Baylor Bears | |
University | Baylor University |
---|---|
Conference(s) | Big 12 |
NCAA | Division I |
Athletics director | Ian McCaw |
Location | Waco, TX |
Varsity teams | 16 |
Football stadium | Floyd Casey Stadium |
Basketball arena | Ferrell Center |
Baseball stadium | Baylor Ballpark |
Mascot | Judge |
Nickname | Bears |
Fight song | "Good Ole Baylor Line" |
Colors | Envy Green and Craven Gold
|
Homepage | www.baylorbears.com |
Baylor Bears (variously Baylor or BU) refers to the sports teams of Baylor University. Baylor's men's sports teams are nicknamed the Bears, and some women's teams are nicknamed the Lady Bears. Student athletes participate in the NCAA's Division I, and Baylor is the only private school in the Big 12 Conference. Prior to joining the Big 12, Baylor was a member of the Southwest Conference from the conference's charter in 1914 until its dissolution in 1996.
Baylor won its first team NCAA title in 2004 as the men's tennis team defeated UCLA in the championship game. They narrowly lost to UCLA in the 2005 national championship match. The Women's Basketball team won the school's other NCAA Championship in 2005.
The mascots of Baylor University are two black bears named Joy and Lady.[1]
Contents |
Baylor competes in the following 16 varsity sports:
|
|
Baylor's baseball team is led by Steve Smith, who has coached the team since the 1995 season. During his tenure, the program has achieved success rarely seen before his arrival. In the 11 seasons from 1998-2009, Coach Smith led the team to 11 NCAA Regional appearances (1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2010), 3 NCAA Super Regional appearances (1999, 2003, 2005), and a College World Series appearance (2005). The Bears hosted a NCAA Regional in 1999, 2000, and 2005 in addition to hosting a NCAA Super Regional in 1999 and 2005. Since the inception of the Big 12 Conference, Baylor is one of only two teams (Baylor & Oklahoma) to have qualified for the Big 12 Tournament every year.
The Baylor Lady Bears won the NCAA Women's Division I Basketball Championship in 2005. Coached by Kim Mulkey, at that time Mulkey-Robertson, the Lady Bears defeated the Spartans of Michigan State University 84–62. Mulkey became the first women's coach and only the third coach in history to win an NCAA Division I basketball championship as both a player and a coach, joining Dean Smith and Bob Knight. In 8 of her 9 years as head coach, Mulkey has guided the Lady Bears to the NCAA Tournament. In 2010, Mulkey returned the Lady Bears to the Final Four, where they lost in the national semifinals to eventual champion U-Conn. In 2011, the Lady Bears were knocked out of the tournament by rival and eventual national champion, Texas A&M.
The men's basketball program was plagued by scandal in 2003. Patrick Dennehy, a player for the team, was murdered by a former player for the team, and then-coach Dave Bliss was forced to resign amidst allegations that he had made improper financial payments to players and planned to cover his actions by characterizing Dennehy as a drug dealer. The school placed itself on probation, limited itself to 7 scholarships for two years and imposed a post-season ban for one year. Additionally, the NCAA further punished the team by initiating a non-conference ban for the 2005-2006 season and extending the probationary period during which the school would have limited recruiting privileges.
The 2005 Bears were hindered by only having 7 scholarship players and recorded only one win in conference play. In spite of these challenges, head coach Scott Drew was able to put together a 2005 signing class ranked No. 7 nationally by HoopScoop. The 2006 Bears included Aaron Bruce, the highest scoring freshman in the NCAA in 2005, and Mamadou Diene, rated one of the top 10 centers for the 2007 NBA draft. The program's recovery culminated in 3 straight postseason appearances: an at-large NCAA Men's Tournament berth in March 2008, an NIT championship game appearance in March, 2009, and a trip to the NCAA tournament's Elite Eight in March, 2010. In the previous 17 years prior to 2008, BU made one postseason appearance (a first round exit of the NIT in 2001).
Baylor men's teams won five conference championships in the former Southwest Conference (1932, 1946, 1948, 1949*, 1950*; * denotes shared title). The Bears reached the NCAA Tournament for the first time in 1946 and 2010 and the Final Four in 1948 and 1950. The 1948 team advanced to play the Kentucky Wildcats for the NCAA championship, but fell 58–42 to Adolph Rupp's first national championship team.
Both the men and women call the Ferrell Center home, which was built in 1988. Previously they played in the Heart of Texas Coliseum. An non-exhaustive list of BU players who played in the NBA include Vinnie Johnson, David Wesley, Michael Williams, Terry Teagle and Brian Skinner. Ekpe Udoh was selected with the #6 pick in the 2010 NBA Draft by the Golden State Warriors.
The Baylor football team plays at Floyd Casey Stadium, located a few miles away from campus. It was called Baylor Stadium until 1988. The stadium was built in 1950 and currently officially seats 50,000 fans.
Since joining the Big 12 conference in 1996, Baylor has held a 18–101 record in regular season play, with its best season coming in 2010 when they finished with a 4-4 conference record. In 2004, Baylor defeated its first ranked opponent since 1998, #16 ranked Texas A&M, by a score of 35-34 in overtime on a two-point conversion.[2] In 2005 the team opened 3-0 for the first time since 1996 and finished 5-6; Baylor also won its first Big 12 road game in school history at Iowa State. Also despite a disappointing 4–8 record in 2006, the Bears swept the Big 12 North portion of its conference schedule and won 3 conference games in a season for the first time since joining the Big 12 in 1996. On November 18, 2007, Baylor fired football coach Guy Morriss and announced on November 28, 2007 that former University of Houston head coach Art Briles as the new coach. During the 2010 season, Baylor finished with a 7-5 regular season record, its first winning season since 1995, when they finished 7-4.[3]
During the 2006 campaign, the Bears notched a 3-5 losing record in the Big 12, its best since the Big 12 Conference was created. The record included wins over Kansas State University, Kansas University, and the University of Colorado at Boulder, all teams of the conference's northern division. The Bears' five losses were all to the Big 12 South Division, which includes the University of Texas, Texas A&M University, Texas Tech University, the University of Oklahoma, and Oklahoma State University. Baylor recorded the third largest comeback in its history against the Kansas Jayhawks by scoring 19 points in the 4th quarter to win the contest 36–35. The game also marked Baylor's first homecoming victory since beating Texas in 1997.
Baylor's first national championship in the school's history came when the men's tennis team won in 2004. Merely a year later in 2005 the women's basketball team won the school's second national title.
Baylor's most notable sports program is undoubtedly its track and field team, producing 466 All-Americans under the 42-year tenure of head coach Clyde Hart. The greatest standout of the track program has been its men's 4x400 relay team, which has sent teams to the NCAA finals in each of the past 27 years and produced three Olympic gold medalists: Michael Johnson, Jeremy Wariner and Darold Williamson. Baylor grads won gold in the 400 meter dash at three consecutive Olympics (Johnson in '96 and '00, then Wariner in '04). In 2005, Clyde Hart became Director of Track & Field, and Todd Harbour took over as head coach of Baylor's track and field and cross country squads.
Baylor has two national titles:
Baylor has won 69 conference titles, 42 of which are from the Big 12, and the other 28 from the Southwest Conference:
Baylor has carried over its rivalries from the now-defunct Southwest Conference, the most important of which are with the Texas A&M Aggies and the Texas Longhorns. The Baylor–Texas A&M rivalry is known as the Battle of the Brazos, as the Brazos River runs near both campuses (which are approximately 90 miles apart).
In recent years, Baylor renewed an old rivalry with Texas Christian University. TCU and Baylor had the nation's longest "continuous game" rivalry in when the series was temporarily stopped in 1995 upon the SWC's demise, as the schools went to different conferences. The TCU–Baylor rivalry originated around 1900 when both schools were located in Waco. With the restart of the rivalry in 2006, TCU won the first three games in 2006, 2007 and 2010. Baylor evened the series at 50-50-7 by hosting TCU to kick off both teams' 2011 seasons. Baylor beat TCU. Baylor gained a 24 point lead at 47-23, but TCU fought back to take the lead at 48-47 with just 4 minutes to go. Baylor ran down the clock to set up kicker Aaron Jones, who nailed a field goal with just over a minute left. TCU was able to drive past midfield, but a bad pass by TCU QB Casey Pachall led to an interception by Mike Hicks. Hicks ran for about five seconds, fell over to protect the ball, and won the most important football game Baylor had played in years.
The Baylor Line is one of the first aspects of Baylor spirit to which freshmen are introduced. The Baylor Line is made entirely of freshmen and is the core of Baylor spirit and tradition. Students wear a football jersey with the number of their proposed graduation year and a nickname on the back. Before each football game, the Baylor Line gathers at one end of Floyd Casey Stadium and waits for the signal to rush the field and create a giant human tunnel through which the football team runs to enter the stadium. Six members of the Baylor Line carry flags with the letters B-A-Y-L-O-R while the rest of the Line runs behind them. After that, students rush the sidelines and stand in an exclusive Baylor Line section behind the opponents' bench. Here, students heckle the opposing team.
The Baylor Line was organized in 1970 and was an all male organization until 1993. The Baylor women were previously called the Baylor Sidelines. At its inception, the Baylor Line was a group of men who lined the front of Baylor's student section—for the express purpose of keeping Baylor women away from other teams' fans. Today, however, the Line is limited to freshmen only.
Colors of the Line were rotated among white, Baylor green and Baylor gold, but in the interest of having a more substantial-looking student section, the decision was made to use gold every year.
In 1931, Mrs. Enid Markham, wife of music professor Robert Markham, wrote lyrics that were presented in chapel in November and soon sanctioned as the official school song. The "Good Old Summer Time” tune was rearranged to fit Mrs. Markham’s “Baylor Line” by Baylor Band Director Donald I. Moore.
♫ That Good Old Baylor Line! ♫
That Good Old Baylor Line!
We’ll march forever down the years,
As long as stars shall shine.
We’ll fling our Green and Gold afar
To light the ways of time,
And guide us as we onward go;
That Good Old Baylor Line!
Words Copyright 1952
by Enid Eastland Markham
|