ӣƵAPP

Skip to main content
inthenews

Share

From the local news to The New York Times, the Washington Post and the Los Angeles Times, TCU’s appearance in the College Football Playoff had Horned Frogs all over the news.


Jan. 16, 2022
Fort Worth Star-Telegram
As we look back on a magical 13-2 season that ended in the national championship game, it’s important for TCU fans to remember the players that made all the magic possible. Remember their stories, their love for one another and the program itself, their resiliency in the face of adversity and doubters. That should be the defining memory of this team.


Jan. 11, 2023 
KXAS-TV
Fans gathered last night to welcome home the TCU Horned Frogs from California after falling short in the College Football National Championship game against Georgia. “TCU, we love you. We want to make sure they know we have nothing but love and support for them back here in Fort Worth,” said Stephanie Corso, a TCU alumna, at the welcome.


Jan. 11, 2023
Fort Worth Star-Telegram 
Save for the gory finale, it was all organically perfect, memorable, and so much fun. “This is probably the worst day, I guess, ever,” TCU offensive lineman Steve Avila said. “I wanted to bring one back for the city. One for my teammates. That’s all that matters to me. This loss ... this sucks. We didn’t get it done.” There is no shame in losing to Georgia in the national title game. Even by a historic margin. Because, you’re in the national title game. The final record says TCU lost two games, but no team won the 2022 college football season like TCU.


Jan. 10. 2023
Fort Worth Star-Telegram 
The TCU Horned Frogs faced the Georgia Bulldogs in the College Football Playoff National Championship in Los Angeles. Patricia Cook Smith stood alongside more than 200 other TCU fans and students to welcome them home, wearing a letter jacket and carrying a cutout of a player from the 1938 championship team. That player was her father, Bob Cook, a left tackle for the team when they claimed that 1938 championship title. “Today they’re just as important as they were 48 hours ago, and I want to help make sure they know that,” Smith said.   


Jan. 9, 2023 
Fox News 
Ahead of the college championship game, Chancellor Victor J. Boschini, Jr. told Fox News Digital in an interview that the school has evolved over the past 150 years. “Everybody here is connected in a way that I’ve never seen,” he said. Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs Kathy Cavins-Tull told Fox News Digital that the university’s rich history is what makes it so special. “’Frogs for Life’ is an attitude that brings us together and helps generations of Horned Frogs to know that they always have a home at TCU,” she said. 


Jan. 9, 2023 
CBS Sports 
Johnny Hodges loves his chips. “We’re a team full of chips,” the TCU linebacker said. In Hodges shorthand, that translates to chips on shoulders. They weren't meant to be here in the College Football Playoff National Championship. “I didn't think I was good enough to play at a Power Five [program],” Hodges said. “My dad did. He got me here.” Cornerback Tre'Vious Hodges-Tomlinson said, “We have a lot of guys on this team who are three-stars, two-stars that didn't have many offers coming out of high school, so I feel like everybody already had a chip on their shoulder coming in.”


Jan. 8, 2023 
New York Post 
Emari Demercado smiled broadly as he imagined what his emotions would be like Monday night. For the first time in his life, he will walk inside SoFi Stadium, and he will do so as a player living out his wildest dream, playing in the national championship a five-minute drive from his Inglewood home. “Literally, if I walk to the end of my street, I can see the stadium,” the TCU running back said. “To be able to grow up here, have my whole childhood here, leave and go to ӣƵAPP and be able to finish my college career here, it’s almost like it’s scripted.”  


Jan. 8, 2023 
Los Angeles Times 
Make an all-powerful, sentient frog for your unofficial mascot and you might find yourself in the College Football Playoff championship game — or at least that’s the case for the TCU Horned Frogs. During the last few years, the Fort Worth-based team has embraced the Hypnotoad — a recurring bit character from the animated sci-fi series “Futurama” — because of the amphibious commonality between the character and a horned frog. In the show, Hypnotoad has hypnotic powers capable of putting anyone and everyone in his trance. Those entranced by the being are overwhelmed by his large eyes with oscillating pupils and the aggressive whirring he releases before they loudly proclaim, “All glory to the Hypnotoad’,” Tre'Vius Hodges-Tomlinson, senior cornerback, said, “You ain’t even got to see it, you just know, you hear the whole crowd going crazy. Just to have the Hypnotoad — I’m very thankful.”


Jan. 8, 2023 
Fort Worth Star-Telegram 
To appreciate TCU’s place in the national title game, you must go back to the discussions when TCU contemplated if having a football team as worth the hassle and the money. “There was some discussion (among the university leadership), early in my career, ‘Is athletics really that important to a university?’” said retired TCU assistant athletic director Ross Bailey ’76, who worked at the school from 1976 to 2020. Chris Del Conte, former TCU athletic director now with the University of ӣƵAPP, said, “The common denominator to all of this is their board has been super focused on reinvesting, and a big part of that is athletics. Gary (Patterson) built a successful program. But this is not a Cinderella. This is who TCU is.”


Jan. 8, 2023 
KTVT-TV
Hundreds of fans from Fort Worth - and even some from Santa Monica - turned out in purple to cheer on the Frogs. “I love that this team is worth celebrating,” said Fort Worth Mayor Mattie Parker. Horned Frog families traveled together to watch the historic moment and TCU gained fans in California as well.


Jan. 8, 2023 
Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Ellen Saunders is proof that giddy knows no age limit. Just ask her about her beloved TCU Horned Frogs football team, who has supported them for many years. “I have my house shoes that are purple, my nightgown is purple, I’m just waiting for the day,” said Saunders, a 1949 graduate who lives at The Stayton senior living facility. “I can’t remember the last time I’ve been so excited about something,” Saunders said. “But whatever happens I am so proud of these young men. But oh my, wouldn’t it be so wonderful if they could win a national championship for all of us who have been so loyal for so long?”


Jan. 7, 2023 
New York Post
Quentin Johnston had the opportunity to enter the transfer portal. Despite the change in coaches at TCU after a dismal 5-7 campaign, Johnston decided to stay. “Leaving never crossed my mind,” the star wideout said Saturday at the L.A. Convention Center. “People came up to me, asking me, kind of just assuming [I was going to transfer]. I didn’t just fall in love with the football program. I fell in love with the TCU community as a whole. And, plus, I built relationships with people on the team, a lot of my brothers that I came in with.”


Jan. 6, 2023
ӣƵAPP Monthly 
TCU is perfectly positioned to pull off a monumental upset and capture the school’s first title in 84 years. T-C-Who? This is the team picked to finish seventh in the Big 12, the team that entered the Michigan game a seven-and-a-half-point underdog. The team didn’t appear to inspire too much concern in the Big Ten champions. TCU coaches and players watched a video in which Wolverines linebacker Junior Colson seemed unaware of which conference the Frogs played in. “Well, you know now,” TCU safety Bud Clark said after the game. “The landscape of college football has changed, and I think the perception of the Big 12 has changed,” Head Coach Sonny Dykes said. “I think all of that allowed us to get in the playoff, and then it was up to us to do something with that opportunity.” And, well, maybe seizing that opportunity will be just a little bit easier if big-name opponents keep underestimating TCU.


Jan. 6, 2023
ӣƵAPP Highways 
It has been a roller coaster for generations of TCU fans and players. The ups and downs have included two 1930s-era national championships and a Rose Bowl victory after the 2010 season. Now, TCU is headed to a national championship game. “I watched on TV every minute of every game this team played and about halfway through the season, I realized this wasn’t good luck or a fluke or getting the breaks,” said legendary CBS anchor Bob Schieffer, a 1959 TCU journalism graduate for whom the school’s College of Communication is named. “What we are seeing was a great football team.”


Jan. 6, 2023 
Fort Worth Star-Telegram 
As he reflected back on his breakout performance in the Fiesta Bowl, TCU running back Emari Demercado kept reiterating how much the game felt like a movie. When star Kendre Miller went out with a knee injury, the Horned Frogs turned to Demercado as the lead back against one of the best defenses in the country. In a tense situation, Demercado didn’t flinch and produced the most rushing yards the Wolverines allowed all season. “It was big for me,” Demercado said. “Always having that confidence of what you’re capable of and finally being able to really put it on display.”


Jan. 6, 2023
Fort Worth Star-Telegram 
Senior Griffin Kell made his only field goal attempt and all six extra points as TCU beat Michigan in the College Football Playoff national semifinal on Saturday. When Kell’s time is up at TCU, he will be among the best kickers in Horned Frogs history. “I am just super blessed to have everyone in my life. They have helped me get to where I am today,” Kell added. “It’s surreal. Playing for a national championship with TCU...it’s pretty crazy.”


Jan. 6, 2023
The Washington Post 
When TCU takes the field in the College Football Playoff national championship game, the team will be nearly two-touchdown underdogs. Legendary coach Dutch Meyer might have preferred it that way the last time TCU played for a national title. “We are the favorites and all the kids know it, and that doesn’t help,” Meyer told the Fort Worth Star-Telegram ahead of TCU’s meeting with Carnegie Tech in the Sugar Bowl on Jan. 2, 1939.


Jan. 6, 2023
Fort Worth Star-Telegram
TCU’s near perfect season and historic berth into the College Football Playoff National Championship has generated a level of excitement that is perhaps unprecedented in recent memory, extending well beyond University Drive. The national spotlight on TCU during the Fiesta Bowl on Dec. 31 and ahead of Monday’s battle for the title against Georgia is acquainting tens of millions of people with Fort Worth’s hometown university.


Jan. 6, 2023
KTVT-TV
The countdown is on for the TCU Horned Frogs to take on the defending national champions, the Georgia Bulldogs, in the national championship game in Inglewood, California at SoFi Stadium. In Fort Worth, TCU fans lined W. Cantey Street as five buses rolled through for the team send off. “It's just such an incredible thing. Probably something that we will never see again in our lifetime,” said Suzy Lockwood, associate dean for nursing and nurse anesthesia. Among the crowd, creative signs expressing the fans’ support for the team. “I threw it together and it's just something that's from heart and it's 'bring home the ’ship’,” said TCU fan Keith Hall.


Jan. 6, 2023
Fort Worth Report 
Barbara Dike graduated from TCU in 1968 — she was part of the cheerleading team and met her husband, who also graduated in 1968. “I’ve been happy all fall. It’s so emotional,” Dike said. “My kids and my family came here. Really, it goes way back. I love it. Everybody across the nation is adopting us. They’re all for the underdog.” Fans cheered as TCU football buses departed from the Amon G. Carter Stadium to the airport for the championship game. Dike got emotional as the buses drove by her. Her connection to TCU runs deep. Her father, Don Smith, played TCU football before he graduated from the university in 1934.


NBC 5
Jan. 5, 2023
We asked Incoming TCU incoming President Daniel Pullin his reaction when the team won the game that got them there. “Well, it was joy and pride, and I probably welled up a little bit,” said Pullin, who discussed the national attention the university is now receiving. “There is really not a corner of our university that isn't benefitting right now, and the goodness that we have known for so long, each and every day here on campus, is not being lost on the world,” said Pullin.


Jan. 5, 2023
Fort Worth ӣƵAPP Magazine
TCU’s march to the national stage at the dawn of its 150th birthday has been the agent of an awakening that perhaps only Barton Stone, Billy Graham, or Jim Wacker could have induced. “I couldn’t script a better way to do it than this. That’s how incredible it’s been,” said Chancellor Victor J. Boschini, Jr. of the university beginning its sesquicentennial by having the football team competing in front of a worldwide audience for the College Football Playoff national championship.


Jan. 5, 2023 
Fort Worth Report 
Daniel Pullin, current John V. Roach Dean of the TCU Neeley School of Business and soon-to-be university president, discusses the impact of the TCU football season that will see the team in the National Championship game. “There are a lot of eyeballs paying attention to TCU, and we’re excited to be able to tell the story. As proud as we are of the football team, we’re really, really proud of what’s going on academically and otherwise at this institution. And this moment’s giving us a chance to let the rest of the world know how special a place this is to be a student, to be a faculty member, to be on staff or to be a proud alumnus,” Pullin said.


Jan. 4, 2023 
Fort Worth Report 
TCU’s win over Michigan propelled the Horned Frogs to the College Football Playoff National Championship final for the first time in the program’s history – and, with it, Fort Worth’s chance to market itself on a national level. The economic impact of TCU’s season has not gone unnoticed. With increased eyes on and interest in the Horned Frogs, Fort Worth’s hoteliers and retailers have seen an influx of people and dollars to the area. “As Fort Worth awaits its final game on Jan. 9, the lasting impact of TCU’s appearance in the national championship will be felt for years to come,” said Brandom Gengelbach, president and CEO of the Fort Worth Chamber of Commerce. “I think TCU has real similarities and really is the epitome of who Fort Worth is. It’s a smaller university. We’re a smaller community.”


Jan. 2, 2023
Sports Illustrated 
Georgia and TCU play for the college football national championship Jan. 9. It’s a meeting of two schools and football programs that don’t have much in common, other than excellent teams this season. In the old-school format of a boxing tale of the tape, Sports Illustrated put together a 50-item chart that compares and contrasts the two College Football Playoff finalists.


Jan. 1, 2023 
Fort Worth Star-Telegram 
A few minutes before kickoff, Chancellor Victor J. Boschini, Jr. escaped from his suite, away from the game. He typically prefers to watch from the press box, where he can focus on the field, but TCU’s game against Michigan didn’t really allow for it. No. 3 TCU’s 51-45 win over No. 2 Michigan in the 2022 Fiesta Bowl on Saturday in Glendale, Arizona, could do for the school what winning the Rose Bowl did back in 2011. After the game, TCU players, coaches, administrators, cheerleaders and so many other TCU people, ran around and celebrated on the field. Boschini navigated alums and coaches while radiating happiness. Jeremiah Donati, director of intercollegiate athletics, said, “Honestly, this is one of the most surreal moments of my life.”


Dec. 31, 2022
The New York Times 
Officially, the ӣƵAPP Christian University mascot is the Horned Frog. But the team’s real hero is the Hypnotoad, a “Futurama” gag of mesmerizing power. The silent sentient amphibian with pulsating eyes and amorphous powers has provided TCU with an incalculable edge this season. This fall, after the new football coach, Sonny Dykes, had encouraged everyone involved with the program to let their creative flags fly, the Hypnotoad curiosity morphed into something else. “One game, I’m standing on the sidelines looking up and thinking, ‘I don’t understand what it is, but it’s awesome,’” said Jason Andrews, director of football creative media who oversees TCU's similarly smart, subversive social media account.


Dec. 31, 2022
The Washington Post
That stodgy old College Football Playoff, long the province of kingdoms, apex predators and chalk, finally hatched itself a darling Saturday. Somehow, it will send to its Los Angeles finale one vivid batch of purple Frogs. How March Madness of it. Never in the previous eight years of semifinals rich in the humdrum had an underdog upended all known thoughts as did the ӣƵAPP Christian Horned Frogs in their madcap 51-45 deprogramming of Michigan in the Fiesta Bowl national semifinal. Now TCU, not even close to ranked at season’s outset, with an enrollment of only 12,273, and hardly fancied even in its state full of football snobs, will play in the national championship game against Georgia. “If you look at the teams that play for a national championship,” said Sonny Dykes, the coach in his 13th season at four colleges but his first at TCU, “typically they’re not picked seventh in their conference.”


Dec. 31, 2022 
The New York Times 
Sonny Dykes is not the ideal jut-jawed football coach. He opens his program up, instead of building walls around it. He freely acknowledges there were times when he was a younger coach — several, in fact — that the pressure of winning games became suffocating. What Dykes is doing though, in his first year at TCU, is turning the college football world on its ear. The last time TCU played for a national championship was in the 1938 season when it claimed a title by beating Carnegie Tech in the Sugar Bowl. “We know we’re going to hear it again,” said Dykes, whose players listened to analysts — and even Michigan players — who wondered how the Horned Frogs could stay in the game. “It’s not going to stop now. We play in 10 days and we’re going to hear the same crap.”


Dec. 8, 2022 
PaperCity Magazine
TCU quarterback Max Duggan’s rise to Heisman Trophy finalist is one of the best stories in sports. And Fort Worth is all in. The city has grown increasingly more purple throughout the fall, as TCU’s magical season came into focus. Everyone seems to be wearing their favorite shade of purple these days with the college football playoffs beckoning. From light lavender to rich royal purple — and not just on game day. 


Dec. 1, 2022
ESPN 
The 12 stories behind TCU's football run to 12-0 includes a new era, Max Duggan, TCU's fanbase, Hypnotoad and the creative marketing team. On Nov. 30, 2021, Sonny Dykes landed in a helicopter at midfield of Amon G. Carter Stadium, awash in purple lights, for his arrival as the new head coach at TCUOver a year later, TCU is ranked No. 3 and is headed to the national championship.

Tag IconIn The News