Baylors Rebuilt Line Hinges On One Crucial 2026 Question

With his wealth of experience and potential eligibility pending, Yakiri Walker is poised to be a game-changer for Baylor's 2026 lineup.

Baylor’s offensive line overhaul has put a lot on Yakiri Walker’s plate, and the projected starting center arrives in Waco with the kind of résumé the Bears badly needed.

Walker is slotted at No. 19 on Baylor on SI’s list of the program’s 25 most important players for 2026, and the reason is pretty straightforward: Baylor lost all but one starting offensive lineman from last season, so the Bears had to reload fast. Walker was one of the key transfer additions brought in to help stabilize the front.

Last season, Walker played at Memphis and started all 13 games at center. He was on the field for 881 snaps and, according to Pro Football Focus, allowed four sacks while posting a 96.6% pass-rush efficiency. That kind of experience matters, especially for a team trying to rebuild in the trenches.

His college path has been a winding one. Walker signed with UConn out of high school in 2021, redshirted that season, then handled a rotational role in 2022.

By 2023, he had become the Huskies’ starting center. He transferred to Colorado in 2024 and appeared in one game there before landing at Memphis.

Now the biggest question is whether he’ll actually be eligible for 2026. Walker is among the players seeking another year, and Baylor is expected to learn whether that gets approved within the next week or two.

If it does, the 6-foot-2, 298-pound center should step right into the starting job. Baylor coach Dave Aranda made clear why Walker matters.

“Yakiri gives us leadership and confidence because he’s been in that position,” Dave Aranda has said. “We have other guys in there that can play that position. There’s good depth at center, but we’re stronger with him in there.”

Walker would be asked to fill a major void after Coleton Price, who was one of the best centers in the Big 12 last season. Baylor believes Walker has the tools to grow into an All-Big 12 type of player in 2026, but the immediate job is simpler: help keep pressure off DJ Lagway and give the Bears a steadier presence in the middle.

In Other News...

Baylor Just Got A Strange New Auburn Twist Before Kickoff

Auburns season opener against Baylor is taking on an unusual off-field wrinkle before the teams ever line up at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta on Sept. 5. The Aflac Kickoff Game is now tied to a new NIL arrangement that will bring marketing commitments, promotional appearances and a revenue-sharing component into the picture, giving the matchup a business side that goes well beyond the usual neutral-site staging.

For Baylor, it is another reminder that big nonconference games are changing fast, especially when they are played on a stage built for television and ticket sales. The setup also underscores how much the opening weekend has become about more than football alone, with up to 24 Auburn players expected to be involved in the agreement and a precedent now set that could ripple through future showcase games. [Read more 🡒]

Baylor Equestrian Just Got A Schedule Built For Another Big 12 Push

Baylor equestrian head coach Casie Maxwell has laid out a 2026-27 schedule that gives the Bears plenty of chances to build momentum at home, where they will have seven meets on the calendar. The slate also includes five road dates and one neutral-site competition, with the season set to begin at home in mid-September and stretch all the way into championship season in the spring.

The timing matters for a program that expects to be in the Big 12 mix again, especially with the conference title meet coming back to Waco at the end of March. Before that, Baylor will have to navigate a fall schedule that mixes familiar rivals with a few tougher measuring-stick trips, and the way the Bears handle those early tests should say plenty about how well positioned they are for another run toward the postseason in April. [Read more 🡒]