Baylor Bears football: Difference between revisions
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{{short description|American college football team}} |
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{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2024}}{{Infobox NCAA football school |
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| TeamName = Baylor Bears football |
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| TeamName = Baylor Bears football |
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| CurrentSeason = 2024 Baylor Bears football team |
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| Image =Baylor_University_Athletics_(logo).svg |
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| Image = Baylor Athletics logo.svg |
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| ImageSize = 140 |
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| ImageSize = 125 |
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| Helmet = |
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| FirstYear = [[1899 Baylor football team|1899]]; {{Years or months ago|1899}} |
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| ImageSize2 = 120 |
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| AthleticDirector = [[Mack Rhoades]] |
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| HeadCoachDisplay = Art Briles |
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| HeadCoach = [[Dave Aranda]] |
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| HeadCoachLink = Art Briles |
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| HeadCoachYear |
| HeadCoachYear = 5th |
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| HCWins = 31 |
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| HCWins = 26 <!-- 25 through 2011 season end, plus 1 in 2012 --> |
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| HCLosses = 29 |
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| HCLosses = 25 <!-- 25 through 2011 season end, plus 0 in 2012 --> |
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| Stadium = [[McLane Stadium]] |
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| HCTies = |
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| StadiumBuilt = 2014 |
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| Stadium = Floyd Casey Stadium |
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| StadCapacity |
| StadCapacity = 45,140 |
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| StadSurface = Field Turf |
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| StadSurface = Synthetic Turf; (The Prestige System)<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.baylorbears.com/facilities/casey.html |title=Facilities - Floyd Casey Stadium |publisher=Baylor Athletics (Baylor University) |accessdate=2009-09-06}}</ref> |
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| Location = [[Waco, Texas]] |
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| ConferenceDisplay= Big 12 |
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| NCAAdivision = I FBS |
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| Location = [[Waco, Texas]] |
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| Conference = [[Big 12 Conference]] |
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| PastAffiliations = [[NCAA Division I-A independent schools|Independent]]<br>(1898–1915)<br>[[Southwest Conference]] <br>(1915–1996) |
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| FirstYear = 1896 |
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| WebsiteName = BaylorBears.com |
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| AthlDirectorDisp = Ian McCaw |
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| WebsiteURL = https://baylorbears.com/sports/football |
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| AthlDirectorLink = Ian McCaw |
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| ATWins = 630 <!-- Through 9/7/24 --> |
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| WebsiteName = BaylorBears.com |
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| ATLosses = 607<!-- Through 9/7/24 --> |
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| WebsiteURL = http://baylorbears.cstv.com/sports/m-footbl/bay-m-footbl-body.html |
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|ATTies = 44 |
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| ATWins = 544 <!-- 541 through 2011 season end, plus 3 in 2012 --> |
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| BowlWins = 14<!-- Through 2021 season --> |
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| BowlLosses = 12 <!-- Through 2021 season --> |
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| ATTies = 44 |
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| BowlTies = |
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| BowlWins = 10 <!-- Through 2011 season --> |
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| NatlTitles = |
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| BowlLosses = 8 <!-- Through 2011 season --> |
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| ConfTitles = 10: 1915, 1916, 1922, 1924, 1974, 1980, 1994, 2013, 2014, 2021 |
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| BowlTies = |
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| Heismans = [[Robert Griffin III]] – 2011 |
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| NatlTitles = |
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| AllAmericans = 18 (10 Unanimous)<ref name=NCAARecords>{{cite web|title=2021 Baylor Bears All-American Selections|url=https://www.sports-reference.com/cfb/schools/baylor/all-america.html|publisher=NCAA|access-date=4 March 2022|pages=13}}</ref> |
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| ConfTitles = 6 |
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| uniform = [[File:Baylor bears football unif.png|250px]] |
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| Heismans = 1 |
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| FightSong = Old Fight |
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| AllAmericans = 16<ref>{{Cite web | last = NCAA | title = NCAA Football Award Winners | pages = 12 | year = 2009 | url = http://web1.ncaa.org/web_files/stats/football_records/DI/2009/2009Awards.pdf | postscript = <!--None-->}}</ref> |
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| MascotDisplay = [[Bruiser and Marigold]] |
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| uniform = File:Big12-Uniform-BU.png |
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| MarchingBand = [[Baylor University Golden Wave Band|The Golden Wave Band]] |
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| Color1 = Green |
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| Rivalries = [[Houston Cougars football|Houston]] ([[Baylor–Houston football rivalry|rivalry]])<br />[[TCU Horned Frogs football|TCU]] ([[Baylor-TCU football rivalry|rivalry]])<br />[[Texas Tech Red Raiders football|Texas Tech]] ([[Baylor–Texas Tech football rivalry|rivalry]])<br />[[Texas Longhorns football|Texas]] ([[Baylor–Texas football rivalry|rivalry]])<br /> [[Texas A&M Aggies football|Texas A&M]] ([[Battle of the Brazos|rivalry]])}} |
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| Color1Hex = 004834 |
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| Color2 = Gold |
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| Color2Hex = FDBB2F |
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| FightSong = Old Fite |
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| MascotDisplay = American Black Bear, Costumed (mascot) Bruiser|Bruiser |
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| MascotLink = Judge and Bruiser (mascots) |
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| MarchingBand = [[Baylor University Golden Wave Band|The Golden Wave Band]] |
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| PagFreeLabel = Rivals |
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| PagFreeValue = [[TCU Horned Frogs football|TCU Horned Frogs]]<br> [[Texas Longhorns football|Texas Longhorns]] <br> [[Texas Tech Red Raiders football|Texas Tech Red Raiders]] |
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}} |
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The '''Baylor Bears football''' team represents [[Baylor University]] in [[Division I FBS]] [[college football]]. |
The '''Baylor Bears football''' team represents [[Baylor University]] in [[Division I (NCAA)#Football Bowl Subdivision|Division I FBS]] [[college football]]. They are a member of the [[Big 12 Conference]]. After 64 seasons at the off-campus Baylor Stadium, renamed [[Floyd Casey Stadium]] in 1988, the Bears opened the new on-campus [[McLane Stadium]] for the 2014 season. |
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==Conference affiliations== |
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*1896–1914: [[NCAA Division I-A independent schools|Independent]] |
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*1914–1996: [[Southwest Conference]] (Founding Member) |
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*1996–present: [[Big 12 Conference]] (Founding Member-South Division 1996-2010) |
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==History== |
==History== |
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[[File:Early campus football field date 1915.jpg|thumb|Baylor Football Team Circa 1921]] |
[[File:Early campus football field date 1915.jpg|thumb|Baylor Football Team Circa 1921]] |
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{{See also|List of Baylor Bears football seasons}} |
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Baylor University's football team has seen a wide variation in its success through the years, from an undefeated perfect 3-0 record in 1900 to a winless record in 1969. |
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===Early history=== |
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Initially, the university played its home games on an undetermined field near the university. Beginning in 1905, the team's home games were played at Carroll Field, between the Carroll Science Building and Waco Creek. Baylor did not adopt a mascot (the Baylor Bears) until December 14, 1914, after the completion of the 1914 football season.[2] Additionally, Baylor did not join an athletic conference until 1914 after the conclusion of football season, when it became a founding member of the Southwest Conference. Baylor played its first home game against Toby's Business College (located in Waco) in 1899, its first away game on 4 November 1900, at [[Austin College]], and its first neutral-site game against Texas A&M in 1901. |
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{{unreferenced section|date=July 2014}} |
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Baylor University's football team has seen a wide variation in its success through the years, including an undefeated 3–0 perfect record in 1900. |
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Initially, starting in the year 1898, the university played its home games on an unnamed field near the university campus. Beginning in 1905, the team's home games were played at Carroll Field, between the Carroll Science Building and Waco Creek. Baylor did not adopt a mascot (the Baylor Bears) until December 14, 1914 after the completion of the 1914 football season.[2] Additionally, Baylor did not join an athletic conference until 1914 after the conclusion of the football season, when it became a founding member of the Southwest Conference. Baylor played its first home game against Toby's Business College (located in Waco) in 1899, its first away game on 4 November 1900, at [[Austin College]], and its first neutral-site game against Texas A&M in 1901. |
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For the 1899 and 1900 seasons, the team was coached by R.H. Hamilton, whose 5–1–1 record was distinguished with never having a losing record; in 1899, Baylor played its first game against Texas A&M, which would become a rivalry (until 2012 when Texas A&M changed conferences), the Battle of the Brazos, with over 100 games played in the series by 2003. W.J. Ritchie coached the 1901 team, leading it to a 5–3 record; in this year, the first games of the Baylor-[[Texas]] and Baylor-[[Texas Christian University|TCU]] series were played. [[Texas Christian University]] (known as AddRan Male & Female College until 1902) was located in Waco from 1895 to 1910 and was one of Baylor's greatest football rivals until the dissolution of the [[Southwest Conference]] in 1995. |
For the 1899 and 1900 seasons, the team was coached by R.H. Hamilton, whose 5–1–1 record was distinguished with never having a losing record; in 1899, Baylor played, and lost, its first game against Texas A&M, which would become a rivalry (until 2012 when Texas A&M changed conferences), the Battle of the Brazos, with over 100 games played in the series by 2003. W.J. Ritchie coached the 1901 team, leading it to a 5–3 record; in this year, the first games of the Baylor-[[Texas]] and Baylor-[[Texas Christian University|TCU]] series were played. [[Texas Christian University]] (known as AddRan Male & Female College until 1902) was located in Waco from 1895 to 1910 and was one of Baylor's greatest football rivals until the dissolution of the [[Southwest Conference]] in 1995. The 1901 season also welcomed Baylor's first Thanksgiving Day football game, with a 28–0 win over [[St. Edward's University]]. J.C. Ewing took control of the team in 1902, and led it to its first losing season, with a 3–4–2 record. R.N. Watts restored Baylor's winning tradition in 1903, with a record of 4–3–1. |
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[[File:CarrollField 1922.jpg|thumb|Carroll Field]] |
[[File:CarrollField 1922.jpg|thumb|Carroll Field]] |
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No team was fielded in 1906 following a ban opposing the violence of football; along with 1943 and 1944 (during World War II), 1906 is one of three seasons since 1899 that Baylor has not competed in varsity football. Luther Burleson headed the restored football team in 1907, and managed a 4–3–1 record. E.J. Mills led the team for the 1908 and 1909 seasons; their 3–5–0 and 5–3–0 records were notable for the 1908 loss to [[LSU]], and for the world's first "[[Homecoming]]" at the 1909 Thanksgiving Day game, which included a concert, parade, and bonfire. To this day, Baylor claims the honor of having the largest homecoming parade in the world. |
No team was fielded in 1906 following a ban opposing the violence of football; along with 1943 and 1944 (during World War II), 1906 is one of three seasons since 1899 that Baylor has not competed in varsity football. Luther Burleson headed the restored football team in 1907, and managed a 4–3–1 record. E.J. Mills led the team for the 1908 and 1909 seasons; their 3–5–0 and 5–3–0 records were notable for the 1908 loss to [[LSU]], and for the world's first "[[Homecoming]]" at the 1909 Thanksgiving Day game, which included a concert, parade, and bonfire. To this day, Baylor claims the honor of having the largest homecoming parade in the world. |
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Baylor has many traditions such as the [[Battle of the Brazos]] |
Baylor has many traditions such as the Baylor-TCU rivalry game which is one of the most played in all of college football, the [[Battle of the Brazos]] (through 2011 when Texas A&M left the Big 12), membership in the historic [[Southwest Conference]], a [[Judge (mascot)|live bear mascot]] since 1915 and the [[Baylor Line]]. |
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In 1966, John Hill Westbrook of Elgin, Texas became the first African American to play varsity football in the Southwest Conference when he joined the Baylor team. |
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===Early SWC Championships and Bowl success=== |
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Baylor won the SWC Championship in 1915, 1916, 1922 and again in 1924. In 1956 Baylor came close to the SWC title again but finished second and was sent to face the undefeated No. 2 [[Tennessee Volunteers]] in the 1957 [[Sugar Bowl]]. Baylor defeated [[Johnny Majors]] and the No. 2 Volunteers 13–7. This was the highest ranked opponent Baylor had ever defeated until defeating No. 1 ranked [[Kansas State]] in 2012. The 1924 SWC Championship would be the last for many decades until Baylor won the conference again in 1974 under the leadership of third year head coach [[Grant Teaff]]. From the late 1940s until the mid-1960s, Baylor also played in the 1952 Orange Bowl (vs. Georgia Tech), twice in the Gator Bowl (vs. Auburn and Florida), and the Bluebonnet (beating LSU), Dixie (beating Wake Forest) and Gotham Bowl (beating No. 10 ranked Utah St in New York City). |
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===Miracle on the Brazos=== |
===Miracle on the Brazos=== |
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Baylor had finished in last place in 4 of the last 7 seasons including the year before and had not won the conference championship in 50 years. Also, prior to this season, they had never appeared in the Cotton Bowl. Furthermore, coming into the 1974 season Baylor had lost 16 consecutive games to the [[Texas Longhorns football|Texas Longhorns]]. The 1974 Texas vs Baylor game looked like another easy win for Texas as the Longhorns took quick control of the game and went into halftime leading 24–7. Baylor was energized starting the 2nd half however, sparked by a blocked punt early in the 3rd quarter. The Bears rallied to a thrilling 34–24 victory over the Longhorns. Baylor went on to win the conference title that year and a first ever trip to the Cotton Bowl (the first time in seven seasons that Texas did not win the [[Southwest Conference]] title). The entire 1974 Baylor football season was dubbed the "Miracle on the Brazos" by many sports writers at the time. The win over Texas and the SWC championship have thus become a special part of Baylor's athletic history. |
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===Grant Teaff era (1972–1992)=== |
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The 1974 SWC Championship season was one of the most memorable in school history. Baylor had finished in last place in 1973 and had not won the conference in fifty years. Furthermore, coming into the '74 season Baylor had lost 16 consecutive seasons to the University of Texas Longhorns. Baylor not only won the conference title but defeated the Longhorns, which marked the first time in seven seasons that Texas did not win the [[Southwest Conference]] title. The entire '74 Baylor football season was dubbed the "Miracle on the Brazos" by many sports writers at the time, the name and season have thus become part of Baylor's athletic history. |
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One of the most successful coaches in Baylor football history was [[Grant Teaff]]. He led the Bears to conference titles in 1974, his third year in the program, and again in 1980 when he led the Bears to the [[Cotton Bowl Classic|Cotton Bowl]] to face the [[1980 Alabama Crimson Tide football team|Alabama Crimson Tide]]. Grant Teaff recruited famous players such as [[Mike Singletary]], Thomas Everett, Walter Abercrombie and James Francis to play football at Baylor University. Teaff was also named National Coach of the Year after the 1974 season. He would go on to serve until 1992 leading Baylor to eight bowl games as well as the aforementioned Southwest Conference championships (1974, 1980) in his 21 years as head coach. |
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=== |
===Chuck Reedy era (1993–1996)=== |
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[[Chuck Reedy]] was coach for four seasons and compiled a record of 23–22. His [[1994 Baylor Bears football team|1994 team]] was part of a 5-way co-championship of the Southwest Conference, though an ineligible Texas A&M held a better conference record. In 1996 Baylor joined Texas, Texas Tech, and Texas A&M, along with the Big 8 conference schools, to form the Big 12 Conference. |
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One of the most successful coaches in Baylor football history was Grant Teaff. He lead the Bears to a 1974 Conference Title in his third year in the program. And nearly brought home a National Championship during the record setting 1980 football season that saw the Bears take on the [[Alabama Crimson Tide]] in the [[Cotton Bowl Classic|Cotton Bowl]]. Teaff recruited famous players such as [[Mike Singletary]] along with many others. Teaff was also named national coach of the year for the 1974 football season. Teaff would go on to serve until 1992 leading Baylor to 8 bowl games and two conference championships (1974, 1980) in his 21 years as coach. |
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===Roberts, Steele, and Morriss era (1997–2007)=== |
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[[File:Big 12 logo in Baylor colors.svg|thumb|200px|Big 12 logo in Baylor's colors]] |
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Baylor was led by a succession of coaches with mediocre results. [[Dave Roberts (American football)|Dave Roberts]] was coach from 1997 to 1998 and compiled a 4–18 record. |
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===The Big 12 Era=== |
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[[Kevin Steele]] followed from 1999 to 2002 and posted a 9–36 record. He was succeeded by [[Guy Morriss]] from 2003 to 2007 who compiled an 18–40 record. |
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In 1996 Baylor joined the University of Texas, Texas Tech, and Texas A&M Universities along with the Big 8 Universities, to form the Big 12 Conference. |
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=== Art Briles era (2008–2015) === |
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==Recent history== |
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{{very long section|date=October 2018}} |
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The 2010 season was a breakthrough for the Baylor Bears. Baylor earned an invitation to the Texas Bowl in Houston after finishing the regular season with a 7–5 record, this was their first bowl appearance since 1995. In the regular season the Bears victories included Big 12 conference wins over Kansas and Kansas St, as well as road wins over Colorado and Texas. |
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===2009 season=== |
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{{main|2009 Baylor Bears football team}} |
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The 2009 season was highlighted by a non-conference road win against Wake Forest, and another against two-time defending Big 12 North champions Missouri 40-32, two games that were televised on ABC television. The season fell short of Bears' fans expectations however when starting QB Robert Griffin III was injured in the 3rd game of the year and Baylor finished the season with a 1-7 Big 12 Conference record and a 4-8 overall record. |
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Building on the success of the 2010 team, Baylor began the 2011 season at home with an upset of No. 14 TCU, winners of the previous season's Rose Bowl. The Bears also won their next two games before traveling to Kansas State where they lost a tightly contested game by a single point. Baylor then defeated Iowa State 49–26 for the first conference win of the year before finishing October by losing two straight on the road, to A&M and eventual conference champion No. 3 Oklahoma State. The Bears rebounded to finish the regular season, with five straight victories including a Homecoming win over Missouri, a 31–30 overtime victory at Kansas in which Baylor tied a school record by overcoming a 21-point deficit in the 4th quarter, and the program's first win over No. 5 Oklahoma on a 34-yard touchdown pass from Griffin to Terrance Williams with 8 seconds remaining in the game. Baylor concluded November in Dallas playing against Texas Tech in Cowboys Stadium; although Griffin left the game due to a concussion at the half, backup [[Nick Florence]] entered the game and led the Bears to a 66–42 victory. The Bears finished the regular season at home with a 48–24 victory over No. 22 Texas that propelled the team (9–3, 6–3 Big XII) to the Alamo Bowl with No. 12 and No. 15 BCS and AP rankings respectively, and propelled Griffin to the top of the [[Heisman Trophy]] voting; he became the first Baylor player to win the award and the first Baylor player since Don Trull in 1963 to factor significantly in the voting. In the Alamo Bowl, the Bears faced the Washington Huskies in what became the second-highest scoring bowl game in history, and the highest-scoring regulation bowl game ever. Baylor went up 21–7 early in the game, with Griffin throwing for one touchdown and rushing for another. The Huskies roared back with 28 unanswered points, and the teams finished the half with Washington leading 35–24. In the second half, with the defenses showing limited ability to cope with the high-powered offenses led by Griffin and Husky QB [[Keith Price]], the teams traded scores. The Bears overcame the halftime deficit, going ahead for good 60–56 halfway in the 4th quarter, and Baylor RB Terrance Ganaway tacked on a final 43-yard touchdown run. Ganaway finished with 21 carries for 200 yards and 5 TDs and was recognized as the game's offensive MVP. |
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===2010 season=== |
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{{main|2010 Baylor Bears football team}} |
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The 2010 season was a breakthrough for the Baylor Bears even though they suffered an early season loss to rival TCU 45-10; they earned an invitation to the Texas Bowl in Houston after finishing the regular season with a 7-5 record. Baylor subsequently lost the Texas Bowl 38-14 to Illinois. In the regular season the Bears victories included Big12 conference wins over Kansas 55-7 and Kansas St 47-42, as well as road wins over Colorado and Texas. |
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Baylor's 2012 season opened in Waco against the SMU Mustangs. Quarterback Nick Florence – now a senior, having burned his redshirt season to play the second half against Texas Tech in 2011 after Griffin III left with a concussion – led the Bears to a 59–24 victory. Two weeks later, a victory at home against No. 2 FCS Sam Houston State gave Baylor fans their first glimpse of things to come when Oregon transfer running back Lache Seastrunk, who entered the game in the 4th quarter, put Baylor ahead 41–23 with a 15-yard touchdown rush. Baylor then traveled to Louisiana-Monroe to face a Warhawk team which had notched a stunning victory over No. 8 Arkansas and had subsequently taken Auburn to overtime. A 47–42 Baylor victory represented the Bears' 9th consecutive win (at the time, the 2nd longest streak in the FBS) and gave the Bears a No. 24 ranking. The win streak was broken during Baylor's first trip to Morgantown, West Virginia, by a No. 7 ranked Mountaineer team playing their inaugural Big 12 conference game. The 70–63 shootout saw several Big 12 records set, notably including the single-game receiving record by Baylor receiver Terrance Williams (314 yards). The loss dropped Baylor from the rankings and represented the start of a 4-game skid during which time Baylor lost in Waco to TCU, at No. 25 Texas, and at Iowa State. A win at home against Kansas and a loss at No. 12 Oklahoma left the Bears fighting for bowl eligibility. Baylor shocked the college football world the next week by soundly beating No. 1 Kansas State in Waco 52–24. A 12-yard Florence touchdown rush in the first quarter gave Baylor a 14–7 lead which was never relinquished. The Baylor defense highlighted the game with a stout goal-line stand in the 4th quarter and intercepted Heisman hopeful Collin Klein three times, the last in the endzone to set up an 80-yard touchdown run by Lache Seastrunk. The victory over Kansas State represented the program's first ever win over a No. 1 ranked team and sparked a 3-game win streak for Baylor (with a 52–45 overtime victory over Texas Tech in Cowboys Stadium and a 41–34 victory in Waco over No. 23 Oklahoma State). During the OSU game Seastrunk again achieved recognition for a 76-yard touchdown rush, outrunning the Oklahoma State secondary despite suffering a quadriceps cramp near midfield. The conclusion of Baylor's 7–5 2012 campaign marked the first time since 1949–51 that the Bears have enjoyed three consecutive seasons with 7+ wins. On December 2, Baylor accepted a berth in the Holiday Bowl, sending the Bears to a third consecutive bowl for the first time in program history. Baylor easily defeated the No. 17-ranked UCLA Bruins in the Holiday Bowl on December 27, 2012 by a final margin of 49–26 after jumping out to a 21–0 lead early in the 2nd quarter. Lache Seastrunk (RB) and Chris McAllister (DE) were named Offensive Player and Defensive Player of the game respectively. |
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===2011 season=== |
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{{main|2011 Baylor Bears football team}} |
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Building on the success of the previous year's team, Baylor began the season at home with a 50-48 upset of then #14 TCU, winners of the previous season's Rose Bowl. The Bears won their next two games against Stephen F. Austin and Rice at home, before traveling to Kansas State where they lost a tightly contested game 35-36 to the greatly improved Bill Snyder-coached team. After defeating Iowa State 49-26 at home, the Bears finished October losing two straight on the road at Texas A&M and eventual conference champion Oklahoma State. |
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In 2013, Baylor had arguably its best regular season in school history. A best-ever 9–0 start propelled the Bears to a No. 3 national ranking in the [[AP Poll]]. However, after an on-the-road loss to Oklahoma State, the Bears needed victories in their last two games and an Oklahoma State loss to have an opportunity to clinch the outright Big 12 title. With the Cowboys' loss, Baylor's season-closing game against Texas — the final game at Floyd Casey Stadium — became a de facto Big 12 championship game. Baylor defeated the Longhorns, 30–10, to notch a school-record 11th win and its first outright conference title since 1980. It also assured the team a [[Fiesta Bowl]] berth, the Bears' first-ever BCS bowl appearance and their first major bowl in 33 years. Baylor was defeated in the Fiesta Bowl by the University of Central Florida 52–42.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.glendalestar.com/sports/article_7549eb52-73be-11e3-b5c0-001a4bcf887a.html|title=UCF pulls biggest upset in BCS with 52-42 victory over Baylor|date=2 January 2014 |publisher=glendalestar.com}}</ref> [[Bryce Petty]], the Bears' quarterback, placed 7th in the overall 2013–14 Heisman race in New York, the second Heisman Trophy candidate set forth by Baylor in the last three record-breaking seasons. Petty was voted Big 12 Offensive Player of the Year following the season.{{citation needed|date=July 2014}} |
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The Bears rebounded to finish the regular season with five straight victories including a Homecoming win over Missouri, a 31-30 overtime victory at Kansas in which Baylor tied a school record by overcoming a 21-point deficit in the 4th quarter, and the program's first win over then #5 Oklahoma on a 34-yard touchdown pass from Griffin to Terrance Williams with 8 seconds remaining in the game. Baylor concluded November in Dallas playing against Texas Tech in Cowboys Stadium; although Griffin left the game due to a concussion at the half, backup [[Nick Florence]] entered the game to lead the Bears to a 66-42 victory. |
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==== Assault scandal ==== |
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The Bears finished the regular season at home with a 48-24 victory over then #22 Texas that propelled the team (9-3, 6-3 Big XII) to the Alamo Bowl with #12 and #15 BCS and AP rankings respectively, and propelled Griffin to the top of the [[Heisman Trophy]] voting; he became the first Baylor player to win the award and the first Baylor player since Don Trull in 1963 to factor significantly in the voting. |
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{{main|Baylor University sexual assault scandal}} |
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From 2012 to 2016, Baylor was rocked by a sexual assault scandal which resulted in the dismissal of head coach Art Briles, as well as the resignations of Athletic Director Ian McCaw, the University President [[Kenneth Starr]], and the Title IX coordinator Patty Crawford. |
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The Big 12 Conference conditionally withheld $6 million from Baylor's yearly payout until Baylor could certify changes were implemented.<ref name=A1nyt>{{cite news|last1=Tracy|first1=Marc|last2=Barry|first2=Dan|title=Baylor's Pride Turns to Shame in Rape Scandal|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/09/sports/baylor-football-sexual-assault.html|access-date=10 March 2017|work=[[The New York Times]]|date=10 March 2016|pages=A1}}</ref> In March 2017, the [[Texas Ranger Division]] confirmed that it had begun a "preliminary investigation" into whether or not the university or Waco PD had broken any laws.<ref name=A1nyt/> On March 7, 2017, U.S. District Judge [[Robert L. Pitman]] dismissed several claims made in a lawsuit against the university while allowing others to proceed.<ref name=A1nyt/> |
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In the Alamo Bowl, the Bears faced the Washington Huskies in what became the second-highest scoring bowl game in history, and the highest-scoring regulation bowl game ever. Baylor went up 21-7 early in the game, with Griffin throwing for one touchdown and rushing for another. The Huskies roared back with 28 unanswered points, and the teams finished the half with Washington leading 35-24. In the second half, with the defenses showing limited ability to cope with the high-powered offenses led by Griffin and Husky QB Keith Price, the teams traded scores. The Bears overcame the halftime deficit, going ahead for good 60-56 halfway in the 4th quarter, and Baylor RB Terrance Ganaway tacked on a final 43-yard touchdown run. Ganaway finished with 21 carries for 200 yards and 5 TDs, and was recognized as the game's offensive MVP. The victory represented Baylor's first bowl win since a victory in the John Hancock (Sun) Bowl in 1992. |
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===Jim Grobe era (2016)=== |
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[[Jim Grobe]] took over as interim head coach for Baylor and led them to their 7th straight bowl appearance and a 31-12 victory over highly favored Boise State (10-2 record) at the Cactus Bowl in Arizona. Baylor finished the season with a 7-6 record. |
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<ref name=ESPN>[http://espn.go.com/college-football/team/schedule/_/id/239/baylor-bears Baylor Bears Schedule – 2011], ESPN, retrieved 2 August 2011</ref><ref name=NCAA>[http://www.ncaafootball.com/News/tabid/729/Article/1167/ncaa-football-tv-listings.aspx NCAA Football TV Listings], NCAAFootball.com, retrieved 2 August 2011</ref> |
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{{CFB Schedule Start|time=|rank=|ranklink=|rankyear=2011|tv=|attend=yes}} |
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{{CFB Schedule Entry |
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| w/l = w |
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| date = September 2 |
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| nonconf = yes |
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| time = 7:00 PM |
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| rank = |
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| opponent = [[2011 TCU Horned Frogs football team|TCU]] |
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| opprank = 15 |
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| site_stadium = [[Floyd Casey Stadium]] |
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| site_cityst = [[Waco, Texas|Waco, TX]] |
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| tv = [[College Football on ESPN|ESPN]] |
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| score = 50–48 |
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| attend = 43,753 |
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}} |
|||
{{CFB Schedule Entry |
|||
| w/l = w |
|||
| date = September 17 |
|||
| nonconf = yes |
|||
| time = 6:00 PM |
|||
| rank = 24 |
|||
| opponent = [[2011 Stephen F. Austin Lumberjacks football team|Stephen F. Austin]] |
|||
| opprank = 19 (FCS) |
|||
| site_stadium = Floyd Casey Stadium |
|||
| site_cityst = Waco, TX |
|||
| tv = |
|||
| score = 48–0{{Ref|A|A}} |
|||
| attend = 43,090 |
|||
}} |
|||
{{CFB Schedule Entry |
|||
| w/l = w |
|||
| date = September 24 |
|||
| nonconf = yes |
|||
| time = 6:00 PM |
|||
| rank = 19 |
|||
| opponent = [[2011 Rice Owls football team|Rice]] |
|||
| opprank = |
|||
| site_stadium = Floyd Casey Stadium |
|||
| site_cityst = Waco, TX |
|||
| tv = [[Fox Sports Net|FSN]] |
|||
| score = 56–31 |
|||
| attend = 40,088 |
|||
}} |
|||
{{CFB Schedule Entry |
|||
| w/l = l |
|||
| date = October 1 |
|||
| time = 2:30 PM |
|||
| away = yes |
|||
| rank = 15 |
|||
| opponent = [[2011 Kansas State Wildcats football team|Kansas State]] |
|||
| opprank = |
|||
| site_stadium = [[Bill Snyder Family Football Stadium|Bill Snyder Family Stadium]] |
|||
| site_cityst = [[Manhattan, Kansas|Manhattan, KS]] |
|||
| tv = [[ESPN on ABC|ABC]] |
|||
| score = 35–36 |
|||
| attend = 49,399 |
|||
}} |
|||
{{CFB Schedule Entry |
|||
| w/l = w |
|||
| date = October 8 |
|||
| time = 6:00 PM |
|||
| rank = 24 |
|||
| opponent = [[2011 Iowa State Cyclones football team|Iowa State]] |
|||
| opprank = |
|||
| site_stadium = Floyd Casey Stadium |
|||
| site_cityst = Waco, TX |
|||
| tv = FSN |
|||
| score = 49–26 |
|||
| attend = 41,625 |
|||
}} |
|||
{{CFB Schedule Entry |
|||
| w/l = l |
|||
| date = October 15 |
|||
| time = 12:00 PM |
|||
| rank = 24 |
|||
| away = yes |
|||
| opponent = [[2011 Texas A&M Aggies football team|Texas A&M]] |
|||
| opprank = 23 |
|||
| site_stadium = [[Kyle Field]] |
|||
| site_cityst = [[College Station, Texas|College Station, TX]] |
|||
| gamename = [[Battle of the Brazos]] |
|||
| tv = [[FX (TV Channel)|FX]] |
|||
| score = 28–55 |
|||
| attend = 87,361 |
|||
}} |
|||
{{CFB Schedule Entry |
|||
| w/l = l |
|||
| date = October 29 |
|||
| time = 2:30 PM |
|||
| away = yes |
|||
| rank = |
|||
| opponent = [[2011 Oklahoma State Cowboys football team|Oklahoma State]] |
|||
| opprank = 4 |
|||
| site_stadium = [[Boone Pickens Stadium]] |
|||
| site_cityst = [[Stillwater, Oklahoma|Stillwater, OK]] |
|||
| tv = ABC/[[ESPN2]] |
|||
| score = 24–59 |
|||
| attend = 58,274 |
|||
}} |
|||
{{CFB Schedule Entry |
|||
| w/l = w |
|||
| date = November 5 |
|||
| homecoming = yes |
|||
| time = 6:00 PM |
|||
| rank = |
|||
| opponent = [[2011 Missouri Tigers football team|Missouri]] |
|||
| opprank = |
|||
| site_stadium = Floyd Casey Stadium |
|||
| site_cityst = Waco, TX |
|||
| tv = FSN |
|||
| score = 42–39 |
|||
| attend = 40,194 |
|||
}} |
|||
{{CFB Schedule Entry |
|||
| w/l = w |
|||
| date = November 12 |
|||
| time = 1:00 PM |
|||
| away = yes |
|||
| rank = 25 |
|||
| opponent = [[2011 Kansas Jayhawks football team|Kansas]] |
|||
| opprank = |
|||
| site_stadium = [[Memorial Stadium (University of Kansas)|Memorial Stadium]] |
|||
| site_cityst = [[Lawrence, Kansas|Lawrence, KS]] |
|||
| tv = |
|||
| score = 31–30 |
|||
| overtime = OT |
|||
| attend = 35,188 |
|||
}} |
|||
{{CFB Schedule Entry |
|||
| w/l = w |
|||
| date = November 19 |
|||
| time = 7:00 PM |
|||
| rank = 22 |
|||
| opponent = [[2011 Oklahoma Sooners football team|Oklahoma]] |
|||
| opprank = 5 |
|||
| site_stadium = Floyd Casey Stadium |
|||
| site_cityst = Waco, TX |
|||
| tv = ABC |
|||
| score = 45–38 |
|||
| attend = 40,281 |
|||
}} |
|||
{{CFB Schedule Entry |
|||
| w/l = w |
|||
| date = November 26 |
|||
| time = 6:00 PM |
|||
| rank = 18 |
|||
| neutral = yes |
|||
| opponent = [[2011 Texas Tech Red Raiders football team|Texas Tech]] |
|||
| opprank = |
|||
| site_stadium = [[Cowboys Stadium]] |
|||
| site_cityst = [[Arlington, Texas|Arlington, TX]] |
|||
| gamename = Texas Farm Bureau Insurance Shootout |
|||
| tv = FSN |
|||
| score = 66–42 |
|||
| attend = 51,615 |
|||
}} |
|||
{{CFB Schedule Entry |
|||
| w/l = w |
|||
| date = December 3 |
|||
| time = 2:30 PM |
|||
| rank = 17 |
|||
| opponent = [[2011 Texas Longhorns football team|Texas]] |
|||
| opprank = 22 |
|||
| site_stadium = Floyd Casey Stadium |
|||
| site_cityst = Waco, TX |
|||
| gamename = |
|||
| tv = ABC |
|||
| score = 48–24 |
|||
| attend = 46,543 |
|||
}} |
|||
{{CFB Schedule Entry |
|||
| date = December 29 |
|||
| time = 8:00 PM |
|||
| w/l = w |
|||
| nonconf = yes |
|||
| homecoming = |
|||
| away = |
|||
| neutral = yes |
|||
| rank = 15 |
|||
| opponent = [[2011 Washington Huskies football team|Washington]] |
|||
| opprank = |
|||
| site_stadium = [[Alamodome]] |
|||
| site_cityst = [[San Antonio|San Antonio, TX]] |
|||
| gamename = [[2011 Alamo Bowl|Alamo Bowl]] |
|||
| tv = ESPN |
|||
| score = 67–56 |
|||
| overtime = |
|||
| attend = 65,256 |
|||
}} |
|||
{{CFB Schedule End|rank=|poll=[[Coaches Poll]]|timezone=[[Central Time Zone (North America)|Central Time]]}} |
|||
=== Matt Rhule era (2017–2019) === |
|||
* {{Note|A|A}}Game was called at the end of the 3rd quarter due to lightning. |
|||
In December 2016 former Temple coach, [[Matt Rhule]], was hired as the head Baylor football coach and given a 7 year contract.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/18219314/baylor-bears-hire-matt-rhule-football-coach|title=Rhule leaves Temple to become Baylor coach|date=6 December 2016 |publisher=ESPN}}</ref> Rhule subsequently replaced all of the prior football coaches and support staff and completed the hiring process in February 2017.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wacotrib.com/sports/baylor/football/rhule-completes-baylor-football-staff-with-qb-coach/article_cdbd872f-9b01-5241-bd89-30442767571c.html|title=Rhule completes Baylor football staff with QB coach|first=JOHN|last=WERNER|date=16 February 2017 |publisher=wacotrib.com}}</ref> |
|||
Coach Rhule and the Bears suffered through a disastrous first season in 2017, finishing the year with a 1-11 record. A 38-9 victory on the road in week 10 over the Kansas Jayhawks was the lone win. The rest of the season was sprinkled with some positives, including a close loss vs No. 3 Oklahoma (49-41) and a 2 point loss to No. 23 West Virginia (38-36). In 2018 Coach Rhule led the Baylor Bears to one of the nations biggest 1 year turnaround seasons, going from 1 win to 7 wins after a thrilling Texas Bowl victory over Vanderbilt (45-38). Baylor finished the year with a 7-6 record but was close to having a very good season as 4 losses came on the road to top 20 competition (No. 6, No. 9, No. 13, No. 20). The 2019 season will go down as one of the best ever in Baylor football history. The Bears finished the regular season T-1st in the Big 12 with an 11-1 record, matching the program record for wins. The Bears played Oklahoma in the Big 12 Championship game but lost in a close, hard fought game. To finish the season, Baylor was ranked No. 7 in the CFP poll and was selected to play the No. 5 Georgia Bulldogs in the Sugar Bowl. They lost this game by a score of 14-26. On January 7, 2020, Rhule was hired as the head coach of the [[Carolina Panthers]] of the NFL, leaving Baylor after completely turning around the football program and its national perception. |
|||
==Stadium== |
|||
{{Main|Floyd Casey Stadium}} |
|||
[[File:Floydcaseystadiumutvsbaylorpano11-05-2005.jpg|thumb|Floyd Casey Stadium in 2005]] |
|||
The Baylor Bears have played their home games at [[Floyd Casey Stadium]], then known as Baylor Stadium, since the facility opened in 1950. Floyd Casey Stadium has a [[seating capacity]] of 50,000 and has undergone multiple renovations, most recently in 2005. The Bears, along with the [[UTSA Roadrunners football|UTSA Roadrunners]], are only Division I football teams in Texas to play their games at an off-campus stadium.<ref name="baylorbears.com">http://www.baylorbears.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/110511aab.html</ref> Prior to the Bears' time at Floyd Casey Stadium, the Bears played at [[Municipal Stadium (Waco)|Municipal Stadium]] (1936–1949), Cotton Palace (1926–1929), and [[Carroll Field]] (1906–1925 and 1930–1935). As of the 2011 season, Carroll Field has been the only on-campus home field for the Bears. Baylor University has announced plans for a [[New Baylor University stadium|new on-campus stadium]] on the north bank of the [[Brazos River]], scheduled to open for the 2014 football season.<ref name="baylorbears.com"/> |
|||
=== Dave Aranda era (2020–present) === |
|||
==Simpson Athletics and Academic Center== |
|||
In January 2020, after Rhule's departure for the Panthers, Baylor hired former [[LSU Tigers football|LSU]] defensive coordinator Dave Aranda.<ref>{{cite web |title=Baylor hires LSU defensive coordinator Dave Aranda as head coach |url=https://www.espn.com/college-football/story?id=28497789&_slug_=baylor-hires-lsu-defensive-coordinator-dave-aranda-head-coach |website=ESPN.com | date=16 January 2020 |publisher=ESPN, inc. |access-date=21 January 2020}}</ref> In Aranda's first season, the team compiled a 2–7 record, with wins against Kansas (0–9) and Kansas State (4–6). |
|||
On December 4, 2021, Baylor held off an Oklahoma State rally to win the Big 12 Championship Game 21-16. Coach Dave Aranda took responsibility for a controversial decision to go for the first down on a 4th-and-1 at their own 36. The failed conversion triggered the Oklahoma State rally. However, Coach Aranda owned up to the call in a post-game interview, explaining that Baylor Football is about seizing opportunities when they are available; an attitude that ultimately won them the game. |
|||
The Simpson Center was built in 2009 and provides a 97,000 foot facility to house football operations. The building also houses the 13,500 foot football weight room. The building is built in a classic collegiate style matching the red brick southern architectural style of the Baylor University campus and is over three stories tall. It houses the main athletic training room, football team locker room, equipment room, coach's locker room, and a large primary weight room. The Simpson Center also houses academic support rooms for studying and academic work. Equipment for sports and athletic rehabilitation include the new state of the art underwater treadmills built into the Simpson Center. |
|||
Oklahoma State had the ball at the Baylor 2-yard line with 1:19 to go. Baylor stopped them on 3 runs and a pass for one of the all-time great goal-line stands. |
|||
==Conference affiliations== |
|||
==Jay and Jenny Allison Indoor Football Practice Facility== |
|||
Baylor has been independent and a member of two different conferences.{{Citation needed|date=August 2018}} |
|||
* [[NCAA Division I-A independent schools|Independent]] (1898–1915) |
|||
* [[Southwest Conference]] (1915–1996) |
|||
* [[Big 12 Conference]] (1996–present) |
|||
==Conference championships== |
|||
The indoor full football field is a synthetic field and a full A/C building that allows Baylor athletics to practice in all weather conditions year round. The Indoor field was a gift from longtime Baylor letterwinner and successful businessman Jay Allison along with his wife Jenny. The new state of the art indoor field was designed to be apart of the Highers Athletic Complex and backs up to the Brazos river. The building was built in 2010 for an estimated cost of 15.4 million dollars. |
|||
Baylor has won ten conference championships, won in two different conferences, six outright and four shared.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://graphics.fansonly.com/photos/schools/big12/sports/m-footbl/auto_pdf/historical-standings-prior.pdf|title=Southwest Conference Historical Standings|access-date=2008-06-19|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160303182715/http://graphics.fansonly.com/photos/schools/big12/sports/m-footbl/auto_pdf/historical-standings-prior.pdf|archive-date=2016-03-03|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://big12sports.com/documents/2021/7/12//2021_Big_12_FB_Record_Book_Reduced_Size_.pdf?id=6330|title=Big 12 Football Record Book|access-date=2022-03-21}}</ref> |
|||
==Current Coaching Staff== |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
|||
|- " |
|||
! Name !! Title !! Position Coach |
|||
|- style="text-align:center;" |
|||
| [[Art Briles]] || [[Head Coach]] ||| N/A |
|||
|- style="text-align:center;" |
|||
| Phil Bennett || [[Defensive Coordinator]] ||| [[Defensive Line]] |
|||
|- style="text-align:center;" |
|||
| Randy Clements || [[Offensive Coordinator|Co-Offensive Coordinator]] ||| [[Running Back]]s |
|||
|- style="text-align:center;" |
|||
| Brian Norwood || [[Coach (sports)|Associate Head Coach]] ||| [[Safety]]s |
|||
|- style="text-align:center;" |
|||
| Phillip Montgomery || [[Offensive Coordinator|Co-Offensive Coordinator]] ||| [[Quarterback]], [[Running Back]]s |
|||
|- style="text-align:center;" |
|||
| Kaz Kazadi || Head [[Strength training|S&]][[Physical exercise|C]] [[Coach (sports)|Coach]] ||| [[Strength training|Strength]] and [[Physical exercise|Conditioning]] |
|||
|} |
|||
==Championships== |
|||
Baylor has won six [[Southwest Conference]] Championships.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://graphics.fansonly.com/photos/schools/big12/sports/m-footbl/auto_pdf/historical-standings-prior.pdf|title=Southwest Conference Historical Standings}}</ref> Baylor won the 1915 Southwest Conference championship, but the title was later forfeited voluntarily after Baylor discovered that a transfer player was ineligible to have played. |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Baylor Bears|Year|Conference|Coach|Overall record|Conference record}} |
|||
<TR><font color="gold"> |
|||
|- |
|||
<TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Year</TD> |
|||
| [[1915 Baylor Bears football team|1915]]† || rowspan="7"|[[Southwest Conference]] || rowspan="2"|[[Charles Mosley (coach)|Charles Mosley]] || 7–1 || 3–0 |
|||
<font color="gold"><TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Overall Record</TD> |
|||
<font color="gold"><TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Conference Record</TD> |
|||
<font color="gold"><TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Coach</TD> |
|||
<font color="gold"><TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Conference</TD></font> |
|||
</TR> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| [[1916 Baylor Bears football team|1916]]† || 9–1 || 5–1 |
|||
| 1915x || 7-1 || 3-0 || [[Charles Mosley]] || Southwest Conference |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 1922 |
| [[1922 Baylor Bears football team|1922]] || rowspan="2"|[[Frank Bridges]] || 8–3 || 5–0 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 1924 |
| [[1924 Baylor Bears football team|1924]] || 7–2–1 || 4–0–1 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 1974 |
| [[1974 Baylor Bears football team|1974]] || rowspan="2"|[[Grant Teaff]] ||| 8–4 || 6–1 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| 1980 |
| [[1980 Baylor Bears football team|1980]] || 10–1 || 8–0 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| [[1994 Baylor Bears football team|1994]]† || [[Chuck Reedy]] || 7–4 || 4–3 |
||
|- |
|||
|- align="center" |
|||
| [[2013 Baylor Bears football team|2013]] || rowspan="3"|[[Big 12 Conference]] || rowspan="2"|[[Art Briles]] || 11–2 ||8–1 |
|||
| colspan=1 bgcolor="FFCC00"| '''Totals''' |
|||
|- |
|||
| colspan=1 bgcolor="FFCC00"| '''6''' |
|||
| [[2014 Baylor Bears football team|2014]]† || 11–2 ||8–1 |
|||
| colspan=1 bgcolor="FFCC00"| '''–''' |
|||
|- |
|||
| colspan=1 bgcolor="FFCC00"| '''-''' |
|||
| [[2021 Baylor Bears football team|2021]] || [[Dave Aranda]] || 12–2 || 7–2 |
|||
| colspan=1 bgcolor="FFCC00"| '''-''' |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
† Co-championship |
|||
† Denotes shared title, |
|||
x Denotes vacated title |
|||
==Bowl games== |
==Bowl games== |
||
Baylor has played in 27 bowl games, garnering a record of 14–13. Baylor has appeared in 8 New Year's Day bowl games and 8 major bowl games.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://sandiegobowlgames.com/game-history-2/|title=Game History - Holiday Bowl|publisher=sandiegobowlgames.com|access-date=2014-12-31|archive-date=2015-05-18|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150518072124/http://sandiegobowlgames.com/game-history-2/|url-status=dead}}</ref> |
|||
Baylor has appeared in 5 New Year's Day bowl games and 5 major bowl games. |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Baylor Bears|Season|Coach|Bowl|Opponent|Result}} |
|||
<TR><font color="gold"> |
|||
<TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Season</TD> |
|||
<font color="gold"><TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Date</TD> |
|||
<font color="gold"><TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Bowl</TD> |
|||
<font color="gold"><TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Opponent</TD> |
|||
<font color="gold"><TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Result</TD></font> |
|||
</TR> |
|||
|- bgcolor="gold" |
|||
| 1948 || January 1, 1949 || [[1949 Dixie Bowl|Dixie Bowl]] || Wake Forest || W 20-7 |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| [[1948 Baylor Bears football team|1948]] || [[Bob Woodruff]] || [[1949 Dixie Bowl|Dixie Bowl]] || [[1948 Wake Forest Demon Deacons football team|Wake Forest]] || '''W''' 20–7 |
|||
| 1951 || January 1, 1952 || [[Orange Bowl]] || Georgia Tech || L 14-17 |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| [[1951 Baylor Bears football team|1951]] || [[George Sauer]] || [[1952 Orange Bowl|Orange Bowl]] || [[1951 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets football team|Georgia Tech]] || L 14–17 |
|||
| 1954 || December 31, 1954 || [[Gator Bowl]] || Auburn || L 13-33 |
|||
|- bgcolor="gold" |
|||
| 1956 || January 1, 1957 || [[Sugar Bowl]] || Tennessee || W 13-7 |
|||
|- bgcolor="gold" |
|||
| 1960 || December 31, 1960 || [[Gator Bowl]] || Florida || W 13-12 |
|||
|- bgcolor="gold" |
|||
| 1961 || December 9, 1961 || [[Gotham Bowl]] || Utah State || W 24-9 |
|||
|- bgcolor="gold" |
|||
| 1963 || December 31, 1963 || [[Bluebonnet Bowl]] || LSU || W 14-7 |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| [[1954 Baylor Bears football team|1954]] || George Sauer || [[1954 Gator Bowl (December)|Gator Bowl]] || [[1954 Auburn Tigers football team|Auburn]] || L 13–33 |
|||
| 1974 || January 1, 1975 || [[Cotton Bowl Classic]] || Penn State || L 41-20 |
|||
|- |
|||
|- bgcolor="gold" |
|||
| [[1956 Baylor Bears football team|1956]] || [[Sam Boyd (American football)|Sam Boyd]] || [[1957 Sugar Bowl|Sugar Bowl]] || [[1956 Tennessee Volunteers football team|Tennessee]] || '''W''' 13–7 |
|||
| 1979 || December 31, 1979 || [[Peach Bowl]] || Clemson || W 24-18 |
|||
|- |
|||
| [[1960 Baylor Bears football team|1960]] || [[John Bridgers]] || [[1960 Gator Bowl (December)|Gator Bowl]] || [[1960 Florida Gators football team|Florida]] || L 12–13 |
|||
|- |
|||
| [[1961 Baylor Bears football team|1961]] || John Bridgers || [[1961 Gotham Bowl|Gotham Bowl]] || [[Utah State Aggies football|Utah State]] || '''W''' 24–9 |
|||
|- |
|||
| [[1963 Baylor Bears football team|1963]] || John Bridgers || [[1963 Bluebonnet Bowl|Bluebonnet Bowl]] || [[1963 LSU Tigers football team|LSU]] || '''W''' 14–7 |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| |
| [[1974 Baylor Bears football team|1974]] || [[Grant Teaff]] || [[1975 Cotton Bowl Classic|Cotton Bowl Classic]] || [[1974 Penn State Nittany Lions football team|Penn State]] || L 20–41 |
||
|- |
|||
| [[1979 Baylor Bears football team|1979]] || Grant Teaff || [[1979 Peach Bowl|Peach Bowl]] || [[1979 Clemson Tigers football team|Clemson]] || '''W''' 24–18 |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| [[1980 Baylor Bears football team|1980]] || Grant Teaff || [[1981 Cotton Bowl Classic|Cotton Bowl Classic]] || [[1980 Alabama Crimson Tide football team|Alabama]] || L 2–30 |
|||
| 1983 || December 31, 1983 || [[Bluebonnet Bowl]] || Oklahoma State || L 14-24 |
|||
|- bgcolor="gold" |
|||
| 1985 || December 27, 1985 || [[Liberty Bowl]] || LSU || W 21-7 |
|||
|- bgcolor="gold" |
|||
| 1986 || December 31, 1986 || [[Bluebonnet Bowl]] || Colorado || W 21-9 |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| [[1983 Baylor Bears football team|1983]] || Grant Teaff || [[1983 Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl|Astro-Bluebonnet Bowl]] || [[Oklahoma State Cowboys football|Oklahoma State]] || L 14–24 |
|||
| 1991 || December 31, 1991 || [[Insight Bowl|Copper Bowl]] || Indiana || L 0-24 |
|||
|- bgcolor="gold" |
|||
| 1992 || December 31, 1992 || [[John Hancock Bowl|Sun Bowl]] || Arizona || W 20-15 |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| [[1985 Baylor Bears football team|1985]] || Grant Teaff || [[1985 Liberty Bowl|Liberty Bowl]] || [[1985 LSU Tigers football team|LSU]] || '''W''' 21–7 |
|||
| 1994 || December 31, 1994 || [[Alamo Bowl]] || Washington State || L 3-10 |
|||
|- |
|||
| [[1986 Baylor Bears football team|1986]] || Grant Teaff || [[1986 Bluebonnet Bowl|Bluebonnet Bowl]] || [[1986 Colorado Buffaloes football team|Colorado]] || '''W''' 21–9 |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| [[1991 Baylor Bears football team|1991]] || Grant Teaff || [[1991 Copper Bowl|Copper Bowl]] || [[1991 Indiana Hoosiers football team|Indiana]] || L 0–24 |
|||
| 2010 || December 29, 2010 || [[Texas Bowl]] || Illinois || L 14-38 |
|||
|- |
|||
|- bgcolor="gold" |
|||
| [[1992 Baylor Bears football team|1992]] || Grant Teaff || [[1992 John Hancock Bowl|John Hancock Bowl]] || [[Arizona Wildcats football|Arizona]] || '''W''' 20–15 |
|||
| 2011 || December 29, 2011 || [[Alamo Bowl]] || Washington || W 67-56 |
|||
|- |
|||
|-align=center |
|||
| [[1994 Baylor Bears football team|1994]] || [[Chuck Reedy]] || [[1994 Alamo Bowl|Alamo Bowl]] || [[1994 Washington State Cougars football team|Washington State]] || L 3–10 |
|||
|-style="background: ="#003015" align=center |
|||
|- |
|||
| '''Total''' || '''18 bowl games''' || '''10–8''' || || ''' ''' || |
|||
| [[2010 Baylor Bears football team|2010]] || [[Art Briles]] || [[2010 Texas Bowl|Texas Bowl]] || [[2010 Illinois Fighting Illini football team|Illinois]] || L 14–38 |
|||
|- |
|||
| [[2011 Baylor Bears football team|2011]] || Art Briles || [[2011 Alamo Bowl|Alamo Bowl]] || [[2011 Washington Huskies football team|Washington]] || '''W''' 67–56 |
|||
|- |
|||
| [[2012 Baylor Bears football team|2012]] || Art Briles || [[2012 Holiday Bowl|Holiday Bowl]] || [[2012 UCLA Bruins football team|UCLA]] || '''W''' 49–26 |
|||
|- |
|||
| [[2013 Baylor Bears football team|2013]] || Art Briles || [[2014 Fiesta Bowl (January)|Fiesta Bowl]] || [[2013 UCF Knights football team|UCF]] || L 42–52 |
|||
|- |
|||
| [[2014 Baylor Bears football team|2014]] || Art Briles || [[2015 Cotton Bowl Classic (January)|Cotton Bowl Classic]] † || [[2014 Michigan State Spartans football team|Michigan State]] || L 41–42 |
|||
|- |
|||
| [[2015 Baylor Bears football team|2015]] || Art Briles || [[2015 Russell Athletic Bowl|Russell Athletic Bowl]] || [[2015 North Carolina Tar Heels football team|North Carolina]] || '''W''' 49–38 |
|||
|- |
|||
| [[2016 Baylor Bears football team|2016]] || [[Jim Grobe]] || [[2016 Cactus Bowl (December)|Cactus Bowl]] || [[2016 Boise State Broncos football team|Boise State]] || '''W''' 31–12 |
|||
|- |
|||
| [[2018 Baylor Bears football team|2018]] || [[Matt Rhule]] || [[2018 Texas Bowl|Texas Bowl]] || [[2018 Vanderbilt Commodores football team|Vanderbilt]] || '''W''' 45–38 |
|||
|- |
|||
| [[2019 Baylor Bears football team|2019]] || Matt Rhule || [[2020 Sugar Bowl|Sugar Bowl]] † || [[2019 Georgia Bulldogs football team|Georgia]] || L 14–26 |
|||
|- |
|||
| [[2021 Baylor Bears football team|2021]] || [[Dave Aranda]] || [[2022 Sugar Bowl (January)|Sugar Bowl]] † || [[2021 Ole Miss Rebels football team|Ole Miss]] || '''W''' 21–7 |
|||
|- |
|||
| [[2022 Baylor Bears football team|2022]] || Dave Aranda || [[2022 Armed Forces Bowl|Armed Forces Bowl]] || [[2022 Air Force Falcons football team|Air Force]] || L 15–30 |
|||
|- |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
† [[New Year's Six]] bowl game |
|||
==Rivalries== |
|||
===Top 25 poll finishes=== |
|||
===Houston=== |
|||
The Bears have finished in the final season rankings of the [[AP Poll]] or [[Coaches Poll]] at least 14 times. The [[AP Poll]] first appeared in 1934, and has been published continuously since 1936. The [[Coaches Poll]] began its ranking with 20 teams in [[1950 in sports|1950–51 season]], but expanded to 25 teams beginning in the [[1990 NCAA Division I-A football season|1990–91 season]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/div_ia/big12/texas_a&m/in_the_polls.php|title=Texas A&M In the Polls|publisher=College Football Data Warehouse|accessdate=2007-11-02| archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20071118033525/http://cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/div_ia/big12/texas_a&m/in_the_polls.php| archivedate= 18 November 2007 <!--DASHBot-->| deadurl= no}}</ref> |
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{{main|Baylor–Houston football rivalry}} |
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{{Expand section|date=October 2024}} |
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===TCU=== |
|||
{{main|Baylor–TCU football rivalry}} |
|||
Baylor's rivalry with [[TCU Horned Frogs football|TCU]] is one of the oldest and most played in all of college football. Dating back to 1899 the series began while TCU was located in [[Waco]], Texas as a cross-town rival to Baylor. Due to the close proximity of the two schools 23 games were played between 1899 and 1910. A fire in 1910 destroyed the Main Building on the TCU campus and financial incentives from the city of [[Fort Worth]] convinced the Board of Trustees to relocate TCU to that city. There was a ten-year break in the series when the dissolution of the [[Southwest Conference]] in 1996 resulted in the two universities joining separate athletic conferences. The series resumed in Waco for Baylor's 2006 home opener and continued in 2007 in Fort Worth. TCU leads the series 59–54–7 through the conclusion of the 2024 season.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.winsipedia.com/baylor/vs/tcu|title=Winsipedia - Baylor Bears vs. TCU Horned Frogs football series history|website=Winsipedia}}</ref> In November 2023, the official name of the rivalry was changed to the "Bluebonnet Battle" to commemorate the rivalry becoming the longest-played rivalry in Texas.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://news.web.baylor.edu/news/story/2023/baylor-and-tcu-formalize-rivalry-bluebonnet-battle | title=Baylor and TCU Formalize Rivalry as the Bluebonnet Battle | date=13 November 2023 }}</ref> |
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===Texas=== |
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Baylor and [[Texas Longhorns football|Texas]] have played each other 111 times, with the first game between Baylor and Texas being played in 1901. Only Oklahoma and Texas A&M have played Texas more times than Baylor. Both Baylor and Texas were founding members of the Southwest Conference and the BIG 12 Conference. Texas leads the series with Baylor 81-28-4. However, starting in 2010 this rivalry intensified as Baylor established themselves as a major contender in the BIG 12 Conference with Baylor playing for 4 BIG 12 titles and winning 3, including a head-to-head win over Texas to clinch the BIG 12 Championship in 2013, in what is now known as the "Ice Bowl".<ref>{{cite web |url=https://blogs.baylor.edu/nmsspr12/2013/12/10/on-ice-fog-and-winter-football/|title=On ice fog and winter football | New Media Seminar – Spring 2012 }}</ref> Losing the BIG 12 Title to Baylor 30-10 was Mack Brown's last regular season game as the head coach at Texas. With Texas departing the Big 12 to join the [[Southeastern Conference]] (SEC) in 2024, the future of the rivalry is uncertain beyond 2023.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/31920686/texas-longhorns-oklahoma-sooners-unanimously-accept-invitation-sec | title=Texas, Oklahoma regents accept SEC invitation | date=30 July 2021 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.cbssports.com/college-football/news/texas-oklahoma-leaving-big-12-early-joining-sec-in-2024-season-after-reaching-exit-agreement/ | title=Texas, Oklahoma leaving Big 12 early, joining SEC in 2024 season after reaching exit agreement | date=10 February 2023 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.si.com/college/alabama/bamacentral/texas-oklahoma-joining-the-sec-in-2024 | title=Texas, Oklahoma Joining the SEC in 2024 | newspaper=Sports Illustrated Alabama Crimson Tide News, Analysis and More }}</ref> Since 2010, the Baylor vs Texas series is led by Texas 8-6-0.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://longhornswire.usatoday.com/lists/texas-longhorns-baylor-bears-history-recent/|title=Texas Longhorns Football: Recent series history vs Baylor|date=October 20, 2020}}</ref> |
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===Texas Tech=== |
|||
{{main|Baylor–Texas Tech football rivalry}} |
|||
[[File:KDawson2004.jpg|right|thumb|Baylor Bears and Texas Tech Red Raiders in action in 2004]] |
|||
The Baylor Bears are [[Texas Tech Red Raiders football|Texas Tech]]'s most played opponent with 80 meetings between the teams dating back to 1929. From 2009-2018, the Bears played the Red Raiders at [[AT&T Stadium]] during the Saturday after Thanksgiving (with the exception of the 2010 game which was played at the [[Cotton Bowl (stadium)|Cotton Bowl]] during the [[State Fair of Texas]]). Starting with the 2019 season, the series moved back to the two schools respective on campus stadiums with Baylor hosting in Waco in 2019 and Texas Tech hosting in Lubbock in 2020. As of the conclusion of the 2022 season, Baylor leads the overall series 42–40–1.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.winsipedia.com/baylor/vs/texas-tech|title=Winsipedia - Baylor Bears vs. Texas Tech Red Raiders football series history|website=Winsipedia}}</ref> |
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===Texas A&M=== |
|||
{{main|Battle of the Brazos}} |
|||
[[Texas A&M Aggies football|Texas A&M]] is one of Baylor's oldest rivals as the series dates from 1899 and the two schools are located only 90 miles apart on the Brazos River. The competitive peak of the series was from 1960–1990 when Baylor won 13 games, A&M won 16 games and 2 games ended in ties. During that time 18 games were decided by 7 points or fewer. The game played in 2011 is likely the end of the series for the foreseeable future given A&M's decision to leave the Big 12 Conference. Texas A&M leads the series 68–31–9 with the most recent game played in 2011.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.winsipedia.com/baylor/vs/texas-am|title=Winsipedia - Baylor Bears vs. Texas A&M Aggies football series history|website=Winsipedia}}</ref> |
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==Facilities== |
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===Stadium=== |
|||
{{Main|McLane Stadium}} |
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[[File:Baylor University's McLane Stadium.JPG|thumb|right|200px|McLane Stadium before its inaugural Baylor game.]] |
|||
The Baylor Bears had played their home games at [[Floyd Casey Stadium]], originally known as Baylor Stadium, since the facility opened in 1950 till closure in 2013. Construction began on what would become Floyd Casey Stadium right after World War II in 1948. The stadium cost $1.8 million to construct and was placed on land donated by a local Baylor landowner. It opened under the name Baylor Stadium in 1950 with a game against Houston, won by Baylor 34–7. When finished the new stadium was the second largest football stadium in the state of Texas.{{citation needed|date=July 2014}} Floyd Casey Stadium had a [[seating capacity]] of 50,000 and had undergone multiple renovations during its lifetime, most recently in 2009. |
|||
Prior to the Bears time at Floyd Casey Stadium, the Bears played at [[Municipal Stadium (Waco)|Municipal Stadium]] (1936–1949), Cotton Palace (1926–1929), on campus at [[Carroll Field]] (1906–1925 and 1930–1935). As of the 2012 season Carroll Field has been the only on-campus homefield for the Bears. |
|||
In the Fall of 2012, Baylor University began construction of a new $266 million [[McLane Stadium|stadium]] on the north bank of the [[Brazos River]]. The stadium opened for the 2014 football season with the first game taking place on August 31, 2014 against former Southwest Conference rival [[SMU Mustangs football|Southern Methodist University]] (SMU).<ref name="baylorbears.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.baylorbears.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/110511aab.html|title=On-Campus Stadium Getting a Closer Look - Baylor University|website=Baylor University|access-date=2011-11-05|archive-date=2012-02-07|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120207035645/http://www.baylorbears.com/sports/m-footbl/spec-rel/110511aab.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> The new McLane Stadium was named after Drayton McLane, Jr. who donated a significant amount of money toward the stadium's construction. McLane Stadium is the largest construction project in the history of Waco and Central Texas, and has brought increased revenue to the downtown Waco area. Although McLane Stadium is smaller in capacity than its predecessor, Floyd Casey Stadium, it is expandable to up to 55,000 seats.{{citation needed|date=July 2014}} |
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===Simpson Athletics and Academic Center=== |
|||
The Simpson Center was built in 2009 and provides a 97,000 foot facility to house football operations. The building also houses the 13,500 foot football weight room. The building is built in a classic collegiate style matching the red brick southern architectural style of the Baylor University campus and is over three stories tall. It houses the main athletic training room, football team locker room, equipment room, coach's locker room, and a large primary weight room. The Simpson Center also houses academic support rooms for studying and academic work. Equipment for sports and athletic rehabilitation include the new state of the art underwater treadmills built into the Simpson Center.{{citation needed|date=July 2014}} |
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===Jay and Jenny Allison Indoor Football Practice Facility=== |
|||
The indoor practice facility is a full football field and A/C building that allows Baylor athletics to practice in all weather conditions year round. The Indoor facility was a gift from longtime Baylor letterwinner and successful businessman Jay Allison along with his wife Jenny. The new state of the art indoor field was designed to be a part of the Highers Athletic Complex and backs up to the Brazos river. The building was built in 2010 for an estimated cost of $15.4 million.{{citation needed|date=July 2014}} |
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==Top 25 poll finishes== |
|||
The Bears have finished in the final season rankings of the [[AP Poll]] or [[Coaches Poll]] 18 times. The [[AP Poll]] first appeared in 1934, and has been published continuously since 1936. The [[Coaches Poll]] began its ranking with 20 teams in [[1950 in sports|1950–51 season]], but expanded to 25 teams beginning in the [[1990 NCAA Division I-A football season|1990–91 season]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/div_ia/big12/texas_a&m/in_the_polls.php|title=Texas A&M In the Polls|publisher=College Football Data Warehouse|access-date=2007-11-02|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071118033525/http://cfbdatawarehouse.com/data/div_ia/big12/texas_a%26m/in_the_polls.php|archive-date=18 November 2007|url-status=dead}}</ref> The [[College Football Playoff]] rankings were used from 2014-23 for a four-team knockout tournament to determine a national champion; a 12-team playoff is planned beginning in 2024. |
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{| class="wikitable" |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Baylor Bears|Season|AP Rank|Coaches Rank|{{abbr|Playoff|College Football Playoff}} Rank}} |
|||
<TR><font color="gold"> |
|||
|- |
|||
<TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Season</TD> |
|||
|[[1949 NCAA football rankings|1949]]||20||— |
|||
<font color="gold"><TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>AP Rank</TD> |
|||
|- |
|||
<font color="gold"><TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Coaches Rank</TD> |
|||
|[[1950 NCAA football rankings|1950]]||—||15 |
|||
</TR> |
|||
|- |
|||
|[[1951 NCAA football rankings|1951]]||9||9 |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[ |
|[[1954 NCAA football rankings|1954]]||18||— |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[ |
|[[1956 NCAA University Division football rankings|1956]]||11||11 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[ |
|[[1960 NCAA University Division football rankings|1960]]||12||11 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[ |
|[[1963 NCAA University Division football rankings|1963]]||—||20 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[ |
|[[1974 NCAA Division I football rankings|1974]]||14||14 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[ |
|[[1976 NCAA Division I football rankings|1976]]||—||19 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[ |
|[[1979 NCAA Division I-A football rankings|1979]]||14||15 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[ |
|[[1980 NCAA Division I-A football rankings|1980]]||14||13 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[ |
|[[1985 NCAA Division I-A football rankings|1985]]||17||15 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[ |
|[[1986 NCAA Division I-A football rankings|1986]]||12||13 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[ |
|[[2011 NCAA Division I FBS football rankings|2011]]||13||12 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[ |
|[[2013 NCAA Division I FBS football rankings|2013]]||13||13 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[ |
|[[2014 NCAA Division I FBS football rankings|2014]]||7||8||5 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[ |
|[[2015 NCAA Division I FBS football rankings|2015]]||13||13||17 |
||
|- |
|||
|[[2019 NCAA Division I FBS football rankings|2019]]||13||12||7 |
|||
|- |
|||
|[[2021 NCAA Division I FBS football rankings|2021]]||5||6||7 |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
==Hall of Fame== |
==Hall of Fame== |
||
A total of two Baylor coaches and eight Baylor players have been inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame to date. |
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===College Football Hall of Fame |
===College Football Hall of Fame inductees=== |
||
{{see also|College Football Hall of Fame}} |
{{see also|College Football Hall of Fame}} |
||
{| class="wikitable" |
|||
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;" |
|||
|- |
|||
<TR><font color="gold"> |
|||
<TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Name</TD> |
|||
<font color="gold"><TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Position</TD> |
|||
<font color="gold"><TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Years at BAYLOR</TD> |
|||
<font color="gold"><TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Year Inducted</TD> |
|||
</TR> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Baylor Bears|Player|Position|Tenure at Baylor|Induction year}} |
|||
| [[Morley Jennings]] || [[Coach (sport)|Coach]] || 1926–1940 || 1973 |
| [[Morley Jennings]] || [[Coach (sport)|Coach]] || 1926–1940 || 1973 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| [[Barton Koch]] || [[Guard (American football)| |
| [[Barton Koch]] || [[Guard (American football)|G]] || 1928–1930 || 1974 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| [[ |
| [[Jim Ray Smith]] || [[Offensive tackle|T]] ||1950–1953|| 1987 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| [[ |
| [[Bill Glass]] || [[Defensive end|DE]] || 1954–1956 || 1985 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| [[ |
| [[Larry Elkins]] || [[Wide receiver|WR]] || 1963–1964 || 1994 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| [[ |
| [[Mike Singletary]] || [[Linebacker|LB]] || 1977–1980 || 1995 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| [[Grant Teaff]] || [[ |
| [[Grant Teaff]] || [[Coach (sport)|Coach]] || 1972–1992 || 2001 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| [[ |
| [[Thomas Everett]] || [[Free Safety|FS]] || 1985–1987 || 2006 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
| [[ |
| [[Don Trull]] || [[Quarterback|QB]] || 1961–1963 || 2013 |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|} |
|} |
||
===Pro Football Hall of Fame players=== |
===Pro Football Hall of Fame players=== |
||
{| class="wikitable" |
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Baylor Bears|Player|Position|Career|Induction}} |
|||
<TR><font color="gold"> |
|||
<TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Player</TD> |
|||
<font color="gold"><TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Position</TD> |
|||
<font color="gold"><TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Years</TD> |
|||
<font color="gold"><TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Induction</TD> |
|||
</TR> |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| [[Mike Singletary]] || |
| [[Mike Singletary]] || LB || 1981–1992 || 1998 |
||
|} |
|} |
||
==Heisman Trophy== |
==Heisman Trophy== |
||
[[File:Rashaan Salaam-Heisman whitebg.JPG|thumb|The Heisman Trophy is awarded annually to the nation's most outstanding college football player.]] |
|||
Baylor has had |
Baylor has had four [[Heisman Trophy]] candidates, an award given to the best player in college football, with one candidate winning the trophy. |
||
{| class="wikitable" |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|- |
|- |
||
{{CollegePrimaryHeader|team=Baylor Bears|Year|Player|Place|Votes}} |
|||
<TR><font color="gold"> |
|||
<TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Season</TD> |
|||
<font color="gold"><TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Player</TD> |
|||
<font color="gold"><TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Place</TD> |
|||
<font color="gold"><TD BGCOLOR="#003015"><b>Votes</TD> |
|||
</TR> |
|||
|- |
|||
| 1951 |
| 1951 |
||
| [[Larry Isbell]] |
| [[Larry Isbell]] |
||
Line 517: | Line 339: | ||
| 1963 |
| 1963 |
||
| [[Don Trull]] |
| [[Don Trull]] |
||
| |
| 4th |
||
| 970 |
| 970 |
||
|- bgcolor="gold" |
|- bgcolor="gold" |
||
Line 524: | Line 346: | ||
| 1st |
| 1st |
||
| 1,687 |
| 1,687 |
||
|} |
|||
==Current Rivalries== |
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'''Conference Rivals''': |
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===TCU=== |
|||
{{main|Baylor–TCU football rivalry}} |
|||
Baylor's rivalry with [[Texas Christian University|TCU]] is one of the most played in all of college football. Dating back to 1899, the series record is tied 50-50-7. The series began while TCU was located in [[Waco]], Texas as a cross-town rivalry with Baylor. Due to their close proximity 23 games were played between 1899 and 1910. A fire in 1910 destroyed the Main Building on the TCU campus and financial incentives from the city of [[Fort Worth]] convinced the Board of Trustees to relocate the university to that city. There was a ten year break in the series when the dissolution of the [[Southwest Conference]] in 1995 resulted in the two universities joining separate athletic conferences. The series resumed in Waco for Baylor's 2006 home opener. The two schools concluded a home-and-home series in 2007, and have continued their rivalry in Fort Worth in 2010 and Waco in 2011. TCU fans have long held a deep resentment for Baylor getting into the [[Big 12]] Conference ahead of TCU in 1996. This resentment is due to the wide spread but false rumor that influence from then-Texas governor Ann Richards was the reason. One famous incident in the rivalry was in 1971 when TCU coach [[Jim Pittman]] collapsed and died during the actual football game making it the only time in collegiate history that a coach ever died while a game was in progress. Both schools will return to being conference mates and yearly football games when TCU joins the Big XII in July 2012. |
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<center> |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 2013 |
|||
|+ '''Baylor-Texas Christian University: All-Time Record''' |
|||
| [[Bryce Petty]] |
|||
!Games played |
|||
| 7th |
|||
!First meeting |
|||
| 127 |
|||
!Last meeting |
|||
!Baylor wins |
|||
!Baylor losses |
|||
!Ties |
|||
!Win % |
|||
|- align="center" |
|||
|107 |
|||
|1899 |
|||
|September 2, 2011 (W 50–48) |
|||
|50 |
|||
|50 |
|||
|7 |
|||
|50.0% |
|||
|} |
|||
</center> |
|||
===Texas Tech=== |
|||
[[File:KDawson2004.jpg|right|thumb|Baylor Bears and Texas Tech Red Raiders in action in 2004]] |
|||
The Baylor Bears are [[Texas Tech]]'s most played opponent with 70 meetings between the teams. Dating back to 1929, the series is 36-33-1 in favor of Texas Tech. Since 2009, the Bears have played the Red Raiders at [[Cowboys Stadium]] the Saturday after Thanksgiving (with the exception of the 2010 game which was played at the [[Cotton Bowl (stadium)|Cotton Bowl]] during the [[State Fair of Texas]]). The most recent game in 2011 saw the Bears win their first game against the Red Raiders since 1995. |
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<center> |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
| 2014 |
|||
|+ '''Baylor-Texas Tech: All-Time Record''' |
|||
| [[Bryce Petty]] |
|||
!Games played |
|||
| 10th |
|||
!First meeting |
|||
| 14 |
|||
!Last meeting |
|||
!Baylor wins |
|||
!Baylor losses |
|||
!Ties |
|||
!Win % |
|||
|- align="center" |
|||
|70 |
|||
|1929 |
|||
|November 26, 2011 (W 66–42) |
|||
|33 |
|||
|36 |
|||
|1 |
|||
|47.8% |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
</center> |
|||
== |
==Traditions== |
||
{{unreferenced section|date=July 2014}} |
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===Baylor Line=== |
|||
The Bears have played the [[University of Texas at Austin]] more than 100 times. The teams were both founding members of the Southwest Conference and the Big 12 Conference. They are also located very close with about 90 miles separating the two colleges. |
|||
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 gold football jersey with the number of their expected graduation year and a chosen nickname on the back. |
|||
Before each football game the Baylor Line gathers at one end of [[McLane Stadium]] and waits for the signal to make a 'mad dash' down the field to create a giant human tunnel through which the football team runs through 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. Afterwards students rush the sidelines and stand in an exclusive Baylor Line section behind the opponents' bench where students watch the game, cheer the Bears to another victory, and heckle the opposing team. |
|||
<center> |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
|||
|- |
|||
|+ '''Baylor-Texas: All-Time Record''' |
|||
!Games played |
|||
!First meeting |
|||
!Last meeting |
|||
!Baylor wins |
|||
!Baylor losses |
|||
!Ties |
|||
!Win % |
|||
|- align="center" |
|||
|101 |
|||
|1901 |
|||
|December 3, 2011 (W 48–24) |
|||
|24 |
|||
|73 |
|||
|4 |
|||
|24.7% |
|||
|} |
|||
</center> |
|||
It began as an all-male organization until 1993, when women were allowed to join. At its inception the Baylor Line was a group of freshmen men who lined the front of Baylor's student section for the express purpose of protecting Baylor women from the other teams more violent fans. |
|||
'''Non-Conference Rivals''': |
|||
The jersey colors of the Line were originally rotated between green in odd numbered years and gold in even numbered years through 1998 (class of 2002). This changed to green every year until around 2001, when in the interest of having a more substantial looking student section the decision was made to use gold every year. The green jerseys are now used for members of the [[Baylor University Chamber of Commerce]] who lead the Baylor Line in chants; these jerseys have "CC" on the back instead of a graduation year. |
|||
===SMU=== |
|||
===Mascots=== |
|||
The [[Southern Methodist University]] Mustangs football team was once a big rival of the Bears, both teams having played each other many times. The two teams were both football rivals in the old [[Southwest Conference]]. The programs competed heavily for Dallas area recruits during the SWC era and where separated by about 1 hour of driving time. Both teams are set to meet for the next 7 seven years starting in the 2012 football season and will meet every year until the 2019 season. |
|||
<center> |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
|||
|- |
|||
|+ '''Baylor-SMU: All-Time Record''' |
|||
!Games played |
|||
!First meeting |
|||
!Last meeting |
|||
!Baylor wins |
|||
!Baylor losses |
|||
!Ties |
|||
!Win % |
|||
|- align="center" |
|||
|79 |
|||
|1916 |
|||
|September 2, 2012 (W 59-24) |
|||
|36 |
|||
|36 |
|||
|7 |
|||
|50.0% |
|||
|} |
|||
</center> |
|||
Baylor keeps two [[American black bears]], Indy and Belle, on campus in their natural habitat enclosure as mascots for the University. American black bears roamed the majority of Texas in considerable abundance when Baylor was founded in 1845, and bears could still be found throughout many areas of the state until the 1940s. The university has had live bears since 1915. The first live bear was a gift from Herbert Mayr, a local businessman who won the bear in a poker game from a member of the troops of the 107th Engineers, which was a unit of the [[32nd Infantry Division (United States)|32nd Infantry Division]] stationed at [[Camp MacArthur]] in Waco. The soldiers were based in the city during World War I. The Bears are brought to the stadium by the Baylor Chamber spirit group on game days and they attend pre-game events and stay to be the living symbol of the University at the games. However, since 2010 the bears are no longer allowed at football games or other campus events on leashes. The USDA informed Baylor officials that they would no longer be permitted to bring the bears to games per Federal Code of Regulations 2.131(c)(1)which states "During public exhibition, any animal must be handled so there is minimal risk of harm to the animal and to the public, with sufficient distance and/or barriers between the animal and the general viewing public so as to assure the safety of the animals and the public." |
|||
==Inactive Rivalries== |
|||
=== |
===Alma mater=== |
||
Before kickoff and after each games conclusion Baylor fans sing the University alma mater 'That Good Old Baylor Line' while holding their "Bear claws"<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.baylorbears.com/trads/bay-bearclaw.html |title=BAYLOR OFFICIAL ATHLETIC SITE - Traditions |access-date=2014-09-29 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101225004453/http://www.baylorbears.com/trads/bay-bearclaw.html |archive-date=2010-12-25 |url-status=dead }}</ref> in the air. The tune is set to the 1949 classic "In the Good Old Summertime." |
|||
The [[University of Arkansas]] Razorbacks football team was once one of Baylor's oldest rivals as the series dates from 1904. The two teams were both football powers in the old Southwest Conference. The programs competed heavily for East Texas recruits during the [[Southwest Conference|SWC]] era and played many close and contested football games while playing for nearly 90 years as conference foes. |
|||
<center> |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
|||
|- |
|||
|+ '''Baylor-Arkansas: All-Time Record''' |
|||
!Games played |
|||
!First meeting |
|||
!Last meeting |
|||
!Baylor wins |
|||
!Baylor losses |
|||
!Ties |
|||
!Win % |
|||
|- align="center" |
|||
|70 |
|||
|1904 |
|||
|November 2, 1991 (W 9–5) |
|||
|33 |
|||
|35 |
|||
|2 |
|||
|48.5% |
|||
|} |
|||
</center> |
|||
== Logos and uniforms == |
|||
===Rice=== |
|||
The traditional Baylor uniform worn for home games consists of a gold helmet with a green interlocking BU logo on the sides and green & white stripes down the middle, green jersey, and white or gold pants; a white jersey is substituted for the green one for road games. In recent seasons, both a matte green helmet and a white helmet have been used as alternates to the gold helmet. Black jerseys as well as black or green pants have also been used giving the Bears multiple uniform combinations to choose from. |
|||
The [[Rice University]] Owls football team was once a longtime rival of the Bears, both teams having played each other 78 times. The two teams were both football rivals in the old [[Southwest Conference]]. The programs competed heavily for Houston area recruits during the SWC era and were separated by about 3 hours. |
|||
<center> |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
|||
|- |
|||
|+ '''Baylor-Rice: All-Time Record''' |
|||
!Games played |
|||
!First meeting |
|||
!Last meeting |
|||
!Baylor wins |
|||
!Baylor losses |
|||
!Ties |
|||
!Win % |
|||
|- align="center" |
|||
|78 |
|||
|1914 |
|||
|September 24, 2011 (W 56–31) |
|||
|46 |
|||
|30 |
|||
|2 |
|||
|60.5% |
|||
|} |
|||
</center> |
|||
On August 11, 2014, the Baylor Bears won the online fan vote for college football's best uniform awarded by Sporting News Magazine. |
|||
===Texas A&M=== |
|||
In 2019, Baylor university updated their athletic marks across all sports, including football. This included an updated primary interlocking "BU" logo, as well as a new proprietary number font and alternate bear head logo. The football uniforms were updated with the new font for the numbers, primary logo on the helmet, and an inclusion of the bear head logo on the collar. |
|||
{{main|Battle of the Brazos}} |
|||
Texas A&M is one of Baylor's oldest rivals as the series dates from 1899 and the two schools are only located 90 miles apart on the Brazos River. Texas A&M holds a 68-31-9 lead in the Battle of the Brazos. The competitive peak of the series was from 1960-1990 when Baylor won 13 games, A&M won 16 games and 2 games ended in ties. During that time 18 of the games were decided by 7 points or less. 2011's meeting is likely the end of the series with A&M leaving for the Southeastern Conference. |
|||
<center> |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
|||
|- |
|||
|+ '''Baylor-Texas A&M: All-Time Record''' |
|||
!Games played |
|||
!First meeting |
|||
!Last meeting |
|||
!Baylor wins |
|||
!Baylor losses |
|||
!Ties |
|||
!Win % |
|||
|- align="center" |
|||
|108 |
|||
|1899 |
|||
|October 15, 2011 (L 55-28) |
|||
|31 |
|||
|68 |
|||
|9 |
|||
|28.7% |
|||
|} |
|||
</center> |
|||
==Traditions== |
|||
'''THE BAYLOR LINE''': |
|||
A group physically composed of all Baylor freshman, but of which all Baylor alumni are a part of in spirit. The Line attends all home football games and is a massive spirit organization that cheers on the Bears. The Line as it is called, always sits together in a large group wearing matching gold jerseys. The Line is also given the honor of running on to the field prior to kickoff in one large group. The members then jog the perimeter of the field and form a line for the team to enter before kickoff. This forms a massive gathering of students and is one of the largest student groups in the nation. The Line sits close to the field behind the cheerleaders to harass the opposing team and has been a Baylor tradition for over 50 years. |
|||
'''LIVE BEARS''': |
|||
Baylor keeps two large American Black Bears on campus as mascots for the University. They were brought to the stadium by the Baylor Chamber spirit group on game days. They attended pre-game events and would stay to be the living symbol of the University at the games. However, since 2010 the bears were no longer allowed at football games or other campus events on leashes. The USDA informed Baylor officials that they would no longer be permitted to bring the bears to games per Federal Code of Regulations 2.131(c)(1)which states "During public exhibition, any animal must be handled so there is minimal risk of harm to the animal and to the public, with sufficient distance and/or barriers between the animal and the general viewing public so as to assure the safety of the animals and the public." |
|||
'''SINGING THE ALMA MATER''': |
|||
At the end of every game all those Baylor men and women in attendace will stay and gather together to sing the University alma mater, That Good Old Baylor Line. |
|||
== Logos and uniforms == |
|||
[[File:Big12-Uniform-BU-Camouflage-2010.png|thumb|left|110px|Baylor wore a camouflage helmet against [[Buffalo Bulls football|Buffalo]] in 2010 remembrance of the [[September 11 attacks]] and to commemorate the [[United States armed forces|armed forces of the United States]]]] |
[[File:Big12-Uniform-BU-Camouflage-2010.png|thumb|left|110px|Baylor wore a camouflage helmet against [[Buffalo Bulls football|Buffalo]] in 2010 remembrance of the [[September 11 attacks]] and to commemorate the [[United States armed forces|armed forces of the United States]]]] |
||
{{Clear}} |
{{Clear}} |
||
Line 732: | Line 391: | ||
===National=== |
===National=== |
||
{{Div col}} |
|||
*'''[[Heisman Trophy]]''' |
|||
* '''[[Heisman Trophy]]<br />Most Outstanding Player''' |
|||
:[[Robert Griffin III]], 2011 |
|||
*:[[Robert Griffin III]], Winner-2011 |
|||
* '''[[Biletnikoff Award]]<br />Best Receiver''' |
|||
*'''[[Davey O'Brien Memorial Trophy]]''' |
|||
:[[ |
*:[[Corey Coleman]], Winner-2015 |
||
*:[[Terrance Williams]], Finalist-2012 (finished 2nd) |
|||
:[[Mike Singletary]], 1980 |
|||
* '''[[William V. Campbell Trophy|Campbell Trophy]]<br />Academic Heisman''' |
|||
*'''[[Davey O'Brien National Quarterback Award]]''' |
|||
*:[[Nick Florence]], Finalist-2012 (finished 2nd) |
|||
:[[Robert Griffin III]], 2011 |
|||
*'''[[ |
*'''[[Davey O'Brien Memorial Trophy]]<br />Best SWC Player''' |
||
*:[[Mike Singletary]], Winner-1979, 1980 |
|||
:[[Don Trull]], 1962 |
|||
*'''[[Davey O'Brien National Quarterback Award]]<br />Best Quarterback''' |
|||
:[[Don Trull]], 1963 |
|||
*:[[Robert Griffin III]], Winner-2011 |
|||
*'''[[AFCA Coach of the Year]]''' |
|||
:[[ |
*:[[Nick Florence]], semifinalist-2012 |
||
*'''[[ |
* '''[[Outland Trophy]]<br />Best Interior Lineman''' |
||
*:[[Cyril Richardson (American football)|Cyril Richardson]], Finalist-2013 |
|||
:[[Thomas Everett]], 1986 |
|||
*:[[Spencer Drango]], Finalist-2015 |
|||
*'''[[Ray Guy Award]]''' |
|||
* '''[[Chic Harley Award]]<br />College Football Player of the Year''' |
|||
:[[Daniel Sepulveda]], 2004 |
|||
:[[ |
*:[[Robert Griffin III]], Winner-2011 |
||
*'''[[ |
*'''[[Sammy Baugh Trophy]]<br />Top Passer''' |
||
:[[ |
*:[[Don Trull]], Winner-1962, 1963 |
||
*'''[[ |
*'''[[AFCA Coach of the Year]]<br />Best Coach''' |
||
:[[ |
*:[[Grant Teaff]], Winner-1974 |
||
*'''[[Jim Thorpe Award]]<br />Top Defensive Back''' |
|||
*:[[Thomas Everett]], Winner-1986 |
|||
*'''[[Ray Guy Award]]<br />Best Punter''' |
|||
*:[[Daniel Sepulveda]], Winner-2004, 2006 |
|||
*'''[[The Jim Parker Trophy]]<br />Top Offensive Lineman''' |
|||
*:[[Cyril Richardson (American football)|Cyril Richardson]], Winner-2013 |
|||
*'''[[Manning Award]]<br />Best Quarterback''' |
|||
*:[[Robert Griffin III]], Winner-2011/2012 |
|||
*'''[[Associated Press College Football Player of the Year]]<br />Most Outstanding Player''' |
|||
*:[[Robert Griffin III]], Winner-2011 |
|||
*'''[[Earl Campbell Tyler Rose Award]]<br />Top Offensive Player''' |
|||
*:[[Bryce Petty]], Winner-2013 |
|||
*'''[[AT&T ESPN All-America Player of the Year]]<br />College Football Player of the Year''' |
|||
*:[[Robert Griffin III]], Winner-2011 |
|||
*'''[[Sporting News College Football Player of the Year]]<br />College Football Player of the Year''' |
|||
*:[[Robert Griffin III]], Winner-2011 |
|||
{{colend}} |
|||
===Conference=== |
===Conference=== |
||
*'''Southwest Conference Coach of the Year''' |
*'''Southwest Conference Coach of the Year''' |
||
:[[Grant Teaff]], 1974 |
:[[Grant Teaff]], 1974 & 1978 |
||
:[[Grant Teaff]], 1978 |
|||
*'''Southwest Conference Player of the Year''' |
*'''Southwest Conference Player of the Year''' |
||
:[[Mike Singletary]], 1979 |
:[[Mike Singletary]], 1979 & 1980 |
||
:[[ |
:[[Thomas Everett]], 1986 & 1987 |
||
:[[Thomas Everett]], 1986 |
|||
*'''Big 12 Conference Coach of the Year''' |
|||
:[[Thomas Everett]], 1987 |
|||
:[[Art Briles]], 2013 |
|||
:[[Dave Aranda]], 2021 |
|||
*'''Big 12 Special Teams Player of the Year''' |
*'''Big 12 Special Teams Player of the Year''' |
||
:[[Daniel Sepulveda]], 2006 |
:[[Daniel Sepulveda]], 2006 |
||
:[[Trestan Ebner]], 2021 |
|||
*'''Big 12 Conference Athlete of the Year''' |
|||
:[[Robert Griffin III]], 2011–2012 |
|||
*'''Big 12 Conference Freshman of the Year''' |
*'''Big 12 Conference Freshman of the Year''' |
||
Line 775: | Line 456: | ||
*'''Big 12 Conference Offensive Player of the Year''' |
*'''Big 12 Conference Offensive Player of the Year''' |
||
:[[Robert Griffin III]], 2011 |
:[[Robert Griffin III]], 2011 |
||
:[[Bryce Petty]], 2013 |
|||
*'''Big 12 Conference Defensive Player of the Year''' |
|||
==Bears in the NFL== |
|||
:[[James Lynch (American football)|James Lynch]], 2019 |
|||
As of July 22, 2012, 19 former Baylor players were listed on active [[National Football League|NFL]] rosters:<ref>{{cite web|url=http://espn.go.com/nfl/college/_/letter/b|title=NFL Players By College - B}}</ref> |
|||
:[[Jalen Pitre]], 2021 |
|||
*'''Big 12 Conference Offensive Newcomer of the Year''' |
|||
*[[Matt Bryant]], PK, [[Atlanta Falcons]] |
|||
:[[Lache Seastrunk]], 2012 |
|||
*[[Nicolas Jean-Baptiste]], DT, [[Baltimore]] |
|||
*[[Mikail Baker]], DB, [[St. Louis Rams]] (Injured Reserve) |
|||
*[[Philip Blake]], C, [[Denver Broncos]] |
|||
*[[Terrance Ganaway]], RB, [[New York Jets]] |
|||
*[[David Gettis]], WR, [[Carolina Panthers]] |
|||
*[[Josh Gordon]], WR, [[Cleveland]] |
|||
*[[Robert Griffin (offensive lineman)]], OG, [[New York Jets]] |
|||
*[[Robert Griffin III]], QB, [[Washington Redskins]] |
|||
*[[Tracy Robertson]], DE, [[Houston Texans]] |
|||
*[[Jason Smith (American football)|Jason Smith]], OL, [[St. Louis Rams]] |
|||
*[[Mike Singletary]], linebackers coach/Assistant head coach, [[Minnesota Vikings]] |
|||
*[[Daniel Sepulveda]], P, [[Pittsburgh Steelers]] |
|||
*[[Justin Snow]], C, [[Washington Redskins]] |
|||
*[[Phil Taylor (American football)|Phil Taylor]], DT, [[Cleveland Browns]] |
|||
*[[Jon Weeks]], LS, [[Houston Texans]] |
|||
*[[Danny Watkins]], G, [[Philadelphia Eagles]] |
|||
*[[J.D. Walton]], C, [[Denver Broncos]] |
|||
*[[Kendall Wright]], WR, [[Tennessee Titans]] |
|||
*'''Big 12 Conference Defensive Newcomer of the Year''' |
|||
==Consensus All-Americans== |
|||
:[[Siaki Ika]], 2021 |
|||
*'''Big 12 Conference Offensive Lineman of the Year''' |
|||
1951 [[Larry Isbell]], QB |
|||
:[[Cyril Richardson (American football)|Cyril Richardson]], 2012 & 2013 |
|||
:[[Spencer Drango]], 2014 & 2015 |
|||
:[[Connor Galvin]], 2021 |
|||
*'''Big 12 Conference Defensive Lineman of the Year''' |
|||
1956 [[Bill Glass]], G |
|||
:[[Andrew Billings]], 2015 |
|||
:[[James Lynch (American football)|James Lynch]], 2019 |
|||
*'''Big 12 Conference Scholar-Athlete of the Year''' |
|||
1963 [[Larry Elkins|Lawrence Elkins]], E |
|||
:[[Nick Florence]], 2012 |
|||
==Bears in the NFL== |
|||
1963 [[Don Trull]], QB |
|||
{{main|List of Baylor Bears in the NFL draft}} |
|||
As of October 18, 2021, 12 former Baylor players were listed on [[National Football League|NFL]] rosters:<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.espn.com/nfl/college/_/letter/b|title=NFL Players by College - B - National Football League - ESPN|website=ESPN.com}}</ref> |
|||
1964 [[Larry Elkins|Lawrence Elkins]], B |
|||
*[[Andrew Billings]], DT, [[Cleveland Browns]] |
|||
1972 [[Roger Goree]], DE |
|||
*[[Henry Black (American football)|Henry Black]], S, [[Green Bay Packers]] |
|||
*[[Kyle Fuller (offensive lineman)|Kyle Fuller]], C, [[Seattle Seahawks]] |
|||
*[[Xavien Howard]], CB, [[Miami Dolphins]] |
|||
*[[Clay Johnston (American football)|Clay Johnston]], LB, [[Carolina Panthers]] |
|||
*[[Blake Lynch]], LB, [[Minnesota Vikings]] |
|||
*[[James Lynch (American football)|James Lynch]], DT, [[Minnesota Vikings]] |
|||
*[[Ross Matiscik]], LS, [[Jacksonville Jaguars]] |
|||
*[[Denzel Mims]], WR, [[New York Jets]] |
|||
*[[Bravvion Roy]], DT, [[Carolina Panthers]] |
|||
*[[Sam Tecklenburg]], C, [[Carolina Panthers]] |
|||
*[[Jon Weeks]], LS, [[Houston Texans]] |
|||
==Consensus All-Americans== |
|||
1976 [[Gary Green (American football)|Gary Green]], DB |
|||
* 1930 [[Barton Koch]], G |
|||
* 1956 [[Bill Glass]], G |
|||
* 1963 [[Larry Elkins|Lawrence Elkins]], E |
|||
* 1964 [[Larry Elkins|Lawrence Elkins]], B |
|||
1980 [[Mike Singletary]], LB |
|||
* 1976 [[Gary Green (American football)|Gary Green]], DB |
|||
* 1979 [[Mike Singletary]], LB |
|||
* 1980 [[Mike Singletary]], LB |
|||
* 1986 [[Thomas Everett]], DB |
|||
* 1991 [[Santana Dotson]], DL |
|||
2006 [[Daniel Sepulveda]], P |
* 2006 [[Daniel Sepulveda]], P |
||
* 2011 [[Robert Griffin III]], QB |
|||
* 2012 [[Terrance Williams]], WR |
|||
* 2013 [[Cyril Richardson (American football)|Cyril Richardson]], OL |
|||
* 2014 [[Spencer Drango]], OL |
|||
* 2015 [[Spencer Drango]], OL |
|||
* 2015 [[Corey Coleman]], WR |
|||
* 2019 [[James Lynch (American football)|James Lynch]], DL |
|||
* 2021 [[Jalen Pitre]], S |
|||
== Future non-conference opponents == |
== Future non-conference opponents == |
||
Announced schedules as of May 17, 2024.<ref name="nonconfopp">{{cite web| title=Baylor Bears Football Future Schedules|publisher=FBSchedules.com| url=https://fbschedules.com/ncaa/baylor/|access-date=4 May 2024}}</ref> |
|||
{| class="wikitable" |
{| class="wikitable" |
||
|-style=" |
|- style="{{CollegePrimaryStyle|Baylor Bears|border=0|color=white}}; text-align:center" |
||
|'''2025'''||'''2026'''||'''2027'''||'''2028'''||'''2029''' |
|||
| <font color=gold>'''2012''' || <font color=gold>'''2013''' || <font color=gold>'''2014''' || <font color=gold>'''2015''' || <font color=gold>'''2016''' || <font color=gold>'''2017''' || <font color=gold>'''2018''' || <font color=gold>'''2019''' |
|||
|- |
|||
|-align=center |
|||
| [[Auburn Tigers football|Auburn]] |
|||
| vs [[SMU Mustangs football|SMU]] || vs [[Louisiana–Monroe Warhawks football|Louisiana–Monroe]] || vs [[SMU Mustangs football|SMU]] || at [[SMU Mustangs football|SMU]] || vs [[SMU Mustangs football|SMU]] || at [[SMU Mustangs football|SMU]] || at [[UTSA Roadrunners football|UTSA]] || at [[SMU Mustangs football|SMU]] |
|||
| at [[Auburn Tigers football|Auburn]] |
|||
|-align=center |
|||
| [[Oregon Ducks football|Oregon]] |
|||
| vs [[Sam Houston State Bearkats football|Sam Houston State]] || vs [[Buffalo Bulls football|Buffalo]] || vs [[Northwestern State Demons football|Northwestern State]] || vs [[Lamar Cardinals football|Lamar]] || at [[Rice Owls football|Rice]] || vs [[UTSA Roadrunners football|UTSA]] || at [[Duke Blue Devils football|Duke]] || vs [[UTSA Roadrunners football|UTSA]] |
|||
| [[North Texas Mean Green football|North Texas]] |
|||
|-align=center |
|||
| at [[North Texas Mean Green football|North Texas]] |
|||
| at [[Louisiana–Monroe Warhawks football|Louisiana–Monroe]] || at [[SMU Mustangs football|SMU]] || at [[Buffalo Bulls football|Buffalo]] || vs [[Rice Owls football|Rice]] || vs [[Liberty Flames football|Liberty]] || vs [[Duke Blue Devils football|Duke]] || vs [[SMU Mustangs football|SMU]] || at [[Rice Owls football|Rice]] |
|||
|- |
|||
|}<ref name="nonconfopp">{{cite web| title=Baylor Bears Football Schedules and Future Schedules|publisher=fbschedules.com| url=http://www.fbschedules.com/ncaa/big-12/baylor-bears.php|accessdate=2012-05-22}}</ref> |
|||
| at [[SMU Mustangs football|SMU]] |
|||
| [[Prairie View A&M Panthers football|Prairie View A&M]] |
|||
==Big 12 Conference Baylor 2012 Conference Schedule== |
|||
| at [[Air Force Falcons football|Air Force]] |
|||
| at [[Oregon Ducks football|Oregon]] |
|||
Sept. 29 at West Virginia |
|||
| |
|||
Oct. 13 vs. TCU |
|||
|- |
|||
Oct. 20 at Texas |
|||
| |
|||
Oct. 27 at Iowa State |
|||
| [[SMU Mustangs football|SMU]] |
|||
Nov. 3 vs. Kansas |
|||
| |
|||
Nov. 10 at Oklahoma |
|||
| |
|||
Nov. 17 vs. Kansas State |
|||
| |
|||
Nov. 24 vs. Texas Tech in Arlington |
|||
|} |
|||
Dec. 1 vs. Oklahoma State |
|||
==See also== |
|||
* [[Baylor University football, 1899–1914]] |
|||
* [[Baylor Bears football (1970–1979)]] |
|||
* [[Baylor Bears football (1980–1989)]] |
|||
==References== |
==References== |
||
{{reflist}} |
{{reflist|30em}} |
||
==External links== |
==External links== |
||
{{Commons category}} |
|||
* {{Official website |http://baylorbears.cstv.com/sports/m-footbl/bay-m-footbl-body.html}} |
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* {{Official website}} |
|||
{{Baylor Bears football navbox}} |
{{Baylor Bears football navbox}} |
||
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Baylor Bears Football}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:Baylor Bears Football}} |
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[[Category:Baylor Bears football| |
[[Category:Baylor Bears football| ]] |
||
[[Category: |
[[Category:American football teams established in 1899]] |
||
[[Category:1899 establishments in Texas]] |
|||
Seifried, C.S., Demiris, T., & Petersen, J. (2021). Baylor University’s Football Stadia: Life before McLane Stadium. Sport History Review, 51, 70-89. |
Latest revision as of 00:51, 2 December 2024
Baylor Bears football | |||
---|---|---|---|
| |||
First season | 1899; 125 years ago | ||
Athletic director | Mack Rhoades | ||
Head coach | Dave Aranda 5th season, 31–29 (.517) | ||
Stadium | McLane Stadium (capacity: 45,140) | ||
Year built | 2014 | ||
Field surface | Field Turf | ||
Location | Waco, Texas | ||
NCAA division | Division I FBS | ||
Conference | Big 12 Conference | ||
Past conferences | Independent (1898–1915) Southwest Conference (1915–1996) | ||
All-time record | 630–607–44 (.509) | ||
Bowl record | 14–12 (.538) | ||
Conference titles | 10: 1915, 1916, 1922, 1924, 1974, 1980, 1994, 2013, 2014, 2021 | ||
Rivalries | Houston (rivalry) TCU (rivalry) Texas Tech (rivalry) Texas (rivalry) Texas A&M (rivalry) | ||
Heisman winners | Robert Griffin III – 2011 | ||
Consensus All-Americans | 18 (10 Unanimous)[1] | ||
Current uniform | |||
Colors | Green and gold[2] | ||
Fight song | Old Fight | ||
Mascot | Bruiser and Marigold | ||
Marching band | The Golden Wave Band | ||
Website | BaylorBears.com |
The Baylor Bears football team represents Baylor University in Division I FBS college football. They are a member of the Big 12 Conference. After 64 seasons at the off-campus Baylor Stadium, renamed Floyd Casey Stadium in 1988, the Bears opened the new on-campus McLane Stadium for the 2014 season.
History
[edit]Early history
[edit]Baylor University's football team has seen a wide variation in its success through the years, including an undefeated 3–0 perfect record in 1900.
Initially, starting in the year 1898, the university played its home games on an unnamed field near the university campus. Beginning in 1905, the team's home games were played at Carroll Field, between the Carroll Science Building and Waco Creek. Baylor did not adopt a mascot (the Baylor Bears) until December 14, 1914 after the completion of the 1914 football season.[2] Additionally, Baylor did not join an athletic conference until 1914 after the conclusion of the football season, when it became a founding member of the Southwest Conference. Baylor played its first home game against Toby's Business College (located in Waco) in 1899, its first away game on 4 November 1900, at Austin College, and its first neutral-site game against Texas A&M in 1901.
For the 1899 and 1900 seasons, the team was coached by R.H. Hamilton, whose 5–1–1 record was distinguished with never having a losing record; in 1899, Baylor played, and lost, its first game against Texas A&M, which would become a rivalry (until 2012 when Texas A&M changed conferences), the Battle of the Brazos, with over 100 games played in the series by 2003. W.J. Ritchie coached the 1901 team, leading it to a 5–3 record; in this year, the first games of the Baylor-Texas and Baylor-TCU series were played. Texas Christian University (known as AddRan Male & Female College until 1902) was located in Waco from 1895 to 1910 and was one of Baylor's greatest football rivals until the dissolution of the Southwest Conference in 1995. The 1901 season also welcomed Baylor's first Thanksgiving Day football game, with a 28–0 win over St. Edward's University. J.C. Ewing took control of the team in 1902, and led it to its first losing season, with a 3–4–2 record. R.N. Watts restored Baylor's winning tradition in 1903, with a record of 4–3–1.
No team was fielded in 1906 following a ban opposing the violence of football; along with 1943 and 1944 (during World War II), 1906 is one of three seasons since 1899 that Baylor has not competed in varsity football. Luther Burleson headed the restored football team in 1907, and managed a 4–3–1 record. E.J. Mills led the team for the 1908 and 1909 seasons; their 3–5–0 and 5–3–0 records were notable for the 1908 loss to LSU, and for the world's first "Homecoming" at the 1909 Thanksgiving Day game, which included a concert, parade, and bonfire. To this day, Baylor claims the honor of having the largest homecoming parade in the world.
Baylor has many traditions such as the Baylor-TCU rivalry game which is one of the most played in all of college football, the Battle of the Brazos (through 2011 when Texas A&M left the Big 12), membership in the historic Southwest Conference, a live bear mascot since 1915 and the Baylor Line.
In 1966, John Hill Westbrook of Elgin, Texas became the first African American to play varsity football in the Southwest Conference when he joined the Baylor team.
Early SWC Championships and Bowl success
[edit]Baylor won the SWC Championship in 1915, 1916, 1922 and again in 1924. In 1956 Baylor came close to the SWC title again but finished second and was sent to face the undefeated No. 2 Tennessee Volunteers in the 1957 Sugar Bowl. Baylor defeated Johnny Majors and the No. 2 Volunteers 13–7. This was the highest ranked opponent Baylor had ever defeated until defeating No. 1 ranked Kansas State in 2012. The 1924 SWC Championship would be the last for many decades until Baylor won the conference again in 1974 under the leadership of third year head coach Grant Teaff. From the late 1940s until the mid-1960s, Baylor also played in the 1952 Orange Bowl (vs. Georgia Tech), twice in the Gator Bowl (vs. Auburn and Florida), and the Bluebonnet (beating LSU), Dixie (beating Wake Forest) and Gotham Bowl (beating No. 10 ranked Utah St in New York City).
Miracle on the Brazos
[edit]Baylor had finished in last place in 4 of the last 7 seasons including the year before and had not won the conference championship in 50 years. Also, prior to this season, they had never appeared in the Cotton Bowl. Furthermore, coming into the 1974 season Baylor had lost 16 consecutive games to the Texas Longhorns. The 1974 Texas vs Baylor game looked like another easy win for Texas as the Longhorns took quick control of the game and went into halftime leading 24–7. Baylor was energized starting the 2nd half however, sparked by a blocked punt early in the 3rd quarter. The Bears rallied to a thrilling 34–24 victory over the Longhorns. Baylor went on to win the conference title that year and a first ever trip to the Cotton Bowl (the first time in seven seasons that Texas did not win the Southwest Conference title). The entire 1974 Baylor football season was dubbed the "Miracle on the Brazos" by many sports writers at the time. The win over Texas and the SWC championship have thus become a special part of Baylor's athletic history.
Grant Teaff era (1972–1992)
[edit]One of the most successful coaches in Baylor football history was Grant Teaff. He led the Bears to conference titles in 1974, his third year in the program, and again in 1980 when he led the Bears to the Cotton Bowl to face the Alabama Crimson Tide. Grant Teaff recruited famous players such as Mike Singletary, Thomas Everett, Walter Abercrombie and James Francis to play football at Baylor University. Teaff was also named National Coach of the Year after the 1974 season. He would go on to serve until 1992 leading Baylor to eight bowl games as well as the aforementioned Southwest Conference championships (1974, 1980) in his 21 years as head coach.
Chuck Reedy era (1993–1996)
[edit]Chuck Reedy was coach for four seasons and compiled a record of 23–22. His 1994 team was part of a 5-way co-championship of the Southwest Conference, though an ineligible Texas A&M held a better conference record. In 1996 Baylor joined Texas, Texas Tech, and Texas A&M, along with the Big 8 conference schools, to form the Big 12 Conference.
Roberts, Steele, and Morriss era (1997–2007)
[edit]Baylor was led by a succession of coaches with mediocre results. Dave Roberts was coach from 1997 to 1998 and compiled a 4–18 record. Kevin Steele followed from 1999 to 2002 and posted a 9–36 record. He was succeeded by Guy Morriss from 2003 to 2007 who compiled an 18–40 record.
Art Briles era (2008–2015)
[edit]This section may be too long to read and navigate comfortably. (October 2018) |
The 2010 season was a breakthrough for the Baylor Bears. Baylor earned an invitation to the Texas Bowl in Houston after finishing the regular season with a 7–5 record, this was their first bowl appearance since 1995. In the regular season the Bears victories included Big 12 conference wins over Kansas and Kansas St, as well as road wins over Colorado and Texas.
Building on the success of the 2010 team, Baylor began the 2011 season at home with an upset of No. 14 TCU, winners of the previous season's Rose Bowl. The Bears also won their next two games before traveling to Kansas State where they lost a tightly contested game by a single point. Baylor then defeated Iowa State 49–26 for the first conference win of the year before finishing October by losing two straight on the road, to A&M and eventual conference champion No. 3 Oklahoma State. The Bears rebounded to finish the regular season, with five straight victories including a Homecoming win over Missouri, a 31–30 overtime victory at Kansas in which Baylor tied a school record by overcoming a 21-point deficit in the 4th quarter, and the program's first win over No. 5 Oklahoma on a 34-yard touchdown pass from Griffin to Terrance Williams with 8 seconds remaining in the game. Baylor concluded November in Dallas playing against Texas Tech in Cowboys Stadium; although Griffin left the game due to a concussion at the half, backup Nick Florence entered the game and led the Bears to a 66–42 victory. The Bears finished the regular season at home with a 48–24 victory over No. 22 Texas that propelled the team (9–3, 6–3 Big XII) to the Alamo Bowl with No. 12 and No. 15 BCS and AP rankings respectively, and propelled Griffin to the top of the Heisman Trophy voting; he became the first Baylor player to win the award and the first Baylor player since Don Trull in 1963 to factor significantly in the voting. In the Alamo Bowl, the Bears faced the Washington Huskies in what became the second-highest scoring bowl game in history, and the highest-scoring regulation bowl game ever. Baylor went up 21–7 early in the game, with Griffin throwing for one touchdown and rushing for another. The Huskies roared back with 28 unanswered points, and the teams finished the half with Washington leading 35–24. In the second half, with the defenses showing limited ability to cope with the high-powered offenses led by Griffin and Husky QB Keith Price, the teams traded scores. The Bears overcame the halftime deficit, going ahead for good 60–56 halfway in the 4th quarter, and Baylor RB Terrance Ganaway tacked on a final 43-yard touchdown run. Ganaway finished with 21 carries for 200 yards and 5 TDs and was recognized as the game's offensive MVP.
Baylor's 2012 season opened in Waco against the SMU Mustangs. Quarterback Nick Florence – now a senior, having burned his redshirt season to play the second half against Texas Tech in 2011 after Griffin III left with a concussion – led the Bears to a 59–24 victory. Two weeks later, a victory at home against No. 2 FCS Sam Houston State gave Baylor fans their first glimpse of things to come when Oregon transfer running back Lache Seastrunk, who entered the game in the 4th quarter, put Baylor ahead 41–23 with a 15-yard touchdown rush. Baylor then traveled to Louisiana-Monroe to face a Warhawk team which had notched a stunning victory over No. 8 Arkansas and had subsequently taken Auburn to overtime. A 47–42 Baylor victory represented the Bears' 9th consecutive win (at the time, the 2nd longest streak in the FBS) and gave the Bears a No. 24 ranking. The win streak was broken during Baylor's first trip to Morgantown, West Virginia, by a No. 7 ranked Mountaineer team playing their inaugural Big 12 conference game. The 70–63 shootout saw several Big 12 records set, notably including the single-game receiving record by Baylor receiver Terrance Williams (314 yards). The loss dropped Baylor from the rankings and represented the start of a 4-game skid during which time Baylor lost in Waco to TCU, at No. 25 Texas, and at Iowa State. A win at home against Kansas and a loss at No. 12 Oklahoma left the Bears fighting for bowl eligibility. Baylor shocked the college football world the next week by soundly beating No. 1 Kansas State in Waco 52–24. A 12-yard Florence touchdown rush in the first quarter gave Baylor a 14–7 lead which was never relinquished. The Baylor defense highlighted the game with a stout goal-line stand in the 4th quarter and intercepted Heisman hopeful Collin Klein three times, the last in the endzone to set up an 80-yard touchdown run by Lache Seastrunk. The victory over Kansas State represented the program's first ever win over a No. 1 ranked team and sparked a 3-game win streak for Baylor (with a 52–45 overtime victory over Texas Tech in Cowboys Stadium and a 41–34 victory in Waco over No. 23 Oklahoma State). During the OSU game Seastrunk again achieved recognition for a 76-yard touchdown rush, outrunning the Oklahoma State secondary despite suffering a quadriceps cramp near midfield. The conclusion of Baylor's 7–5 2012 campaign marked the first time since 1949–51 that the Bears have enjoyed three consecutive seasons with 7+ wins. On December 2, Baylor accepted a berth in the Holiday Bowl, sending the Bears to a third consecutive bowl for the first time in program history. Baylor easily defeated the No. 17-ranked UCLA Bruins in the Holiday Bowl on December 27, 2012 by a final margin of 49–26 after jumping out to a 21–0 lead early in the 2nd quarter. Lache Seastrunk (RB) and Chris McAllister (DE) were named Offensive Player and Defensive Player of the game respectively.
In 2013, Baylor had arguably its best regular season in school history. A best-ever 9–0 start propelled the Bears to a No. 3 national ranking in the AP Poll. However, after an on-the-road loss to Oklahoma State, the Bears needed victories in their last two games and an Oklahoma State loss to have an opportunity to clinch the outright Big 12 title. With the Cowboys' loss, Baylor's season-closing game against Texas — the final game at Floyd Casey Stadium — became a de facto Big 12 championship game. Baylor defeated the Longhorns, 30–10, to notch a school-record 11th win and its first outright conference title since 1980. It also assured the team a Fiesta Bowl berth, the Bears' first-ever BCS bowl appearance and their first major bowl in 33 years. Baylor was defeated in the Fiesta Bowl by the University of Central Florida 52–42.[3] Bryce Petty, the Bears' quarterback, placed 7th in the overall 2013–14 Heisman race in New York, the second Heisman Trophy candidate set forth by Baylor in the last three record-breaking seasons. Petty was voted Big 12 Offensive Player of the Year following the season.[citation needed]
Assault scandal
[edit]From 2012 to 2016, Baylor was rocked by a sexual assault scandal which resulted in the dismissal of head coach Art Briles, as well as the resignations of Athletic Director Ian McCaw, the University President Kenneth Starr, and the Title IX coordinator Patty Crawford.
The Big 12 Conference conditionally withheld $6 million from Baylor's yearly payout until Baylor could certify changes were implemented.[4] In March 2017, the Texas Ranger Division confirmed that it had begun a "preliminary investigation" into whether or not the university or Waco PD had broken any laws.[4] On March 7, 2017, U.S. District Judge Robert L. Pitman dismissed several claims made in a lawsuit against the university while allowing others to proceed.[4]
Jim Grobe era (2016)
[edit]Jim Grobe took over as interim head coach for Baylor and led them to their 7th straight bowl appearance and a 31-12 victory over highly favored Boise State (10-2 record) at the Cactus Bowl in Arizona. Baylor finished the season with a 7-6 record.
Matt Rhule era (2017–2019)
[edit]In December 2016 former Temple coach, Matt Rhule, was hired as the head Baylor football coach and given a 7 year contract.[5] Rhule subsequently replaced all of the prior football coaches and support staff and completed the hiring process in February 2017.[6]
Coach Rhule and the Bears suffered through a disastrous first season in 2017, finishing the year with a 1-11 record. A 38-9 victory on the road in week 10 over the Kansas Jayhawks was the lone win. The rest of the season was sprinkled with some positives, including a close loss vs No. 3 Oklahoma (49-41) and a 2 point loss to No. 23 West Virginia (38-36). In 2018 Coach Rhule led the Baylor Bears to one of the nations biggest 1 year turnaround seasons, going from 1 win to 7 wins after a thrilling Texas Bowl victory over Vanderbilt (45-38). Baylor finished the year with a 7-6 record but was close to having a very good season as 4 losses came on the road to top 20 competition (No. 6, No. 9, No. 13, No. 20). The 2019 season will go down as one of the best ever in Baylor football history. The Bears finished the regular season T-1st in the Big 12 with an 11-1 record, matching the program record for wins. The Bears played Oklahoma in the Big 12 Championship game but lost in a close, hard fought game. To finish the season, Baylor was ranked No. 7 in the CFP poll and was selected to play the No. 5 Georgia Bulldogs in the Sugar Bowl. They lost this game by a score of 14-26. On January 7, 2020, Rhule was hired as the head coach of the Carolina Panthers of the NFL, leaving Baylor after completely turning around the football program and its national perception.
Dave Aranda era (2020–present)
[edit]In January 2020, after Rhule's departure for the Panthers, Baylor hired former LSU defensive coordinator Dave Aranda.[7] In Aranda's first season, the team compiled a 2–7 record, with wins against Kansas (0–9) and Kansas State (4–6).
On December 4, 2021, Baylor held off an Oklahoma State rally to win the Big 12 Championship Game 21-16. Coach Dave Aranda took responsibility for a controversial decision to go for the first down on a 4th-and-1 at their own 36. The failed conversion triggered the Oklahoma State rally. However, Coach Aranda owned up to the call in a post-game interview, explaining that Baylor Football is about seizing opportunities when they are available; an attitude that ultimately won them the game. Oklahoma State had the ball at the Baylor 2-yard line with 1:19 to go. Baylor stopped them on 3 runs and a pass for one of the all-time great goal-line stands.
Conference affiliations
[edit]Baylor has been independent and a member of two different conferences.[citation needed]
- Independent (1898–1915)
- Southwest Conference (1915–1996)
- Big 12 Conference (1996–present)
Conference championships
[edit]Baylor has won ten conference championships, won in two different conferences, six outright and four shared.[8][9]
Year | Conference | Coach | Overall record | Conference record |
---|---|---|---|---|
1915† | Southwest Conference | Charles Mosley | 7–1 | 3–0 |
1916† | 9–1 | 5–1 | ||
1922 | Frank Bridges | 8–3 | 5–0 | |
1924 | 7–2–1 | 4–0–1 | ||
1974 | Grant Teaff | 8–4 | 6–1 | |
1980 | 10–1 | 8–0 | ||
1994† | Chuck Reedy | 7–4 | 4–3 | |
2013 | Big 12 Conference | Art Briles | 11–2 | 8–1 |
2014† | 11–2 | 8–1 | ||
2021 | Dave Aranda | 12–2 | 7–2 |
† Co-championship
Bowl games
[edit]Baylor has played in 27 bowl games, garnering a record of 14–13. Baylor has appeared in 8 New Year's Day bowl games and 8 major bowl games.[10]
† New Year's Six bowl game
Rivalries
[edit]Houston
[edit]This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (October 2024) |
TCU
[edit]Baylor's rivalry with TCU is one of the oldest and most played in all of college football. Dating back to 1899 the series began while TCU was located in Waco, Texas as a cross-town rival to Baylor. Due to the close proximity of the two schools 23 games were played between 1899 and 1910. A fire in 1910 destroyed the Main Building on the TCU campus and financial incentives from the city of Fort Worth convinced the Board of Trustees to relocate TCU to that city. There was a ten-year break in the series when the dissolution of the Southwest Conference in 1996 resulted in the two universities joining separate athletic conferences. The series resumed in Waco for Baylor's 2006 home opener and continued in 2007 in Fort Worth. TCU leads the series 59–54–7 through the conclusion of the 2024 season.[11] In November 2023, the official name of the rivalry was changed to the "Bluebonnet Battle" to commemorate the rivalry becoming the longest-played rivalry in Texas.[12]
Texas
[edit]Baylor and Texas have played each other 111 times, with the first game between Baylor and Texas being played in 1901. Only Oklahoma and Texas A&M have played Texas more times than Baylor. Both Baylor and Texas were founding members of the Southwest Conference and the BIG 12 Conference. Texas leads the series with Baylor 81-28-4. However, starting in 2010 this rivalry intensified as Baylor established themselves as a major contender in the BIG 12 Conference with Baylor playing for 4 BIG 12 titles and winning 3, including a head-to-head win over Texas to clinch the BIG 12 Championship in 2013, in what is now known as the "Ice Bowl".[13] Losing the BIG 12 Title to Baylor 30-10 was Mack Brown's last regular season game as the head coach at Texas. With Texas departing the Big 12 to join the Southeastern Conference (SEC) in 2024, the future of the rivalry is uncertain beyond 2023.[14][15][16] Since 2010, the Baylor vs Texas series is led by Texas 8-6-0.[17]
Texas Tech
[edit]The Baylor Bears are Texas Tech's most played opponent with 80 meetings between the teams dating back to 1929. From 2009-2018, the Bears played the Red Raiders at AT&T Stadium during the Saturday after Thanksgiving (with the exception of the 2010 game which was played at the Cotton Bowl during the State Fair of Texas). Starting with the 2019 season, the series moved back to the two schools respective on campus stadiums with Baylor hosting in Waco in 2019 and Texas Tech hosting in Lubbock in 2020. As of the conclusion of the 2022 season, Baylor leads the overall series 42–40–1.[18]
Texas A&M
[edit]Texas A&M is one of Baylor's oldest rivals as the series dates from 1899 and the two schools are located only 90 miles apart on the Brazos River. The competitive peak of the series was from 1960–1990 when Baylor won 13 games, A&M won 16 games and 2 games ended in ties. During that time 18 games were decided by 7 points or fewer. The game played in 2011 is likely the end of the series for the foreseeable future given A&M's decision to leave the Big 12 Conference. Texas A&M leads the series 68–31–9 with the most recent game played in 2011.[19]
Facilities
[edit]Stadium
[edit]The Baylor Bears had played their home games at Floyd Casey Stadium, originally known as Baylor Stadium, since the facility opened in 1950 till closure in 2013. Construction began on what would become Floyd Casey Stadium right after World War II in 1948. The stadium cost $1.8 million to construct and was placed on land donated by a local Baylor landowner. It opened under the name Baylor Stadium in 1950 with a game against Houston, won by Baylor 34–7. When finished the new stadium was the second largest football stadium in the state of Texas.[citation needed] Floyd Casey Stadium had a seating capacity of 50,000 and had undergone multiple renovations during its lifetime, most recently in 2009.
Prior to the Bears time at Floyd Casey Stadium, the Bears played at Municipal Stadium (1936–1949), Cotton Palace (1926–1929), on campus at Carroll Field (1906–1925 and 1930–1935). As of the 2012 season Carroll Field has been the only on-campus homefield for the Bears.
In the Fall of 2012, Baylor University began construction of a new $266 million stadium on the north bank of the Brazos River. The stadium opened for the 2014 football season with the first game taking place on August 31, 2014 against former Southwest Conference rival Southern Methodist University (SMU).[20] The new McLane Stadium was named after Drayton McLane, Jr. who donated a significant amount of money toward the stadium's construction. McLane Stadium is the largest construction project in the history of Waco and Central Texas, and has brought increased revenue to the downtown Waco area. Although McLane Stadium is smaller in capacity than its predecessor, Floyd Casey Stadium, it is expandable to up to 55,000 seats.[citation needed]
Simpson Athletics and Academic Center
[edit]The Simpson Center was built in 2009 and provides a 97,000 foot facility to house football operations. The building also houses the 13,500 foot football weight room. The building is built in a classic collegiate style matching the red brick southern architectural style of the Baylor University campus and is over three stories tall. It houses the main athletic training room, football team locker room, equipment room, coach's locker room, and a large primary weight room. The Simpson Center also houses academic support rooms for studying and academic work. Equipment for sports and athletic rehabilitation include the new state of the art underwater treadmills built into the Simpson Center.[citation needed]
Jay and Jenny Allison Indoor Football Practice Facility
[edit]The indoor practice facility is a full football field and A/C building that allows Baylor athletics to practice in all weather conditions year round. The Indoor facility was a gift from longtime Baylor letterwinner and successful businessman Jay Allison along with his wife Jenny. The new state of the art indoor field was designed to be a part of the Highers Athletic Complex and backs up to the Brazos river. The building was built in 2010 for an estimated cost of $15.4 million.[citation needed]
Top 25 poll finishes
[edit]The Bears have finished in the final season rankings of the AP Poll or Coaches Poll 18 times. The AP Poll first appeared in 1934, and has been published continuously since 1936. The Coaches Poll began its ranking with 20 teams in 1950–51 season, but expanded to 25 teams beginning in the 1990–91 season.[21] The College Football Playoff rankings were used from 2014-23 for a four-team knockout tournament to determine a national champion; a 12-team playoff is planned beginning in 2024.
Season | AP Rank | Coaches Rank | Playoff Rank |
---|---|---|---|
1949 | 20 | — | |
1950 | — | 15 | |
1951 | 9 | 9 | |
1954 | 18 | — | |
1956 | 11 | 11 | |
1960 | 12 | 11 | |
1963 | — | 20 | |
1974 | 14 | 14 | |
1976 | — | 19 | |
1979 | 14 | 15 | |
1980 | 14 | 13 | |
1985 | 17 | 15 | |
1986 | 12 | 13 | |
2011 | 13 | 12 | |
2013 | 13 | 13 | |
2014 | 7 | 8 | 5 |
2015 | 13 | 13 | 17 |
2019 | 13 | 12 | 7 |
2021 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
Hall of Fame
[edit]A total of two Baylor coaches and eight Baylor players have been inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame to date.
College Football Hall of Fame inductees
[edit]Player | Position | Tenure at Baylor | Induction year |
---|---|---|---|
Morley Jennings | Coach | 1926–1940 | 1973 |
Barton Koch | G | 1928–1930 | 1974 |
Jim Ray Smith | T | 1950–1953 | 1987 |
Bill Glass | DE | 1954–1956 | 1985 |
Larry Elkins | WR | 1963–1964 | 1994 |
Mike Singletary | LB | 1977–1980 | 1995 |
Grant Teaff | Coach | 1972–1992 | 2001 |
Thomas Everett | FS | 1985–1987 | 2006 |
Don Trull | QB | 1961–1963 | 2013 |
Pro Football Hall of Fame players
[edit]Player | Position | Career | Induction |
---|---|---|---|
Mike Singletary | LB | 1981–1992 | 1998 |
Heisman Trophy
[edit]Baylor has had four Heisman Trophy candidates, an award given to the best player in college football, with one candidate winning the trophy.
Year | Player | Place | Votes |
---|---|---|---|
1951 | Larry Isbell | 7th | 618 |
1963 | Don Trull | 4th | 970 |
2011 | Robert Griffin III | 1st | 1,687 |
2013 | Bryce Petty | 7th | 127 |
2014 | Bryce Petty | 10th | 14 |
Traditions
[edit]Baylor Line
[edit]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 gold football jersey with the number of their expected graduation year and a chosen nickname on the back.
Before each football game the Baylor Line gathers at one end of McLane Stadium and waits for the signal to make a 'mad dash' down the field to create a giant human tunnel through which the football team runs through 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. Afterwards students rush the sidelines and stand in an exclusive Baylor Line section behind the opponents' bench where students watch the game, cheer the Bears to another victory, and heckle the opposing team.
It began as an all-male organization until 1993, when women were allowed to join. At its inception the Baylor Line was a group of freshmen men who lined the front of Baylor's student section for the express purpose of protecting Baylor women from the other teams more violent fans.
The jersey colors of the Line were originally rotated between green in odd numbered years and gold in even numbered years through 1998 (class of 2002). This changed to green every year until around 2001, when in the interest of having a more substantial looking student section the decision was made to use gold every year. The green jerseys are now used for members of the Baylor University Chamber of Commerce who lead the Baylor Line in chants; these jerseys have "CC" on the back instead of a graduation year.
Mascots
[edit]Baylor keeps two American black bears, Indy and Belle, on campus in their natural habitat enclosure as mascots for the University. American black bears roamed the majority of Texas in considerable abundance when Baylor was founded in 1845, and bears could still be found throughout many areas of the state until the 1940s. The university has had live bears since 1915. The first live bear was a gift from Herbert Mayr, a local businessman who won the bear in a poker game from a member of the troops of the 107th Engineers, which was a unit of the 32nd Infantry Division stationed at Camp MacArthur in Waco. The soldiers were based in the city during World War I. The Bears are brought to the stadium by the Baylor Chamber spirit group on game days and they attend pre-game events and stay to be the living symbol of the University at the games. However, since 2010 the bears are no longer allowed at football games or other campus events on leashes. The USDA informed Baylor officials that they would no longer be permitted to bring the bears to games per Federal Code of Regulations 2.131(c)(1)which states "During public exhibition, any animal must be handled so there is minimal risk of harm to the animal and to the public, with sufficient distance and/or barriers between the animal and the general viewing public so as to assure the safety of the animals and the public."
Alma mater
[edit]Before kickoff and after each games conclusion Baylor fans sing the University alma mater 'That Good Old Baylor Line' while holding their "Bear claws"[22] in the air. The tune is set to the 1949 classic "In the Good Old Summertime."
Logos and uniforms
[edit]The traditional Baylor uniform worn for home games consists of a gold helmet with a green interlocking BU logo on the sides and green & white stripes down the middle, green jersey, and white or gold pants; a white jersey is substituted for the green one for road games. In recent seasons, both a matte green helmet and a white helmet have been used as alternates to the gold helmet. Black jerseys as well as black or green pants have also been used giving the Bears multiple uniform combinations to choose from.
On August 11, 2014, the Baylor Bears won the online fan vote for college football's best uniform awarded by Sporting News Magazine.
In 2019, Baylor university updated their athletic marks across all sports, including football. This included an updated primary interlocking "BU" logo, as well as a new proprietary number font and alternate bear head logo. The football uniforms were updated with the new font for the numbers, primary logo on the helmet, and an inclusion of the bear head logo on the collar.
Awards
[edit]National
[edit]- Heisman Trophy
Most Outstanding Player- Robert Griffin III, Winner-2011
- Biletnikoff Award
Best Receiver- Corey Coleman, Winner-2015
- Terrance Williams, Finalist-2012 (finished 2nd)
- Campbell Trophy
Academic Heisman- Nick Florence, Finalist-2012 (finished 2nd)
- Davey O'Brien Memorial Trophy
Best SWC Player- Mike Singletary, Winner-1979, 1980
- Davey O'Brien National Quarterback Award
Best Quarterback- Robert Griffin III, Winner-2011
- Nick Florence, semifinalist-2012
- Outland Trophy
Best Interior Lineman- Cyril Richardson, Finalist-2013
- Spencer Drango, Finalist-2015
- Chic Harley Award
College Football Player of the Year- Robert Griffin III, Winner-2011
- Sammy Baugh Trophy
Top Passer- Don Trull, Winner-1962, 1963
- AFCA Coach of the Year
Best Coach- Grant Teaff, Winner-1974
- Jim Thorpe Award
Top Defensive Back- Thomas Everett, Winner-1986
- Ray Guy Award
Best Punter- Daniel Sepulveda, Winner-2004, 2006
- The Jim Parker Trophy
Top Offensive Lineman- Cyril Richardson, Winner-2013
- Manning Award
Best Quarterback- Robert Griffin III, Winner-2011/2012
- Associated Press College Football Player of the Year
Most Outstanding Player- Robert Griffin III, Winner-2011
- Earl Campbell Tyler Rose Award
Top Offensive Player- Bryce Petty, Winner-2013
- AT&T ESPN All-America Player of the Year
College Football Player of the Year- Robert Griffin III, Winner-2011
- Sporting News College Football Player of the Year
College Football Player of the Year- Robert Griffin III, Winner-2011
Conference
[edit]- Southwest Conference Coach of the Year
- Grant Teaff, 1974 & 1978
- Southwest Conference Player of the Year
- Mike Singletary, 1979 & 1980
- Thomas Everett, 1986 & 1987
- Big 12 Conference Coach of the Year
- Art Briles, 2013
- Dave Aranda, 2021
- Big 12 Special Teams Player of the Year
- Daniel Sepulveda, 2006
- Trestan Ebner, 2021
- Big 12 Conference Athlete of the Year
- Robert Griffin III, 2011–2012
- Big 12 Conference Freshman of the Year
- Robert Griffin III, 2008
- Big 12 Conference Offensive Player of the Year
- Robert Griffin III, 2011
- Bryce Petty, 2013
- Big 12 Conference Defensive Player of the Year
- James Lynch, 2019
- Jalen Pitre, 2021
- Big 12 Conference Offensive Newcomer of the Year
- Lache Seastrunk, 2012
- Big 12 Conference Defensive Newcomer of the Year
- Siaki Ika, 2021
- Big 12 Conference Offensive Lineman of the Year
- Cyril Richardson, 2012 & 2013
- Spencer Drango, 2014 & 2015
- Connor Galvin, 2021
- Big 12 Conference Defensive Lineman of the Year
- Andrew Billings, 2015
- James Lynch, 2019
- Big 12 Conference Scholar-Athlete of the Year
- Nick Florence, 2012
Bears in the NFL
[edit]As of October 18, 2021, 12 former Baylor players were listed on NFL rosters:[23]
- Andrew Billings, DT, Cleveland Browns
- Henry Black, S, Green Bay Packers
- Kyle Fuller, C, Seattle Seahawks
- Xavien Howard, CB, Miami Dolphins
- Clay Johnston, LB, Carolina Panthers
- Blake Lynch, LB, Minnesota Vikings
- James Lynch, DT, Minnesota Vikings
- Ross Matiscik, LS, Jacksonville Jaguars
- Denzel Mims, WR, New York Jets
- Bravvion Roy, DT, Carolina Panthers
- Sam Tecklenburg, C, Carolina Panthers
- Jon Weeks, LS, Houston Texans
Consensus All-Americans
[edit]- 1930 Barton Koch, G
- 1956 Bill Glass, G
- 1963 Lawrence Elkins, E
- 1964 Lawrence Elkins, B
- 1976 Gary Green, DB
- 1979 Mike Singletary, LB
- 1980 Mike Singletary, LB
- 1986 Thomas Everett, DB
- 1991 Santana Dotson, DL
- 2006 Daniel Sepulveda, P
- 2011 Robert Griffin III, QB
- 2012 Terrance Williams, WR
- 2013 Cyril Richardson, OL
- 2014 Spencer Drango, OL
- 2015 Spencer Drango, OL
- 2015 Corey Coleman, WR
- 2019 James Lynch, DL
- 2021 Jalen Pitre, S
Future non-conference opponents
[edit]Announced schedules as of May 17, 2024.[24]
2025 | 2026 | 2027 | 2028 | 2029 |
Auburn | at Auburn | Oregon | North Texas | at North Texas |
at SMU | Prairie View A&M | at Air Force | at Oregon | |
SMU |
References
[edit]- ^ "2021 Baylor Bears All-American Selections". NCAA. p. 13. Retrieved March 4, 2022.
- ^ Baylor University Athletics Brand Identity (PDF). April 15, 2019. Retrieved June 20, 2019.
- ^ "UCF pulls biggest upset in BCS with 52-42 victory over Baylor". glendalestar.com. January 2, 2014.
- ^ a b c Tracy, Marc; Barry, Dan (March 10, 2016). "Baylor's Pride Turns to Shame in Rape Scandal". The New York Times. pp. A1. Retrieved March 10, 2017.
- ^ "Rhule leaves Temple to become Baylor coach". ESPN. December 6, 2016.
- ^ WERNER, JOHN (February 16, 2017). "Rhule completes Baylor football staff with QB coach". wacotrib.com.
- ^ "Baylor hires LSU defensive coordinator Dave Aranda as head coach". ESPN.com. ESPN, inc. January 16, 2020. Retrieved January 21, 2020.
- ^ "Southwest Conference Historical Standings" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 3, 2016. Retrieved June 19, 2008.
- ^ "Big 12 Football Record Book" (PDF). Retrieved March 21, 2022.
- ^ "Game History - Holiday Bowl". sandiegobowlgames.com. Archived from the original on May 18, 2015. Retrieved December 31, 2014.
- ^ "Winsipedia - Baylor Bears vs. TCU Horned Frogs football series history". Winsipedia.
- ^ "Baylor and TCU Formalize Rivalry as the Bluebonnet Battle". November 13, 2023.
- ^ "On ice fog and winter football | New Media Seminar – Spring 2012".
- ^ "Texas, Oklahoma regents accept SEC invitation". July 30, 2021.
- ^ "Texas, Oklahoma leaving Big 12 early, joining SEC in 2024 season after reaching exit agreement". February 10, 2023.
- ^ "Texas, Oklahoma Joining the SEC in 2024". Sports Illustrated Alabama Crimson Tide News, Analysis and More.
- ^ "Texas Longhorns Football: Recent series history vs Baylor". October 20, 2020.
- ^ "Winsipedia - Baylor Bears vs. Texas Tech Red Raiders football series history". Winsipedia.
- ^ "Winsipedia - Baylor Bears vs. Texas A&M Aggies football series history". Winsipedia.
- ^ "On-Campus Stadium Getting a Closer Look - Baylor University". Baylor University. Archived from the original on February 7, 2012. Retrieved November 5, 2011.
- ^ "Texas A&M In the Polls". College Football Data Warehouse. Archived from the original on November 18, 2007. Retrieved November 2, 2007.
- ^ "BAYLOR OFFICIAL ATHLETIC SITE - Traditions". Archived from the original on December 25, 2010. Retrieved September 29, 2014.
- ^ "NFL Players by College - B - National Football League - ESPN". ESPN.com.
- ^ "Baylor Bears Football Future Schedules". FBSchedules.com. Retrieved May 4, 2024.
External links
[edit]Seifried, C.S., Demiris, T., & Petersen, J. (2021). Baylor University’s Football Stadia: Life before McLane Stadium. Sport History Review, 51, 70-89.