Deep search
Rewards
Search
Copilot
Images
Videos
Maps
News
Shopping
More
Flights
Travel
Hotels
Real Estate
Notebook
Top stories
Sports
U.S.
2024 Election
Local
World
Science
Technology
Entertainment
Business
More
Politics
Any time
Past hour
Past 24 hours
Past 7 days
Past 30 days
Best match
Most recent
Dallas mayor, TCU Sucks
Dallas mayor Eric Johnson wears ‘TCU sucks’ shirt at city council meeting
The Mustangs and Horned Frogs are set to reignite their rivalry on Saturday at Gerald J. Ford Stadium, the last scheduled appearance for the game in Dallas.
Dallas mayor sports his 'TCU Sucks' shirt at Wednesday city council meeting
Dallas mayor Eric Johnson is getting in the spirit for Saturday's Battle of the Iron Skillet in North Texas. Mayor Johnson sported a "TCU Sucks," shirt to Wednesday's Dallas City Council briefing, showing his bias ahead of the historic rivalry between SMU and Texas Christian this Saturday at Gerald J.
Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson, other council members sport 'TCU Sucks' shirt at city council briefing
The SMU Mustangs and TCU Horned Frogs are set to face off Saturday at Gerald J. Ford Stadium, which is the last time the rivalry game is scheduled in Dallas.
Dallas mayor wears 'TCU Sucks' shirt ahead of Iron Skillet showdown
Johnson and other leaders wore shirts simply stating "TCU Sucks" ahead of the Battle for the Iron Skillet. The mayor said he received the "awesome shirt" from council member Chad West. Johnson grew up in Dallas, but did not attend SMU. The football game between TCU and SMU will be held at Gerald J. Ford Stadium in Dallas on Saturday.
Dallas Mayor Dons 'TCU Sucks' Shirt As Horned Frogs Prepare to Pause Rivalry With SMU
Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson & members of Dallas City Council wore “TCU Sucks” T-shirts at Wednesday’s city council meeting. TCU decided to “pause” the SMU-TCU rivalry after 2025 game. The teams play for 103rd time on Saturday pic.twitter.com/uS5CB5DjW0
‘Iron Skillet' rivalry on display at Dallas City Council meeting Wednesday
Mayor Eric Johnson – and some council members – sporting some new “TCU Sucks” shirts in support of SMU ahead of their “Iron Skillet” game against TCU.
Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson wears anti-TCU shirt ahead of team’s rivalry game against SMU
TCU and SMU will play in the Battle for the Iron Skillet on Saturday and Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson wore an anti-TCU shirt to show the Mustangs’ support.
Iron Skillet Week: Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson backs SMU ahead of rivalry game with TCU
Mayor Eric Johnson knows who he’s supporting in this year’s Battle for the Iron Skillet. Before SMU and TCU face off for the latest installment of their long-tenured rivalry, Johnson declared Monday as the official start of Iron Skillet Week in Dallas. The event will last until Saturday when the teams face off at Gerald J. Ford Stadium.
1d
on MSN
Three Reasons Why: Arguments for and against TCU’s win over SMU in rivalry game
Here’s three reasons why TCU will bounce back in the rivalry game or fall to 2-2: ...
2d
on MSN
Dallas City Council passes nearly $5B 2024-2025 budget
DALLAS — The Dallas City Council approved the budget for the 2024-2025 fiscal year on Wednesday. The roughly $5 billion ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results
Trending now
Secret Service admits failure
Kentucky judge fatally shot
Boy kills bear, saves father
$230 million crypto theft
Russia threatens retaliation
FCC chair denies Trump call
Secret Service probing post
Families lose appeal
Body found in SUV
Feds subpoena Schaeffer
Hiker injured in bear attack
1st rabies outbreak in seals
Hand count approved in GA
House repeals emission rules
Hold campaign event in MI
144K+ Mavericks recalled
Baby powder recalled
Sues pharmacy middlemen
Raises settlement offer
In-person voting begins
Bill to boost security OK'd
Top Hezbollah leader killed?
MS sheriff's office probe
Recalling 449K+ vehicles
Collapse hazard recall
PGA welcomes LIV players
Vows to remain in race
Stein's ballot bid rejected
Brazil threatens daily fines
Disney to stop using Slack
$3B for battery projects
Overdose deaths drop in US
Feedback