Dave Aranda Knows Baylor Cannot Afford Another Soft Reset

Coach Dave Aranda is revamping Baylor's strategy on and off the field in his quest to bring the Bears back to prominence.

Dave Aranda has spent much of his coaching career avoiding the spotlight, but Baylor’s head coach is leaning into a different kind of leadership now.

At Big 12 Media Days on Monday, Aranda said one of the biggest personal hurdles he has faced is becoming more visible with fans, especially through social media. He admitted it still does not come naturally.

"It's still uncomfortable for me," Aranda said. "When I'm doing it, I'm choosing to do it.

It's like game day. I get ready for it."

For Aranda, that shift is about more than posting videos or speaking more often in public. He said taking over at Baylor forced him to confront a long-held habit of assuming bigger opportunities belonged to someone else.

"When opportunities came up before, I always thought they were for someone else," he said. "I could see my kids becoming what I was becoming - thinking that's for other people, not for us. I didn't want that."

That realization, he said, has changed how he thinks about leading the program and connecting with the people around it.

"There were so many people associated with Baylor football that didn't know me," he said. "That's on me."

The changes inside the program have been just as significant. After last season’s disappointing finish, Aranda said he took a hard look at nearly everything, starting with his own job description.

"I need to be a head coach," Aranda said. "I need to get out of defense. I need to be involved on all three sides."

That means less hands-on work calling the defense and more attention on culture, accountability and leadership across the roster. One of the clearest signs of that shift has been the creation of a 16-player leadership council, with teammates from every class and position group electing the members. From that group, Baylor chose six captains.

"The player leadership is the strongest it's been since I've been at Baylor," Aranda said.

He said that kind of internal structure will matter as Baylor tries to get back on track in 2026.

Aranda also said the defense will look different under coordinator Joe Klanderman. The Bears have trimmed down responsibilities so players can react faster instead of thinking through assignments after the snap.

The roster-building approach has changed, too. Baylor moved away from the receiver-heavy investment it made a year ago and put more resources into both offensive and defensive lines.

"We paid for that," Aranda said of last year's receiver-heavy roster construction. "There was too much money there. That's on me."

This time, the focus has been on adding more physical linemen and building a team that can control the line of scrimmage.

"If everything is blocked correctly, there needs to be a three-and-a-half to four-yard gain for the Baylor Bears," Aranda said. "Last year that was a one-yard gain."

Quarterback DJ Lagway is one of the players drawing the most attention entering the season, and Aranda was quick to praise his influence.

"He's the best I've been around at connecting on the football field," Aranda said.

He said Lagway organized throwing sessions with teammates during spring break and has already won over the locker room.

"They want to roll with him," Aranda said. "They've got his back."

Veteran defensive end Kyler Jordan is another key piece for Baylor, and Aranda pointed to his steady rise as both a player and a leader. He called Jordan one of the Bears’ top pass rushers and said his development has stood out.

"He has developed," Aranda said. "He's one of our best pass rushers, if not the best."

With optimism building around the program, Aranda said Baylor is starting to look more like the kind of physical team he has been trying to build. When asked whether this roster is better equipped to handle top competition, he didn’t hesitate.

"Yes," he said. "Better."

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