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All TCU. All the time.

TCU 360

TCU 360

All TCU. All the time.

TCU 360

Professor Todd Kerstetter leads the panel discussion with the Race and Reconciliation research team Lucius Seger, Marcela Molina, Kelly Phommachanh and Jenay Willis (left to right).
The fourth annual Reconciliation Day recognized students' advocacy and change
By Miroslava Lem Quinonez, Staff Writer
Published Apr 25, 2024
Reconciliation Day highlighted students’ concerns and advocacy in the TCU community from 1998 to 2020.

Despite bouncing back after loss, TCU defense still has something to prove

What? Thought it was going to happen again? Thought six balls over the secondary was going to happen again? Thought 50 points and 564 yards of offense was going to happen again?

Maybe, but not this week.

This is Gary Patterson we’re talking about. This is three straight national defensive titles in a row.

These are  conference championships and All-Americans. Not to mention, the Rose Bowl.

Then again, this was Air Force.

The Frogs beat the Falcons 35-19 Saturday in a game not nearly as close as the scored indicated — Air Force tacked on a field goal and a touchdown in the game’s last eight minutes as TCU’s starters watched from the sidelines.

Although TCU played well on offense and defense, they still have something to prove:

Can they stop a high profile offense?

The Air Force triple option attack is effective, not explosive.

Will it eat up the clock? Will it churn out rushing yards? Will it grind out eight, maybe even nine, wins a season?

Yes, yes and yes.

But it won’t send receivers vertical, and it won’t go after cornerbacks, and it won’t rack up 34 points in one half.

Baylor’s can and did. Just ask Patterson.

Even without linebacker Tanner Brock in the game, the Air Force offense played perfectly into the hands of the TCU defense. The Frogs were bigger and more skilled up front and their other linebackers – Tank Carder, Kenny Cain and Kris Gardner – were fast enough to contain the triple option.

Air Force quarterback Tim Jefferson completed nine of 15 passes for 83 yards with his longest throw an 18-yarder to receiver Mikel Hunter.

That’s a far cry from the aerial attack Robert Griffin III and Baylor put on the Frogs in their season opener last weekend. Cornerbacks Greg McCoy and Jason Verrett were exposed throw after throw against the Bears. Just because that didn’t happen Saturday in Colorado Springs, doesn’t mean it can’t happen again.

Until the TCU defense proves it can stop a high-profile passing attack, it’ll still be the same defense and secondary that got rung up in Waco.

Luckily, the Frogs will have a month to continue to iron out any coverage issues, and they’ll get to do it knowing they already have one conference road win in the bag.

TCU plays Louisiana-Monroe Saturday, and in two weeks will face Portland State. Both games are at home and both could be won on athleticism alone.

Rising program SMU comes to Fort Worth Oct. 1, but they might bring a quarterback controversy with them between week-one starter Kyle Padron  and recently named starter J.J. McDermott.  Either one, Padron or McDermott, shouldn’t pose much of a threat.

But in four weeks the Frogs head west to face San Diego State and quarterback Ryan Lindley. Lindley and the Aztecs nearly spoiled TCU’s home finale last year, racking up 262 yards through the air before falling just short 40-35.

If Frog fans thought that game gave them a scare, wait until TCU has to face the same quarterback on the road.

But that’s a month and three games away. That means a month’s worth of practices, film sessions and growing up for a young team.

And if you had to turn a young team over to a coach for a month of that, who’d it be?

Yeah, you guessed it.

This is Gary Patterson  we’re talking about.

Ryan Osborne is the sports editor for the TCU Daily Skiff.

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