The scandal left Baylor's basketball program in ruins.
Lawrence Roberts,
John Lucas III, Kenny Taylor, and Tyrone Nelson transferred to other schools. Two of the four became immediate stars at programs that would win regular-season conference titles in 2004 – Roberts became the main inside force at
Mississippi State, leading their team in scoring and rebounding and being selected as a first-team All-American, while Lucas stayed in the conference at
Oklahoma State, becoming their second-leading scorer and assists leader while helping his team to reach the
Final Four. Taylor transferred to the
University of Texas at Austin and Nelson enrolled at
Prairie View A&M University. A year later, Herring transferred to
Canisius College. Bliss' successor,
Scott Drew, was hired two weeks after Bliss' ouster. Due to his unusually late hiring–two months before practice and three months before the season opener–and the crippling sanctions imposed by both the school and the NCAA, Baylor only won a total of 36 games, including only thirteen conference games, from 2003 to 2007. However, Drew quickly turned the program around after his recruits arrived; Baylor made the
2008 NCAA tournament, finished second in the
2009 NIT, and advanced to the Elite Eight of the
2010 and
2012 NCAA tournaments—the school's deepest NCAA run since going to the Final Four in
1950. In
2019–20, Drew led the Bears to the greatest season in school history at the time. Baylor finished with a 26–4 regular-season record, was ranked 4th in the final
Coaches Poll, and was projected to a #1 seed in the
2020 NCAA tournament which would've been a first for the program. Unfortunately for Baylor, the 2020 Tournament was canceled due to the
COVID-19 pandemic.
The following season, Baylor won the Big 12 regular season title for the first time in program history, received a #1 seed for the
2021 NCAA tournament's South Region, advanced to its first Final Four appearance since
1950, and made its first title game appearance since
1948, where the Bears won their first
national championship. Rouse sued his attorney in 2005 for releasing the incriminating tapes of Bliss, claiming that it breached the
attorney–client privilege. Rouse's attorney claims she did not know how the tapes got transcribed, but the journalist who published them said he got them from her.
Jeff Ray, the Midwestern coach who hired Rouse, commented: "I'm right in the middle of it, don't get me wrong. But sometimes the things you see are pretty disgusting. Why is there this black cloud hanging over him? He did nothing wrong. To me, this is all a testimony to the sad state of affairs of our profession." ==References==