The Baylor Bears are the intercollegiate athletic teams representing Baylor University, a private Baptist research university in Waco, Texas. Competing in NCAA Division I's Football Bowl Subdivision as members of the Big 12 Conference, the Bears field 19 varsity sports programs for men and women, including football, basketball, baseball, softball, track and field, and acrobatics and tumbling.[1][2]
The nickname "Bears," adopted in 1914, draws from the university's Baptist roots and symbolizes strength, with the teams having amassed 121 conference championships, including 92 in the Big 12 era, and multiple national titles such as the men's basketball program's 2021 NCAA championship.[3][4][5]Football has secured nine conference titles, highlighted by the 2021 Big 12 championship and a Sugar Bowl victory, while women's basketball claimed national championships in 2005 and 2012.[6][7]
The program's history includes the tragic 1927 bus accident that killed ten members of the men's basketball team, immortalized as the "Immortal Ten," and controversies such as the 2003 basketball scandal involving the murder of player Patrick Dennehy by teammate Carlton Dotson, as well as the 2016 football sexual assault scandal, where institutional mishandling of over 50 reports led to the firing of head coach Art Briles, athletic director Ian McCaw, and the demotion of university president Kenneth Starr.[8][9][10]
![Immortal_10.jpg][center]
Historical Development
Founding and Southwest Conference Era
Baylor University was chartered on February 1, 1845, by the Republic of Texas Congress, with athletics emerging as organized intercollegiate programs in the early 20th century amid efforts to foster school spirit despite financial constraints from university indebtedness.[11][12]Football games began around 1900, focusing on regional rivals, while men's basketball records date to the 1906-07 season, emphasizing local competition before broader conference alignment.[13][14] The Bears mascot was officially adopted on December 14, 1914, following the football team's inaugural Southwest Conference (SWC) season, as Baylor joined the league upon its founding that year with seven other institutions, including Texas, Texas A&M, and Arkansas.[15][16]During the SWC era, Baylor athletics experienced sporadic successes punctuated by extended inconsistencies, particularly in football, where the program secured a conference title in 1924 but endured a 50-year drought thereafter amid competition from better-resourced rivals.[17]Basketball provided early highlights, including the 1949-50 SWC regular-season championship under coach Bill Henderson, though the program was marred by the 1927 "Immortal Ten" tragedy, in which ten players and the bus driver perished in a collision en route to a game against Texas, underscoring the era's rudimentary travel and safety conditions.[18][19] Mid-20th-century challenges included financial limitations that restricted facility upgrades and recruitment, leading to uneven performances; for instance, football teams often finished mid-pack in the eight-team league, hampered by smaller budgets compared to state flagships like Texas.[20]A pivotal breakthrough came in 1974 under head coach Grant Teaff, when the Bears achieved an 8-4 overall record and sole possession of the SWC football championship—their first undisputed title since 1924—with a signature 34-24 comeback victory over No. 12 Texas, dubbed the "Miracle on the Brazos" after trailing 24-7 at halftime before rallying on homecoming at Waco's Municipal Stadium.[17][21] This success, capped by a 26-20 Cotton Bowl loss to Penn State, highlighted improved execution in key games against SMU (27-3), Rice (24-3), and others, amassing a 6-1 conference mark.[22] Over 81 years in the SWC through its 1996 dissolution, Baylor claimed 29 total conference titles across sports, though football and basketball dominance remained elusive against perennial powers, reflecting persistent resource disparities in a league increasingly strained by television revenue shifts and internal scandals.[4][23]
Transition to the Big 12 Conference
The Southwest Conference (SWC) dissolved following its final season of competition in 1995–96, prompted by defections driven by television revenue and competitive concerns, leading to the formation of the Big 12 Conference through a merger with the Big Eight.[23] In February 1994, the Big Eight invited four SWC members—Texas, Texas A&M, Baylor, and Texas Tech—to join, with Baylor selected as the private institution to provide geographic and institutional balance amid the SWC's collapse, which left remaining schools like Rice and Houston to join other conferences.[24] The Big 12 began operations in the 1996–97 academic year, divided into North and South divisions, with Baylor placed in the South alongside Oklahoma, Oklahoma State, Texas, Texas A&M, and Texas Tech.[24] This realignment elevated Baylor's competitive profile by aligning it with power programs but also intensified scrutiny on its ability to sustain relevance in a revenue-driven landscape.[23]Baylor's early Big 12 tenure highlighted adaptation challenges, as the conference's structure demanded higher recruiting and operational standards than the declining SWC. Football programs in the new league faced stiffer opposition, with Baylor posting consistent deficits; over the first dozen seasons (1996–2007), the Bears lost Big 12 games by an average margin of 24 points and exceeded two conference wins only once prior to major program overhauls.[25] Men's basketball showed relative resilience, qualifying for postseason play more frequently than football counterparts, though still grappling with inconsistencies against league powers like Kansas and Texas.[25] These mixed outcomes underscored Baylor's transitional struggles, where football's prolonged futility contrasted with basketball's incremental progress, prompting internal assessments of coachingstability and resource allocation.[25]To bridge facility gaps with wealthier Big 12 peers, Baylor initiated targeted infrastructure investments in the late 1990s and 2000s, focusing on multi-sport complexes to enhance recruiting appeal. In February 1998, the university announced a major project including a new baseball/softball complex, soccer field, tennis courts, and refurbished locker rooms, aimed at modernizing venues previously outpaced by conference rivals.[26] Subsequent upgrades, such as improved dugouts and sound systems at existing sites by 2000–2002, supported broader efforts to foster competitive equity, though full parity required ongoing commitments into the next decade.[27] These developments marked foundational shifts toward sustainability in the Big 12, prioritizing empirical upgrades over short-term results amid early competitive disparities.[26]
21st Century Expansion and Challenges
In the early 2000s, Baylor University's institutional expansion provided a foundation for athletic program growth, with enrollment rising from around 12,000 students in 2000 to approximately 20,000 by the mid-2020s, alongside an endowment that surpassed $2 billion by 2024.[28][29] This financial strengthening enabled significant investments in facilities, including the opening of McLane Stadium in 2014 and subsequent eight-figure enhancements announced in July 2024, such as improved seating and premium areas to boost fan experience and revenue potential.[30] The university also expanded its varsity offerings by adding women's equestrian in 2009 and acrobatics and tumbling as an emerging NCAA sport, increasing the total to 19 programs and aligning with efforts to enhance Title IX balance through non-traditional women's competitions.[2]Baylor's position in the Big 12 Conference benefited from renewed stability following the 2021-2024 realignment turbulence, where departures of Texas and Oklahoma to the SEC prompted the addition of four new members—BYU, Cincinnati, Houston, and UCF—preserving the league's footprint and averting collapse despite rumors of Pac-12 interest in Baylor.[31] A landmark media rights extension with ESPN and Fox, finalized in 2023, elevated annual distributions from $220 million to $380 million starting in 2025-26, providing Baylor with an average per-school increase of about $31.7 million in media revenue to support operations amid escalating costs.[32] This influx, combined with a 2024-25 conference payout of $558 million, underscored the financial upside of Big 12 retention for mid-major powerhouses like Baylor.[33]Challenges persisted, including administrative turnover driven by heightened performance demands; for instance, athletic directors Ian McCaw (2005-2016) and others faced scrutiny amid program inconsistencies, with current AD Mack Rhoades navigating post-2021 expectations for sustained contention.[34]Title IX compliance emerged as a recurring hurdle, with a December 2024 federalOffice for Civil Rights report citing delays in sexual harassment case processing from 2014-2020 and inadequate athletics oversight, prompting Baylor to commit to expedited reviews within 30 days.[35] Broader pressures from NCAA shifts, such as the transfer portal's liberalization and revenue-sharing mandates up to $20.5 million annually starting in 2025, strained resources and roster stability for non-revenue sports.[36]
Varsity Sports Programs
Football
The Baylor Bears football program, established in 1899, fields a team in NCAA Division I FBS as a member of the Big 12 Conference and has compiled an all-time record of 630–602–41 (.512 winning percentage) through the 2025 season.[6] The program participated in the Southwest Conference from 1915 to 1995 before transitioning to the Big 12 in 1996, where it has since competed. Baylor has secured nine conference championships, including three in the Big 12 era, and holds a bowl record of 14–14 across 28 appearances as of the 2024 season.[6][37]During the Southwest Conference era, Grant Teaff provided program stability from 1972 to 1992, amassing a 128–105–6 record, two SWC titles (1974, 1980), and eight bowl berths with a 4–4 bowl mark.[38]Art Briles revitalized the offense from 2008 to 2015 through spread concepts emphasizing tempo and passing, achieving back-to-back Big 12 championships in 2013 and 2014—the latter featuring a perfect 7–0 conference record—and nine bowl appearances with a 3–6 outcome.[39] Statistical hallmarks of Briles' tenure include high-yardage outputs, with the Bears averaging over 7,000 total offensive yards in seasons post-2010.[40]Dave Aranda, appointed in 2020 with a defensive background from LSU's 2019 national championship staff, shifted focus to stout defenses, ranking No. 3 nationally in total defense (268.5 yards allowed per game) during his debut partial season.[41] The 2021 campaign peaked at 12–2 overall (7–2 Big 12), clinching the conference title and culminating in a 21–7 Sugar Bowl victory over Ole Miss on January 1, 2022, marked by three interceptions and key sacks.[42] However, performance waned afterward, with records of 6–7 (2022), 3–9 (2023), and a return to .500 (29–29 cumulative through 2024), followed by a 4–4 start in 2025 amid ongoing Big 12 challenges (1–11 conference record post-2021).[43][44]Career statistical leaders underscore passing prowess: Robert Griffin III holds records for 10,366 passing yards and 78 touchdowns from 2008–2011, while rushing leader Walter Ables tallied 3,611 yards (1971–1973).[6] Recent recruiting trends reflect adaptation to name, image, and likeness (NIL) rules, with Baylor escalating compensation efforts—coaches publicly endorsing "We Pay Players" initiatives—to bolster classes, yielding a top-20 transfer portal haul in 2025 and emphasizing Texas talent pipelines for defensive rebuilds.[45][46]
Men's Basketball
The Baylor Bears men's basketball team competes in the Big 12 Conference and has experienced significant resurgence under head coach Scott Drew, who assumed the role on July 2, 2003, following the program's involvement in a scandal that led to the resignation of predecessor Dave Bliss. Drew inherited a squad reeling from NCAA sanctions and internal issues, including the 2003 murder of player Patrick Dennehy by teammate Carlton Dotson, which prompted a rebuild from consistent mediocrity—Baylor had posted a 55-63 record from 1999 to 2003—to national prominence, amassing a 466-259 mark through the 2023-24 season and achieving a .643 winning percentage in Big 12 play.[47][48]Drew's tenure includes eight NCAA Tournament berths, four Sweet 16 appearances, two Elite Eight runs, and a 21-9 postseason record, highlighted by the 2021 NCAA championship—the program's first national title—where the No. 1-seeded Bears dominated with an 86-70 victory over Gonzaga in the final after defeating Hartford, Wisconsin, Villanova, Arkansas, Houston, and Gonzaga across six games, capping a 28-2 regular season that featured the Big 12 regular-season crown, Baylor's first conference title in 71 years.[5][49][50] This success marked Baylor's first Final Four since 1950, transforming the Bears into a consistent top-tier program with multiple 20-win seasons and strong defensive identities under Drew's culture of discipline and player development.[51]The program has fostered an NBA pipeline, producing 14 draft picks during Drew's era, including first-round selections Ekpe Udoh (No. 6 overall, 2010), Perry Jones III (No. 28, 2012), Ja'Kobe Walter (No. 19, 2024), and Yves Missi (No. 21, 2024), alongside 2021 Final Four Most Outstanding Player Jared Butler (No. 30 overall).[52][53] Baylor's development emphasis has yielded 12 All-America honors under Drew, contributing to sustained Big 12 competitiveness despite no conference tournament titles.[48] In Big 12 Tournament play, the Bears have advanced to semifinals or better in select years, such as a second-round win over Kansas State (70-56) in 2025, though overall performance reflects the conference's parity with a 2024-25 finish of 10-10 in league play and 20-15 overall.[54][55]Home-court advantage has been pivotal, with Baylor maintaining winning records at the Ferrell Center (capacity 10,284) through 2022-23 before transitioning to the $213 million Foster Pavilion, which opened January 2, 2024, seating 7,000 plus 500 standing-room-only spots along the Brazos River and enhancing recruiting and atmosphere with modern amenities.[56][57][58] Recent roster dynamics, including a near-complete 2025 offseason overhaul via the transfer portal—replacing all returners from the prior NCAA Tournament team with additions ranked among the nation's top classes—underscore Drew's adaptability amid NIL and portal pressures to preserve contention.[59][60]
Women's Basketball
The Baylor women's basketball program achieved national prominence under head coach Kim Mulkey, who led the team from 2000 to 2021 and secured three NCAA Division I championships in 2005, 2012, and 2019.[61][62] Mulkey's tenure included four Final Four appearances, highlighted by the 2012 season's undefeated 40-0 record, which culminated in a 68-59 victory over Notre Dame for the title.[62] The Bears dominated the Big 12 Conference, capturing 13 regular-season titles and 11 tournament championships during her era, contributing to Baylor holding the most Big 12 women's basketball titles overall with 11 tournament wins as of 2025.[63][64]Under Mulkey, Baylor established statistical superiority in key areas, ranking among the nation's leaders in scoring and rebounding margins during peak seasons, such as the 2018-19 campaign's 37-1 record with an average of 85.8 points per game.[65] The program produced elite talent, including center Brittney Griner, who earned three Olympic gold medals with Team USA in 2016, 2020, and 2024 after starring for Baylor from 2009 to 2013.[66] Mulkey reached 600 career wins faster than any Division I coach, achieving the milestone in 700 games by February 2020.[67]Nicki Collen succeeded Mulkey in May 2021, focusing on roster reconstruction through high-caliber recruiting and international additions to maintain competitiveness.[63] In her tenure through the 2024-25 season, Baylor posted a 28-8 overall record and 15-3 in Big 12 play, finishing second in the conference and earning an No. 18 final AP ranking while advancing in the NCAA Tournament.[68] The Bears led the Big 12 in rebounding during the 2024-25 campaign and achieved their best conference start under Collen with a 10-2 record through 12 games in one season.[69] Entering the 2025-26 season ranked No. 16 preseason, Collen's squad continued Baylor's tradition of top-20 contention and Big 12 contention.[70]
Baseball
The Baylor Bears baseball program, competing in the Big 12 Conference, has secured three regular-season conference championships, in 2000, 2005, and 2012, all under head coach Steve Smith.[71] The team has made three College World Series appearances, in 1977, 1978, and 2005, with the latter marking a program highlight after a regional and super regional run capped by a 4-3 extra-inning victory over Stanford.[72][73]Steve Smith coached the Bears from 1995 to 2015, compiling a 744-523-1 overall record and leading the program to 16 NCAA Tournament berths, including those conference titles and the 2005 College World Series.[74] His tenure emphasized pitching depth, with teams posting sub-4.00 ERAs in title years like 2005 (3.85 ERA, leading the Big 12).[75] Following Smith's departure, Steve Rodriguez took over in 2016, guiding the Bears to a Big 12 Tournament championship in 2018 after a late-season surge (10 wins in final 12 conference games) and an NCAA Regional berth.[76] Seasonal records under Rodriguez showed variability, with a 34-23 mark in 2017 (fourth in Big 12) but dips to 24-29 in 2016, reflecting challenges in sustaining elite hitting (team batting average hovered around .270 in mid-2010s). Recent seasons under subsequent coaches have trended toward mid-conference finishes, such as 13-17 in Big 12 play in 2025, amid improved pitching staffs (e.g., Gabe Craig's closing role leading to draft selection).[77][78]More than 48 Baylor alumni have reached Major League Baseball, including standout Max Muncy, who set program records with multiple World Series appearances and titles.[79] Notable draftees like David Murphy (most MLB at-bats from Baylor) highlight the program's pipeline, with recent picks such as Tyriq Kemp and Gabe Craig in 2025 underscoring continued professional advancement.[72][78]Baylor Ballpark serves as the home venue, with key upgrades including a full locker room renovation in 2019 and a major donation from Bob Simpson in 2024 aimed at program revitalization, enhancing recruiting and training facilities to support performance gains in hitting and pitching metrics.[80][81] These improvements correlate with stabilized win totals in the 30s during competitive Big 12 stretches, fostering trends toward balanced offenses (e.g., .280+ team batting averages in tournament-winning years).[82]
Softball
The Baylor Bears softball program, established as a varsity sport in the Big 12 Conference era, has demonstrated consistent postseason contention under head coach Glenn Moore, who has led the team since the 2000 season and amassed over 1,000 career victories by 2023.[83][84] The Bears secured the 2007 Big 12 regular-season championship with a conference record of 14-3, marking their most dominant league performance to date.[85] Since joining the Big 12 in 1996, the program has grown into a regional power, qualifying for 15 NCAA regional appearances between 2005 and 2024, including super regional berths in multiple years.[86]Baylor has earned four Women's College World Series berths since 2007, with the 2011 team advancing to the final four after a 47-15 overall record and strong pitching that limited opponents in key postseason games.[87][88] Additional WCWS appearances came in 2013 and 2017, during which the Bears posted 42-17 and record-setting seasons, respectively, highlighting pitching depth and offensive contributions from returners who started over 30 games.[86] Postseason metrics reflect sustained competitiveness, with the team achieving 40 wins in 2023—the first such mark since 2017—and maintaining above-.500 Big 12 records in several seasons, such as 14-13 in 2024.[86][89]Getterman Stadium serves as the program's home venue in Waco, Texas, with upgrades including a new video board installed for the 2020 season to enhance fan experience and training capabilities, positioning it among top Big 12 facilities.[90] These improvements, alongside Moore's emphasis on player development, have supported the Bears' ability to host NCAA regionals and attract talent for ongoing regional contention.[91]
Tennis
The Baylor men's tennis team won its first and only NCAA Division I national championship in 2004 under head coach Matt Knoll, defeating UCLA 4-0 in the final match held at the Yale International Tennis Center in New Haven, Connecticut.[7][92] The program has qualified for the NCAA Tournament 27 consecutive times as of 2025, including a national runner-up finish in 2021 after a 4-1 loss to Florida in the championship match.[93][94] Under current head coach Michael Woodson, who assumed the role on an interim basis in July 2020 before becoming permanent, the Bears achieved a 29-4 dual-match record in the 2020-21 season and earned multiple All-Big 12 honors in 2025, including Newcomer of the Year for one player.[95][96]Baylor men's tennis has demonstrated conference dominance in the Big 12, contributing to the program's ninth dual sweep of regular-season titles with the women's team in 12 years as of 2014, part of 22 combined league titles in the conference's first 18 seasons.[97] Notable alumni include Jenson Brooksby, who committed to Baylor but turned professional before enrolling, reaching a career-high ATP singles ranking of No. 33 after strong junior and early pro results.[98] The team competes at the Hurd Tennis Center and maintains ITA national rankings, with consistent top-25 finishes supporting its pipeline to professional circuits.[99]The Baylor women's tennis program, led by head coach Joey Scrivano since 2003, has recorded 19 winning seasons in his tenure, including a 17-14 dual-match mark in 2023 and top-25 ITA national rankings for the 16th time in 2022.[100] Scrivano reached 500 career wins in 2023, guiding the Bears to their 12th ITA Texas Regional championship in 2025, highlighted by the doubles team of Na Dong and Zuza Kubacha securing the regional title with five consecutive victories to earn an automatic NCAA Doubles Championship berth.[83][101] While lacking an NCAA team title, the program has produced WTA professionals such as Leolia Jeanjean, who reached No. 94 in singles rankings after playing for Baylor in 2014-15.[102]Women's tennis shares the men's conference success, with dual Big 12 regular-season sweeps underscoring dual-match prowess and ITA individual accolades, though NCAA team appearances have been less consistent than the men's streak.[97] The Bears host events like the Big 12-SEC Challenge at the Hurst Tennis Center, fostering regional rivalries and player development for pro transitions.[99]
Track and Field
Baylor's track and field program has a storied legacy in sprinting and relay events, bolstered by the coaching tenure of Clyde Hart, who guided athletes to multiple Olympic gold medals from 1984 to 2004.[103] The program competes in NCAA Division I and the Big 12 Conference, emphasizing individual excellence over team titles, with historical standouts including Michael Johnson, who won four Olympic golds in the 1990s and 2000s while setting world records in the 200m and 400m.[7] Other alumni like Jeremy Wariner and Darold Williamson contributed to the 4x400m relay gold in 2004 and 2008, respectively, underscoring Baylor's causal emphasis on speed development through rigorous technique and strength training.[7]In recent years, the program has sustained competitiveness through individual NCAA titles and Big 12 accolades. During the 2025 outdoor season, athletes secured two national championships in individual events, alongside multiple All-American honors, while claiming three of four Big 12 Performer of the Year awards, including Nathaniel Ezekiel as Men's Performer and Alexis Brown as Women's Performer.[104][105]Ezekiel, who competed in the 400m hurdles for Nigeria at the 2024 Paris Olympics, exemplifies the program's pipeline to international competition, though he did not medal.[106] Indoor achievements include Brown's NCAA long jump title earlier in 2025, highlighting strengths in jumps alongside sprints.[107]Event-specific prowess is evident in program records, particularly sprints: Trayvon Bromell holds the men's 100m mark at 9.76 seconds (2015, +3.7 wind), while women's records feature Tiffany Townsend's 200m at 22.78 seconds (2011, indoor).[108][109] Jumps records include Brown's contributions, and throws have seen program advancements, such as heavy wind-aided hammer throw marks in 2025 meets, though no recent NCAA throws titles.[110] These performances stem from targeted training in explosive power, with Baylor's 47 NCAA individual titles historically concentrated in track events rather than field.[7]Facility advantages enhance training efficacy: the Clyde Hart Track & Field Stadium, dedicated in 2014 with a Mondo surface for optimal traction and a 5,000-seat capacity, hosted the 2018 Big 12 Championships and supports outdoor meets year-round.[111] Complementing it is the Indoor Track & Field Complex, enabling consistent practice amid Texas weather variability and facilitating early-season competitions like Big 12 indoors in Lubbock.[112] These venues, including hydrotherapy and strength areas, provide a competitive edge in recovery and event-specific drills, contributing to sustained outputs in high-velocity disciplines.[111]
Soccer
The Baylor Bears men's soccer program, established in 1995, has made seven NCAA tournament appearances, with its deepest regional runs occurring in 2017 and 2018 under head coach Paul Jobson. In 2017, the Bears compiled a 15-6-3 record, won the Big 12 Conference tournament, and advanced to the NCAA Elite Eight for the first time in program history by defeating Northern Illinois, Seattle, and Akron at home before falling 1-0 to Wake Forest.[113] The following year, Baylor achieved a program-record 20-5 mark, earned a No. 2 national seed—the highest in school history—and repeated as Big 12 tournament participants while reaching the Elite Eight again, losing 2-1 to Stanford after home wins over SMU and UNC.[114][113] These back-to-back third-round finishes marked the program's peak, bolstered by consistent conference tournament berths in the Big 12 since joining in 1996 and recruitment of international talent, including players from Europe and South America to enhance defensive solidity, with Jobson recording multiple shutouts in key matches.[115]Seasonal win-loss trends for the men's team show variability, with a high of 20 wins in 2018 contrasting earlier struggles, such as a decade-long NCAA drought broken in 2011 (14-3-3 record, first-round exit to Texas State).[116] Post-2018, records dipped to 8-5-6 in 2021 amid coaching stability under Jobson, who emphasized tactical discipline leading to top Big 12 defensive rankings in select seasons. Notable individual contributions include forward Haruki Ishida's goal-scoring prowess in tournament play, though all-time leaders like those from the 2017-18 eras set benchmarks for shutouts, with the team logging several clean sheets en route to regional semifinals.[117]The women's soccer program, launched in 1996, has featured regional NCAA tournament advances, including a 1998 run where the Bears won three home games before a third-round loss to Georgetown, matching their deepest historical penetration.[115] Under Marci Jobson from 2007 to 2021, the team returned to the NCAA field in 2011 (15-4-3 record, first-round win over Texas State) after a 12-year absence and secured Big 12 tournament berths, with 2018 yielding an undefeated conference streak and the program's first regular-season title in two decades.[118][119] Jobson's tenure emphasized international recruitment from regions like Scandinavia and Latin America, contributing to shutout records, such as multiple clean sheets in 2011's postseason push.[120]Following Jobson's departure in 2021, Michelle Lenard assumed head coaching duties, leading to a 2022 NCAA appearance but subsequent misses in 2023 and 2024 amid win-loss fluctuations (e.g., 8-8-3 in 2019).[121] The 2025 season shows resurgence with an 11-2-2 mark entering late October, positioning for another tournament berth and featuring six shutouts, including against ranked foes like Kansas, driven by defenders like Azul Alvarez. Top scorers such as Ashley Merrill (multi-goal games) have supported conference contention, though the program has not matched men's 2017-18 depth in recent regionals.[122][123]
Volleyball
The Baylor Bears women's volleyball program, established in the 1970s, has competed in NCAA Division I as part of the Big 12 Conference since 1996, posting a mid-tier record with sporadic peaks in national contention. The team has qualified for the NCAA Tournament in multiple seasons, including hosting first- and second-round matches in 2017 as the No. 12 seed and earning the No. 1 overall seed in 2019 following a 25-1 regular-season mark.[124][125] However, postseason success has been limited, with early exits such as a second-round loss in 2024 to Wofford and a quarterfinal defeat to Nebraska in 2021.[126][127] Conference performance reflects consistent competitiveness without sustained dominance, exemplified by a 14-4 record and tie for third place in 2024.[128]Under head coach Ryan McGuyre, who assumed the role in 2015, the program achieved its most notable successes, including the 2019 Big 12 regular-season championship with a 15-1 conference mark and McGuyre's AVCA National Coach of the Year honor.[129][124] McGuyre's tenure emphasized defensive strengths, with Baylor ranking among Big 12 leaders in blocks during peak years; for instance, the 2019 squad's blocking efficiency contributed to an undefeated start until a late-season loss to Texas. His coaching also fostered individual accolades, such as outside hitter Yossiana Pressley's 2017 Big 12 Freshman of the Year award amid strong serving contributions from the team.[125] Assistant coaches like Joshua Walker have supported player development, aiding recoveries such as middle blocker Gabrielle Essix's in 2023.[130]The Bears play home matches at the Paul and Alejandra Foster Pavilion, with practices at the Allison Indoor Facility to mitigate weather disruptions via synthetic surfaces.[131] Key statistical leaders in serving aces and blocks have driven competitive edges; in recent seasons, players like Bailey Warren have topped attack efficiency while contributing to blocking returns exceeding 68% from prior years.[132][133] Overall, the program's trajectory under McGuyre has elevated its Big 12 standing from lower finishes to co-championship contention in 2019, though it remains below perennial powers like Texas.[134]
Other Varsity Sports
Baylor University sponsors varsity programs in men's and women's cross country and golf, along with women's equestrian and acrobatics & tumbling, which operate under NCAA Division I governance except for acrobatics & tumbling, governed by the National Collegiate Acrobatics & Tumbling Association (NCATA).[135] These teams compete in the Big 12 Conference and emphasize competitive performance alongside academic priorities.The acrobatics & tumbling program stands out for its dominance, capturing 10 consecutive NCATA national championships from 2016 through 2025, including a 276.015–266.355 victory over Oregon in the 2025 final on April 26.[136][137] The women's equestrian team has secured four Big 12 Conference titles and the 2012 NCEA Hunt Seat National Championship, with recent individual accolades including monthly honors in 2025 for riders like those earning Most Outstanding Performer awards.[138][139] In men's golf, Baylor claimed the 2001 Big 12 Championship with a three-round total of 894 and the 2018 Big 12 Match Play title by going undefeated at Golf Club at Houston Oaks.[140][141] Cross country programs, while not yielding conference or national team titles in recent years, have produced individual top-10 finishes, such as Amos Kimeli's at the 2025 Texas A&M Invitational on October 17.[142] These additions, including equestrian in 2009 and acrobatics & tumbling in 2016, support Title IX gender equity by expanding women's opportunities beyond traditional sports.[143]
Facilities and Infrastructure
McLane Stadium and Football Facilities
McLane Stadium, the on-campus home of Baylor Bears football, opened on August 31, 2014, with a seating capacity of 45,140.[144][145] Constructed at a cost of approximately $260 million, the stadium is situated along the Brazos River, providing scenic views and integrating with the university's campus landscape.[144] Key features include advanced Wi-Fi coverage throughout the facility and the introduction of mobile device replays for fans, marking the first such implementation in collegiate stadiums.[144][146]The stadium's design and amenities have contributed to higher attendance figures, particularly during periods of on-field success. In the 2021 season, when Baylor captured the Big 12 Conference championship and advanced to the Sugar Bowl, games routinely drew near-capacity crowds, with attendance exceeding 45,000 for matchups against Texas (45,834) and Oklahoma (46,782).[147][148] Average attendance in 2019 reached 45,517, reflecting sustained fan interest post-opening.[149] These figures underscore the venue's role in enhancing game-day experiences and supporting revenue generation through ticket sales and premium seating reseating initiatives.[150]In July 2024, Baylor announced upgrades to McLane Stadium, including enhanced video boards, new production control rooms, and a hospitality clubhouse to improve fan amenities and operational capabilities.[30] Complementing the stadium, the Fudge Football Development Center, a 110,000-square-foot facility opened in 2024, provides dedicated training resources such as a full indoor practice field, upgraded locker rooms, weight training areas, and athletic training spaces.[151][152] These post-2010s investments in football infrastructure have bolstered recruiting efforts and program performance by offering state-of-the-art environments for player development.[152]Football revenues from McLane Stadium, including non-football events, help fund other university athletic programs.[153]
Basketball and Multi-Purpose Venues
The Ferrell Center, opened in 1988 adjacent to the Brazos River, functioned as the primary multi-purpose venue for Baylor Bears men's and women's basketball teams until the 2023-24 season, alongside hosting volleyball competitions.[56] Its capacity reached 10,284 spectators, accommodating record attendances such as 10,545 during a 2008 men's game against Texas A&M and combined program totals of 297,238 fans in the 2011-12 season amid postseason successes.[154][155] These peaks reflected heightened interest during championship-caliber runs, including the men's 2021 NCAA title, though overall attendance trends prompted a shift toward smaller, more engaging facilities.Baylor Bears basketball transitioned to the Paul and Alejandra Foster Pavilion in January 2024, a 223,547-square-foot arena constructed at a cost of $212 million along the Brazos Riverfront.[58][57] Designed for intimacy with a fixed seating capacity of 7,000 plus standing room for 500, the pavilion prioritizes proximity to the court, reducing available seats by about 27% from the Ferrell Center to enhance atmosphere during games.[58] It incorporates modern amenities including 160 courtside seats, 720 club seats, 70 loge boxes, a 24-seat suite, and integrated athletic development areas like strength training and hydrotherapy spaces shared between programs.[157][58]As a multi-purpose venue, the Foster Pavilion supports non-basketball events such as concerts, with adjustable seating listed at 5,928 for most performances, broadening its role in campus and community programming.[158] Meanwhile, the Ferrell Center underwent $15 million in renovations approved in May 2025, adapting it for continued multi-sport use primarily by volleyball and acrobatics & tumbling teams while maintaining its historical infrastructure.[159] This evolution underscores Baylor's emphasis on specialized basketball facilities amid broader venue repurposing.[56]
Olympic Sports Venues
Baylor University's Olympic sports venues encompass specialized facilities for baseball, softball, tennis, track and field, soccer, and volleyball, primarily clustered along the Brazos River in the Turner Riverfront Complex to centralize training and competition.[160] These on-campus setups, completed or upgraded in the 2010s, support recruitment by offering dedicated spaces that integrate academic proximity with advanced amenities, enabling year-round access without off-site travel.[161] The design emphasizes performance optimization, including hydrotherapy pools and monitoring technologies, which correlate with sustained Big 12 competitiveness in these programs.[111][162]Baylor Ballpark, home to baseball since 2011, features 3,242 chairback seats and 1,000 bleachers, with field-level premium seating to enhance fan and player engagement.[163] Adjacent Getterman Stadium, dedicated to softball and opened in 1999 with expansions, includes 430 chairbacks, 800 covered bleachers, and a modern press box, facilitating high-attendance events that draw regional recruits.[164] The Hurd Tennis Center, with 12 outdoor courts and complementary Hawkins Indoor Tennis Center's six courts, hosts NCAA championships, as in 2025 for men's and women's events, bolstering national visibility and talent acquisition.[165][166][167]Clyde Hart Track & Field Stadium, dedicated in 2015 with 5,000 capacity including 2,060 fixed seats, incorporates a nine-lane Mondo track surface and a 10,300-square-foot team building equipped for recovery and strategy.[111][168] An adjacent Indoor Track & FieldComplex extends training capabilities during inclement weather.[112] Soccer utilizes Betty Lou Mays Field within the riverfront complex, paired with the 14,500-square-foot Williams Family Soccer & Olympic Sports Center opened in 2015, which includes weight rooms, lockers, and coaches' offices shared across programs to streamline operations and elevate training standards.[160][169] Volleyball competes at Ferrell Center's Paul J. Meyer Arena, a 6,000-capacity venue with production upgrades supporting televised matches and skill development.[56] These investments, totaling multimillion-dollar developments, have positioned Baylor to host elite events and maintain top-tier recruiting pipelines in Olympic sports.[2]
Championships and Honors
NCAA National Championships
Baylor University has secured five NCAA Division Iteam national championships across three sports.[7] The men's tennis team won in 2004, followed by three titles in women's basketball in 2005, 2012, and 2019, and one in men's basketball in 2021.[28]The men's tennis program claimed its lone NCAA title on May 23, 2004, defeating UCLA 4-2 in the final match held at the George L. Meyer Tennis Center in Athens, Georgia. Coached by Mark Beyers, the Bears advanced through the tournament by overcoming Southern California in the semifinals and posting a 28-3 overall record, leveraging strong doubles play and contributions from players like Benjamin Becker and Kamea Koa. This victory marked Baylor's first NCAA team championship in any sport.In women's basketball, the Lady Bears captured the 2005 NCAA championship on April 5, defeating Michigan State 84-62 in Indianapolis, Indiana, under coach Kim Mulkey. The team, led by Sophia Young and Steffanie Blackmon, navigated a bracket that included upsets over powerhouses like LSU and finished 33-4, dominating the Final Four with a semifinal win over visiting host Rutgers. Baylor repeated as champions in 2012, achieving a perfect 40-0 season and routing Notre Dame 68-59 in the final on April 3 in Denver, Colorado; key performances from Brittney Griner, who scored 16 points and blocked four shots, highlighted a tournament run featuring blowout victories and defensive stifling of opponents averaging under 55 points allowed. The 2019 title came on April 7 against Notre Dame again, winning 82-81 in a thriller in Tampa, Florida, with DiDi Richards' clutch plays sealing the victory after a comeback from a halftime deficit; the Bears went 28-2, overcoming injuries and a tough bracket including Oregon and Iowa State.Men's basketball achieved its first NCAA crown on April 5, 2021, overpowering Gonzaga 86-70 in Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis, to end the Bulldogs' 31-0 season. Coached by Scott Drew, the Bears posted a 28-2 record amid the COVID-19-shortened season, entering the tournament unseeded in their region but delivering a dominant March Madness performance: wire-to-wire wins over Hartford, Wisconsin, and Villanova, a 78-62 quarterfinal rout of Arkansas, and a 97-78 semifinal demolition of Houston, fueled by guards Jared Butler and MaCio Teague alongside forward Mark Vital's rebounding. Baylor's tournament average of 91.4 points per game underscored their offensive efficiency and defensive pressure.[50][170]
The Baylor Acrobatics & Tumbling program has won ten consecutive NCATA National Championships, spanning from 2016 to 2025, with the latest title secured on April 26, 2025, via a 276.015–266.355 victory over Oregon at the Elmen Center in New Orleans.[136][137] This dominance includes superior performances across all six events in the 2025 final, extending a streak that has positioned Baylor as the preeminent program in the sport.[172]Baylor Acrobatics & Tumbling athletes have also claimed 53 individual event titles at NCATA Nationals as of 2018, contributing to the program's overall national acclaim in a discipline governed outside NCAA oversight.[7]In the 2024 Paris Olympics, Baylor-affiliated athletes earned a school-record four medals, including two golds, surpassing prior hauls and outpacing 166 nations in total medals won.[173][174] Historical standouts include track and field alum Michael Johnson, who captured four Olympic gold medals across the 200m, 400m, and 4x400m relay events in 1992 and 1996.[106] Other Baylor Olympians, such as Jeremy Wariner and Darold Williamson, have added gold medals in relay competitions, underscoring the track program's pipeline to international individual excellence.[106]
Conference Championships
Baylor University athletic teams have claimed a total of 121 conference championships as of 2018, including 29 from the Southwest Conference (1915–1995) and 92 from the Big 12 Conference (1996–present), with additional titles won since then in multiple sports.[4] These include distinctions between regular-season and tournament crowns, reflecting performance in league play and postseason conference events.In football, Baylor secured three Big 12 titles: co-championships via 8–1 regular-season records in 2013 (shared with Oklahoma) and 2014 (shared with TCU), and the 2021 outright championship via a 21–16 victory over Oklahoma State in the conference title game at AT&T Stadium on December 4.[175][176] The program also won five Southwest Conference championships prior to the Big 12 era.[6]Men's basketball teams have captured multiple Southwest Conference regular-season titles, including in 1948 and 1950, alongside Big 12 honors such as the 2021 regular-season championship with an undefeated 18–0 conference record.[177]Women's basketball has dominated the Big 12, winning 11 tournament championships—the most in league history—along with numerous regular-season titles, such as outright crowns in 2004, 2005, 2012, and 2017.Across other sports, Baylor has aggregated titles including baseball's 2005 Big 12 regular-season championship, softball regular-season and tournament wins (e.g., 2019 co-regular-season), volleyball's 2012 and 2016 Big 12 tournament titles, and equestrian championships in 2008 (regular-season) and 2009 (tournament).[4] These successes span 20 varsity programs, with over 50 Big 12 titles earned from 2011–12 through 2021–22 alone.[4]
The Baylor–TCU football rivalry originated on October 24, 1899, with a scoreless 0–0 tie in the teams' first meeting, when TCU was still located in Waco, Texas.[178] The series, one of the oldest in college football, spans over 120 contests as of 2025, reflecting the in-state competition between the two private Christian universities in Texas.[179]TCU holds a commanding all-time advantage with 49 victories to Baylor's 36.[180]A pivotal moment came on September 2, 2011, when unranked Baylor staged a dramatic 50–48 upset over the No. 14-ranked Horned Frogs, snapping TCU's 25-game regular-season winning streak.[181] Quarterback Robert Griffin III threw for 359 yards and five touchdowns, while kicker Aaron Jones sealed the win with a 37-yard field goal after Baylor squandered a 24-point lead.[182] This victory marked the start of Baylor's resurgence under head coach Art Briles and highlighted the rivalry's potential for high-scoring, back-and-forth affairs.The matchup gained renewed prominence upon TCU's entry into the Big 12 Conference in 2012, restoring annual play after a hiatus. In the Big 12 era, results have shown greater balance compared to TCU's mid-20th-century dominance, with Baylor securing wins in 2013 (30–7) and 2014 (41–31) amid its own conference title runs.[179] Recent games underscore this competitiveness: TCU prevailed 42–22 in 2016, but the October 18, 2025, contest ended 42–36 in TCU's favor after multiple weather delays, maintaining the Horned Frogs' edge in the modern series (12–5 since 2006).[183][184] This ebb and flow, driven by shifts in coaching stability and recruiting, has kept the intrastate clash a focal point of Big 12 scheduling.
Texas Longhorns
The Baylor–Texas football rivalry features an asymmetric dynamic, with the Texas Longhorns historically exerting dominance over the Baylor Bears in a series dating to 1901. As Southwest Conference (SWC) members from 1915 to 1995, Texas won the vast majority of annual matchups, contributing to an all-time record of 69–26–4 in Texas's favor as of 2024.[185] This lopsidedness reflected Texas's superior resources, recruiting advantages, and consistent national contention, while Baylor struggled for relevance, securing only sporadic victories such as the 7–3 upset in Austin on November 11, 1916, their first as conference foes.[186]In the Big 12 Conference era beginning in 1996, Baylor has shown greater competitiveness, particularly during its offensive resurgence under head coach Art Briles from 2008 to 2015, notching key upsets that highlighted shifts in program trajectories. Notable wins include a 30–22 victory on October 30, 2010, in Austin against the defending Big 12 champions, snapping Texas's five-game win streak in the series and signaling Baylor's rising contention; a 30–10 rout on November 30, 2013, at Floyd Casey Stadium that aided Baylor's first Big 12 title; and a 24–10 defensive stand on November 23, 2019, securing Baylor's berth in the conference championship game.[186][187][188] These triumphs, often high-scoring or defensively stout, underscored Baylor's occasional ability to exploit Texas's inconsistencies, though Texas reclaimed dominance post-2020, including a 38–6 rout on September 23, 2023.[189]The rivalry lacks a dedicated trophy, distinguishing it from other Texas intrastate series like Baylor–TCU's Bluebonnet Battle, with stakes deriving instead from conference implications and regional pride.[190] Despite the imbalance, Baylor's modern upsets have fostered renewed intensity, particularly as Texas transitioned to the Southeastern Conference in 2024, potentially reducing annual meetings.[23]
Texas A&M Aggies
The Battle of the Brazos refers to the American football rivalry between the Baylor Bears and Texas A&M Aggies, which originated in the early 20th century and intensified during their competition in the Southwest Conference from 1915 to 1995.[191] The series, played annually or near-annually, featured 91 meetings through 2011, with Texas A&M holding a dominant 55–28–8 edge.[192] Baylor secured its first victory in the matchup on November 6, 1920, defeating Texas A&M 14–10 in Waco, though the Aggies quickly reasserted control with extended winning streaks, including periods of 10 and 12 consecutive triumphs in the mid-20th century.[193]A pivotal event underscoring the rivalry's ferocity occurred on October 30, 1926, during a halftime brawl at Baylor's campus that escalated into a riot involving thousands of spectators and players, resulting in the fatal stabbing of Texas A&M cadet J. W. Melton amid the chaos.[194] The animosity persisted into the Big 12 Conference era (1996–2011), where Texas A&M extended a three-game winning streak from 2009 to 2011, including a 38–30 victory in College Station on October 15, 2011—the final contest before Texas A&M's departure to the Southeastern Conference fractured the series.[192] Tensions peaked that year as Baylor joined a lawsuit against Texas A&M and other departing schools over Big 12 television revenue rights, highlighting institutional conflicts beyond the field.[195]The rivalry has remained dormant since 2012 due to conference realignment, with no games scheduled through the 2025 season and none announced in future non-conference slates for either program.[196] Discussions of reviving the matchup as a non-conference affair have surfaced periodically, driven by regional proximity along the Brazos River and historical fan interest, though logistical challenges including SEC scheduling protections and Baylor's Big 12 commitments have prevented commitments.[197]
Traditions and Identity
Team Colors and Mascots
Baylor University's official athletic colors are green and gold, selected in 1897 by students inspired by the green and gold jerseys worn during an away football game against Texas A&M.[198] These colors first appeared publicly at a Baylor Glee Club concert on March 25, 1897.[198] Over time, variations in shade, particularly gold, emerged across sports programs, with football and women's basketball occasionally using distinct tones.[199] In 2019, the athletic department standardized the palette to Baylor Green (Pantone 357 C) and Championship Gold (Pantone 123 C) as part of a unified branding initiative, ensuring consistency in logos, uniforms, and merchandise.[200]The bear became Baylor's official mascot in 1914, chosen over alternatives like the bookworm to symbolize strength and ferocity.[201] The first live bear arrived on campus in 1917 as a gift from U.S. soldiers stationed at Camp MacArthur in Waco during World War I.[202] In 1974, the student body voted to prefix all subsequent live bears with "Judge" to honor Robert Emmett Bledsoe Baylor, the university's namesake and a former judge.[203] Live bears are maintained at the Baylor Bear Pit, located near the campus football stadium, and appear at select home games and events.[204]Costumed bear mascots supplemented the live tradition starting in 1981, with the first appearing at basketball games sponsored by a local business.[205]Bruiser, the primary costumed malebear, debuted in the late 2000s and handles most game-day performances, tricks, and fan interactions.[206] In 2017, Marigold joined as the female counterpart, expanding the duo's presence at athletic events.[206] These costumed mascots, operated by student handlers, embody the bear's aggressive spirit through dances, skits, and crowd engagement while adhering to safety protocols distinct from the live animals.[201]
Fight Songs, Alma Mater, and Cheers
The official fight song of the Baylor Bears is "Old Fight," with music composed by Frank Boggs and lyrics by Dick Baker in 1947.[207][208] It is traditionally performed by the Golden Wave Marching Band following each score and prior to the fourth quarter during football games.[209]The alma mater, titled "That Good Old Baylor Line," draws from early student-composed words set to the melody of "In the Good Old Summer Time" that emerged around 1906 and gained informal popularity.[210] The modern lyrics were authored by Enid Eastland Markham in 1931, establishing it as the enduring school song sung collectively at the conclusion of athletic events and commencements.[211][210]Prominent cheers include "Sic 'Em Bears," a rallying call voiced by spectators, spirit squads, and the Golden Wave Band, typically paired with a distinctive bear-claw hand signal formed by gripping the knee and extending the arm upward.[212][208] The "Baylor Line" chant, integrated into pre-game and in-game routines, traces its organized origins to the student section's formation in 1970, where freshmen and participants generate unified vocal support to energize the team.[202][213] Additional cheers, such as the Whisper Chant, are led by cheerleaders to build anticipation during timeouts and key moments.[213]
Baylor Line and Homecoming
The Baylor Line is a student-led spirit tradition unique to Baylor University's home football games, comprising exclusively freshmen and transfer students with fewer than 30 credit hours. Participants don gold jerseys emblazoned with "Baylor Line" and rush onto McLane Stadium approximately 15 minutes before kickoff, forming a dense human tunnel through which the Bears football team enters the field amid cheers and green smoke. This ritual, which seats the Line in a reserved lower-level section behind the south end zone, requires members to arrive at least two hours early, stand throughout the first half, and remain until the post-game rendition of the alma mater, "That Good Old Baylor Line."[214][215]Originating in the early 1970s as a freshman cheering group in special T-shirts and a card-stunting section, the Line evolved by the mid-1990s into its signature field-rush format, replacing earlier practices of circling the field perimeter. By 2020, the tradition marked its 50th anniversary, having grown to involve thousands annually and symbolizing initiation into Baylor's community for new students. Restrictions limit participation to eligible underclassmen to preserve its freshman-focused energy, with jerseys issued upon verification of class standing.[216][217]Baylor University's homecoming traces to November 24, 1909, when it hosted what is regarded as the nation's inaugural collegiate homecoming, prompted by alumni postcards urging a campus return to boost spirit ahead of a Thanksgiving Day football matchup against Texas A&M. The debut event featured a mass meeting, bonfire, and parade launching at 2 p.m. from the intersection of 11th Street and Washington Avenue in Waco, drawing over 130 entries including student floats, alumni vehicles, and local bands.[218][219]Subsequent homecomings solidified parades as a central element, with annual processions along Austin Avenue or campus routes showcasing elaborate floats constructed by student organizations, Greek life, and Waco businesses—often themed around Baylor history or current events. By the mid-20th century, parades routinely included the Baylor marching band, equestrian units, and convertible-riding dignitaries, peaking in participation during the 1940s and 1950s with crowds exceeding 10,000 spectators. The tradition persists today, integrating modern elements like drone light shows while maintaining its role in alumni engagement and community bonding.[220][221]
Immortal Ten and Historical Symbols
On January 22, 1927, a bus transporting 21 members of the Baylor University basketball program, including players, coaches, and supporters, collided with a Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad train near Round Rock, Texas, while en route to a game against the University of Texas in Austin.[222] The accident claimed the lives of ten individuals—primarily student-athletes—out of the group, an event that profoundly shaped Baylor's institutional memory and athletic heritage.[223] The victims, dubbed the "Immortal Ten," included figures such as basketball players and a team manager, whose deaths highlighted the perils of early 20th-century travel for collegiate sports teams.[222]In response to the tragedy, Baylor University erected a permanent memorial in 2007 at what was then Traditions Square, now Vera Martin Daniel Plaza, featuring four life-sized bronze statues depicting select members of the Immortal Ten alongside a bas-relief panel portraying the remaining six.[224] Sculpted by artist Bruce Greene after over a decade of planning and fundraising, the monument serves as a tangible historical symbol of the group's sacrifice and Baylor's enduring commitment to commemorating loss through communal resilience.[222] The installation underscores the event's role in prompting broader safety reforms, including reevaluations of railway crossing protocols and school bus designs nationwide.[223]The Immortal Ten's legacy embeds themes of perseverance and collective spirit into Baylor's athletic identity, symbolizing the university's capacity to transform adversity into a foundational narrative of fortitude.[223] This historical emblem reinforces Baylor's lore by emphasizing empirical lessons from the crash—such as the causal risks of inadequate safety measures—while fostering a cultural emphasis on cherishing life amid competitive pursuits.[222] The symbols associated with the Ten, including the campusmonument, continue to evoke these principles without reliance on transient traditions, anchoring the Bears' historical self-conception in verifiable events of human cost and institutional response.[224]
Notable Personnel
Head Coaches
Football head coach Art Briles held the position from 2008 to 2015, posting a 65–37 overall record with a .637 winning percentage, including three 10-win seasons and two Big 12 co-championships in 2013 and 2014.[39] His offensive schemes emphasized high-tempo play, averaging over 40 points per game in peak years like 2014's 11–2 campaign. Briles' tenure elevated Baylor from consistent mediocrity to national relevance, with nine bowl appearances across his and predecessors' eras yielding improved postseason outcomes.[225]Dave Aranda succeeded interim and short-term coaches post-Briles, assuming the role in 2020 with a defensive-minded philosophy rooted in his LSU national championship staff experience.[41] Through the 2024 season, Aranda's record stands at 35–34 (.507 winning percentage), peaking with a 12–2 mark and Sugar Bowl victory in 2021 that secured Baylor's first Big 12 title under his watch.[43] Subsequent seasons showed volatility, including a 3–9 finish in 2023 amid injuries and offensive struggles, though a rebound to bowl eligibility in 2024 demonstrated resilience; the 2025 season is ongoing at 4–4 as of late October.[226] Football coaching turnover has been notable since the early 2000s, with five head coaches in two decades contrasting basketball's stability.[225]Scott Drew has anchored men's basketball since July 2003, inheriting a program tainted by prior scandal and building a 466–259 record (.643 winning percentage) through consistent recruiting and development.[47] Highlights include the 2021 NCAA championship, three Big 12 regular-season titles, and 12 NCAA Tournament appearances, with Drew's adaptive strategies yielding elite defenses ranking top-10 nationally multiple times.[227] His 22-year tenure as of 2025 represents the longest active in the Big 12, fostering a culture of sustained excellence amid conference parity.Nicki Collen took over women's basketball in May 2021 following Kim Mulkey's departure, compiling a 102–36 record (.739 winning percentage) across four seasons by 2025.[228] Collen's emphasis on versatile offenses and player empowerment has preserved Baylor's top-25 consistency, including a 26–8 mark and Elite Eight run in 2023–24, while extending contracts signal institutional confidence through 2030. Her prior WNBA head coaching success with the Atlanta Dream informed a professionalized approach, maintaining the Bears' legacy of four national titles under previous regimes.
Standout Athletes
Baylor's football program has produced several NFL standouts, including linebacker Mike Singletary, who played from 1977 to 1980 and later earned the highest approximate value (AV) rating of 124 among Baylor alumni during a 12-year career with the Chicago Bears, culminating in induction to the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1998 after 10 Pro Bowl selections and a key role in the 1985 Super Bowl victory.[229] Quarterback Robert Griffin III, the 2011 Heisman Trophy winner who led Baylor to an 11-2 record and a Holiday Bowl victory that year, was drafted second overall by the Washington Redskins in 2012, earning Offensive Rookie of the Year honors with 3,200 passing yards, 20 touchdowns, and 815 rushing yards in his debut season.[230] Recent draftees include cornerback Jalen Pitre, selected 21st overall by the Houston Texans in 2022, who recorded 11 passes defended and 4.5 sacks as a rookie.[231]In men's basketball, Elgin Baylor, a forward from 1956 to 1958 who averaged 38.3 points per game as a senior, transitioned to a 14-year NBA career with the Minneapolis/Los Angeles Lakers, scoring 23,149 points for a Hall of Fame induction in 1976 and an NBA FinalsMVP in 1965 despite no championship. The program's highest draft pick came in 2025 with guard VJ Edgecombe, selected third overall by the Philadelphia 76ers—the 15th top-5 pick in Baylor history across sports—and the first Baylor men's basketball player ever taken that high, following a freshman season with 15.0 points, 5.6 rebounds, and 3.0 assists per game.[232] Other NBA alumni include guards like Jared Butler, drafted in 2021's second round by the Utah Jazz.[233]Women's basketball standout Brittney Griner, a center from 2009 to 2013 who set NCAA records with 2,304 rebounds and 736 blocks while leading Baylor to the 2012 undefeated national championship, has won three Olympic gold medals with USA Basketball (2016, 2020, 2024) and averages 17.0 points and 7.6 rebounds per game across 11 WNBA seasons primarily with the Phoenix Mercury.[173] Track and field has yielded Olympians like Michael Johnson, who secured four gold medals across three Games (1992–2000) in the 200m, 400m, and relays, setting world records in both sprints.[103] Baylor athletes earned a school-record four medals at the 2024 Paris Olympics, including Griner's third gold, underscoring sustained elite performance.[234]
Administration
Athletic Directors
Baylor University's athletic department has been led by a series of directors who have influenced facility development, competitive success, and departmental growth. Tom Stanton served from 1996 to 2003, during which he focused on marketing and promotions initiatives following his corporate background.[235]Ian McCaw held the position from September 2003 to May 2016, overseeing significant expansion and achievements, including the construction of McLane Stadium, which opened in 2014 with a capacity of 45,000 seats and cost approximately $250 million, funded through private donations and university resources.[236] Under McCaw, Baylor athletics captured four to five national team championships across sports and secured 56 Big 12 Conference titles, contributing to elevated national rankings in multiple programs such as football, men's basketball, and women's basketball, where the university ranked in the top 25 simultaneously in all three by 2013.[237][238]
Name
Tenure
Key Influences
Tom Stanton
1996–2003
Emphasized athletic marketing and promotions; resigned amid basketball program issues.[235]
Ian McCaw
2003–2016
Directed facility expansions like McLane Stadium; achieved multiple national and conference titles.[236][237]
Mack Rhoades
2016–present
Advanced academic metrics and championships; received national AD recognitions.[239][240]
Mack Rhoades assumed the role on July 13, 2016, bringing experience from prior positions at Missouri and Houston, where he had raised substantial funds for athletics infrastructure.[239] His tenure has emphasized holistic program development, resulting in a 94% student-athlete graduation success rate—the highest in Baylor history—and a cumulative 3.35 GPA across athletes by 2021.[241] Rhoades facilitated key hires, such as football coach Dave Aranda in 2020, and contributed to facility enhancements amid ongoing departmental investments exceeding $100 million in prior roles, extending similar strategies at Baylor for sustained competitiveness.[242] His leadership earned him the 2019–20 NACDA Under Armour AD of the Year and 2021 Sports Business Journal AD of the Year awards, coinciding with the department's first simultaneous Big 12 football and men's basketball national titles in 2021.[240][243]
Current Leadership and Governance
Mack B. Rhoades IV serves as Vice President and Director of Intercollegiate Athletics at Baylor University, overseeing the Baylor Bears athletic programs since July 2016.[244] In this capacity, Rhoades manages compliance with NCAA regulations, strategic planning, and interdepartmental coordination, including representation in conferences such as the Big 12, where he holds influence in policy decisions.[245] On March 4, 2025, Rhoades was appointed chairman of the College Football Playoff selection committee for the 2025 season, extending Baylor's administrative reach into national governance structures.[246]The Board of Regents functions as the primary governing body for Baylor University, including oversight of athletics through committees like the Athletic Council, which addresses program mission, rules compliance, academic integrity, and fiscal responsibility.[247] The Athletic Council ensures adherence to NCAA and conference standards, reviewing governance matters without direct operational control, which remains under Rhoades' executive leadership.[248]NIL activities are governed by university policies emphasizing fair market value compensation and compliance, with partnerships like the October 7, 2025, launch of the Baylor NIL Exchange via Teamworks Influencers providing a portal for student-athletes to access opportunities.[249] An Internal Dispute Mediation Committee, comprising at least three full-time university employees, handles licensing agreement disputes as of June 27, 2025.[250] Additional NIL support includes an August 12, 2025, integration with JABA's AI platform for revenue-sharing era enhancements.[251]Title IX compliance falls under the Equity, Civil Rights, and Title IX Office, which manages reports of sexual and interpersonal misconduct, including those involving athletes, with mandatory reporting protocols directing athletic incidents to this office.[252] A December 16, 2024, federal report highlighted delays in processing Title IX complaints and mishandling of athlete-related cases, prompting ongoing scrutiny of response timelines despite policy frameworks for education, prevention, and investigation.[253][35]Booster involvement is regulated as representatives of athletics interests, subject to NCAA rules prohibiting direct benefits to prospects or athletes; Baylor provides education on these restrictions via dedicated resources to maintain compliance and prevent violations.[254][255] Governance emphasizes separation between boosters and program operations, with the Athletic Council monitoring potential conflicts in funding and engagement.[248]
Controversies and Reforms
2012-2016 Football Sexual Assault Scandal
Between 2012 and 2015, at least 17 women reported incidents of sexual assault, dating violence, or other interpersonal violence involving 19 Baylor University football players, according to findings from an independent investigation commissioned by the university.[256][257] These reports included multiple unreported assaults, such as those by players Tevin Elliott, convicted in January 2014 for a 2012 rape of a freshman; Sam Ukwuachu, convicted in August 2015 for assaulting a transfer student in October 2013; and Devein Chafin, who assaulted a woman twice in 2014.[258][259] University coaches, including head coach Art Briles, received direct notifications of several allegations but often failed to escalate them to Title IX offices, campus police, or external authorities, prioritizing player eligibility and program success.[260][261]Evidence from emails and text messages revealed Briles' awareness and intervention in disciplinary matters; for instance, in response to a 2011 alcohol citation involving a player, Briles texted an assistant coach emphasizing internal handling, a pattern that extended into assault cases where he questioned victims' credibility or minimized reports to avoid external scrutiny.[260][262] Assistant coaches similarly dismissed or delayed reporting, as in a 2013 case where a victim informed a coach of an assault by Ukwuachu, yet no formal investigation followed for over a year despite federal Title IX requirements for prompt action.[263] Baylor's athletic department operated with a culture that insulated football players from accountability, leading to repeated failures in identifying and responding to patterns of predatory behavior among team members.[256]The Pepper Hamilton law firm, hired in June 2015 to review Baylor's handling of sexual violence reports from 2011 to 2015, concluded in May 2016 that the university exhibited "systemic" deficiencies, including deliberate inaction by senior football staff on known risks and a lack of coordination between athletics, Title IX compliance, and law enforcement.[258][257] On May 26, 2016, Baylor's Board of Regents responded by suspending Briles indefinitely with intent to terminate his contract, citing his failure to identify problems and report allegations; athletic director Ian McCaw was placed on probation for similar lapses in oversight.[264][265] McCaw resigned shortly thereafter amid ongoing scrutiny.[266]Subsequent lawsuits by victims provided detailed testimonies of institutional neglect; for example, a 2017 suit alleged a former student-athlete was gang-raped by multiple football players in 2012, with reports to coaches ignored, while another claimed assaults by at least four players went uninvestigated despite notifications to staff.[267][268] These cases underscored how the football program's influence enabled cover-ups, with victims facing retaliation or disbelief when challenging player narratives.[269] The scandal exposed a prioritization of athletic victories—Baylor's football team achieved a 28-0 regular-season record from 2013 to 2015—over victim safety and legal obligations.[9]
NCAA Investigations and Penalties
On August 11, 2021, the NCAA Division I Committee on Infractions issued a decision against Baylor University's football program following an investigation into violations occurring primarily between 2011 and 2016 under former head coach Art Briles.[270] The findings centered on impermissible benefits provided to prospective student-athletes, recruiting inducements, and failures in monitoring and enforcing academic misconduct policies, including instances where football staff shielded athletes from consequences for academic violations.[271] The panel explicitly determined that Baylor's handling of sexual assault allegations did not constitute NCAA rule violations, as such matters fall outside the organization's jurisdiction over athletic eligibility and conduct.[272] However, the decision acknowledged Baylor's admission of "moral and ethical failings" in addressing sexual and interpersonal violence involving football student-athletes, though these were not penalized due to lack of applicable bylaws.[273]Penalties imposed included four years of probation starting August 11, 2021, a $5,000 fine, vacation of all records in which ineligible student-athletes competed, reductions in official paid visits (16 in the 2021-22 academic year and 10 in 2022-23), and limits on recruiting communications and off-campus evaluations.[270] A five-year show-cause penalty was also applied to a former assistant coach for involvement in benefits violations, restricting future employment at NCAA institutions.[270] Notably absent were postseason bans, scholarship reductions, or suspensions for current personnel, leading critics to describe the sanctions as lenient or a "wrist-slap" relative to the documented ethical lapses and institutional cover-up of athlete misconduct.[274] The NCAA panel cited Baylor's self-reporting, cooperation, and prior internal reforms as mitigating factors, though observers argued these did not fully offset the severity of the underlying issues.[275]Dave Aranda was hired as Baylor's head football coach on January 16, 2020, while the NCAA investigation remained unresolved and a infractions hearing was scheduled for April 2020.[276] The subsequent penalties directly affected Aranda's early tenure, imposing recruiting restrictions during the 2021-22 season that limited official visits and staff communications amid the program's ongoing probation.[277] Despite the unresolved case at the time of his hiring, no additional sanctions targeted Aranda or his staff personally.[278]
Post-Scandal Reforms and Ongoing Criticisms
In response to the 2016 Pepper Hamilton investigation, which identified systemic failures in handling sexual assault reports, Baylor University restructured its Title IX operations by creating an independent Title IX office in 2017 and mandating annual training programs on sexual misconduct prevention, reporting protocols, and bystander intervention for all students, faculty, and staff.[279] These reforms included expanded ethics education emphasizing personal accountability and university policy compliance, with specific modules for athletic department personnel on Clery Act reporting and interpersonal violence response.[280] The Big 12 Conference verified the implementation of these Title IX enhancements in October 2018, confirming Baylor's adherence to recommended procedural changes as a condition for continued conference membership.[281]The football program's athletic resurgence provided evidence of institutional recovery, culminating in an undefeated 7-0 Big 12 regular season and a 21-16 victory over Oklahoma State in the December 4, 2021, championship game at AT&T Stadium, securing Baylor's first conference title since joining the Big 12 in 1996.[176] Supporters of the reforms, including university leadership, cited this success alongside the NCAA's August 2021 decision to impose no additional penalties—despite findings of unreported assaults from 2010-2015—as validation of improved compliance and cultural shifts toward ethical oversight in athletics.[272] Baylor officials have emphasized ongoing investments in these programs, reporting full implementation of federal Title IX guidelines and zero-tolerance enforcement mechanisms by 2022.[282]Critics, however, contend that accountability remains inadequate, as evidenced by a U.S. Department of Education investigation concluded on December 16, 2024, which documented persistent delays in Title IX case resolutions—averaging over 180 days in some instances—and improper handling of complaints against football players, including failures to timely notify complainants or impose interim measures.[35] The report identified three football athletes as responsible for policy violations since 2018 but criticized Baylor for systemic lapses that risked revictimization, prompting a required corrective action plan with independent monitoring through 2027.[283] Detractors, including victim advocates, argue these issues reflect enduring cultural prioritization of athletic interests over victim support, with minimized external scrutiny allowing reforms to prioritize optics over substantive change.[10]Under head coach Dave Aranda, hired in 2020, the program has encountered performance volatility, including a 2024 season marred by defensive inconsistencies and a slide to below .500 conference play, fueling skepticism about whether post-scandal cultural reforms have fully permeated team dynamics.[284] While Aranda has publicly stressed discipline and ethics in recruiting, incidents such as his July 2025 use of a derogatory term in a coachinganalogy drew backlash for insensitivity, reigniting debates on leadership's role in fostering accountability amid athletic pressures.[285] Proponents counter that on-field metrics, like sustained top-25 recruiting classes through 2023, demonstrate progress, but ongoing Title IX compliance challenges suggest to skeptics that deeper institutional reckonings are needed to prevent recurrence.[286]