NFLNBAMLBNHLWNBASoccerGolf
Featured Video
🚨 Mitchell Headed to 1st Conference Finals
Mar 17, 2016; Providence, RI, USA; Yale Bulldogs forward Justin Sears (22) celebrates during the first half of a first round game against the Baylor Bears during the 2016 NCAA Tournament at Dunkin Donuts Center. Mandatory Credit: Mark L. Baer-USA TODAY Sports
Mar 17, 2016; Providence, RI, USA; Yale Bulldogs forward Justin Sears (22) celebrates during the first half of a first round game against the Baylor Bears during the 2016 NCAA Tournament at Dunkin Donuts Center. Mandatory Credit: Mark L. Baer-USA TODAY SportsMark L. Baer-USA TODAY Sports

Baylor vs. Yale: Score and Twitter Reaction from March Madness 2016

Adam WellsMar 17, 2016

In the always popular No. 5 vs. No. 12 upset, Yale earned its first-ever NCAA tournament win Thursday with an impressive, efficient 79-75 victory over Baylor at the Dunkin' Donuts Center in Providence, Rhode Island.

Yale entered the tournament playing with house money. The Bulldogs haven't been to the Big Dance since 1962, just missing out last year with a two-point loss against archrival Harvard in a playoff game to determine the Ivy League champion. 

Per ESPN Stats & Info, Yale owned a 0-4 record all time in the NCAA tournament before Thursday's win. Bleacher Report's Adam Lefkoe and Jordan Schultz reacted to the school's first tournament victory:

TOP NEWS

NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament Championship
NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament Championship
North Carolina v Duke

Bulldogs head coach James Jones explained his team's credentials to reporters Wednesday: "I've been a head coach at Yale for 17 years. This is the first time we've made the tournament since 1952. We are one of the best defensive teams in the country. We are one of the best rebounding teams in the country. So I think that's a great story. And I'd like to tell that one going forward."

Looking at how Yale beat Baylor, though, this game was a statement for its efficiency on offense. The Bulldogs were virtually unstoppable in the first half, shooting 64 percent, and they out-rebounded Baylor 28-18 on the defensive glass overall. 

B/R's official Twitter feed had the perfect response when Yale began to pull away in the second half:

Former Michigan basketball player Anthony Wright's wasn't bad, either:

Some upsets seem to happen by accident, but that wasn't the case here. Yale took it to Baylor from the opening tip, dominating on the inside by going 12-of-12 from two-point range to start the game, and it never let up on either side of the ball. 

Sophomore Makai Mason, who led the Bulldogs in scoring during the regular season, was marvelous in the win. He finished with 31 points, six rebounds and four assists while pulling off moves like this:

Sports Illustrated's Pete Thamel went so far as to say Mason's name alone "kind of sounds like a name destined for March lore." ESPN Stats & Info noted Mason's 31 points are the most by a Yale player in the NCAA tournament. 

Mason's legacy in March will be decided in due time, but his first appearance in the tournament sets him up nicely to be on highlight tapes alongside Bryce Drew, Stephen Curry and R.J. Hunter in the annals of memorable breakout performances. 

Mason wasn't alone in picking apart Baylor's defense. Justin Sears, who entered the tournament having scored nine combined points in Yale's previous two games, responded with 18 points and provided the highlight of the victory:

Sears was also instrumental in two key plays late in the game. He hit an easy layup under the basket to extend the lead to six points and blocked an Ishmail Wainright attempt close to the basket that gave Yale possession with roughly two minutes remaining. 

The Bears continued to battle back, even climbing within two points with 1:14 remaining after Sears turned the ball over right under his own basket, which gave Jake Lindsey an easy layup.

Lester Medford had the ball as Baylor trailed 77-75 with less than five seconds remaining, but he appeared to slip and lost his handle of it, allowing Brandon Sherrod to get the steal. Sherrod hit two free throws for Yale to seal the win. 

While the ecstasy of victory will linger around Yale's campus in Connecticut for at least two days, the agony of defeat will haunt Baylor all offseason. This marks the Bears' second consecutive defeat in the round of 64, as the aforementioned Hunter made himself a star last year with a game-clinching three-pointer that gave No. 14 Georgia State a 57-56 win over No. 3 Baylor. 

This was an unusual season for Baylor, which entered the tournament having lost four of its last six games, but those losses were against Kansas (twice), Oklahoma and West Virginia. A schedule like that should have made this team more prepared for the rigors of the NCAA tournament. 

Mark Bradley of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and Gerry Fraley of the Dallas Morning News did not speak highly of Baylor head coach Scott Drew after the loss:

For instance, Baylor was unable to regroup and set up another play on the sidelines during the late comeback attempt because it used its last timeout with 81 seconds left in the game. In a contest that came down to the waning seconds, every minor detail matters.

Something is getting lost in translation with Baylor. It's one thing to lose games to Oklahoma and Kansas during the regular season, but losses to Georgia State and Yale in the tournament in consecutive seasons are a bigger problem. 

WVU Nation tweeted out what it must feel like to be a Bear right now:

The second-guessing about what Baylor could have done doesn't matter because Yale did exactly what it needed to do. It needed to shoot well, play tough defense and make free throws down the stretch. 

Even though the freebies were a struggle at times, Yale made enough of them to count. Now, Cinderella will be wearing her slipper heading into a showdown with the defending national champion Duke Blue Devils on Saturday. 

The two teams met earlier this season with Duke knocking off Yale, 80-61, but it was a two-point game at halftime. The Blue Devils will have the edge in talent, but Mason's star-making performance gives Yale reason to be optimistic about earning its second NCAA tournament win.  

Postgame Reaction

Mason was the story of the game and earned high praise from Sears after the win, via Evan Frondorf of Yale Alumni Magazine:

Jones took things a step further by repping for his entire conference, via Frondorf:

Things were not as rosy on Baylor's side, as Taurean Prince responded to a question about the Bears losing the rebounding battle to Yale:

Sometimes the best way to make the pain go away is getting sarcastic when replying to a question which requires that kind of an answer. 

Check out Bleacher Report's live updating bracket to track your picks along the road to the Final Four. 

🚨 Mitchell Headed to 1st Conference Finals

TOP NEWS

NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament Championship
NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament Championship
North Carolina v Duke
NCAA Men's Basketball Tournament – Sweet Sixteen - Practice Day – San Jose
B/R

TRENDING ON B/R