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Tag: TCU

  • Three takeaways from No. 7 TCU’s baseball series finale against No. 1 UCLA

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    TCU head coach Kirk Saarloos sits in the back of the dugout during game two of the NCAA super regional between TCU and Indiana State at Lupton Stadium in Fort Worth, Texas, on Saturday June 10, 2023. Indiana State led 2-0 going into the fourth inning. The game was delayed two hours due to weather. TCU defeated Indians State 6-4 to move on to the College World Series in Omaha.

    TCU head coach Kirk Saarloos sits in the back of the dugout during game two of the NCAA super regional between TCU and Indiana State at Lupton Stadium in Fort Worth, Texas, on Saturday June 10, 2023. Indiana State led 2-0 going into the fourth inning. The game was delayed two hours due to weather. TCU defeated Indians State 6-4 to move on to the College World Series in Omaha.

    Special to the Star-Telegram

    The much anticipated top 10 matchup between No. 1 UCLA and No. 7 TCU was dominated by the Bruins through the first two games, and the Horned Frogs couldn’t buck that trend in a 15-5 loss to UCLA.

    It was a back-and-forth game for much of the day at Jackie Robinson Stadium in Los Angeles, but the Bruins broke the game open in the sixth with a four-run inning — three of those runs coming off Noah Franco in his first pitching appearance since the team’s second game against Arkansas — that gave them a 9-4 lead .

    TCU’s Sawyer Strosnider came into the game hitting 3 for 8 with and RBI, a run scored and a walk through the first two games with UCLA and had his best game of the series on Sunday going 2 for 2 with two RBIs and three runs scored with a home run, a triple and two walks.

    Strosnider helped spark an offense that scored more runs by the fifth inning of Sunday’s game (4) than they had in the previous two games combined (3).

    Horned Frogs chase Stump early

    Over the first two games of the series Bruins starting pitchers had been lights out, giving up a combined two runs off eight hits in 10 innings with 14 strikeouts.

    The Horned Frogs bucked that trend on Sunday chasing UCLA’s Landon Stump from the game before the third inning’s conclusion and having their most successful offensive game of the series.

    Stump gave up three runs off four hits with two walks in 2.1 innings of work. In Stump’s final inning Sawyer Strosnider got the scoring going with a triple that scored Cole Cramer. The next batter, Chase Brunson, would hit a single, scoring Strosnider — which would be Stump’s last batter faced of the day.

    This was the first multi-run inning in the series for the Horned Frogs offense.

    Uli Fernsler makes collegiate debut

    Freshman Uli Fernsler made his first start for the Horned Frogs, and similar to Stump it was a short stint.

    Fernsler gave up three runs off three hits with one strikeout in two innings of work, with the Bruins using the long ball to attack the young pitcher.

    The runs Fernsler gave up came when Will Gasparino, with a man on base, and Dominic Cadiz had back-to-back home runs in the second which put the Bruins up 3-1 when he exited the game.

    TCU bats wake up

    Sunday’s game was by far the liveliest of the series with the Horned Frogs and Bruins both taking leads and each side tying the game and the Horned Frogs offense having their best showing.

    TCU took the early lead after Strosnider and Nolan Traeger executed a double steal which caused the UCLA defender to fumble with the ball allowing the Horned Frogs to take the early lead in the first inning.

    TCU ended the game with seven hits and five runs scored and was a step in the right direction for an offense that had been scuttling over the past few games.

    TCU will be back in action against Loyola Marymount at 3 p.m. on Monday at Page Stadium.

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    Lawrence Dow

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lawrence Dow is a digital sports reporter from Philadelphia. He graduated with a master’s degree in journalism from USC. He’s passionate about movies and is always looking for a great book. He covers the Texas Rangers and other sports.

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  • Three takeaways from No. 7 TCU baseball’s series opener against No. 1 UCLA

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    TCU entered Friday’s game against No. 1 UCLA looking to avoid a three-game losing streak after dropping back-to-back games against unranked opponents.

    The trend continued with their 10-2 loss to UCLA.

    TCU head coach Kirk Saarloos said — during the broadcast on FS1 — his team would need its veterans to step up to try and help the Horned Frogs get back on track.

    “We haven’t really got off to the start we wanted to. We started the first two days well, and haven’t played good since. So we’re going to need these veteran guys to kind of weather the storm a little bit here,” said Saarloos.

    Top Horned Frogs out of commission

    The Horned Frogs suffered a major blow when ace Tommy LaPour was sidelined for this series with elbow soreness and will be re-evaluated in a couple of weeks.

    LaPour was the preseason Big 12 Pitcher of the Year and got his season off to a strong start against Vanderbilt, giving up two runs off fives hits in five innings of work with five strikeouts.

    TCU was also missing the reigning Big 12 Pitcher of the Week, Noah Franco, who was out of the game against the Bruins with an oblique injury.

    Without LaPour, TCU turned to Mason Brassfield as their Friday night starter, how did he fare?

    Bruins bounce Brassfield in second inning

    Brassfield did not give up any runs in the first inning: He forced a pop-up to end the inning after allowing back-to-back singles.

    The next inning Brassfield would not be so lucky, after allowing a lead off double to Aiden Aguayo, Will Gasparino came up one batter later and hit his own double that scored the Bruins’ first run of the game.

    The Bruins inning continued with a single and a hit by pitch that loaded the bases for Roch Cholowsky, the presumptive No. 1 pick in the upcoming MLB Draft, Cholowsky broke the inning open with a grand slam that put the Bruins up 5-0.

    Brassfield allowed two more base runners before being pulled for Tyler Phenow.

    Pitching has been a problem for the Horned Frogs in their last three games, with the team giving up a total of 33 runs.

    Saarloos talked about the team’s struggles and injuries after a starting the season with back-to-back wins.

    “We got to keep playing. I mean, we haven’t last couple outings, last couple games, we’ve gotten off to really poor starts with our starting pitching, again tonight obviously, they end up getting seven in the first three [innings],but we got to keep playing. I mean, nobody’s going to feel sorry for injuries or stuff like that. We got to be able to overcome those things,” said Saarloos.

    Horned Frogs hitters stymied

    UCLA pitcher Logan Reddemann had a career day against TCU. He struck out ten Horned Frogs and gave up only one run off five hits in five innings of work.

    TCU’s first run of the game came off a Chase Brunson home run. TCU went hitless with runners in scoring position and went 2 for 16 with runners on base as the offense failed to get into rhythm against the nation’s top team.

    TCU will continue the three-game series at UCLA at 4 p.m. Saturday and 3 p.m. Sunday. The Horned Frogs will then stay in Los Angeles and play their next game against Loyola Marymount at 3 p.m. Monday at Page Stadium.


    Game schedule dates, times, locations

    • Feb. 3 Boston 110, Mavericks 100
    • Feb. 5 San Antonio 135, Mavericks 123
    • Feb. 7 San Antonio 138, Mavericks 125
    • Feb. 10 Phoenix 120, Mavericks 111
    • Feb. 12 L.A. Lakers 124, Mavericks 104
    • Feb. 20 at Minnesota, 6:30 p.m., ESPN, KFAA, MavsTV
    • Feb. 22 at Indiana, 4 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Feb. 24 at Brooklyn, 6:30 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Feb. 26 vs. Sacramento, 6:30 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Feb. 27 vs. Memphis, 7:30 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Feb. 1 Colorado 87, TCU 61
    • Feb. 7 TCU 84, Kansas State 82
    • Feb. 10 TCU 62, Iowa State 55
    • Feb. 14 TCU 95, Oklahoma State 92 (OT)
    • Feb. 17 Central Florida 82, TCU 71
    • Feb. 21 vs. West Virginia, 4 p.m., Peacock
    • Feb. 24 vs. Arizona State, 8 p.m., CBSSN
    • Feb. 28 at Kansas State, 5:30 p.m., ESPN2
    • March 3 at Texas Tech, 6 p.m., FS1
    • March 7 vs. Cincinnati, 1 p.m., TNT
    • Feb. 1 Texas Tech 62, TCU 60
    • Feb. 4 TCU 90, Houston 45
    • Feb. 8 Colorado 80, TCU 79
    • Feb. 12 TCU 83, Baylor 67
    • Feb. 15 TCU 59, West Virginia 50
    • Feb. 18 TCU 72, Houston 50
    • Feb. 22 vs. Iowa State, 3 p.m., ESPN
    • Feb. 25 at Cincinnati, 5:30 p.m., ESPN+
    • March 1 vs. Baylor, 3 p.m., ESPN
    • March 4-8 Big 12 tournament (at Kansas City, Mo.), TBA
    • Feb. 13 TCU 5, Vanderbilt 4
    • Feb. 14 TCU 5, Arkansas 4
    • Feb. 15 Oklahoma 12, TCU 2 (seven innings)
    • Feb. 17 UT Arlington 11, TCU 8
    • Feb. 20 at UCLA, 7 p.m., FS1
    • Feb. 21 at UCLA, 4 p.m., BigTen+
    • Feb. 22 at UCLA, 3 p.m., BigTen+
    • Feb. 23 at Loyola Marymount, 3 p.m., none
    • Feb. 27 vs. New Haven, 6 p.m., ESPN+
    • Feb. 28 vs. New Haven, 2 p.m., ESPN+
    • March 1 vs. New Haven, 1 p.m., ESPN+
    • Jan. 27 Stars 4, St. Louis 3
    • Jan. 29 Stars 5, Vegas 4 (SO)
    • Jan. 31 Stars 3, Utah 2
    • Feb. 2 Stars 4, Winnipeg 3 (OT)
    • Feb. 4 Stars 5, St. Louis 4
    • Olympic break
    • Feb. 25 vs. Seattle, 7 p.m., Fox, Victory+
    • Feb. 28 vs. Nashville, 7 p.m., Victory+
    • March 2 at Vancouver, 9 p.m., Victory+
    • March 3 at Calgary, 8 p.m., Victory+
    • March 6 vs. Colorado, 7 p.m., Victory+
    • 2026 season
    • Aug. 29 vs. North Carolina (at Dublin), TBA
    • Sept. 12 vs. Grambling State, TBA
    • Sept. 19 vs. Arkansas State, TBA
    • Sept. 26 at Central Florida, TBA
    • Oct. 3 vs. BYU, TBA
    • Oct. 17 at Baylor, TBA
    • Oct. 24 vs. West Virginia, TBA
    • Oct. 31 vs. Kansas, TBA
    • Nov. 7 at Arizona, TBA
    • Nov. 14 vs. Kansas State, TBA
    • Nov. 21 vs. Utah, TBA
    • Nov. 28 at Texas Tech, TBA
    • 2026 season
    • TBA vs. TBA (at Rio de Janeiro), TBA
    • 2026 opponents (dates and times TBA; one home game will be in Rio)
    • vs. N.Y Giants
    • vs. Philadelphia
    • vs. Washington
    • vs. Arizona
    • vs. San Francisco
    • vs. Tampa Bay
    • vs. Jacksonville
    • vs. Tennessee
    • vs. Baltimore
    • at N.Y Giants
    • at Philadelphia
    • at Washington
    • at L.A. Rams
    • at Seattle
    • at Green Bay
    • at Houston
    • at Indianapolis
    • Feb. 21 Team Texas-David Starr’s Racing School
    • March 6-7 Goodguys: 16th LMC Truck Spring Lone Star Nationals
    • March 12-15 Steak Cookoff Association World Championships
    • March 14 NASCAR Racing Experience
    • March 20-21 POWRi Racing
    • March 28 Mopar Heaven
    • April 11 NASCAR Racing Experience
    • April 18 Team Texas-David Starr’s Racing School
    • April 18 Bubble Run
    • April 23-25 Pate Swap Meet
    • April 25 FuelFest
    • April 30-May 2 High Limit Racing Stockyard Stampede
    • May 1 NASCAR Truck Series: SpeedyCash.com 250
    • May 2 NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series: Andy’s Frozen Custard 340
    • May 3 NASCAR Cup Series: Wurth 400

    This story was originally published February 20, 2026 at 10:33 PM.

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    Lawrence Dow

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lawrence Dow is a digital sports reporter from Philadelphia. He graduated with a master’s degree in journalism from USC. He’s passionate about movies and is always looking for a great book. He covers the Texas Rangers and other sports.

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  • Three takeaways from TCU’s baseball game against Arkansas

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    After winning the season opener, No. 10 TCU was looking to continue its early-season success, and Chase Brunson got a quick start in the team’s 5-4 win over the No. 7 Arkansas Razorbacks on Saturday.

    The Horned Frogs have made a statement with two wins over ranked teams to start the season.

    Saturday night, pitcher/utility player Noah Franco talked about what the wins mean early on.

    “We knew we had the talent coming in. We were a good ball club, now we’re good ball brothers. We’re all coming together and playing like one. Yesterday, we’re getting punched in the face, and we’re coming right back,” Franco said. “There’s nothing really affecting us in the dugout, practice, any of that, we’re all in together.“

    Centerfielder Brunson went 2 for 4 with three RBIs and a run scored. But it wasn’t just him. The entire Horned Frogs offense got off to a hot start, scoring two runs in two of the first three innings, then one in the ensuing six to open the door for Arkansas.

    Brunson talked about the key to getting off to a fast start.

    “Just get going early and stay going. Our offense is dangerous, and we got a lot of talent on it, so once one guy gets hot, the rest of the lineup will continue to grow and continue to get on base,” said Brunson.

    Franco strong out of the bullpen

    Franco is hitless in eight at-bats to start the season, but the two-way player showed off his bona fides with his first stint out of the bullpen.

    Head coach Kirk Saarloos talked about Franco’s two-way impact.

    “Noah’s great like that, like last year, I remember a couple times he didn’t have the best outing, and then he would come back in, in the DH spot and hit a homer or two. So he doesn’t let one affect the other. He’s gonna get his hits, It’s just a matter of time,” said Saarloos, “He’s gonna get going offensively. We have no doubt in our mind about it.

    “When we came into the season, when we would DH him, we thought we’d use him [as a pitcher], I wasn’t planning on using him quite as long as I did, but after the eighth inning, he rolled back to the dugout and looked me in the eyes and said, ‘I’m not coming out.’”

    Franco explained why he wanted to stay in the game.

    “How competitive I am in that type of situation, I knew I’m not gonna just try to hand it off to the next person on there. I got called for a reason,” Franco said. “Because of the top talent on the field, and I knew I had capability.”

    Franco relieved Zack James, who gave up two earned runs in two innings pitched and was TCU’s best pitcher on the day. He gave up no runs or hits with four strikeouts in three innings of work, also earning the win.

    Wasted opportunities

    Mason Broomfield gave up two runs in four innings of work off three hits with six strikeouts.

    Broomfield’s final stats may belie how much he had to work throughout the game. He had four walks and struggled to consistently find the strike zone, but when it mattered most, he stymied the Razorbacks.

    One of Arkansas’ best chances came in the third inning with the bases loaded and only one out. The Razorbacks got a fielder’s choice to score a run, but a second fielder’s choice by Aloy Kuhio ended the inning without further damage.

    Another great opportunity came in the fourth inning after an overturned call put Ryder Helfrick up with the bases loaded. Broomfield forced Helfrick to hit a soft ground out and TCU escaped the inning.

    The Razorbacks went 0 for 5 with runners in scoring position and 0 for 9 with runners on base against Broomfield and didn’t fare much better versus the other Horned Frogs pitchers, with only one hit all game with runners on base or in scoring position.

    Saarloos talked about how his pitching staff avoided giving up a big inning.

    “I think it comes down to toughness, like we’ve been talking a bunch about that, [what] you’re going to come up with in situations where you got to be resilient and kind of put the past in the past and be able to move to the next pitch and be 100% behind that pitch.

    “And I think that’s that’s key when you have a good offensive club and a great club over there, you got to make pitches. And for the most part, I thought we made some pretty good pitches.”

    TCU will play Oklahoma at 6:30 p.m. Sunday at Globe Life Field.

    This story was originally published February 14, 2026 at 11:17 PM.

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    Lawrence Dow

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lawrence Dow is a digital sports reporter from Philadelphia. He graduated with a master’s degree in journalism from USC. He’s passionate about movies and is always looking for a great book. He covers the Texas Rangers and other sports.

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  • How Fort Worth-filmed ‘Landman’ inspired a new course at TCU

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    A combination of Hollywood and the oil and gas industry helped inspire a new course at TCU.

    “Landman” has filmed in and around TCU’s campus over the show’s first two seasons. The Fort Worth university is not just set dressing in the Paramount+ series, but a central location where one of the main characters attends school.

    The show has inspired a wave of interest in the land management profession, which spurred a new eight-week course at TCU’s Neeley School of Business called “Land Management and Land Administration.”

    “There’s an opportunity here to not only educate students about what a landman does, but ‘Hey, guess what guys? This is a profession,’” said Tom Seng, an assistant professor of energy finance at TCU. “There are a lot of young people that will get this type of knowledge and go into that job.”

    Sam Elliott as T.L., Billy Bob Thornton as Tommy and Jacob Lofland as Cooper in “Landman” episode 10, season 2, streaming on Paramount+.
    Sam Elliott as T.L., Billy Bob Thornton as Tommy and Jacob Lofland as Cooper in “Landman” episode 10, season 2, streaming on Paramount+. Emerson Miller Paramount+

    TCU’s new ‘Landman’-inspired class

    The class was born out of a few factors, including “Landman” co-creator Taylor Sheridan’s Fort Worth ties and TCU’s appearance in the show.

    Another reason is oil companies hinting to Seng that internships may be available for students if they have this knowledge of the industry. All this converged into a class that examines the actualities of the profession and what it takes to work as a real-life landman.

    To do this, Seng said he received support from the American Association of Professional Landmen, which is headquartered in Fort Worth. For more than 70 years, the association has been a resource for thousands of land professionals across the country.

    “I reached out to people I know in the industry, because I want them to come and talk, and the responses were all positive,” Seng said.

    🔥 In case you missed it…

    Each class is led by a different land professional, as students learn everything from leasing mineral rights to defining land management.

    The Star-Telegram attended a class on Tuesday, Feb. 3, where contract law was the topic of discussion. Michelle Phillips, vice president of land at Lime Rock Resources, drove up from Houston.

    When it came to lining up guest speakers for the course, Seng said it’s not often you have this many experts open and ready to help.

    “I have run programs like this in the past, but I’m not a landman,” Seng said. “You get the people that know what they’re talking about.”

    Members of the American Association of Professional Landmen talk to students during TCU’s new “Land Management and Land Administration” course.
    Members of the American Association of Professional Landmen talk to students during TCU’s new “Land Management and Land Administration” course. Courtesy of TCU’s Neeley School of Business

    Why TCU students are interested

    A total of 30 students are enrolled in the class.

    Political science major Andrew Gentile said he enrolled in the class because he wants to be an attorney. He’s also a fan of the show.

    The class offered looks at several different types of law like property, contract and oil and gas, which Gentile believes to be essential for him.

    “For myself, with those legal aspirations, I felt that it would be worthwhile to take this class,” he said.

    One thing Gentile said he’s been particularly interested in thus far is the ownership of mineral rights.

    Owning a piece of land doesn’t always mean the owner has the rights to what’s underneath, as it could have been sold to another party prior. Tracing rights ownerships over the years is like finding a piece of the puzzle, Gentile said.

    It’s also been fun to tell his family about what he’s learned.

    “My mother was ecstatic when she found out that I was able to take a class that was similar to the TV show,” Gentile said.

    Both “Landman” and the class have added to what Gentile says has been an overall “great” experience for TCU.

    The show is introducing global audiences to the university and showing a slice of Texas life. Being from the East Coast, it’s also impacting Gentile’s day-to-day life.

    “More and more people ask me about TCU than ever,” Gentile said.

    Michelle Randolph as Ainsley Norris in “Landman” episode 1, season 2, streaming on Paramount+.
    Michelle Randolph as Ainsley Norris in “Landman” episode 1, season 2, streaming on Paramount+. Emerson Miller Paramount+

    ‘Landman’ and TCU

    Ultimately, Seng said the goal is for students to land internships or jobs in the industry.

    It remains to be seen if he will offer the class again, it depends on the feedback from students after the course wraps up. If they’re interested in pursing this profession, and think this class can be a bridge to a job, than it will likely continue.

    “If they do like it, they’re going to tell their friends about it, and then that’s when we find out, ‘OK, there is enough interest to offer it again,’” Seng said. “It’s certainly an experiment, believe me.”

    Everything harkens back to “Landman,” which Seng said helped introduce this industry to the world.

    If the show was called “Oil Man” or something other than what it is, Seng isn’t sure it would have reached so many people. By calling it “Landman,” the actual name of a profession, the show is piquing audience interest from the get-go.

    Simply put, if the show is an appetizer to this world, the class is a full meal.

    “None of this would be happening without the series,” Seng said. “Absolutely not.”

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  • ‘Stop these ridiculous parties’: TCU neighborhoods are uniting to take a stand

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    Residents of the Westcliff neighborhood that borders TCU have reported loud parties at rental properties in the area in recent years.

    Residents of the Westcliff neighborhood that borders TCU have reported loud parties at rental properties in recent years.

    amccoy@star-telegram.com

    Neighborhoods that surround Texas Christian University’s campus have formed a larger neighborhood association called the Safe Neighborhood Alliance as community members grow increasingly irritated by parties and noise near their homes.

    Group leaders hope forming a larger group will amplify their voice when it comes to sharing their thoughts and displeasure with the university and law enforcement about fraternity parties, noise, and future issues that could arise around matters such as construction and campus expansion.

    Neighborhoods represented in the Safe Neighborhood Alliance include Westcliff, Westcliff West, Bluebonnet Hills, Paschal, University West and University Place. The group has met about five times over the past few months and has grown to roughly 20 members.

    The group could grow larger as word is spread to other residents and members of surrounding neighborhood associations.

    “TCU had no solutions other than to build more dorms, which takes a lot of time,” said Janet Williamson, a leader of the Safe Neighborhood Alliance who lives in Westcliff. “So all of us are coming together to come up with solutions. We need quicker solutions, and we realized how many neighborhood associations are being affected by this poor behavior [from students].”

    TCU ‘takes every noise complaint seriously’

    TCU’s Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs Mike Russel told the Star-Telegram he was not aware of the Safe Neighborhood Alliance but believes the university’s Neighbor-to-Neighbor program is helpful in addressing such issues. He said the school takes every noise complaint seriously.

    “Keeping open communication about issues affecting students and neighbors is helpful to everyone,” Russel wrote in a statement. “TCU responds to every complaint or concern about any TCU student behavior off campus. For loud parties, if we know the names of the students who hosted the party, and we have credible information linking them to a policy or law violation, the Dean of Students office initiates our conduct process. “

    Williamson said there are two main reasons why the Safe Neighborhood Alliance was formed. The group is concerned about dozens of student-occupied homes that it believes are ideal targets for theft and burglaries when students are on break. And the group wants to do something about the noise and parties that have long caused students, community members and the university to butt heads on potential solutions.

    “Ninety-nine percent of the students are lovely, and we really like them,” Williamson said. “It’s the 1%, mainly fraternities, that we’re having problems with. So the second part is to stop these ridiculous parties that are in our neighborhoods, that are so loud our houses just vibrate.”

    Alliance to hire off-duty police

    The Safe Neighborhood Alliance is collecting money to pay off-duty police officers to patrol the neighborhoods in the alliance. Members of the alliance say noise and parties are the worst during TCU football games, when the Fort Worth Police Department is already stretched thin.

    Safe Neighborhood Alliance leaders also hope their organization works alongside the Neighbor-to-Neighbor program TCU runs to connect students and community members, hoping it can inform students living on their own for the first time how to be considerate neighbors.

    TCU’s Neighbor-to-Neighbor program has been in place for several years, but started to lose its effectiveness around the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, said Lexi Lovett, a member of both the Neighbor-to-Neighbor program and the Safe Neighborhood Alliance who lives in Bluebonnet Hills.

    Lovett hopes the Safe Neighborhood Alliance can fill in the gaps in the Neighbor-to-Neighbor program.

    “The Safe Neighborhood Alliance is looking for people that can find solutions to issues that we’re all having,” Lovett said. “Just constantly having hundreds of students in one house that probably doesn’t have the capacity for that. So I think that’s where the Alliance comes in. And if TCU doesn’t move forward with the Neighbor-to-Neighbor program then we still have something to fall back on.”

    The Neighbor-to-Neighbor group met with TCU leaders Wednesday, Jan. 14, with city officials and law enforcement also present. They discussed ways the program can be more effective moving forward.

    “The Neighbor-to-Neighbor program was designed to help neighbors and students have open communication,” Lovett said. “After COVID, it kind of dropped the ball, and now it’s not an effective program in any way. I could still believe in the program if it was updated, but right now it’s just not effective.”

    Martha Jones, a member of the Neighbor-to-Neighbor program, believes the program can be rebooted and effective.

    “Before COVID, the Neighbor-to-Neighbor program was really working,” Jones said. “It helped neighbors reach out to students, and I still feel very strongly that it will help eliminate a lot of problems. It had every organization working together to come up with common solutions for problems. City staff, TCU staff, neighborhood leaders, panhellenic groups and student body representatives.”

    The Safe Neighborhood Alliance has not yet met with TCU officials but members hope they can in the near future. The next step for members of the organization is to call homeowners near TCU and ask them to contribute to their GoFundMe to hire off-duty police for additional protection for the area. A number of homeowners have already contributed, Williamson said.

    Fraternity parties a focus

    Another main goal of the Safe Neighborhood Alliance is to limit the amount of fraternity parties in their neighborhoods, or at least better enforce the city’s noise ordinance. Fort Worth currently has a sound limit in place of 70 decibels during the day and 60 decibels at night. That is about the equivalent of a loud vacuum cleaner. Residents in the area say that law is not only being broken, but shattered.

    When community members have gone to TCU officials complaining about parties, they’ve often been told TCU can’t control what students do off school property, Williamson said. When those same community members take their concerns to the police, there hasn’t been much action taken, members of the Alliance said.

    About half of the noise complaints to law enforcement from the Westcliff neighborhood from Aug. 1, 2024, through Nov. 20, 2025, were canceled without a police report being filed, according to an analysis by the Star-Telegram. The university has stated it takes every complaint seriously.

    Fort Worth City Council member Michael Crain, whose district includes much of TCU’s campus, has previously been involved in discussions between disgruntled community members and university administration. He previously told the Star-Telegram that he’s taking a more active role in bolstering the Neighbor-to-Neighbor program.

    Even as tensions rise between students and residents, most members of the Safe Neighborhood Alliance, including Jones, enjoy living near TCU, interacting with students, and being part of the university community. Jones enjoys meeting the new students who move in on her street at the beginning of semesters and makes it a point to introduce herself.

    But Jones and her fellow Safe Neighborhood Alliance members feel like they are at a point where something more needs to be done about the “1%” of students who give the entire student body a bad reputation.

    “I’m really pro-students,” Jones said. “I don’t want to sound anti-students because I love college students. The first thing I do when a student moves in is I go across the street, I introduce myself and I get their numbers. I think overall, people are just frustrated. Because they feel like this has gone on for a while and nothing gets done. So something just has to change.”

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    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Samuel O’Neal is a local news reporter at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram covering higher education and local news in Fort Worth. He joined the team in December 2025 after previously working as a staff writer at the Philadelphia Inquirer. He graduated from Temple University, where he served as the Editor-in-Chief of the school’s student paper, The Temple News.

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  • Three takeaways from No. 10 TCU’s game against Big 12 foe West Virginia

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    No. 10 TCU scored its fewest points of the season, but a last-second shot helped the Horned Frogs escape Morgantown with a 51-50 win over unranked West Virginia on Wednesday at WVU Coliseum.

    Despite a tough shooting night from Marta Suárez, the Spaniard came up huge to help the Horned Frogs avoid an upset, popping to the top of the key off an inbounds play with 2.8 seconds left. She took a jab step before knocking down the winning 3-pointer in the face of a WVU defender.

    The win was a big one for the Horned Frogs place in the Big 12 standings with Texas Tech currently undefeated and two other teams, including Utah who handed TCU it’s only loss of the season, with one loss in Big 12 play.

    Here are three takeaways from the Horned Frogs’ last-second win.

    Olivia Miles leads the way in scoring

    In a game where the Horned Frogs’ offense had its most turnovers of the season and its fewest assists, it relied on Miles to lead the way with 14 points scored on 5-for-12 shooting, but went without a shot attempt for the first half of the final quarter.

    The Mountaineers worked hard to take away Miles’ effectiveness as a scorer and held her to 0 for 1 shooting and only one assist in the final quarter.

    Turnovers haunt Horned Frogs’ offense

    TCU entered Wednesday’s game averaging the second-fewest turnovers in the Big 12 (14.0) but against a Mountaineers squad that forces the most turnovers in the league, the Horned Frogs struggled to take care of the ball, matching their season average by the end of the first half.

    The Horned Frogs’ turnovers came in myriad ways: multiple illegal screens, errant passes and offensive fouls. WVU used those turnovers to keep the game close despite an abysmal 28.3% shooting day for the Mountaineers.

    The turnovers sunk the Horned Frogs’ offense, which didn’t score its first basket of the second half until there were a little under four minutes remaining — and after a 1-for-8 start from the field with four turnovers. They ended the game with almost six times as many turnovers (24) as assists (5).

    Marta Suárez plays hero after struggles

    After scoring 20 points in three of four games, the Spanish native has struggled over the past two games as defenses have keyed in to try and slow her down.

    As teams have focused on Suárez, other players have been able to take advantage, but that was not the case on Wednesday.

    Despite her struggles from the field, Suárez continued to stay aggressive but still couldn’t find the net consistently, ending the night with 11 points. She also found herself in foul trouble, with four midway through the third quarter.

    After re-entering the game in the fourth quarter, she went scoreless on her first four shot attempts — until her 3-pointer, which won the game.

    TCU will continue with their Big 12 schedule playing Arizona on Saturday at 4 p.m. at Schollmaier Arena.

    This story was originally published January 14, 2026 at 8:36 PM.

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    Lawrence Dow

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Lawrence Dow is a digital sports reporter from Philadelphia. He graduated with a master’s degree in journalism from USC. He’s passionate about movies and is always looking for a great book. He covers the Texas Rangers and other sports.

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  • ‘I’m not going anywhere!’: Confusion plagues TCU-area favorite Cafe Bella

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    One rule of Fort Worth dining:

    Know your Bellas.

    Cafe Bella is a 27-year favorite in the TCU neighborhood, known for simple dishes and BYOB dining.

    It’s not moving.

    That’s Bella Italia, a different restaurant on Camp Bowie Boulevard.

    Ever since Bella Italia announced its move, Cafe Bella owner Eli Golemi has had to explain that they’re not related.

    “People tell me, ‘I heard you’re selling’ — I tell them I’m not going anywhere!” said Golemi, a native of Ioannina, Greece.

    She started as a server at Cafe Bella and now owns the cafe, 3548 South Hills Ave.

    “Ladies are shaking my hand, saying, ‘I’m so happy for you getting divorced,’ “ she said — “I am not getting a divorce!

    Cafe Bella owner Eli Golemi, a native of Greece, began working at the Fort Worth, Texas, restaurant as a server. She bought a share of the restaurant when founder Sali Kaba retired and now owns it outright. Seen Jan. 3, 2026.
    Cafe Bella owner Eli Golemi, a native of Greece, began working at the Fort Worth, Texas, restaurant as a server. She bought a share of the restaurant when founder Sali Kaba retired and now owns it outright. Seen Jan. 3, 2026. Bud Kennedy bud@star-telegram.com

    “”I have never been to that other restaurant! This is my only restaurant!”

    The confusion started in 1999. That’s when the prolific Kaba restaurant family opened a small restaurant on Blue Bonnet Circle named Bella Pizza and Pasta.

    Across town, chef Carlo Croci had already opened Bella Italia West on Camp Bowie Boulevard.

    The new decor at Cafe Bella in the Westcliff Shopping Center, Fort Worth, Texas, as seen Oct. 1, 2025.
    The new decor at Cafe Bella in the Westcliff Shopping Center, Fort Worth, Texas, as seen Oct. 1, 2025. Bud Kennedy bud@star-telegram.com

    That should have untangled in 2004, when the Kabas and Golemi moved their restaurant to the Westcliff Shopping Center as Cafe Bella.

    Now that Bella Italia is moving to 6115 Camp Bowie Blvd., some customers and social media commenters are confused all over again.

    Golemi just upgraded Cafe Bella. She redecorated and dialed the decor up a notch, adding softer lighting, tablecloths and nicer dinnerware, giving it the feel of a night-out restaurant at a BYOB price.

    “I grew up with my customers, and I wanted to give them a nicer experience,” she said.

    Cafe Bella in the Westcliff Shopping Center, Fort Worth, Texas, seen Oct. 1, 2025.
    Cafe Bella in the Westcliff Shopping Center, Fort Worth, Texas, seen Oct. 1, 2025. Bud Kennedy bud@star-telegram.com

    Cafe Bella has always been known for basic dishes such as chicken Marsala or baked ziti. Customers like the salmon piccata or Golemi’s salmon special from her mother’s kitchen, she said.

    “We buy vegetables from the farmers’ market and we use organic chicken,” she said. “We grate the garlic fresh. Everything is a better quality,” she said.

    “i just want the people to feel at home.”

    Cafe Bella is open for dinner weeknights and Saturdays and for lunch Wednesdays through Fridays; 817-922-9500, cafebellaftw.com..

    Eggplant parmigiana and a pizza with tomatoes, green onion, pesto, black olive, red peppers and Canadian bacon at Cafe Bella on November 16, 2011.
    Eggplant parmigiana and a pizza with tomatoes, green onion, pesto, black olive, red peppers and Canadian bacon at Cafe Bella on November 16, 2011. Joyce Marshall Star-Telegram archives

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    Bud Kennedy’s Eats Beat

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    Bud Kennedy is celebrating his 40th year writing about restaurants in the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He has written the “Eats Beat” dining column in print since 1985 and online since 1992 — that’s more than 3,000 columns about Texas cafes, barbecue, burgers and where to eat.
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  • How TCU’s Mitch Kirsch is approaching the opportunity to call plays vs. USC

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    TCU tight ends coach Mitch Kirsch didn’t think coaching college football was his calling after a brief stint with the Chicago Bears in 2017.

    Fast-forward eight years later and Kirsch finds himself with an opportunity to call plays for TCU in the Alamo Bowl against USC at 8 p.m. Tuesday in San Antonio.

    It’s been quite the journey for Kirsch, a former FCS All-American at James Madison who was trying to find his way after the opportunity with the Bears came to an end.

    “I got cut from the Chicago Bears. I was coaching at my high school and trying to get back to the NFL,” Kirsch said. “My O-line coach that I played for got the job at SMU. He gave me a call and said had I thought of coaching. My initial answer was ‘No, not really.’ I gave it a few days, called him back and said I’m in.

    “I packed two duffle bags full of fishing rods and drove down to Dallas. I walked into Sonny [Dykes]’ office and said, ‘Hey, I’m ready to work.’”

    It was Kirsch’s first time meeting Dykes, who was still head coach at SMU, but it was the start of what would be a coaching relationship that is approaching a decade.

    Kirsch served as an offensive graduate assistant with Dykes with the Mustangs and then followed him to Fort Worth to become a senior analyst. After Doug Meacham departed to become the offensive coordinator at Oklahoma State last December, Kirsch was elevated to tight ends coach.

    Now he’ll have an opportunity to lead the Horned Frogs’ offense against a top-20 opponent. It’s not something Kirsch is taking for granted.

    “It’s been really cool,” Kirsch said. “Coach Dykes gave me this opportunity, and I’ve been with him for eight years. Most importantly, we’ve got a great staff that’s put together a really good game plan … to just go execute at a high level, and that’s what we were looking at going into this. How can we get our guys to play fast, play efficiently and execute at a high level?”

    The departure of former offensive coordinator Kendal Briles to South Carolina earlier this month opened the door for Kirsch to have this moment, and while Briles’ departure happened quickly, Kirsch has been preparing for this chance since he joined Dykes’ staff.

    Kirsch said the quality of offensive coordinators Dykes has had helped Kirsch develop his own scheme he’s been waiting to unleash.

    “It’s funny everybody thinks in this profession you have to move around as much as possible to learn new stuff,” Kirsch said. “But I’ve been lucky to be around Sonny for eight years and have four really good coordinators come in and be able to learn from them. It started off with Rhett Lashlee. Rhett was a power run guy and our second year changed to more four verts and change [routes] stuff.

    “Then I got with Garrett Riley who was true Air Raid and Kendal, being able to pick and pluck things from each of their offenses [was huge]. A lot of people don’t know this, but I’ve got my offensive playbook off to the side for when I get my chance.”

    Kirsch said the playbook includes concepts that Dykes was using five years ago and some concepts that were used five games ago. Kirsch also said that Briles and TCU’s new offensive coordinator, Gordon Sammis, provided some tips to prepare for Tuesday’s game.

    The biggest goal for Kirsch and the rest of the offensive staff was to build a game plan around Ken Seals, who will start at quarterback in place of Josh Hoover, who said on Dec. 18 that he intends to enter the transfer portal. Seals played at Weatherford High School before starting his college career at Vanderbilt.

    Kirsch said he doesn’t see a huge difference in their skill sets.

    “Ken and Josh have a lot of similarities in arm talent,” Kirsch said. “Ken is a little bit more of a runner at times. Everything that Josh could do, Ken can do. Let’s not forget, Ken started 20-plus games in the SEC. So we felt as a staff for the longest time, we’ve had the best backup quarterback in the country, and now he’s got a chance to ride off into the sunset for TCU, a team that he grew up watching.”

    As much as Kirsch is excited about the opportunity for Seals, the Horned Frogs are also excited that Kirsch will have his moment to lead the offense.

    “Man, Mitch has been a great role model to me,” tight end Chase Curtis said. “He’s like an older brother to me because I’m closer to him in age than most of the other tight ends in the room. But he’s made football really fun for me again. I’ve grown so much with him as a coach, and it means the world to me he’s got this opportunity. I know he’s going to do a good job.”

    All-American wide receiver Eric McAlister, who will likely play a big role in Kirsch’s game plan, also said he was excited to see Kirsch get play-calling duties.

    “Mitch is a cool guy, he’s always fun to be around,” McAlister said. “He’s one of those guys you want to go into a fire with, no matter if it’s dumb or smart decision. If Mitch says let’s go, he’s going to be one of those guys we follow behind.”


    Game schedule dates, times, locations

    • Dec. 29 at Portland, 9:30 p.m., NBC
    • Jan. 1 vs. Philadelphia, 7:30 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Jan. 3 vs. Houston, 7:30 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Jan. 6 at Sacramento, 10 p.m., NBC, KFAA, MavsTV
    • Jan. 8 at Utah, 8 p.m., KFAA, MavsTV
    • Dec. 29 vs. Jackson State, 7 p.m., ESPN+
    • Jan. 3 vs. Baylor, 1 p.m., TNT
    • Jan. 6 at Kansas, 8 p.m., ESPN or ESPN2
    • Jan. 10 vs. Arizona, 3 p.m., ESPN or ESPN2
    • Jan. 14 at BYU, 10 p.m., ESPN2
    • Dec. 31 at BYU, 8 p.m., ESPN+
    • Jan. 3 at Utah, 8 p.m., ESPN+
    • Jan. 7 vs. Oklahoma State, 6:30 p.m., ESPN+
    • Jan. 11 vs. Arizona State, 4 p.m., ESPN+
    • Jan. 14 at West Virginia, 6 p.m., ESPN+
    • Dec. 27 vs. Chicago, 7 p.m., Victory+
    • Dec. 31 vs. Buffalo, 7 p.m., Victory+
    • Jan. 1 at Chicago, 7:30 p.m., Victory+
    • Jan. 4 vs. Montreal, 1 p.m., Victory+
    • Jan. 6 at Carolina, 6 p.m., Victory+
    • Alamo Bowl
    • Dec. 30 vs. USC (at San Antonio), 8 p.m., ESPN
    • New Mexico Bowl
    • North Texas 49, San Diego State 47
    • Jan. 3 or 4 at N.Y. Giants, TBD
    • End of season
    • May 1 NASCAR Truck Series: SpeedyCash.com 250
    • May 2 NASCAR O’Reilly Auto Parts Series: Andy’s Frozen Custard 340
    • May 3 NASCAR Cup Series: Wurth 400

    This story was originally published December 28, 2025 at 6:10 PM.

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  • Which TCU running back intends to enter the transfer portal?

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    TCU running back Nate Palmer intends to enter the transfer portal when it opens on Jan. 2, the Star-Telegram has learned.

    The redshirt freshman flashed his talent during spring camp, where he and Jeremy Payne shared a majority of the first-team reps.

    But even with a strong performance in the spring Palmer spent the season behind Kevorian Barnes, Trent Battle, Payne and true freshman Jon Denman.

    Palmer had 30 carries and 139 yards this season.

    Palmer is the latest Horned Frog to announce their intentions to enter the portal joining Josh Hoover, Jordyn Bailey and Jonah Martinez.

    The Horned Frogs will face USC in the Valero Alamo Bowl on Dec. 30.

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  • TCU is rolling out an ambitious enrollment campaign. How big will it be?

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    Students return to Texas Christian University campus for the first day of class on Monday, Aug. 19, 2024, in Fort Worth.

    Students return to Texas Christian University campus for the first day of class on Monday, Aug. 19, 2024, in Fort Worth.

    amccoy@star-telegram.com

    When Coleton Power applied to TCU as a senior in high school, he attended a live stream hosted by the university to learn more about the school. The stream was designed to answer questions from prospective students to help them make their college decision easier.

    That call, and the insight shared by Heath Einstein, the vice provost for enrollment management, sealed the deal for Power. He knew TCU was where he wanted to spend the next four years of his life.

    “[Einstein] gave probably the best possible pitch as to why students should want to go to TCU,” said Power, now a junior.

    Three years later, Einstein leads an ambitious campaign to substantially increase enrollment. He and his team are assigned with reaching goal of growing enrollment to about 18,000 undergraduate students by 2035. By increasing its student body, TCU hopes to become the premier research institution in Texas and improve its national reputation.

    The enrollment campaign is part of a broader strategic plan called Lead On: Values in Action. Outlined in that plan is a specific campus master plan that includes adding 25 buildings, including dorms, classrooms, parking garages and sports facilities that will be needed to accommodate a student body increase of several thousand.

    Enrollment Strategies

    TCU’s enrollment has already grown by 23% in the last 10 years — from just more than 10,000 in 2015-16 to almost 13,000 today. The enrollment bump also includes the freshman class of 2,754, the largest single class in TCU’s 151-year history.

    “We have various enrollment campaigns that reach students and parents and high school counselors and alumni,” Einstein said in an interview with the Star-Telegram. “We’re really trying to broaden our audience little by little.”

    The most important part of a successful enrollment campaign is meeting students where they are, Einstein said. TCU has six members of its enrollment team stationed across the country to reach prospective students in every part of the nation. Those recruiters are based in northern California, southern California, Houston, Atlanta, Chicago and western Massachusetts. Over 14% of TCU students are from California, 5.1% are from Illinois, 1.9% are from Georgia and just over 1% are from Massachusetts, according to university data.

    The enrollment team has also prioritized digital advertising and messaging, as well as building relationships with those considering attending the university before they even step foot on campus.

    “We try to be reflective of the town that we’re in,” Einstein said. “People here are just so authentic and warm, and we want to bring that authenticity and warmth to our prospective students through our various enrollment campaigns.”

    Another way TCU has been able to grow enrollment is by revisiting its application process and identifying how many students started filling out an application but didn’t finish. Some of those students forgot to fill out a final question, didn’t check every box or just forgot they started filling out the application in the first place, said Dean of Admission Mandy Castro.

    “There were thousands of students in that pile,” Castro said. “We looked internally at what we could do to facilitate that process and there were a couple specific questions on the application that, with advice from our Common App partners, they were like, ‘If you remove this, I think that you’ll find more completion rate.’”

    TCU has been able to defy a national trend of declining enrollment. The messaging from Einstein and his team allows for them to “cut through the noise” because it appeals to so many people in a variety of different ways, he said.

    College enrollment numbers have rebounded in recent years but are still not as high as they were before the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2018-19, there were 22.1 million undergraduate college students in the country. That number was as high as 23.7 million in 2014. Now, there are just under 21 million undergraduate college students in the U.S., according to the National Center for Education Statistics.

    But TCU has been able to mitigate that trend throughout its new aggressive enrollment campaign. Einstein and his team believe now is the perfect time to expand enrollment to heights the university has never seen because TCU is more desirable as a college than it has ever been.

    “Demand for a Texas Christian University education continues to rise,” Chancellor Daniel W. Pullin wrote in a statement to the Star-Telegram. “This growth reflects intentional choices we’ve made as a university to increase the TCU academic and campus experience while thoughtfully growing the number of Horned Frogs who will become leaders in their fields.”

    Acceptance rates still dropping

    TCU has been able to carry out its enrollment campaign without sacrificing its competitive acceptance rate. Although overall enrollment numbers are rapidly growing, the school’s undergraduate acceptance rate is dropping.

    In 2021, 10,606 of the 19,782 students who applied were accepted — just more than 53%. In 2024, the most recent enrollment numbers available in the university’s common data set, just 44.5% of applications were accepted.

    TCU is aiming to increase enrollment by 3% in each of the next few years — a number that mirrors organic application growth in recent admission cycles. Instead of sacrificing its competitive enrollment rate, the university is able to admit more students within an already growing pull of applicants, Castro said.

    “When applications were already growing by that much per year, that told us that we were already in a pretty good market position to be able to find some more qualified students, and by allowing us to admit more, we just have so many more yeses that we can give to incoming students,” Castro said.

    Campus expansion

    TCU has nine freshman dorms for around 5,000 students living on campus — a number that will need to increase as the university attempts to grow their freshman enrollment numbers a little bit each year over the next decade. TCU requires students to live on campus during their first two years at the school to keep the university from becoming a “commuter school.”

    “If you don’t have the right order of operations, you actually could mess things up,” Einstein said. “We currently do not have the housing in place that would allow us to support more students in a way that we currently do. We already have construction underway, and we’ll have several new buildings opening in fall 2027 which aligns with sort of the anticipated spike of first-year students.”

    The school’s campus master plan will also focus on improving academic facilities, medical innovation, sense of place, athletic facilities, revitalizing Berry Street, connecting the university to the Trinity River and improving the east portion of campus.

    Amid TCU’s push to expand its student body have also been multiple tuition increases, pushing the total cost of attending the school for eight semesters up to over $300,000 before scholarships and other financial aid opportunities. That number includes tuition, room and board and fees.

    The admissions team understands TCU may not be in every family’s budget, and acknowledged it had to part ways with some prospective students because of that. But admissions leadership has still been able to grow enrollment despite that. “Sometimes the fiscal decisions do have to be made,” Castro said. “But for somebody who is looking for a great college experience, TCU is a great investment that you know you get a good return on. We have a wonderful alumni base that extends from east and west and north to south, and they tell our story about how TCU is a great place to be.”

    Samuel O’Neal

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Samuel O’Neal is a local news reporter at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. He joined the team in December 2025 after previously working as a staff writer at the Philadelphia Inquirer. He graduated from Temple University in Philadelphia where he served for a year as the Editor-in-Chief of the university’s student-run newspaper, The Temple News. 

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  • TCU Tops Coogs in Final Home Game – Houston Press

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    UH misses game-tying field goal in the final minute

    The University of Houston lost to the TCU Horned Frogs by a score of 17-14 at TDECU Stadium on a warm Saturday afternoon. The Coogs offensive could not fully capitalize on four turnovers and no longer has the opportunity to play in the Big XII championship game.  UH will travel to Waco to face the Baylor Bears on Thanksgiving weekend to wrap up the regular season. (Photos by Jack Gorman)

    Jackson is a freelance photographer and writer covering a variety of music and sporting events in the Houston area. He has contributed to the Houston Press since 2013.

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  • TCU caught in the middle of college football’s ‘everything must go!’ madness

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    Year 1 of the most important two years of TCU’s football program can be called a bust.

    A bust because the team will not meet the expectations set by athletic director Mike Buddie. There will be no appearance in the Big 12 title game, or the playoff.

    TCU’s 44-13 defeat Saturday night at No. 12 BYU was a nail gun to the needs of the program, and university. Barring a season-ending three-game winning streak, the finale being the Stale Milk Bowl, TCU will not equal its win total from 2024. It will also not finish in the Top 25 for the third straight year, during which it has been a ranked program for two weeks.

    Year 4 of the Sonny Dykes era at TCU is supposed to be better than this.

    The momentum created by TCU’s run to the national title game in 2022 has evaporated, and is overwhelmed by a current madness of firing coaches while worshiping the SEC, Big Ten and Notre Dame.

    The development has put TCU in a difficult spot with coach Sonny Dykes. After starting the season with a 4-1 record, the weaknesses of the team have been fleshed out in defeats to Kansas State, Iowa State and BYU.

    TCU is a decent team that has no margin for error, or mistakes. And the team doesn’t belong on the same field as BYU or Texas Tech, the top programs in the Big 12.

    The reality for Dykes is that the program has not developed the type of talent that carried this team to the national title game; there has not been a new set of quality offensive linemen to the level of Steve Avila, Brandon Coleman and Andrew Coker.

    There have been no new players to create the type of production on the defensive side, such as linebacker Dee Winters, defensive end Dylan Horton, or cornerbacks Tre Hodges-Tomlinson and Josh Newton.

    (The easy shot here is that those players were recruited by Gary Patterson. Other than Newton, this is true. Also true, that group of talent was not winning games.)

    Most damning of all for Dykes and offensive coordinator Kendal Briles is their high-priced quarterback, Josh Hoover, has regressed in a season where in the first month he deserved to be in the discussion for the Heisman Trophy.

    Too much is asked of Hoover, who needs help that he hasn’t received.

    The state of the team has left angry fans to parcel together a slate of unflattering statistics that make Dykes look like a terrible coach who should be fired today. Stats that begin with the sentence, “Starting with the 65-7 loss to Georgia in the 2022 national title game … TCU is 0-7 against coaches who own Cockapoos, and are out-scored by an average margin of 24.5 points in games that start at 9:05 p.m. Hawaiian time.”

    This is not a good place to be for a head coach, and worse for his school. A place where fans and alums want their team to lose, just accelerate the firing process. Once the momentum starts in this direction, it’s hard to convince the masses to be patient.

    They have been able to do it at Oklahoma. And USC.

    They couldn’t at Penn State. Or LSU. Auburn. Florida. The list grows by the week of coaches who are fired, despite their achievements, or the size of their buyouts.

    Dykes was never the most popular hire to replace Patterson. There are circles and pockets of TCU supporters that regard any positive achievement by Dykes as dumb luck, while every defeat is the true indicator of his coaching acumen.

    All of this is compounded exponentially by a culture that remembers nothing, whose impatience is satiated by a phone that says life is better elsewhere. If you’re not winning, and the game isn’t “big,” they’re not coming.

    This puts TCU in a hard spot. Because it’s not in TheBIGSEC10, most schools in the ACC and Big 12 operate with the fear that those conferences will soon grab a few more schools, which will in effect turn the remainders of the lesser two leagues into glorified Group of Five universities.

    This may not be an actual reality, but the prospect of it strikes the fear of 5,000 Greek Gods into schools. Without a winning football team that’s in the conversation of the playoff, their chance at national relevance, and leverage, is nearly disabled.

    It’s why winning coaches are easily fired, and millions of dollars in buyout cash falls from the sky in states that are broke.

    TCU is not apt to join the national trend of firing its coach this season, but more likely to “encourage” Dykes to make staff changes in hopes of improvement, because Year 1 of the most important time in the history of its football program has gone bust.

    This story was originally published November 16, 2025 at 3:21 PM.

    Mac Engel

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Mac Engel is an award-winning columnist who has covered sports since the dawn of man; Cowboys, TCU, Stars, Rangers, Mavericks, etc. Olympics. Movies. Concerts. Books. He combines dry wit with 1st-person reporting to complement an annoying personality.
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  • TCU professors get $7.2 million to study this alternative to arrest

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    FortWorth

    The Institute of Behavioral Research at TCU has been awarded a $7.2 million grant from the NIH National Institute on Drug Abuse to study alternatives to arrest or prosecution that connect people with treatment instead.

    The project will work with 20 communities across Colorado, Illinois, New Mexico, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

    “We know that substance use and crime are deeply connected, and arrests alone aren’t fixing the problem,” said senior research scientist Jenny Becan, PhD. “Often arrests actually make things worse for people and their families.”

    Instead of arresting an individual, the program would link that person to medical or emotional support, Becan said, and offer to enroll them into deflection. If someone opts into deflection, they would be connected with a peer navigator who could help them set up appointments or do anything else they need assistance with, Becan said.

    “It’s all about reducing arrest and getting people to treatment, and it’s always about team effort between law enforcement, first responders, and community-based health providers,” Becan said.

    The research is led by Becan and Kevin Knight, Ph.D., professor and IBR director.

    The goal is that law enforcement can play a role in both public safety and public health, Becan said.

    “Hopefully we’ll see reduced reoffending or recidivism, and breaking down that costly cycle of repeated, you know, going through the arrest and jail and back in the community,” she said.

    Becan said she expects the research to further understanding of how deflection improves outcomes for people who use drugs and to inform best practices for communities using deflection.

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    Ciara McCarthy covers health and wellness as part of the Star-Telegram’s Crossroads Lab. She came to Fort Worth after three years in Victoria, Texas, where she worked at the Victoria Advocate. Ciara is focused on equipping people and communities with information they need to make decisions about their lives and well-being. Please reach out with your questions about public health or the health care system. Email cmccarthy@star-telegram.com or call or text 817-203-4391.

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  • Keeler: CU Buffs coach Deion Sanders hasn’t hesitated to play freshmen. So why is he hesitating to play 5-star QB Julian Lewis?

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    BOULDER — There will be another Ju Ju.

    Lots of them, actually. If we’ve learned anything about CU recruiting in the Deion Sanders Era, it’s that if Coach Prime wants someone — like, really, really, really wants them — he gets them.

    Left tackle Jordan Seaton? Got him.

    Cornerback Cormani McClain? Got him. (Best not look at the young man’s Florida Gators numbers right now if you’re a Buffs fan. Seriously. Don’t.)

    Quarterback Julian Lewis? Got him, too.

    Keeping him? Well …

    At 2-4, 0-3 in Big 12 play, CU football is staring at a crisis/inflection point right now. No. 22 Iowa State (5-1) rolls into town for a Saturday matinee, and a trip to Utah (4-1), which is back to running the ball at will again, looms after that.

    Meanwhile, Coach Prime’s health concerns are mounting. And the Buffs have played three QBs in six games because, as the old adage goes, they don’t really have one. Not one who can sling it consistently at a Big 12 level, at any rate.

    After Kaidon Salter just tossed three interceptions at TCU, Ju Ju is the people’s choice again.

    Build for the future!

    The season’s already lost!

    What’s the difference between 4-8 and 2-10?

    If we don’t play Ju Ju this fall, we’ll lose him to the transfer portal! And that would be a tragedy!

    Would it, though?

    I mean, in terms of Lewis’ value in the open market, you’re absolutely right. Big Ten and SEC football programs, even bad ones, have more money right now than they know what to do with. The Buffs, as with many of their Big 12 peers, have to pick and choose their bidding wars.

    Although CU also, at the moment, has 24 offers out to quarterbacks in the Class of ’26, according to the 247Sports database. They’ve got five out to signal-callers in the Class of ’27, and four in the Class of ’28.

    Recruiting, at its core, is about salesmanship. Nobody sells — themselves, their school, a product, the future — the way Coach Prime sells. Charmers are charmers for life.

    Ask yourself this, too: If Lewis is that hot, why hasn’t he beaten out the two guys who’ve been driving you crazy?

    You’ve watched Salter for five games. You’ve watched backup Ryan Staub for two.

    As Coach Prime points out, he sees what you saw.

    Yet when asked about Ju Ju’s progress on Tuesday, Sanders said this, and bluntly:

    “He’s coming around the mountain when he comes.”

    Will he be driving six white horses?

    We kid, we kid. But the hesitation, given precedent, is more than curious, isn’t it?

    After all, Coach Prime has made a point of playing freshmen who earned his trust early. Seaton. Micah Welch. Omarion Miller. Dre’Lon Miller.

    Lewis, though?

    Not so much. Not yet, anyway.

    “I mean, he’s young, and you can’t throw everything at him,” Sanders explained after playing Lewis for two rocky series vs. Delaware last month. “So you don’t want to do that. You don’t want him to feel like he failed.

    “So you’ve got to proceed with — some guys want you to just throw him in there, and I’m too protective. I mean, I love the kid and I want the kid to be successful, so we’re very protective on what we do with him and what we can do with him and really how we call things with him. We want him to be in a situation to excel.”

    Again, he sees what you see. He sees a young man who only turned 18 two-and-a-half weeks ago. And it doesn’t take much reading between the lines to see a QB who isn’t quite ready yet.

    Although …

    “I’ve never sat on the bench and said, ‘Whoa, I learned a lot today.’”

    That quote also came from Sanders, when he was a guest on the Kelce Brothers’ “New Heights” podcast a fortnight ago. He’d said that while explaining why son Shedeur didn’t want to be drafted by Baltimore and become All-Pro QB Lamar Jackson’s understudy

    “Who learns sitting on the bench?” Coach Prime continued. “Who does that?”

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    Sean Keeler

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  • Ken Paxton drags TCU over Turning Point USA event. He forgot one crucial thing | Opinion

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    Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton speaks against Republicans supporting Rep. Dustin Burrows in the Texas House speaker’s race at the headquarters for Texas Scorecard, a conservative think tank, in Leander, Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2025.

    Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton speaks against Republicans supporting Rep. Dustin Burrows in the Texas House speaker’s race at the headquarters for Texas Scorecard, a conservative think tank, in Leander, Tuesday, Jan. 7, 2025.

    USA TODAY Network

    We’re starting to wonder if Ken Paxton is pining for his college days at Baylor.

    After all, the attorney general seems unusually engaged in just about every on-campus controversy and debate — or at least the ones where he finds political advantage.

    This time, it’s TCU in the spotlight. Chloe Cole, who advocates against gender transition for minors, alleged that the university canceled a scheduled event planned by the university chapter of Turning Point USA, the organization founded by slain conservative activist Charlie Kirk. School officials say the event was never scheduled to begin with because it did not have a secure space available on relatively short notice. Paxton, a master of speaking boldly when he knows little, declared he would get to the bottom of this “free speech” issue.

    We can’t believe we have to say this to a self-described conservative Republican, but: TCU is a private institution. It can welcome or reject any campus visitor or event, for any reason. It’s a different standard than the state-supported universities that have previously drawn fire.

    Once upon a time, Republicans cherished that difference. Many stood up for the rights of private businesses or entities against what they saw as intrusive government.

    These days, Ken Paxton is that intrusive government.

    Republican populism flexes government power

    As the GOP has moved inexorably in a populist direction, elected officials have increasingly sought to use the government power that they once feared to get the policy outcomes they desire — or simply to intimidate private institutions.

    Paxton has taken this to a new level. Over three terms, he has morphed the job of attorney general into enforcer of whatever his political side wants at the moment. Republicans have developed grievances in recent years with technology companies, Big Pharma and, most recently, universities, including the University of North Texas. To be clear, many of these complaints have merit, and there’s a role for government to counter expansive corporate power.

    The hypocrisy is inescapable, though: The party that ascended to majorities in no small part by bashing “frivolous lawsuits” decided by “activist judges” is more than happy to turn to the courts or hang the looming threat of litigation over schools and companies if they don’t get the outcome they desire.

    It’s mobster government. Nice university you’ve got there; it would be a shame if anything happened to it.

    Colleges, even private ones like TCU, must embrace free speech

    TCU, like all colleges, should embrace and promote freedom of speech. Institutions of higher education must be vigorous promoters of a free-expression culture, and not just in narrow, legalistic ways. They should be devoted to the idea that unpopular ideas are often those that need the most vigorous defense. They should reject the heckler’s veto and counter the idea that speech, however noxious or even hateful, is equivalent to violence.

    A poster promoting a conservative commentator's speaking tour
    A poster for conservative commentator Charlie Kirk’s ‘Live Free’ tour taken from the Turning Point USA TCU chapter’s Facebook page. Courtesy of Turning Point USA at TCU

    But in this case, there’s no evidence of anything other than a logistical issue. Kirk himself held an event on campus in 2023, and the Turning Point chapter had a memorial service for him after his assassination last month.

    Perhaps university officials could have worked a little harder to find a space and fulfill the roles we describe above. But what happened is not a suppression of anyone’s rights, and it’s well within the university’s prerogative to control the scheduling of its facilities.

    State universities have an obligation to be even more open, and elected officials should hold their feet to the fire. But private institutions — think hard, General Paxton, surely you still understand the difference — are more immune from government scrutiny.

    But again, activists at all levels seem to be forgetting this distinction. Tarrant County Republican Party Chairman Bo French has been on a separate crusade against TCU, dropping “investigations” of the university’s diversity practices, its professors’ comments and whatever else he can find in an attempt to keep the outrage fire stoked.

    French gets more attention for his ignominious comments about minorities, gay people and immigrants. Tarrant Republican leaders should ask tough questions about who’s doing the actual work of the party — raising money, winning campaigns and assisting with the conduct of elections — while French sticks his nose in so many other people’s business.

    French and other critics of TCU like to drop the cliche that the university should remember what the “C” in “TCU” stands for. (Newsflash: If you’re the 18,000th person to post that thought on X, it’s not all that clever.) We’re not aware of a time when Jesus addressed the procedure of booking lecture halls. TCU’s history is largely secular, while still dedicated to Christian values. It’s not Baylor, no matter how much Paxton might want it to be.

    The attorney general seems to be everywhere all the time. That’s one way to bolster his U.S. Senate campaign or distract from his personal and professional controversies.

    It’s just a shame that so many institutions, especially private ones, must suffer in service to Paxton’s ambition.

    BEHIND THE STORY

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    Hey, who writes these editorials?

    Editorials are the positions of the Editorial Board, which serves as the Fort Worth Star-Telegram’s institutional voice. The members of the board are: Cynthia M. Allen, columnist; Steve Coffman, editor and president; Bradford William Davis, columnist and editorial writer; Bud Kennedy, columnist; and Ryan J. Rusak, opinion editor. Most editorials are written by Rusak or Davis. Editorials are unsigned because they represent the board’s consensus positions, not necessarily the views of individual writers.

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    The Editorial Board meets regularly to discuss issues in the news and what points should be made in editorials. We strive to build a consensus to produce the strongest editorials possible, but when we differ, we put matters to a vote.

    The board aims to be consistent with stances it has taken in the past but usually engages in a fresh discussion based on new developments and different perspectives.

    We focus on local and state news, though we will also weigh in on national issues with an eye toward their impact on Texas or the Dallas-Fort Worth area.

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    News reporters strive to keep their opinions out of what they write. They have no input on the Editorial Board’s stances. The board consults their reporting and expertise but does its own research for editorials.

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  • Irish foreign minister touts ‘sports diplomacy’ ahead of TCU game in Dublin

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    TCU Horned Frogs quarterback Josh Hoover (10) points against the Arizona State Sun Devils in the first half Friday, Sept. 26, 2025, at Mountain America Stadium in Tempe, Ariz.

    TCU Horned Frogs quarterback Josh Hoover (10) points against the Arizona State Sun Devils in the first half Friday, Sept. 26, 2025, at Mountain America Stadium in Tempe, Ariz.

    Imagn Images

    Neale Richmond, Ireland’s deputy minister for foreign affairs and trade, on Friday visited TCU’s campus, where he spoke to the economic, educational and cultural benefits of the Frogs’ game in Dublin next August.

    Richmond was joined by former Aer Lingus CEO Stephen Kavanagh, and together they talked with TCU Chancellor Daniel Pullin and Athletic Director Mike Buddie about the reasons for exporting American football from Fort Worth to Dublin. The Horned Frogs will face the University of North Carolina.

    “It’s much more than a game,” said Richmond. He described the annual Aer Lingus College Football Classic as a key to strengthening Irish-American relations.

    For one, Richmond said the games are a tourism driver, attracting upward of 30,000 visitors to Dublin each August. And last year alone, he said, Ireland welcomed roughly 50,000 guests from Texas. Richmond hopes to see that number grow before, during and after TCU’s Dublin game, which is scheduled for Aug. 29.

    Richmond added that Texas is Ireland’s largest U.S. trading partner, and he believes the game will serve to bring together more Texan and Irish businesses.

    From Pullin’s perspective, competing in Dublin will help elevate TCU’s profile on the international stage. He pointed out that TCU already has a robust partnership with University College Dublin, and Pullin’s hope is that seeing the team play overseas will encourage more students to take advantage of study-abroad opportunities.

    “I think there’s a high return on investment,” Pullin said of the payoff for moving a home game to Dublin.

    Because it’s held during “week zero” of the season, when there are only a handful of other games, the Dublin matchup typically draws high ratings. Pullin feels those tuning in will not only view TCU as being competitive on the field, but from an academic standpoint as well.

    “Our commitment to be driven as an academic enterprise should resonate all over the world,” he said.

    When asked about American football’s place in Irish culture, Richmond said it’s popular and only becoming more so.

    “It’s certainly bigger than you think,” he said of Irish fandom. “You find a lot of Irish people who, every weekend, will watch college football and the NFL. They are passionate about the teams they follow.”

    Richmond said those traveling from Fort Worth next year to see TCU play will be met with a high level of excitement and energy, and he assured fans that Dublin is “ready for a purple invasion.”

    Those planning to make the trip are encouraged to visit a new website, frogs2ireland.com, for ticket and travel package details.

    This story was originally published October 3, 2025 at 6:04 PM.

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    Matt Adams

    Fort Worth Star-Telegram

    Matt Adams is a news reporter covering Fort Worth, Tarrant County and surrounding areas. He previously wrote about aviation and travel and enjoys a good weekend road trip. Matt joined the Star-Telegram in January 2025.

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  • A TCU Alum is Joining the Cast of SNL This Season

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    After a months-long celebration of the 50th season of Saturday Night Live, it’s back to business as usual for the iconic sketch comedy show. Just a few weeks away from the Oct. 4 premiere of SNL season 51, the show announced the abrupt firing of four cast members, including Devon Walker, Michael Longfellow, Emil Wakim and Heidi Gardner…

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    Simon Pruitt

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  • Belichick’s UNC debut goes bust as TCU routs the Tar Heels :: WRALSportsFan.com

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    TCU Horned Frogs 48
    North Carolina Tar HeelsNorth Carolina Tar Heels 14
    Final

    — The Bill Belichick era couldn’t have gotten off to a better start at North Carolina, but the rest of the game could hardly have been worse for the Tar Heels.

    TCU defeated UNC 48-14 at Kenan Stadium on Monday night, spoiling Belichick’s highly anticipated debut and sending almost all of the capacity crowd home early.

    The Tar Heels went 83 yards in seven plays on its first drive with running back Caleb Hood capping it off with an 8-yard touchdown run. UNC rushed five times for 25 yards on the drive, and quarterback Gio Lopez completed both of his pass attempts – both to Jordan Shipp – for 58 yards on the drive.

    The highlights ended there for UNC and Belichick.

    The Tar Heels’ offense completely stalled after that. Lopez went more than two hours of real time before his next completion. And TCU scored the game’s next 41 points, including two defensive scores.

    TCU had a 27-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Josh Hoover to receiver Jordan Dwyer to tie the game and then took the lead 10-7 on a field goal early in the second half.

    TCU was in scoring position again, but UNC forced the game’s first turnover when Kaleb Cost snagged a tipped pass at the UNC 17. However, on the ensuing possession, Bud Clark intercepted a Lopez pass and returned it 25 yards for a TCU touchdown. TCU added a field goal right before half.

    Things got worse for UNC after halftime.

    TCU running back Kevorian Barnes ran 75 yards untouched on the first play of the third quarter to extend the Horned Frogs’ edge.

    TCU added to the lead on a 28-yard touchdown run, and then a fumble recovery for a touchdown when Lopez was hit and lost the ball. Lopez came up hobbling after the play and was replaced by Max Johnson at quarterback.

    Johnson led UNC on an 80-yard scoring drive, capping it with a 2-yard touchdown pass to tight end Jake Johnson, his brother. Max Johnson started the 2024 opener against Minnesota, but suffered a gruesome leg injury that ended his season. He almost lost his leg due to the injury.

    TCU finished with 522 yards of total offense and 29 first downs. UNC had 222 yards of total offense and 10 first downs. The Tar Heels turned the ball over three times and converted just one of 10 third-down tries.

    UNC hired Belichick, who won six Super Bowls with the New England Patriots, to revitalize its sagging football program. The emphasis has paid off so far in additional ticket sales, more sponsorship dollars, more donations and increased media attention.

    UNC legends Michael Jordan, Lawrence Taylor and Roy Williams were seated together in a suite. ESPN hosted a pregame show live from the sidelines with former Alabama coach (and Belichick assistant) Nick Saban and former Belichick players Randy Moss and Tedy Bruschi on the set.

    But fans likely expected a better effort in the opener, a game in which UNC was favored by more than a field goal.

    Neither team provided a depth chart for the highly anticipated season opener in a bit of gamesmanship.

    First quarter

    UNC — Caleb Hood 8 run (Rece Verhoff kick), 10:55. Drive: 7 plays, 83 yards, 3:59. Key play: Gio Lopez hit Jordan Shipp for 39 yards and 19 yards on back-to-back plays to move UNC deep into TCU territory. UNC 7, TCU 0.

    TCU — Jordan Dwyer 27 pass from Josh Hoover (Kyle Lemmermann kick), 4:08. Drive: 6 plays, 58 yards, 2:31. Key play: UNC defensive back Marcus Allen was called for pass interference after an incomplete pass on 2nd-and-11. UNC 7, TCU 7.

    Second quarter

    TCU – Lemmermann 32 field goal, 11:18. Drive: 14 plays, 55 yards, 6:24. Key play: An offensive pass interference penalty in the end zone stalled the TCU drive. TCU 10, UNC 7.

    TCU – Bud Clark 25 interception return (Lemmerman kick), 3:57. No drive. Key play: Clark stepped in front of a Lopez third-down pass intended for Shipp and ran untouched into the end zone. TCU 17, UNC 7.

    TCU – Lemmermann 33 field goal, 0:00. Drive: 9 plays, 63 yards, 0:53. Key plays: TCU didn’t even need a third-down conversion as it moved down the field for a field goal. TCU 24, UNC 7.

    Third quarter

    TCU – Kevorian Barnes 75 run (Lemmermann kick), 14:48. Drive: 1 play, 75 yards, 0:12. Key play: Barnes, who had 36 yards in the first half, burst through the middle of the UNC line and outran everyone to the end zone. TCU 27, UNC 7.

    TCU – Devean Deal 31 fumble recovery (Lemmerman kick), 6:56. No drive. Key play: Lopez was scrambling and got hit from behind, losing the ball. Deal picked it up and ran into the end zone. TCU 41, UNC 7.

    UNC – Jake Johnson 2 pass from Max Johnson (Verhoff kick), 0:29. Drive: 10 plays, 80 yards, 6:22. Key play: Max Johnon connected with Shipp for 16 yards on third-and-8 at the UNC 22; Davion Gause rushed for three yards on fourth-and-2 to extend the drive. TCU 41, UNC 14.

    Fourth quarter

    TCU – DJ Rogers 4 pass from Hoover (Lemmermann kick), 9:21. Drive: 5 plays, 76 yards, 2:26. Key play: TCU got the ball after a UNC fumble and ripped off gains of 16, 26 and 33 on consecutive plays. TCU 48, UNC 14.

    Belichick debut pushes excitement over UNC football to new levels

    There have been some big games at Kenan Stadium over the past three decades. Florida State in 1993 and, especially, in 1997 with ESPN’s “College GameDay” in Chapel Hill come to mind. So, too, do Notre Dame’s visits and Mack Brown’s first game back against Miami 2019.

    But Bill Belichick’s coaching debut in Chapel Hill stands alone for long-time observers of the program. The legendary NFL coach will lead the Tar Heels against TCU in a highly anticipated season opener Monday night. Tickets are sold out. ESPN will broadcast the game, having promoted Belichick’s presence all weekend.

    UNC legends Michael Jordan, Lawrence Taylor, Mia Hamm and Julius Peppers are expected to be in attendance, along with other former football and men’s basketball players. Country music singer Eric Church is expected, too.

    “I don’t remember anything like this,” said Rick Steinbacher, a senior associate athletics director who has been around the football program in different capacities for 42 years. “It’s Monday night. It’s Bill Belichick. So much excitement, so much enthusiasm. There’s just so much hope and optimism about this new era under Coach Belichick and to be able to have his first game at Carolina in Kenan on a Monday night, which we’ve never done before.”

    It’s the culmination of a nine-month frenzy around the program since Belichick was hired in December. He has 333 career wins in the NFL (regular season and postseason) and six Super Bowl titles as head coach of the New England Patriots.

    His hiring was an indication that the Tar Heels, who haven’t won an ACC football title since 1980, are getting serious about the sport. UNC, as one Board of Trustees member put it in December, was tired of being “in the JV tier.”

    Nothing about Belichick says junior varsity.

    Nor does anything about the school’s investment – $50 million over five years for Belichick, $13 million in revenue sharing with the players, the highest-paid general manager in the sport, revamped strength and conditioning and nutrition programs. To capitalize on the excitement around Belichick and football, the school launched a revamped tailgating scene dubbed “Chapel Thrill,” including a concert series on the main quad.

    “More so than ever before, there’s absolute alignment on campus, from the chancellor’s office to UNC facilities to just so many groups,” Steinbacher said. “There’s so much alignment around, ‘Hey, let’s build a football program that can be successful for the long term.’ We’ve got a great new coach in here to do that. We’ve got Chapel Thrill. We’ve got lots of different things that we haven’t done previously that we’re doing now.

    “We’ve been successful, we just haven’t been consistent over the long term, and it’s been too long since we won a conference championship. But I really think everything that we’re doing, and when I saw we, I mean the university, the athletics department, the football program, it’s in total alignment and it’s being put together for consistent, long-term success.”

    Belichick is 73. He has revamped the roster, bringing in 70 new players. Long-term success can be fleeting in today’s game where every program is one coaching change away from a boom or bust cycle.

    Just ask Alabama.

    Or TCU.

    The Horned Frogs reached the College Football Playoff national title game in 2022, their first season under coach Sonny Dykes. TCU went 5-7 the next season before bouncing back with a 9-4 campaign in 2024. TCU presents a big challenge.

    “They really make you defend all the blades of grass on the field, sideline to sideline, the line of scrimmage to 50 yards down the field,” said Belichick, whose sons Steve (defensive coordinator) and Brian (defensive backs coach) are on the UNC defensive staff.

    Despite all the attention on Belichick – or maybe because of it – there is a whole lot unknown about the Tar Heels. South Alabama transfer Gio Lopez will start at quarterback, but the team didn’t release a full depth chart. Staff holdover Freddie Kitchens will coordinate the offense, but it’s a “head coach-run program,” as general manager Michael Lombardi said in February.

    Belichick is known for the simplicity of his messaging: Do your job. That hasn’t changed even with the excitement surrounding his debut.

    “However many people are here or not here, or however many hours they talk about it on a network show or don’t talk about it, is really not anything we can control,” Belichick said. “It’s irrelevant. We’re trying to focus on what we can control, what helps us win and so the rest of it is, with all due respect, just noise for us. We have to focus on our job.”

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  • Week 1 picks against the spread: Texas, Clemson, Notre Dame look enticing as West Coast schedule carries limited intrigue

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    Week 1 features a series of marquee matchups, all of them in the eastern half of the country. On the West Coast, the intrigue level is low.

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  • College Football 2025 Season Win Totals — Four Best Bets

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    The college football season is already underway, with several bite-sized morsels served out this past weekend during the oddly labeled “Week 0,” If you’re wondering about the magnitude of the actual games, know this — the biggest story coming out of Week 0 was the father and brother of Kansas State quarterback Avery Johnson getting into a fight WITH EACH OTHER in the streets of Dublin, Ireland, after the Wildcats’ 24-21 loss to Iowa State:

    Week 1 should bring us some actual relevant football action as the top stories, headlined by the top ranked Texans Longhorns visiting defending national champion Ohio State in Columbus in the early window on Saturday afternoon. That is a game where we can truly say “These two teams may see each other again in January.” Should be fun!

    You know what else is fun? GAMBLING on college football! Sure, you can go week to week, game to game, but here is my annual article for the more conservative bunch out there, those who want to engage in the “long play” of betting on season win totals. With that in mind, here are my four favorite bets on Season win totals:

    BAYLOR OVER 7.5 wins
    Baylor was one of the hottest teams in the country down the stretch in 2024, finishing out the season with six straight wins.  You’ll have a pretty good idea if this ticket is going to cash before the first month of the season is over, as the Bears open at home against Auburn and then on the road in Dallas against playoff team SMU. Two weeks later, they play another 2024 playoff team in Arizona State. Sawyer Robertson is an experienced signal caller, which should help tremendously in navigating that mine field. Arizona State, Utah, and Kansas State are on the schedule, but all of those games are in Waco.

    NOTRE DAME UNDER 10.5 wins
    As a proud 1991 graduate of the small parochial school in northern Indiana, this one hurts to give out, but the fact is this — historically, Notre Dame has not followed up GREAT seasons, seasons with one or zero losses, with another great season. In the last 70 years, it’s happened twice, both under Lou Holtz, back in the late ’80s and early ’90s. As early season schedules go, Notre Dame’s is not murderer’s row, but it’s very treacherous, if you need 11 wins to cash an OVER ticket — at Miami, hosting Texas A&M, at Arkansas, with games against Boise State and USC on the schedule, as well. If the Irish make the playoffs this season, they’ll have earned it. 10-2 may get it done for a playoff berth, but it doesn’t for the OVER. Take the UNDER.

    TCU OVER 6.5 wins

    We’re just a couple seasons removed from TCU coming within one (massive, murderous, blowout) loss to Georgia from winning a national championship. It’s been very up and down for Sonny Dykes’ crew since then, but 6.5 wins just feels very low for a team with this many playmakers on the defensive side of the football. Finishing above .500 cashes you this ticket, granted the juice is so high on the OVER that you might get 7 wins as the number in some places.

    MISSOURI OVER 7.5 wins
    Eli Drinkwitz’s team has been one of the better ones in the country over the last two seasons, having won 23 games the last two years. The Tigers have done a nice job in the transfer portal, adding top level talent to a unit that was already pretty good. They need to find playmakers to replace Luther Burden and Theo Wease. Missouri gets lost in the SEC perception shuffle, because their brand isn’t that of Deep South programs like Georgia, Alabama and LSU, but the schedule is conducive to an eight or nine win season, with the swing games against teams like Texas A&M and South Carolina being at home.

    Listen to Sean Pendergast on SportsRadio 610 from 6 a.m. to 10 a.m. weekdays. Also, follow him on Twitter at twitter.com/SeanTPendergast, on Instagram at instagram.com/sean.pendergast, and like him on Facebook at facebook.com/SeanTPendergast.

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    Sean Pendergast

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