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The next year, 2003, the Horned Frogs recorded their best record to date at 20–11 and made it to the second round of the C-USA tournament, a first for a TCU Volleyball team. 2005 the Horned Frog Volleyball team saw their first year in the Mountain West Conference. The team finished the season 16–18 and were seeded 8th in the conference ...
Franchione led the Horned Frogs to their first bowl game win and AP poll finish since the 1950s. TCU enjoyed further success under Franchione's successor, Gary Patterson (2001-2021). Patterson led the Horned Frogs to ten seasons of 11 or more wins, including a perfect 2010 season and six AP top 10 finishes.
TCU Horned Frogs, adopted in 1915, formerly known as the "Christians" [156] Texas Tech Red Raiders, changed from "Matadors" (1925–1932), which had been inspired by the campus's Spanish architecture. [157] Toledo Rockets, adopted in 1923 by sportswriters who shortened it from "Skyrockets", coined by a student in the press box for a football ...
The horned frog has been TCU’s mascot since 1897. It has been the Texas state reptile since 1992. And although the funky, fierce-looking brown critter’s crown of horns can look intimidating ...
(Updated from a column first published Sept. 20, 2017.) What makes Fort Worth “Funky Town?” Now on a line of TCU Horned Frogs T-shirts, the nickname started with a song nearly 40 years ago ...
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It is the home stadium of the TCU Horned Frogs football team. It is named after Amon G. Carter , a prominent Fort Worth businessman, newspaper publisher, and city booster. Amon G. Carter stadium has several popular nicknames, the most popular being "The Carter" and "Hell's Half Acre" (a reference to the site in Fort Worth's Wild West past ...
It would be 1968 before TCU flanker Linzy Cole would break the color line. (The basketball Horned Frogs already had star center James Cash, now a business professor emeritus at Harvard University.) 7.