TCU News: Top 25 of ’25
From a newsworthy year in TCU Athletics to developments in university leadership, and from TCU’s role in Landman to heartwarming Horned Frog tales, TCU News takes a look at its top stories of the year.
TCU for Texans Expands Access to a Horned Frog Education
An ambitious aid initiative is removing financial barriers to obtaining a TCU degree
by providing tuition – as well as assistance for food and housing – for qualifying
residents. Beginning with the fall 2026 class, TCU for Texans will be available to
incoming first-year students whose families earn $70,000 or less in adjusted gross
income and meet other eligibility criteria through the financial aid application process.
Read more.
Taylor Sheridan to Receive Honorary Degree at TCU Spring 2025 Commencement
Texas Christian University recognized acclaimed filmmaker, writer and producer Taylor
Sheridan with an honorary Doctor of Letters degree during its spring commencement,
acknowledging his significant contributions to the arts, the Texas film industry,
the greater Fort Worth community and TCU.
Read more.
Daniel W. Pullin Becomes 11th Chancellor of Texas Christian University
Daniel W. Pullin began his tenure as the 11th Chancellor of TCU, signaling a bold
new chapter in the university’s 152-year evolution — one defined by strategic growth,
academic distinction, competitive excellence and a commitment to shaping the future
of higher education.
Read more.
TCU’s $40 Million Alumni Naming Gift ‘Sends a Powerful Message’
Texas Christian University’s second biggest college has a new name: the Louise Dilworth
Davis College of Science & Engineering. A $40 million gift from the 1977 alumna will
support the college’s strategic plan and operations in perpetuity and will also endow
the college’s deanship, the Louise Dilworth Davis Dean.
Read more.
TCU Names Mike Buddie Director of Intercollegiate Athletics
TCU has named Mike Buddie its ninth athletic director in TCU history. Following a
nationwide search, Buddie joins TCU from the United States Military Academy at West
Point, where he served as director of athletics since 2019. During his tenure, he
led Army’s athletics programs to new heights.
Read more.
Two Major Residence Life Developments to Expand TCU Student Experience
The TCU Board of Trustees approved two residence life developments: Morado on Berry,
located along Berry Street near the campus’s southern edge, will deliver 780 luxury
apartment-style beds for upper-division and graduate students, while TCU plans to
develop 2,450 beds across four on-campus sites. At its spring 2025 meeting, the Board
also approved a comprehensive renovation of Ed Landreth Hall and Auditorium.
Read more.
TCU Ranks Top 100 in U.S. News & World Report for 15th Year
U.S. News & World Report ranked Texas Christian University as a Top 100 National University and placed TCU
at the top in six other categories, including business and health care. TCU saw notable
gains in entrepreneurship, undergraduate business and nursing — areas that align with
workforce demand and institutional investment.
Read more.
Horned Frogs Lead On: New National Spot Showcases Alumni Leaders
TCU has always been known for creating leaders, but its newest national broadcast
commercial tells that story in a bold new way. The 30-second spot, which debuted nationally
Sept. 20 on ESPN2 during the TCU rivalry game against SMU, breaks from the traditional
formula of higher education ads filled with classroom scenes and campus beauty shots.
Instead, it focuses on a single theme: alumni outcomes. The commercial features five
Horned Frogs whose careers embody momentum and purpose.
Read more.
Smile! The Princeton Review Ranks TCU at the Top for Happiest Students
Cue the smiley face emojis. TCU is home once again to a joy-filled student body. TCU
appeared in several top rankings by The Princeton Review, including placing No. 1
for “happiest students.” TCU achieved the same status in 2024. TCU received several
top-10 rankings, including Best-Run Colleges and Best Quality of Life, among others.
Read more.
TCU Women’s Basketball: Cinderella Goes to the Dance
The Sweet 16 appearance is just one in a long line of firsts, mosts and bests achieved
by women’s basketball head coach Mark Campbell and the Horned Frogs this season. A March win over Notre Dame sent the team to the Elite Eight where they faced No.
1 Texas. “I think it’s the greatest story going on in college basketball — men or
women,” Campbell said.
Read more.
Filming ‘Landman’ Provides TCU Students Experiential Learning
Hollywood’s spotlight is shining directly on Texas Christian University students.
As viewers turn to the anticipated second season of the hit TV show Landman, know that Horned Frogs had a hand in its success. In addition to working as extras
on the Taylor Sheridan production, as hundreds had in brief on-campus filming in the
first season, students this time had a larger role. For Season 2 of the anticipated
Paramount+ series, Horned Frogs worked as extras and behind the scenes, getting real-world,
hands-on experience in areas such as camera and wardrobe.
Read more.
TCU, UT Southwestern Lead $25 Million Effort to Improve Maternal Health in North Texas
In Fort Worth’s 76104 ZIP code, the infant mortality rate once reached 19 deaths per
1,000 live births, more than triple the national average. Across North Texas, maternal
morbidity rates rank among the highest in the country. Now, a $25 million initiative
led by the Burnett School of Medicine at TCU and the University of Texas Southwestern
Medical Center is determined to reverse those numbers.
Read more.
‘TCU and Mystic Shaped and Formed Me’
Caroline Cutrona ’24 (’25 M.Ed.) was a counselor at Camp Mystic when the deadly floods
devastated Central Texas this summer. This is a story about the places that shape
us and the experiences that change us. Nights had been a leisurely routine for Cutrona
and the 14 little campers in her cabin. She read them the daily devotional. She led
them in bedtime prayers. And then she tucked them into their beds. The devotional
on July 3, 2025: Joy Choosers.
Read more.
Faculty Q&A: Understanding Executive Orders, Evolving Impact
As one of the most powerful tools available to a U.S. president, executive orders
can shape policy and governance. Michele Meitl, associate professor of criminology
and criminal justice and assistant director of the department’s graduate program,
also holds a juris doctorate and has focused research on constitutional law. She took
time to explain the nature of executive orders, their legal boundaries and how their
use has evolved in modern presidencies.
Read more.
A Vibrant East Campus: New TCU Dining, Residence Halls Open
For Horned Frogs taking morning classes in the Neeley School of Business, there really
is only one downside: Getting across campus by 8 a.m. necessitated an early wake-up.
With the opening of Hill Hall and Walsh Hall in the spring, students now have the
ability to attend Neeley and any other classes on the east side of campus within minutes,
with a breakfast stop at Gutierrez Hall if desired.
Read more.
New East Campus Parking Garage will also be New Home for TCU Public Safety
Critical big ideas are at the heart of the TCU Campus Master Plan. The nuts and bolts
are safety and parking, which will be two of the first things to visibly take shape.
The TCU Board of Trustees approved the construction of a new parking garage, which
will house a new station for the TCU Police Department at the ground level at the
corner of Merida Avenue and West Cantey Street. Adrian Andrews, assistant vice chancellor
for public safety, and Robert Rangel, chief of police, recently spoke to TCU News
about what the campus can expect.
Read more.
University Launches New Strategic Plan, LEAD ON: Values in Action
TCU officially unveiled its new strategic plan, marking a significant milestone in
the university’s commitment to shaping its future over the next decade. LEAD ON: Values
in Action includes four foundational pillars that work together to support TCU’s mission
and vision: Student-Centered Growth; Research, Scholarship & Creative Activities;
Community Engagement; and Athletics.
Read more.
Reuben Burch to Focus on Funding, Scholarly Productivity as Vice Provost for Research
Reuben F. Burch V is a dynamic and entrepreneurial-minded executive research administrator
who joins TCU as vice provost for research. With extensive leadership experience in
both higher education and industry, he will provide vision, direction and strategic
planning to increase research funding and scholarly productivity to support TCU’s
national research agenda.
Read more.
TCU Goes Global: Horned Frogs to Play in Dublin, Welcome World Cup Teams to Dallas-Fort
Worth
TCU will face North Carolina next August in the Aer Lingus College Football Classic,
once again taking the world stage in what will be the 11th Division I college football
game to take place on Irish soil. Set for another international spotlight – with its
world-class facilities and prime Fort Worth location – TCU is among fewer than two
dozen U.S. universities up for a FIFA World Cup base-camp site in 2026.
Read more.
TCU Women’s Beach Volleyball: Road to the National Championship Ends with Splash in
the Ocean
TCU graduate student Daniela Alvarez’s hands and the spiked volleyball met just above
the tape for the briefest of moments Sunday, hovering in the in between of “almost”
and “National Champions.” Then: block, point, game, set and a national championship
for the TCU women’s beach volleyball team.
Read more.
TCU Expands Educational Research with Bezos Family Foundation Gift
TCU announced a new endowed fund made possible by a $3 million investment from the
Bezos Family Foundation and established in recognition of the College of Education’s
centennial year. The endowment will fund an expansion of the college’s research initiatives,
fueling the science of learning while bolstering faculty-led research and community-engaged
projects that address critical education issues.
Read more.
Chris Watts Sets Out to Research ‘Staggering Increase’ in Parkinson’s
TCU Parkinson’s disease researcher Chris Watts is working on yet another project to
inform public health. Watts, Marilyn & Morgan Davies Dean of the Harris College of
Nursing & Health Sciences, has gathered preliminary data for a new line of research
on the increasingly common disease. Watts is collaborating with Sean Young, a medical
geographer from the University of Texas Southwestern.
Read more.
Say Yes: FOX Sports Reporter Alexa Landestoy ’18 Shares Rules for Succeeding in Sports
Media
Meet Alexa Landestoy ’18, the sideline reporter on one of FOX Sports’ college football
broadcast teams with Robert Griffin III and Jason Benetti, a proud TCU Horned Frog,
and well on her way to being a household name in sports journalism. The question she
gets most often: “How do I do what you are doing?”
Read more.
Full Circle Moment: Baseball Pro Returns to TCU to Finish Degree
For college athletes, the path to graduation isn’t always a straight line or even
always one that has a finish line. That is why former Horned Frogs catcher Evan Skoug
’25 had a plan and a promise to return for his degree. Skoug fulfilled that promise
this spring … after a few extra innings. Drafted in 2017 by the Chicago White Sox,
Skoug played in the organization until retirement in 2023. He then returned to TCU
to complete his bachelor’s degree in strategic communication.
Read more.
Welcome to the Neighborhood: TCU Dedicates Gutierrez, Hill, Walsh Halls
The dining hall and two new residence halls on the east side of campus were built
with TCU’s next 150 years in mind. Students, TCU administrators, donors and their
families and TCU Board of Trustee members were on hand April 11 to get a firsthand
look at Gutierrez Hall, Hill Hall and Walsh Hall, which opened to students at the
beginning of the semester.
Read more.