1999 Texas Tech Red Raiders football team

The 1999 Texas Tech Red Raiders football team represented the Texas Tech University in the 1999 NCAA Division I-A football season. The Red Raiders offense scored 253 points while the defense allowed 282 points. It was Spike Dykes final season as head coach.

1999 Texas Tech Red Raiders football
ConferenceBig 12 Conference
DivisionSouth Division
1999 record6–5 (5–3 Big 12)
Head coachSpike Dykes (13th season)
Offensive coordinatorRick Dykes (4th season)
Defensive coordinatorJohn Goodner (5th season)
Home stadiumJones Stadium
(Capacity: 50,500)
1999 Big 12 Conference football standings
Conf  Overall
Team W L    W L 
Northern Division
No. 3 Nebraska xy$  7 1     12 1  
No. 6 Kansas State x  7 1     11 1  
Colorado  5 3     7 5  
Kansas  3 5     5 7  
Iowa State  1 7     4 7  
Missouri  1 7     4 7  
Southern Division
No. 21 Texas xy  6 2     9 5  
Oklahoma  5 3     7 5  
Texas Tech  5 3     6 5  
No. 23 Texas A&M  5 3     8 4  
Oklahoma State  3 5     5 6  
Baylor  0 8     1 10  
Championship: Nebraska 22, Texas 6
  • $ BCS representative as conference champion
  • x Division champion/co-champions
  • y Championship game participant
Rankings from AP Poll

Schedule

DateTimeOpponentSiteTVResultAttendance
September 67:00 PMat Arizona State*FSNL 13–3165,091
September 117:00 PMat Louisiana–Lafayette*W 38–1718,182
September 186:00 PMNorth Texas*L 14–2145,824
October 26:00 PMTexas A&M
FSNW 21–1953,513
October 97:00 PMat Oklahoma State
L 21–4144,125
October 162:30 PMColorado
  • Jones Stadium
  • Lubbock, TX
ABCW 31–1046,424
October 236:00 PMat BaylorW 35–727,815
October 301:00 PMat MissouriL 7–3452,982
November 61:00 PMIowa State
  • Jones Stadium
  • Lubbock, TX
W 28–1641,691
November 136:00 PMat TexasFSNL 7–5883,882
November 2011:30 AMOklahoma
  • Jones Stadium
  • Lubbock, TX
FSNW 38–2842,020

Team players drafted into the NFL

PlayerPositionRoundPickNFL Club
Anthony MalbroughDefensive back5130Cleveland Browns
Sammy MorrisRunning back5156Buffalo Bills

[1]

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gollark: Primarily that some things won't be happy with it because nobody does it. Other than that:- servers may allocate limited-sized buffers for incoming request headers so you can't put too much in them (this is somewhat problematic for cookies)- headers have character set limits while bodies can be arbitrary bytes- request bodies are generated by forms and all sane clients so stuff is mostly designed to deal with those- request bodies can probably be handled more performantly because of stuff like the length field on them
gollark: In HTTP, you mean?
gollark: For some arbitrary reason I forgot.

References


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