2024 Summer Magazine: TCU Preview

2024 TCU Horned Frogs football preview, including projected starters, game-by-game predictions, breakout candidates, player spotlights and more.

Playing in a national championship game has its challenges. TCU learned that the hard way. 

A slide down the mountaintop was always in the cards after a 13-2 fairytale season in Sonny Dykes’ first year in Fort Worth, but the fall was steeper than expected. In 2022, TCU became the first FBS team from Texas to play for a national championship since the 2009 Longhorns. In 2023, the 5-7 Frogs became the first national runner-up to not reach a bowl the following season since the 2010 Longhorns.

After the miracle run of 2022 ended, Dykes was faced with a harsh reality. His Frogs arrived back in Fort Worth a wounded squad following the 65-7 loss to Georgia in the national title game two days before the spring semester began. He gave the squad three weeks off to recover from the 15-game season that was spread over five full months. 

“I never felt like we caught up, especially with a new offensive coordinator and so many new faces on the team,” Dykes said. “It was a mess. We were so far behind.” 

The loss of time early in the 2023 offseason was compounded by roster turnover. Only programs like Ohio State, Alabama, and Georgia can lose eight players to the NFL, like TCU did after the 2022 season, and reload quick enough to compete for a national title. TCU recruits well, but not THAT well. 

More than pure talent, TCU lost its leaders. And its edge. Dykes inherited a team with a chip on its shoulder and a roster without much bowl experience. Replacing the sheer talent of Quintin Johnston, Kendre Miller and Tre’Vius Hodges-Tomlinson was hard enough. Finding new voices in the locker room after losing Max Duggan, Steve Avila, and Dee Winters proved impossible. 

“We went from one of the most experienced to one of the least experienced teams in the country and that stuff matters,” Dykes said. “In ‘22, we were opportunistic. In ‘23, we seemed to make mistakes in critical situations. We also didn’t create as many big plays on either side of the ball.”

The good news in Funky Town is that the Frogs are reunited with the chip on their shoulder. TCU brought in Andy Avalos as its new defensive coordinator. The staff believes Year 2 in Kendal Briles’ system, as well as young gunslinger Josh Hoover, will jumpstart an offense that struggled to score touchdowns in the red zone last season. Hoover is also part of a budding leadership revival that includes players such as Savion Williams, Caleb Fox, and Bud Clark. 

More good news for the Horned Frogs is that the margins in the Big 12 are razor thin. TCU was 6-1 in one-possession games during the 2022 season. The team was 0-4 in those games last year. Baylor won two games the year before winning the Big 12 crown in 2021. TCU was a five-win team the season prior to reaching the national championship game. With Texas and Oklahoma gone, the Big 12 is the new Wild West. 

“We want to be in the conversation for the Big 12 championship,” Dykes said. “That’s where we should be every year. We had a bad year last year and everyone’s hungry for us to improve.”  

An expanded playoff provides more hope for programs like TCU. The Frogs don’t need to finish 12-0 in the regular season and hope for help. Starting in 2024, all it takes is winning your conference. Take away expected favorites such as Utah and Arizona, and there aren’t many rosters better than TCU. Dykes & Co. signed the Big 12’s best class in 2023 and the second-best in 2024. Their 17th-ranked transfer class this year checks in second behind Colorado and includes potential breakout candidates such as wide receiver Eric McAlister, tight end Drake Dabney and linebacker Kaleb Elarms-Orr. 

“We learned from last year as a staff and we’re a better program because of that adversity,” Dykes said. “We’re so far ahead of where we were last year. We’re in a better space as a team. I think we’ll see that pay off in the fall.”  

https://www.texasfootball.com/articles/article/default.aspx?url=2024/06/26/ranking-the-state-s-best-linebacker-rooms-power-four-leads-way