2012 Baylor Bears football team

American college football season

2012 Baylor Bears football
Holiday Bowl champion
Holiday Bowl, W 49–26 vs. UCLA
ConferenceBig 12 Conference
Record8–5 (4–5 Big 12)
Head coach
  • Art Briles (5th season)
Co-offensive coordinatorRandy Clements (5th season)
Co-offensive coordinatorPhilip Montgomery (5th season)
Offensive schemeVeer and shoot
Defensive coordinatorPhil Bennett (2nd season)
Base defense4–3
Home stadiumFloyd Casey Stadium
Seasons
← 2011
2013 →
2012 Big 12 Conference football standings
  • v
  • t
  • e
Conf Overall
Team   W   L     W   L  
No. 12 Kansas State $+   8 1     11 2  
No. 15 Oklahoma +   8 1     10 3  
No. 19 Texas   5 4     9 4  
Oklahoma State   5 4     8 5  
Baylor   4 5     8 5  
TCU   4 5     7 6  
Texas Tech   4 5     8 5  
West Virginia   4 5     7 6  
Iowa State   3 6     6 7  
Kansas   0 9     1 11  
  • $ – BCS representative as conference champion
  • + – Conference co-champions
Rankings from AP Poll

The 2012 Baylor Bears football team represented Baylor University in the 2012 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was coached by Art Briles and played its home games at Floyd Casey Stadium in Waco, Texas. The Bears were members of the Big 12 Conference. The conference slate began with a trip to Morgantown, West Virginia to take on the West Virginia Mountaineers, and concluded at home against the Oklahoma State Cowboys. On December 2, Baylor accepted a berth in the 2012 Holiday Bowl to face #17 UCLA, where they defeated the Bruins, 49–26, on December 27.

Schedule

DateTimeOpponentRankSiteTVResultAttendance
September 25:30 p.m.SMU*FSNW 59–2443,514
September 156:00 p.m.No. 2 (FCS) Sam Houston State*
  • Floyd Casey Stadium
  • Waco, Texas
FCS CentralW 48–2344,856
September 217:00 p.m.at Louisiana–Monroe*ESPNW 47–4231,175
September 2911:00 a.m.at No. 9 West VirginiaNo. 25FXL 63–7060,012
October 136:00 p.m.TCU
  • Floyd Casey Stadium
  • Waco, Texas (rivalry)
FSNL 21–4942,524
October 207:00 p.m.at No. 25 TexasABCL 50–56101,353
October 276:00 p.m.at Iowa StateFSNL 21–3554,877
November 32:30 p.m.Kansas
  • Floyd Casey Stadium
  • Waco, Texas
FSNW 41–1439,039
November 102:30 p.m.at No. 12 OklahomaFSNL 34–4284,945
November 177:00 p.m.No. 2 Kansas State
  • Floyd Casey Stadium
  • Waco, Texas
ESPNW 52–2438,029
November 241:30 p.m.vs. Texas TechFOXW 52–45 OT44,168
December 111:00 a.m.No. 23 Oklahoma State
  • Floyd Casey Stadium
  • Waco, Texas
FXW 41–3439,203
December 278:45 p.m.vs. No. 17 UCLA*ESPNW 49–1955,507

[1]

Rankings

Ranking movements
Legend: ██ Increase in ranking ██ Decrease in ranking
— = Not ranked RV = Received votes
Week
PollPre1234567891011121314Final
APRVRVRVRV25RVRVRVRVRV
CoachesRVRVRVRV24RVRVRVRV
HarrisNot releasedRVRVRVRVNot released
BCSNot releasedNot released

Game summaries

SMU

SMU at Baylor
1 234Total
Mustangs 0 3714 24
Bears 14 102114 59
Sources:

Baylor came into the game 71–35–4 in season openers; in the series history between Baylor and SMU, SMU held a slim lead at 36–35–7, including an 18–17–3 record in Waco.[2] The Bears struck first, going ahead 14–0 in the first quarter on touchdown passes from quarterback Nick Florence to wide receiver Lanear Sampson and tight end Jordan Najvar. In the second quarter, SMU scored a field goal to make the score 14–3. In a subsequent drive, the Mustangs advanced to the Baylor 9-yard-line before a tipped Garrett Gilbert pass was intercepted. Baylor scored a touchdown on the ensuing 75-yard, 39 second, three play drive to increase its lead to 21–3. That touchdown represented the first of 31 unanswered Baylor points in the second and third quarters, leaving Baylor with a commanding lead of 45–3 before SMU scored a touchdown with 1:58 remaining in the 3rd quarter. Both teams would tack on a pair of touchdowns in the fourth quarter, with both teams' last touchdowns coming on passes from their backup quarterbacks (Baylor's Brice Petty and SMU's Conner Preston). The Bears' 59–24 win was their 7th consecutive win since the team's loss to Oklahoma State (October 29, 2011), and the fifth consecutive game that the Baylor offense scored 40 points or more.[3]

Scoring summary
Quarter Time Drive Team Scoring information Score
Plays Yards TOP SMU Baylor
1 11:18 10 75 3:42 Baylor Lanear Sampson 6-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 0 7
1 6:27 7 74 1:40 Baylor Jordan Najvar 5-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 0 14
2 12:52 16 66 6:16 SMU 22-yard field goal by Chase Hover 3 14
2 2:02 3 75 0:39 Baylor Tevin Reese 50-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 3 21
2 0:00 16 50 0:59 Baylor 44-yard field goal by Aaron Jones 3 24
3 10:22 Baylor Fumble recovery returned 66 yards for touchdown by Bayl Mike Hicks, Aaron Jones kick good 3 31
3 6:11 9 60 1:59 Baylor Jarred Salubi 9-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 3 38
3 2:39 2 74 0:33 Baylor Lanear Sampson 36-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 3 45
3 1:58 2 75 0:41 SMU Der'rikk Thompson 42-yard touchdown reception from Garrett Gilbert, Chase Hover kick good 10 45
4 11:34 6 25 2:06 Baylor Glasco Martin 1-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 10 52
4 4:49 16 73 6:45 SMU Jeremy Johnson 4-yard touchdown reception from Garrett Gilbert, Chase Hover kick good 17 52
4 4:00 4 75 0:49 Baylor Darryl Stonum 37-yard touchdown reception from Bryce Petty, Kolton Lye kick good 17 59
4 2:25 4 72 1:35 SMU Gehrig Dieter 40-yard touchdown reception from Conner Preston, Chase Hover kick good 24 59
"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football. 24 59

Sam Houston State

#2 Sam Houston State at Baylor
1 234Total
#2 Bearkats 3 1703 23
Bears 3 71424 48
Sources:

The Bears and Bearkats met each other for the fourth time in school history. All 4 games have been in Waco. Baylor owned a 3–0 advantage.[4] SHSU was led by quarterback Brian Bell, the younger brother of former Baylor quarterback Shawn Bell (2003–2006). The teams traded field goals in a low-scoring first quarter, and SHSU dominated the second quarter, taking a 20–10 lead into the half. Baylor, however, dominated the second half, outscoring the Bearkats 38–3, with Florence chalking up two touchdown passes and running backs Glasco Martin IV and Lache Seastrunk adding touchdown runs of 5 and 15 yards, respectively. Darius Jones provided the Bears' final touchdown, returning an interception 73 yards to seal a 48–23 Baylor victory.[5]

Scoring summary
Quarter Time Drive Team Scoring information Score
Plays Yards TOP Sam Houston State Baylor
1 13:00 8 60 2:00 Baylor 30-yard field goal by Aaron Jones 0 3
1 5:02 9 39 3:26 Sam Houston State 31-yard field goal by Miguel Antonio 3 3
2 14:01 10 74 3:04 Sam Houston State 23-yard field goal by Miguel Antonio 6 3
2 12:52 5 77 1:09 Baylor Terrance Williams 22-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 6 10
2 10:00 7 75 2:52 Sam Houston State Brian Bell 1-yard touchdown run, Miguel Antonio kick good 13 10
2 1:30 12 76 6:07 Sam Houston State Tim Flanders 26-yard touchdown reception from Brian Bell, Miguel Antonio kick good 20 10
3 14:10 1 9 0:05 Baylor Jordan Najvar 9-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Miguel Antonio kick good 20 17
3 6:17 11 66 3:13 Baylor Terrance Williams 18-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Miguel Antonio kick good 20 24
4 11:17 7 27 2:41 Sam Houston State 28-yard field goal by Miguel Antonio 23 24
4 10:33 3 75 0:44 Baylor Glasco Martin 5-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 23 31
4 8:48 4 3 1:25 Baylor 26-yard field goal by Aaron Jones 23 34
4 2:10 1 15 0:05 Baylor Lache Seastrunk 15-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 23 41
4 00:12 Baylor Interception returned 73 yards for touchdown by Darius Jones, Aaron Jones kick good 23 48
"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football. 23 48

Louisiana–Monroe

Baylor at Louisiana–Monroe
1 234Total
Bears 0 241013 47
Warhawks 14 7714 42
Sources:

The Bears and the Warhawks had never met prior to this Friday night game in the fourth week of the 2012 season.[6] In the preceding two weeks, the Warhawks had stunned the college football world by defeating then #8 Arkansas 34–31 in overtime and taking Auburn to overtime in a 31–28 loss at Auburn.[7][8] With excitement surrounding the Louisiana-Monroe program at an all-time high, the Bears traveled to Monroe to face the Warhawks in their home opener before a Malone Stadium-record crowd of 31,175. ULM struck first, capitalizing on two interceptions to take a 14–0 lead in the 1st quarter. Baylor outscored the Warhawks 34–14 in the next two quarters, and took a 34–28 lead into the fourth with ULM driving. The Warhawks would score on their drive spanning the third and fourth quarters to go ahead 35–34, but the Bears would answer with a 14-play, 73-yard drive of their own to go ahead 40–35 (a two-point conversion attempt failed). Baylor subsequently forced a fumble and drove down the field for another touchdown to make the score 47–35. ULM, fighting to the end, struck back to score a touchdown and pull within 5 points of Baylor; however, with only 6 seconds remaining, the subsequent onside kick was recovered by the Bears. The victory represented Baylor's ninth consecutive win, which at the time was the second-longest winning streak in the nation behind TCU. The game also represented the Bears' seventh consecutive game in which they scored more than 40 points.[9]

Scoring summary
Quarter Time Drive Team Scoring information Score
Plays Yards TOP Baylor Louisiana-Monroe
1 7:43 4 44 1:11 Louisiana-Monroe Tevarese Maye 22-yard touchdown reception from Kolton Browning, Justin Manton kick good 0 7
1 1:33 7 76 2:46 Louisiana-Monroe Monterrell Washington 9-yard touchdown run, Justin Manton kick good 0 14
2 14:22 7 75 2:11 Baylor Tevin Reese 22-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 7 14
2 12:00 5 75 2:22 Louisiana-Monroe Monterrell Washington 48-yard touchdown run, Justin Manton kick good 7 21
2 7:51 11 68 4:09 Baylor Glasco Martin 1-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 14 21
2 5:25 1 48 0:07 Baylor Tevin Reese 48-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 21 21
2 0:00 12 51 1:55 Baylor 34-yard field goal by Aaron Jones 24 21
3 13:10 5 75 1:50 Louisiana-Monroe Jyrus Edwards 58-yard touchdown run, Justin Manton kick good 24 28
3 8:13 4 68 1:13 Baylor Tevin Reese 46-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 31 28
3 1:48 11 25 3:53 Baylor 21-yard field goal by Aaron Jones 34 28
4 10:54 15 75 5:54 Louisiana-Monroe Kolton Browning 1-yard touchdown run, Justin Manton kick good 34 35
4 7:10 14 73 3:44 Baylor Levi Norwood 9-yard touchdown run, 2-point run by Nick Florence fumbled failed 40 35
4 2:25 8 62 3:15 Baylor Terrance Williams 22-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 47 35
4 0:06 12 90 2:19 Louisiana-Monroe Brent Leonard 15-yard touchdown reception from Kolton Browning, Justin Manton kick good 47 42
"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football. 47 42

West Virginia

#25 Baylor at #9 West Virginia
1 234Total
#25 Bears 14 21721 63
#9 Mountaineers 14 212114 70
Sources:

In this first-ever meeting of the two schools, #25 Baylor traveled to Morgantown, West Virginia to take on early Heisman favorite Geno Smith and the #9 ranked Mountaineers in their Big XII conference debut. With the teams featuring offenses among the best and defenses among the worst that the FBS had to offer, the stage was set for an offensive shootout. After an early Nick Florence interception led to a WVU drive capped by a missed field goal, the offenses matched each other score for score in a first half which saw 10 touchdowns in 15 drives. The half concluded dramatically: with WVU leading 35–28, Florence was forced from the pocket and, inches from crossing the line of scrimmage, unleashed a 67-yard touchdown pass while scrambling as time expired. The teams went into the half tied 35–35. West Virginia pulled away in the 3rd quarter with 21 points to Baylor's 7 and clung tenaciously to the lead, scoring two more touchdowns in the 4th to Baylor's three. The Mountaineers' victorious Big XII debut proved to be a record-setting affair: Geno Smith tied a conference record with eight passing touchdowns (having completed 45/51 attempts, he finished the game with more touchdown passes than incompletions); Nick Florence and Geno Smith set school records for single-game passing yardage (581 and 656 yards, respectively); West Virginia set a school record for total yardage (807 yards); Stedman Bailey hauled in a school record 5 touchdown receptions; and Bailey also set a Big XII conference record for single-game receiving yards (303 yards) only to see that surpassed moments later by Baylor's Terrance Williams, who finished with 314 receiving yards. Following the game, WVU moved to #8 in the AP poll, and Baylor dropped from the rankings.[10][11] With 133 points combined, this game was the highest-scoring FBS game of 2012.

Scoring summary
Quarter Time Drive Team Scoring information Score
Plays Yards TOP Baylor West Virginia
1 9:12 5 67 1:32 Baylor Jarred Salubi 1-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 7 0
1 5:32 9 75 3:40 West Virginia Andrew Buie 1-yard touchdown run, Tyler Bitancurt kick good 7 7
1 2:39 9 54 2:53 Baylor Glasco Martin IV 7-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 14 7
1 0:42 6 60 1:57 West Virginia J.D. Woods 7-yard touchdown reception from Geno Smith, Tyler Bitancurt kick good 14 14
2 9:00 4 23 1:03 Baylor Glasco Martin IV 1-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 21 14
2 6:55 6 75 2:05 West Virginia Stedman Bailey 47-yard touchdown reception from Geno Smith, Tyler Bitancurt kick good 21 21
2 6:21 2 68 0:34 Baylor Tevin Reese 65-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 28 21
2 4:54 5 59 1:27 West Virginia Stedman Bailey 20-yard touchdown reception from Geno Smith, Tyler Bitancurt kick good 28 28
2 0:29 8 87 1:58 West Virginia Stedman Bailey 2-yard touchdown reception from Geno Smith, Tyler Bitancurt kick good 28 35
2 0:00 2 65 0:29 Baylor Lanear Sampson 67-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 35 35
3 12:31 7 75 2:29 West Virginia Tavon Austin 45-yard touchdown reception from Geno Smith, Tyler Bitancurt kick good 35 42
3 9:13 7 84 2:48 West Virginia Tavon Austin 52-yard touchdown reception from Geno Smith, Tyler Bitancurt kick good 35 49
3 5:16 7 71 2:40 West Virginia Andrew Buie 1-yard touchdown run, Tyler Bitancurt kick good 35 56
3 3:18 9 94 1:58 Baylor Terrance Williams 37-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 42 56
4 14:14 11 63 3:08 Baylor Nick Florence 1-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 49 56
4 13:55 1 87 0:19 West Virginia Stedman Bailey 87-yard touchdown reception from Geno Smith, Tyler Bitancurt kick good 49 63
4 10:49 11 86 3:06 Baylor Antwan Goodley 7-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 56 63
4 5:55 10 75 4:54 West Virginia Stedman Bailey 39-yard touchdown reception from Geno Smith, Tyler Bitancurt kick good 56 70
4 3:08 10 75 2:47 Baylor Terrance Williams 8-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 63 70
"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football. 63 70

TCU

TCU at Baylor
1 234Total
Horned Frogs 7 71421 49
Bears 7 0140 21
Sources:

Following their first defeat of the season, the Bears returned to Waco to take on the second Big 12 newcomer, a TCU Horned Frogs team suffering from attrition both on and off the field. Veteran TCU quarterback Casey Pachall had been suspended from the team less than two weeks prior, and freshman Trevon Boykin was slated to start his second game ever against Baylor. The game started well for the Bears, as Florence connected with Williams for a touchdown on the second offensive play of the game. But then the Baylor offense began to implode as Boykin and TCU responded to tie the game at 7–7 after the first of 4 Florence interceptions and 6 total turnovers on the day. TCU tacked on another touchdown to go into the half leading 14–7. During the third quarter the teams traded scores evenly to go to the fourth with the score 28–21 in favor of TCU. The fourth quarter was dominated by the Horned Frogs, who scored 3 touchdowns and held Baylor scoreless. The loss snapped Baylor's home winning streak and ended Baylor's streak of games in which they scored 40+ points.[12]

Scoring summary
Quarter Time Drive Team Scoring information Score
Plays Yards TOP Texas Christian Baylor
1 14:34 2 75 0:26 Baylor Terrance Williams 74-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 0 7
1 8:56 8 55 4:10 TCU Cam White 18-yard touchdown reception from Trevone Boykin, Jaden Oberkrom kick good 7 7
2 2:45 16 75 7:42 TCU Cam White 15-yard touchdown reception from Trevone Boykin, Jaden Oberkrom kick good 14 7
3 10:48 9 75 4:12 TCU LaDarius Brown 43-yard touchdown reception from Trevone Boykin, Jaden Oberkrom kick good 21 7
3 9:12 7 75 1:36 Baylor Nick Florence 5-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 21 14
3 1:28 15 74 7:44 TCU Josh Boyce 2-yard touchdown run, Jaden Oberkrom kick good 28 14
3 1:13 1 77 0:15 Baylor Terrance Williams 77-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 28 21
4 11:29 10 75 4:44 TCU Laderice Sanders 2-yard touchdown run, Jaden Oberkrom kick good 35 21
4 9:11 3 14 1:35 TCU Josh Boyce 15-yard touchdown reception from Trevone Boykin, Jaden Oberkrom kick good 42 21
4 5:33 4 4 2:08 TCU Trevone Boykin 3-yard touchdown run, Jaden Oberkrom kick good 49 21
"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football. 49 21

Texas

Baylor at #25 Texas
1 234Total
Bears 21 10127 50
#25 Longhorns 14 2877 56
Sources:

A wild shootout in Austin ended with Baylor falling just short of a third consecutive victory over the Longhorns. Texas scored first on an 84-yard touchdown rush by Daje Johnson on the first play from scrimmage, and forced a Baylor punt. However, the Bears stopped the ensuing Texas drive, and an errant long snap with the Longhorns in punt formation led to an 8-yard Florence touchdown rush to tie the game. The teams scored a combined 10 touchdowns in a first half that ended with an Aaron Jones field goal to bring the Bears to within 11 points of Texas. In the third quarter, Baylor scored nine points on a field goal and a touchdown (failed two-point conversion) to close to 40–42. But Texas held, scoring two more touchdowns and holding Baylor to a field goal on a subsequent scoring drive to maintain a 6-point lead. The 106 points scored was the most in any Longhorn football game since 1950, and the Longhorns yielded the most points in school history (50) in a winning effort.[13]

Scoring summary
Quarter Time Drive Team Scoring information Score
Plays Yards TOP Baylor Texas
1 14:43 1 84 0:17 Texas Daje Johnson 84-yard touchdown run, Anthony Fera kick good 0 7
1 11:51 1 8 0:08 Baylor Nick Florence 8-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 7 7
1 6:58 9 72 4:53 Texas Joe Bergeron 15-yard touchdown run, Anthony Fera kick good 7 14
1 4:08 9 75 2:50 Baylor Glasco Martin IV 2-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 14 14
1 2:42 2 82 0:41 Baylor Terrance Williams 80-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 21 14
2 13:57 8 75 3:45 Texas Joe Bergeron 2-yard touchdown run, Anthony Fera kick good 21 21
2 11:45 7 75 2:12 Baylor Lanear Sampson 7-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 28 21
2 9:38 4 30 2:07 Texas Joe Bergeron 9-yard touchdown run, Anthony Fera kick good 28 28
2 6:18 5 63 2:12 Texas Johnathan Gray 25-yard touchdown run, Anthony Fera kick good 28 35
2 1:06 13 66 3:46 Texas Joe Bergeron 4-yard touchdown run, Anthony Fera kick good 28 42
2 0:00 7 63 1:06 Baylor 29-yard field goal by Aaron Jones 31 42
3 12:21 7 75 2:39 Baylor Jordan Najvar (Nick Florence fumble recovered in endzone) 0-yard touchdown run, 2-point Nick Florence pass incomplete 37 42
3 7:09 11 58 3:10 Baylor 42-yard field goal by Aaron Jones 40 42
3 6:31 2 75 0:38 Texas Joe Bergeron 8-yard touchdown run, Anthony Fera kick good 40 49
3 2:12 11 53 4:19 Baylor 44-yard field goal by Aaron Jones 43 49
4 12:16 7 46 2:53 Texas Mike Davis 15-yard touchdown reception from David Ash, Anthony Fera kick good 43 56
4 1:57 15 94 5:24 Baylor Nick Florence 1-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 50 56
"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football. 50 56

Iowa State

Baylor at Iowa State
1 234Total
Bears 7 707 21
Cyclones 7 1477 35
  • Date: October 27
  • Location: Jack Trice Stadium
    Ames, IA
  • Game start: 6:00 p.m. CDT
  • Elapsed time: 3:34
  • Game attendance: 54,877
  • Game weather: 40 °F (4 °C), Mostly Clear, winds E at 0–5mph
  • Referee: Rick Loumiet
  • TV announcers (FSN): Mike Morgan (Play-by-play), J. C. Pearson (Color) & Laura McKeeman (Sideline)
Sources:

After three straight losses, the Bears travelled to Ames, Iowa to take on an Iowa State team that had beaten TCU at home and played respectably against conference leader Kansas State. The game, played on a cold October night, had more than its share of dropped passes and offensive miscues. Iowa State attempted an onside kick to open the game that was recovered by Baylor; however, a Florence fumble in the end zone meant that the Bears would have to wait until more than midway through the first quarter to put up the game's first points. Iowa State scored a touchdown in the first quarter to tie the game, and scored two more to Baylor's one in the second quarter to take a 21–14 lead into the half. The Bears continued to fight in the second, stopping a Cyclone drive with an interception in the red zone, but in a low-scoring second half Baylor's offense was able to reach the end zone only once more. In the meantime, ISU quarterback Steele Jantz set career highs for passing and touchdowns, tacking on two more passing touchdowns in the second half to go with his three from the first, and preserving the 35–21 victory for Iowa State.[14]

Scoring summary
Quarter Time Drive Team Scoring information Score
Plays Yards TOP Baylor Iowa State
1 5:20 9 80 2:44 Baylor Jarred Salubi 2-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 7 0
1 0:50 12 75 4:30 Iowa State Jarvis West 23-yard touchdown reception from Steele Jantz, Edwin Arceo kick good 7 7
2 14:53 4 67 0:57 Baylor Tevin Reese 49-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 14 7
2 8:49 9 67 3:57 Iowa State Albert Gary 36-yard touchdown reception from Steele Jantz, Edwin Arceo kick good 14 14
2 0:27 10 73 1:35 Iowa State Jarvis West 7-yard touchdown reception from Steele Jantz, Edwin Arceo kick good 14 21
3 4:16 14 81 4:44 Iowa State Jeff Woody 8-yard touchdown reception from Steele Jantz, Edwin Arceo kick good 14 28
4 8:37 5 36 2:24 Iowa State Jarvis West 22-yard touchdown reception from Steele Jantz, Edwin Arceo kick good 14 35
4 6:14 8 74 2:23 Baylor Lanear Sampson 3-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 21 35
"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football. 21 35

Kansas

Kansas at Baylor
1 234Total
Jayhawks 7 700 14
Bears 17 3147 41
Sources:

Back in Waco against the Jayhawks, Baylor jumped out to a 14–0 lead early behind two stops by the defense. A 59-yard touchdown rush by Kansas put them back in the game, but Baylor drove back down the field for a field goal and then stopped a Jayhawk drive early in the 2nd quarter that ended with a failed fake field goal rush at the Baylor 14-yard line. Subsequent offensive drives for both teams stalled until Kansas' Cummings, despite injuring his leg on the run, limped ahead of the Baylor defense into the end zone to make the game 17–14. Baylor managed another field goal to increase its lead to 6, and the teams went into the half with Baylor up 20–14. Lightning delayed the start of the second half for about 30 minutes; by the time the teams resumed play, a steady drizzle had begun. The Bears came up with a big stop on the first Jayhawk drive of the second half, with Kansas turning the ball over on downs near the Baylor 45. Baylor promptly punched the ball into the endzone on a Bryce Petty rush to make the score 27–14. A Joe Williams interception offered the Bears the chance to increase their lead, but their ensuing drive stalled. However, the Bears picked off Cummings again on the next drive, this time the interception coming from Ahmad Dixon, and Nick Florence added a rushing touchdown on the subsequent drive. Baylor would add one more touchdown in the 4th quarter, while holding Kansas scoreless throughout the second half to snap a 4-game losing streak.[15]

Scoring summary
Quarter Time Drive Team Scoring information Score
Plays Yards TOP Kansas Baylor
1 12:24 11 84 2:36 Baylor Terrance Williams 11-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 0 7
1 10:09 1 68 0:10 Baylor Lache Seastrunk 68-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 0 14
1 7:44 1 59 0:10 Kansas James Sims 58-yard touchdown run, Nick Prolago kick good 7 14
1 3:57 10 58 3:47 Baylor 35-yard field goal by Aaron Jones 7 17
2 5:46 6 81 2:49 Kansas Michael Cummings 22-yard touchdown run, Nick Prolago kick good 14 17
2 1:02 16 67 4:44 Baylor 22-yard field goal by Aaron Jones 14 20
3 10:59 4 55 1:01 Baylor Bryce Petty 1-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 14 27
3 2:24 6 40 2:05 Baylor Nick Florence 7-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 14 34
4 11:05 4 87 1:18 Baylor Tevin Reese 40-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 14 41
"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football. 14 41

Oklahoma

Baylor at #12 Oklahoma
1 234Total
Bears 3 1498 34
#12 Sooners 14 1477 42
Sources:

Following their 4th win of the year against the Jayhawks in Waco, Baylor traveled to Norman to face a tough #12 Oklahoma Sooners team that had two home losses on the season (Kansas State and Notre Dame). The teams alternated scoring in the first half, with Oklahoma holding Baylor to a field-goal on their first scoring drive to take a 28–17 lead into the half. In the third quarter, Baylor struck first, scoring a field goal and then a touchdown to pull to within 2 of the Sooners (an attempted two-point conversion following the touchdown failed). Oklahoma's offense answered the challenge, however, with two touchdowns in the third and fourth quarters, one a 55-yard Blake Bell rush. Lache Seastrunk added a rushing touchdown late in the game and Nick Florence rushed for a successful two-point conversion to bring the Bears to within a touchdown of Oklahoma, but with less than 1:30 left in the game, Oklahoma ran out the clock for the win. Baylor fell to 4–5 on the season.[16]

Scoring summary
Quarter Time Drive Team Scoring information Score
Plays Yards TOP Baylor Oklahoma
1 9:58 11 75 5:02 Oklahoma Brennan Clay 5-yard touchdown reception from Landry Jones, Michael Hunnicutt kick good 0 7
2 8:20 6 34 1:38 Baylor 58-yard field goal by Aaron Jones 3 7
1 2:55 12 75 5:25 Oklahoma Brennan Clay 1-yard touchdown run, Michael Hunnicutt kick good 3 14
2 9:38 6 80 1:22 Baylor Nick Florence 5-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 10 14
2 6:17 8 70 3:21 Oklahoma Damien Williams 3-yard touchdown run, Michael Hunnicutt kick good 10 21
2 0:32 17 75 5:45 Baylor Lache Seastrunk 4-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 17 21
2 0:15 2 45 0:17 Oklahoma Justin Brown 35-yard touchdown reception from Landry Jones, Michael Hunnicutt kick good 17 28
3 12:21 8 71 2:39 Baylor 21-yard field goal by Aaron Jones 20 28
3 7:42 6 28 1:59 Baylor Lache Seastrunk 2-yard touchdown run, 2-point Jarred Salubi rush failed 26 28
3 2:10 12 75 5:32 Oklahoma Damien Williams 17-yard touchdown run, Michael Hunnicut kick good 26 35
4 14:14 3 64 1:24 Oklahoma Blake Bell 55-yard touchdown run, Michael Hunnicutt kick good 26 42
4 1:26 19 80 4:42 Baylor Lache Seastrunk 6-yard touchdown run, 2-point Nick Florence rush good 34 42
"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football. 34 42

Kansas State

#1 Kansas State at Baylor
1 234Total
#1 Wildcats 7 1070 24
Bears 14 14240 52
Sources:

One week after falling in Norman, and almost a year to the day after the Bears' BCS-shaking first victory against Oklahoma, the Bears again took on a top 5 opponent in Waco. This time the opponent was 10–0 Kansas State, ranked #1 in the BCS after an Alabama loss the previous week and clear favorites in their final two games of the year, at Baylor and vs. Texas. As so often during the season, the quick-strike Baylor offense put the Bears ahead early on a 38-yard Florence pass to Tevin Reese. Kansas State answered when then-Heisman favorite Collin Klein completed a touchdown pass to tie the game 7–7. Baylor subsequently put up 21 unanswered points to go ahead 28–7 before the Wildcats managed 10 more points in the final two minutes of the first half. In the third quarter, Baylor put up another touchdown (a 4-yard Glasco Martin IV rush) and forced a Kansas State punt that pinned Baylor on their own 1-yard line. Two plays later, Florence attempted a quick pass to Terrance Williams that was intercepted on the 2-yard line, setting up a Collin Klein touchdown rush that made the score 35–24 in Baylor's favor. The Bears went on to rack up 17 more points in the third quarter, the last touchdown coming on an 80-yard Lache Seastrunk rush after Joe Williams intercepted Klein in the endzone (the third of Klein's three interceptions on the night). With 58 seconds remaining in the third quarter following Seastrunk's touchdown, Kansas State embarked upon an 8-minute, 21 play, 74-yard drive that brought the Wildcats to first-and-goal from the Baylor 6-yard line. An inspired Baylor defense turned in the goal-line stand of their season, halting four straight Collin Klein rushes and forcing a turnover on downs. Baylor would subsequently almost completely run down the clock, picking up 4 first downs on 10 straight rushes before punting the ball back to Kansas State with only 32 seconds left in the game. The victory was Baylor's first ever over a #1 ranked opponent (the 1956 team defeated #2 Tennessee in the 1957 Sugar Bowl, and the 1941 team tied #1 Texas) and represented only the fifth time in the BCS era that the #1 ranked team lost to an unranked opponent. The win took Baylor to 5–5 on the season, needing one more victory for bowl eligibility.[17]

Scoring summary
Quarter Time Drive Team Scoring information Score
Plays Yards TOP Kansas State Baylor
1 13:04 6 82 1:56 Baylor Tevin Reese 38-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 0 7
1 9:47 6 38 3:17 Kansas State Torell Miller 8-yard touchdown reception from Collin Klein, Anthony Cantele kick good 7 7
1 6:29 11 75 3:18 Baylor Nick Florence 12-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 7 14
2 6:42 8 55 3:23 Baylor Terrance Williams 22-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 7 21
2 2:54 9 64 2:47 Baylor Glasco Martin IV 2-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 7 28
2 1:47 4 63 1:07 Kansas State Chris Harper 7-yard touchdown reception from Collin Klein, Anthony Cantele kick good 14 28
2 0:00 10 63 0:51 Kansas State 23-yard field goal by Anthony Cantele 17 28
3 13:19 4 38 0:49 Baylor Glasco Martin IV 4-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 17 35
3 12:25 1 1 0:05 Kansas State Collin Klein 1-yard touchdown run, Anthony Cantele kick good 24 35
3 7:58 13 45 4:27 Baylor 50-yard field goal by Aaron Jones 24 38
3 4:32 4 54 1:19 Baylor Glasco Martin IV -yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 24 45
3 0:58 1 80 0:12 Baylor Lache Seastrunk 80-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 24 52
"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football. 24 52

Texas Tech

Texas Tech vs Baylor (neutral site game)
1 234OTTotal
Bears 7 714177 52
Red Raiders 14 710140 45
Sources:

The Bears and Red Raiders again met at Cowboys Stadium to renew their rivalry. Texas Tech jumped out to an early 21–7 lead after the Red Raider defense shut down the Baylor offense in the red zone and Aaron Jones missed two field goals early in the game. Near the end of the second quarter Texas Tech was driving to go into halftime up by three touchdowns; however, a fumble inside Baylor territory led to a quick-strike Baylor scoring drive capped by a 39-yard Florence touchdown pass to Tevin Reese. Texas Tech got the ball to start the second half and put themselves ahead by 10 with a field goal. After Baylor answered two drives later with a touchdown, Leon Mackey fielded the ensuing kickoff and returned it for a 97-yard touchdown. The Bears answered with a touchdown drive to close the deficit to 28–31 with just over 2 minutes left in the 3rd. Subsequently, Baylor linebacker Eddie Lackey returned a Seth Doege interception for a touchdown to give Baylor its first lead of the game. Baylor picked up another TD and the Red Raiders tacked own two touchdowns before Aaron Jones kicked his only good field goal of the night, a 22 yarder that tied the game up at 45. With 2:48 left in the game, Texas Tech began a drive which ended with another Doege interception, this time a screen pass deflected off a Red Raider lineman's helmet into Lackey's arms. After Jones missed a game-winning field goal, Baylor scored on its opening overtime possession on a Glasco Martin IV touchdown rush. Texas Tech subsequently failed to convert on 4th and 5, giving Baylor its 6th win of the season.[18]

Scoring summary
Quarter Time Drive Team Scoring information Score
Plays Yards TOP Baylor Texas Tech
1 10:37 7 75 2:05 Texas Tech Seth Doege 19-yard touchdown run, Ryan Bustin kick good 0 7
1 3:02 10 80 3:34 Texas Tech Kenny Williams 5-yard touchdown run, Ryan Bustin kick good 0 14
1 0:12 7 53 2:50 Baylor Glasco Martin IV 1-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 7 14
2 14:17 3 75 0:55 Texas Tech Eric Ward 23-yard touchdown reception from Seth Doege, Ryan Bustin kick good 7 21
2 0:05 8 93 1:27 Baylor Levi Norwood 39-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 14 21
3 10:45 11 63 4:15 Texas Tech 29-yard field goal by Ryan Bustin 14 24
3 4:50 9 68 2:41 Baylor Nick Florence 4-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 21 24
3 4:50 1 97 Texas Tech Jakeem Grant 97-yard kickoff return 21 31
3 2:16 7 57 2:20 Baylor Lanear Sampson 27-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 28 31
4 14:44 Baylor Interception returned 55 yards for touchdown by Eddie Lackey, Aaron Jones kick good 35 31
4 12:24 5 71 2:20 Texas Tech Darrin Moore 15-yard touchdown reception from Seth Doege, Ryan Bustin kick good 35 38
4 8:58 10 75 3:26 Baylor Terrance Williams 4-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 42 38
4 6:19 6 63 2:39 Texas Tech Darrin Moore 6-yard touchdown reception from Seth Doege, Ryan Bustin kick good 42 45
4 2:48 11 65 3:31 Baylor 22-yard field goal by Aaron Jones 45 45
OT 4 25 Baylor Glasco Martin IV 4-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 52 45
"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football. 52 45

Oklahoma State

#23 Oklahoma State at Baylor
1 234Total
#23 Cowboys 3 14314 34
Bears 17 1437 41
Sources:

With bowl eligibility already assured, Baylor now looked to improve their bowl berth against Oklahoma State. The teams traded field goals, and then Eddie Lackey, the previous week's Big 12 defensive player of the week, returned a Clint Chelf interception for a touchdown. Baylor tacked on two more touchdowns, scoring 24 unanswered points before Oklahoma State again found the end zone. The subsequent Baylor drive stalled after a controversial Seastrunk fumble, and the Cowboys capitalized again to make the score 17–24 in favor of the Bears. Fighting back, Baylor scored another touchdown and added a second interception, this time by Mike Hicks. An Aaron Jones field goal attempt following the interception was blocked, and the teams entered the half with the score Baylor 31, Oklahoma State 17. In the second half, Oklahoma State fought to close the gap, drawing to within 7 of the Bears before Seastrunk rushed 76 yards for a touchdown despite suffering a quadriceps cramp with 45 yards to go. Oklahoma State scored once more to again close to within 7 but with just over a minute left in the game, Baylor was able to run out the clock to cap a 7 win season.[19]

Scoring summary
Quarter Time Drive Team Scoring information Score
Plays Yards TOP Oklahoma State Baylor
1 10:32 12 55 4:28 Oklahoma State 36-yard field goal by Quinn Sharp 3 0
1 8:05 11 60 2:27 Baylor 39-yard field goal by Aaron Jones 3 3
1 7:58 Baylor Interception returned 26 yards for touchdown by Eddie Lackey, Aaron Jones kick good 3 10
1 0:20 16 98 4:32 Baylor Glasco Martin IV 2-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 3 17
2 14:31 1 75 0:10 Baylor Tevin Reese 75-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 3 24
2 11:23 10 56 3:08 Oklahoma State J. W. Walsh 1-yard touchdown run, Quinn Sharp kick good 10 24
2 6:50 8 77 2:36 Oklahoma State Josh Stewart 15-yard touchdown reception from Clint Chelf, Quinn Sharp kick good 17 24
2 3:33 8 75 3:17 Baylor Nick Florence 3-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 17 31
3 11:27 7 50 2:08 Oklahoma State 43-yard field goal by Quinn Sharp 20 31
3 6:25 14 64 5:02 Baylor 23-yard field goal by Aaron Jones 20 34
4 5:30 12 88 3:31 Oklahoma State J.W. Walsh 4-yard touchdown run, Quinn Sharp kick good 27 34
4 5:11 1 76 0:19 Baylor Lache Seastrunk 76-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 27 41
4 1:16 9 84 1:33 Oklahoma State David Glidden 18-yard touchdown reception from Clint Chelf, Quinn Sharp kick good 34 41
"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football. 34 41

Holiday Bowl

Baylor vs. #17 UCLA
1 234Total
Bears 14 2177 49
#17 Bruins 0 10313 26
Sources:

On December 2, 2012, Baylor accepted its first-ever berth in the Holiday Bowl. The Bears would face the #17 UCLA Bruins, winners of the Pac-12 South Division, for the first time in school history. After both teams' first drives ended in punts, Baylor's Glasco Martin IV rushed for a touchdown from 4 yards out to cap the Bears' second drive. That touchdown represented the first of 21 unanswered points for Baylor, including touchdown receptions by Tevin Reese and Antwan Goodley. Sterling defensive play by Baylor held UCLA scoreless until midway through the 2nd quarter – Baylor's defense, which had tallied 13 total sacks all season, recorded 5 sacks of UCLA quarterback Brett Hundley in the first half while shutting down UCLA's attempts to rush. UCLA finally got on the board with just over six minutes left in the first half, scoring a touchdown on a 2-play, 21-yard drive set up by a Jordan Najvar fumble. Baylor would answer on its subsequent two drives, with Martin IV adding a 26-yard touchdown run and Lache Seastrunk rushing for a 43-yard touchdown. With time winding down in the first half, UCLA tacked on a field-goal and the teams went to halftime with Baylor leading 35–10.

Gameplay during the first half of the 2012 Holiday Bowl.

UCLA received the ball to start the second half, but turned the ball over on downs at the Baylor 48. The Bears' ensuing drive faltered, however, and Baylor was forced to punt the ball back to the Bruins, who put together a 9-play, 58-yard drive culminating in a second UCLA field goal. Late in the 3rd quarter, Glasco Martin IV rushed the ball in for his third touchdown of the game, this time from 1 yard out. In the 4th, UCLA added a touchdown following a Baylor fumble, but an attempted 2-point conversion failed. Nick Florence tacked on Baylor's final touchdown of the game with a 1-yard rush of his own at the 7:46 mark of the 4th. After UCLA turned the ball over on downs in their ensuing possession, Baylor took possession and ran the clock down to 8 seconds before turning the ball over on downs at their own 34. With time for one play left in the game, Hundley completed a pass to Logan Sweet for a 34-yard touchdown. The play was not reviewed during the game, but replays appeared to show that Sweet was down at the 1-yard line.[20][21]

While the score of the game is officially 49–26,[22] Baylor Head Coach Art Briles ignored the final touchdown and had the score changed to 49–19 on the championship rings presented to Baylor players commemorating the victory.[23] CBSSports.com called the changing of the score "an arrogant move."[24]

Baylor finished the game with 494 total yards, 306 of which came on the ground. 138 of those yards came from Lache Seastrunk, who finished with one rushing touchdown and was named the offensive player of the game. The Bears' offense, typically known for its aerial attack, attempted only 13 passes for 10 completions and 188 yards. That passing yardage, however, was sufficient to allow Nick Florence to finish the season with 4,309 passing yards, overtaking Robert Griffin III's school record 4,293 passing yards, set during his 2011 Heisman-winning campaign. The Baylor defense, which entered the game ranked among the worst of FBS schools, allowed the Bears to overcome three turnovers. Although the defense created no turnovers of its own, Baylor sacked Hundley 6 times, limited UCLA to only 33 total yards on the ground, and allowed the Bruins to convert on only 1 of 17 third downs. Two of Baylor's sacks came from defensive end Chris McAllister, who was named the defensive player of the game. The victory gave the Bears bowl wins in consecutive seasons for the second time in school history (1985 Liberty Bowl, 1986 Bluebonnet Bowl; 2011 Alamo Bowl, 2012 Holiday Bowl).[25][26]

Scoring summary
Quarter Time Drive Team Scoring information Score
Plays Yards TOP Baylor UCLA
1 8:01 6 53 1:43 Baylor Glasco Martin 4-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 7 0
1 4:22 7 84 3:04 Baylor Antwan Goodley 8-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 14 0
2 11:08 5 76 1:36 Baylor Tevin Reese 55-yard touchdown reception from Nick Florence, Aaron Jones kick good 21 0
2 6:21 2 21 0:34 UCLA Joseph Fauria 22-yard touchdown reception from Brett Hundley, Ka'imi Fairbairn kick good 21 7
2 4:36 7 75 1:45 Baylor Glasco Martin 26-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 28 7
2 1:58 4 56 1:17 Baylor Lache Seastrunk 43-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 35 7
2 0:07 13 53 1:51 UCLA 30-yard field goal by Ka'imi Fairbairn 35 10
3 8:18 9 58 2:55 UCLA 40-yard field goal by Ka'imi Fairbairn 35 13
3 1:52 7 59 2:44 Baylor Glasco Martin 1-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 42 13
4 12:25 5 35 2:17 UCLA Shaquelle Evans 24-yard touchdown reception from Brett Hundley, 2-point Brett Hundley pass attempt failed 42 19
4 7:46 7 31 3:20 Baylor Nick Florence 1-yard touchdown run, Aaron Jones kick good 49 19
4 0:00 1 34 0:08 UCLA Logan Sweet 34-yard touchdown reception from Brett Hundley, Aaron Jones kick good 49 26
"TOP" = time of possession. For other American football terms, see Glossary of American football. 49 26

References

  1. ^ Hoover, John E. (February 15, 2012). "Big 12 Announces 2012 Football Schedule". Tulsa World. Retrieved February 17, 2012.
  2. ^ "Football Hosts Former SWC Rival SMU in Season Opener". Baylor University Department of Athletics. August 27, 2012. Retrieved August 28, 2012.
  3. ^ "Nick Florence, Baylor Opens Post-RG3 Era by Walloping SMU". ESPN. September 2, 2012. Retrieved September 4, 2012.
  4. ^ "Sam Houston State vs. Baylor All-time results". College Football Reference. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved July 31, 2012.
  5. ^ "Nick Florence, Baylor Rally Past Sam Houston State". ESPN. September 15, 2012. Retrieved September 17, 2012.
  6. ^ "Baylor, ULM Postgame Notes". Baylor University Department of Athletics. September 22, 2012. Retrieved September 24, 2012.
  7. ^ "Louisiana-Monroe Shocks No. 8 Arkansas with Fourth-Down TD in OT". ESPN. September 8, 2012. Retrieved September 24, 2012.
  8. ^ "Cody Parkey's FG in OT Lifts Auburn Past Louisiana-Monroe". ESPN. September 15, 2012. Retrieved September 24, 2012.
  9. ^ "Football Wins Offensive Battle Over ULM, 47–42". Baylor University Department of Athletics. September 22, 2012. Retrieved September 24, 2012.
  10. ^ "Geno Smith Throws for 656 Yards, 8 TDs in WVU's Wild 70–63 Win". ESPN. September 29, 2012. Retrieved September 30, 2012.
  11. ^ "Baylor, West Virginia Postgame Notes". Baylor University Department of Athletics. September 29, 2012. Retrieved September 30, 2012.
  12. ^ "Trevone Boykin, TCU Halt Baylor's Home Winning Streak". ESPN. October 13, 2012. Retrieved October 15, 2012.
  13. ^ "Joe Bergeron's Five TDs Help Texas Outlast Baylor". ESPN. October 20, 2012. Retrieved October 22, 2012.
  14. ^ "Iowa St. Tops Baylor Behind Steele Jantz's Career Day". ESPN. October 27, 2012. Retrieved October 29, 2012.
  15. ^ "Nick Florence, Baylor Win First Big 12 Game of 2012". ESPN. November 3, 2012. Retrieved November 5, 2012.
  16. ^ "Bob Stoops Moves Into Second Place on Oklahoma's Career Wins List". ESPN. November 10, 2012. Retrieved November 12, 2012.
  17. ^ "Baylor Runs Over Top-Ranked Kansas State to Shake Up BCS". ESPN. November 17, 2012. Retrieved November 19, 2012.
  18. ^ "Baylor Bowl Eligible After Outlasting Texas Tech in OT". ESPN. November 24, 2012. Retrieved November 26, 2012.
  19. ^ "Lache Seastrunk, Baylor Knock off Oklahoma State". ESPN. December 1, 2012. Retrieved December 3, 2012.
  20. ^ Ubben, David (July 15, 2013). "Baylor takes some liberties with bowl rings". ESPN.com. Archived from the original on April 6, 2015.
  21. ^ Smith, Alison (July 15, 2013). "Baylor Puts Wrong Score on Holiday Bowl Rings, Takes Dig at UCLA". NESN.com. Archived from the original on October 21, 2014.
  22. ^ "ESPN 2012 Holiday Bowl Recap". ESPN. December 27, 2012. Retrieved January 14, 2015.
  23. ^ "Art Briles says he changed the score on the Holiday Bowl rings so his players wouldn't be 'shorted'". Dallas Morning News. July 23, 2013. Archived from the original on January 27, 2015. Retrieved January 14, 2015.
  24. ^ Patterson, Chip (July 15, 2013). "PHOTO: Baylor Holiday Bowl ring shorts UCLA final touchdown". CBSSports.com. Archived from the original on March 3, 2016.
  25. ^ "Nick Florence Surpasses Robert Griffin III as Baylor Wins Holiday Bowl". ESPN. December 27, 2012. Retrieved December 28, 2012.
  26. ^ "Baylor, UCLA Postgame Notes". Baylor University Department of Athletics. December 28, 2012. Retrieved December 28, 2012.
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