Bears Travel to Missouri With Bowl Hopes on Line
11/7/2005 12:00:00 AM | Football
Nov. 7, 2005
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BAYLOR BEARS (4-5, 1-5) at
BAYLOR TRAVELS TO
Baylor returns to action Saturday, Nov. 12, traveling to
The Bears (4-5, 1-5) suffered a 62-0 setback last Saturday at home against second-ranked
Saturday's game is an important one in both team's bowl hopes. Baylor must win each of its final two games in order to become bowl eligible.
BAYLOR-MISSOURI SERIES
Saturday is the 11th meeting between Baylor and
In 1996, Missouri edged Baylor 49-42 in a triple-overtime game that still stands as the longest game in Baylor football history and is tied for the longest game ever involving two Big 12 schools (Missouri defeated Oklahoma State 41-38 in three overtimes in 2001).
SERIES NOTES: The 1996 game was the first overtime game in Baylor football history. In that game, the Bears scored twice in the final 128 seconds to force the extra periods. Baylor trailed 28-0 at one point in the third quarter. Backup QB Mark Cogdill, who also was an outfielder for the Bears' baseball team, filled in at receiver and led the Bears with seven catches for 86 yards and two TDs. QB Jeff Watson threw for 272 yards and four TDs. ... In the 2001 game, WR Reggie Newhouse tied Baylor single-game records with 12 receptions and three receiving TDs. Trailing 34-3 at halftime, the Bears out-scored
WHAT TO WATCH FOR ...
• Baylor looks to post two conference wins in a season for the first time since 1995 when the Bears were 5-2 in the final season of the Southwest Conference.
• The Bears look for their first five-win season since going 7-4 in 1995.
• Baylor looks for its first season with two conference road wins since 1995 when the Bears had wins at
• Baylor has not scored more than once in a quarter since a 10-point fourth quarter Oct. 8 at
• 2005 Thorpe Award candidate
• Lane should make his 44th career start against Missouri; he has started every game of his collegiate career in which he has played, a streak that is tied for the 12th-longest in Division I-A.
• Senior RT Lequalan McDonald should draw his 33rd straight start along the offensive line against
• WR Trent Shelton has at least one reception in 31 consecutive games, tied for the 13th-longest active streak in Division I-A and the longest at Baylor since Reggie Newhouse's school-record 34-game streak.
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• Junior WR Dominique Zeigler is fifth on Baylor's career receptions list with 103.
• Zeigler is 17th all-time at Baylor with 1,086 career receiving yards. He needs three yards to move into 16th place, and 17 yards to move into 15th place.
• Zeigler has nine career TD receptions, tied for 10th all-time at Baylor. He needs one TD reception to move into a ninth-place tie and two TD receptions to move into a four-way tie for eighth.
• Zeigler has caught at least two passes in each of his last 19 appearances.
• Junior QB Shawn Bell ranks 13th all-time at Baylor with 2,606 career passing yards. He needs 45 yards to move into 12th place and 134 yards to moved into 11th place. With 394 yards, he would become Baylor's 11th 3,000-yard passer.
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• Junior RB Paul Mosley and sophomore RB Brandon Whitaker have combined for 263 touches this season without a fumble.
• Baylor's average starting field position has been its own 30 or better in seven of nine games this season, including a season-best of its own 43 against
• The Bears have scored 49 points off their opponents 19 turnovers while holding opponents to 40 points off their own 22 turnovers.
• Baylor is 7-3 under Morriss when scoring at least 24 points and 7-1 when holding the opponent under 20 points.
• Baylor's defense has allowed 23 or fewer points in six of nine games this season and fewer than 20 points in five of nine games this season.
• Baylor has held six of nine opponents this season to 10 or fewer second-half points.
• The Bears have forced 14 fumbles this season, the most by a Baylor team since the 2001 squad forced 22 fumbles.
• Baylor's defense has 11 interceptions this season, the most by a Baylor team since the 2001 Bears also had 11 picks.
BAYLOR vs. BIG 12 NORTH
Most of Baylor's success in the Big 12 Conference has come against teams from the North Division. The Bears are 5-24 against teams from the North with only two victories (Texas, 1997; Texas A&M, 2004) against teams from the South. Baylor's victories against North teams are as follows:
INJURY REPORT
Senior WR J Fields suffered a left knee injury during an Oct. 18 practice and is out indefinitely. Junior DT Corey Ford (right knee) is out due to a knee injury sustained against Samford.
DIFFICULT STRETCH CONTINUES FOR BEARS
Saturday's game against Missouri is the final of seven consecutive games for the Bears against teams who have at least received votes in at least one of the two major polls at some point this season -- Texas A&M, Iowa State, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Texas Tech, Texas and Missouri. In fact, of those seven opponents, only
BEARS AIM FOR FIRST FIVE-WIN SEASON IN A DECADE
Baylor enters Saturday's game at 4-5 on the season, the first four-win season at Baylor since the 1996 team finished 4-7. A win against
HOME, HOME ON THE ... ROAD?
Baylor entered the 2005 season with a 24-game losing streak in games away from Floyd Casey Stadium, a streak that dated back to the 2000 season opener. However, the Bears won their first three road games this season and since have lost at Texas A&M and at
After years of playing significantly better at home, that trend has reversed for the Bears in 2005. Baylor is better in nearly every statistical category on the road this season, including scoring offense (22.8 road/15.5 home), scoring defense (19.8 road/31.8 home) and, most importantly, record (3-2 road/1-3 home).
CATEGORY ROAD HOME
Scoring Offense 22.8 15.5
Total Offense 335.6 288.5
Passing Offense 202.6 183.2
Rushing Offense 133.0 105.2
Pass Efficiency Offense 109.70 104.76
Scoring Defense 19.8 31.8
Total Defense 328.2 418.5
Passing Defense 189.0 244.8
Rushing Defense 139.2 173.8
Pass Efficiency Defense 94.17 115.07
Turnover Margin +0.2 +0.3
FROM THE
• Attendace: 44,783 -- 25th-largest crowd in Floyd Casey Stadium history.
• Second-largest crowd since joining the Big 12 Conference.
• Largest crowd since
• Sixth-largest crowd ever to see a Baylor-Texas game at Floyd Casey Stadium, largest since
• Baylor's defense did not force a turnover for the first time this season.
• Baylor's 201 total yards were the fewest yards gained since the 173 total yards against
• Baylor's 89 passing yards were the first time under 100 since the 88 yards against
• The 62-point margin of defeat was the largest since a 63-point loss at Texas A&M in 2003 (73-10).
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• QB Terrance Parks made his first start of the season; it was his second career start.
• WR Mikail Baker made his first career start.
• WR Carl Sims made his first career start.
• DT Vincent Rhodes made his first career start.
• DT Quincy Jenkins made his first start of the season; it was his seventh career start.
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HOME ATTENDANCE CLIMBS
Last Saturday's attendance of 44,783 for the
Through four home games, Baylor's season home attendance total stands at 165,758 for an average of 41,440. That would be the largest per-game average in the stadium's 56-year history, breaking the previous record of 41,180 in 1975. Baylor has averaged 40,000-plus only four times -- 1974 (40,560; five games), 1975 (41,180; five games), 1991 (40,061; six games) and 1995 (40,456; four games).
In order to break the 1975 per-game average, Baylor must draw at least 40,142 for the regular-season finale Nov. 19 against
A total of 435,363 fans have seen the Bears play (home and away) this season, already the 17th-largest season total in school history. A total of 101,470 fans would need to attend Baylor's final two games in order to match the school record of 536,833 established in 1997. Baylor's Oct. 22 game at
EVIDENCE OF IMPROVEMENT
In Baylor's three seasons under head coach Guy Morriss, the Bears have improved in 11 of the 14 major team statistical categories tracked by the NCAA. The lone categories in which Baylor ranks lower this season than it did in 2002 are total offense, passing offense and pass efficiency offense. The Bears rank higher in the Big 12 this season in total offense than they did in 2002. Baylor also ranks lower nationally and in the league this season in rushing defense, but the Bears have allowed nearly 10 fewer yards rushing per game.
CATEGORY 2002 NCAA BIG 12 2005 NCAA BIG 12
Scoring Offense 16.8 115 12 19.6 96 11
Total Offense 334.9 95 11 314.7 97 10
Passing Offense 231.5 47 6 194.0 87 9
Rushing Offense 103.4 105 11 120.7 90 9
Pass Efficiency Offense 111.6 85 10 107.8 93 9
Scoring Defense 41.3 114 11 25.1 55 8
Total Defense 405.2 89 10 368.3 55 9
Passing Defense 251.6 93 10 213.8 52 5
Rushing Defense 163.6 69 7 154.6 73 11
Pass Efficiency Defense 147.0 107 11 105.6 12 2
Turnover Margin -1.42 115 12 -0.33 t-72 8
Kickoff Returns 16.3 115 12 25.0 12 2
Punt Returns 8.0 91 11 11.8 26 4
Net Punting 26.6 117 12 35.9 33 6
ANDREWS NEARS RETURNS MARK
Senior OS Willie Andrews enters Saturday's game against
With 51 return yards on three career interception and seven yards on one rushing attempt in 2003, Andrews also enters Saturday's game with 2,583 career all-purpose yards. He needs 24 yards to crack Baylor's career top 10 list. Andrews would have the fewest rushing and receiving yards of any player in Baylor's career top 10 (seven). Of the others in Baylor's top 10, Del Shofner (1954-56) had the next fewest rushing and receiving yards with 1,954.
QB Shawn Bell ranks high in several of Baylor's career passing lists. He ranks 13th in passing yardage (2,606), 10th in attempts (467), 10th in completions (278), first in completion percentage (.595) and first in touchdown-to-interception ratio (16-7, 2.286).
ROCHON FINDS WAYS TO SCORE
With his 98-yard kickoff return for a TD Oct. 22 at
THIRD-AND-LONG TOUGH SPOT FOR BEARS
While Baylor's defense has been one of the league's toughest this season, third-and-long has been a tough spot for the unit. Through nine games, Baylor opponents have faced 80 third-down situations of seven yards or more to convert; they have converted 19 times (23.8 percent). Another seven times, the opponent converted a first down on the subsequent fourth-down play, meaning that opponents have sustained drives 26 of 80 times when facing third-and-long against the Bears (32.5 percent).
Baylor's opponents have scored 13 times on the 22 drives in which they have gained a first down after facing a third-and-long situation -- nine touchdowns and four field goals. The Bears have surrendered two touchdowns this season on third-and-long.
Opponents are 43-of-57 (75.4 percent) on third-down conversions when faced with fewer than six yards to move the chains.
AS FIRST DOWN GOES, SO GO THE BEARS
Much of Baylor's success this year can be directly connected to the team's success on first down. The Bears enter Saturday's game against
However, the telling numbers are the vast differences between Baylor's first-down statistics in its four wins and its five losses. In the four wins, the Bears averaged 5.5 yards per first-down play, including 4.5 yards per first-down rush and a 76.6 completion percentage (32-of-42) with four touchdown passes and only one interception. In the five losses, the Bears averaged 3.3 yards per first-down play, including 3.2 yards per first-down rush and a 45.9 completion percentage (28-of-61) with one touchdown and three interceptions.
LANE CLIMBS CAREER TACKLES CHART
Player Seasons Solo Asst TT
1. Mike Singletary 1977-80 351 311 662
2. Ray Berry 1983-86 231 149 380
4. Kris Micheaux 1997-00 214 137 351
5. James Francis 1986-89 198 136 334
6. Doak Field 1977-80 164 166 330
7. Thomas Everett 1983-86 204 121 325
8. Gary Joe Kinne 1986-89 179 144 323
9. Mike Welch 1986-90 190 129 319
10. Joe Campbell 1977-80 170 146 316
THREE AMIGOS: PART SIX
WRs Dominique Zeigler (39), Shaun Rochon (32) and Trent Shelton (32) give Baylor three receivers with at least 30 receptions each this season, just the sixth Baylor trio to do so. Last season, Zeigler (55) and
Here is a look at the nine seasons in which Baylor's top three receivers have combined for 100 or more receptions along with the six seasons in which those three receivers had at least 30 receptions each:
• 1963 -- 129 receptions
• 1964 -- 127 receptions (Lawrence Elkins - 50, Ken Hodge - 35,
• 1966 -- 109 receptions (Tommy Smith - 41, Paul Becton - 38, Jack Eisenhart - 30)
• 1983 -- 113 receptions
• 1998 -- 107 receptions (Morris Anderson - 37, Derek Lagway - 37, Derrius Thompson - 33)
• 2001 -- 129 receptions (Reggie Newhouse - 61, Andra Fuller - 36, John Martin - 32)
• 2002 -- 140 receptions
• 2004 -- 127 receptions (Dominique Zeigler - 55, Trent Shelton - 37, Marques Roberts - 35)
• 2005 -- 103 receptions (Dominique Zeigler - 39, Shaun Rochon - 32, Trent Shelton - 32)
ZEIGLER,
Junior WRs Trent Shelton and Dominique Zeigler enter Saturday's game against
BAYLOR SECONDARY AMONG NATION'S BEST
Through games of Nov. 5, Baylor ranks second in the Big 12 Conference and 12th nationally with a pass efficiency defense rating of 105.55. The Bears have allowed only 10 passing touchdowns with 11 interceptions. Baylor has allowed a minimum of 13 TD passes in nine straight seasons and yielded 28 last season. Opposing quarterbacks have completed just 51.1 percent of their passes for 213.8 yards per game.
Baylor intercepted only four passes in 11 games last season; the Bears have nearly tripled that total through nine games this fall. Six different players have interceptions this season, including five different defensive backs. CBs C.J. Wilson has four picks, tied for the Big 12 lead and tied for 18th nationally, and CB Anthony Arline has three picks, sixth in the Big 12 and tied for 50th nationally. DT M.T. Robinson has the 11th interception.
BAYLOR IN BIG 12 CONFERENCE STATISTICAL RANKINGS
Through games of Nov. 5, Baylor ranks 10th (97th nationally) in total offense (314.7 ypg), ninth (90th) in rushing offense (120.7 ypg), ninth (87th) in passing offense (194.0 ypg), ninth (93rd) in passing efficiency (107.8) and 11th (96th) in scoring offense (19.6 ppg).
In special teams, the Bears are fourth (26th) in net punting (35.9 ypp), fourth (26th) in punt returns (11.8 ypr) and second (12th) in kickoff returns (25.0 ypr). Baylor ranks eighth (t-72nd) in turnover margin (minus-0.33 per game).
Individually, several Bears appear in this week's rankings. RB Paul Mosley is 11th in rushing (65.3 ypg), while RB Brandon Whitaker is 19th (44.1 ypg). QB Shawn Bell is eighth in passing efficiency (114.27), eighth in passing yardage (185.8 ypg) and ninth in total offense (182.8 ypg). WR Dominique Zeigler ranks ninth in receptions per game (4.2), while WRs Shaun Rochon (3.6) and Trent Shelton (3.6) are tied for 16th. In receiving yards per game, Zeigler (51.9) ranks 12th and
Defensively, CB C.J. Wilson is tied for the Big 12 lead (t-18th nationally) with 0.44 interceptions per game, while CB Anthony Arline (0.33) is sixth (t-50th).
P Daniel Sepulveda ranks second (fourth) with 45.5 yards per punt. Rochon leads the Big 12 (16th nationally) with 27.6 yards per kickoff return, while Andrews (24.1 ypr) ranks fourth (41st). Andrews also ranks seventh (39th) in punt returns (10.2 ypr). PK Ryan Havens is fourth (t-33rd) with 1.3 field goals made per game. In all-purpose yardage, Rochon (92.1) ranks 11th, while Mosley (75.8) ranks 23rd.
WR Trent Shelton enters the Missouri game having caught at least one pass in 31 consecutive games, the longest such string for a Bear since Reggie Newhouse ended his career with a 34-game streak (2000-2002).
46 - Charles Sharon, WR,
45 - Jovon Bouknight, WR,
39 - Chris Francies, WR, UTEP
38 - Derek Hagan, WR,
38 - Bill Sampy, WR, Louisiana-Lafayette
37 - Mark Philmore, WR, Northwestern
36 - Garrett Mills, TE,
35 - Nichiren Flowers, WR,
34 - Steve Odom, WR,
33 - Johnny Quinn, WR,
33 - Mark Simmons, WR,
32 - Vincent Marshall, WR, Houston
31 - Trent Shelton, WR, BAYLOR
31 - Brian Leonard, FB,
31 - Tres Moses, WR,
30 - Jeff Webb, WR,
29 - Martin Nance, WR,
28 - Ryne Robinson, WR,
ANDREWS,
OS Willie Andrews, QB Shawn Bell and P Daniel Sepulveda all rank among the NCAA's top career active leaders in sundry statistical categories.
Andrews is tied for third in career punt returns (90), fifth in punt return yardage (878), 14th in punt returns per game (2.0), ninth in kickoff returns (67), 10th in kickoff return yardage (1,647) and 10th in yards per kickoff return (24.6).
Shaun Rochon's 98-yard kickoff return for a touchdown Oct. 22 at
• 2003 vs. UAB -- James Todd blocked punt for safety
• 2003 vs.
• 2003 at
• 2003 at
• 2003 vs. Texas Tech -- Robert Quiroga 100-yard kickoff return
• 2003 vs.
• 2004 vs.
• 2004 vs.
• 2004 vs.
• 2005 vs. Samford -- Jamaal Harper 29-yard fumble return (forced by Colin Allred)
• 2005 vs. Samford -- Shaun Rochon 85-yard punt return
• 2005 at
Junior QB Shawn Bell was among 12 student-athletes named to the American Football Coaches Association's 2005 Good Works Team, the AFCA announced recently.
The two teams, a Division I-A team and a combined team from Divisions I-AA, II, III and the NAIA, honor players for their dedication and commitment to community service. From 1992-1996, the Good Works Team was selected by the College Football Association. When the CFA disbanded in 1997, the AFCA began selecting the teams.
SPECIAL SPECIAL TEAMS
The strongest facet of Baylor's squad in Guy Morriss' two seasons on the sideline has arguably been its special teams play. After recording four scores in 2003, the Bears' 2004 special team units tallied two more scores and featured the 2004 Ray Guy Award winner in Daniel Sepulveda and consensus first-team All-Big 12 return specialist Willie Andrews.
The 2004 Bears, who ranked No. 5 nationally in net punting (40.6 ypp), No. 35 in kickoff returns (21.7 ypr) and No. 36 in punt returns (11.1 ypr), were the only Big 12 team to rank among the nation's top 36 in all three of those statistical categories a year ago. Perhaps even more impressive is the fact that in the year prior to Mark Nelson's arrival as Baylor's special teams coordinator the program ranked 91st nationally in punt returns, 115th in kickoff returns and 117th in net punting.
Sepulveda captured the Ray Guy Award as the nation's top collegiate punter after ranking No. 3 nationally with his 46.0 yard average and Andrews led the league and ranked 24th nationally in kickoff returns with his 24.7 yard mark.
A senior outside safety who will again contend for All-Big 12 and All-America honors, Andrews ranked No. 6 in the Big 12 and No. 65 nationally in 2004 with 107.6 all-purpose yards per game despite not taking a snap on the offensive side of the ball. He also led the Big 12 and ranked 24th nationally in kickoff returns (24.7 ypr) while standing No. 3 in the league and No. 43 nationally in punt returns (10.8 ypr).
BEARS GROWING UP
After fielding the nation's second-youngest team a year ago (only SMU at 76.1 percent had a higher percentage of underclassmen on its 2004 roster than Baylor, whose roster was 71.1 percent underclassmen) third-year coach Guy Morriss' 2005 Baylor squad will arguably be the most-seasoned of his tenure in
Baylor's 132-man 2005 roster includes 19 seniors, 34 juniors, 25 sophomores and 54 freshmen. The Bears' 2004 roster, by comparison, included some 96 underclassmen among the 135 players listed.
2005 BEARS FACE SIX 2004 BOWL TEAMS
After playing eight of 11 games a year ago against teams that went on to earn bowl invitations, Baylor will tackle six 2004 bowl squads in 2005. However, that's really nothing new for coach Guy Morriss' program: 15 times in Morriss' first two seasons (including 13 of 16 Big 12 contests), Baylor faced an opponent which wound up with a bowl bid at season's end.
The Bears' 2005 opponents combined for a 70-58 (.545) record a year ago and six earned bowl invites -- Texas A&M, Iowa State, Oklahoma, Texas Tech, Texas and Oklahoma State.
All-told, six of BU's eight 2005 Big 12 games will be against teams that earned bowl bids last year. The Bears' eight Big 12 foes went 61-34 (.642) last year and accounted for six of the league's seven 2004 bowl bids.
Two of Baylor's three wins a year ago and six of its eight losses were at the hands of eventual bowl-bound teams. The Bears knocked off Cotton Bowl participant Texas A&M (35-34 in overtime) and New Orleans Bowl entrant
Baylor and
BAND OF BROTHERS
Baylor's 2005 roster features three sets of brothers: the Boatners (junior Yancy and true freshman Thad), Jenkins (junior
COACHING STAFF BOASTS 198 YEARS OF EXPERIENCE
The 2005 Baylor football coaching staff boasts a combined 198 years of sideline experience in the professional, collegiate and high school ranks. Six members of this year's staff -- Larry Hoefer (safeties), Harold Jackson (wide receivers), Chris Lancaster (offensive line), Wesley McGriff (cornerbacks/recruiting coordinator), Mark Nelson (linebackers/special teams coordinator and Brent Pease (offensive coordinator/quarterbacks) -- have been with Guy Morriss since he first became a Division I-A head coach in 2001 at Kentucky. Entering his fifth season as a head coach, Morriss was recently rated as one of the nation's eight most underrated coaches by SportsIllustrated.com.
The newest member of the Baylor staff is 26-year coaching veteran Don Wnek who replaced Tom Adams as the Bears' defensive line coach on
Not only is the Baylor staff steeped in sideline experience, but it features three men, Morriss (one), defensive coordinator Bill Bradley (three) and Jackson (five), who combined to earn nine NFL All-Pro awards between them. Two others, Nelson and Pease, also enjoyed successful professional football playing careers.
TRANSFERS FIND HOME AT BAYLOR
Baylor's 2005 depth chart features seven players who began their collegiate careers at other Division I-A programs but have since found their way to
Tulane transfer Will Blaylock missed nearly all of Baylor's spring drills with an ankle injury, but the junior is listed as the Bears' top center. Sophomore Jordan Adams stands No. 3 at tight end after joining the program from
On the defensive side of the ball, sophomore Nick Moore, who lettered at Georgia Tech as a true freshman in 2003, is No. 2 at linebacker behind senior Jamaal Harper and another Tulane transfer, sophomore Alton Widemon, is No. 2 at cornerback.
Junior Paul Howard, the Bears' No. 2 defensive end, began his collegiate career at Texas Tech and played there as a redshirt freshman, and DT Klayton Shoals redshirted as a true freshman at Iowa State before joining the Baylor program.
Howard, Price and Shoals both lettered for the Bears in 2004 while the other four were in the program but sat out due to NCAA transfer rules.
BAYLOR AGAIN LEADS BIG 12 IN GRADUATION RATES
For the fifth time in the Big 12 Conference's nine-year history, Baylor University posted the highest student-athlete graduation rate of any league institution, according to figures released by the NCAA last fall.
The Bears' most-recent graduation rates, for the freshman class of 1997-98, is 78 percent, a school record by four points over the previous high of 74 percent in 2000. That figure is also 8 points higher than Baylor's general student population and 16 points better than the NCAA Division I national average of 62 percent.
Baylor also graduated a Big 12-best 76 percent of its male student-athletes and a league-high 82 percent of its female student-athletes. The Baylor football program produced a Big 12-leading 88 percent graduation rate, marking the fifth time in the league's history it set the standard for classroom excellence.
Among Division I-A institutions, Baylor's overall student-athlete graduation rate ranked as the nation's 10th-highest mark according to the most-recent NCAA figures.
In addition to leading the Big 12 in graduation rates five times, Baylor ranked second on three other occasions. All-told, 88 percent of Baylor student-athletes who exhausted their eligibility and entered school from 1988-89 through 1997-98 left with degree in hand according to the NCAA study.
LONE STAR TIES
The Bears' 132-man roster features 120 players who played their high school football in the Lone Star state. The other 12 players on Baylor's roster hail from
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NEXT UP...
Baylor concludes the 2005 regular season Saturday, Nov. 19, hosting