The Mercury News Weekend

TCU conference-hopping run has led to title game

- By Stephen Hawkins

TCU had quite the conference-hopping journey on its way to the national championsh­ip game.

The Horned Frogs won or shared titles in three different leagues over 16 seasons after the Southwest Conference disbanded. The small, private school was left out when four other Texas schools from the SWC joined the Big 12 in 1996.

“It's like that old song by Hank Snow, `I've Been Everywhere' — our fans, they've traveled all over the place,” said John Denton, the Horned Frogs' kicker for their 1984 Bluebonnet Bowl team who has been part of their radio broadcasts since 1988.

All the way from the East Coast to Hawaii, with stops in the Western Athletic Conference, Conference USA and the Mountain West before finally getting an invitation to the Big 12 in 2012. They are now the school located the closest to the league's headquarte­rs in North Texas, after being either the easternmos­t or westernmos­t team in other conference­s.

The long journey by TCU (13-1) has taken it to a showdown with defending national champion Georgia (14-0) in the title game Monday night at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood. TCU has just over 10,000 students, about one-third the enrollment at Georgia's main campus.

The Frogs, led by former Cal coach Sonny Dykes, won their semifinal over Michigan in the Fiesta Bowl, the game where they were a BCS buster along with Boise State in 2009, long before the current four-team playoff.

“We're focused in on what we're doing but we understand there's been so many great teams that built this program to get to where we are,” Heisman Trophy runnerup quarterbac­k Max Duggan said. “I've had guys from past teams that have been hitting me up and congratula­ting me, and they're rooting for us ... whether it's teams back in the Southwest Conference, teams with Andy (Dalton), the 2014 team.”

The Frogs have already matched the school record for wins set by the 2010 team that, with Dalton as the senior quarterbac­k, went 13-0 with a Rose Bowl victory and was No. 2 in the final AP Top 25 poll. That was the middle of three consecutiv­e seasons (2009-11) when TCU didn't lose a Mountain West league game before going to the Big 12.

Within a month after that Rose Bowl victory, the school had raised the final $30 million needed for a $165 million rebuild of Amon G. Carter Stadium, its campus home. Both fundraisin­g and enrollment increased, helping set up TCU's major conference move.

That was also during a span when the Horned Frogs had accepted an invitation to join the Big East, but never played in the predominan­t basketball league that no longer sponsors football.

After the SWC dissolved, TCU initially was part of the WAC, then a 16-team conference that is now less than half that size and playing at the Championsh­ip Subdivisio­n level after an eight-season hiatus that ended in 2021. Then came four seasons in C-USA before four outright MWC titles in seven seasons.

TCU bottomed out at 1-10 in 1997, the second season after the SWC, before Dennis Franchione was hired and the Frogs finished his debut season with a victory over Southern California in the Sun Bowl when Pro Football Hall of Fame running back LaDainian Tomlinson was a sophomore.

When Franchione left for Alabama at the end of the 2000 season, defensive coordinato­r Gary Patterson succeeded him and won a school-record 181 games before his departure with four games left in the 2021 season. The Frogs had 11 seasons with at least 10 wins overall under Patterson and top-10 finishes in the AP Top 25 six times over a 10-season period through 2017.

 ?? RICK SCUTERI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? TCU head coach Sonny Dykes holds the trophy after the Horned Frogs defeated Michigan in the Fiesta Bowl to advance to Monday's CFP championsh­ip game.
RICK SCUTERI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS TCU head coach Sonny Dykes holds the trophy after the Horned Frogs defeated Michigan in the Fiesta Bowl to advance to Monday's CFP championsh­ip game.

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