STILLWATER, Okla. - Bruce Weber left this place without a smile. How could he smile? He left miserable. Frustrated. Angry. His Kansas State basketball team lost its most important game of the season here, so hope had no place in his heart.
No. He would not watch Kansas' game with Baylor, even if a KU loss meant K-State would share the Big 12 title with the Jayhawks. A few weeks ago, Weber watched KU's win at Iowa State, and those emotions did him no good. So he got home, unpacked. He and his wife took their dog, Penny, for a walk. That's when they heard the car horns blaring. That's when they heard Weber's cell phone ring. John Currie, the K-State athletic director, was on the Caller ID.
"Congratulations," Weber heard.
For what?
"You don't know?"
Don't know what?
"Baylor won."
Weber hugged his wife. Now he smiled. Texted his players congratulations. Sports are funny sometimes. K-State's first conference men's basketball championship since 1977, and the coach had to be told.
Just a few hours before, he and his players cursed themselves after a 76-70 loss at Oklahoma State. Forward Thomas Gipson was like his coach. Said he wouldn't even bother checking the KU-Baylor score. Didn't matter, Gipson said. Now the game they refused to care about is the reason they will hang a new banner at Bramlage Coliseum. It is the reason they will all get shiny new rings.
And it's the reason this is not only the most successful sports year in school history, but in the new Big 12. K-State is king. This is the new league order.
This isn't the way K-State would've preferred winning in basketball, of course. Celebrating after a loss is bizarre, and co-champion KU will have the top seed in the Big 12 tournament for sweeping the season series. But that doesn't diminish the overall accomplishment.
Doesn't change the fact that K-State - not Texas, not Oklahoma, not Kansas and not Oklahoma State - is ruling the new league in the two sports people care most about.
You would've had a heck of a time convincing folks of this two years ago. Remember two years ago? That's when the Big 12 actually included 12 schools, though not for long, and many figured the league had as much staying power as a gallon of milk.
And if the conference went sour, then it was hard not to wonder what might happen to K-State. Speculation tended to range from Mountain West to Big East, a demotion no matter what. Look how it turned out instead:
The Big 12 is down to 10 schools but stronger than anyone imagined, and the most successful school in the two major sports is - by far, really - the one so many wondered about two years ago.
"We know what we have here," Currie says. "Perhaps this allows national perception of what K-State is to catch up to reality."
Look around. Texas and Oklahoma bring in more money. Oklahoma State spends more money. Kansas basketball gets more glory (and another league title). But none of them have done as much winning as K-State.
This is the first time a school has won the Big 12 title in both football and men's basketball in the same school year since Texas in 2005-06. Even with the loss, K-State is in position to be join Louisville and Florida as the only teams to finish in the top 15 in both sports.
This will be the third year in a row Bill Snyder's football team plays a bowl game and basketball makes the NCAA Tournament, so a true golden run in K-State's athletic history is hitting a new peak. The football team won the Big 12 championship behind Heisman Trophy finalist Collin Klein, and came within a bizarre night in Waco from what likely would've been a game against Notre Dame for the BCS national championship.