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KANSAS STATE-BAYLOR PREVIEW: Bears return home to battle Wildcats in Saturday showdown

Friday, February 22nd, 2008

KANSAS STATE-BAYLOR PREVIEW: Bears return home to battle Wildcats in Saturday showdown

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

 

WACO, Texas – In about 24 hours, the Baylor Bears (17-8 overall, 5-6 Big 12) will be fighting for their postseason life when they face the Kansas State Wildcats (18-7, 8-3) on Saturday, Feb. 23 at the Ferrell Center.

After dropping four straight conference contests, the Bears hope to end that skid on Saturday evening in Waco when they battle the Wildcats – a team coming off a surprising loss at Nebraska and currently sitting in third place in the highly competitive Big 12.

Saturday’s showdown between Baylor and Kansas State is slated to tip off at 7 p.m. CST, with the game scheduled to be broadcast live on FSN Southwest for local Texas viewers.

“We have been in a couple of close games this year; I am very proud of the effort of our team,” Baylor Head Coach Scott Drew said following Tuesday’s tough one-point OT loss to Oklahoma on the road. “We have had two heartbreakers and a lot of teams could fold from here on out.

“I think we are going to get on a roll; I am really proud of our team. I think we are going to bond from this and I think we are going to grow from this.”

For Baylor Bear fans, this weekend’s match-up on the Ferrell Center hardwood could make or break their NCAA postseason dreams.

With the Bears currently tied with the Texas Tech Red Raiders for sixth place, Saturday’s game against the Wildcats is a must-win if Baylor expects to make a push for a March Madness tournament seed.

The good news for the BU basketball team is that they are returning home, where they hold a 10-3 mark, and Kansas State has lost three straight road games.

Check back tomorrow for post game quotes, notes, stats and more from Saturday night’s Big 12 match-up between the Bears and Wildcats…

 

 

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

 

SPORTS ADDICT: The real reason OU beat BU in Norman is due to awful officiating and straight-up cheating…

Wednesday, February 20th, 2008

SPORTS ADDICT: The real reason OU beat BU in Norman is due to awful officiating and straight-up cheating…Commentary by Denton Ramsey, NCAA Basketball Sportswriter/Big 12 Fans Baylor Correspondent

WACO, Texas – I have never in my life seen as much unsportsmanlike conduct by a team as was exhibited by the Oklahoma Sooners against the Baylor Bears on Tuesday evening, Feb. 19 in Norman, Okla.

On top of that, I honestly don’t think I have a seen a more one-sided officiated game as called by the Big 12 trio of Steve Welmer, Mark Whitehead and Curtis Shaw.

In my opinion, those three should be fined, fired and never allowed to officiate another game as long as they live.

Yes, the Bears may have now lost four straight.

But at least they can say they didn’t cheat to get to where they are today.

And, they literally did everything in their power to make it a game on Tuesday night on the road – forcing overtime before a ridiculous call came against Baylor’s Aaron Bruce with 7.3 seconds left in OT after a made three-pointer by OU gave the Sooners a chance to take the lead at the free throw line.

First of all, Bruce never touched the Oklahoma player shooting the three; in fact, not a single part of his body touched the Sooner taking the shot.

Secondly, the “fight” that occurred earlier in the game was started – no doubt about it – by Oklahoma.

Yet two Baylor players – Mark Shepherd, who left with a laceration above his eye and trouble breathing after being put in a full-nelson by Oklahoma’s Blake Griffin prior to throwing an elbow in Griffin’s direction to get the OU forward to let him go, and Richard Hurd, who apparently was tossed for standing up for his teammate, were ejected after the skirmish with just one, an ASSISTANT COACH, being ejected for OU.

Unbelievable.

In addition, the Bears were whistled for 33 fouls compared to 23 fouls called on the Sooners – with OU outscoring BU at the charity stripe 28-17 (37 attempts for Oklahoma, 23 attempts for Baylor).

For those looking at the final box score for Oklahoma’s win over Baylor, they will find the sheet full of lies – two BU players were tossed from the game for so-called flagrant fouls while no OU players were ejected (the “official” box score has no Baylor players ejected, but those watching the game on television know that is not the case).

The NCAA needs to be held accountable for these actions.

First, their officials call an awful game – through the first half, second half and especially in overtime.

Secondly, it appears to me as though the NCAA now wants to cover this whole thing up by not mentioning anything about this incident in the official box score.

Also, the officials REVIEWED the skirmish before ejecting the two BU players – did they just decided to ignore what they saw and only punish Baylor?

Either way, it’s unreal and unfair.

The Big 12 and the NCAA need to look into this matter – and fast.

Baylor shouldn’t have lost in OU – and Sooner fans can say all they want about Curtis Jerrells being whistled for a foul in the lane with one second left and a chance to win the game for BU.

It never should have come down to that.

> Find Big 12 gear including Baylor hats & merchandise and Oklahoma Sooners apparel online through Big12-fans.com!

Bruce never fouled the OU shooter on the other end and the game should have been tied at 91; we should have played another five minutes of overtime.

Instead, the officials handed the Sooners a 92-91 Big 12 win – propelling the Oklahoma basketball team, albeit by cheating, into a two-way tie for fourth place with Texas A&M.

Let’s even go back towards the beginning of the game, when Oklahoma had a steal that led to a fast break the other way.

Have you ever, in your entire life of watching college hoops, seen a teammate showboat by tossing the ball off the glass as an “alley-oop” of sorts to setup a thunderous slam?

In my opinion, definitely should have been whistled for unsportsmanlike conduct.

The sad thing is that not only was it not called unsportsmanlike, but OU head coach Jeff Capel appears to applaud the unsportsmanlike play of his players.

I guess that shouldn’t surprise me coming from Capel, a guy who loves to think of himself as a mini-god in college hoops…

Grow up, Capel – learn to win the right way, not by showboating and cheating.

The Oklahoma basketball team, coaching staff and the trio of officials who called Tuesday night’s game should all be investigated.

And if any wrongdoings are uncovered, they should all be severely punished.

The Bears are back in NCAA basketball, I guarantee you.

It’s just impossible to win games if the officials are going to cheat the entire time – from the opening tip to the 7.3-second mark in overtime.

Coach Scott Drew and the Baylor Bears basketball team deserve an apology and a win.

Unfortunately, I doubt they will receive either as the NCAA would rather pretend this never occurred than to actually do something about their terrible officiating crew.

If this is how Baylor games are going to be called the rest of the season, we’ll never win again.

But I’m not about to watch my Bears go down in flames due to cheating.

Wake up, NCAA – Baylor deserves, at the very least, sportsmanlike respect.

And, OU better get their heads out of their exits-only before they become so wrapped up in themselves that they think the world has come to an end and that they are all little deities led by mini-god Capel…

No matter how you slice it, the Sooners are a stuck-up bunch of jerks – and you can tell they learned it from the man at the helm, none other than Mr. Capel himself.

I just can’t wait until my Bears get revenge come Big 12 tourney time.

My only hope, and prayer, is that the same officiating crew won’t be hitting the hardwood come March…

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

 

Baylor Battles Back, Falls 82-77 To No. 11 Texas In Big 12 Thriller

Saturday, February 16th, 2008

Baylor Battles Back, Falls 82-77 To No. 11 Texas In Big 12 Thriller

By Denton Ramsey, NCAA Basketball Sportswriter

 

WACO, Texas — By the time all was said and done, the No. 11 Texas Longhorns (21-4 overall, 8-2 Big 12) escaped Waco with a narrow 82-77 victory over the Baylor Bears (17-7, 5-5) on Saturday evening, Feb. 16 at the Ferrell Center.

With the largest crowd in the gold dome’s history on hand to watch and support the Bears, the Baylor hoops team gave them something to cheer about – despite the final outcome.

“I give credit to two things [on being able to make a run in the final minutes],” Baylor Head Coach Scott Drew said. “Our players showed a lot of heart and a lot of character, and our fans gave us a chance to be in that situation.”

After falling behind 74-61 with 3:39 remaining, the BU basketball team made a remarkable run – cutting the Texas lead to 76-72, with 1:05 left in regulation, after back-to-back threes by LaceDarius Dunn and Henry Dugat.

Shortly thereafter, a Texas miss and a Baylor drive to the basket cut the Horns lead to 76-74 as the Bears’ house erupted.

“From a coach’s standpoint, we did a great job coming back,” 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’s Bears did just that – giving themselves a fighting chance after a Texas turnover with 58 seconds left gave the ball back to Baylor.

However, upon regaining possession, Curtis Jerrells was whistled for an offensive foul – with BU’s junior guard fouling out of the game after picking up his fifth personal with 41.8 seconds remaining in regulation.

“They [the Baylor basketball team] have come a long way in a short period of time, and in the last two games where we’ve been over-excited to play, Arkansas and Texas, we didn’t start off shooting the ball very well,” Drew said. “[Shooting] 1-for-17 in the first half [against Texas] doesn’t get it done against a top-10 team, but we played good enough defense and rebounded well enough to give ourselves a chance in the second half.

“The irony is that when the offense came on in the second half the defense shut off. We’ve just got to get them both at the same time.”

With Texas taking a 77-74 lead after hitting one of two from the charity stripe, Tweety Carter answered with a driving layup to make it 77-76 with just under 30 ticks left in the game.

“We haven’t given up all year and I didn’t expect us to give up,” Drew said. “We like to play fast and Texas starting slowing down in the second half and did a good job milking that lead.

“We had to start pressuring and try to create something else, and we were able to get some momentum after we made a couple of shots. They missed some free throws which gave us a chance.”

The Ferrell Center’s crowd roared to life on the ensuing play after a poor inbounds pass by Texas led to a quick turnover – with BU retaining possession and down just one with 28.4 seconds remaining.

Then, the unthinkable happened. Senior Aaron Bruce, a veteran to the game of basketball pretty much since birth, made a big mistake – signaling for an untimely timeout with Baylor having none remaining, resulting in a technical foul against the Bears.

“I don’t think it [the technical] drew any life out of us because he hit one free throw and he missed one,” Rogers said. “We just didn’t make the play to come out with the victory.”

As Rogers mentioned, Texas hit only one of two from the line - once again giving Baylor a chance to tie or take the lead with BU down by just two, 78-76, with the ball in the Bears’ hands.

Bruce quickly made up for his poor decision making on the prior play, making a beautiful drive to the basket before kicking the ball out to an open Dunn – who barely missed a three-point shot that would have given Baylor the lead – before a foul by Kevin Rogers sent Texas to the line for two shots with 20.5 ticks left on the game clock.

“Where I was pleased with Aaron (Bruce) is that he made a mistake, but he didn’t let that one mistake turn into two,” Drew said. “He came back and made a great drive and dished off to LaceDarius (Dunn), who was our best shooter tonight by far. There’s no one you’d rather have with a wide-open shot in that situation. I was proud that Aaron came back after that.”

With the crowd standing to their feet and screaming near the top of their lungs for a Texas miss from the free throw line, UT’s D.J. Augustin hit only one of two to give the Horns a 79-76 lead – and Baylor, amazingly, had another chance to tie the game if the Bears’ could find their touch from long range.

“At the end of the game we didn’t get it done from the free throw line and we made it a lot harder than it had to be,” Texas Head Coach Rick Barnes said. “With the pressure that they applied and the turnovers that they forced, you have to give Baylor credit for that.”

A late whistle on a Carter drive in the lane on the ensuing BU possession put the sophomore guard at the line for a pair of free throws with 16.1 seconds left. Carter used all of the basket’s iron to make the first shot from the stripe before missing the second as UT pulled down the rebound.

Texas‘ Augustin then calmly drained a clutch pair of free throws in front of a loud and rowdy BU home crowd, giving the Horns a two-possession lead at 81-77.

“I think over the past few years that we have played Baylor, they have showed that they are never out of the game,” UT guard Justin Mason said. “We haven’t really beaten [Baylor] that badly recently, so we know they are never out of the game.”

After both Carter and Bruce, after a BU offensive rebound, missed desperation three-pointers on the other end, Baylor was again forced to foul Augustin – this time with only 1.1 seconds left and the Bears in a hole too big to climb out of.

“Baylor is a great team,” Augustin said. “We knew it was going to be a tough game coming in. We need to win every road game that we get. This was a great win for us, and we give a lot of credit for Baylor.”

Augustin hit the back end of two from the line before Carter’s half-court heave nearly dropped - bouncing off the back iron – as the Bears lost a home court heartbreaker, 82-77.

“Any time you make a run like that you expect to win,” Carter said. “Texas missed some free throws, and we had a lot of opportunities to win the game, but we just didn’t pull it off.”

According to Rogers, despite the trio of conference losses the team’s confidence level hasn’t dipped as the Bears prepare to face the Sooners on Tuesday night at OU.

“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 this game and learn from them and hope we get better before we play Oklahoma.”

The Bears still have plenty of time to regain momentum, with six games remaining in the highly competitive conference before the Big 12 tournament tips off March 13 in Kansas City, Mo.

“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 tonight. Over the last two years we’ve finished very strong, and I look for us to get on a roll pretty shortly here.”

 

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

 

Bears Drop Heartbreaker To Horns, Falls 82-77 At Ferrell Center

Saturday, February 16th, 2008

Bears Drop Heartbreaker To Horns, Falls 82-77 At Ferrell Center
By Denton Ramsey, NCAA Basketball Sportswriter

WACO, Texas — Unfortunately for the Big 12’s green and gold, the Baylor Bears (17-7 overall, 5-5 Big 12) have now dropped three straight conference games.

On Saturday, Feb. 16 at the BU Ferrell Center, Baylor fell to No. 11 Texas (21-4, 8-2) in a home court heartbreaker - battling back for an unprecedented run with a little over 3:30 remaining - dropping an 82-77 decision under the Bears’ gold dome.

After shooting just under 24 percent in the first half, while going 1-for-17 from long range in that same stretch, Baylor hit seven three-pointers in the second half while draining 60 percent of their shots from the field (18-for-30).

LaceDarius Dunn and Henry Dugat led the BU hoops team in scoring, with both players putting up 19 points apiece in the Bears loss to the Longhorns.

Also scoring in double-figures for Baylor was Kevin Rogers (12 points), Curtis Jerrells (11) and Tweety Carter (11).

Damion James led the charge for UT, netting 19 points as Texas held on for another Big 12 victory to improve the Horns’ conference mark to 8-2.

Check back within the next hour or so for postgame analysis, quotes from coach Scott Drew and the Baylor basketball team, as well as final stats from tonight’s match-up…

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

No. 11 Texas Holds On For 82-77 Victory Over Baylor

Saturday, February 16th, 2008

No. 11 Texas Holds On For 82-77 Victory Over Baylor
By Denton Ramsey, NCAA Basketball Sportswriter

WACO, Texas — It seems as though the Texas Longhorns had an answer for everything the Baylor Bears did.

Despite a remarkable run, with BU rattling off six straight points in a matter of seconds, the Bears fell to the Horns on Saturday evening, Feb. 16, at the Ferrell Center.

In front of a sold out and rowdy home crowd - the largest in the arena’s history - Baylor made a big comeback late, only to fall 82-77.

With the Bears down just one, 77-76 with 28.4 seconds remaining in regulation, Baylor’s Aaron Bruce called an untimely timeout - as BU was out of timeouts when he signaled to the officials for the call.

Due to Bruce’s momentary lapse of reason, Texas went to the other end for two free throws - with A.J. Abrams missing the second and the Horns on top 78-76.

However, LaceDarius Dunn missed a quick three for BU - forcing the home team to foul down the stretch as Texas hung on for a victory in Waco, defeating Baylor 82-77.

Check back soon for postgame quotes, notes and more…

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

BU Drains Two Big Threes, Cuts Into UT Lead At 76-72

Saturday, February 16th, 2008

BU Drains Two Big Threes, Cuts Into UT Lead At 76-72
By Denton Ramsey, NCAA Basketball Sportswriter

WACO, Texas — The Baylor Bears, somehow, are back in the fight.

After a huge three-pointer by Dunn, followed by a steal and three by Dugat, Baylor finds themselves down just four, 76-72, with 1:05 remaining.

And the Horns were just forced to call a timeout after full-court Baylor defense prevented Texas from passing the ball inbounds.

Check back soon as this barn burner rolls on…

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

Abrams Drains Three-Pointer After Bears Claw Back Within 10

Saturday, February 16th, 2008

Abrams Drains Three-Pointer After Bears Claw Back Within 10
By Denton Ramsey, NCAA Basketball Sportswriter

WACO, Texas — If the Bears have a hot-steak left in them, now is the time to break it out.

Texas’ A.J. Abrams just hit a big three for the Horns to put them back up by 13.

Baylor, down 74-61 with 3:39 left in regulation, need to start hitting some shots - and fast - as well as play solid defense down the stretch if they want to get back into this one.

Check back soon…

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

Bears Battling Back, But Still Down 68-54 With 7:38 Left

Saturday, February 16th, 2008

Bears Battling Back, But Still Down 68-54 With 7:38 Left
By Denton Ramsey, NCAA Basketball Sportswriter

WACO, Texas — The Baylor Bears couldn’t be shooting much better than they are here in the second half.

Unfortunately for BU, the Horns are just as hot.

With 7:38 left in the game, Baylor is down by 14 points and needs to make some big stops - as well as hit some big shots - if they want to get back into this one.

Check back soon…

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

Shooting Clinic Has Bears Down 55-42 As Teams Come Out Hot

Saturday, February 16th, 2008

Shooting Clinic Has Bears Down 55-42 As Teams Come Out Hot
By Denton Ramsey, NCAA Basketball Sportswriter

WACO, Texas — Despite LaceDarius “Kool” Dunn’s attempts to bring Baylor ever close to Texas, the Bears still find themselves on the short end of the stick - down 55-42 with 14:17 left in the game.

Both teams have been hot in the second half, as Dunn drained three straight three-pointers and UT answered almost every time.

Check back soon…

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