Brigham Young University
Dec 21 | 07:00 PM
64 - 79
Baylor University
Ferrell Center

1900 S University Parks Dr. Waco TX 76706

JMorris | Posted: 21 Dec 2012 | Updated: 8 Nov 2020
JMorris

Men's basketball falls to Baylor

Image

WACO, Texas -- Brandon Davies’ 26 points and 17 rebounds were not enough as BYU men's basketball fell 79-64 to Baylor at the Ferrell Center on Friday night.

"I thought we were prepared for this game," said BYU head coach Dave Rose. "Our game plan was good, practice was good and shootaround was good but then we get a couple misses in the game and gave up some turnovers, and Baylor took off. Things got out of hand - their length and athleticism showed through tonight."

Baylor’s 21-2 run at the end of the first half helped solidify the victory and improved its record to 8-3 on the season, while BYU falls to 8-4.

"When we're playing a lot of young and inexperienced guys I rely a lot on our older guys," Rose said. "Brandon played his heart out tonight and again had an amazing night but we need players around him. That's basically what it comes down to - he just needs help."

Davies added three assists, three steals and a block to his double-double. Tyler Haws was also in double digits with 13points while Matt Carlino and Nate Austin both contributed eight points for the Cougars. Baylor’s Pierre Jackson led his team with 16 points and all five of the Bear starters scored in double figures.

BYU started the game on a 9-2 run to grab the quick lead. Haws scored five of the nine BYU points on a three-point play and a jump shot and hit his third field goal at the 15:28 mark to put the Cougars up 11-5.

BYU didn’t turn the ball over until the 14:41 mark and took advantage of some Baylor miscues to score nine of its first 11 points in the half. At the 14:52 mark, Davies was awarded two foul shots on a flagrant foul call, which he sunk to put the Cougars up 13-6.

The Cougars grabbed their biggest lead of the night at 15-6 when Davies passed the ball off to Haws for the easy lay in.

Baylor answered with a 9-2 run heading into the 10-minute mark, but BYU held the lead.

Raul Delgado came in off the bench at the eight-minute mark to put BYU back up by 10 with its first 3-pointer of the game. However, Baylor sunk a three of its own to cut the score to 29-22.

Baylor then scored nine-straight points to grab its first lead of the game with 3:35 remaining in the half. Haws ended BYU’s scoring drought with 2:21 left to tie the game at 31, but Baylor took a nine-point run into the half to go up 40-31.  

Austin started the second half on a high note for BYU with a tip in to cut the Baylor lead to seven but the Bears came back with a 3-point shot in transition and forced a BYU timeout by taking a 12-point lead two minutes in.

Davies scored the next eight points for BYU, but the Cougars couldn’t hold off Baylor’s offensive attack. At the 13:41 mark, the Bears extended their lead to 20 at 61-41.

Carlino earned his first bucket of the night with 13:20 left in the game and followed with another jumper to put the score at 63-45.

At the 10:19 mark, Baylor hit its ninth 3-point shot of the game to go up 68-45. After that shot, BYU went on a 9-0 run to cut the Bear lead to 14 at 68-54.

Baylor kept the pressure on BYU and extended its lead back to 21 with 5:55 remaining.

Davies cut the Bears' lead to 17 at the 1:46 mark with the second 3-point field goal of the game for the Cougars, but it wasn’t enough as BYU fell to Baylor 79-64.

BYU will play next at the Marriott Center on Dec. 27 at 7 p.m. MST against Northern Arizona.  

File Attachments
 

 
Kyle Chilton | Posted: 19 Dec 2012 | Updated: 8 Nov 2020
Kyle Chilton

BYU at Baylor on Friday

Image

Game notes: BYU at Baylor

BYU basketball will play at Baylor on Friday at 8 p.m. CST. The game will be broadcast on KSL Newsradio 102.7 FM and 1160 AM and televised on ESPN2.

BYU Cougars (8-3, 0-0 WCC)

  • Head Coach: Dave Rose
  • Alma Mater: Houston, 1983
  • Division I Career Record: 193-57 (8th)
  • Record at BYU: Same

Baylor Bears (7-3, 0-0 Big 12)

  • Head Coach: Scott Drew
  • Alma Mater: Butler, 1993
  • Division I Career Record: 184-138 (11th)
  • Record at Baylor: 164-127 (10th)

Game Information

  • TV: ESPN2
  • TV Talent: Mark Neely (play-by-play), Bruce Pearl (analyst)
  • Live Video: ESPN3.com
  • Radio: KSL 102.7 FM / 1160 AM, BYU Radio - Sirius XM 143
  • Radio Talent: Greg Wrubell (play-by-play), Mark Durrant (analyst)
  • Live Audio: KSL.com
  • Live Stats: BYUcougars.com

Series Information

  • Series Record: BYU leads 5-3
  • Last Meeting: Baylor won 86-83, 12/17/11
  • H/A/N: 4-2/1-0/0-1

Projected starters

Baylor Bears (7-3, 0-0 Big 12)
No. Name Ht. Pos. Ppg Rpg
55 Pierre Jackson 5-10 G 19.3 3.8
22 A.J. Walton 6-1 G 7.2 4.3
5 Brady Heslip 6-2 G 10.1 1.7
34 Cory Jefferson 6-9 F 13.2 8.0
21 Isaiah Austin 7-1 C 13.9 8.6
BYU Cougars (8-3, 0-0 WCC)
No. Name Ht. Pos. Ppg Rpg
10 Matt Carlino 6-2 G 7.1 2.9
2 Craig Cusick 6-2 G 5.5 3.1
3 Tyler Haws 6-5 G 20.3 5.5
33 Nate Austin 6-11 F 3.5 4.1
0 Brandon Davies 6-9 F 19.2 7.3

Player notes

  • BYU posted a season-high 27 assists on 38 made baskets in a 95-62 win against Eastern New Mexico. Six different players recorded at least three assists against the Greyhounds. The 27 dimes are the most by the Cougars since recording the same number last season against San Francisco on Jan. 7, 2012. BYU had 29 assists against Buffalo last season on Dec. 20, 2011.
  • BYU defeated Utah despite shooting just 31.1 percent (19 of 61) from the field. The Cougars have shot 31.1 percent or worse 27 times since the 1960-61 season and won just three of those games. In addition to the Utah win, BYU defeated UC Santa Barbara 57-48 on Dec. 29, 1999 while shooting 29.6 percent (16 of 54) and Air Force 68-60 on Feb. 13, 1992 while shooting 30.4 percent (17 of 56).
  • Tyler Haws hit 10 of 10 from the free throw line vs. Weber State, his second-consecutive game shooting 100 percent from the line while attempting at least 10 free throws and his third this season. Haws has four such games in his career, tied for the most in BYU history with Jimmer Fredette. Haws is tied with Russell Larson (1993-94) and Roberts (1994-95) for most perfect days from the line (minimum of 10 attempts) in a season with three. Danny Ainge, Lee Cummard, Larson and Roberts are tied for second on the career list with three.

Haws the closer

Tyler Haws has played some of his best basketball in the final five minutes of games this season. Against Cal State Northridge, BYU trailed 74-73 with less than four minutes remaining. Haws hit a jumper with 3:44 to go to give BYU the lead and had 10 of the Cougars’ final 14 points to help secure the 87-75 win. Against Utah BYU trailed 58-56 before Haws completed a three-point play with 2:47 to go. He added two free throws with 16 seconds remaining to secure the 61-58 win. After struggling from the field the first 35 minutes at Weber State, Haws scored nine points in the last five minutes on 3 of 3 shooting from the field and 2 of 2 from the free throw line. For the season, Haws is 12 of 15 from the field, 2 of 3 from three and 11 of 12 from the free throw line in the last five minutes of games.

Davies does it all

Brandon Davies stuffed the stat sheet in the opener against Tennessee State, tallying 16 points, 7 rebounds, 3 assists, 4 blocks and 2 steals while drawing 3 charges. He did it again vs. Georgia State with 28 points, 9 rebounds, 3 assists, 3 blocks and 2 steals. Davies had maybe his most complete game against Montana with 21 points, 10 rebounds, 6 assists, 2 blocks and 4 steals. Through 11 games he is averaging 19.2 points, 7.3 rebounds, 2.6 assists, 1.8 blocks and 1.3 steals. Last season he became the second Cougar in history to average at least one of everything (points, rebounds, assists, steals and blocks). Russell Larson is the only other BYU player to produce a ‘one of everything’ season and did so twice, in 1993-94 and 1994-95 (blocks and steals were not tracked until the 1977-78 season). 

Dave Rose

BYU head coach Dave Rose has led BYU to its most successful eight-year run since taking over in 2005. His career record of 193-57 ranks him second in BYU history in total victories and first in winning percentage (.772). Rose has been named conference coach of the year three times, district coach of the year twice and has guided the Cougars to four conference titles, six NCAA Tournament appearances and six 25-win seasons. In 2010 he led BYU to its first NCAA Tournament win in 17 years and the Cougars have also won at least one tournament game in the two seasons since, including a trip to the Sweet 16 in 2011.

File Attachments