Reliant Roars
Baylor blinks: Scott Drew's coaching exposed as Duke goes Final Four retro
With the Reliant Stadium crowd — its crowd — roaring, with Duke looking anything but Duke-like, with Ekpe Udoh turning into Bill Russell for an afternoon, the Baylor Bears held a Final Four berth in their eager hands for several moments.
Then, Scott Drew's coaching showed up.
Leading 57-54 with the clock inside five minutes, Baylor suddenly found the gulp in its throat and fell apart in the big moment in front of the big crowd already anticipating a big Final Four in Houston next year. When the Bears needed their controversial coach most of all, Drew didn't give them an answer.
There was no adjustment as Duke ripped off an 18-5 run to steal back a 78-71 win and the trip to Indianapolis that comes with it. No words of encouragement that made a difference. No sure play call that had been saved all game to get a basket. Instead, Drew might as well have been one of the nearly 50,000 spectators at Reliant. Drew only threw his hands in the air as Mike Krzyzewski's team scored 17 second-chance points in the second half, including not one, not two, but three 3-pointers that the Blue Devils made off rebounds.
Drew didn't have an answer — and what had been whispered about all NCAA Tournament long (how would the Bears, and specifically their coach react in a close game) became a season-killing legacy.
Reliant's Revenge
In many ways, this game was payback for the pair of duds that Houston watched on Friday night. Baylor-Saint Mary's made that game where Yates High School won by 100 look almost competitive by comparison, and Duke-Purdue, while closer, was about as scintillating as a minute-by-minute account of Earth Hour.
You'd sign up for three games like today's for next year's Final Four right now though.
This was compelling theater. Duke guard Nolan Smith dropped in a career-high 29 points, shooting 4-for-6 from 3-point land. LaceeDarius Dunn put in 22 for Baylor. The game remained close throughout — the biggest lead for either team until Duke's deciding run was five points. And the Blue Devils returned to the Final Four for the first time in six years on a day when usual-star Kyle Singler went 0-for-10 from the field and finished with only five points.
For all of his faults and sleazy recruiting moves — hiring the AAU coach of then-No. 1-rated recruit in the country (John Wall), allegedly ripping Texas' program to recruits — there is no denying that Scott Drew is one entertaining sideline presence. When Baylor made a late run in the first half to take the lead and Drew went into full windmill on the sideline, the Bears coach had the Reliant throngs in the palm of his hands. Or at least, the pits of his rotating underarms.
There is no denying that Drew's histrionics gave Baylor even more of a home-court advantage than it otherwise would have enjoyed. Sure, most of the 48,000 who poured into Reliant came to cheer for the Bears — or scream hate at the Blue Devils. But Drew made them scream a bit louder.
Watching the guy coach is compelling — and there are few sideline figures you can say that about these days.
All of Drew's sideline antics didn't help Baylor when the game came down to the last five minutes — and the Bears blinked in the big moment. Then, Baylor's coach was the one lacking.