© 2024 Public Radio Tulsa
800 South Tucker Drive
Tulsa, OK 74104
(918) 631-2577

A listener-supported service of The University of Tulsa
classical 88.7 | public radio 89.5
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

TCU's women's basketball team had so many injuries, it held open tryouts midseason

MARY LOUISE KELLY, HOST:

Texas Christian University's women's basketball team was so good early this season, it cracked the top 25 in the AP's national rankings. But after multiple players were sidelined with injuries, the Division I Big 12 squad started a losing streak. So the team held a rare walk-on tryouts to refill its roster and try to restore the team's winning ways. Bill Zeeble with member station KERA in Dallas reports.

BILL ZEEBLE, BYLINE: Pregame excitement reverberates through TCU's Schollmaier Arena, where the once-winning Horned Frogs host the seventh-ranked Texas Longhorns. The Frogs' record-setting 14 straight opening wins ended with the New Year after serious injuries took out four top players. Two of those losses were forfeits because the team had only six players and couldn't field a team. A desperate TCU immediately held walk-on tryouts, a first for this school. Pre-med sophomore Mekhayia Moore, who's 20, is one of the four who made the Division I team.

MEKHAYIA MOORE: I was like, this is probably never going to happen again. I can at least - the least I can do is get, like, a little taste of college basketball and especially at the D1 level, which has been really amazing so far.

ZEEBLE: Amazing because Moore played ball all through high school, but thought she'd left team play behind. She hadn't practiced in more than a year. She and the other walk-ons know their skills aren't equal to their teammates. Their passion, though, is. Just ask 20-year-old Madison Conner, one of TCU's stars who got injured.

MADISON CONNER: These girls have been great. They come in here every day and work. I mean, they just helped me with a workout. So just seeing how much they love the game and genuinely just want to be a part of a team.

ZEEBLE: TCU coach Mark Campbell wasn't sure what he'd see at the tryouts. After all, school was well underway, class schedules were set and any hopefuls were out of practice, if not out of shape. But he says 40 to 50 young women tried out.

MARK CAMPBELL: They were diving on the floor. They were just beet red. They were competing. It was really refreshing to see the joy and passion for the opportunity they were trying to earn. It was like "American Idol."

ZEEBLE: At least the Division I college basketball version. In the very first game with walk-ons, TCU actually won, but they've mostly lost since. The role of walk-ons, says coach Campbell, is to spell the regulars during games and keep them sharp in practice.

CAMPBELL: You can't look at it as are they in the game, playing a huge role in helping us win? No. Are they in practice, flat-out competing and giving us everything they got to prepare us for the game? Yes.

ZEEBLE: In that recent match against the Texas Longhorns, it was a 3-point game at the half. Horned Frog fans were hopeful, but in the end, Texas wore down and blew out TCU by more than 20 points. Here's Coach Campbell after the loss.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

CAMPBELL: The last two games we've struggled to hit shots, but that's the hand we're dealt. We got to make threes in order to stay in these ballgames. Right now, there is no other option.

ZEEBLE: Eighteen-year-old freshman Piper Davis is just happy to be along for the ride. She's another walk-on who thought her basketball days ended after she left high school in Boise, Idaho, for college in Fort Worth, Texas.

PIPER DAVIS: Coach Campbell said, make the most of it 'cause this never happens. And so I just decided I'm going to play my best and go out there and have fun doing something that I thought was over and see where it goes.

ZEEBLE: For Davis and the rest of the Horned Frogs, they're still finding out where it goes.

For NPR News, I'm Bill Zeeble in Fort Worth. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.

Bill Zeeble
Bill Zeeble has been a full-time reporter at KERA since 1992, covering everything from medicine to the Mavericks and education to environmental issues. Heâââ