Curt Cignetti Just Got Validation In Indianas Josh Hoover Debate

TCU's Sonny Dykes reflects on criticisms of quarterback Josh Hoover, acknowledging past coaching strategies may have hindered his performance.

TCU coach Sonny Dykes is no longer pushing back on Curt Cignetti’s defense of Josh Hoover.

After a spring comment that drew attention for Hoover’s turnover numbers, Dykes said Wednesday at Big 12 Media Days that Cignetti had a point. Hoover transferred from TCU to Indiana during the offseason, and Cignetti had argued that the quarterback would be in a better spot with a stronger defense and a more reliable run game behind him.

“There’s a lot of truth to what he (Cignetti) said,” Dykes told The Athletic on Wednesday at Big 12 Media Days.

Dykes had sparked the discussion earlier this spring when he noted that Hoover started 31 games and turned the ball over 42 times in those starts. That led Cignetti to respond by saying Hoover’s new surroundings would help him thrive.

“When Josh got here, he met his two new best friends - great defense and a really good run game, and he was never the same after that,” Cignetti said in defense of his new quarterback.

Hoover’s numbers still make him one of the most productive active passers in college football. He enters Bloomington as the active career leader in passing yards with 9,629 and ranks second among active players with 71 passing touchdowns. But the turnovers remain part of the story, and Dykes said the issue wasn’t only on Hoover.

Dykes told The Athletic that the broader point people missed was that the mistakes were tied to the coaching around him as well. TCU brought in a new offensive coordinator this offseason, and Dykes said he wants to lean more on the run game and get more out of the defense - the same ingredients Cignetti pointed to.

“There’s a million different reasons why he turned it over,” Dykes told The Athletic. “But (Cignetti) was fair.

I think (he) was right. When you don’t have to score 50 points to win, it’s a lot easier.”

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