Baylor coach
Scott Drew is a 35-year-old bundle of encouragement, a glass-half-full guy who
could set a record for long-distance smiling. But when asked what positives can
be taken from this season, Drew hesitates. "I'm an optimistic person,"
he says, "but I don't know if even I can come up with positives from
this."
Drew (above) can
be forgiven if he can't look past the Bears' record, which fell to 2-8 when
they lost to Oklahoma 80-52 last Saturday, and the fact that Baylor will play
only 16 games this season because NCAA sanctions banned it from facing teams
from outside the Big 12. But there are signs that the program, which nearly
collapsed after the 2003 murder of Patrick Dennehy and the subsequent
uncovering of NCAA violations by former coach Dave Bliss, is moving on.
Drew, who had
been coaching at Valparaiso, replaced Bliss six weeks after Dennehy was killed
by teammate Carlton Dotson, who is now serving a 35-year prison sentence. The
coach immediately began to disinfect the scandal-ridden program. (The NCAA also
placed it on a five-year probation.) He instituted a no-swearing rule for
players and banned them from wearing jewelry. He starts and ends practices with
prayer and had Biblical verse painted on a locker-room wall. " Coach Drew
doesn't do this because he thinks people are watching us," says sophomore
guard Aaron Bruce. "He actually says the prayers and puts the things on ...
walls because that's how he lives his life.."
Drew also isn't
afraid to employ unusual coaching methods. Last year, just before a game at
Oklahoma State, Drew made his players run the bleachers at OSU's football
stadium because he thought they lacked energy. In December, Drew got his
players accustomed to playing on the road by organizing a practice trip to
Dallas--complete with hotel stay, game-plan meetings and cellphone
confiscations--followed by an intrasquad scrimmage at the American Airlines
Center.
The results have
not yet shown up in the standings--the Bears are 19-48 overall and 6-36 in the
Big 12 in Drew's three seasons--but Drew is selling the rebuilt program to high
school seniors. His last two recruiting classes each ranked in the top 25. This
year's team is young: Bruce, a freshman All-America last season, is the leader,
and the Bears are getting more than half of their scoring, rebounding and
assists from four freshmen. With potential like that, there's reason for Drew
to be his usual upbeat self. "I can see him turning this program
around," Bruce says. "If not by the time I leave, then very, very
soon."