Baylor scored more than 100 points for the seventh time in the Drew Era. The Bears are 7-0 in those games.
Baylor is 56-3 all-time when scoring 100-plus points.
Baylor's 58-point win is the third-largest margin of victory in school history (66 vs. Austin College in 1978; 59 vs. Hardin-Simmons in 2001).
Baylor is now 19-10 all-time vs. current NAIA member schools.
Baylor is 31-5 in the Drew Era when scoring 80-plus points.
Over the past six seasons Baylor is 88-9 when totaling an equal or higher shooting percentage than its opponents.
Baylor teams have made at least one 3-point field goal in 487 straight games.
Team Notes
Every player dressed for Baylor scored in the game.
Five Baylor players scored in double-figures, the most since seven players scored 10-plus points against Missouri (3/1/08).
After missing its first three 3-point field goals of the game, Baylor connected on its next five 3FG opportunities.
Baylor's 55 first-half points were the most in a single half since the Bears scored 55 second-half points against Missouri on March 1, 2008, and the most points scored in the first half since Baylor scored 60 in the first half in last year's season-opener against Jackson State.
The Bears recorded 24 assists, the most since Baylor tallied 24 assists at Colorado (1/30/02).
Baylor held Paul Quinn to 30.2% (19-63) shooting from the floor, the lowest since Oklahoma shot 29.6% (16-54) on March 6, 2004.
After trailing 9-8 at 15:37 remaining in the first half, Baylor closed the half on a 47-12 run.
Baylor set a new school record with 13 blocked shots. The previous record of 12 was set against Rice (2/23/94) and Louisiana Tech (12/30/95).
Individual Notes
Curtis Jerrells dished out a career-high 10 assists, becoming the first Bear to reach double-digit assists since Aaron Bruce had 11 vs. Gonzaga (11/15/06)
Henry Dugat made 4-of-5 3-point field goals tonight, and has connected on 14 of 24 (58.3%) 3FGs in his last seven games dating back to the 2007-08 season.
Quincy Acy recorded a double-double (13 points, 11 rebounds) in his first career game.
Kevin Rogers tied a career high with four blocked shots (Texas Southern, 2006).