“I’m not here to make a lot of changes,” Grobe said. “I thought that was really important for our players to have the same terminology, the same type of schemes as much as possible. But hopefully as we go forward if I do see things that I think might help us be a little better we might put a different spin on things.”

Despite the offseason turmoil, the Bears have major talent coming back from last year’s 10-3 team that ended the season with a 49-38 win over North Carolina in the Russell Athletic Bowl.

The biggest question will be Baylor’s lack of depth since the squad is down to 70 of the maximum 85 scholarship players. Only 12 of 24 scholarship players from the 2016 class stuck on the roster while veterans like quarterback Jarrett Stidham, receiver Chris Johnson and running back Devin Chafin left the program.

The Bears will be particularly thin at quarterback and defensive line. They can’t afford to have injury issues that plagued them at the end of last season.

“I think we will probably come to camp with somewhere around 100 kids, counting our walk-on kids,” Grobe said. “We’re going to have to be creative in our practice and try to make sure we don’t get anybody banged up by doing too much in any one practice because of our numbers.”