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He was a 210-pound running back in high school, but Patterson switched him to defensive end where Hughes has blossomed into a future NFL draft pick.
"We want to be known as the best developmental program in Texas," Patterson said.
This season's TCU team has developed into a dominant one. The Frogs have blown out most of their opposition -- nine victories by at least 25 points -- and come up big on the road. TCU has won at Virginia, Clemson and BYU.
"It's a very strong underneath current of confidence and that's the reason they have played on the road so well," Patterson said of his team's personality. "Not a high emotion group, not a bunch of yellers and screamers."
TCU's success has turned the 49-year-old Patterson into a rising star in coaching, a guy who's name frequently comes up when another job opens up. Last year, there was speculation he'd end up at his alma mater, Kansas State.
This season, when Notre Dame was looking for a coach, Patterson was mentioned as a possible candidate.
But he agreed to a new contract earlier this month intended to keep him at TCU through 2016. Patterson said TCU has everything he needs and he doesn't think reaching the BCS means the job is done in Fort Worth.
"For us it's been a dream come true, but we understand there's a fine line between penthouse and outhouse," he said. "People my think we reached the pinnacle. No, we haven't. We want to play for the national championship. We want to be the USC of Texas. The private school that competes for championships."
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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