TCU competes in
NCAA Division I athletics as a member of the
Big 12 Conference (Big XII). For most of its history (1923–1996), TCU was a member of the now defunct
Southwest Conference (SWC). Prior to joining the Big XII in 2012, TCU spent seven years in the
Mountain West Conference (MWC) (2005–2011), where they were the only school to join from a conference other than the
Western Athletic Conference (WAC), having come from
Conference USA (C-USA), of which they were a member from 2001 to 2005. Before joining C-USA, TCU teams competed in the WAC for five years, from 1996 to 2001, after the SWC dissolved. TCU's varsity sports have eight men's and twelve women's squads. Men's sports include
baseball,
basketball,
football,
golf, swimming and diving, track and field, cross country, and tennis. Women's sports include basketball, volleyball, beach volleyball, golf, swimming and diving, cross country, track and field, triathlon, soccer, rifle, equestrian, and tennis. In recent years the university has made significant upgrades to its athletics facilities, including construction of the Abe-Martin Academic Enhancement Center, which was completed in August 2008. The university finished reconstruction of the entire Amon G. Carter Football Stadium in September 2012, with an additional expansion on the east side of the stadium being completed in 2019. The Daniel-Meyer Coliseum underwent a reconstruction and was completed as Ed and Rae Schollmaier Arena for the 2015–16 basketball season, with expanded seating, concessions, office and locker room space, better sight lines, and luxury fan facilities.
Football The Horned Frogs have won two national championships, one in 1935 and the other in 1938. The Horned Frogs also competed in the
2023 College Football Playoff National Championship game, losing 65-7 to the
Georgia Bulldogs. Additionally, the team has captured eighteen conference championships. Many notable football players have played for TCU, including
Sammy Baugh,
Davey O'Brien,
Jim Swink,
Bob Lilly,
LaDainian Tomlinson, and
Andy Dalton.
Rivalries The oldest rivalry, which has become nationally famous since TCU joined the
Big 12 Conference, is
The Revivalry with
Baylor University. The Revivalry is unique in that it is a major FBS rivalry between two church affiliated schools. It is also one of the oldest rivalries in the nation, with the series currently led by TCU 59-54-7 since 1899. The
TCU Horned Frogs also share a historic rivalry with the
Southern Methodist University Mustangs, located in Fort Worth's sister (and rival) city,
Dallas. In football, teams from TCU and SMU have competed annually in the
Battle for the Iron Skillet since 1946 when, during pre-game festivities, an SMU fan was frying
frog legs as a joke before the game. A TCU fan, seeing this as a desecration of their "Horned Frog", told him that eating the frog legs was going well beyond the rivalry and that they should let the game decide who would get the skillet and the frog legs. SMU won the game, and the skillet and frog legs went to SMU that year. The tradition spilled over into the actual game and the Iron Skillet is now passed to the winner as the rivalry's traveling trophy.
West Virginia University has become a rival largely due to the schools' cohort entry into the Big 12 Conference together in 2012, combined with a toggle of extremely close, dramatic, last-minute wins in their football match ups to date. The rivalry with
Boise State University, with which TCU competed on the national stage in the 2000s as the two most prominent
"BCS Busters", and which also shared one year together as members of the Mountain West Conference, has also become a major, if periodic, rival. TCU and Boise State competed as the most effective BCS Busters before the demise of the
BCS system. In 2011, as members of the Mountain West, TCU won the only in-conference game between the two schools, winning with no time left on a missed Boise State field goal. The rivalry with Boise State will be played only sporadically in the future due to TCU's move to the
"Power Conference" Big 12 and Boise State's remaining status as the consensus leader of the "mid-major" programs in the
"Group of Five" Conferences. ==Notable faculty==