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The Texas–Texas Tech football rivalry is an American college football rivalry [2] between the Texas Longhorns and the Texas Tech Red Raiders. The winner of this gauntlet receives the other university's chancellor's sterling silver boot spurs which is what the name of the rivalry is named after.
Fisher Stadium's scoreboard in Easton, Pennsylvania following Lafayette College's victory over Lehigh University in the 142nd edition of "The Rivalry" in 2006.The series between the two colleges, which are 17 miles (27 km) away from each other in the Lehigh Valley, is the most played rivalry in college football history with 158 meetings since 1884.
The two programs took wildly different routes to get to Atlanta. Prior to the Peach Bowl, Texas and Arizona State had met exactly one time in history: 2007, when a Colt McCoy-led Longhorn team ...
Texas Tech has had 17 head coaches, and three-interim head coaches. Five coaches have won conference championships with the Red Raiders: Pete Cawthon, Dell Morgan, DeWitt Weaver, Steve Sloan, and Spike Dykes. Mike Leach is the only head Texas Tech football coach to win a division title. Dykes is the all-time leader in games and years coached ...
The fifth-seeded Longhorns and fourth-seeded Sun Devils play News Years Day in the Peach Bowl in the quarterfinals of the College Football Playoff. Texas, Arizona State to meet in CFP clash of old ...
The Texas Tech football team controlled the majority of Saturday's Big 12 Conference opener and came away with a 30-22 win over Arizona State in Jones AT&T Stadium.. Aside from penalties and a few ...
Texas Tech 31 Virginia 28 2007 Dec 31, 2007 Insight Bowl Oklahoma State 49 Indiana 33 2007 Dec 30, 2007 Independence Bowl Alabama 30 Colorado 24 2007 Dec 29, 2007 Alamo Bowl Penn State 24 Texas A&M 17 2007 Dec 27, 2007 Holiday Bowl Texas 52 Arizona State 34 2006 Jan 1, 2007 Cotton Bowl Auburn 17 Nebraska 14 2006 Jan 1, 2007 Fiesta Bowl Boise State
An upstart Arizona State squad enters Wednesday's game as nearly two-touchdown underdogs, much due to Texas' stingy defense, which allows the second-fewest points per game in college football (13.3).