

Jamie Dixon’s men’s team finished the regular season strong, closing with five straight wins and securing the program’s first winning Big 12 record in eight years.
The late-season surge pushed the Horned Frogs firmly into the NCAA Tournament picture, something that looked unlikely earlier in the season when the team struggled to close games.
Despite the turnaround, TCU’s roster has produced offense by committee. The Horned Frogs don’t have a single player ranked among the top 25 scorers in the Big 12, yet they still finished 10th in the conference in scoring as a team, proof that their balance has become a strength.
On the women’s side, TCU remains dangerous heading toward March, but the blueprint for success is clear.
The Horned Frogs go as Olivia Miles and Marta Suarez go.
Miles scored 17 points in the Big 12 Tournament final, while Suarez added 16 before fouling out, highlighting both the star power and the thin margin for error. When those two are rolling, TCU can compete with anyone. When foul trouble or cold shooting hits, the offense can stall quickly.
That reality will define TCU’s postseason path.
But in Fort Worth, the bigger conversation remains focused on the fall.