Jarrett Anderson
Wide Receivers
After serving as a graduate assistant coach for the last three
seasons,
Jarrett Anderson has been elevated to a full-time position with
the Horned
Frogs. Anderson will coach the TCU wide receivers.
In his three seasons at TCU, Anderson has assisted with the
offensive line.
A two-year letterman at New Mexico, Anderson joined the TCU staff
in August
1998. He spent the previous season as an assistant coach at Tyler
Junior
College, working with the running backs and receivers.
After completing his eligibility at New Mexico, Anderson spent one
season as
a graduate assistant for the Lobos. Then, Anderson entered
private business
for two years. Anderson lettered at New Mexico in the 1992 and
1993 seasons.
Prior to New Mexico, Anderson spent two years at Tyler Junior
College.
He attended Robert E. Lee High School in Tyler, where he lettered
and earned
all-district 13-5A honors in both football and baseball. He also
received
all-East Texas honors in both sports. Anderson graduated from
New Mexico
in 1993 with a bachelors degree in business and he is currently
pursuing a
masters degree in TCUs MLA program.
The 30-year-old Anderson is married to the former Lisa Watson of
Marshall,
Texas.
David Bailiff
Defensive Line
One of the top recruiters in the state of Texas, David Bailiff
will coach the
defensive line at TCU. A former standout player at Southwest
Texas, Bailiff
served as the assistant head coach/defensive coordinator for the
Bobcats. In
addition, he coached the defensive line. In 1999, Bailiff was
selected by
the American Football Coaches Association as the NCAA I-AA
Assistant Coach
of the Year.
A two-term assistant coach at at Southwest Texas, Bailiff coached
for the
Bobcats from 1989-91, working with the late John OHara for one
year and
with Dennis Franchione for two years. Bailiff left SWT in 1992 for
an
assistant coaching position at New Mexico, where he handled the
defensive
line and recruiting. He then returned to SWT in 1997 to take over
as the
defensive coordinator. He added assistant head coaching duties to
his role
in 1999.
Bailiff earned four letters on the offensive line for SWT from
1977-80. As a
player, Bailiff was named All-Lone Star Conference as well as
honorable
mention All-America. A 1981 graduate of Southwest Texas, Bailiff
was named
honorable mention to the Lone Star Conference Team of the Decade.
In 1996,
Bailiff was inducted into the Southwest Texas Hall of Honor.
Bailiff and his
wife, Angie, have twin sons, Grayson and Gregory, and a daughter
Brooke.
Willie Mack Garza
Cornerbacks
One of the younger members of the Horned Frogs new coaching staff
is Willie
Mack Garza. A former standout at Texas, Garza spent the previous
four
seasons as the defensive backs coach at Western Michigan under
Gary Darnell.
He went to WMU from the University of Texas, where he both played
and
coached for Darnell.
Western Michigan ended the 2000 season with a 9-3 record, dropping
the
Mid-American Conference Championship game to Marshall. The
Broncos finished
in the top-20 nationally in all four defensive categories,
including fourth
in scoring defense (11.5 points), ninth in total defense (283.2)
and 13th in
pass defense (178.0). WMU held opponents to less than 100 yards
passing on
four occassions.
Garza, 31, spent the 1994-96 seasons as a graduate assistant in
Austin where
he worked with the UT cornerbacks and special teams. Before that,
he was a
four-year starter for the Longhorns as a cornerback and free
safety. He was
the Southwest Conference Newcomer of the Year in 1988 and an
All-SWC
selection.
Garza received a bachelor's degree in social work (1993) and is
currently
pursuing a master's in the same field at Texas. A native of
Refugio, Texas,
(DOB: 11-16-69), Willie was a prep All-American running back and
three-year
all-state pick as a running and defensive back. He was recently
chosen for
induction into the Texas High School Hall of Fame.
Mike Schultz
Offensive Coordinator/Running Backs
Since arriving in Fort Worth in January 1998, Mike Schultz has
guided the TCU
running backs to record-setting levels. In addition to coaching
the TCU
running backs, Schultz will now serve as the offensive
coordinator.
The TCU running game has consistently proven to among the best in
the
nation, ranking among the national leaders in each of the last
three years.
Led by All-American LaDainian Tomlinson, the 2000 Frogs rushed for
a 275.6
yards per contest, ending the year fourth in the nation in rushing
yards per
game. Tomlinson, a finalist for the Heisman Trophy and winner of
the Doak
Walker National Running Back award, led the nation in rushing with
a
school-record 2,158 yards. In 1999, Tomlinson led the NCAA in
rushing with
1,850 yards.
A native of Houston, Texas, Schultz had served the previous six
seasons at
New Mexico, the first four as the secondary coach and the final
two as the
Lobos assistant head coach and running backs coach. Recruiting
extensively
in East Texas, the greater Houston area, and the Texas junior
colleges,
Schultz has proven to be one of the top recruiters in Texas.
Under Schultzs guidance at New Mexico, four different Lobos
earned
all-conference honors during his six campaigns there. UNM
cornerback Eric
Jack and free safety Ray Wilson were named all-league in 1993,
while
cornerback Art Celestine was a second-team pick in 1994. In 1995,
Lennox
Gordon nabbed first-team All-WAC honors.
His coaching career began at his alma mater, Sam Houston State, in
1979.
Schultz then assisted at Texas-El Paso (1981) and Kansas State
(1982).
Schultzs next stop was with the Fred Akers staff at Texas for
one season
(1985), then he spent four years (1986-89) at Round Rock (TX)
Westwood High
School as an assistant before reuniting with joining Dennis
Franchione at
Southwest Texas State for the 1990-91 seasons.
The 43-year-old Schultz earned two letters for Sam Houston State
as a
quarterback and wide receiver, following a one-year stop at Tyler
Junior
College. Schultz received his bachelors degree from Sam Houston
State in
1979. A member of the American Football Coaches Association,
Schultz and
his wife, Cindy, have three daughters - Taylor, Kendall, and
Jordan.
Dan Sharp
Tight Ends/Special Teams
One of the more popular Horned Frog products, Dan Sharp is in his
second
stint on the TCU coaching staff. Sharp, who will coach the tight
ends and
coordinate the TCU special teams, coached seven seasons at TCU
before
joining the staff at Tulsa in 1998.
Before spending three seasons (1998-2000) at Tulsa, Sharp coached
at TCU
(1991-97) under both Jim Wacker and Pat Sullivan. He coached tight
ends for
five years and defensive ends for two seasons. Before joining the
TCU staff
on a full-time basis, Sharp served as a Horned Frog graduate
assistant under
Wacker.
Sharp was a prime force on TCUs 1984 team that finished the
regular-season
with an 8-3 mark and a trip to the Bluebonnet Bowl. In addition to
providing
some outstanding blocking for TCUs vaunted running attack, Sharp
caught 42
passes for 596 yards and seven touchdowns that season, gaining
all-Southwest
Conference recognition at tight end.
Following his career at Frogland, Sharp spent the next two seasons
in
professional football with the Atlanta Falcons before returning to
his alma
mater in 1988. He received his B.S. degree in secondary education
from TCU
in 1985, and his masters in liberal arts in 1992. Sharp and his
wife Cindy,
have two children: Alexandra and Andrea.
Eddie Williamson
Offensive Line
A 25-year veteran of the college coaching ranks, Eddie Williamson
comes to
TCU from Wake Forest University, where he served as the offensive
coordinator and offensive line coach. Williamson will coach the
offensive
line at TCU.
Williamson joined the WFU staff in January of 2000, after
previously serving
as the offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Texas
Southern
University. Prior to his tenure at Texas Southern, Williamson
served as an
assistant coach at several different universities, including
Baylor (in both
1998 and 1983), North Carolina (1993-97), Wake Forest (1991-92),
South
Carolina (1989-90), Georgia (1984), Duke (1978-82) and Furman
(1974-75,
77).
Williamson also has experience as a head coach on the collegiate
level. He
served as the head coach at Virginia Military Institute from
1985-88. In
all, Williamson has been a part of nine bowl teams during his
career,
including the Demon Deacons' 1992 Independence Bowl squad. While
previously
at Wake Forest, Williamson helped develop a young offensive line
into a
solid, dependable unit, which was a key to the team's success
during that
bowl season.
Williamson's college coaching career began soon after graduating
from
Davidson College in 1974. He served as a graduate assistant coach
at Furman
in 1975 before spending one year as an academic counselor to the
football
team at North Carolina, also under Dooley.
A native of Pendleton, S.C., Williamson played three seasons of
football at
Davidson (1971-73). He was a standout linebacker for the Wildcats
and served
as team captain as a senior. Williamson is married to the former
Patricia
Ogle of High Point (N.C.). The Williamsons have three children -
Eddie III,
Carrie Beth and Tricia.