North Carolina
Game Week: at North Carolina – TCU Athletics
GAME DAY DETAILS
TCU (0-0) at North Carolina (0-0)
Monday, Sept. 1 – 7:00 p.m. CT
Kenan Memorial Stadium – Chapel Hill, N.C.
Tickets » Sold Out. Buy on SeatGeek
How to Track the Game:
📺 Television » ESPN
(Rece Davis, Kirk Herbstreit, Holly Rowe)
📻 Radio Tuning » KZPS 92.5 FM / (Spanish) KWRD 100.7 FM
📻 Radio Streaming » The Varsity Network app
📊 Live Stats » StatBroadcast
GAME DAY PRIMER
Weekly Press Conference
» Watch
2025 Fact Book
» Read
Weekly Game Notes
» Read
NOTING THE HORNED FROGS
- TCU begins its fourth season under the direction of head coach Sonny Dykes in 2025. In his first three years, the 2022 National Coach of the Year has led TCU to more wins in his first three seasons (27) than all but one head coach in program history (Dutch Meyer, 29, 1934-36).
- Dykes has also led programs at SMU (2018-21), Cal (2013-16), and Louisiana Tech (2010-12). In all four stops, Dykes has led the program to the postseason, making him one of just six active head coaches to take four different schools to a bowl game. The others are Hugh Freeze, Butch Jones, Brian Kelly, Lane Kiffin, and Rich Rodriguez.
- Directing the TCU offense for his third season as the starting quarterback is redshirt junior Josh Hoover. In his redshirt sophomore campaign, Hoover set TCU’s single-season passing record with 3,949 yards on 313-of-471 passing with 27 touchdowns to 11 interceptions. He has thrown 42 touchdown passes in 19 career starts.
- Surrounding Hoover will be a new cast of wide receivers as 76 combined starts and 5,464 career receiving yards across their college careers left with the departures of Jack Bech, Savion Williams, and JP Richardson to the NFL.
- TCU’s rushing attack was an offseason focus as the Horned Frogs rushed for just 113.9 yards per game last season, their lowest per game average since 1997 (110.2) and by far the lowest for a Dykes-coached team. Over his tenure as a head coach, Dykes’ teams have averaged 158.5 yards per game on the ground with his 2012 Louisiana Tech team posting 227.2 yards per game.
- Defensively, the Horned Frogs are led by Bud Clark, who led all safeties in college football last season with a 90.1 coverage grade. After logging a career-high 68 tackles last season, Clark opted to return to TCU rather than head to the NFL, and his 11 career interceptions are two shy of cracking the program’s record book.
NOTING THE GAME
- TCU and North Carolina are set to play the final game of Week 1 on Monday night in Chapel Hill. The Horned Frogs have not traveled to the state of North Carolina for a game since a 2002 trip to East Carolina as members of Conference USA.
- The two programs last met in 1997 when No. 5 North Carolina came to Fort Worth and won 31-10. North Carolina has won all three meetings.
- The game is one of two Power 4 non-conference opponents for TCU this season. TCU is one of only two programs in the country to have 11 Power 4 opponents in their 2025 schedule.
- TCU is 10-6 since 2015 against non-conference Power 4/5 foes. Among those games in a true road environment (excluding bowl games), the Frogs are 4-1.
- The Horned Frogs enter the game, as a program, on a four-game winning streak, having won six of their final seven in 2024. The last time TCU entered a season on a four-plus game winning streak was 2014 after going 12-1 and defeating No. 9 Ole Miss in the Peach Bowl.
North Carolina
NC Made: Durham’s Old Hillside Bourbon toasts Black heritage one bottle at a time
DURHAM, N.C. (WTVD) — Bourbon is more than a business for Jesse Carpenter — it’s a tribute to the city that shaped him.
“This is Durham. This is where I’m from. This is where I grew up,” said Carpenter, Chief Product Officer of Old Hillside Bourbon.
The company he co-founded with childhood friends takes its name and identity from one of Durham’s most iconic institutions-Hillside High School, one of the oldest historically Black high schools in the nation.
“We graduated Class of 1993 from Hillside High School,” Carpenter said. “Concord and Lawson Street. It’s the old Hillside.”
The idea took root during the pandemic when Carpenter proposed starting a bourbon company to those same friends.
“I had an idea to start a bourbon company, and they were on board,” he said. “Friends from 30 years ago, and now we’re doing this business together. It’s awesome.”
From 300 Cases to 10,000
What began as a pandemic-era idea has evolved into a rapidly growing business.
In its inaugural year, Old Hillside distributed 300 cases; this year, the company anticipates 10,000. The bourbon also earned Best in Show at the 2023 TAG Global Spirits Awards, impressing even the most discerning craft bourbon critics.
“Let me focus on the aroma — layers of oak, vanilla,” one reviewer commented on the Bourbon Banter YouTube channel, concluding with, “I think it’s a great taste.”
SEE MORE NC MADE STORIES
A Bottle Full of Stories
Beyond its flavor, Old Hillside stands out for the history embedded in its label. Each vintage pays homage to a chapter of Black American history that might otherwise remain overlooked.
The inaugural bottle features a photo of the old Hillside High building, symbolizing the school’s deep community ties. A second flavor pays tribute to the African American jockeys who dominated the Kentucky Derby before the Jim Crow era effectively pushed them out of the sport. The company’s latest release honors the Harlem Hellfighters, the renowned all-Black military unit that served with distinction in World War I.
It’s a storytelling approach that Carpenter and his team are actively working to spread across North Carolina. Brand ambassadors Corey Carpenter and Amire Schealey are on the front lines of that effort.
“More bars and restaurants — tackling different markets,” said Corey Carpenter. Schealey added that the team is “setting up tastings at different ABC boards to build up our brand and presence around the state of North Carolina.”
Like many acclaimed bourbons, Old Hillside is distilled and bottled in Kentucky. But its founders are quick to point out where its true spirit comes from.
“Old Hillside is a lifestyle,” Jesse Carpenter said. “Not just a school-friendship and camaraderie. That’s what we do.”
SEE ALSO | NC Made: Raleigh jewelry brand AnnaBanana grows from UNC dorm room to statewide success
Copyright © 2026 WTVD-TV. All Rights Reserved.
North Carolina
State and local leaders discuss ‘child-care crisis’ in NC
DURHAM, N.C. (WTVD) — State and local leaders gathered in Durham on Thursday to discuss how they say North Carolina’s ‘child-care crisis’ is taking a toll on our communities.
“We’re demanding recognition,” former childcare provider DeeDee Fields said. “We want fair compensation. We want health protections and a retirement pathway for the workforce that makes all the work possible.”
Childcare is one of the biggest expenses North Carolinians face, with infant care more costly than in-state college tuition per year, according to data. Childcare for a four-year-old costs nearly $8,000 a year.
Since 2020, North Carolina has seen a record loss of licensed childcare programs. Durham County, for example, experienced a 14% drop.
“I think a lot of people are making these tough choices about what makes the most sense for their family,” Nylah Jimerson said.
Jimerson used to work as a nanny before she became a parent. She’s one of more than a quarter of parents in North Carolina who left the workforce to stay home to care for children.
As North Carolina is the only state without a new budget, childcare is top of mind for State Sen. Sophia Chitlik, who co-authored a package of bills that aims to better support the industry, including making childcare more affordable.
“The ‘Child Care Omnibus’ is part of a series of bills that have budget requirements and budget asks in them,” Chitlik said. “But we’re not going to know until we get a state budget. The most urgent and important thing, in addition to those subsidies, is raising the subsidy floor … so I hope that there is bipartisan consensus that would be worked out in a state budget.”
North Carolina could remain without a budget until the legislature is back in session in April.
“We have got to do something about childcare,” Sen. Natalie Murdock said. “We shouldn’t be in this position … we have to have a sustainable model and program because it’s about our children.”
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Copyright © 2026 WTVD-TV. All Rights Reserved.
North Carolina
Lawmakers discuss solutions to solving a 'child care crisis' in NC
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