TCU and Oklahoma battled back and forth in a rollercoaster game Saturday night. But, the Frogs ultimately fell to the Sooners by six, 52-46. All five Big 12 meetings have been decided by seven points or less. Oklahoma now holds a 11-5 series advantage over TCU.

Here are five takeaways from the Frogs’ performance.

1.The Sooner running game dominated the Horned Frog defense

Oklahoma running backs Joe Mixon and Samaje Perine each rushed for over 100 yards. Nixon had 109 yards on 16 carries and a touchdown. Perine totaled 101 yards on 17 carries and two touchdowns.

“Their running backs did a great job and ran well,” TCU head coach Gary Patterson said.

Sooner quarterback Baker Mayfield also had a big day on the ground finishing the night with a couple of touchdown runs and 72 yards on 12 carries.

“We had him [Mayfield],” Patterson said, “We just couldn’t tackle.”

TCU defensive end Josh Carraway said the TCU’s defensive performance was “unacceptable.”

The Horned Frogs had opportunities to bring down OU’s two-headed running back attack, and they did in the fourth quarter.

“People started playing faster, doing their jobs, and following their assignments,” Carraway said.

2.Taj Williams Returns

After 11 catches and an 158 yard performance against South Dakota State, TCU wide receiver faded to the background of the TCU offense — until Saturday night.

Williams had just two catches for 56 yards at halftime, but dominated the Oklahoma secondary in the second half with three catches, 154 yards and two touchdown catches. He ended the game with a total of five catches, 210 yards and touchdown catches from 64 and 74 yards out.

Williams’ career-high 210 yards receiving were the fourth most in a game in TCU history. It was the highest total since Josh Doctson’s school-record 267 yards against Texas Tech last season.

“He stepped up and made big plays, and I’m proud of him,” TCU running back Kyle Hicks said.

3.TCU dug too deep a deficit

The Horned Frogs were firing on all cylinders early in the game. They forced a Mayfield fumble, TCU quarterback Kenny Hill threw a touchdown on his first pass of the game and TCU led 21-7.

Then, Oklahoma went on a 42-3 run and TCU found themselves trailing 49-24 at the end of the third quarter.

“We were punting too much,” Patterson said.

TCU needed consistent offense, but the Horned Frogs punted on their first three possessions of the second half. For TCU to come away with big wins, they need the offense to help the defense out.

4.Kenny Hill had a wildly inconsistent second half

Hill had 213 passing yards at the half. At the end of the third quarter, he had only passed for 22 yards. Offensive production was the key to the game, and it seemed to be lacking.

However, in the fourth quarter the momentum changed

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