AHSFHS.org


Search Site






Texas Christian Football Team History


Texas Christian Horned Toads
Texas Christian University
 Fort Worth, TX
Founded: 1873
Stadium: Amon G. Carter Stadium
Capacity: 46,000
Colors: Purple & White
Coach: Sonny Dykes
Conference: Big 12-

Team Home Summary  Coaches Games by Year Opponents Rankings Bowls Conference

Texas Christian 
Team Timeline
First Team: 1896  
  1900 - Did not field a team.
  1971 - Jim Pittman died of a heart attack suffered on the sidelines of a game against Baylor in Waco, Texas on October 30, 1971. Assistant Coach Billy Tohill took over the remainder of the season.
  2000 - Gary Patterson took over as interim head coach in December for the bowl game.
  2021 - Gary Patterson left the program after eight games. He was replaced by special assistant coach Jerry Kill on an interim basis.
 
Championships
National Championships
1938
Conference Championships
  1920, 1929, 1932, 1938, 1944, 1951, 1955
1958, 1959, 1994, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2005, 2009
2010, 2011
Division Championships
  2022
 
Team Records
 Overall Record 685-574-57
 Winning Pct. 54%
 Vacated Wins 0
 Forfeit Wins 1
 Adjusted Record 685-574-57
 Winning Pct. 54%
 National Championships 1
 Conference Titles 17
 Division Titles 1
 Conference Record 337-344-22
 All American Players 
 NFL Players (#2)
 Home Record 345-216-28
 Away Record 311-327-27
 
By The Numbers
 Seasons 128
 Winning Seasons (#1) 67
 Losing Seasons (#1)56
 Most Wins in A Season 13 (2022)
 Most Loses in A Season 11 (1976)
 10 Win Seasons 16
 Most Points Scored in a Game 82 (10/25/2014)
 Most Points Scored in a Season 604 (2014)
 Most Points Allowed in a Game 81 (11/16/1974)
 Most Points Allowed in a Season 435 (2022)
 Largest Margin of Victory 69 (10/22/2011)
 Largest Margin of Defeat 72 (10/2/1915)
 Most Points Both Teams in a Game 119 (10/11/2014)
 Last Shutout 10/21/2017
 Last Time Shutout 11/16/1991
 Shutouts All-Time 204
 Been Shutout All-Time 156
 
Streaks
 Longest Win 16 (10/18/2014-10/29/2015)
 Longest Losing  20 (9/21/1974-11/15/1975)
 
Bowl Records
 Overall Record 18-16-1
 Rose 1-0-0
 Cotton 2-3-1
 Orange 0-1-0
 Fiesta 1-0-0
 Sugar 2-0-0
 
By the Decade
 2020-29  29-20
 2010-19  87-42
 2000-09  95-29
 1990-99 51-61
 1980-89 34-73-4
 1970-79 26-81-3
 1960-69 40-56-5
 1950-59 60-41-4
 1940-49 47-47-7
 1930-39 84-24-8
 1920-29 59-26-10
Next Game
 8/30/2024 (Fri)  
@ Stanford in a Non-Conference Game
Last Time: Texas Christian won 39-37 in 2017.
All-Time:
 Texas Christian vs. Stanford 3-0-0 100.0% 
 
2024 Season
 Fri., Aug. 30  @ Stanford
 Sat., Sep. 7  vs. Long Island
 Sat., Sep. 14  vs. Central Florida
 Sat., Sep. 21  @ Southern Methodist
 Sat., Sep. 28  @ Kansas
 Fri., Oct. 4  vs. Houston
 Sat., Oct. 12  OPEN 
 Sat., Oct. 19  @ Utah
 Sat., Oct. 26  vs. Texas Tech
 Sat., Nov. 2  @ Baylor
 Sat., Nov. 9  vs. Oklahoma State
 Sat., Nov. 16  OPEN 
 Sat., Nov. 23  vs. Arizona
 Sat., Nov. 30  @ Cincinnati
 
2024 Season Totals
  Record0-0
  Scoring0-0
  Conference Record0-0
  Home Record0-0
  Away Record0-0
 
2024 Big 12  Standings
 Season   Conference 
Arizona 0-0
Arizona State 0-0
Baylor 0-0
Brigham Young 0-0
Central Florida 0-0
Cincinnati 0-0
Colorado 0-0
Houston 0-0
Iowa State 0-0
Kansas 0-0
Kansas State 0-0
Oklahoma State 0-0
Texas Christian 0-0
Texas Tech 0-0
Utah 0-0
West Virginia 0-0
 
Longest Running Rivalry
 Texas Christian & Baylor have played 119 games.
Texas Christian has won 59 games.
Baylor has won 53 games.
with 7 tie games.
 
Record when scoring..... (since 2000)
 Scoring  Record 
 less than 10 0-10
 10 or more 211-81
 20 or more  190-51
 30 or more 151-19
 40 or more 90-7
 
Record when allowing..... (since 2000)
 Points Allowed  Record 
 less than 10 66-0
 10 or more 145-91
 20 or more 72-86
 30 or more 30-57
 40 or more 9-28
 
  
 
Some records may be incomplete.

NOTES:
(1) Winning and losing seasons counted only if team plays at least 8 games.
(2) NFL Players counted for any player that participated in a regular season game.

Great Moments in College Football History

During Nebraska Cornhuskers' home games, their stadium becomes the state's third largest city.