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No. 3 TCU escapes with a 55-52 victory over Texas Tech

Josh Doctson is a well-built, highly competitive receiver who consistently produced at TCU, and knows how to play every receiver spot. His presence should help bolster the NFL’s 31st ranked passing attack. Team needs: WR, S, RB, OG

Josh Doctson is a well-built, highly competitive receiver who consistently produced at TCU, and knows how to play every receiver spot. His presence should help bolster the NFL’s 31st ranked passing attack. Team needs: WR, S, RB, OG

(LM Otero / Associated Press)
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Aaron Green made it sound so simple. He was just following the ball as he had been told.

He ended up in perfect position, too, catching a tipped pass in the back of the end zone with 23 seconds left to give the No. 3 Horned Frogs a 55-52 victory over Texas Tech on Saturday.

“You never know with the ball, somebody might fumble, or anything like that,” the senior running back said. “So I knew there was a chance. Josh Doctson catches almost everything, but there’s a chance. I knew he might not have caught it because it was a little high and the guy was behind him. So I just did what I was told and I followed the ball. I saw it the whole way and I caught it.”

Josh Doctson was relieved.

“He made the play,” the senior receiver said. “He saved us, so we’re 4-0.”

On fourth-and-goal from the 4 in the Big 12 opener for both teams, Trevone Boykin’s pass was high to Doctson, but he got a hand on it and Green grabbed the ball as he fell out of the end zone. A video review confirmed Green had control of the ball and got a foot in bounds.

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Boykin threw four touchdown passes and finished with a career-high 509 yards for TCU (4-0, 1-0). He completed 34 of 54 passes and ran for 42 yards on 14 carries.

Doctson caught three touchdown passes and had 267 yards on 18 catches — all career highs.

Green rushed for one touchdown, and the Horned Frogs got a safety in the first quarter after the snap went over Texas Tech quarterback Patrick Mahomes.

Mahomes, who was injured in the first quarter, completed 25 of 45 passes for 392 yards. He threw two touchdown passes and ran for another score for the Red Raiders (3-1, 0-1).

TCU went ahead 48-45 on Kyle Hicks’ 21-yard run with 8:22 left. Texas Tech answered after two clutch third-down plays when Mahomes found Justin Stockton on a 50-yard scoring pass with 5:55 to go.

The teams traded empty possession before the Horned Frogs started at their own 47 and drove downfield for the winning touchdown.

The Red Raiders didn’t give up after TCU scored. On the final play of the game — after time expired and a defensive penalty on TCU — Mahomes found DeAndre Washington for a 24-yard gain. He pitched it to a lineman, who pitched it to a receiver who got the ball to Jakeem Grant. He was pushed out of bounds at the TCU 10 to end the game.

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“I’ve gone from one baby aspirin to two,” TCU Coach Gary Patterson said. “I may go extra-strength Tylenol. Jiminy Christmas.”

Washington ran for four touchdowns and a career-high 188 yards.

Doctson’s 18 catches marked the first time a TCU receiver got at least 10 receptions in a game since Boykin got 10 as a receiver against West Virginia in 2013.

Mahomes hurt his left knee early in the first quarter when he dove toward the end zone as he finished a 15-yard run. He got up limping but stayed in for the next play to hand the ball to Washington who scored on a 1-yard run. Mahomes played the rest of the game with a knee brace but managed to limp around the left side for a 4-yard score late in the second quarter.

“He wasn’t his normal self, I think you could see that,” Texas Tech Coach Kliff Kingsbury said of Mahomes’ injury. “But he hung in there, had a gutsy performance.”

Horned Frogs had a chance to extend their 33-28 lead on the opening drive of the third quarter but Jaden Oberkrom, the active Football Bowl Subdivsion leader with 62 career field goals, missed one right from 25 yards.

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