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CONNECTICUT 31, BAYLOR 28: Bears fall to Huskies in Friday night heartbreaker

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

CONNECTICUT 31, BAYLOR 28: Bears fall to Huskies in Friday night heartbreaker

By Denton Ramsey, NCAA Sportswriter/Big 12 Fans Baylor Correspondent

WACO, Texas – Despite a three-point loss to undefeated Connecticut on Friday night, Sept. 19, the Bears showed up to play – and brought some fireworks along for the ride – in front of a Huskies crowd and an ESPN audience.

With a freshman quarterback bearing a name no one had ever heard of until last week, Robert Griffin led Baylor’s football team like a veteran – while his counterparts did a near perfect job in both the secondary as well as the offensive and defensive lines.

And with a sports-frenzied hype surrounding Griffin entering Friday night’s affair – a coach’s worst nightmare – Griffin brought everything he had in him, and then some, to face the Huskies.

“You really can’t compare him to anyone else,” Baylor tight end Justin Akers said following Friday night’s loss at U-Conn. “The things that he does, the way that he cuts back, moves his body and the way he can throw on the run very accurately is something we really need in this offense.”

However, and regardless of the fact that Baylor fought to the finish and continued to keep a final drive alive until the game’s closing seconds, the Bears came up just short in a 31-28 setback at Connecticut.

“Any time you don’t win, it’s hard,” Baylor head coach Art Briles said following the Bears defeat. “That’s why we play the game. I feel terrible for our seniors and our guys who are fighting to be a bowl-eligible team. We had a great opportunity tonight to take a positive step toward bowl eligibility, a positive step toward the respect that we’re after and we came out where it didn’t work out right there in the end.

“I don’t think I did a good job right there at the end of the game of allowing our guys to get in position to get a field goal. I was thinking ‘touchdown’ and not thinking ‘field goal’ because we didn’t come up here to tie and go into overtime.”

After taking a 14-14 tie into the locker room at the break, Connecticut took a brief three-point lead before Griffin and company stepped up to lead the Bears down the field for a go-ahead touchdown with 6:48 remaining in the third quarter and Baylor on top, 21-17.

But Baylor’s lead was short-lived, as the Huskies answered the Bears score with a touchdown of their own, giving Connecticut a 24-21 lead heading into the fourth and final quarter.

Baylor took a 28-24 lead with 11:13 remaining in the game, and were primed to hold onto the lead until a late stop by Connecticut midway through the quarter forced the Bears to punt out of their own end zone – giving the Huskies a short field with the game on the line.

“It was a bad sequence of events,” Briles said. “The defense did a great job in stopping [Robert Griffin]. We’re starting out of our end zone and they make a couple of plays defensively. We almost popped a screen then had to punt out and then everything happens on top of it. A call not going our way and we get a 15-yard penalty tacked on to it which puts them at our 32-yard line, on a short field. That was the worst part of it.”

Shortly thereafter, the Huskies made one final push – and one final score – to give Connecticut a 31-28 lead with 6:04 left in the game.

But the Bears weren’t through fighting, and neither was their freshman play-caller.

Griffin, sometimes single-handedly, drove Baylor into Connecticut territory and had the Bears setup to score with just minutes left on the game clock.

This time around, though, the Huskies defense stopped the Bears in their tracks – and after having to burn their last two timeouts on a fourth-and-11 attempt inside the Connecticut 40-yard line, Griffin couldn’t connect with his received as the Bears fell in a heartbreaker.

“It’s a tough loss; everyone was out there playing as hard as they can,” Akers said. “Obviously, there are a lot of good things we can take out of it and also, there are a lot of bad things. There’s a few plays we should have had, a few costly penalties and stuff we usually don’t do. In an atmosphere like this, things kind of get into your head; you always want to play up to your potential – all the time – but one thing we have to strive for is to keep our head’s up.

“We have Oklahoma two weeks from now so we just have to stay focused for that. Any time you can play a team like this, play them this close for this long and come down to the last few plays on national TV, someone’s going to notice us. Obviously, someone’s going to have at least a little more respect [for us] than at the beginning.”

Denton Ramsey may be reached via email at denton.ramsey@gmail.com

BIG 12 MEN’S BASKETBALL UPDATE (March 7): Weekend Match-Ups, Latest Standings…

Friday, March 7th, 2008

BIG 12 MEN’S BASKETBALL UPDATE (March 7): Weekend Match-Ups, Latest Standings…

By Denton Ramsey, NCAA Sportswriter/Big 12 Fans Baylor Correspondent

 

WACO, Texas – It certainly looks like the Big 12 title will go down to the wire.

With just two more days remaining in conference play, and a two-way tie for first and a three-way tie for fourth up for grabs, this weekend’s match-up will likely determine who will walk away with the Big 12 regular season crown.

All 12 teams have just one game left on the schedule – with eight teams ending regular season play on Saturday and the final four completing Big 12 competition on Sunday.

After the weekend showdowns, conference records will seed all 12 teams for the upcoming Big 12 Tournament, slated to run March 13-16 in Kansas City.

In addition to conference tourney placement being on the line, many of the Big 12 teams are also fighting for an opportunity to earn an NCAA Tournament berth – with Texas A&M, Baylor and Oklahoma all using this weekend’s match-ups as last minute resume builders for the NCAA Selection Committee…

 

Big 12 Standings (03.07.2008)

                                    Big 12              Overall

Kansas                         12-3                 27-3

Texas                           12-3                 25-5

Kansas State                9-6                   19-10

Texas A&M                 8-7                   22-8

Baylor                          8-7                   20-9

Oklahoma                    8-7                   20-10

Oklahoma State            7-8                   16-13

Texas Tech                   7-8                   16-13

Nebraska                     6-9                   17-11

Missouri                       6-9                   16-14

Iowa State                    4-11                 14-16

Colorado                      3-12                 11-18

 

Saturday, Sunday Showdowns

This weekend will feature all Big 12 teams in action as the conference concludes regular season play on Sunday, March 9.

The four games slated for Saturday, March 8 are as follows (with television coverage and tipoff times): Baylor at Texas Tech, ESPN Plus, 12:30 p.m. CT; Missouri at Oklahoma, ABC, 2:30 p.m. CT; Kansas State at Iowa State, ESPN Plus, 3 p.m. CT; and Kansas at Texas A&M, CBS, 3 p.m. CT.

Sunday, March 9, will mark the conclusion of Big 12 regular season action as two conference games hit the hardwood (with television coverage and tipoff times): Colorado at Nebraska, no television coverage scheduled, 2 p.m. CT; followed by Oklahoma State at Texas, ESPN, 3 p.m. CT.

 

Denton Ramsey may be reached via email at denton.ramsey@gmail.com

 

BAYLOR-TEXAS TECH PREVIEW: Bears head north for Lubbock for season finale hardwood showdown with Red Raiders

Friday, March 7th, 2008

BAYLOR-TEXAS TECH PREVIEW: Bears head north for Lubbock for season finale hardwood showdown with Red Raiders

By Denton Ramsey, NCAA Sportswriter/Big 12 Fans Baylor Correspondent

 

WACO, Texas – Saturday, March 8, marks the final day of the regular season for the Baylor Bears.

Scott Drew’s Bears aim to bounce back and end the season on a high note – after falling in an ice cold shooting contest with Texas A&M on Wednesday at the Ferrell Center – and hope to secure a top-four spot in the Big 12 Tourney, therefore earning a first round bye in Kansas City, Missouri.

The match-up between the Baylor Bears (20-8, 8-7 Big 12) and Texas Tech Red Raiders (16-13, 7-8) is slated to tipoff at 12:45 p.m. CT on ESPN Plus (KWTX and “The CW” in Waco/Temple).

Baylor is also seeking an NCAA Tournament berth with Drew at the helm, having already garnered 20 wins this season and currently owning an 8-7 record in conference play – sitting in a three-way tie for third place in Big 12 standings.

Texas Tech is coming off a 109-51 defeat at Kansas on ESPN’s Big Monday game, with the Red Raiders getting blown out of the building after picking up a huge win over Texas on March 1.

The Red Raiders own a 13-2 record at home this season, and the Bears are looking to break out of a slump in Lubbock – with Baylor having dropped nine straight contests at Texas Tech.

However, the Bears took care of business in a prior match-up with the Red Raiders earlier this season – with Drew’s Baylor hoops team defeating Texas Tech in Pat Knight’s debut as head coach, 80-74, which aired nationally on ESPN (Feb. 6).

Check back on Sunday, March 9, for postgame quotes, notes, stats and more from the Baylor-Texas Tech Big 12 season finale…

 

Denton Ramsey may be reached via email at denton.ramsey@gmail.com

 

BIG 12 MEN’S BASKETBALL UPDATE (March 4, 2008): Latest news, notes and standings on the hoops hardwood…

Tuesday, March 4th, 2008

BIG 12 MEN’S BASKETBALL UPDATE (March 4, 2008): Latest news, notes and standings on the hoops hardwood…

By Denton Ramsey, NCAA Sportswriter/Big 12 Fans Baylor Correspondent

 

WACO, Texas – Keep shuffling the Big 12 standings; this year’s conference champion likely won’t be crowned until Sunday’s season finale.

Kansas, the newest leader in Big 12 men’s basketball, picked up a lopsided lights-out 109-51 victory over Texas Tech in ESPN’s Big Monday, March 3 match-up – moving the Jayhawks into first place in conference standings, a mere half-game lead over the Texas Longhorns.

Both the Horns and Wildcats put their upper-echelon records on the line on Tuesday night, March 4 in Big 12 hoops action, with Texas hosting Nebraska and Kansas State hosting Colorado.

The Wildcats aim to end a four-game skid on Tuesday evening at home, a game slated to be televised on ESPN Plus at 8 p.m. CT, while the Longhorns aim to bounce back after a disappointing loss at Texas Tech.

On Wednesday, March 5 the Big 12 boasts a triple-header of conference showdowns, as the trio of games are scheduled to be televised on ESPN’s family of channels – with two games tipping off at 7 p.m. CT on ESPN Plus (Iowa State at Missouri and Oklahoma at Oklahoma State) followed by a much anticipated match-up featuring Texas A&M at Baylor beginning at 8 p.m. CT on ESPN2.

After Wednesday’s games, every Big 12 team will have only one regular season contest remaining on their calendars – with eight teams ending their 2008 conference campaign on Saturday and the final four waiting until Sunday’s final buzzer to figure out where they stand come season’s end.

Here’s a quick look at those final six showdowns, beginning with the four slated for Saturday, March 8 (including television schedule and tip off times): Baylor at Texas Tech, 12:30 p.m. CT on ESPN Plus; Missouri at Oklahoma, 2:30 p.m. CT on ABC; Kansas State at Iowa State, 3 p.m. CT on ESPN Plus; and Kansas at Texas A&M, 3 p.m. CT on CBS.

Sunday, March 9 will mark the final day of the regular season in Big 12 basketball – as the conference concludes with a hardwood double-header (including television schedule and tip off times): Colorado at Nebraska, 2 p.m. CT (no television coverage), followed by Oklahoma State at Texas, 3 p.m. CT on ESPN.

Check back on Friday, March 7 for the latest news, notes and standings from the Big 12 as conference hoops action heats up through the final week of the regular season…

 

Current Big 12 Men’s Basketball Standings (03.04.08)

                                    Big 12              Overall             Ranking (ESPN)

Kansas                         12-3                 27-3                 6

Texas                           11-3                 24-5                 9

Baylor                          8-6                   20-8                

Kansas State                8-6                   18-10              

Texas A&M                 7-7                   21-8                

Oklahoma                    7-7                   19-10              

Oklahoma State            7-7                   16-12              

Texas Tech                   7-8                   16-13              

Nebraska                     6-8                   17-10              

Missouri                       5-9                   15-14              

Iowa State                    4-10                 14-15              

Colorado                      3-11                 11-17              

 

Conference Standings Scenarios

As the season has worn on, it’s been proven time and time again that the Big 12 is a very competitive conference when it comes to men’s basketball.

And it appears as though the top teams in the standings will be a toss-up ‘til Sunday’s season finale.

There are all sorts of scenarios as far as who ends up where, but the truth is that no one will really have the final answer until Sunday’s final buzzer.

One thing is crystal clear in the conference: Kansas and Texas are the leaders, followed by a Baylor team that’s heating up, a Kansas State team that’s slumping and a trio of teams (Texas A&M, Oklahoma and Oklahoma State) at .500 in Big 12 play.

 

Big 12 Weekly Honors

Baylor’s Kevin Rogers and Kansas’ Brandon Rush were recently named the Big 12 players of the week (March 3).

Rogers, a junior forward on the BU basketball team, averaged 18 points and 12 rebounds in the Bears’ back-to-back conference victories this past week and has now garnered 12 double-doubles this season.

Rush, meanwhile, helped propel the Jayhawks into a tie for first in conference standings – averaging 18 points, four rebounds and three assists in a pair of Kansas wins.

Kansas State’s Michael Beasley once again took home rookie of the week honors in the Big 12, his sixth straight week to win the award – averaging 35 points and 13 boards in two conference contests, both losses for the Wildcats.

In addition, Beasley’s 10th conference award (two player honors, eight rookie honors) ties a Big 12 record by matching former Texas star Kevin Durant’s 10 combined honors for the 2006-07 season (four player awards and six rookie awards).

 

 

Denton Ramsey may be reached via email at denton.ramsey@gmail.com

 

BIG 12 MEN’S BASKETBALL UPDATE (March 1, 2008): Conference Standings, Weekend Contests…

Saturday, March 1st, 2008

BIG 12 MEN’S BASKETBALL UPDATE (March 1, 2008): Conference Standings, Weekend Contests…

By Denton Ramsey, NCAA Sportswriter/Big 12 Fans Baylor Correspondent

 

WACO, Texas – With weekend match-ups on the horizon, the Big 12 Conference has a lone leader in men’s basketball standings in the Texas Longhorns (24-4, 11-2 Big 12).

However, things could change come Saturday night’s hardwood finale as Kansas (25-3, 10-3) is a mere game back of first place, Kansas State (18-9, 8-5) holds down third, while Baylor (19-8, 7-6) and Texas A&M (21-7, 7-6) aim to breakout of a deadlock for fourth.

Right behind the Bears and Aggies are four conference teams tied for sixth place, with Nebraska, Oklahoma, Oklahoma State and Texas Tech sandwiched in between the elite and cellar teams of the Big 12 with 6-7 marks.

Texas is currently on an eight-game winning streak, with Oklahoma State (won four), Nebraska (won three) and Baylor (won two) also putting streaks on the line in Saturday’s hardwood action; Colorado (lost four) and Kansas State (lost three), meanwhile, hope to end conference skids.

The regular season officials ends on Sunday, March 9, before the Big 12 Tourney tips off in preparation for March Madness postseason invites and the Big Dance…

 

Big 12 Standings (02.29.2008)

                                    Big 12              Overall

Texas                           11-2                 24-4

Kansas                         10-3                 25-3

Kansas State                8-5                   18-9

Texas A&M                 7-6                   21-7

Baylor                          7-6                   19-8

Nebraska                     6-7                   17-9

Oklahoma                    6-7                   18-10

Oklahoma State            6-7                   15-12

Texas Tech                   6-7                   15-12

Missouri                       5-8                   15-13

Iowa State                    4-9                   14-14

Colorado                      2-11                 10-17

 

Saturday Showdowns

On Saturday, March 1, the Big 12 Conference features six showdowns as the final week of the season looms just around the corner.

Those games, including television coverage and scheduled tipoff times (Central Standard Time), are as follows: Nebraska at Oklahoma State, ESPN Plus (check local listings), 12:30 p.m.; Texas A&M at Oklahoma, ESPN, 1 p.m.; Missouri at Baylor, ESPN Plus (KWTX and “The CW” in Waco), 3 p.m.; Texas at Texas Tech, CBS, 3 p.m.; Iowa State at Colorado, ESPN Classic, 4 p.m.; Kansas State at Kansas, ESPN, 8 p.m.

 

Denton Ramsey may be reached via email at denton.ramsey@gmail.com

 

BIG 12 MEN’S BASKETBALL UPDATE (Feb. 25, 2008): Horns, Wildcats tip off tonight at Kansas State

Monday, February 25th, 2008

BIG 12 MEN’S BASKETBALL UPDATE (Feb. 25, 2008): Horns, Wildcats tip off tonight at Kansas State

By Denton Ramsey, NCAA Sportswriter/Big 12 Fans Baylor Correspondent

 

WACO, Texas – There’s been quite a shuffle in the Big 12 in just a week’s worth of men’s basketball games.

After facing a possible three-way tie for first place after Saturday’s showdowns in conference play, there are now three distinct positions for first through third place – while the Big 12 now boasts a four-way tie for fourth.

With big upsets in weekend contests – including a Kansas loss to Oklahoma State, a Texas A&M loss to Nebraska, and a must-win Baylor victory over Kansas State, the Wildcats second straight conference loss – two teams, Texas A&M and Kansas State, dropped out of top-25 polls.

The Texas Longhorns now sit alone as the Big 12 leader at 10-2 and Kansas, meanwhile, holds a secure spot in second at 9-3 while Kansas State rounds out the top three with an 8-4 conference record.

Tonight’s Big 12 match-up, scheduled to be televised on ESPN beginning at 8 p.m. CT as part of Big Monday, pits Texas on the road at Kansas State – as the Longhorns aim to increase their lead in conference standings.

On Tuesday, Feb. 26, Oklahoma State travels to Missouri for an 8 p.m. hardwood battle slated to be televised on ESPNU.

Eight teams shoot for higher positions in the conference when facing off against Big 12 opponents on Wednesday, Feb. 27, beginning with an ESPN-televised contest as Kansas travels to Iowa State for a 6 p.m. CT tip off.

At 7 p.m., two conference match-ups – Oklahoma at Nebraska (not televised) and Texas Tech at Texas A&M (ESPN+) – will give fans and coaches alike a better understanding of where teams sit in conference standings.

Baylor, sitting amongst a pack of teams in a four-way tie for fourth place, heads to Colorado for a game slated to be televised locally on FSN Southwest at 7:30 p.m. CT to close out a full-slate of Big 12 games on Wednesday.

After a three-day break from NCAA men’s basketball action, all 12 teams return to the hardwood on Saturday, March 1 – Nebraska at Oklahoma State (12:30 p.m., ESPN+), Texas A&M at Oklahoma (1 p.m., ESPN), Missouri at Baylor (3 p.m., ESPN+), Texas at Texas Tech (3 p.m., CBS), Iowa State at Colorado (4 p.m., ESPN Classic) and Kansas State at Kansas (8 p.m., ESPN).

 

Current Big 12 Men’s Basketball Standings (02.25.08)

                                    Big 12              Overall             National Ranking (ESPN)

Texas                           10-2                 23-4                 5

Kansas                         9-3                   24-3                 7

Kansas State                8-4                   18-8                

Texas A&M                 6-6                   20-7                

Baylor                          6-6                   18-8                

Oklahoma                    6-6                   18-9                

Texas Tech                   6-6                   15-11              

Nebraska                     5-7                   16-9                

Missouri                       5-7                   15-12              

Oklahoma State            5-7                   14-12              

Iowa State                    4-8                   14-13              

Colorado                      2-10                 10-16              

 

Conference Standings Scenarios

Regardless of Monday’s outcome, the worst case scenario for the Horns would be a half-game lead over Kansas (if Texas falls to Kansas State) in Big 12 standings.

Tuesday’s and Wednesday’s conference contests, meanwhile, will have major impacts on area standings as the results from the college hardwood pour in late Wednesday evening – and based on Big 12 positioning alone the conference standings may not change much, although there will likely be a two-way tie for fourth place come Thursday morning.

 

Weekly Notes: Big 12 Hoops

Eleven of the 12 conference teams have an overall record of .500 or better, tied with the highly touted Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) for the highest percentage of teams of any conference.

In addition, the Big 12 has six teams with 18 wins or more – with only the Big East (seven teams) boasting a higher number of squads with 18-plus victories.

The conference also leads the nation in victories and winning percentage against 2008 nationally-ranked non-district opponents.

Seven teams also sit amongst the top-65 according to RPI ratings – a major factor in deciding NCAA tournament teams – including Texas (5), Kansas (8), Oklahoma (24), Kansas State (31), Baylor (39), Texas A&M (54) and Texas Tech (63).

 

Big 12 Weekly Awards

On Monday, Feb. 25, the Big 12 Conference announced the weekly award winners in NCAA men’s basketball action – with Texas and Kansas State both receiving the honors for individual achievements.

This week’s player of the week was awarded to Longhorns sophomore guard D.J. Augustin, who averaged 23.0 points and 6.0 assists in Texas’ two conference victories this past week.

Rookie of the week honors for the week of Feb. 25 once again went to Kansas State’s NBA-bound Michael Beasley – where despite his Wildcats two-game losing streak this past week, the freshman-phenom scored a league-record 44 points in a loss to Baylor (while shooting a picture perfect 15-of-15 from the charity stripe and pulling down 13 rebounds).

Beasley’s rookie of the week honor was also the fifth consecutive time for Kansas State’s young star to garner the award, and the ninth overall for the freshman forward this season – one shy of the Big 12 record for combined honors set by former Texas star Kevin Durant (four player honors and six rookie honors) one year ago.

 

 

Denton Ramsey may be reached via email at denton.ramsey@gmail.com

 

BIG 12 MEN’S BASKETBALL: Latest Standings, Weekend Match-Ups…

Friday, February 22nd, 2008

BIG 12 MEN’S BASKETBALL: Latest Standings, Weekend Match-Ups…

By Denton Ramsey, NCAA Sportswriter/Big 12 Fans Baylor Correspondent

 

WACO, Texas – As of Friday, Feb. 22, 2008, the Big 12 Conference has a two-way tie for first place, with both the highly touted Kansas Jayhawks (24-2 Overall, 9-2 Big 12) and the Lone Star leading Texas Longhorns (22-4, 9-2) sitting at the top.

Nipping at their heels is Kansas State (18-7, 8-3), coming off a surprising loss on the road against Nebraska (15-9, 4-7) – currently in the lower echelon of Big 12 play.

Right behind K-State, the Aggies of Texas A&M (20-6, 6-5) and the Oklahoma Sooners (18-8, 6-5) are tied for fourth place in a conference expected to get five – and maybe even six – teams into the NCAA Tournament.

Baylor (17-8, 5-6) and Texas Tech (14-11, 5-6) are in a two-way tie for sixth place in conference play with only a handful of games remaining.

 

Big 12 Standings (02.22.2008)

                                    Big 12              Overall

Kansas                         9-2                   24-2

Texas                           9-2                   22-4

Kansas State                8-3                   18-7

Texas A&M                 6-5                   20-6

Oklahoma                    6-5                   18-8

Baylor                          5-6                   17-8

Texas Tech                   5-6                   14-11

Nebraska                     4-7                   15-9

Iowa State                    4-7                   14-12

Missouri                       4-7                   14-12

Oklahoma State            4-7                   13-12

Colorado                      2-9                   10-15

 

Saturday Showdowns

On Saturday, Feb. 23, the conference features six showdowns in Big 12 play as the final weeks of the season loom around the corner.

Those games, including television coverage and games times (all times Central), are as follows:

Iowa State at Texas Tech, ESPN+ (check local listings), 12:30 p.m.

Oklahoma at Texas, ABC, 2:30 p.m.

Kansas at Oklahoma State, CBS, 3 p.m.

Nebraska at Texas A&M, ESPN+ (check local listings), 3 p.m.

Colorado at Missouri, no television coverage, 7 p.m.

Kansas State at Baylor, FSN Southwest (locally), 7 p.m.

 

Denton Ramsey may be reached via email at denton.ramsey@gmail.com

 

BAYLOR-OKLAHOMA MEN’S BASKETBALL PREVIEW: Bears tip off against Sooners tonight at OU, seek to end three-game slide

Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

Bears tip off against Sooners tonight at OU, seek to end three-game slide

By Denton Ramsey, NCAA Basketball Sportswriter/Big 12 Fans Bears Correspondent

 

WACO, Texas – Tonight at 7 p.m. CT, the Baylor Bears (17-7 overall, 5-5 Big 12) shoot to end a three-game losing streak in conference play when they tip off against the Oklahoma Sooners (17-8, 5-5).

The Big 12 showdown will be broadcast live on ESPN Plus (The “CW” in Waco, Temple and Bryan), with Bob Carpenter and Paul Splittorff calling the action from the Lloyd Noble Center in Norman, Okla.

According to BU big man Kevin Rogers, despite the Bears recent three-game slide, the Baylor men’s basketball team’s confidence is still up.

“It [our confidence] is definitely still up,” Rogers said. “We can’t let a couple of games get us down because there’s still plenty of season left to go. We can only take things from [the Texas] game and learn from them and hope we get better before we play Oklahoma.”

Baylor dropped their last conference match-up, a home game at the Ferrell Center against the University of Texas, in a five-point heartbreaker after battling back in the game’s final seconds.

“From a coach’s standpoint, we did a great job coming back,” Baylor Head Coach Scott Drew said. “I was proud of the team’s effort to give ourselves a chance to get a win down the stretch. I credit Texas for making big plays.

“I told the guys in shoot-around that this program’s back to a point now where you have ESPN, you have the largest crowd in the school’s history, and you’ve got a chance to beat a top-10 program.”

Drew is exactly right.

Since Drew’s arrival in Waco nearly five years ago, the Baylor basketball program has gone from zero to hero – hanging with some of the best teams in the nation this season while finally beginning to get the recognition they deserve after taking a program from the ashes and creating an NCAA Tourney-bound team.

“This has been a tough week, and you’ve got to be above .500 in the league to normally get to the NCAA [Tournament],” Drew said. “We’re going to get five or six teams in, and our goal is to be in the top half so that we’re in that position.

“I don’t think we played well at Oklahoma State, but I think we played better [against Texas]. Over the last two years we’ve finished very strong, and I look for us to get on a roll pretty shortly here.”

Beginning tonight in Norman, the Bears’ hoops team will hopefully heed the words of their head coach as they face an OU team riding a two-game winning streak after defeating Texas Tech, 66-64, on Saturday (Feb. 16) in Lubbock.

A win tonight would push Baylor into a two-way tie for fourth place after Texas A&M was blown out last night (Feb. 18) in Austin, falling by 27 points to the Longhorns on ESPN Big Monday.

In just a few short hours, we’ll have a little better idea of who’s who in the Big 12 Conference… although a majority of our questions (postseason births, etc.) will still have to wait until March’s madness to be answered.

Check back tonight after the BU-OU match-up for post game quotes, notes, stats and more…

 

Game Notes

In addition to hopes and prayers of ending a three-game slide in the Big 12, the Bears also aim to end a 27-game losing streak against the Sooners – dating back to a 75-69 win at OU on Dec. 6, 1977.

On a happier note for Bears fans, Baylor’s 5-5 conference start matches its best ever in Big 12 play after opening the 1997-98 season (my freshman year at BU) with a 5-5 mark.

Also, Baylor’s 17 wins this year surpasses last season’s win total and is the most since Drew inherited the program (additionally, its the most wins since 2000-01, when the Bears won 19 games and received a postseason birth in the NIT tournament).

In conference play, Baylor leads the Big 12 in scoring (81.4 points per game), free throw shooting (78.1 percent) and three-pointers (8.0 threes per game).

With three more wins, Drew (53 victories with the Bears) will move into seventh place on Baylor’s career coaching victories list; also, if BU guard Curtis Jerrells (1,051 career points) can put up 11 or more points tonight on the road, he will move him into 15th place on Baylor’s career scoring list.

Aaron Bruce could also join the Bears’ top-10 milestones list as well – with Bruce (309 assists) needing just five more assists to move into fourth place on Baylor’s career assists list and needing just 66 more points to move into sixth place on BU’s all-time scoring leaders (Bruce currently has 1,294 career points).

In addition, Bruce (129 threes) is just three three-pointers shy of moving into sixth place in the Big 12’s career three-pointers in conference games list, while freshman LaceDarius Dunn (56 threes) is just three three-pointer shy of moving into second place on Baylor’s freshman three-pointers list (Tweety Carter is currently third with 57 in 2007 and John Lucas III is second with 59 in 2002).

 

 

Denton Ramsey may be reached via email at denton.ramsey@gmail.com

 

2008 BAYLOR BASEBALL PREVIEW: Bears look to redefine Big 12 baseball as team strives for postseason success

Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

2008 BAYLOR BASEBALL PREVIEW: Bears look to redefine Big 12 baseball as team strives for postseason success

By Denton Ramsey, NCAA Sportswriter/Big 12 Fans Baylor Correspondent

 

WACO, Texas – With Baylor’s baseball team having eight pitchers returning, as well as adding four freshman to the mound, the Bears are hoping to have some postseason success this year after 2007 saw the group take an early exit in the NCAA Houston Regional.

Baylor last tasted true playoff success when the Bears reached the pinnacle of NCAA baseball by getting to the College World Series in 2005 – eventually falling to the Texas Longhorns in a controversial and heated match-up.

“The expectations [for the 2008 Baylor Baseball season] are extremely high, and we’re holding ourselves accountable,” Baylor senior relief pitcher Nick Cassavechia said. “The expectations on the team are really high, and everyone else has expectations, too. We’re expecting to make it back to Omaha and get a national championship.”

For the time being, we’ll let the past be the past and will focus on the here and now – the 2008 NCAA baseball season.

Preseason polls have Baylor ranked as high as 15 according to the Baseball America Preseason College Top 25 (NCAA.com), with the Bears compiling an overall 2007 record of 35-27 (while garnering a disappointing 12-15 mark in the Big 12).

“I participate in those rankings, so I buy them,” Baylor Head Coach Steve Smith said. “Time will tell. This sport determines its champion on the field and not in the polls, so that’s one good thing we have going for us.”

The National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association (NCBWA), meanwhile, has the Bears ranked 26 in preseason polls, while the USA Today/ESPN Preseason Poll places the BU baseball team at 24.

“We should compete for the [Big 12 Conference] championship, but there are other good teams in this league that could feel just as strongly,” Smith said. “The league is good, there are some very good teams in it, and Missouri has probably got their strongest team in the history of their school. There are some other programs in the league that are just as capable of setting that goal.”

Baylor joins four other Big 12 teams in many of the preseason rankings – showing the need to succeed in conference play in ’08 as the Bears aim for a much more successful season in the Big 12.

“It [our team] is very experienced, but it’s still very young,” Smith said. “I just think it’s extremely talented. I don’t think we’ve ever had as much talent across the board – offensive, defensive and pitching – as we have right now.

“They’re highly motivated, they’re very disciplined, and they’ve set their goals really high. They’re all smart kids. They look around and they know how good this club can be, and they’re going to apply themselves. We’ll play it out on the field over the course of the next few months and we’ll see how it shakes out.”

The Bears begin the 2008 season with a three-game series beginning Feb. 22 at Baylor Ballpark, hosting Purdue with the opening pitch slated for 6:30 p.m. on Friday evening.

“We’re going to be able to match up offensively with anyone in the country,” Baylor sophomore outfielder Aaron Miller said. “All the way up and down the lineup we have so many power threats that one swing can drastically change a game.”

The Bears return 19 lettermen from the 2007 squad, returning with six starters and eight pitchers while entering the ’08 season with 11 newcomers.

“From an opposing team view, attacking our lineup is going to be really hard because we have so many match-up problems with left-handed and right-handed power, and with guys who can run,” Miller said. “We have three or four guys who can hit a home run, get a triple, or steal a base, so it’s going to be really hard to match up with our lineup.”

After Saturday’s season opener in Waco, the Bears conclude their series with Purdue on Saturday, Feb. 23 at 3 p.m., and Sunday, Feb. 24 at noon.

“A lot of people are looking forward to this year with everybody that we’ve got coming back and all of the firepower,” Miller said. “We’re all anxious to take it off of paper and put it on the field to see what we can do.”

For many of the Baylor baseball players, just hitting the field for regular season play will be a blessing – as the Bears aim to prove to the nation, as well as the Big 12 conference, that they are a much-improved team from 2007.

“We’ve definitely got some talent out here, so it should be a great year,” Baylor junior shortstop Beamer Weems said. “Omaha is where we want to go, so we’ll see what happens. Hopefully we’ll start off well this season and take it from there.”

The Bears return to the diamond on Tuesday, Feb. 26 at Baylor Ballpark, against Texas Southern at 6:30 p.m. before hosting the QTI Baylor Classic beginning Friday, Feb. 29, and running through Sunday, March 2.

Teams invited to this year’s QTI Baylor Classic include Illinois, Illinois-Chicago and Stephen F. Austin.

After hosting the annual tourney in Waco, the Bears have two more home games – a two-game series against Louisiana Tech (Tuesday, March 4 at 6:30 p.m. and Wednesday, March 5 at 4 p.m.) before hitting the road for a three-game series with Mississippi State (March 7-9) and a two-game series with Oral Roberts (March 11-12).

“We’ve got great leadership on the team,” Weems said. “The freshman came in here and worked really hard this year. From the freshman to the seniors, everybody’s working really hard, and there’s a lot of dedication out here so it should be fun.”

 

Denton Ramsey may be reached via email at denton.ramsey@gmail.com

TEXAS-BAYLOR MEN’S BASKETBALL PREVIEW: Bears Look To Claw Out Of Two-Game Skid, Host No. 11 Longhorns Saturday

Friday, February 15th, 2008

Bears Look To Claw Out Of Two-Game Skid, Host No. 11 Longhorns Saturday

By Denton Ramsey, NCAA Basketball Sportswriter

WACO, Texas — On Saturday, Feb. 16, Baylor (17-6 overall, 5-4 Big 12) will host Big 12 rival No. 11 Texas (20-4, 7-2) as the Bears aim to end a two-game skid in front of a sold out, gold out crowd at the Ferrell Center.

The game is slated to tipoff at 5 p.m. CT and will be broadcast live on ESPN, where the Bears own a 9-4 record in their last 13 nationally televised games.

“I don’t think we have to give [the team] much motivation, speeches or talks when it comes to [facing] Texas,” Baylor Head Coach Scott Drew said. “The guys are usually pretty excited to play them, and the last four games have been very close and come down to the wire – and we just need to change the outcome of the game.”

Drew’s Bears face a difficult task ahead, but that hasn’t stopped the talented and optimistic bunch from having a very successful season thus far – becoming the Cinderella surprise of both the Big 12 Conference as well as the country.

“We’ve got to get back to the basics,” Drew said. “Why we won games early: we were defending, we were rebounding – and I think the last couple games we’ve tried to outscore people, and that doesn’t work.”

After dropping a pair of road losses – to the highly touted and highly ranked Kansas Jayhawks before falling in Stillwater to the upbeat Oklahoma State Cowboys – the Bears look to bounce back tomorrow afternoon at home.

“The first half [on the road against Oklahoma State] was the first time all year where we have not had the effort and come to the game ready to play,” Drew said. “And, for whatever reason, you can’t give yourself a 20-point hole and then crawl out of it on the road very often.

“Hopefully it will be a learning tool and we won’t have another one of those for the rest of the year. Right now, we’re just ready to get this taste out of our mouth [after two conference losses] and we’re looking forward to Saturday.”

Despite the back-to-back losses, Drew’s Bears are still confident heading into tomorrow’s matinee match-up.

“We have a group that has been through a lot of games, and – at the same time – we’ve won 17 this year and I think we know how to win,” Drew said. “It’s just a matter of getting back to doing what we need to do in order to win – and I think Saturday is a great opportunity for us and we’re very excited about that.”

Although BU ended up dropping their second straight Big 12 game on Wednesday night in Stillwater, Drew was still proud of his Bears’ second half effort – twice cutting the Cowboys’ 20-point lead to nine.

“I think the second half showed the character of our team,” Drew said. “I thought we really played a good 20 minutes as far as coming out with effort and intensity, which picked up a lot. Hopefully that carries over for the Texas game.”

In addition to Saturday’s ESPN televised game being sold out, the Bear Pit (Baylor student cheering section: just think Cameron Crazies, but green and gold) will be joined by many in the crowd in showing their support for BU – as fans entering the game will be given a gold t-shirt at the door, hence the ‘gold out’ terminology for tomorrow’s Lone Star showdown in Waco.

“I think that anyone who follows college basketball knows just how successful Duke Basketball has been,” Drew said. “They do it the right way, their kids come across the right way, they represent their school the right way – so, they do a lot of things positive and we want to do the same thing and win as many games as them.”

Sounds good to me, both as a fan of Coach K and Duke hoops as well as a sports writer with a passion for college athletics, and I have no doubt the Baylor program is heading that direction with Drew at the helm.

Recharging BU’s Defense

According to Drew, his young Bears already have the talent and ability to succeed; all they really need is a regrouping and recharging as a team – beginning with defense.

“Defensively, we’ve given up too much dribble penetration, haven’t contained the ball enough, haven’t been rotating as well as we did earlier [this season] and haven’t gotten in the passing lanes as much as we were,” Drew said. “Credit some of the teams we’ve played: at Texas, Kansas and Oklahoma State – some of the tougher places to play, and those teams played well and they had something to do with it. But we’ve got to take care of what we can control.”

Included in the list of what the Bears can control: blocking out and rebounding.

“With rebounding I think we’re making a more conscious effort since the Texas game to block out,” Drew said. “Now we’ve just got to do a better job in blocking out and retrieving the ball; we’re hitting [the boards] – we’ve just got to work on the getting.”

Baylor prided itself on team defense to begin the season, holding opponents to around 40 percent shooting from the field.

“If you can do that, usually you’re going to be successful as long as you’re blocking out and rebounding with that,” Drew said. “The other thing is, on the offensive end, we have turned the ball over more than we did earlier in the year too – which has allowed for some easy transition baskets for the other team – and we need to make sure that we do a better job of taking care of the ball so we don’t give up easy baskets.”

According to Baylor’s Kevin Rogers, the Bears’ main problem defensively has been a mental collapse.

“I think it’s just a lack of focus – it’s nothing we have to fix, it’s just us figuring out what we need to do – because it’s nothing that we haven’t done before,” Rogers said. “Our defense [is one of the reasons] we have the record we have – it’s just a lack of focus.”

Camping Out In Drew-Land

With Saturday’s game sold out to the public, and with the BU campus decked in green and gold as the team’s sixth-man crew aims to help propel the Bears to a victory tomorrow on the hardwood, Baylor students are camping out in preparation for the I-35 showdown.

Call it Drew-Land, if you’d like – a play-on-words of Duke’s Krzyzewskiville – where die-hard fans line up early for the action, setting up tents and shelter for an evening of eager anticipation of what’s to come.

For those staying the night in Drew-Land, they may want to bundle up – as well as dig a ‘gutter’ around their one-night stay – with high winds, low temperatures and possible heavy thunderstorms predicted.

But that won’t stop the Bear Pit and friends from braving the storm, as their classmates aim to right the ship tomorrow afternoon against a deep and talented Texas team.

“A lot of excitement – should be the largest crowd in the school’s history and we’ve got students camping out,” Drew said. “They have a pep-rally the night before, so we need to make sure to give them a lot to cheer for come Saturday.”

Young Guns Having Fun

Recruiting talented players – yet with a focus on finding character-driven kids wanting to become a part of something bigger than themselves – has been a key to the Baylor Men’s Basketball program’s turnaround.

One of those talented newcomers include true-freshman LaceDarius “Kool” Dunn, who had a breakout game in Stillwater and was a vital reason the Bears had even a fighting chance against the Cowboys.

According to Dunn, defense is the key to ending Baylor’s current two-game skid.

“It’s going to be a big game and a big crowd – so I think one of the things we need to do is to go back to what got us here at the beginning of the season, and that’s defense,” Dunn said. “Each teammate has to go back and find that mold or that spot in their bodies that had us motivated that we wanted to play defense. I think that we’ve got to go back and pick that up – whatever it is we have to go find – and bring it to Saturday’s game.”

Defense is a priority – but according to Dunn, rebounding will also be a major factor in deciding this weekend’s winner.

“They are not going to come out and just give it to us, so we’re going to have to go out there and take it,” Dunn said. “We’ve got to be rebounding – coaches preach to us every day, ‘rebounding, rebounding,’ and there’s nothing more the coaches can do. We’ve got to want it for us – the coaches can’t go out there and play it for us – so we’ve just got to go out there and want it. Once we realize and find what got us here, which is defense, I think we’ll be okay.”

Dunn, who chose Baylor for both the brilliant hands-on coaching staff and a wonderful environment to get an education as well as play basketball, is happy with his decision to sign with Drew’s Bears.

“Since coming on campus, everything has been great,” Dunn said. “One of the reasons I came here was because of the coaching staff – it’s a great coaching staff and I wouldn’t want to play for anyone but the coaches at Baylor – they have great personality and they care for you not only on the court, but off the court.

“Coming here and having the good season that we’ve had so far, I really had a plan for me with the things that I contribute to the team; everything has been great and I am glad to be here at Baylor.”

I’m sure the coaching staff – as well as BU sports fans – are also glad to have Dunn on board this season.

McDonald’s All-American Tweety Carter is another example of a student-athlete with the ability and willpower to succeed both on and off the court, and his game has stepped up since he first set foot on campus last year in Waco.

Against OSU on Wednesday in Stillwater, Carter exploded late – way too late to be honest – draining multiple three-pointers in the games final seconds; though it was still nice to see that he hasn’t lost his ‘shooter’s touch’ from long range.

“I know we needed them,” Carter said. “That’s something that I have to shoot and knock down and get confident in taking that shot.”

For Carter and company, pulling off a must-win upset tomorrow in Waco means going back to the basics – including coming out the gates ready to play.

“It’s going to be another good game, and the Big 12 is a tough conference – every game you’re going to have to come out and it’s a toss-up,” Carter said. “If you don’t come to play, you can get beat on any given night; OSU came out and they attacked us and put it on us early – and that’s a game we just have to look past and get prepared for Texas.”

Come Saturday at 5 p.m. CT, preparation meets game time as the Bears and Horns tipoff in Baylor’s home dome – the Ferrell Center.

“It’s big – being home and playing in front of our home crowd,” Carter said. “It’s going to be a fun experience.”

For Dunn, Saturday’s game will be a big one – as the game very well could determine where the Bears go from here – and the young gun guard believes Baylor has the advantage, especially if they can get their swagger back.

“It’s going to be great – playing at home, having everybody cheering for you – and I think it’s better than playing on the road and having other fans rooting against you,” Dunn said. “Coming in on Saturday, I think we’ll have an advantage – we’ve just got to pick it up, and most importantly we’ve got to find that [intensity], because they’re not just going to come out and give it to us.”

Post Play Paint Slammin’

The Bears’ main big-man/go-to guy this season, when it comes to posting up and scoring inside, has been Rogers – and in my opinion, he still isn’t getting enough respect for his presence in the paint.

Rogers has put up some remarkable numbers this season – both in rebounding as well as timely scoring, soaring to new heights in 2008 as a recipient of the fan-friendly alley-oop.

So what does the big man think it will take to beat Texas?

“Just a total team focus,” Rogers said. “We can’t have as many turnovers as we’ve had the past two games; that’s just a mental breakdown. It’s going to take a team focus and being in the right position on every play; and Texas is such a great team – you give them an inch and they’ll take a mile – so you definitely have to bring your A-game.”

And tomorrow afternoon in the rockin’ Ferrell Center, Rogers and the Bears shoot for a big time, Big 12 victory over Texas Head Coach Rick Barnes and the Longhorns.

“[Being at home is] really big – you always want to play to your home crowd and hopefully come out and get a victory for those guys,” Rogers said. “But the home crowd will hopefully give us an extra advantage.”

If you ask Drew and the rest of the BU bunch, they will be the first to let you know that they have no problems with the home crowd – the team’s sixth man – helping to push Baylor to a major upset over Texas

The Road Ahead

After tomorrow evening’s match-up under the Ferrell Center’s dome, Baylor will have six games remaining in Big 12 play – three on the road and three at home – as the Bears look to continue their rise from the ashes in college hoops.

The road ahead contains away games against Oklahoma, Colorado and Texas Tech, as well as home match-ups with Kansas State, Missouri and Texas A&M – with Baylor having already garnered a big road win over the Aggies earlier this season in a five-overtime thriller in College Station.

And for those in the highly competitive Big 12, the league boasts schedules that tend to include tough stretches that sometimes seem to never end.

“I think that’s a tribute to the Big 12,” Drew said. “It’s been as good as the league has been, maybe in the history of the league, from a standpoint that we’ve had nine out of 12 teams ranked or receive votes, RPI-wise we were first or second until conference play began – and some conferences began earlier than us, so our RPI dropped a little bit at that point – but top to bottom, we have a very competitive league and there are no easy games.”

Denton Ramsey may be reached via email at denton.ramsey@gmail.com

NCAA BASKETBALL FANS: DENTON RAMSEY WILL BE LIVE BLOGGING THE TEXAS-BAYLOR GAME ON SATURDAY AT THE FERRELL CENTER. CHECK BACK AT GAME TIME FOR LIVE NOTES, HALFTIME STATS, POSTGAME ANALYSIS, QUOTES AND MORE…