“This is unbelievably believable. “It's unbelievable because in the moment we're all amazed when great things happen. But it's believable because great things don't happen without hard work.”
The words above come from Robert Griffin III's Heisman Trophy acceptance speech back in 2011. Those same words seem appropriate as a description of my reaction to the fact that the BAYLOR BEARS ARE NATIONAL CHAMPIONS IN BASKETBALL!
Much has been said and written about the job that Scott Drew has done with the Baylor program. Some people have called it the best rebuilding job in college basketball history. But to "rebuild" something implies that there was a foundation or something there from which to rebuild. In the case of Baylor basketball, I'm not sure that's really the case.
Many of you may be aware of the sordid goings on that ultimately led to Scott Drew's arrival in Waco. His predecessor, Dave Bliss, was fired after one player murdered another player and then Bliss tried to cover up illicit and impermissible tuition payments by painting the deceased player as a drug dealer. It was a disgusting and disturbing situation which led to Bliss's termination as well as the termination of the athletic director and the resignation of the university president, not to mention the tragic death of the player. At that point in time, considering all of the awful things that had occurred, the Baylor head coaching job wasn't just a bad job - it might have been the worst major conference job in the country. Scott Drew accepted the job knowing that the program was going to be handed serious penalties (including an unprecedented ban on all non-conference games in the 2005-06 season) and scholarship reductions. Needless to say, it was a daunting task and he was not walking into a good situation.
But, even if you said aside the mess that the program became under Bliss, Baylor was a moribund program with little history of success or prestige. Sure, they went to two Final Fours in three years between 1948 and 1950, but then they followed that up with decades of irrelevance. Sure, they had a few really good players who went on to have successful NBA careers (Vinnie "The Microwave" Johnson and Brian Skinner), but that's about it. Consider the following:
- Between 1951 and 2010 (60 seasons), Baylor had zero NCAA tournament wins
- Between 1951 and 2007 (57 seasons), Baylor only had 1 NCAA appearance
- In the 2,197 games of Baylor basketball history prior to Drew's arrival in Waco, Baylor had only been ranked in the Top 25 for two of them
That belief first bore some semblance of fruit in 2008 when Baylor won 20 games and was selected for the NCAA tournament for the first time in 20 years. The Bears' stay in the NCAA tournament was short-lived, getting knocked out in the first round by Purdue. They followed that up in the 2008-09 season with another 20 win campaign and a run to the championship game of the NIT. But Drew and the Bears finally broke through on a national level in 2010 when they won a school record 28 games and advanced to the Elite Eight where they lost a heartbreaker to Duke after some questionable, late game officiating. ("It was a block!!!") The Bears returned to the Elite Eight two years later when they set another school record with 30 wins. Drew still had his doubters - he wasn't the best at making in-game adjustments and some highly touted recruits didn't seem to develop during their time in Waco - but he had at least made Baylor basketball relevant again and proved that it could compete not just within the Big 12 but on a national scale.
The Bears won an NIT championship in 2013, followed by four consecutive NCAA tournament appearances, including two Sweet 16s. But the best was yet to come...
Anchored by the best backcourt in America, the Bears went on a two year run of excellence that pushed them to the upper echelon of college basketball programs. In 2019-20, the Bears at one point won 23 games in a row - including a blowout win over Kansas at Allen Fieldhouse - in route to their first ever #1 ranking and a 2nd place conference finish. They were on the cusp of a #1 seed in the NCAA tournament when COVID hit and the tournament got cancelled. Baylor fans everywhere were despondent. The best team in school history never got a chance to show what they could do on the biggest stage. Some of their much ballyhooed backcourt seemed headed to the NBA and it looked like the Bears' window to finally get back to the Final Four was closing.
...And then a funny thing happened. Those incredible guards decided to keep the band together and come back to Waco for one more year. And, as good as the Bears were in 2019-20, they were even better in 2020-21, routinely trouncing opponents with a shut down defense and an explosive offense that led the nation in 3 point field goal percentage. They finally ended Baylor's conference championship drought with the first conference title since 1950 - a run of 71 years. But that was just the appetizer before the main course; just the preview of coming attractions before the main event. Baylor didn't just go on to make the Final Four and win a national championship. They did emphatically. Consider the following:
- In their last 7 halves of basketball (2nd half of Sweet 16 vs. Villanova, Elite Eight vs. Arkansas, Final Four vs. Houston and national title game vs. Gonzaga), Baylor trailed for a TOTAL of less than 5 minutes.
- They never trailed against Arkansas or Gonzaga, leading from buzzer to buzzer. While they did briefly trail early on against Houston, they were up by 25 at halftime. They didn't just win those games, they completely dominated their opponents, removing any doubt about who the best team in the country was.