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Horned Frog Fast Break

Three Things to Watch in TCU’s Top-20 Tilt with NC State

November 14, 2025

No. 17 TCU Women’s Basketball closed its season-opening homestand on Wednesday night, dominating Tennessee State 122–39 after earlier decisive wins over Sam Houston and North Carolina A&T.  

The most recent result was not only impressive but historic. The Horned Frogs’ 83-point margin of victory is the largest in TCU men’s or women’s basketball history, and the 122 points mark the program’s second-highest total against a Division I opponent in nearly five decades. 

“In transition, this team is explosive,” head coach Mark Campbell said to open Wednesday’s postgame press conference. “If we can defend and rebound, there are just so many playmakers running around the court and so many skilled players. It’s been three games in a row now where the ball is zinging all over the place.”

The Frogs were efficient and balanced during the midweek rout, going 17-for-27 (63 percent) from beyond the arc. No team in the country shot better than 39 percent from three over the course of 2024–25. Guard Maddie Scherr sank all six of her three-point attempts and finished with a game-high 22 points — her most since Dec. 21, 2023 — after missing all of last season with injury. 

You’re just starting to see what Maddie’s able to do. She’s always been one of the best guards in college basketball,” Campbell said, noting that the now graduate student Scherr was a McDonald’s All-American coming out of Kentucky’s Ryle High School. 

Forward Natalie Mazurek, who averaged four minutes per game last season (and never exceeded four points during her first 16 games as a Horned Frog), knocked down three three-pointers Wednesday — all within the final five and a half minutes of regulation — bringing the home crowd roaring to its feet each time. 

“Special shout out for Nat, who works her tail off every day, competes every day, has been a huge part of our program the last two years,” Campbell said, “so really cool for her to get some minutes and be able to stick shots. 

Contributions off the bench will be key if the Frogs are to capture what would be an impressive road win over No. 10 NC State on Sunday afternoon. 

Photograph of a TCU women’s basketball player seen from a low rear angle, sitting with arms resting on folding chairs on either side during pregame introductions. A purple-lit jumbotron hangs overhead in a red-lit arena.

Fresh off a record-setting blowout, the Frogs set their sights on a tough road test against No. 10 NC State. Courtesy of TCU Athletics

The Wolfpack, a Final Four team two seasons ago, fell to the Frogs last year at Schollmaier Arena in a 76-73 thriller that vaulted TCU into the AP Top 25, setting the stage for an all-time year. 

With Sunday’s rematch in Raleigh all but promising to challenge the Frogs in new ways, here are three things to watch as TCU looks to build on a stellar start. 

Will off-court chemistry continue to show?

The Horned Frogs aren’t just among the nation’s top 10 in scoring this season — they also rank fourth in assists, averaging 24.7 per game. The team has had a different leading scorer in each of its three wins.

We all get along so well. We hang out outside of basketball,” Mazurek said. “We enjoy spending time with each other, and I feel like that plays a part on the court.”

Photograph of TCU forward Natalie Mazurek preparing to shoot a basketball during a pregame warmup at Schollmaier Arena in Fort Worth, Texas, November 2025 NCAA basketball game.

Natalie Mazurek knocked down three of the four shots she took from three-point range Wednesday night against Tennessee State. Courtesy of TCU Athletics

“You see us on the court, vibing and just having fun, laughing with each other,” echoed Olivia Miles after posting her first double-double of the season Wednesday. “That’s what it’s all about at the end of the day. It’s bigger than basketball. These girls and these relationships last forever. We just aren’t afraid to be ourselves.” 

NC State will be without guard Saniya Rivers, a two-time All-ACC defender who was the No. 8 overall pick in April’s WNBA draft by the Connecticut Sun. The Wolfpack haven’t been known for elite team defense under Texas native Wes Moore — in his 13 years as head coach, they’ve never ranked in the top 25 in scoring defense. But they do bring offensive firepower, with four players averaging double figures, including junior guard Zoe Brooks and junior forward Khamil Pierre, who each average a double-double through three games. 

Will early top-15 showdowns for NC State factor in?

The Wolfpack handled Maine on Tuesday night, 66-47, in their first contest of the season at James T. Valvano Arena — the storied venue named for the famous late coach.

NC State’s other two early-season matchups, against No. 12 Tennessee and No. 8 USC, were both decided by a single possession.

They’re not going to be nervous,” Campbell said. “That program has been at such a high level for years. And so they’ve played in tons of big games. They’re going to be well prepared.”

TCU enters Sunday with three days’ rest and holds a trio of wins by 39-plus points. The Frogs don’t face another top-25 opponent until Jan. 7, when they visit No. 20 Oklahoma State.

How will the Frogs fare in the paint? 

TCU’s first loss last season, an 85-52 defeat to South Carolina at Dickies Arena in December, was largely decided in the paint. The Frogs were outrebounded 36-26 overall and 8-6 on the offensive glass. 

Looking ahead to Sunday, NC State’s Pierre — a 6-foot-2 transfer from Vanderbilt — has been a beast on the boards early in the season, stacking up 14, 18 and 10 rebounds over the Wolfpack’s first three games. 

The Frogs’ bigs have stepped up as well. Senior center Kennedy Basham recorded six blocks against North Carolina A&T on Nov. 6, tied for the second most of her career, while fellow transfer and sophomore center Clara Silva leads the team with 8.7 rebounds per game. 

How TCU’s frontcourt matches up with Pierre and NC State’s size and athleticism in the paint could be a decisive factor on Sunday. 

When the Frogs return to Schollmaier for a 6:30 p.m. tip against Tarleton State next Thursday, they’ll be aiming to extend their program record to 28 consecutive home victories.

— Corey Zapata-Smith

TCU Women’s Basketball Season Preview: Olivia Miles Headlines a Deep 2025-26 Horned Frog Squad

October 23, 2025

They say defense wins championships, and No. 17 TCU loaded up on it through the transfer portal this offseason.

Photograph of Horned Frog student-athlete Olivia Miles wearing a black TCU basketball uniform against an all-purple backdrop. She holds the jersey forward, hands around the "TCU" emblem on the front.

Olivia Miles led Notre Dame with 5.8 assists per game last season, helping the Fighting Irish reach their fourth straight Sweet 16. Photo by Zach Campbell | TCU Athletics

Chief among the newcomers is senior center Kennedy Basham, who arrives in Fort Worth after a 2024-25 season at Arizona State, where she led the team in defensive rebounds, totaling 34 more than any other Sun Devil, and averaged 2.6 blocks per game, good for second in the Big 12.

She’s not the only defensive-minded addition. The Frogs also brought in senior guard Veronica Sheffey, who stacked up seven steals in a three-game span en route to Mountain West Conference Tournament MVP honors, as she willed San Diego State to the Big Dance for the first time in 13 years.

And that’s not to mention guard Olivia Miles, a graduate student, whose 15.4 points per game last season marked a career best, punctuating a Notre Dame career that will all but certainly see the two-time AP All-American inducted into the program’s Ring of Honor.

With those reinforcements, plus several key veteran holdovers from the 2024-25 squad that reached the Elite Eight for the first time in school history, TCU enters Year 3 of the Mark Campbell era, its roster rich in talent.

What changed since last season

Nothing on the coaching front. Associate head coach Xavier Lopez and assistants Minyon Moore, Nia Jackson, Nolan Wilson and Jessie Craig all return under Coach Campbell, along with Adeola Akomolafe, director of recruiting operations and student-athlete development. 

The roster, however, is reloaded. Last season’s Big 12 Player of the Year, Hailey Van Lith, went 11th overall in April’s WNBA Draft after leading the Frogs in points and assists. If a player in the 2025 portal class can match that level of offensive firepower, it’s Miles, projected by ESPN as a top-2 pick. 

TCU women’s basketball player Marta Suárez attempts a left-handed layup during practice while teammate Veronica Sheffey watches from her left.

Transfers Marta Suárez, right, and Veronica Sheffey bring NCAA Tournament experience to a veteran TCU roster. Courtesy of TCU Athletics

TCU adds size and experience up front to replace defensive stalwart Sedona Prince ’25 MLA. Graduate student and forward Marta Suárez joins the Frogs with 80 career Power Four starts, while 6-foot-7 sophomore center Clara Silva arrives from Kentucky, giving TCU another post presence alongside Basham and first-year center Emily Hunter. Graduate student and forward Natalie Mazurek returns for what will be her second year with the Frogs after transferring from South Dakota. 

Helping to counter the departure of sharpshooter Madison Conner ’24 is graduate student and guard Maddie Scherr, who missed all of last season with injury. The former Kentucky Wildcat brings a proven scoring touch: in 2022-23, she led the SEC by making 92 percent of her free throws, and her 1.4 three-pointers per game in 2023-24 marked a career high. 

Sophomore guard Taliyah Parker signed on after a season at Texas A&M, where she averaged one steal over 18 minutes per game, adding defensive energy off the bench. First-year players Sarah Portlock, a 6-foot-8 Australian center, and guard Clara Bielefeld, who made history as the youngest competitor on Germany’s senior national team at the FIBA Women’s EuroBasket Championship, bolster TCU’s depth. The Frogs will be without senior forward Aaliyah Roberson for the duration of the season after she suffered a torn ACL in the spring. The former San Antonio area high school standout still holds one year of NCAA eligibility.

Biggest storyline heading into the season

How will the backcourt gel? Five of the Frogs’ six leading scorers last season were guards, but only junior Donovyn Hunter and senior Taylor Bigby return from that group. 

On paper, TCU boasts a dynamic mix of playmakers, but how quickly this unit develops chemistry will go a long way in determining the effectiveness of an offense that could be largely driven by guard play. 

Are the Frogs better positioned than a year ago?

Very possibly, and for the rest of the Big 12, that’s a scary thought. The Horned Frogs swept the conference titles last season, topping three-time national champions Baylor in both the regular-season finale, which left TCU a game ahead at 16-2 in conference, and the Big 12 championship game just a week later.

The Frogs retain the top-end talent and deep bench that carried them to new heights a season ago, and the stability of the coaching staff serves as another plus as TCU sets out to defend its conference crown.

Player to watch

Donovyn Hunter. She may not finish as the team’s top scorer, but the ex-Oregon State Beaver contributes on both ends of the floor. She showed her sharpshooting potential by hitting all four of her three-point attempts — and each of her six field goals — in TCU’s 85-70 NCAA Tournament win against Louisville and appears to be locked in for a breakout campaign, routinely pacing the team in preseason sprint drills.

Newcomer who could make the biggest difference

Suárez is perhaps the favorite to lead TCU’s frontcourt in scoring, having averaged double figures for Cal in each of the past two seasons. But the answer here has to be Miles. Among the more impressive numbers from the former Fighting Irish star last year: Her 40.6 percent mark from three — second best in the ACC — represented a jump of more than 13 points from her previous career high.

Statistic to watch

Turnover ratio. TCU lost the turnover battle in each of its four losses last season.

For a starting group that featured three of the Big 12’s top six players in offensive rating in 2024–25, ball security was one of its few weaknesses. The Frogs’ 12.4 giveaways per game were lowest in the conference, but the miscues proved costly in key moments. Tightening up — especially with eight newcomers among 14 total players — will again be essential to sustaining success in March, and maybe into April.

Toughest stretch on the schedule

The Frogs’ final six regular-season conference matchups, between Feb. 12 and March 1, include three against preseason AP Top 25 teams: No. 16 Baylor, West Virginia (receiving votes), No. 14 Iowa State, Houston, Cincinnati and a second meeting with No. 16 Baylor.

What success looks like this season

Dare I say a trip to Phoenix for the NCAA Women’s Final Four? For a team that finished last in the Big 12 with a 1-17 league record just three seasons ago, it sounds crazy. And yet, with a talented but balanced roster and a phenom guard leading the way, it feels within reach.

One bold prediction

The Frogs this season take the next step, reaching the program’s first Final Four behind a first-team All-America-caliber campaign from Miles.

— Corey Zapata-Smith