/1 4-49/0 1-6/0 4-20/0 1-3/0 - 2-11/0 1-5/1 1--5/0 1--2/0 - Fort, Jercell - - DNP - 1-2/0 2-8/0 - 1-2/0 4-26/0 - - 6-26/0 Hightower, Ryan DNP 1-16/1 - DNP DNP - DNP - DNP DNP DNP DNP Shivers, Luke 1-1/0 - 1-2/1 1-4/1 1-2/0 - 1-1/0 - - - - 3-3/2 Gallegos, Yogi DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP 2-8/0 DNP DNP DNP DNP DNP -Dawson, Skye 1-5/0 1-4/0 1-0/0 - - - 1--5/0 DNP - - - - Hicks, Antoine - DNP - - - 1-2/1 - - 1-0/0 - - 1-1/0 TEAM - 1--1/0 2--4/0 2--2/0 1--2/0 DNP 1--20/0 1--1/0 4--6/0 DNP 1--2/0 DNPTotals 54-278/3 41-270/7 48-291/4 46-190/4 49-346/2 46-305/3 38-108/0 51-377/4 52-273/4 45-177/2 54-226/1 50-293/5

GAME-BY-GAME PASSING (CMP-ATT-INT-YDS-TD) OSU TTU BAY SMU CSU WYO BYU AFA UNLV UTAH SDSU UNMDalton, Andy 17-27-2-175-1 15-21-0-182-1 21-23-0-267-2 14-26-2-174-1 11-24-0-109-1 14-17-0-270-3 24-36-0-273-4 11-20-1-185-1 16-23-0-252-2 21-26-0-355-3 21-36-1-240-4 9-14-0-156-3Casey Pachall - - - - 1-1-0-19-0 - - - 1-2-0-5-0 - - 4-6-0-54-1Kerley, Jeremy - - - 1-1-0-11-0 - - - - - 1-1-0-26-1 - - Yogi Gallegos - - - - - 1-1-0-11-0 - - - - - 0-3-0-0-0Totals 17-27-2-175-1 15-21-0-182-1 21-23-0-267-2 15-27-2-185-1 12-25-0-128-1 15-18-0-281-3 24-36-0-273-4 11-20-1-185-1 17-25-0-257-2 22-27-0-381-4 21-36-1-240-4 13-23-0-210-4

GAME-BY-GAME RECEIVING (REC-YDS/TD) OSU TTU BAY SMU CSU WYO BYU AFA UNLV UTAH SDSU UNMBoyce, Josh 1-5/0 3-70/1 3-28/0 1-8/0 4-44/0 - 8-127/2 3-49/0 2-64/1 3-126/2 2-31/0 3-50/0 Kerley, Jeremy 6-49/1 1-16/0 6-69/2 4-33/0 3-5/0 3-65/1 5-25/1 2-20/1 5-82/1 7-68/0 8-85/3 - Young, Jimmy - 1-17/0 3-53/0 1-9/0 1-39/1 1-8/0 3-40/1 2-38/0 4-43/0 5-84/1 4-44/0 2-54/1 Johnson, Bart 3-26/0 7-56/0 3-43/0 3-29/1 1-7/0 1-31/1 3-59/0 1-25/0 1-29/0 2-33/1 4-54/0 1-4/0 Hicks, Antoine 1-12/0 DNP 1-9/0 1-41/0 - 1-4/1 2-20/0 2-47/0 1-5/0 1-7/0 - 2-26/1 Dawson, Skye 4-69/0 - 1-8/0 1-10/0 1-5/0 1-43/0 - DNP 1-5/0 1-24/0 1-7/0 1--1/0 Brock, Logan - - 1-29/0 - - 2-22/0 - - - 1-23/0 1-15/1 1-21/1 Tucker, Matthew - - 1-6/0 - - 3-53/0 1-6/0 - 2-21/0 1-11/0 - - James, Waymon DNP - - 1-7/0 - 1-34/0 - DNP - - 1-4/0 2-46/1 Clay, Curtis 1-13/0 2-12/0 1-11/0 1-8/0 - - - - - - - - Frosch, Evan - - 1-11/0 1-31/0 - - - - - - - DNP Fuller, Corey DNP - - DNP 1-19/0 1-11/0 - - - - - - Wesley, Ed 1-1/0 - - - 1-9/0 - 2--4/0 - 1-8/0 1-5/0 - 1-10/0 Shivers, Luke - - - 1-9/0 - 1-10/0 - 1-6/0 - - - - Adams, Alonzo - 1-11/0 - - - - - - - - - DNPTotals 17-175-1 15-182-1 21-267-2 15-185-1 12-128-1 15-281-3 24-273-4 11-185-1 17-257-2 22-381-4 21-240-4 13-210-4

GAM E-BY-GAM E I N D I V I D UAL S TAT I S T I C S

Page 70: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

68

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

20

10 S

EA

SO

N R

EV

IEW

TACKLES (U-A-T) U-A TOTAL OSU TTU BAY SMU CSU WYO BYU AFA UNLV UTAH SDSU UNMBrock, Tanner 53-44 97 3-3 2-7 3-1 2-2 5-5 3-4 8-3 7-1 3-3 6-6 7-2 4-7 Jones, Colin 44-26 70 2-1 2-3 5-2 5-2 3-4 3-3 2-0 6-0 3-6 2-4 8-0 3-1 Johnson, Tejay 34-22 56 0-2 4-2 5-2 1-1 4-2 4-0 3-5 5-0 3-3 0-4 3-1 2-0 Carder, Tank 31-23 54 3-0 3-2 5-1 5-3 5-1 2-2 1-0 2-0 3-7 1-4 - 1-3 Cuba, Tekerrein 30-15 45 - 1-0 1-0 0-1 5-1 9-3 5-4 1-0 3-4 2-0 - 3-2 Ibiloye, Alex 21-15 36 4-2 4-5 2-1 2-2 DNP DNP - 3-0 0-1 4-3 2-0 0-1 Daniels, Wayne 17-16 33 3-0 1-3 2-0 2-3 2-1 1-1 1-3 1-0 0-2 1-0 1-1 2-2 Teague, Jason 24-9 33 1-2 4-0 5-0 0-3 1-0 - 2-0 1-1 2-1 2-0 3-0 3-2 Maponga, Stansly 13-16 29 0-3 1-3 1-3 2-3 2-0 - 3-0 3-2 1-0 - DNP 0-2 Cain, Kenny 18-9 27 1-1 3-0 2-0 1-0 1-0 1-2 2-1 5-0 2-3 0-1 - 0-1 McCoy, Greg 20-5 25 3-0 2-1 1-1 2-0 4-0 0-1 3-0 1-0 - 0-2 3-0 1-0 Thompson , Jurrell 13-9 22 0-2 1-0 2-0 - 3-0 1-0 1-0 1-0 0-2 0-3 - 4-2 Grant, Cory 8-10 18 - 0-1 1-1 0-2 0-1 - 2-1 2-0 0-1 1-1 0-1 2-1 Yendrey, D.J. 6-11 17 0-1 0-1 1-0 1-2 2-0 - 1-0 1-0 0-2 - - 0-5 Battle, Travaras 10-6 16 - - 1-1 0-1 2-1 0-1 0-1 2-0 - 1-0 1-0 3-1 Gardner, Kris 8-4 12 0-1 2-0 - 1-0 - 2-1 - - 0-1 - 1-0 2-1 Williams, Malcolm 8-3 11 1-1 - - 2-1 - 1-0 - - 1-0 1-0 - 2-1 Broughton, Braylon 5-6 11 0-1 1-1 - 0-3 1-0 - - 2-0 - 0-1 1-0 DNP Clay, Curtis 4-5 9 - 0-1 0-1 0-1 0-1 - 2-0 - 1-1 1-0 - - Burks, Greg 9-0 9 - 1-0 2-0 1-0 - 2-0 1-0 - - - - 2-0 Luttrell, Tyler 3-5 8 1-3 DNP DNP DNP - 2-0 - - 0-1 0-1 - DNP Olabode, Elisha 4-4 8 DNP 1-0 - - 0-1 1-1 DNP - 0-1 - - 2-1 Fobbs, Johnny 4-3 7 0-1 1-0 - - DNP 1-1 - 2-0 - 0-1 - DNP Coleman, Jeremy 2-4 6 - 1-1 1-0 0-1 0-1 - - - - - DNP 0-1 Griffin, Kelly 3-2 5 - - 1-0 0-1 0-1 1-0 1-0 - DNP DNP DNP DNP Fort, Jercell 3-2 5 - 1-0 DNP - - - - - 0-1 0-1 2-0 - Forrest, Ross 2-3 5 - 1-0 - - DNP DNP DNP - - 0-1 1-1 0-1 Anderson, Matt 3-1 4 - 2-0 - DNP DNP - - 1-0 0-1 - DNP DNP Sharples, Kevin 1-1 2 - 0-1 - - - - - - 1-0 - - - Olson, Jeff 1-0 1 DNP - - - - - - 1-0 - - - DNP Frosch, Evan 1-0 1 1-0 - - - - - - - - - - DNP Adams, Alonzo 0-1 1 - - - - - - - - - 0-1 - DNP Brock, Logan 1-0 1 - - - 1-0 - - - - - - - - Wesley, Ed 1-0 1 - - - - - - - - - - - 1-0 Leatch, Clarence 1-0 1 DNP DNP - DNP DNP - DNP DNP 1-0 - DNP DNP Shivers, Luke 0-1 1 - - - - - - - - - - - 0-1 Scott, Chris 1-0 1 DNP - DNP DNP DNP 1-0 DNP - DNP DNP DNP DNP Shelley, Daniel 0-1 1 - - - - - - DNP - - - - 0-1 Hicks, Antoine 1-0 1 1-0 DNP - - - - - - - - - - Fuller, Corey 0-1 1 DNP - - DNP - - - - - - - 0-1 Totals 408-283 691 24-24 39-32 41-14 28-32 40-20 35-20 38-18 47-4 24-41 22-34 33-6 37-38

TACKLES FOR LOSS (TFL-YARDS) U-A TOTAL OSU TTU BAY SMU CSU WYO BYU AFA UNLV UTAH SDSU UNMDaniels, Wayne 10-4 12.0 3.0-12 2.0-13 1.0-1 0.5-1 1.0-3 1.0-3 0.5-0 - - 1.0-7 - 2.0-6 Jones, Colin 9-3 10.5 - 1.5-4 1.5-3 - 3.5-7 1.0-6 - 1.0-2 - - 2.0-18 - Carder, Tank 4-5 6.5 1.0-1 0.5-5 - 0.5-0 1.5-2 - - 1.0-6 1.0-2 0.5-1 - 0.5-2 Brock, Tanner 3-5 5.5 - 1.5-7 - 1.0-2 - - 1.0-1 - 1.0-1 - 0.5-3 0.5-1 Yendrey, D.J. 3-4 5.0 - 0.5-0 1.0-8 0.5-1 1.0-2 - 1.0-5 - - - - 1.0-4 Grant, Cory 3-4 5.0 - 0.5-2 1.5-9 - - - 1.5-9 - - - 0.5-2 1.0-7 Ibiloye, Alex 4-1 4.5 1.0-1 1.5-5 1.0-2 - DNP DNP - 1.0-1 - - - - Maponga, Stansly 1-4 3.0 - 1.0-5 0.5-4 - - - 1.0-8 0.5-0 - - DNP - Griffin, Kelly 2-1 2.5 - - 1.0-6 0.5-1 - 1.0-1 - - DNP DNP DNP DNP Broughton, Braylon 1-2 2.0 - 0.5-1 - - 1.0-1 - - - - 0.5-1 - DNP Fobbs, Johnny 2-0 2.0 - - - - DNP 1.0-2 - 1.0-1 - - - DNP Cuba, Tekerrein 2-0 2.0 - - - - 1.0-1 - - - - - - 1.0-2 Teague, Jason 1-1 1.5 - - - - - - 1.0-3 0.5-1 - - - - Johnson, Tejay 1-1 1.5 - - 0.5-0 - - 1.0-3 - - - - - - Anderson, Matt 1-0 1.0 - 1.0-5 - DNP DNP - - - - - DNP DNP Cain, Kenny 1-0 1.0 - 1.0-1 - - - - - - - - - - Thompson, Jurrell 1-0 1.0 - 1.0-4 - - - - - - - - - - Gardner, Kris 1-0 1.0 - - - - - 1.0-1 - - - - - - Coleman, Jeremy 0-1 0.5 - 0.5-1 - - - - - - - - DNP - Totals 50-36 68.0 4.0-14 13.0-53 8.0-33 3.0-5 9.0-16 6.0-16 6.0-26 5.0-11 2.0-3 2.0-9 3.0-23 6.0-22

SACKS (SACKS-YARDS) U-A TOTAL OSU TTU BAY SMU CSU WYO BYU AFA UNLV UTAH SDSU UNMDaniels, Wayne 6-1 6.5 2.0-10 1.5-12 - - 1.0-3 1.0-3 - - - 1.0-7 - - Grant, Cory 2-3 3.5 - 0.5-2 0.5-4 - - - 1.0-8 - - - 0.5-2 1.0-7 Yendrey, D.J. 3-0 3.0 - - 1.0-8 - 1.0-2 - 1.0-5 - - - - - Maponga, Stansly 1-3 2.5 - 1.0-5 0.5-4 - - - 1.0-8 - - - DNP - Carder, Tank 2-1 2.5 - 0.5-5 - - 1.0-1 - - 1.0-6 - - - - Brock, Tanner 1-2 2.0 - 0.5-4 - 1.0-2 - - - - - - 0.5-3 - Jones, Colin 2-0 2.0 - - - - - - - - - - 2.0-18 - Broughton, Braylon 1-0 1.0 - - - - 1.0-1 - - - - - - DNP Griffin, Kelly 1-0 1.0 - - 1.0-6 - - - - - DNP DNP DNP DNP Thompson, Jurrell 1-0 1.0 - 1.0-4 - - - - - - - - - - Totals 20-10 25.0 2.0-10 5.0-32 3.0-22 1.0-2 4.0-7 1.0-3 3.0-21 1.0-6 - 1.0-7 3.0-23 1.0-7

GAM E-BY-GAM E D E F E NS I V E S TAT I S T I C S

Page 71: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

69

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

20

10 S

EA

SO

N R

EV

IEW

|---------RUSHING-----------| |-------RECEIVING-------| |-------------PASSING-------------| |---------KICK RET----------| |---------PUNT RET---------| ALLOPPONENT NO. YDS TD LG NO. YDS TD LG C-A-I YDS TD LG NO. YDS TD LG NO. YDS TD LG PURvs Oregon State 25 73 1 16 10 182 2 34 10-26-0 182 2 34 5 114 0 24 2 13 0 13 255 TENNESSEE TECH 41 92 0 31 9 58 1 17 9-14-1 58 1 17 6 95 0 30 1 0 0 0 150 BAYLOR 26 99 0 28 16 164 1 53 16-30-0 164 1 53 7 166 0 30 1 8 0 8 263 at SMU 29 192 1 29 14 169 2 50 14-35-1 169 2 50 5 104 0 28 2 4 0 2 361 at Colorado State 26 45 0 6 17 116 0 18 17-29-0 116 0 18 5 123 0 29 3 5 0 2 161 WYOMING 28 75 0 9 11 116 0 40 11-17-1 116 0 40 6 120 0 26 0 0 0 0 191 BYU 27 56 0 9 14 91 0 13 14-30-2 91 0 13 6 123 0 31 1 23 0 23 147 AIR FORCE 41 184 1 19 3 47 0 22 3-7-0 47 0 22 7 122 0 25 0 0 0 0 231 at UNLV 24 69 0 17 15 128 1 23 15-32-2 128 1 23 8 158 0 24 1 0 0 0 197 at Utah 17 51 0 13 16 148 1 23 16-35-2 148 1 23 7 161 0 45 1 10 0 10 199 SAN DIEGO STATE 21 38 2 21 11 262 2 50 11-26-2 262 2 50 7 111 0 22 2 33 0 29 300at New Mexico 40 96 2 20 9 34 0 9 9-21-1 34 0 9 10 224 0 32 1 12 0 12 130 Opponent totals 345 1070 7 31 145 1515 10 53 145-302-12 1515 10 53 79 1621 0 45 15 108 0 29 2585 TCU 574 3134 39 49 203 2764 28 93 203-308-6 2764 28 93 28 747 0 83 36 533 0 50 5898

GAMES PLAYED: 12 PASS EFFICIENCY: 93.13 ALL PURPOSE AVG/GAME: 365.5 AVG PER RUSH: 23.1 KICK RET AVG: 20.5 TOTAL OFFENSE AVG/GM: 215.4 AVG PER CATCH: 10.4 PUNT RET AVG: 7.2 |-----------------------TACKLES-----------------------| |----FUMBLES----| |------------Kicks--XPTS------------|OPPONENT SOLO AST TOTAL TFL-YDS SACKS-YDS FF FR-YDS INT-YDS QBH PBU KICK ATT-MAD RUN RCV SAF PTSvs Oregon State 48 50 98 2.0-7 1.0-6 0 0-0 2-21 0 2 0 3-3 0 0 0 21 TENNESSEE TECH 34 30 64 5.0-12 1.0-5 0 1-0 0-0 0 0 0 1-1 0 0 0 7 BAYLOR 41 46 87 1.0-2 0.0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 1-1 0 0 0 10 at SMU 39 30 69 6.0-15 1.0-7 1 0-0 2-32 0 4 0 3-3 0 0 0 24 at Colorado State 38 34 72 1.0-2 0.0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 4 0 0-0 0 0 0 0 WYOMING 42 32 74 2.0-3 0.0-0 0 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0-0 0 0 0 0 BYU 53 20 73 8.0-35 2.0-12 1 0-0 0-0 0 4 0 0-0 0 0 0 3 AIR FORCE 45 22 67 1.0-2 0.0-0 0 0-0 1-19 0 1 0 1-1 0 0 0 7 at UNLV 30 56 86 1.0-1 0.0-0 0 2-0 0-0 0 2 0 0-1 0 0 0 6 at Utah 35 54 89 3.0-7 0.0-0 1 1-0 0-0 0 0 0 1-1 0 0 0 7 SAN DIEGO STATE 69 14 83 6.0-28 2.0-17 1 1-0 1-0 0 6 0 5-5 0 0 0 35 at New Mexico 38 50 88 5.0-22 2.0-17 2 2-53 0-0 2 1 0 2-2 0 0 0 17 Opponent totals 512 438 950 41.0-136 9.0-64 6 7-53 6-72 2 24 0 17-18 0 0 0 137 TCU 408 283 691 68.0-231 25.0-140 15 10-10 12-164 4 35 0 65-70 0 0 1 520

|-----------------------------------------PUNTING------------------------------------------------------| |---------FIELD GOALS---------| |----------------KICKOFFS----------------------|OPPONENT NO. YDS AVG LONG BLKD TB FC 50+ I20 ATT-MADE LG BLKD NO. YDS AVG TB OBvs Oregon State 5 217 43.4 53 0 0 2 1 3 0-1 0 0 5 317 63.4 0 0 TENNESSEE TECH 7 274 39.1 53 0 2 2 2 0 0-0 0 0 2 123 61.5 0 0 BAYLOR 8 365 45.6 53 0 0 3 3 3 1-1 48 0 3 178 59.3 1 0 at SMU 7 280 40.0 74 0 1 2 2 1 1-1 26 0 5 319 63.8 0 0 at Colorado State 8 398 49.8 67 0 2 2 3 2 0-0 0 0 1 70 70.0 1 0 WYOMING 8 371 46.4 61 0 1 2 3 3 0-0 0 0 1 70 70.0 0 0 BYU 7 336 48.0 59 0 1 0 5 0 1-1 27 0 2 128 64.0 0 0 AIR FORCE 6 287 47.8 71 0 1 0 3 3 0-0 0 0 2 122 61.0 0 0 at UNLV 6 197 32.8 42 0 0 3 0 1 0-0 0 0 2 101 50.5 0 0 at Utah 8 347 43.4 67 0 1 5 3 1 0-0 0 0 2 140 70.0 2 0 SAN DIEGO STATE 9 361 40.1 48 0 0 3 0 1 0-0 0 0 6 411 68.5 2 0 at New Mexico 10 425 42.5 51 0 0 0 2 3 1-1 27 0 4 228 57.0 1 0 Opponent totals 89 3858 43.3 74 0 9 24 27 21 4-5 48 0 35 2207 63.1 7 0 TCU 39 1623 41.6 58 0 4 13 8 16 11-13 43 0 93 6151 66.1 14 0

O PPO N E NT GAM E-BY-GAM E T EAM S TAT I S T I C S

Page 72: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

70

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

20

10 S

EA

SO

N R

EV

IEW

TCU INSIDE OPPONENT RED-ZONE Times Times Total Rush Pass FGs - ---------- Failed to score inside RZ ----------Date Opponent Score In RZ Scored Pts TDs TDs TDs Made FGA Downs Int Fumb Half GameSept. 4 vs Oregon State W 30-21 6 4 28 4 3 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 Sept. 11 Tennessee Tech W 62-7 7 7 48 7 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Sept. 18 Baylor W 45-10 5 5 31 4 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Sept. 24 at SMU W 41-24 5 5 35 5 4 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Oct. 2 at Colorado State W 27-0 4 3 17 2 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 Oct. 9 Wyoming W 45-0 5 5 31 4 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Oct. 16 BYU W 31-3 2 2 10 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Oct. 23 Air Force W 38-7 6 6 38 5 4 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Oct. 30 at UNLV W 48-6 6 4 27 4 4 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 Nov. 6 at Utah W 47-7 4 4 20 2 1 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 Nov. 13 San Diego State W 40-35 9 6 33 4 1 3 2 1 0 1 0 1 0 Nov. 27 at New Mexico W 66-17 7 7 45 6 5 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 66 58 363 48 37 11 10 1 0 2 1 4 0 58 of 66 (87.9%)

OPPONENTS INSIDE TCU RED-ZONE Times Times Total Rush Pass FGs ---------- Failed to score inside RZ ----------Date Opponent Score In RZ Scored Pts TDs TDs TDs Made FGA Downs Int Fumb Half GameSept. 4 vs Oregon State W 30-21 1 1 7 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Sept. 11 Tennessee Tech W 62-7 1 1 7 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Sept. 18 Baylor W 45-10 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 Sept. 24 at SMU W 41-24 3 2 10 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 Oct. 2 at Colorado State W 27-0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Oct. 9 Wyoming W 45-0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Oct. 16 BYU W 31-3 1 1 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Oct. 23 Air Force W 38-7 1 1 7 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Oct. 30 at UNLV W 48-6 1 1 6 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Nov. 6 at Utah W 47-7 1 1 7 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Nov. 13 San Diego State W 40-35 2 2 14 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Nov. 27 at New Mexico W 66-17 3 3 17 2 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 16 13 78 10 6 4 3 0 2 1 0 0 0 13 of 16 (81.2%)

TIME OF POSSESSIONDate Opponent Overall 1st Qtr 2nd Qtr 3rd Qtr 4th QtrSept. 4 vs. Oregon State 39:23 9:02 7:36 11:42 11:03Sept. 11 TENNESSEE TECH 28:33 5:38 7:29 7:42 7:44Sept. 18 BAYLOR 36:07 9:28 7:10 8:08 11:21Sept. 24 at SMU 32:18 6:27 8:31 9:25 7:55Oct. 2 at Colorado State 33:56 9:12 8:48 10:41 5:15Oct. 9 WYOMING 32:21 7:02 6:16 10:43 8:20Oct. 16 BYU 35:44 10:37 9:48 3:59 11:20Oct. 23 AIR FORCE 32:36 6:33 9:31 8:45 7:47Oct. 30 at UNLV 32:49 8:35 6:00 7:40 10:34Nov. 6 at Utah 39:06 8:52 10:37 9:59 9:38Nov. 13 SAN DIEGO STATE 40:51 11:25 9:47 9:18 10:21 Nov. 27 at New Mexico 31:08 9:00 5:54 7:21 8:53 TCU Total 414:52 101:51 97:27 105:23 109:11 Avg. 34:34 8:29 8:07 8:46 9:10 Opponents Total 305:08 78:09 82:33 74:37 69:49 Avg. 25:26 6:30 6:52 6:13 5:49

S PE C I A LT Y S TAT I S T I C S

3RD-DOWN CONVERSIONSOverall Rate11-17 64.7%7-10 70%3-8 37.5%5-11 45.5%6-14 42.9%4-7 57.1%7-16 43.8%6-10 60%7-11 63.6%10-15 66.7%7-18 38.9%5-12 41.6%78-149 52.3%33-151 21.8%

4TH-DOWN CONVERSIONSOverall Rate0-0 0%0-0 0%1-1 100%2-3 66.7%0-1 0%0-0 0%1-2 50%1-2 50%2-2 100%0-0 0%1-1 1000%1-1 100%9-13 69.2%6-15 40%

BIG PLAYS (25 yards+) Rushing (7):Wesley ______________ 49 yds* vs BaylorDalton _____________ 47 yds vs Air ForceTucker ________ 47 yds at Colorado StateWesley __________ 44 yds at New MexicoDean _________________ 35 yds at UNLVTucker _______ 28 yds vs San Diego StateTucker _________________25 yds at Utah

Receiving (30):Boyce _________________93 yds* at UtahBoyce ________________ 54 yds* at UNLVDawson ________ 52 yds vs Oregon StateKerley ____________50 yds* vs WyomingYoung __________45 yds* at New MexicoWesley __________ 44 yds at New Mexico Dawson ___________ 43 yds vs WyomingHicks __________________41 yds at SMUYoung _______ 39 yds* at Colorado StateKerley ______ 38 yds* vs San Diego StateJames __________38 yds* at New Mexico Johnson _____________ 37 yds vs BaylorBoyce _________________ 35 yds* vs BYUJames ____________ 34 yds vs WyomingKerley ________32 yds vs Tennessee TechFrosch _________________31 yds at SMUTucker ____________ 31 yds vs. WyomingJohnson __________31 yds* vs Wyoming Young _________________30 yds at UtahYoung _______________ 29 yds vs BaylorYoung _______________ 29 yds vs BaylorJohnson ______________ 29 yds at UNLVJohnson _____ 29 yds vs San Diego StateBoyce ___________ 28 yds at New Mexico

Kerley ______________ 28 yds* vs BaylorBoyce ______________ 27 yds vs Air ForceKerley ________________ 27 yds at UNLVJohnson ______________26 yds* at UtahBoyce _________________26 yds* at UtahKerley _________________25 yds at SMUKerley _________________25 yds at Utah

Returns (23):Kerley _____________83 yds (KO) at SMUBrock ______________ 57 yds (int) at UtahMcCoy ______ 56 yds (KO) at New MexicoKerley _____________ 52 yds (KO) vs BYUClay _______ 50 yds (punt) at New MexicoKerley __________45 yds (punt) vs BaylorDawson __ 44 yds (KO) vs San Diego StateKerley __43 yds (punt) vs San Diego StateKerley _____________38 yds (KO) at SMUKerley __________34 yds (punt) vs BaylorClay ____33 yds (punt) vs San Diego StateClay _______ 32 yds (punt) at New Mexico McCoy ___________ 31 yds (KO) vs BaylorJones ____________ 30 yds (int)* vs UNLVTeague __ 29 yds (int)* vs Tennessee TechKerley _____________ 29 yds (KO) vs BYUJohnson __29 yds (int) vs San Diego StateKerley _____ 28 yds (punt) at New MexicoKerley _______ 26 yds (punt) vs WyomingKerley _________26 yds (KO) vs WyomingKerley ___ 26 yds (KO) vs San Diego StateKerley _________ 25 yds (KO) vs Air ForceDawson ____ 25 yds (punt) at New Mexico

* - Denotes touchdown-scoring play Senior Jeremy Kerley has five returns of longer than 35 yards this season and was named the Mountain West Conference Special Teams Player of the Year for the second-straight season.

Page 73: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

71

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

20

10 S

EA

SO

N R

EV

IEW

TCU TEAM HIGHS AND LOWS____________________ HIGHS ____________________________ LOWSRushes _____________ 54 (vs Oregon State; vs. SDSU) ________ 38 (vs BYU) Yards Rushing _______ 377 (vs Air Force) ____________________ 108 (vs BYU)Yards Per Rush _______ 7.4 (vs Air Force) ____________________ 2.8 (vs BYU)TD Rushes __________ 7 (vs Tennessee Tech) ________________ 0 (vs BYU)Pass attempts _______ 36 (vs BYU; vs. San Diego State) ________ 18 (vs Wyoming)Pass completions ____ 24 (vs BYU) ________________________ 11 (vs Air Force)Yards Passing ________ 381 (at Utah) _______________________ 128 (at Colorado State)Yards Per Pass _______ 15.6 (vs Wyoming) __________________ 5.1 (at Colorado State)TD Passes ___________ 4 (Four times) ______________________ 1 (Five times)Total Plays __________ 90 (vs San Diego State) _______________ 62 (vs Tennessee Tech) Total Offense ________ 586 (vs Wyoming) ___________________ 375 (at SMU)Yards Per Play _______ 9.2 (vs Wyoming) ___________________ 5.1 (at SMU; vs BYU)Points ______________ 66 (at New Mexico) _________________ 27 (at Colorado State)Sacks By ____________ 5 (vs Tennessee Tech) ________________ 1 (Five times)First Downs _________ 30 (vs Air Force; at UNLV) _____________ 21 (at SMU)Penalties ___________ 11(vs Wyoming) ____________________ 3 (Five times)Penalty Yards ________ 84 (vs Wyoming) ____________________ 20 (vs BYU)Turnovers __________ 2 (Five times) _______________________ 0 (Four times)Interceptions By _____ 2 (Four times) ______________________ 0 (Four times)

TCU INDIVIDUAL GAME HIGHSRushes _____________________ 28 _____________ Wesley, Ed vs Air ForceYards Rushing _______________ 209 ____________ Wesley, Ed vs Air ForceTD Rushes __________________ 2 ______________ Dalton, Andy vs Oregon State Tucker, Matthew vs Tennessee Tech Wesley, Ed vs Baylor James, Waymon at SMU Wesley, Ed at Colorado State Wesley, Ed vs Air Force Shivers, Luke at New MexicoLong Rush __________________ 49 _____________ Wesley, Ed vs BaylorPass attempts _______________ 36 _____________ Dalton, Andy vs BYU Dalton, Andy vs San Diego StatePass completions ____________ 24 _____________ Dalton, Andy vs BYUYards Passing _______________ 355 ____________ Dalton, Andy at UtahTD Passes __________________ 4 ______________ Dalton, Andy vs BYU Dalton, Andy vs San Diego StateLong Pass __________________ 93 _____________ Dalton, Andy at UtahReceptions _________________ 8 ______________ Boyce, Josh vs BYU Kerley, Jeremy vs San Diego StateYards Receiving ______________ 127 ____________ Boyce, Josh vs BYUTD Receptions _______________ 3 ______________ Kerley, Jeremy vs San Diego State Long Reception _____________ 93 _____________ Boyce, Josh at UtahField Goals _________________ 2 ______________ Evans, Ross at Colorado State Evans, Ross at Utah Evans, Ross vs San Diego StateLong Field Goal ______________ 43 _____________ Evans, Ross at Colorado StatePunts ______________________ 6 ______________ Kelton, Anson vs BYUPunting Avg ________________ 47.2 ____________ Kelton, Anson at New MexicoLong Punt __________________ 58 _____________ Kelton, Anson vs BYULong Punt Return ____________ 50 _____________ Clay, Curtis at New MexicoLong Kickoff Return __________ 83 _____________ Kerley, Jeremy at SMUTackles _____________________ 12 _____________ Cuba, Tekerrein vs Wyoming Brock, Tanner at UtahSacks ______________________ 2.0 _____________ Daniels, Wayne vs Oregon State Jones, Colin vs San Diego StateTackles For Loss _____________ 3.5 _____________ Jones, Colin at Colorado StateInterceptions _______________ 1 ______________ Teague, Jason vs Tennessee Tech Johnson, Tejay at SMU Luttrell, Tyler vs Wyoming Johnson, Tejay vs BYU Carder, Tank vs BYU Teague, Jason at UNLV Jones, Colin at UNLV McCoy, Greg at Utah Brock, Tanner at Utah Johnson, Tejay vs San Diego State McCoy, Greg vs San Diego State Thompson, Jurrell at New Mexico

OPPONENT TEAM HIGHS AND LOWS HIGHS LOWSRushes _________________ 41 (vs Tenn Tech; vs Air Force) ____ 17 (at Utah)Yards Rushing ___________ 192 (at SMU) __________________ 38 (vs San Diego State)Yards Per Rush ___________ 6.6 (at SMU) ___________________ 1.7 (at Colorado State)TD Rushes ______________ 2 (vs SDSU; at New Mexico) ______ 0 (Seven times)Pass attempts ___________ 35 (at SMU; at Utah) ____________ 7 (vs Air Force)Pass completions ________ 17 (at Colorado State) ___________ 3 (vs Air Force)Yards Passing ____________ 262 (vs San Diego State) ________ 34 (at New Mexico)Yards Per Pass ___________ 10.1 (vs San Diego State) ________ 1.6 (at New Mexico)TD Passes _______________ 2 (vs OSU; at SMU; vs SDSU) ______ 0 (Five times)Total Plays ______________ 64 (at SMU) ___________________ 32 (vs San Diego State)Total Offense ____________ 361(at SMU) __________________ 130 (at New Mexico)Yards Per Play ___________ 6.4 (vs San Diego State) _________ 2.1 (at New Mexico)Points __________________ 35 (vs San Diego State) __________ 0 (at CSU, vs Wyoming)Sacks By ________________ 2 (vs BYU; vs SDSU; at UNM) ______ 0 (Six times)First Downs _____________ 19 (at SMU) ___________________ 7 (vs San Diego State)Penalties _______________ 9 (at UNLV) ___________________ 3 (vs Utah)Penalty Yards ____________ 88 (at UNLV) __________________ 20 (vs BYU)Turnovers ______________ 5 (vs Tennessee Tech) ___________ 0 (vs OSU; vs BU; vs BYU)Interceptions By _________ 2 (vs Oregon State; at SMU) ______ 0 (Eight times) OPPONENT INDIVIDUAL GAME HIGHSRushes _________________ 19 ______________Godfrey, Stump at New Mexico Yards Rushing ___________ 139 _____________Line, Zach at SMU TD Rushes ______________ 2 _______________Sullivan, Brand vs San Diego State Godfrey, Stump at New Mexico Long Rush ______________ 31 ______________Gay, Dontey vs Tennessee Tech Pass attempts ___________ 35 ______________Padron, Kyle at SMU Wynn, Jordan at Utah Pass completions ________ 17 ______________Thomas, Pete at Colorado State Yards Passing ____________ 262 _____________Lindley, Ryan vs San Diego State TD Passes _______________ 2 _______________Katz, Ryan vs Oregon State Padron, Kyle at SMU Lindley, Ryan vs San Diego State Long Pass ______________ 53 ______________Griffin III, R. vs Baylor Receptions _____________ 7 _______________Johnson, M. at UNLV Yards Receiving __________ 167 _____________Brown, Vincent vs San Diego State TD Receptions ___________ 2 _______________Brown, Vincent vs San Diego State Long Reception __________ 53 ______________Gordon, Josh vs Baylor Field Goals ______________ 1 _______________Jones, Aaron vs Baylor Szymanski, Matt at SMU Payne, Mitch vs BYU Aho, James at New Mexico Long Field Goal __________ 48 ______________Jones, Aaron vs BaylorPunts __________________ 10 ______________Skaer, Ben at New Mexico Punting Avg ____________ 49.8 _____________Kontodiakos, Pete at Colorado State Long Punt ______________ 74 ______________Szymanski, Matt at SMULong Punt Return ________ 29 ______________Parker, Larry vs San Diego State Long Kickoff Return ______ 45 ______________Smithson, Shaky at Utah Tackles _________________ 18 ______________Mitchell, Lance vs Oregon State Walker, Chaz at Utah (Nov 06, 2010) Sacks __________________ 1.0 ______________Paea, Stephen vs Oregon State Edwards, Marcus vs Tennessee Tech Thompson, Taylor at SMU Eason, Corby vs BYU So’oto, Vic vs BYU Burris, Miles vs San Diego State Andrews, Rob vs San Diego State Greer, Jacori at New Mexico Tackles For Loss __________ 2.0 ______________Banjo, Chris at SMU So’oto, Vic vs BYU Burris, Miles vs San Diego State Interceptions ____________ 1 _______________Mitchell, Lance vs Oregon State Roberson, Dwight vs Oregon State Moore, Sterling at SMU Smith, Ryan, at SMU Wooding, Anthony vs Air Force Lemon, Gabe vs San Diego State

S EAS O N S U PE R LAT I V E S

Page 74: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

72

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

20

10 S

EA

SO

N R

EV

IEW

2 0 10 GAM E-BY-GAM E R ECAPS

#24 OREGON STATE 21

#6 TCU 30

SEPT. 4, 2010 • ATTENDANCE: 46,138COWBOYS STADIUM • ARLINGTON, TEXAS

ARLINGTON, Texas - Andy Dalton ran for two touchdowns and threw for another, and No. 6 TCU opened the season with a 30-21 victory over No. 24 Oregon State in the 2010 Cowboys Classic.

Dalton’s final touchdown, a 4-yard keeper at the end of the third quarter, put TCU ahead for good. The Frogs’ final points, a safety after an errant Oregon State snap inside its own 20-yard line with only 4:14 remaining, put the game out of the Beavers’ reach.

Ed Wesley led a potent Frog ground attack with 134 yards rushing on 17 carries. Matthew Tucker added 74 yards on 20 carries, while Dalton accounted for 237 yards of offense, including 64 on the ground.

Jeremy Kerley tied a career high with six receptions. He caught a 1-yard touchdown to tie the game at 14-all midway through the second quarter, then set up an 8-yard score by Wesley before halftime with a 34-yard punt return.

SCORE BY QUARTERS 1 2 3 4 FOREGON STATE 7 7 7 0 21TCU 7 14 7 2 30

SCORING SUMMARYFirst QuarterOSU - Jam. Rodgers 30-yard pass from R. Katz (J. Kahut kick), 11:48TCU - A. Dalton 6-yard run (R. Evans kick), 7:19Second QuarterOSU - J. Bishop 34-yard pass from R. Katz (J. Kahut kick), 11:57TCU - J. Kerley 1-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 8:39TCU - E. Wesley 8-yard run (R. Evans kick), 0:49Third QuarterOSU - Jac. Rodgers 1-yard run (J. Kahut kick), 5:33TCU - A. Dalton 4-yard run (R. Evans kick), 0:59Fourth QuarterTCU - Team safety, 4:14

TEAM STATISTICSCATEGORY OSU TCUFirst Downs 13 28Rushes-Yards 25-73 54-278Passing Yards 182 175Passes Comp-Att-Int 10-26-0 17-27-2Total Offense Plays-Yards 51-255 81-453Punt Returns-Yards-TDs 2-13-0 3-42-0Kickoff Returns-Yards-TDs 5-114-0 5-105-0Interception Returns-Yards-TDs 2-21-0 0-0-0Punts (Number-Avg) 5-43.4 4-42.2Fumbles-Lost 2-0 0-0Penalties-Yards 4-30 6-45Possession Time 20:37 39:23Third-Down Conversions 4-of-11 11-of-17Fourth-Down Conversions 1-of-1 0-of-0Sacks By: Number-Yards 1-6 2-10

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHINGOSU - Jac. Rodgers 18-75; Jam. Rodgers 2-8; Wheaton 1-6; Katz 3-2.TCU - Wesley 17-134; Tucker 20-74; Dalton 15-64; Dawson 1-5; Shivers 1-1.

PASSINGOSU - Katz 9-25-0-159; Hekker 1-1-0-23.TCU - Dalton 17-27-2-175.

RECEIVINGOSU - Jam. Rodgers 4-75; Halahuni 2-26; Nichols 2-24; Bishop 1-34; Poyer 1-23.TCU - Kerley 6-49; Dawson 4-69; B. Johnson 3-26; Clay 1-13; Hicks 1-12; Boyce 1-5; Wesley 1-1.

TENNESSEE TECH 7

#4 TCU 62

SEPT. 11, 2010 • ATTENDANCE: 37,117AMON G. CARTER STADIUM • FORT WORTH, TEXAS

FORT WORTH, Texas - Matthew Tucker ran for two touchdowns, Andy Dalton threw for a score while setting another TCU record and the Frogs stretched their home winning streak to 15 games with a 62-7 victory over Tennessee Tech.

Dalton tied Max Knake’s school record of 622 career completions with his second against the Eagles, a 24-yard TD to Josh Boyce less than 5 minutes into the game to put TCU ahead to stay.

TCU also shined on defense. Jason Teague returned an interception 29 yards for a touchdown at the end of the first quarter for a 21-0 lead, and Alex Ibiloye forced three TTU fumbles, more than any Frog recorded during all of 2009.

SCORE BY QUARTERS 1 2 3 4 FTENNESSEE TECH 0 7 0 0 7TCU 21 14 6 21 62

SCORING SUMMARYFirst QuarterTCU - J. Boyce 24-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 10:54TCU - M. Tucker 3-yard run (R. Evans kick), 1:03TCU - J. Teague 29-yard int. return (R. Evans kick), 0:01Second QuarterTTU - T. Hudson 11-yard pass from T. Lamb (M. Barker kick), 11:39TCU - J. Kerley 5-yard run (R. Evans kick), 1:26TCU - M. Tucker 1-yard run (R. Evans kick), 0:25Third QuarterTCU - A. Dalton 19-yard run (R. Evans kick failed), 6:41Fourth QuarterTCU - E. Wesley 7-yard run (R. Evans kick), 14:19TCU - W. James 15-yard run (R. Evans kick), 11:06TCU - R. Hightower 16-yard run (R. Evans kick), 4:09

TEAM STATISTICSCATEGORY TTU TCUFirst Downs 11 24Rushes-Yards 41-92 41-270Passing Yards 58 182Passes Comp-Att-Int 9-14-1 15-21-0Total Offense Plays-Yards 55-150 62-452Punt Returns-Yards-TDs 1-0-0 1-12-0Kickoff Returns-Yards-TDs 6-95-0 2-47-0Interception Returns-Yards-TDs 0-0-0 1-29-1Punts (Number-Avg) 7-39.1 3-42.3Fumbles-Lost 6-4 1-1Penalties-Yards 4-25 8-75Possession Time 31:27 28:33Third-Down Conversions 5-of-14 7-of-10Fourth-Down Conversions 0-of-0 0-of-0Sacks By: Number-Yards 1-5 5-32

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHINGTTU - Gay 7-38; Garrett 2-30; Barnes 3-12; Perez 3-11; Crawford 7-6; Hudson 1-3; Ziegler 1-3; Team 1-(-1); Lamb 15-(-5); Page 1-(-5).TCU - Wesley 11-85; Tucker 9-53; James 5-34; Pachall 2-28; Dean 5-23; Dalton 5-23; Hightower 1-16; Kerley 1-5; Dawson 1-4; Team 1-(-1).

PASSINGTTU - Lamb 7-12-1-50; Barnes 2-2-0-8.TCU - Dalton 15-21-0-182.

RECEIVINGTTU - Hudson 2-11; Ziegler 2-7; Benford 1-17; Sailes 1-9; Olverson 1-8; Allen 1-7; Gay 1-(-1).TCU - B. Johnson 7-56; Boyce 3-70; Clay 2-12; Young 1-17; Kerley 1-16; Adams 1-11.

BAYLOR 10

#4 TCU 45

SEPT. 18, 2010 • ATTENDANCE: 47,393AMON G. CARTER STADIUM • FORT WORTH, TEXAS

FORT WORTH, Texas - Ed Wesley ran 19 times for 165 yards and two touchdowns, Andy Dalton completed 21 of 23 passes for 267 yards with two scores to Jeremy Kerley and No. 4 TCU stretched its home winning streak to 16 games with a 45-10 victory over Baylor.

The Horned Frogs scored touchdowns on their first five drives to build a 35-3 lead and had 335 of their 558 total yards by halftime.

Dalton, whose 91-percent completion rate set single-game TCU and Mountain West Conference records, hit his first 11 passes. His first incompletion didn’t come until 4 minutes into the second quarter.

TCU held Baylor, which entered the game averaging 478 yards of total offense per contest, to only 263 yards.

SCORE BY QUARTERS 1 2 3 4 FBAYLOR 3 0 7 0 10TCU 21 14 3 7 45

SCORING SUMMARYFirst QuarterTCU - J. Kerley 28-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 12:40TCU - E. Wesley 49-yard run (R. Evans kick), 7:43BU - A. Jones 48-yard field goal, 5:34TCU - M. Tucker 1-yard run (R. Evans kick), 1:17Second QuarterTCU - E. Wesley 5-yard run (R. Evans kick), 10:11TCU - L. Shivers 2-yard run (R. Evans kick), 6:03Third QuarterTCU - R. Evans 23-yard field goal, 5:30BU - J. Gordon 53-yard pass from R. Griffin III (A. Jones kick), 3:31Fourth QuarterTCU - J. Kerley 9-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 9:43

TEAM STATISTICSCATEGORY BU TCUFirst Downs 15 28Rushes-Yards 26-99 48-291Passing Yards 164 267Passes Comp-Att-Int 16-30-0 21-23-0Total Offense Plays-Yards 56-263 71-558Punt Returns-Yards-TDs 1-8-0 4-84-0Kickoff Returns-Yards-TDs 7-166-0 2-39-0Interception Returns-Yards-TDs 0-0-0 0-0-0Punts (Number-Avg) 8-45.6 3-46.0Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-0Penalties-Yards 6-41 3-25Possession Time 23:53 36:07Third-Down Conversions 2-of-12 3-of-8Fourth-Down Conversions 0-of-1 1-of-1Sacks By: Number-Yards 0-0 3-22

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHINGBU - Finley 9-56; Griffin III 14-21; Ganaway 1-17; Salubi 1-3; I. Williams 1-2.TCU - Wesley 19-165; Kerley 4-49; Tucker 12-34; Dalton 4-26; James 3-13; Dean 1-3; Pachall 1-3; Shivers 1-2; Dawson 1-0; Team 2-(-4).

PASSINGBU - Griffin III 16-28-0-164; Florence 0-2-0-0.TCU - Dalton 21-23-0-267.

RECEIVINGBU - T. Williams 6-37; Gordon 3-66; Sampson 2-31; Wright 2-10; Finley 1-10; K. Johnson 1-7; Taylor 1-3.TCU - Kerley 6-69; Young 3-53; B. Johnson 3-43; Boyce 3-28; L. Brock 1-29; Clay 1-11; Frosch 1-11; Hicks 1-9; Dawson 1-8; Tucker 1-6.

Page 75: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

73

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

20

10 S

EA

ON

RE

VIE

W2 0 10 GAM E-BY-GAM E R ECAPS

#4 TCU 41

SMU 24

SEPT. 24, 2010 • ATTENDANCE: 35,481GERALD J. FORD STADIUM • DALLAS, TEXAS

DALLAS - No. 4 TCU extended its regular-season winning streak to 17 games with a 41-24 win over SMU.

Playing on the road for the first time this season, the Frogs trailed when TCU’S second interception set up a go-ahead SMU touchdown early in the third quarter. Jeremy Kerley responded by returning the ensuing kickoff 83 yards and TCU was back in control.

Andy Dalton capped that drive with an 11-yard touchdown pass to Bart Johnson, then completed a pair of third downs on the way to a 9-yard touchdown run by Waymon James on the next series. Luke Shivers added a 4-yard touchdown run at the start of the fourth quarter to push TCU’s lead to 35-17, and Tejay Johnson later capped the scoring by returning a pick 19 yards to the end zone.

SCORE BY QUARTERS 1 2 3 4 FTCU 7 7 14 13 41SMU 7 3 7 7 24

SCORING SUMMARYFirst QuarterSMU - A. Robinson 23-yard pass from K. Padron (M. Szymanski kick), 6:47TCU - Tucker, Matthew 2-yard run (R. Evans kick), 0:13Second QuarterTCU - W. James 4-yard run (R. Evans kick), 4:21SMU - M. Szymanski 26-yard field goal, 0:20Third QuarterSMU - B. Haynes 1-yard pass from K. Padron (M. Szymanski kick), 13:58TCU - B. Johnson 11-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 12:26TCU - W. James 9-yard run (R. Evans kick), 5:31Fourth QuarterTCU - L. Shivers 4-yard run (R. Evans kick), 14:26SMU - Z. Line 29-yard run (M. Szymanski kick), 11:24TCU - T. Johnson 19-yard int. return (R. Evans kick failed), 7:14

TEAM STATISTICSCATEGORY TCU SMUFirst Downs 21 19Rushes-Yards 46-190 29-192Passing Yards 185 169Passes Comp-Att-Int 15-27-2 14-35-1Total Offense Plays-Yards 73-375 64-361Punt Returns-Yards-TDs 2-23-0 2-4-0Kickoff Returns-Yards-TDs 5-172-0 5-104-0Interception Returns-Yards-TDs 1-19-1 2-32-0Punts (Number-Avg) 3-36.7 7-40.0Fumbles-Lost 2-0 1-0Penalties-Yards 3-35 5-55Possession Time 32:18 27:42Third-Down Conversions 5-of-11 2-of-13Fourth-Down Conversions 2-of-3 1-of-2Sacks By: Number-Yards 1-2 1-7

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHINGTCU - Tucker 19-63; Dalton 7-43; James 8-41; Wesley 8-35; Kerley 1-6; Shivers 1-4; Team 2-(-2)SMU - Line 17-139; Butler 4-22; Padron 7-19; Szymanski 1-12.

PASSINGTCU - Dalton 14-26-2-174; Kerley 1-1-0-11.SMU - Padron 14-35-1-169.

RECEIVINGTCU - Kerley 4-33; B. Johnson 3-29; Hicks 1-41; Frosch 1-31; Dawson 1-10; Shivers 1-9; Young 1-9; Boyce 1-8; Clay 1-8; James 1-7.SMU - D. Johnson 5-72; Robinson 5-61; Beasley 2-20; Line 1-15; Haynes 1-1.

#5 TCU 27

COLORADO STATE 0

OCT. 2, 2010 • ATTENDANCE: 22,553HUGHES STADIUM • FORT COLLINS, COLO.

FORT COLLINS, Colo. - Ed Wesley scored twice, TCU’s swarming defense forced two fumbles and the fifth-ranked Frogs pulled away in the second half Saturday during a 27-0 win at Colorado State.

The Frogs rotated in a steady stream of fresh tailbacks all game long as they gained a season-high 346 yards on the ground. Matthew Tucker led the way with 87 yards, while Wesley added 78.

TCU limited the Rams to just 161 total yards. The Frogs also held the Rams to eight first downs as they won their 18th straight regular-season game. The shutout marked the first time in Gary Patterson’s tenure as head coach that TCU shut out an opponent on the road.

Andy Dalton’s 39-yard fourth-quarter touchdown pass to Jimmy Young gave him a new TCU-record 50 scoring tosses in his career, breaking the previous all-time mark of 49 (Max Knake, 1992-95). Dalton also set a new program mark for career pass attempts during the victory.

SCORE BY QUARTERS 1 2 3 4 FTCU 3 3 14 7 27COLORADO STATE 0 0 0 0 0

SCORING SUMMARYFirst QuarterTCU - R. Evans 29-yard field goal, 7:58Second QuarterTCU - R. Evans 43-yard field goal, 13:31Third QuarterTCU - E. Wesley 8-yard run (R. Evans kick), 12:47TCU - E. Wesley 3-yard run (R. Evans kick), 2:51Fourth QuarterTCU - J. Young 39-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 11:25

TEAM STATISTICSCATEGORY TCU CSUFirst Downs 24 8Rushes-Yards 49-346 26-45Passing Yards 128 116Passes Comp-Att-Int 12-25-0 17-29-0Total Offense Plays-Yards 74-474 55-161Punt Returns-Yards-TDs 3-35-0 3-5-0Kickoff Returns-Yards-TDs 0-0-0 5-123-0Interception Returns-Yards-TDs 0-0-0 0-0-0Punts (Number-Avg) 5-37.6 8-49.8Fumbles-Lost 1-0 3-2Penalties-Yards 4-30 4-30Possession Time 33:56 26:04Third-Down Conversions 6-of-14 4-of-15Fourth-Down Conversions 0-of-1 1-of-2Sacks By: Number-Yards 4-7 0-0

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHINGTCU - Tucker 8-87; Wesley 15-78; Dalton 10-67; James 6-55; Dean 2-25; Kerley 4-20; Pachall 1-12; Fort 1-2; Shivers 1-2; Team 1-(-2).CSU - Mosure 7-15; Nwoke 4-8; Pauga 3-8; Greenwood 1-6; Borcky 1-4; Mason 1-2; Thomas 6-2; Carter 3-1.

PASSINGTCU - Dalton 11-24-0-109; Pachall 1-1-0-19.CSU - Thomas 17-29-0-116.

RECEIVINGTCU - Boyce 4-44; Kerley 3-5; Young 1-39; Fuller 1-19; Wesley 1-9; B. Johnson 1-7; Dawson 1-5.CSU - Pauga 3-23; Liggett 3-20; Greenwood 3-18; Borcky 2-19; Nwoke 2-19; Law 1-9; Peitz 1-4; Yemm 1-3; Mason 1-1.

WYOMING 0

#5 TCU 45

OCT. 9, 2010 • ATTENDANCE: 38,081AMON G. CARTER STADIUM • FORT WORTH, TEXAS

FORT WORTH, Texas - Andy Dalton threw for a season-high 270 yards and three touchdowns, and TCU recorded a second consecutive shutout for the first time in 55 years in the No. 5 Frogs’ 45-0 victory against Wyoming.

TCU featured a balanced offensive attack against the Cowboys, rushing for 305 and passing for 281. Tailback Ed Wesley totaled 115 yards on the ground for his third 100-yard performance of the season.

Dalton completed 14-of-17 attempts and found nine different receivers. Scoring passes went to Jeremy Kerley, Bart Johnson and Antoine Hicks. The tosses to Kerley and Johnson went for 50 and 31 yards, respectively, in the game’s opening 15:07.

The Frogs limited the Cowboys to only 191 total yards, marking the second straight game the TCU defense held an opponent under 200 yards. Wyoming was a combined 0-of-11 on third- and fourth-down conversion attempts. Safety Tekerrein Cuba racked up a TCU season-best 12 tackles.

SCORE BY QUARTERS 1 2 3 4 FWYOMING 0 0 0 0 0TCU 14 17 7 7 45

SCORING SUMMARYFirst QuarterTCU - J. Kerley 50-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 8:18TCU - A. Hicks 2-yard run (R. Evans kick), 3:19Second QuarterTCU - B. Johnson 31-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 14:53TCU - E. Wesley 17-yard run (R. Evans kick), 10:38TCU - R. Evans 37-yard field goal, 3:20Third QuarterTCU - M. Tucker 5-yard run (R. Evans kick), 9:43Fourth QuarterTCU - A. Hicks 4-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 14:22

TEAM STATISTICSCATEGORY UW TCUFirst Downs 8 27Rushes-Yards 28-75 46-305Passing Yards 116 281Passes Comp-Att-Int 11-17-1 15-18-0Total Offense Plays-Yards 45-191 64-586Punt Returns-Yards-TDs 0-0-0 3-48-0Kickoff Returns-Yards-TDs 6-120-0 1-26-0Interception Returns-Yards-TDs 0-0-0 1-0-0Punts (Number-Avg) 8-46.4 2-45.5Fumbles-Lost 0-0 0-0Penalties-Yards 5-30 11-84Possession Time 27:39 32:21Third-Down Conversions 0-of-10 4-of-7Fourth-Down Conversions 0-of-1 0-of-0Sacks By: Number-Yards 0-0 1-3

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHINGUW - Alexander 15-41; Herron 6-19; Crum 5-9; Ogbonna 1-5; Gipson 1-1.TCU - Wesley 17-115; Tucker 7-45; James 6-43; Dalton 4-42; Dean 6-39; Fort 2-8; Gallegos 2-8; Kerley 1-3; Hicks 1-2.

PASSINGUW - Crum 11-17-1-116.TCU - Dalton 14-17-0-270; Gallegos 1-1-0-11.

RECEIVINGUW - McNeill 3-1; Herron 2-43; Leonard 2-10; Alexander 2-8; Burkhalter 1-40; Studnicka 1-14.TCU - Kerley 3-65; Tucker 3-53; Brock 2-22; Dawson 1-43; James 1-34; B. Johnson 1-31; Fuller 1-11; Shivers 1-10; Young 1-8; Hicks 1-4.

Page 76: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

74

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

20

10 S

EA

SO

N R

EV

IEW

2 0 10 GAM E-BY-GAM E R ECAPS

BYU 3

#4 TCU 31

OCT. 16, 2010 • ATTENDANCE: 40,416AMON G. CARTER STADIUM • FORT WORTH, TEXAS

FORT WORTH, Texas - Andy Dalton threw four touchdown passes, including two barely a minute apart late in the first half, and No. 4 TCU narrowly missed a third consecutive shutout in a 31-3 victory against BYU.

Leading 3-0 in the waning minutes of the first half, the Frogs took control of the game. Stansly Maponga sacked BYU quarterback Jake Heaps, forcing the Cougars to punt from their 4. Given good field position, Dalton found Josh Boyce on a 35-yard score two plays later. Boyce finished with eight receptions for 127 yards, the most for TCU since Jimmy Young totaled a school-record 226 in 2008 vs. Wyoming.

The Frogs got the ball right back on an interception, and Dalton hit a wide-open Young for a 14-yard score that made it 17-0 with 26 seconds left in the half.

The Cougars had just 14 total yards in the first half but ended TCU’s shutout streak at 10 quarters, crossing midfield for the first time on a 70-yard drive to a short field goal late in the third. BYU finished with 147 total yards, the third straight time and fourth overall that TCU’s nation-leading defense held an opponent to less than 200 yards.

SCORE BY QUARTERS 1 2 3 4 FBYU 0 0 3 0 3TCU 3 14 0 14 31

SCORING SUMMARYFirst QuarterTCU - R. Evans 20-yard field goal, 2:19Second QuarterTCU - J. Boyce 35-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 1:30TCU - J. Young 14-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 0:26Third QuarterBYU - M. Payne 27-yard field goal, 1:14Fourth QuarterTCU - J. Boyce 20-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 10:03TCU - J. Kerley 21-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 4:26

TEAM STATISTICSCATEGORY BYU TCUFirst Downs 10 23Rushes-Yards 27-56 38-108Passing Yards 91 273Passes Comp-Att-Int 14-30-2 24-36-0Total Offense Plays-Yards 57-147 74-381Punt Returns-Yards-TDs 1-23-0 4-56-0Kickoff Returns-Yards-TDs 6-123-0 2-81-0Interception Returns-Yards-TDs 0-0-0 2-2-0Punts (Number-Avg) 7-48.0 6-41.3Fumbles-Lost 0-0 3-0Penalties-Yards 4-20 4-20Possession Time 24:16 35:44Third-Down Conversions 3-of-14 7-of-16Fourth-Down Conversions 0-of-2 1-of-2Sacks By: Number-Yards 2-12 3-21

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHINGBYU - Kariya 12-57; Di Luigi 9-11; Quezada 2-6; Hague 1-3; Heaps 3-(-21).TCU - Wesley 10-53; Tucker 10-31; James 5-21; Dalton 7-16; Dean 2-9; Pachall 1-2; Shivers 1-1; Dawson 1-(-5), Team 1-(-20).

PASSINGBYU - Heaps 14-30-2-91.TCU - Dalton 24-36-0-273.

RECEIVINGBYU - Di Luigi 6-37; Kariya 4-31; Hague 2-14; Mahina 1-5; Jacobson 1-4.TCU - Boyce 8-127; Kerley 5-25; B. Johnson 3-59; Young 3-40; Hicks 2-20; Wesley 2-(-4); Tucker 1-6.

AIR FORCE 7

#4 TCU 38

OCT. 23, 2010 • ATTENDANCE: 46,096AMON G. CARTER STADIUM • FORT WORTH, TEXAS

FORT WORTH, Texas - Ed Wesley rushed for a career-high 209 yards and two touchdowns, and the TCU defense stiffened after giving up its first October touchdown, leading the No. 4 Frogs to a 38-7 victory over Air Force.

Wesley had more yards by himself than the nation’s No. 1 rushing offense as the Frogs piled up 377 yards on the ground, 30 more than the Falcons averaged coming in.

Air Force answered a TCU touchdown on the opening possession by driving 89 yards against a TCU defense that had allowed just three points in the previous three games.

The Falcons didn’t do much more, though, while the Frogs just kept rolling. Both of Wesley’s scores came in the second half, and TCU finished with 562 total yards.

For the second week in a row, TCU was in a three-point game before taking control just before halftime. This time, the lead was 10-7 after the Frogs went 89 yards in 3:01, capped by Andy Dalton’s 8-yard scoring pass to Jeremy Kerley with 16 seconds left in the half.

Dalton finished 11-of-20 for 185 yards while adding a career-best 93 yards rushing.

SCORE BY QUARTERS 1 2 3 4 FAIR FORCE 7 0 0 0 7TCU 7 10 14 7 38

SCORING SUMMARYFirst QuarterTCU - A. Dalton 5-yard run (R. Evans kick), 12:10AF - T. Jefferson 16-yard run (E. Soderberg kick), 6:36Second QuarterTCU - R. Evans 30-yard field goalTCU - J. Kerley 8-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 0:16Third QuarterTCU - E. Wesley 8-yard run (R. Evans kick), 6:33TCU - M. Tucker 6-yard run (R. Evans kick), 0:00Fourth QuarterTCU - E. Wesley 13-yard run (R. Evans kick), 6:22

TEAM STATISTICSCATEGORY AF TCUFirst Downs 13 30Rushes-Yards 41-184 51-377Passing Yards 47 185Passes Comp-Att-Int 3-7-0 11-20-1Total Offense Plays-Yards 48-231 71-562Punt Returns-Yards-TDs 0-0-0 0-0-0Kickoff Returns-Yards-TDs 7-122-0 2-46-0Interception Returns-Yards-TDs 1-19-0 0-0-0Punts (Number-Avg) 6-47.8 0-0.0Fumbles-Lost 2-0 0-0Penalties-Yards 4-30 3-25Possession Time 27:24 32:36Third-Down Conversions 4-of-11 6-of-10Fourth-Down Conversions 0-of-1 1-of-2Sacks By: Number-Yards 0-0 1-6

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHINGAF - Halderman 4-53; Jefferson 9-39; Walker 6-30; Coleman 1-19; Clark 10-18; Jones 2-14; Cobb 4-9; Dietz 3-5; Team 1-(-1); Warzeka 1-(-2).TCU - Wesley 28-209; Dalton 7-93; Tucker 12-63; Kerley 2-11; Fort 1-2; Team 1-(-1).

PASSINGAF - Jefferson 3-7-0-47.TCU - Dalton 11-20-1-185.

RECEIVINGAF - Warzeka 1-22; Freeman 1-17; Halderman 1-8.TCU - Boyce 3-49; Hicks 2-47; Young 2-38; Kerley 2-20; B. Johnson 1-25; Shivers 1-6.

#4 TCU 48

UNLV 6

OCT. 30, 2010 • ATTENDANCE: 16,745SAM BOYD STADIUM • LAS VEGAS, NEV.

LAS VEGAS, Nev. - Andy Dalton threw for 252 yards and two touchdowns, Jeremy Kerley scored running and receiving, and No. 4 TCU dominated defensively again to stay undefeated with a 48-6 road victory against UNLV.

Ed Wesley ran 64 yards on 13 carries with a touchdown and Dalton finished 16 of 23 with no interceptions.

TCU built a 28-6 halftime lead. Kerley started the scoring with a 5-yard run around the left side with 9:31 left in the first quarter, followed by Wesley’s 1-yard run up the middle on the first play of the second quarter to make it 14-0. Colin Jones intercepted Omar Clayton’s pass and ran it back for 30-yard touchdown one minute later. Dalton had a 1-yard dive into the end zone with a minute until halftime.

Three plays into the second half, Dalton found Josh Boyce across the middle in stride for a 54-yard touchdown pass. It was TCU’s longest play from scrimmage this season.

SCORE BY QUARTERS 1 2 3 4 FTCU 7 21 7 13 48UNLV 0 6 0 0 6

SCORING SUMMARYFirst QuarterTCU - J. Kerley 5-yard run (R. Evans kick), 9:31Second QuarterTCU - E. Wesley 1-yard run (R. Evans kick), 14:57TCU - C. Jones 30-yard int. return (R. Evans kick), 13:57UNLV - M. Johnson 10-yard pass from O. Clayton (N. Kohorst kick failed), 9:02TCU - A. Dalton 1-yard run (R. Evans kick), 1:00Third QuarterTCU - J. Boyce 54-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 14:09Fourth QuarterTCU - J. Kerley 24-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 14:55TCU - C. Pachall 8-yard run (R. Evans kick failed), 4:10

TEAM STATISTICSCATEGORY TCU UNLVFirst Downs 30 12Rushes-Yards 52-273 24-69Passing Yards 257 128Passes Comp-Att-Int 17-25-0 15-32-2Total Offense Plays-Yards 77-530 56-197Punt Returns-Yards-TDs 2-(-3)-0 1-0-0Kickoff Returns-Yards-TDs 2-28-0 8-158-0Interception Returns-Yards-TDs 2-30-1 0-0-0Punts (Number-Avg) 1-36.0 6-32.8Fumbles-Lost 3-2 0-0Penalties-Yards 3-35 9-88Possession Time 32:49 27:11Third-Down Conversions 7-of-11 3-of-13Fourth-Down Conversions 2-of-2 2-of-4Sacks By: Number-Yards 0-0 0-0

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHINGTCU - Wesley 13-64; James 9-61; Dean 5-47; Dalton 6-30; Tucker 7-28; Fort 4-26; Pachall 2-18; Kerley 1-5; Hicks 1-0; Team 4-(-6).UNLV - Cornett 11-26; Purvis 7-24; Clayton 4-14; Trotter 2-5.

PASSINGTCU - Dalton 16-23-0-252; Pachall 1-2-0-5.UNLV - Clayton 15-29-2-128; Herring 0-2-0-0; Lamers 0-1-0-0.

RECEIVINGTCU - Kerley 5-82; Young 4-43; Boyce 2-64; Tucker 2-21; B. Johnson 1-29; Wesley 1-8; Dawson 1-5; Hicks 1-5.UNLV - M. Johnson 7-67; Payne 2-27; Cornett 2-9; Vidal 2-7; Knutson 1-16; Watkins 1-2.

Page 77: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

75

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

20

10 S

EA

SO

N R

EV

IEW2 0 10 GAM E-BY-GAM E R ECAPS

#3 TCU 47

#5 UTAH 7

NOV. 6, 2010 • ATTENDANCE: 46,522RICE-ECCLES STADIUM • SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH

SALT LAKE CITY - Andy Dalton passed for a career-high 355 yards and three touchdowns and No. 3 TCU looked every bit like a team worthy of busting into the BCS championship game with a 47-7 demolition of No. 5 Utah.

Jeremy Kerley threw a TD pass as the Horned Frogs jumped out to an early 20-0 lead, quieting a sellout crowd clad almost entirely in black.

By halftime, the Horned Frogs had outgained Utah 328-72 en route to a 23-0 lead. The loss snapped Utah’s 21-game home winning streak.

Dalton found Josh Boyce for a 26-yard TD pass on the opening drive, then came back to Boyce eight minutes later with a 93-yard scoring strike, the third-longest offensive play in TCU history.

Utah struggled to get anything going against TCU’s No. 1-ranked defense, finishing with only 199 total yards.

SCORE BY QUARTERS 1 2 3 4 FTCU 20 3 14 10 47UTAH 0 0 0 7 7

SCORING SUMMARYFirst QuarterTCU - J. Boyce 26-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 10:14TCU - J. Boyce 93-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 2:11TCU - B. Johnson 26-yard pass from J. Kerley (R. Evans kick failed), 0:25Second QuarterTCU - R. Evans 24-yard field goal, 7:55Third QuarterTCU - E. Wesley 4-yard run (R. Evans kick), 14:20TCU - J. Young 11-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 5:33Fourth QuarterTCU - R. Evans 23-yard field goal, 14:49Utah - M. Asiata 19-yard pass from J. Wynn (J. Phillips kick), 11:12TCU - W. James 25-yard run (R. Evans kick), 4:58

TEAM STATISTICSCATEGORY TCU UTAHFirst Downs 23 11Rushes-Yards 45-177 17-51Passing Yards 381 148Passes Comp-Att-Int 22-27-0 16-35-2Total Offense Plays-Yards 72-558 52-199Punt Returns-Yards-TDs 1-4-0 1-10-0Kickoff Returns-Yards-TDs 0-0-0 7-161-0Interception Returns-Yards-TDs 2-55-0 0-0-0Punts (Number-Avg) 3-42.7 8-43.4Fumbles-Lost 4-1 2-2Penalties-Yards 3-30 3-22Possession Time 39:06 20:54Third-Down Conversions 10-of-15 3-of-13Fourth-Down Conversions 0-of-0 0-of-0Sacks By: Number-Yards 1-7 0-0

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHINGTCU - James 11-64; Wesley 12-50; Tucker 9-32; Dean 4-22; Dalton 5-14; Pachall 3-0; Kerley 1-(-5).UTAH - Wide 9-32; Asiata 6-27; Wynn 2-(-8).

PASSINGTCU - Dalton 21-26-0-355; Kerley 1-1-0-26.UTAH - Wynn 16-35-2-148.

RECEIVINGTCU - Kerley 7-68; Young 5-84; Boyce 3-126; B. Johnson 2-33; Dawson 1-24; L. Brock 1-23; Tucker 1-11; Hicks 1-7; Wesley 1-5.UTAH - Christopher 6-73; Asiata 5-28; Brooks 2-9; Moeai 1-23; Smithson 1-9; Wide 1-6.

SAN DIEGO STATE 35

#3 TCU 40

NOV. 13, 2010 • ATTENDANCE: 45,694AMON G. CARTER STADIUM • FORT WORTH, TEXAS

FORT WORTH, Texas - Andy Dalton threw for 240 yards and four touchdowns, three to fellow senior Jeremy Kerley, as TCU rallied from an early two-touchdown deficit and then held on for a 40-35 victory against San Diego State in its home finale.

San Diego State was held to one first down in the opening 42 minutes, on a flea flicker on the game’s second play from scrimmage, and three first downs through three quarters. The Horned Frogs more than doubled the Aztecs in time of possession.

TCU featured two players with 100-plus yards rushing in Matthew Tucker (131) and Waymon James (102).

SCORE BY QUARTERS 1 2 3 4 FSAN DIEGO STATE 14 0 7 14 35TCU 13 21 3 3 40

SCORING SUMMARYFirst QuarterSDSU - B. Sullivan 1-yard run (A. Perez kick), 12:05SDSU - J. Long 0-yard fumble recovery (A. Perez kick), 9:16TCU - J. Kerley 38-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 3:43TCU - L. Brock 15-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick failed), 0:32Second QuarterTCU - W. James 9-yard run (R. Evans kick), 6:39TCU - J. Kerley 9-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 2:10TCU - J. Kerley 4-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 0:24Third QuarterTCU - R. Evans 36-yard field goal, 9:32SDSU - B. Sullivan 1-yard run (A. Perez kick), 1:01Fourth QuarterTCU - R. Evans 31-yard field goal, 13:06SDSU - V. Brown 33-yard pass from R. Lindley (A. Perez kick), 6:43SDSU - V. Brown 35-yard pass from R. Lindley (A. Perez kick), 4:50

TEAM STATISTICSCATEGORY SDSU TCUFirst Downs 7 27Rushes-Yards 21-38 54-226Passing Yards 262 240Passes Comp-Att-Int 11-26-2 21-36-1Total Offense Plays-Yards 47-300 90-466Punt Returns-Yards-TDs 2-33-0 6-92-0Kickoff Returns-Yards-TDs 7-111-0 4-113-0Interception Returns-Yards-TDs 1-0-0 2-29-0Punts (Number-Avg) 9-40.1 5-39.8Fumbles-Lost 0-0 2-1Penalties-Yards 6-46 6-45Possession Time 19:09 40:51Third-Down Conversions 2-of-11 7-of-18Fourth-Down Conversions 0-of-0 1-of-1Sacks By: Number-Yards 2-17 3-23

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHINGSDSU - Hillman 13-54; Kazee 1-6; Sullivan 3-2; Team 1-(-1); Lindley 3-(-23).TCU - Tucker 22-131; James 23-102; Wesley 1-0; Kerley 1-(-2); Team 1-(-2); Dalton 6-(-3).

PASSINGSDSU - Lindley 11-26-2-262.TCU - Dalton 21-36-1-240

RECEIVINGSDSU - Brown 4-167; Sampson 4-42; Sullivan 2-53; A. Johnson 1-0.TCU - Kerley 8-85; B. Johnson 4-54; Young 4-44; Boyce 2-31; L. Brock 1-15; Dawson 1-7; James 1-4.

#4 TCU 66

NEW MEXICO 17

NOV. 27, 2010 • ATTENDANCE: 18,640UNIVERSITY STADIUM • ALBUQUERQUE, N.M.

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. - Andy Dalton threw three touchdown passes as TCU capped its second straight undefeated regular season with another Mountain West championship.

Fullback Luke Shivers scored twice on short runs and reserve quarterback Casey Pachall passed for one TD and ran for another.

The Horned Frogs had their highest scoring output of the season, outperforming a 62-7 win over Tennessee Tech on Sept. 11. TCU scored five unanswered TDs in the second half to pull away from a 31-17 halftime margin.

TCU set single-season school records with 70 TDs and 520 points, the third straight year with a new mark in each category.

SCORE BY QUARTERS 1 2 3 4 FTCU 24 7 21 14 66NEW MEXICO 7 10 0 0 17

SCORING SUMMARYFirst QuarterTCU - A. Hicks 14-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 13:48TCU - W. James 38-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 9:32TCU - J. Young 45-yard pass from A. Dalton (R. Evans kick), 6:38UNM - S. Godfrey 1-yard run (Aho kick), 3:20TCU - R. Evans 19-yard field goal, 0:00Second QuarterTCU - L. Shivers 2-yard run (R. Evans kick), 14:25UNM - J. Aho 27-yard field goal, 9:42UNM - S. Godfrey 1-yard run, 8:57 Third QuarterTCU - C. Pachall 8-yard run (R. Evans kick), 8:05TCU - L. Brock 21-yard pass from C. Pachall (R. Evans kick), 6:19TCU - L. Shivers 1-yard run (R. Evans kick), 4:26Fourth QuarterTCU - M. Tucker 1-yard run (R. Evans kick), 13:30TCU - A. Dean 5-yard run (R. Evans kick), 8:129

TEAM STATISTICSCATEGORY TCU UNMFirst Downs 24 9Rushes-Yards 50-293 40-96Passing Yards 210 34Passes Comp-Att-Int 13-23-0 9-21-1Total Offense Plays-Yards 73-503 61-130Punt Returns-Yards-TDs 7-140-0 1-12-0Kickoff Returns-Yards-TDs 3-90-0 10-224-0Interception Returns-Yards-TDs 1-0-0 0-0-0Punts (Number-Avg) 4-47.2 10-42.5Fumbles-Lost 2-2 5-2Penalties-Yards 10-73 4-49Possession Time 31:08 28:52Third-Down Conversions 5-of-12 1-of-14Fourth-Down Conversions 1-of-1 1-of-1Sacks By: Number-Yards 1-1 2-17

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHINGTCU - Wesley 11-77; James 7-55; Dean 7-55; Tucker 9-53; Pachall 5-31; Fort 6-26; Shivers 3-3; Hicks 1-1; Dalton 1-(-8).UNM - Carrier 10-39; Wright 9-29; Godfrey 19-27; Austin 2-1.

PASSINGTCU - Dalton 9-14-0-156; Pachall 4-6-0-55; Gallegos 0-3-0-0.UNM - Godfrey 7-14-1-21; Holbrook 1-4-0-9; Austin 1-2-0-4; Scarlett 0-1-0-1.

RECEIVINGTCU - Boyce 3-50; Young 2-54; James 2-46; Hicks 2-26; L.Brock 1-21; Wesley 1-10; B. Johnson 1-4; Dawson 1-(-1).UNM - Solomon 3-15; Kirk 2-3; Wilhelm 1-9; A. Aho 1-9; Wright 1-0; Fussell 1-(-2).

Page 78: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

HIS

TO

RY

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

76

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

NEW ORLEANS, La. — Bernie Moore, coach of the LSU foot ball team, was skep ti cal that TCU’s 3 to 2 vic to ry in the Sug ar Bowl game was a con clu sive test of the squads. “My con clu sion of the game was that the slippery field elim i nat ed at least 30 percent of the offensive power of both teams,” he said. Dutch Meyer, coach of TCU, said he thought the contest before a capacity crowd of 35,000 was the “finest I’ve ever seen played in the rain.”

Yesterday’s “baseball score” game was a thriller which kept the spectators in their seats despite a slow rain which fell through out the second half ... LSU scored in the sec ond quarter after passes and runs brought the ball to the TCU two-inch line where it changed hands on downs. When (Sammy) Baugh at tempt ed to pass from behind the goal line he stepped over the end zone, automatically giving LSU a safety for a two-point lead. The Texans came back in the same period to recover a Louisiana fumble on the Lou-i si ana 40 and pushed down to the LSU 16. Taldon Manton then kicked a field goal from the Tiger 26. From that point on the game was a battle of mighty defensives..

TCU played most of the game minus the services of three of her brightest stars — Left Halfback George Kline, All-American Cen ter Darrell Lester and Halfback Rex Clark ... Clark played only one down and that was by the cour te sy of Coach Meyer who wanted the injured senior star to be able to say he played in the 1936 Sugar Bowl game ... Baugh made the longest run of the day — a 44-yard gallop.

– Fort Worth Star-Telegram

TCU 0 3 0 0 — 3LSU 0 2 0 0 — 2Attendance — 35,000

TEAM STATISTICS TCU LSUFirst downs 6 9Rushes-yards 49-121 45-120Passing yards 54 59Return yards 31 42Passes 8-3-1 21-3-3Punts 14-46.0 13-44.7Fumbles-Lost 2-1 3-2Penalties-yards 4-20 3-33

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingTCU — Lawrence 6-54, Baugh 22-45, Manton 14-15, Kline 1-6, Harrell 3-1, Roberts 1-1, McCall 1-0, Montgomery 1-minus 1. LSU — Crass 15-34, Reed 6-29, Fatheree 6-117, Mickal 8-16, Seago 3-13, Bowman 6-10, Kohm 1-1.

PassingTCU — Baugh 2-7-1, 29 yards, Lawrence 1-1-0, 25 yards. LSU — Mickal 2-14-3, 36 yards, Crass 1-7-0, 23 yards.

ReceivingTCU — Walls 1-25, Meyer 1-18, Lawrence 1-11. LSU — Barrett 3-59.

TCU 3, LSU 2

1936 SUGAR BOWLTCU 3, LSU 2 ∙ Jan. 1, 1936

DALLAS — With a sling-back attack that whipped over a field goal and two touch downs in the first 25 min utes of play and with a stur dy de-fense that piled up the Marquette Golden Av-a lanche, TCU cap tured a spectacular football game here this New Year’s Day. The score in the Cotton Bowl classic was 16-6.

So sudden, sharp and dazzling was the sweep of action of the battle that 15,000 spec ta tors, who braved threat en ing weather, forgot the gray gloom of the afternoon. Led by Sammy Baugh, who out-passed and outplayed “Buzz” Buivid to cinch his claim to the title of the greatest passer of the season, the Texans uncorked an offense that flared into long gains both on the ground and in the air. Although it was Baugh who paced the attack and won the attention of the crowd, it was L.D. Meyer who did the real damage..

He scored all of TCU’s 16 points. He kicked a 33-yard field goal for the first three points in the opening minutes. Before the first quarter had ended, Meyer col lab o rat ed with Sambo on a 55-yard pass-and-run gain for the first Frog TD, and in the second quarter he took an 18-yard heave from Vic Mont gom ery for the last score. Meyer even converted after the first touchdown.

A 60-yard punt return by Art Guepe in the first quarter accounted for all of Marquette’s points.

– Fort Worth Star-Telegram

1937 COTTON BOWLTCU 16, Marquette 6 ∙ Jan. 1, 1937

NEW ORLEANS, La. — It was with pow er, passes and kick ing that the Chris tians made the two touch downs and one field goal that en-abled them to win, 15-7. Carnegie’s most consis-tent method of at tack was a bristling, quick-start ing and hard-hitting offense, but it was with a brilliant 38-yard pass in the last seconds of the first half that the Skibos scored ... The second half started with the Pittsburghers lead ing, 7-6. The first time they got possession of the hoghide, the Frogs proved irresistible. Moving with giant strides, they went 80 yards and a touchdown on five plays.

TCU punted one time. That fact alone indicates ac cu rate ly how fearfully effective was the ground-gain ing ma neu-vers of the big white-shirted representatives ... The one punt figured in making TCU’s first touchdown ... When the Skibos punted out, the TCU regulars took over and went 48 yards on 11 plays to take a 6-0 lead ...

Carnegie took the next kickoff and went to town with big, fast and tough George Muha doing most of the dirty work ... Earl Clark in ter cept ed a pass and ran 25 yards to the Carnegie 35 yard-line, but Durward Horner, a TCU end, had been offsides so the play was called back ... It was on fourth down of this series of plays that Petey Moroz cut loose with his long fine pass for the Carnegie touchdown ...

The third quar ter (Davey) O’Brien passed to Horner down the middle ... The big end caught the ball between two Skibos, but evaded both of them and ran 24 yards across the goal line.

– Fort Worth Star-Telegram

TCU 0 6 6 3 — 15Carnegie Tech 0 7 0 0 — 7Attendance — 50,000

TEAM STATISTICS TCU CTFirst Downs 17 8Rushes-yards 39-141 41-109Passing yards 224 59Return yards 36 0Passes 28-17-0 88-33-2Punts 1-40.0 6-42.0Fumbles-lost 2-2 2-1

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingTCU — Hall 6-47, Sparks 14-37, Wilkinson 5-22, Ware 3-19, O’Brien 5-8, Odle 1-7, Clifford 2-5, McClanahan 1-1, Clark 2-minus 3. CT — Muha 16-69, Condit 10-31, Ingalls 11-7, Laposki 5-7, Zawaacki 22-4, Jordano 4-4, Lee 1-2, Betz 1-minus 5.

PassingTCU — O’Brien 17-27-0, 224 yards, Odle 0-1-0. CT — Moroz 1-2-0, 38 yards, Condit 2-5-1, 21 yards, Jordano 0-1-1.

ReceivingTCU — Clark 7-81, Hall 5-75, Looney 2-21, Horner 1-44, Ware 1-3, Wilkinson 1-0. CT — Muha 1-38, Fisher 1-2

TCU 15, CARNEGIE TECH 7

1939 SUGAR BOWLTCU 15, Carnegie Tech 7 ∙ Jan. 2, 1939

TCU 10 6 0 0 — 16Marquette 6 0 0 0 — 6Attendance — 15,000

TEAM STATISTICS TCU MUFirst Downs 16 10Rushes-yards 34-169 32-55Passing yards 149 134Return yards 81 109Passes 20-9-3 21-11-3Punts 4-32.5 6-39.5Fumbles-lost 1-0 1-0Penalties-yards 5-35 3-25

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingTCU — McClure 5-48, Roberts 11-46, Baugh 2-28, Mont gom ery 4-26, McCall 5-17, Clifford 1-4, Hall 1-3, Wilkinson 2-2, Blackmon 2-minus 1, O’Brien 1-minus 4. Marquette: Guepe (Art) 12-31, Cuff 7-30, Guepe (Al) 1-2, Buivid 12-(-8).

PassingTCU — Baugh 5-13-2, 100 yards, O’Brien 3-6-1, 33 yards, Montgomery 1-1-0, 16 yards. Marquette — Buivid 9-18-3, 111 yards, Guepe (Art) 2-3-0, 23 yards.

ReceivingTCU — Meyer 3-79, McCall 2-32, Roach 2-26, McClure 1-7, Montgomery 1-5. Marquette — Cuff 3-30, Anderson 3-14, Buivid 2-23, Guepe (Art) 1-41, Guepe (Al) 1-19, Cooper 1-7.

TCU 16, MARQUETTE 6

B OWL H I S TO RY

Page 79: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

HIS

TO

RY

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

77

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

MIAMI, Fla. — In the wildest, weird est foot-ball battle ever waged in this cor ner of the coun-try, the Geor gia Bull dogs outscored the cou ra-geous TCU Horned Frogs 40-26 ... Coach Wally Butts’ fast team, well-equipped on ground and in the air, almost chased the Frogs off the field for 35 minutes... The score mounted to 40-7 with only a few minutes played in the second half.

But the Frogs are not quitters ... Everything was against them. They couldn’t hold the enemy, they couldn’t move them selves and they were battered and weary from their empty-handed efforts. But there was too much tradition behind those purple shirts. Sud den ly, almost as if a fresh wind had blown into the stadium, the tide turned. They knocked over three touch downs in rapid order. They turned back every Georgia thrust. The great come back in the last 25 minutes saved the Frogs from humiliation.

Bruce Alford was the Frog star ... He blocked a punt, he made two great catches for touch downs... After the rest period, Texas sup port ers hoped for a rally. But Georgia stepped out and banged 80 yards for still another touchdown that promised to make it a rout ... From that moment to the final gun it was the Bulldogs who held on and the Frogs who ripped.

– Fort Worth Star-Tele gram

Georgia 19 14 7 0 — 40TCU 7 0 7 12 — 26Attendance — 39,000

TEAM STATISTICS TCU UGAFirst Downs 7 12Rushes-yards 31-56 47-188Passing yards 143 282Return yards 23-9-6 23-12-4Passes 7-36.6 4-21.0Punts 3-0 3-2Fumbles-lost 3-0 3-2Penalties 1-15 8-59

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingTCU — Gillespie 10-35, Sparks 3-18, Conway 3-10, Bierman 2-7, Nix 1-6, Ramsey 1-1, Kring 1-1, Medanich 6-minus 5, Brumbaugh 1-minus 7, Bagley 3-minus 10. UGA — Sinkwich 22-112, Todd 6-38, Keuper 8-18, Davis 3-10, Bray 2-5.

PassingTCU — Gillespie 5-11-2, 93 yards, Ramsey 1-1-0, 17 yards, Nix 2-8-3, 25 yards, Kring 1-1-0, 8 yards, Bagley 0-1-1, Montgomery 0-1-0. UGA — Sinkwich 9-11-2, 234 yards, Todd 3-12-2, 48 yards.

ReceivingTCU — Alford 4-57, Kring 1-53, Bierman 1-12, Hall 1-8, Gillespie 1-8, Taylor 1-5. UGA — Davis 4-70, Kimsey 3-74, Conger 2-98, Keuper 2-26.

GEORGIA 40, TCU 26

1942 ORANGE BOWLGeorgia 40, TCU 26 ∙ Jan. 1, 1942

DALLAS — With speed, spirit and spiraling pass-es, the Cow boys of Okla ho ma A&M com-plete ly out-classed the TCU Horned Frogs in the ninth annual Cot ton Bowl football game here this crys tal clear New Year’s af ter noon to win, 34-0. Except for the second quarter when they staved off repeated threats, the Frogs were never able to cope with the double-pronged attack ... The first touch down, scored in the fifth minute, climaxed a 59-yard advance. The second whirled 61 yards, the third 62 yards, the fourth 40 yards and the fifth 66 yards .

The Frogs moved on the ground sev er al times when in their own territory, but after cross ing the 50-yard line they were always thwarted by the bulling tactics of the burly Cowboy line ... Only once did the Frogs get inside the A&M 35-yard line and that was on a pass in ter cep tion.

Bob Ruff was the only TCU back who was able to gain with any consistency, although Jesse Mason did some good work for a short time.

Coach Dutch Meyer tried all kinds of defenses against the Aggies, including a seven-man line which moved fullback Cox into the line. None of them worked for more than a few minutes at a time. The Aggies were too good in too many different ways.

– Fort Worth Star-Tele gram

1945 COTTON BOWLOklahoma A&M 34, TCU 0 ∙ Jan. 1, 1945

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Trail-ing a hard-trying TCU team by nine points, the great Charley Conerly sud den ly soared to the dra mat ic heights of foot ball throw ing expected of him. In just five min utes his rifle arm ac count ed for two touch downs as the Con-fed er ates bested the Chris tians, 13-9, in the first Delta Bowl game.

In the closing minutes of the third period, Conerly launched a passing flurry that carried exactly 80 yards in eight plays ... The Frogs, still going strong, marched right back to the Rebel 37 where an intercepted pass sat Conerly up in business again. This time he threw only two passes...and they ate up just 63 yards to win the ball game.

In more ways than one, it was a tough game for the Frogs to lose... But they fumbled badly, losing the ball twice at crucial moments.

There were nine minutes yet to play and the Frogs gave the enemy fans a heart attack by holding the leather. Just six of them from their one-yard line, where Otis Kelvey was dropped on the kickoff, the Chris tians powered right up field for 59 yards... But the last threat died when Knox’s pass was batted up and intercepted by the Ole Miss linebacker on the Reb 38.

– Fort Worth Star-Tele gram

Mississippi 0 0 0 13 — 13TCU 0 9 0 0 — 9Attendance — 28,600

TEAM STATISTICS TCU MISSFirst Downs 15 15 Rushes-yards 46-141 35-111Passing yards 55 186Return yards 73 23Passes 11-6-2 30-12-4Punts 5-42.8 3-40.6Fumbles-lost 2-2 1-1Penalties-yards 5-45 7-35

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingTCU — Stout 15-73, McKelvey 7-26, Barry 19-20, Knox 2-17, Browning 1-7, Joslin 1-1, Bloxom 1-minus 3. MISS — Salmon 6-48, Harrell 6-18, Jenkins 5-17, Bowen 6-16, Stalling 1-9, Conerly 10-(-1).

PassingTCU — Berry 3-5-1, 32 yards, Stout 2-4-0, 17 yards, Knox 1-2-1, 6 yards. MISS — Conerly 12-28-3, 186 yards, Wilson 0-2-1.

ReceivingTCU — Bailey 3-23, Stout 1-13, Kilman 1-13, Boal 1-6. MISS — Johnson 3-79, Howell 2-25, Salmon 2-23, Bowen 2-20, Poole 1-22, Harper 1-9, Odom 1-8.

MISSISSIPPI 13, TCU 9

1948 DELTA BOWLMississippi 13, TCU 9 ∙ Jan. 2, 1948

Oklahoma A&M 14 0 7 13 — 34TCU 0 0 0 0 — 0 Attendance — 37,500

TEAM STATISTICS TCU A&MFirst Downs 5 20Rushes-yards 27-74 60-295Passing yards 31 199Return yards 26 82Passes 10-3-3 17-9-1Punts 8-34.0 6-31.0Fumbles-lost 2-1 1-1Penalties-yards 5-25 7-75

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingTCU — Ruff 7-35, Mason 8-26, Busby 1-12, Cox 1-4, Jackson 3-4, Hadaway 7-minus 7. A&M — Spavital 18-120, Fenimore 16-63, Hankins 9-57, Thomas 7-25, Creager 5-16, Stafford 2-7, Conner 1-6, Moore 1-3, Karraker 1-minus 2.

PassingTCU — Hadaway 3-6-1, 31 yards, Cox 0-3-1, Busby 0-1-1. A&M — Fenimore 6-13-1, 136 yards, Thomas 2-2-0, 54 yards, Creager 1-2-0, 9 yards.

ReceivingTCU — Jackson 1-34, Ruff 1-minus 1, Gaxxen 1-minus-2. A&M — Hankins 4-103, Creager 2-54, Moore 1-17, Armstrong 1-16, Thomas 1-9.

OKLAHOMA A&M 34, TCU 0

B OWL H I S TO RY

Page 80: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

HIS

TO

RY

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

78

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

DALLAS — TCU, dis-tress ing ly flat except for one mag nifi cent minute-and-half surge late in the third quarter, suc ceed ed only in making it a mas-terpiece of frustration. And so the four-times-beat en Wild cats from the Blue grass State thor-ough ly trounced the South west Con fer ence cham pi ons before a capacity throng of 75,349 ... 20-7. Ken tucky scored on two surges of 52 and 57 yards in the first and second quarters to post its 13-0 halftime lead.

Frogs, who had bogged down once on the four, wasted another 59-yard push to the 24 early in the second quarter. Here, Clark in ter cept ed a Mal Fowler pass returned to the Kentucky 43 and the Wildcats tromped on from here for 57 yards and another touch down in 11 plays ... TCU made its 48-yard move to the five after this and came back later in the quarter with its 51-yard march to the one all for nothing ... (Gilbert) Bartosh drew his first chance of the game ... Here Bartosh called a direct snap — back Bobby Jack Floyd went 43 yards for touchdown on the longest run of the day.

Against the wind in the fourth Bartosh guided the Frogs 40 yards ... The TCU com mand sent in McKown to punt and he obliged with his neat kick-out on the 8. But here, where holding ’em was imperative for TCU, Tom Fillion broke loose for 17 yards on a third-down-seven-to-go-play ... Ken tucky held the ball, put TCU in the hole with the kick and Bartosh was spilled for losses.

– Fort Worth Star-Telegram

Kentucky 7 6 0 7 — 20TCU 0 0 7 0 — 7Attendance — 75,349

TEAM STATISTICS TCU UKFirst Downs 15 13Rushes-yards 48-201 54-213Passing yards 99 8Return yards 10 70Passes 17-5-1 20-8-1Punts 5-40.8 6-34.6Fumbles-lost 2-1 0-0Penalties-yards 7-32 6-40

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingTCU — Floyd 14-115, McKown 16-42, Ray 4-19, Doty 3-14, Bartosh 6-7, Medanich 3-5, Fowler 1-2, Harville 1-minus 3. UK — Fillion 10-73, Jones 11-42, Gruner 11-39, Parilli 8-22, Hamilton 3-14, Jones 3-9, Felch 4-6, Clark 3-6.

PassingTCU — McKown 1-8-0, 51 yards, Bartosh 2-5-0, 26 yards, Fowler 2-4-1, 22 yards. UK — Parilli 8-20-1, 85 yards.

ReceivingTCU — Medanich 3-43, Vaught 1-51, Floyd 1-5. UK — Meilinger 3-61, Ck 2-17, Fillion 2-11.

KENTUCKY 20, TCU 7

1952 COTTON BOWLKentucky 20, TCU 7 ∙ Jan. 1, 1952

DALLAS — The Uni ver-si ty of Mis sis sip pi Rebels, cham pi ons of the South-east ern Con fer ence, spot ted the TCU Horned Frogs, cham pi ons of the South west Con fer-ence, 13 points in the 20th annual Cotton Bowl football game be fore 75,000 spectators here this warm and sun ny Mon day af ter noon and then swung back to win by the margin of a single point, 14-13 ... (TCU) ac tu al ly lost the game for being in motion on a conversion effort.

They made the 14th point on the first try, but because a player was in motion, they had to try again from five yards farther back, and missed. They probably lost the game on the opening kickoff when quarterback Chuck Curtis made the mistake of re ceiv ing and run ning with the ball. He was so badly injured when tackled that he never returned to action ... In spite of the handicap, the Horned Frogs scored a touch down in the first quarter and count ed in the second to lead 13-0 before the Rebels got their first touchdown to make it 13-7 at the half ... Mississippi won the game in the 11th minute of the fourth quarter ... Billy Lott scored on a five-yard gallop around his right wing. The Rebs’ winning move traveled exactly the same distance as their first touchdown pa rade: 66 yards ... The Frogs went 44 and 75 yards for their touch downs.

– Fort Worth Star-Telegram

1956 COTTON BOWLMississippi 14, TCU 13 ∙ Jan. 2, 1956

DALLAS — Harold Pollard’s four-for-four con ver sions and the block ing of Syr a cuse’s third point-af ter-touch-down at tempt by (Chico) Mendoza pro duced a 28-27 Cotton Bowl victory for TCU after 18 years of wait ing. The Frogs had dropped five suc ces sive bowl ap pear anc es and had not recorded a post-season triumph since 1939. It was a moving off en sive show all the way with the TCU passing providing a balance Syracuse couldn’t stop and the Saltine Warriors riding pow er ful ly on a running game spear head ed by the All-America halfback, Jim Brown. He gained 132 yards and was voted the game’s out stand ing back. The Frogs’ All-American tackle, Norman Hamilton, was the one defender who came nearest to stop ping Brown con sis tent ly and he was chosen as the game’s out stand ing lineman.

Syr a cuse scored in the last two min utes to give the game its touch of such hair-breadth close ness. For much of the afternoon it was TCU’s game and a couple of times seemed on the verge of turning decisive.

There was a unique twist to the first-half scoring in that each team intercepted passes and then drove 70 yards to score and each recovered fumbles and pushed out short yardage for the second touchdowns.

– Fort Worth Star-Telegram

TCU 7 7 7 7 — 28Syracuse 0 14 0 13 — 27Attendance – 68,000

TEAM STATISTICS TCU SUFirst Downs 15 16Rushes-yards 56-133 53-235Passing yards 204 62Return yards 3 5Passes 16-13-0 7-3-1Punts 4-37.5 2-46.5Fumbles-lost 3-2 3-3Penalties-yards 4-40 1-5

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingTCU — Dike 11-54, Swink 12-41, Wineburg 6-17, Hallbeck 13-13, Curtis 3-11, Miller 1-6, Shofner 4-5, Vacek 1-4, Finney 4-minus 18. SU — Brown 26-132, Cann 8-28, Ridlon 5-22, Zimmerman 4-21, Kuczala 3-14, Coffin 3-8, Jackson 2-4, Ackley 2-2.

PassingTCU — Curtis 12-15-0, 176 yards, Miller 1-1-0, 28 yards. SU — Zimmerman 1-3-0, 27 yards, Brown 1-2-1, 20 yards, Ridlon 1-2-0, 15 yards.

ReceivingTCU — Swink 4-60, Nikkel 3-57, Williams 2-37, Vacek 1-28, Shofner 2-16, Wineburg 1-6.SU — Ridlon 2-47, Massey 1-15.

TCU 28, SYRACUSE 27

1957 COTTON BOWLTCU 28, Syracuse 27 ∙ Jan. 1, 1957

Mississippi 0 7 0 7 — 14TCU 7 6 0 0 — 13Attendance — 75,000

TEAM STATISTICS TCU MISSFirst Downs 11 12Rushes-yards 54-233 36-92Passing yards 20 137Return yards 55 35Passes 5-2-2 21-10-2Punts 5-29.0 6-42.7Fumbles-lost 2-1 1-1Penalties-yards 8-80 6-80

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingTCU — Swink 19-107, Taylor 10-76, Hallbeck 12-33, Shofner 2-7, Finney 9-5, Wineburg 1-4, Pollard 1-1. MISS — Cothren 12-79, Lott 2-7, Kinard 3-5, Day 13-3, Blair 6-minus 2.

PassingTCU — Finney 1-3-2, 13 yards, Wineburg 1-1-0, 7 yards, Swink 0-1-0. MISS — Day 10-21-0, 137 yards.

ReceivingTCU — Williams 1-13, Nickel 1-7. MISS — Kinard 6-83, Cothren 2-19, Blair 1-28, Baker 1-7.

MISSISSIPPI 14, TCU 13

B OWL H I S TO RY

Page 81: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

HIS

TO

RY

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

79

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

DALLAS — The gen-tle men operating the scoreboard had the easiest occupation in all land as the South west Con fer ence champions (TCU) and the future gen-er als (Air Force Academy) from Col o rado Springs played the sec ond 0-0 dead lock in the 23-year history of the New Year’s Day clas sic ... It was the fourth tie game ever unreeled before a Cotton Bowl assemblage ... It was a dis ap point ing final for both clubs. The Horned Frogs took the field bearing an 8-2 record. The Falcons were unbeaten in 10 games and had their season immaculate but for a tie with Iowa. The Frogs fum bled the ball on eight occasions and on three of these wasted possession. One of these came early in the final period and surely tried the composure of Coach Abe Martin as he saw the Falcons reclaim a bobble just eight steps from the Air Force Academy’s end zone.

The field, covered by tarpaulin during the snow fall earlier in the week, was damp and contributed to the uneasy handling of the ball. The visiting Falcons also had difficulty retaining the sphere and lost control on three of their five fumbles. Jack Spikes attempted both of TCU’s field goals, the first early in the opening period ... The Airmen offered their severest threat midway of the second quarter ... It was here that the Frog line gave its best performance, restraining the Silver and Blue on the six, the spot from where George Pupich missed a field goal.

– Fort Worth Star-Telegram

TCU 0 0 0 0 — 0Air Force 0 0 0 0 — 0Attendance – 75,504

TEAM STATISTICS TCU AFAFirst Downs 9 13Rushes-yards 48-190 45-140Passing yards 37 91Return yards 59 35Passes 11-3-0 23-12-2Punts 9-38.8 7-38.1Fumbles-lost 8-3 5-3Penalties-yards 8-61 3-15

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingTCU — Spikes 17-108, Moreland 3-35, Harris 7-24, Terrell 3-15, Lasater 4-15, Priddy 3-6, Dawson 5-4, Vacek 1-3, Gault 1-3, Enis 4-minus 23. AFA — Galios 13-52, Quinlan 7-33, Lane 5-16, Pupich 7-12, Mayo 4-3.

PassingTCU — Lasater 1-1-0, 37 yards, Enis 2-8-0, 0 yards, Dawson 0-2-0. AFA — 9-19-2, 70 yards, Rosane 1-2-0, 14 yards, Kuenzel 2-2-0, 7 yards.

ReceivingTCU — Meyer 1-37, Gilmore 1-5, Harris 1-minus 5. AFA — Lane 4-27, Rodgers 2-17, Jozwiak 2-11, Rickey 1-19, Quinlan 1-10.

TCU 0, AIR FORCE 0

1959 COTTON BOWLTCU 0, Air Force 0 ∙ Jan. 1, 1959

HOUSTON — The Frogs were drowned, 23-7, by a dead ly sprin kle of Clemson pass es in a sev en-minute pe ri od of the final quarter ... The sud den Clemson scor-ing flood washed away a 7-3 lead TCU carried into the fatal final period. A narrow margin, but one that, at the time, appeared enough to send the luckless Tigers down to their fourth straight bowl defeat ... Neither team had threat ened se ri-ous ly after Clemson’s second quar ter 22-yard field goal by Lon Armstrong, and TCU’s lone touch down, a 19-yard pass from Jack Redding to Harry Moreland with 5:45 left in the first half. Clemson had completed only one gaining pass all af ter noon, that a 5-yard throw from Tiger quar ter back Harvey White.

White must have spotted the silver lining in the gath er ing dark ness for Tiger hopes. He took plenty of time behind the mam moth line and arched a long, high shot toward right end Gary Barnes, racing past TCU’s Larry Dawson at the Frog 35. Armstrong added the extra point ... Two plays after the kickoff, Armstrong las soed a pass from TCU quar-ter back Donald George ... From there, Lowndes Shingler, over whelm ing ly voted out stand ing back, came back to guide the Tigers for the final slap on the cheek to a proud TCU team which had gained wide respect as the class of the Southwest Con fer ence, winning seven games to finish in a 3-way tie for the title.

– The Dallas Morning News

1959 BLUEBONNET BOWLClemson 23, TCU 7 ∙ Dec. 19, 1959

EL PASO, Texas. — The Min ers sulked off the field with a 10-point deficit at the in ter mis-sion, but then pumped up Billy Stevens’ arm and Joe Cook’s foot and even tu al ly de flat ed the Frogs, 13-12. Stevens, who gained sec ond rank among the nation’s passers this season, proved his stardom to TCU by racking up 208 yards on 21 pass completions, the most ever against an Abe Martin team. The skinny sophomore had only seven strikes in the first half as the ball-con trol ling Frogs rammed into a 10-0 lead. Stevens made the 31st annual post season game a vastly different story in the second half.

Stevens shot a 34-yard touchdown pass to 165-pound flanker Chuck Hughes and a star tling comeback was be-gun ... The Miners drove 70 yards for a tying 21-yard field goal by Cook... Texas Western, a raging de fen sive team by this time, hopped on a TCU fumble at the Frog 29.

Cook kicked an 18-yard three-pointer FG four plays deep in the final period to boot the Miners into a 13-10 cushion. TCU’s final two points were a gift. With 43 seconds left in the game ... The Miner quarterback raced back in his end zone for a safety ... The Frogs got their last chance. They could get only eight yards before the clock ran out.

Although Stevens won the great air race in the end, TCU’s senior quar ter back, Kent Nix got a head start.

David Smith hauling in Nix’s 11-yard pass for the score ... The Frogs had another scoring op por tu ni ty in the first period ... (Bruce) Alford missed a kick from the 28.

– Fort Worth Star-Tele gram

Texas Western 0 0 10 3 — 13TCU 0 10 0 2 — 12Attendance – 27,450

TEAM STATISTICS TCU TWUFirst Downs 18 14Rushes-yards 49-100 24-12Passing yards 157 202Return yards 42 72Passes 28-15-3 34-21-3Punts 4-48.5 5-39.0Fumbles-lost 4-3 2-0Penalties-yards 5-35 3-45

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingTCU — Post 22-76, Landon 15-28, Smith 5-0, Nix 7-minus 4. TWU — Davis 14-44, Harrell 1-9, Yarborough 1-1, Stevens 8-minus 42.

PassingTCU — Nix 15-27-3, 157 yards, Landon 0-1-0. TWU — Stevens 21-34-3, 202 yards.

ReceivingTCU — Campbell 6-74, Smith 5-39, Ball 3-35, Post 1-9. TWU — Hughes 6-115, Wallace 6-26, Anderson 4-45, Yarborough 2-13, Harrell 1-13.

TEXAS WESTERN 13, TCU 12

1965 SUN BOWLTexas Western 13, TCU 12 ∙ Dec. 19, 1965

Clemson 0 3 0 20 — 23TCU 0 7 0 0 — 7Attendance – 55,000

TEAM STATISTICS TCU CUFirst Downs 12 16Rushes-yards 39-89 54-203Passing yards 70 103Return yards 10 61Passes 17-7-4 13-6-1Punts 5-32.0 3-37.0Fumbles-lost 1-0 3-1Penalties-yards 5-35 3-23

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingTCU — Spikes 11-33, Harris 8-29, Priddy 3-17, Moreland 7-17, Sledge 1-11, Lasater 3-5, Reding 1-3, Terrell 1-1, Dawson 2-minus 5. CU — Shingler 3-65, Daigeneault 12-50, Cline 9-33, Mathis 6-21, Scrudato 8-21, Usry 9-14, Pavilack 2-1.

PassingTCU — George 3-7-2, 37 yards, Reding 1-2-0, 19 yards, Sledge 1-3-1, 10 yards, Dawson 2-4-1, 4 yards, Lasater 0-1-0. CU — White 4-9-1, 69 yards, Shingler 2-4-0, 24 yards.

ReceivingTCU — Moreland 2-37, Harris 2-17, Meger 1-14, Reding 1-5, Dodson 1-minus 3. CU — Usry 2-5, Barnes 1-17 .

CLEMSON 23, TCU 7

B OWL H I S TO RY

Page 82: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

HIS

TO

RY

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

80

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

HOUSTON — What had promise of being the ex cit ing fin ish to an “unbelievable” season turned clos er to a nightmare ... at least un til TCU’s dramatic, fourth-quarter come back restored some de gree of re spect to the out come in the 25th edition of the Blue b on net Bowl. The final score was West Virginia 31, TCU 14. But for the Horned Frogs there were lots of dips and swerves along the way. For starters, a 21-point West Virginia blitz during a 14-minute span of the first half had some what of a sobering effect on the Purples. So did the loss of All-American running back Kenneth Davis, to a knee injury, in the early moments of the postseason classic.

After being shoved up and down the field by the Mountaineers’ offense (355 yards), while countering with little punch themselves (148 yards) during the first 30 minutes, the Horned Frogs did make a contest of it after the in ter mis sion, scoring the only touchdown of the second half while mount ing a couple of other drives which nearly resulted in points. Much of TCU’s second half turnaround was due to the passing arm of senior Anthony Gulley who finished with 150 yards passing in clud ing TD tosses to Dan Sharp and Keith Burnett. Senior re ceiv er James Maness caught five passes for 90 yards but was no match sta tis tical ly for the six-catch, 152-yard performance of WVU light ning bug.

-Associated Press

West Virginia 14 17 0 0 — 31TCU 0 7 0 7 — 14Attendance — 46,000

TEAM STATISTICS TCU WVUFirst Downs 15 23Rushing Yards 44-92 49-200Passing yards 187 302Return yards 26 42Passes 12-22-1 17-31-1Punts 6-47.5 4-37.0Fumbles-lost 2-2 2-2Penalties-yards 2-15 5-45

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingTCU — Jeffery 10-37, Gulley 13-34, Sciaraffa 6-22, Davis 6-19, Littles 1-6, Riddick 7-minus 6, Tatum 1-minus 20. WVU — Holifield 13-84, Wolfley 7-53, Gay 9-47, Randolph 6-25, Mullen 1-11, Peccon 7-8, Hill 2-6, White 4-minus 34.

PassingTCU — Gulley 9-14-0, 150 yards, Sciaraffa 3-8-1, 37 yards. WVU — White 16-30-1, 280 yards, Mullen 1-1-0, 22 yards.

ReceivingTCU — Maness 5-90, Burnett 3-65, Sharp 3-29, Davis 1-3. WVU — Drewery 6-152, Wolfley 3-36, Bennett 2-16, Fish er 2-17, Mullen 1-62.

WEST VIRGINIA 31, TCU 14

1984 BLUEBONNET BOWLWest Virginia 31, TCU 14 ∙ Dec. 31, 1984

SHREVEPORT, La. — A de cade slipped by before TCU’s Horned Frogs re-sur faced from obliv i on into the post-season... The Frogs most ly slipped however, as they trudged and muddied them selves on the rain-drenched field of In de pen dence Stadium... Some 27,242 fans – a ma jor i ty of them TCU sup port ers – withstood the temp-tation to stay home ... The view be came pains tak ing ly clear no mat ter the van tage point ... Vir gin ia proved too good for these up start Frogs and captured its first bowl tri umph in five attempts since 1987 with the 20-10 victory ... “We can’t use the field as an excuse in any way,” TCU coach Pat Sullivan said. “I couldn’t be more proud of our foot ball team, but we weren’t quite good enough in a couple of ways.”

The 15th-ranked Cav a liers (9-3) dom i nat ed at the point of attack, where so many games will be won or lost ... The Frogs and their South west Con fer ence-leading offense, which av er aged 411.6 yards per game dur ing the regular season, sus tained nothing on this chilly, wet night. Vir gin ia, which en tered the con test with the na tion’s No. 1-ranked defensive unit against the run, surrendered only 191 yards and 11 first downs to the Frogs.

The running of junior tailback Andre Davis, who rushed for 97 yards on 24 carries, failed to provide enough offense on a night when (quarterback Max) Knake struggled. “The truth of it is I played terrible,” said Knake. “If I could have played better, there may have been a different outcome.”

-Associated Press

1994 INDEPENDENCE BOWLVirginia 20, TCU 10 ∙ Dec. 28, 1994

EL PASO, Texas — With only six wins, many thought TCU was not worthy of a bowl appearance. But, the Horned Frogs proved their critics wrong in a big way.

Basil Mitchell rushed for 185 yards and two touchdowns on only 19 carries as TCU earned its first bowl victory in 41 years with a 28-19 win over USC in the 65th Sun Bowl.

Quarterback Patrick Batteaux added 94 yards and two scores for TCU, which recorded its first post-season win since defeating Syracuse in the 1957 Cotton Bowl.

TCU (7-5) dominated the line of scrimmage, rushing for 314 yards while holding USC to a Sun Bowl record minus-23, breaking by two yards the mark set by Florida State in 1951. The Trojans (8-5) also posted the lowest rushing total in school history, eclipsing the previous record of minus-11 yards against Iowa in 1976.

Mitchell fell just short of Charles Alexander’s Sun Bowl rushing record of 197 yards. He opened the scoring with a three-yard run 7:07 into the first quarter.

True freshman Carson Palmer completed 17-of-28 passes for a season-best 280 yards to rally USC.

The Horned Frogs put away the game by chewing more than six minutes off the clock before pinning USC inside its 15 with less than two minutes remaining.

-gofrogs.com

USC 0 3 13 3 — 19TCU 14 7 7 0 — 28Attendance – 46,612

TEAM STATISTICS USC TCUFirst Downs 12 18Rushes-yards 21-(-23) 61-314Passing yards 280 51Return yards 74 110Passes 28-17-0 6-4-0Punts 6-45.8 5-37.8Fumbles-lost 1-0 0-0Penalties-yards 7-49 6-55

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingUSC — Morton 11-18, Papadakis 3-5, Soward 1-1, Palmer 6-(-47). TCU — Mitchell 19-185, Batteaux 28-94, Tomlinson 12-30, Williams 2-5.

PassingUSC — Palmer 17-of-28, 280 yards, 0 INT, 1 TD. TCU — Batteaux 4-of-5, 51 yards, 0 INT, 0 TD; Tomlinson, 0-of-1, 0 yards.

ReceivingUSC — Soward 6-64, Parker 4-104, Miller 3-67, Bastianelli 2-36, Morton 1-5, Harris 1-4. TCU — Tomlinson 1-25, Maiden 1-22, Williams 1-4, Mitchell 1-0.

TCU 28, USC 19

1998 SUN BOWLTCU 28, USC 19 ∙ Dec. 31, 1998

Virginia 0 10 10 0 — 20TCU 0 3 0 7 — 10Attendance — 27,242

TEAM STATISTICS TCU UVAFirst Downs 11 20Rushing Yards 32-126 52-237Passing Yards 65 199Passes 25-8-2 23-14-1Punts 8-37.3 4-38.5Fumbles-lost 2-1 1-0Penalties-yards 6-39 9-66

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingTCU — Davis 24-97, Knake 4-17. UVA — Brooks 17-114, Way 24-90, Barber 3-18.

PassingTCU — Knake 24-8-1, 65 yards - 1 TD. UVA — Groh 23-14-2, 199 yards - 1 TD.

ReceivingTCU — Brasfield 2-11, Collins 2-14, A. Davis 2-9, Oliver 1-22, Washington 1-11. UVA — Jeffers 3-60, Neely 3-55, Barber 3-2, Allen 2-32.

VIRGINIA 20, TCU 10

B OWL H I S TO RY

Page 83: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

HIS

TO

RY

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

81

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

MOBILE, Ala. — LaDainian Tomlinson ran for 124 yards and two touchdowns to lead TCU to a 28-14 victory over No. 20 East Carolina in the inaugural Mobile Alabama Bowl.

It was the second consecutive bowl upset for TCU (8-4). East Carolina (9-3) entered the game as six-point favorites. That didn’t bother the Horned Frogs, who completely shut down the Pirates’ running game, holding them to minus-16 yards.

East Carolina went into the game focusing on stopping Tomlinson, whose 1,850 yards edged Heisman Trophy winner Ron Dayne for the NCAA Division I rushing title.

TCU, which alternated between quarterbacks Casey Printers and Patrick Batteaux, made it impossible for the Pirates to adjust.

Early in the first quarter, Printers gained seven yards on an option run to move TCU to the 2. Batteaux, a senior who runs the option better than Printers, came in on the next play and pitched the ball to Tomlinson, who ran in for the touchdown. That tied the game at 7 and TCU slowly pulled away from there.

East Carolina, which couldn’t run the ball at all against TCU, had to go to the air in the second half.

It initially worked, but early in the fourth quarter, Russell Gary intercepted Garrard’s pass and returned it 32 yards for a touchdown. That gave TCU a 28-14 lead with 14:04 to play.

– Associated Press

TCU 7 14 0 7 — 28ECU 7 0 7 0 — 14Attendance – 34,200

TEAM STATISTICS TCU ECUFirst Downs 16 12Rushes-yards 50-186 26-(-16)Passing yards 174 239Return yards 69 140Passes 19-13-1 37-20-1Punts 6-31.7 7-38.1Fumbles-lost 1-1 0-0Penalties-yards 8-80 3-15

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingTCU — Tomlinson 36-124, Batteaux 6-37, Printers 7-27, Layne 1-(-2). ECU — Henry 4-22, Wilson 9-16, Alston 1-(-7), Stokes 2-(-14), Garrard 10-(-33).

PassingTCU — Printers 13-19-1, 174 yards, 1 TD. ECU — Garrard 19-35-1, 191 yards, 1 TD; Alston, 1-2-0, 48 yards.

ReceivingTCU — Tomlinson 4-29, Scarborough 2-49, Maiden 2-41, Dunbar 2-16, Batteaux 1-17, James 1-13, Brown 1-9. ECU — Wilson 8-23, Chappell 5-116, Powell 2-67, Stokes 2-9, Floyd 1-11, Henry 1-9, Burns 1-4.

TCU 28, EAST CAROLINA 14

1999 MOBILE ALABAMA BOWL

TCU 28, East Carolina 14 ∙ Dec. 22, 1999

MOBILE, Ala. — Jeff Kelly’s 28-yard touchdown pass to freshman Kenny Johnson with eight seconds left lifted Southern Miss to a 28-21 victory over No. 13 TCU in the Mobile Alabama Bowl.

In the first major bowl game of the season, TCU tailback LaDainian Tomlinson ran for 118 yards, his lowest total of the season. The Heisman Trophy finalist carried 28 times and scored two TDs in the third quarter.

Southern Miss (8-4) got a second chance after a fourth missed field goal, and trusted their senior quarterback instead of the shaky kicking game.

With 33 seconds left, they took over at the TCU 43-yard line after Mobile native Etric Pruitt got a hand on John Braziel’s punt. Kelly threw two incompletions, then scrambled 14 yards for a first down. On the next play, he lofted a perfect strike over the middle just above safety LaVar Veale’s outstretched arm, victimizing the nation’s top defense.

The Horned Frogs (10-2) endured a December coaching change and uncertainty over who would lead them into the game. In the end, former defensive coordinator Gary Patterson replaced Dennis Franchione on the sidelines. Franchione left for Alabama Dec. 1 and was initially expected to coach the bowl game. TCU officials decided late last week to allow the Patterson era to begin a season early.

-gofrogs.com

2000 MOBILE ALABAMA BOWL

Southern Miss 28, TCU 21 ∙ Dec. 20, 2000

HOUSTON — Byron Jones intercepted three passes in his first start and Joe Weber scored two touchdowns, helping Texas A&M end a four-game bowl losing streak with a 28-9 victory over TCU (6-6) in the galleryfurniture .com Bowl.

The Aggies (8-4) beat their former Southwest Conference rivals for the 24th straight time.

Weber, voted offensive player of the game, broke a 7-7 second-quarter tie with a 2-yard touchdown run and added a 14-yard run that put the Aggies in control with 1:14 left in the third quarter.

TCU’s Casey Printers was intercepted four times.

Jones earned MVP honors and also was the defensive player of the game with three tackles. Starting in place of injured Sean Weston, Jones had only two broken-up passes on his defensive chart in 11 games before he returned his first interception 62 yards in the first quarter to the Frog 35.

The Aggies couldn’t score on that chance but Jones had a 15-yard interception to the TCU 1-yard line in the second quarter, setting up Mark Farris’ quarterback keeper for the score.

Charlie Owens scooped up a fumble by A&M running back Derek Farmer and returned it 89 yards for a TCU touchdown with four minutes left in the half for a 7-7 tie. It was the second longest fumble return in school history.

-gofrogs.com

TCU 0 7 0 2 — 9Texas A&M 0 14 7 7 — 28Attendance — 53,480

TEAM STATISTICS TCU A&MFirst Downs 11 17Rushing Yards 24-(-26) 49-104Passing yards 144 191Return yards 107 143Passes 15-30-4 9-20-0Punts 6-49.8 7-41.7Fumbles-lost 2-1 1-1Penalties-yards 11-87 4-25

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingTCU — Madison 11-29; Holts 3-9; Team 1-0; Dunbar 1-0; Printers 8- (-64). A&M — Weber 9-59 2 TD; Farmer 17-33; Flemming 5-16; Joseph 8-13; Goynes 2-2; Mangum 1-0; Team 1-(-1); Long 1-(-4); Farris 5-(-14).

PassingTCU — Printers, 15-30-4, 144 yards, 0 TD. A&M — Farris, 9-19-0, 191 yards, 1 TD; Flemming 0-1, 0 yards; Long 0-0, 0 yards.

ReceivingTCU — Madise 7-65; Dunbar 4-36; Schobel 2-22; Williams 2-21. A&M — Carriger 2-57; Farmer 2-18; Weber 2-25; Jones 1-82 1 TD; Taylor 1-15; Porter 1-4.

TEXAS A&M 28, TCU 9

2001 GALLERYFURNITURE.COMBOWL

Texas A&M 28, TCU 9 ∙ Dec. 28, 2001

TCU 7 0 14 0 — 21Southern Miss 7 0 7 14 — 28Attendance — 40,300

TEAM STATISTICS TCU USMFirst Downs 16 15Rushing yards 43-150 36-158Passing yards 115 159Return yards 132 100Passes 10-22-2 11-23-0Punts 6-33.3 4-40.5Fumbles-lost 2-0 0-0Penalties-yards 8-68 5-35

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingTCU — Tomlinson, 28-118, 2 TD, Layne 7-31, Printers 8-1.USM — Nance 16-104, Kelly 11-43, Woods 8-12, Team 1-(-1).

PassingTCU — Printers, 10-22-2, 115 yards, 1 TD. USM — Kelly, 11-23-0, 159 yards, 3 TD.

ReceivingTCU — Brown 3-37, Layne 3-14, Dunbar 2-42, Maiden 2-22. USM — Handy 5-84, Garner 3-42, Johnson 1-29, Mills 1-7, Woods 1-(-3).

SOUTHERN MISS 28, TCU 21

B OWL H I S TO RY

Page 84: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

HIS

TO

RY

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

82

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — TCU figured out how to stop Colorado State standout Cecil Sapp after just two runs in the Liberty Bowl.

Sapp reeled off big gains of 59 and 25 yards on the Rams’ first two possessions, but had 22 yards the rest of the game, and TCU tailback Ricky Madison stole the show with 111 yards rushing and a touchdown as the Horned Frogs beat No. 23 Colorado State 17-3 Tuesday.

It was the Horned Frogs’ 500th victory in school history.

Madison ran for 107 of his yards in the rainy second half as TCU’s offense came alive after a sloppy opening by both teams.

In the first half, the teams combined for three lost fumbles, two interceptions, a missed field goal and an unsuccessful faked field goal. Their sloppy play made for the lowest scoring first half of a Liberty Bowl since Penn State led Tulane 6-0 in 1979.

TCU (10-2) finally put together a seven-play, 62-yard scoring drive led by Lonta Hobbs in the closing minutes of the second quarter. The freshman ran for 39 yards in the drive, capped when Sean Stilley threw a 15-yard touchdown pass to LaTarence Dunbar with 1:21 remaining to put TCU up 7-0 at the break.

The Rams were held to 89 yards rushing - compared with 197 for TCU - for their lowest total of the season. TCU also outgained Colorado State 338-149.

– Associated Press

Colorado State 0 0 3 0 — 3TCU 0 7 0 10 — 17Attendance — 55,207

TEAM STATISTICS CSU TCUFirst Downs 8 19Rushing yards 31-89 52-197Passing yards 50 141Return yards 111 71Passes 6-28-3 16-28-1Punts 8-36.9 8-36.6Fumbles-lost 5-3 2-1Penalties-yards 7-49 9-70

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSPassingCSU — Van Pelt 4-19-1, 24 yards, 0 TD; Holland 2-8-2, 26 yards, 0 TD; Cuppari 0-1-0, 0 yards.TCU — Stilley 16-28, 141 yards, 1 TD, 1 INT.

RushingCSU — Sapp 19-106; Childs 1-0; Sanders 1-(-4); Van Pelt 9-(-6); Holland 1-(-7). TCU — Madison 19-111; Hobbs 20-77; Holts 3-13; Stilley 7-10; Dunbar 1-0; Team 2-(-14).

ReceivingCSU — Pittman 4-33; Dreessen 1-11; Cuppari 1-6. TCU — Dunbar 6-71; Hobbs 3-10; Madise 2-18; Williams 2-12; Madison 1-12; McCarty 1-9; Harrell 1-9.

TCU 17, COLORADO STATE 3

2002 AXA LIBERTY BOWL

TCU 17, Colorado State 3 ∙ Dec. 31, 2002

FORT WORTH — Ryan Dinwiddie, who ended his career as the most efficient passer in college football, threw for 325 yards and three touchdowns to lead the No. 18 Broncos (13-1) to a 34-31 win Tuesday night over No. 19 TCU in the inaugural Fort Worth Bowl.

Their bowl win on TCU’s campus wasn’t secured until sophomore Mike Wynn was well short on a 51-yard field goal attempt, the first kick in his college career, with 7 seconds left.

TCU (11-2) had its school-record 13-game home winning streak snapped. The Frogs had been in contention for a Bowl Championship Series spot until their only regular-season loss Nov. 20 and then turned down an invitation to last week’s GMAC Bowl because it conflicted with exams.

Dinwiddie hit 19 of 35 passes with two interceptions, but his last touchdown was an 18-yarder to Derek Schouman for the winning score with 12:43 left.

“I thought we beat them on both sides of the football. Three big plays beat us,” TCU coach Gary Patterson said. “There’s a reason they’ve won a lot of games.”

– Associated Press

2003 PLAINSCAPITALFORT WORTH BOWL

Boise State 34, TCU 31 ∙ Dec. 22, 2003

HOUSTON — Peter LoCoco hit a 44-yard field goal with 5:25 left in the game to put TCU on top 27-24 and the Frogs’ defense held Iowa State in check on the ensuing drive for the victory at Reliant Stadium.

The TCU defense forced four Iowa State turnovers and Robert Merrill reached the century mark in rushing yards for the 10th time in his career as he ran for 109 yards on 11 carries with a touchdown to help lead the Frogs to the win.

TCU scored on its opening two possessions for a 14-0 lead just 6:36 into the contest. The two touchdowns came in a 1:55 span.

The Horned Frogs took the opening kickoff and drove 80 yards in 12 plays, capped by a 20-yard Merrill touchdown run.

On the second play of Iowa State’s ensuing possession, Jeremy Modkins forced a fumble that was recovered by Drew Coleman, giving the Frogs possession at the Cyclone 21. Three plays later, an Aaron Brown 7-yard scoring run extended TCU’s lead to 14-0.

Iowa State scored 17 points in a 4:30 stretch of the second quarter to take a 17-14 lead with 10:30 left in the first half.

The Cyclones’ third turnover of the first half, a fumble recovery by David Roach, led to the Frogs going back on top. The first snap of TCU’s ensuing series saw Jeff Ballard connect on an 84-yard touchdown pass to Michael DePriest to give the Frogs a 21-17 lead with 4:05 left in the half.

-gofrogs.com

TCU 14 10 0 3 - 27Iowa State 0 17 7 0 - 24Attendance - 37,286

TEAM STATISTICS TCU ISUFirst Downs 21 12Rushes-yards 46-135 25-34Passing yards 275 254Return yards 87 15Passes 21-33-1 20-33-2Punts 7-37.4 8-42.1Fumbles-lost 2-2 2-2Penalties 14-134 6-51

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingTCU — Merrill 11-109, Brown 12-48, Massey 1-4, Rodgers 1-4, DePriest 1-2, Ballard 16-minus 13, Team 4-minus 19. ISU — Meyer 12-27, Coleman 3-9, Team 1-minus 1, Hicks 9-minus 1.

PassingTCU — Ballard 21-33-1, 275 yards. ISU — Meyer 20-33-2, 254 yards.

ReceivingTCU — Rodgers 4-46, Bryant 4-35, DePriest 3-97, Massey 3-11, Moore 2-34, Grimmett 2-18, Pearson 1-14, Hecht 1-12, Merrill 1-8. ISU — Blythe 5-105, Flynn 3-32, Barkema 3-24, Davis 3-15, Sumrall 2-41, Hicks 2-23, Nickel 2-14.

TCU 27, IOWA STATE 24

2005 EV1.NETHOUSTON BOWL

No. 14 TCU 27, Iowa State 24 ∙ Dec. 31, 2005

TCU 14 10 7 0 — 31Boise State 7 17 3 7 — 34Attendance — 38,028

TEAM STATISTICS TCU BSUFirst Downs 26 19Rushing yards 57-280 29-117Passing yards 214 325Return yards 99 161Passes 15-29-1 19-35-2Punts 4-40.8 5-36.8Fumbles-lost 2-2 0-0Penalties-yards 6-57 6-70

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingTCU — Hobbs 23-117; Hassell 19-110; Merrill 8-26; Rodgers 3-14; DePriest 1-14; Hayter 1-2; Kummer 2-(-3). BSU — Mikell 16-101; Heck 6-11; Marks 3-7; Dinwiddie 2-0; Team 1-(-1); Bady 1-(-1).

PassingTCU — Hassell 26-13-1-160; Kummer 2-2-0-54; McCarty 1-0-0-0. BSU — Dinwiddie 35-19-2-325.

ReceivingTCU — Harrell 6-107; Rodgers 4-51; McCarty 2-2; Hobbs 1-45; Andrus 1-6; Harmon 1-3. BSU — Acree 8-150; Smith 3-21; Schouman 2-24; Carpenter 1-54; Gilligan 1-28; Bady 1-26; Mikell 1-10; Weldon 1-9; Heck 1-3.

BOISE STATE 34, TCU 31

B OWL H I S TO RY

Page 85: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

HIS

TO

RY

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

83

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K B C S APPEAR AN C E S

SAN DIEGO — Penned in by a bunch of tough Horned Frogs, Garrett Wolfe had nowhere to run.

The national rushing leader was held to 28 yards, a whopping 130 below his average, and No. 25 TCU won a Poinsettia Bowl mismatch against Northern Illinois 37-7.

While Wolfe was repeatedly stuffed by one of the nation’s best defenses, led by end Tommy Blake, Horned Frogs quarterback Jeff Ballard ran for three touchdowns and threw for another.

Ballard looked like more of a running back as he scored on runs of 10, 1 and 6 yards. He threw a 6-yard TD pass to tight end Brent Hecht and finished with 258 passing yards.

TCU’s Lonta Hobbs rushed for 114 yards and one TD.

Wolfe came in leading the nation with an average of 158.3 yards rushing and 178.9 all-purpose yards.

The Horned Frogs, though, were fourth nationally in run defense after allowing only 67.6 yards per game. TCU kept alive its string of not allowing a 100-yard rusher, one of only four teams to do so this year.

Wolfe, who carried 20 times, came dangerously close to his career-low of 24 yards set in his first game, the 2004 season opener. The Huskies had only five first downs and 60 yards of total offense, compared to 23 first downs and 456 yards for TCU.

– Associated Press

Northern Illinois 0 0 0 7 - 7TCU 6 10 14 7 - 37Attendance - 29, 709

TEAM STATISTICS NIU TCUFirst Downs 5 23Rushes-yards 29-(-20) 46-198Passing yards 80 258Return yards 122 127Passes 6-19-1 19-29-0Punts 9-40.6 6-27.3Fumbles-lost 1-0 2-0Penalties 0-0 7-80

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingNIU — Wolfe 20-28, Anderson 3-4, Britt 1-(-4), Nicholson 5-(-48). TCU — Hobbs 18-109, Brown 14-52, Ballard 11-19, Massey 3-18.

PassingNIU — Nicholson 6-18-1, 80 yards, 0 TD. Morris 0-1-0.TCU — Ballard 19-29-0, 258 yards, 1 TD

ReceivingNIU — Carter 2-14, Wolfe 2-2, Simon 1-62, Davis 1-2. TCU — Harmon 6-94, Hobbs 3-61, Moore 2-26, Reagan 2-23, Bryant 2-20, Andrus 1-12, Brown 1-8, Massey 1-8, Hecht 1-6.

TCU 37, NORTHERN ILLINOIS 7

2006 SAN DIEGO COUNTY CREDIT UNION POINSETTIA BOWL

#25 TCU 37, No. Illinois 7 ∙ Dec. 19, 2006

HOUSTON — Justin Watts had scored exactly one touchdown in his career at TCU before the Texas Bowl.

TD No. 2 marked the go-ahead touchdown early in the fourth quarter to help TCU to a 20-13 win over Houston.

The junior wove through the defense and danced into the end zone for an 8-yard touchdown run that made it 17-10 and gave TCU (8-5) its first lead of the game against its old Southwest Conference rival.

He and Ryan Christian split carries against Houston (8-5) after starter Joseph Turner injured his knee in the first quarter and didn’t return.

Quarterback Andy Dalton also ran for a touchdown for TCU. Dalton was 21-of-30 for 249 yards with one interception. Watts and Christian combined for 88 yards rushing on 12 carries.

A 15-yard leaping reception by Jimmy Young on third down kept the drive that ended in Watts’ touchdown going. Young outjumped Carson Blackmon to grab the ball and managed to keep his left leg in bounds as he landed.It was initially ruled an incomplete pass, but the call was overturned after a review by officials.

The Cougars had a chance to tie it with less than 30 seconds to play but Case Keenum’s pass sailed just beyond the fingertips of Jeron Harvey in the end zone. He had two more shots at the end zone, but the ball fell short on the first one and Chase Ortiz hit him as he threw the second one to end the game.

-Associated Press

2007 TEXAS BOWLTCU 20, Houston 13 ∙ Dec. 28, 2007

Houston 7 3 0 3 — 13TCU 0 7 3 10 — 20Attendance — 62,097

TEAM STATISTICS UH TCUFirst Downs 20 19Rushing yards 30-32 39-116Passing yards 335 249Return yards 83 120Passes 23-38-0 21-30-1Punts 6-50.2 7-37.6Fumbles-lost 0-0 0-0Penalties-yards 6-73 11-85

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingUH — Alridge 15-29, Kohn 1-5, Ganaway 1-0, Keenum 13-(-2). TCU — Watts 12-46, 1 TD, Christian 12-42, Dalton 11-17, 1 TD, Turner 3-10, Dickerson 1-1.

PassingUH — Keenum, 23-38-0, 335 yards, 1 TD. TCU — Dalton, 21-31-1, 249 yards, 0 TD.

ReceivingUH — Avery 10-120, McDaniel 5-55, Harvey 4-64, Kohn 1-67, 1 TD, Gilbert 1-16, Castile 1-9, Alridge 1-4. TCU — Dickerson 3-57, Bryant 3-56, Reagan 3-35, Christian 3-30, Kerley 3-15, B. Johnson 2-17, Young 1-15, Turner 1-12, Frosch 1-9, Watts 1-3.

TCU 20, HOUSTON 13

B OWL H I S TO RY

SAN DIEGO — Joseph Turner dove into the end zone for the winning score, and LaDainian Tomlinson went nuts on the sideline.

It was a good night to be a Frog, current and past.

Turner’s 17-yard run midway through the fourth quarter gave the No. 11 Horned Frogs their first lead of the night, during a 17-16 victory over No. 9 and previously undefeated Boise State in the Poinsettia Bowl.

BSU was trying to finish 13-0 for the second time in three seasons. The Broncos took a 10-0 lead on Ian Johnson’s 20-yard touchdown run midway through the first quarter, but their high-scoring offense bogged down against TCU’s fast, aggressive defense.

TCU piled up yards if not points until finally wearing down the Broncos’ defense in the fourth quarter. The Horned Frogs moved 80 yards in 10 plays on the winning drive, with Turner finishing it off by shedding a tackle inside the 5-yard line and diving into the end zone for a 17-13 lead.

After Turner’s TD, Boise State got to the TCU 14 before having to settle for Kyle Brotzman’s 33-yard field goal to pull to 17-16.

The Broncos got the ball back with 6 seconds left on their 33 and tried to lateral the ball after a catch, but Jeremy Childs’ desperation flip was grabbed by TCU’s Matt Panfil.

TCU outgained Boise State 472 yards to 250.

– Associated Press

Boise State 10 3 0 3 — 16TCU 0 7 3 7 — 17Attendance - 34,628

TEAM STATISTICS BSU TCUFirst Downs 15 28Rushes-yards 20-28 51-275Passing yards 222 197Return yards 153 105Passes 22-35-1 22-36-2Punts 4-48.0 4-32.0Fumbles-lost 2-1 1-0Penalties 4-25 6-63

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRushingBSU — Johnson 7-28, 1 TD, Harper 3-6, Perretta 5-4, Avery 2-1, Moore 2-(-10)TCU — Brown 14-102, 1 TD, Turner 16-84, 1 TD, Dalton 16-84, Kerley 4-10, Christian 1-6

PassingBSU — Moore 22-35-1, 222 yards, 0 TD.TCU — Dalton 22-35-1, 197 yards, 0 TD, Kerley 0-1-1.

ReceivingBSU — Childs 7-61, Pettis 4-64, Johnson 3-(-5), Perretta 2-78, Hawkins 2-10, Avery 1-6, Bissell 1-3, Brockel 1-3, Martin 1-1.TCU — Bryant 6-67, Christian 6-53, Young 5-62, Brown 2-(-3), Reagan 1-11, Clay 1-7, Turner 1-0.

TCU 17, BOISE STATE 16

2008 SAN DIEGO COUNTY CREDIT UNION POINSETTIA BOWL

#11 TCU 17, #9 Boise State 16 ∙ Dec. 23, 2008

Page 86: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide

HO

RN

ED

FR

OG

HIS

TO

RY

2 0 10 TC U FO OTBALL

84

H O R N E D FR O G FO OTBALL 2 0 11 R O S E B OWL GAM E

BAC K-TO-BAC K M O U NTA I N WE ST C O N FE R E N C E C HAM P I O N S

JAN. 4, 2010 • ATTENDANCE: 73,227UNIV. OF PHOENIX STADIUM • GLENDALE, ARIZ.

GAME STATISTICSCATEGORY BSU TCUFirst Downs 16 17Rushes-Yards (Net) 32-77 36-20Passing Yards (Net) 240 272Passes Comp-Att-Int 24-40-0 25-44-3Total Offense Plays-Yards 72-317 64-308Fumble Returns-Yards 0-0 0-0Punt Returns-Yards 4-41-0 5-76-0Kickoff Returns-Yards 3-54-0 4-77-0Interception Returns-Yards 3-66-1 0-0-0Punts (Number-Avg) 8-44.4 8-48.4Fumbles-Lost 1-1 2-0Penalties-Yards 7-70 7-53Possession Time 34:43 25:17Third-Down Conversions 6-of-18 1-of-12Fourth-Down Conversions 2-of-2 0-of-1Red-Zone Scores-Chances 2-3 1-1Sacks By: Number-Yards 2-11 0-0

TCU GAME STARTERSOffense DefenseWR Hicks LE HughesWR Young NT GriffinWR Christian DT GrantWR Kerley RE DanielsRB Turner SLB WashingtonQB Dalton MLB CarderLT Newhouse SS LuttrellLG Dooley FS T. JohnsonC Kirkpatrick WS IbiloyeRG Vernon CB SandersRT Cannon CB McCoy

SCORE BY QUARTERS 1 2 3 4 FBOISE STATE 7 3 0 7 17TCU 0 7 3 0

SCORING SUMMARYFirst QuarterBSU - Thompson, Brandon 51-yard interception return, (Brotzman kick), 11:28Second QuarterBSU - Brotzman, Kyle 40-yard field goal, 8:02TCU - Clay, Curtis 30-yard pass from Dalton, Andy (Evans kick), 0:49Third QuarterTCU - Evans, Ross 29-yard field goal, 3:42Fourth QuarterBSU - Martin, Doug 2-yard run, (Brotzman kick), 7:21

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICSRUSHINGBSU - Martin 16-42; Avery 12-20; Young 3-16; Ke. Moore 1-(-1).TCU - Turner 7-22; Tucker 1-9; Wesley 2-8; Jackson 1-7; Dalton 9 (-10).

PASSINGBSU - Ke. Moore 23-39-0-211; Brotzman 1-1-0-29.TCU - Dalton 25-44-1-272.

RECEIVINGBSU - Young 8-72; Efaw 4-75; Ki. Moore 4-28; Potter 2-21; Burroughs 2-9; Gallarda 1-16; Avery 1-13; Pettis 1-5; Martin 1-1.TCU - Kerley 6-65; Christian 5-40; Young 4-68; Hicks 4-45; B. Johnson 3-12; Clay 2-39; Tucker 1-3.

GLENDALE, Ariz. (AP) - Boise State reached into its bag of tricks again and stunned TCU in a Fiesta Bowl duel of unbeaten BCS busters.

After the Broncos pulled off a gutsy fake punt at their own 33-yard line, Doug Martin scored the decisive touchdown to give No. 6 Boise State a 17-10 victory over third-ranked TCU on Monday night.

A 10-10 stalemate came alive when punter Kyle Brotzman hit wide-open Kyle Efaw with a 30-yard strike with about 9 minutes to play. Four plays later, Martin dove over a tackler from 2 yards out as the Broncos became the second school ever to go 14-0, joining Ohio State in 2002.

The trickery evoked memories of Boise State’s BCS debut three years ago, when it pulled out a passel of gadget plays to defeat Oklahoma on the same field.

Unlike that thriller, this game offered little drama until Petersen made another surprising call.

The Broncos caught the Horned Frogs napping on the fake punt by Brotzman. Kellen Moore then completed three straight passes to advance to the 2, and Martin scored to put Boise State up 17-10 with 7:21 to go.

TCU took over at its own 1 with 1:06 remaining and marched to the Boise State 30 before cornerback Brandyn Thompson disrupted a pass by Andy Dalton, and Winston Venable picked it off to end the threat.

Moore passed for 211 yards. Dalton finished with 272 yards and a score through the air, but was intercepted three times.

Brotzman also made a 40-yard field goal midway through the second to make it 10-0, putting the Horned Frogs in the biggest hole they had faced all season.

Some wondered whether the Broncos deserved a shot at the national title. On this night, they were just barely good enough to edge Mountain West champion TCU (12-1), snapping the Horned Frogs’ 14-game win streak.

It was the first time two schools from conferences without automatic BCS bids have met in one of college football’s biggest bowls. But for long stretches TCU and Boise State played as if they belonged in the Poinsettia Bowl, site of TCU’s 17-16 victory over Boise State in December 2008.

Neither team could muster an offensive touchdown until the final minute of the first half, when Dalton hit Curtis Clay for a 30-yard score to make it 10-7 at halftime.

The Horned Frogs capitalized on Boise State’s first turnover to pull even midway through the third. The Broncos had moved into Horned Frogs territory when All-American defensive end Jerry Hughes stripped Martin and recovered the ball at TCU’s 43-yard line.

Eight plays later, Ross Evans kicked a 29-yard field goal to tie it at 10.

No. 6 BOISE STATE 17

No. 3 TCU 10

B OWL H I S TO RY

10

Page 87: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide
Page 88: 2011 TCU Rose Bowl Guide