😈Your Home for ThrowBack Style Frog & Fort Worth Memes, Merch, & More😈• DM for requests • not affiliated with TCU • owner of @FWDaily1849 • husband to @mrstbf

Joined December 2021
7,708 Photos and videos
Pinned Tweet
Kirk Herbstreit said nothing wrong
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A German in NASA?
This is the coolest thing ever. We’re at NASA getting a tour from astronaut Anne McClain. This is us entering the Orion capsule that flew around the Moon in April.
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ThrowBackFrog retweeted
Don’t worry Sorsby, I found you a team
Sources: Texas Tech transfer quarterback Brendan Sorsby plans to enter the NFL Supplemental Draft. Amid the legal wrangling over his NCAA eligibility after admitting he bet on sports, he intends to head to the NFL.
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CFB Community today:
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ThrowBackFrog retweeted
今日は4日間お世話になった車を返却し、テキサスのカウボーイ文化を体験できるフォートワースのストックヤードを観光。 古き良き雰囲気の中、地元の人がウェスタンスタイルで遊びに来てたり、各国のサポーターが集まって試合を見たりと、やっとW杯らしさを感じられる事ができてとても良い場所でした!
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So you’re coming to Fort Worth @FreddyLA7 ?? 👀
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One thing the Europeans absolutely beat us on…they’re not chronically online like us so they get to go to the club & let loose without worrying about “looking cool” for socials…yeah they’re on it, but not to the scale of Americans Just go out and be goofballs. Life is short🍻
Germany in Houston…. The World Cup brings the world together
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ThrowBackFrog retweeted
Sorsby entering the supplemental draft
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ThrowBackFrog retweeted
Claiming to care about the kid’s recovery for a football advantage… and then dumping the kid when it’s a headache. Absolutely shameful behavior from Texas Tech.
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BREAKING: QB Brendan Sorsby and Texas Tech are mutually parting ways, @PeteNakos reports. Sorsby will not play College Football in 2026. on3.com/news/brendan-sorsby-…
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ThrowBackFrog retweeted
"The Texas AG has managed the rare feat of threatening a lawsuit so weak that he walked his adversary into court, drew a public rebuke from a fellow attorney general within 24 hours, and turned a meeting the Big 12 might never have held into a federal complaint with his own letter stapled to the back as an Exhibit. Crazy times." 😂
The Big 12 has gone to federal court to ask permission to have a conviction. There was a time when a conference could simply disapprove of a player who bet on his own team's games. Now it needs a declaratory judgment first. The Texas AG's threatening letter to the Big 12 was an unforced error of the first order. Strip it out and there's no lawsuit— because there's no justiciable controversy. A conference privately mulling a sanctions vote isn't a "case"; it's a meeting. The AG's 200M per se antitrust threat is what manufactured the ripeness, handed the Big 12 its MedImmune, Inc. v. Genentech, Inc hook, and let Sidley walk into federal court in Dallas with a complaint instead of a press release. Paxton's office didn't just pick a fight— it wrote the other side's standing argument for them, then signed it. Now TTU and the AG get to defend a theory the Oklahoma AG already called "facially absurd," in a real courtroom, against a national firm on its home turf. The letter was meant to intimidate. It functioned as service of process. The complaint itself is well made, and its strongest section is also its most dangerous. Paragraphs 32 through 36 are devastating on TTU's hypocrisy: TTU voted for the Baylor sanctions in 2017 and now insists the conference has no power to sanction anyone. That is good lawyering, and it should sting. But it cuts both ways. Baylor was sanctioned after findings, through process, for institutional conduct. The Big 12 wants to sanction TTU preemptively, for fielding a player a Texas court has enjoined the NCAA from declaring ineligible. The state court injunction is the elephant in the room, and paragraph 62 works very hard not to look at it— "this isn't about the injunction." But it is. The District Court of Lubbock County enjoined the NCAA from barring Brendan Sorsby from practicing or playing for Texas Tech, on a 5K bond, through a trial not set until February 2027. The practical effect is that Sorsby plays the entire 2026 season. The Big 12 now asks a federal court to declare that it may bar Texas Tech from competing for letting him. Strip away the labels, and the conference is asking one sovereign's courts to restore the very exclusion another sovereign's court just lifted—relabeled, from "NCAA eligibility" to "conference governance," but identical in result. That's a real trap, and it is structural. Federal and state courts keep a wary distance from one another's orders; neither likes to be handed the other's ruling to undo. A federal court will rarely enjoin a state proceeding, and it is nearly as reluctant to grant relief that achieves the same end through the back. The Big 12 was shrewd to choose a declaratory judgment over an injunction— a softer vehicle that does not, on its face, touch the state order. But that shrewdness cuts both ways: declaratory relief is discretionary, and a federal judge may simply decline to issue a declaration whose only real function is to neutralize a state court's ruling. The conference says it is exercising independent governance authority. A skeptical judge may see a conference trying to do through the side door what a state court has barred the NCAA from doing through the front— and may decline to hold the door. The Big 12 should win this, and it should win because the law is not actually close: a private association enforcing its own bylaws against a member who bet on his own games is ordinary self-governance. The Texas AG has managed the rare feat of threatening a lawsuit so weak that he walked his adversary into court, drew a public rebuke from a fellow attorney general within 24 hours, and turned a meeting the Big 12 might never have held into a federal complaint with his own letter stapled to the back as an Exhibit. Crazy times. Thanks to @TomMarsLaw for making the complaint available.
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FREDDY!
Community note
The screenshot fabricates a tweet from @FreddyLA7 calling the OU stadium a prison; @FreddyLA7's actual post shared travel plans to OKC (not a stadium image), to which @OU_Athletics replied. x.com/FreddyLA7/stat… x.com/OU_Athletics/s…
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ThrowBackFrog retweeted
So basically Ken Paxton may have really screwed this up for Tech
The Big 12 has gone to federal court to ask permission to have a conviction. There was a time when a conference could simply disapprove of a player who bet on his own team's games. Now it needs a declaratory judgment first. The Texas AG's threatening letter to the Big 12 was an unforced error of the first order. Strip it out and there's no lawsuit— because there's no justiciable controversy. A conference privately mulling a sanctions vote isn't a "case"; it's a meeting. The AG's 200M per se antitrust threat is what manufactured the ripeness, handed the Big 12 its MedImmune, Inc. v. Genentech, Inc hook, and let Sidley walk into federal court in Dallas with a complaint instead of a press release. Paxton's office didn't just pick a fight— it wrote the other side's standing argument for them, then signed it. Now TTU and the AG get to defend a theory the Oklahoma AG already called "facially absurd," in a real courtroom, against a national firm on its home turf. The letter was meant to intimidate. It functioned as service of process. The complaint itself is well made, and its strongest section is also its most dangerous. Paragraphs 32 through 36 are devastating on TTU's hypocrisy: TTU voted for the Baylor sanctions in 2017 and now insists the conference has no power to sanction anyone. That is good lawyering, and it should sting. But it cuts both ways. Baylor was sanctioned after findings, through process, for institutional conduct. The Big 12 wants to sanction TTU preemptively, for fielding a player a Texas court has enjoined the NCAA from declaring ineligible. The state court injunction is the elephant in the room, and paragraph 62 works very hard not to look at it— "this isn't about the injunction." But it is. The District Court of Lubbock County enjoined the NCAA from barring Brendan Sorsby from practicing or playing for Texas Tech, on a 5K bond, through a trial not set until February 2027. The practical effect is that Sorsby plays the entire 2026 season. The Big 12 now asks a federal court to declare that it may bar Texas Tech from competing for letting him. Strip away the labels, and the conference is asking one sovereign's courts to restore the very exclusion another sovereign's court just lifted—relabeled, from "NCAA eligibility" to "conference governance," but identical in result. That's a real trap, and it is structural. Federal and state courts keep a wary distance from one another's orders; neither likes to be handed the other's ruling to undo. A federal court will rarely enjoin a state proceeding, and it is nearly as reluctant to grant relief that achieves the same end through the back. The Big 12 was shrewd to choose a declaratory judgment over an injunction— a softer vehicle that does not, on its face, touch the state order. But that shrewdness cuts both ways: declaratory relief is discretionary, and a federal judge may simply decline to issue a declaration whose only real function is to neutralize a state court's ruling. The conference says it is exercising independent governance authority. A skeptical judge may see a conference trying to do through the side door what a state court has barred the NCAA from doing through the front— and may decline to hold the door. The Big 12 should win this, and it should win because the law is not actually close: a private association enforcing its own bylaws against a member who bet on his own games is ordinary self-governance. The Texas AG has managed the rare feat of threatening a lawsuit so weak that he walked his adversary into court, drew a public rebuke from a fellow attorney general within 24 hours, and turned a meeting the Big 12 might never have held into a federal complaint with his own letter stapled to the back as an Exhibit. Crazy times. Thanks to @TomMarsLaw for making the complaint available.
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ThrowBackFrog retweeted
Is this the cleanest uniform we’ve seen at the Aer Lingus College Football Classic so far 🤔🤔
FIRST LOOK | The alternate uniform we’ll wear when we take the field in Ireland‼️ #GoFrogs 🐸 #ForTheWorthy
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ThrowBackFrog retweeted
8️⃣:1️⃣7️⃣
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ThrowBackFrog retweeted
今回宿泊したFort Worthは地元新潟県長岡市と姉妹都市なんです 嬉しくて写真撮りに来た!
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ThrowBackFrog retweeted
Replying to @FreddyLA7
how about a quick stop in Fort Worth on the 18th ?! visit our restoration center, including a snow room! instagram.com/reels/DOLoFVMD…
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“Southern Americans”
Replying to @FreddyLA7
I don't think even Southern Americans have seen the South as much as you have 😭
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Am I the only one that remembers just how HATED the spikes were in those first few years? (I always loved them)
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ThrowBackFrog retweeted
IRELAND ALTERNATE DROP!!!!! What do we think? ⬇️⬇️⬇️
FIRST LOOK | The alternate uniform we’ll wear when we take the field in Ireland‼️ #GoFrogs 🐸 #ForTheWorthy
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ThrowBackFrog retweeted
I like our new jerseys
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