COLUMBIA, Mo. -- Phil Pressey's first 3-point attempt went in off the glass. The sophomore guard, known more for flashy, no-look passes than his outside touch, took that sketchy success and ran with it.
Pressey scored 19 points, including four of No. 4 Missouri's season-best 14 3-pointers, and the Tigers beat No. 6 Baylor 72-57 on Saturday. He had no 3-pointers in the previous five games but stepped up against the slumping Bears.
"It just happens like that sometimes," Pressey said about his bank shot. "I made it, so that's all that counts."
Sixth man Michael Dixon also had four 3-pointers, and Marcus Denmon added three for Missouri (23-2, 10-2 Big 12), which shot 50 percent from long range.
"That's what they was giving us, and that's what we was taking and making," Dixon said.
Missouri is 14-0 at home with an average margin of 24 points and got an easier test a week after needing an 11-0 run to beat Kansas by three. Both games were sellouts, but the matchup against Baylor (21-4, 8-4), which carries a better ranking, failed to match that atmosphere.
The Tigers still said they were energized by the response from the fans in the second half.
"Yeah, it got pretty loud," Dixon said. "The crowd does ignite us."
Quincy Miller had 20 points, and Perry Jones III had just four on 2-of-12 shooting for Baylor, which flopped for the second straight game after a 14-point home loss against No. 8 Kansas on Wednesday. The Bears shot just 36 percent, which negated a 40-27 rebounding advantage.
Baylor has lost twice to Missouri and Kansas and is unbeaten otherwise.
"When Missouri is on, there is nobody in the country as good as them offensively. Nobody. Period," Baylor coach Scott Drew said. "And when I mean on is when they're making their 3s. So you have to hope they're not on. They've been on a lot this year."
Baylor stopped Ricardo Ratliffe, Missouri's lone inside threat, but nobody else. Ratliffe was held to six points on 3-of-9 shooting after entering the game shooting 75.5 percent and threatening the NCAA single-season record.
"When you're making shots, it's really tough to go out there and try to chase around the guys that they have that can break you down off the bounce," Drew said. "So usually you have to give up something, and tonight we gave up the 3."
Pierre Jackson, who had 20 points and 15 assists in a one-point loss to Missouri at home Jan. 21, had five points on 2-of-9 shooting with five assists in the rematch. Baylor entered the game leading the Big 12 in 3-point shooting but was just 4 of 17 from long range.
The 6-foot-11 Jones, a sophomore, is a top NBA prospect but has struggled in both meetings against Missouri. He finished with eight points and four rebounds at home. He also was off at Kansas, getting five points on 1-of-8 shooting.
"The problem is he's judged on that potential sometimes," Drew said, "and that's hard on everybody."
Denmon had 16 points to pass Jon Sundvold for 10th on Missouri's career scoring list. Dixon finished with 16 points and six assists, and Kim English had 12 points, all in the second half.
Missouri shot 48 percent from the field.
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