Baylor-Kansas features two of Big 12’s bright new coaches

LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) — Dave Aranda should know how Kansas coach Lance Leipold must feel these days, getting thrown into a rebuilding job at a Division I school in the midst of a pandemic that has made just about everything more challenging.

After all, he went through the same thing last year at Baylor.

The Bears played just nine games, all against Big 12 opponents, after an offseason that didn’t really happen. And that made it difficult for Aranda, a longtime college assistant, to put in place everything he wanted after coming over from LSU.

“I feel as if we’re still developing,” said Aranda, whose Bears have opened Year 2 with wins over Texas State and Texas Southern. “I can see the confidence, especially on offense, where there was limited confidence — so I can see the confidence building from our spring scrimmages to our fall camp scrimmages to these past two games. I can see that building.”

Spring scrimmages? Oh, how Leipold would have liked to have some of those.

If the timing of Aranda’s hiring as it pertained to COVID-19 was unfortunate, the timing of Leipold’s hiring away from Buffalo was downright unfair. With the pandemic still raging, Leipold was hired away from Buffalo after spring football had already begun to replace Les Miles, giving him almost no time to build a staff or reinforce a depleted roster.

Somehow, Leipold managed to do both, and the frantic offseason produced a season-opening win over South Dakota. The Jayhawks were dealt a reality check last weekend, when they were trounced on the road by No. 17 Coastal Carolina.

“One thing with Kansas is, you see their improvement,” Aranda said. “You see their level of effort and you see their level of buy-in. There is a strong correlation with those things and the coaching staff they have, and so to see it this early in their tenure is a great statement for them.”

Leipold has been similarly encouraged by the first two weeks of the season. Quarterback Jason Bean has flashed some playmaking ability, the running game has been getting better and a dreadful defense has been faster and more athletic than in previous years.

The next step is to turn all those positive signs into a Big 12 win.

“For those of us that are new, it’s hard for us to really gauge and it’s hard to get into heavy comparisons,” Leipold said. “I like where we’re trending. I said even last week with a win, we’re going to have positive things happen that aren’t going to show up on the scoreboard. We have to notice those but not get into moral victories.”

TUR-NO-VERS

The Jayhawks are one of eight teams in the Football Bowl Subdivision that have yet to turn the ball over this season. “Yeah,” Leipold responded when hearing that stat this week, “if we turn it over Saturday I’m looking at you.”

“It’s so important every year,” Leipold added. “When you’re winning turnover battles, it gives you a better chance to win.”

THE WOOD-SHED

Baylor safety J.T. Woods was the Big 12 co-defensive player of the week after making three tackles and returning a fumble 97 yards for a touchdown against Texas Southern. It was the longest fumble return for a score in school history.

HAPPY SATURDAY

This will be the first time Kansas has played on college football’s traditional day after back-to-back Friday night contests dictated by TV schedules. That’s helpful when it comes to recruiting, allowing the Jayhawks a better chance to get players on campus for game day — most of them have prep games on Friday nights.

BEATING UP TISSUE PAPER

If nothing else, the Jayhawks should provide a little more resistance than Texas Southern, which allowed Baylor to do the following: produce three 100-yard rushers, run for 419 yards on 43 carries, pile up 714 yards of total offense and score the most points of any team since a 66-7 victory over — coincidentally — Kansas on Oct. 10, 2015.

“I knew we were moving the ball really good, but I didn’t know we had 700-something yards,” Bears quarterback Gerry Bohanon said. “That’s something coach challenged us with this week. Everybody was literally, ‘One play at a time.’”

FAMILIARI-CHEESE

During the first two years Aranda spent as Wisconsin’s defensive coordinator, Leipold was winning consecutive Division III national titles at Wisconsin-Whitewater. Leipold ultimately won six of them before leading Buffalo to three bowl games.

“In looking at their two games, you can see the correlation with their Buffalo tape,” Aranda said. ”There is a real strong identity of what they’ve got. So we have to prepare for how they play more so than what they’re doing.”

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