By Foster Nicholas | Sports Editor

After missing over a month of action due to a right knee injury, No. 4 Baylor women’s basketball was prepared to field questions regarding the status of junior forward Darianna Littlepage-Buggs heading into March Madness. But the Bears had an ace up their sleeve.

Just after 4 p.m. Friday, the Baylor women’s basketball X, formerly known as Twitter, account dropped a mock press release “in response to questions regarding her return to play in the 2024-25 season.”

“She’s back,” the post read.

That’s it. Those two words on a printed piece of paper quickly garnered 30,000 views, announcing that the First-Team All-Big 12 selection would make a much-awaited return.

“Everyone loved [the post],” Littlepage-Buggs said. “That was the first thing a lot of people talked about, like, ‘Oh yeah, I like the media team, they did great.’ And they did. I was just happy to put it out there again.”

Littlepage-Buggs, the only player in the Big 12 to average a double-double (14.3 PPG, 10.5 RPG), missed the final seven games of the year, including Baylor’s Big 12 tournament run. With a two-week break between Big 12 play and the Round of 64, Littlepage-Buggs said she feels “amazing,” but head coach Nicki Collen did note she will be on a minutes restriction early in the tournament.

“I’m just excited to come back,” Littlepage-Buggs said. “I’m so excited to be back with my teammates. I think that’s what I missed the most, and just basketball aside, I love my teammates so much. Not being able to travel with them for those two games kind of hurt me. I still watched, but just being back with them, I’m so happy.”

In Littlepage-Buggs’ absence, senior guard Yaya Felder stepped into the starting rotation, and junior guard Waiata Jennings saw boosted minutes off the bench. The Bears went 5-2 in games without Littlepage-Buggs, with two ranked wins by a combined 27 points and the only losses coming at the hands of TCU. Without their star forward, the Bears found a template for success they think will increase the team’s ceiling with her back.

“It gave people a chance to just play without her, and we showed we could win and be a great team,” graduate guard Sarah Andrews said. “We had players step up, which gave them a lot of confidence when she was out. So just adding Buggs, I think that makes us an even stronger team.”

When Littlepage-Buggs arrived on campus as a freshman three years ago, she told Collen her goal was to help the team host a regional. Missing the opportunity to play in the first Waco Regional since the 2021-22 season wasn’t an option.

“I’m just excited to see her back out there, getting on the glass, rolling to the rim — you know, all those very Buggs-like things,” Collen said. “That idea of having [fans] here and getting to share in the experience that we’re going to play here [for] Foster’s first-ever postseason games. It is pretty exciting.”

The fourth-seeded Bears will tipoff the NCAA Tournament against No. 13 Grand Canyon University at 2:30 p.m. Friday at the Foster Pavilion.

Foster Nicholas is a Master of Business Analytics candidate from Parker, Colo. He graduated with his BA in Journalism in May 2025 and returned to the Lariat for his eighth semester. After graduating, he aims to work as a data journalist and sports analyst.

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