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Tobias Ten from Texas

Missouri wide receiver Luther Burden III (3) looks up at the scoreboard as Missouri fell behind by more than 30 points in the second half of a game against Texas A&M on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, at Kyle Field in College Station, Texas. (CAL TOBIAS/ROCK M NATION)

RMN’s weekly photo roundup from deep in the heart of Texas.

This weekend, I traveled “Deep in the Heart of Texas” to photograph Missouri’s game at Texas A&M. I didn’t expect the final result to happen, and frankly, neither did any of the Aggie fans I spoke to. Nevertheless, I had a great time in the Lone Star State, and I enjoyed making all of these pictures.

  1. Brady Bobble

Missouri quarterback Brady Cook (12) loses the ball before scrambling in the first half of a game against Texas A&M on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, at Kyle Field in College Station, Texas. (CAL TOBIAS/ROCK M NATION)

It was clear early that something was wrong with the Tiger offense, from when a Luther Burden III touchdown was called back from a penalty (which I got great pictures of, but it doesn’t matter) to this bobbled snap, which became an incompletion. Brady Cook was 13-for-31 with 186 yards and one touchdown.
2. Way outside!


Missouri wide receiver Theo Wease Jr. (1) can’t get to a ball thrown by Brady Cook in the first half of a game against Texas A&M on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, at Kyle Field in College Station, Texas. (CAL TOBIAS/ROCK M NATION)

A consistent issue for this Tiger team has been inconsistency on the long ball, with the team being unable to complete those big plays which powered their wins last year over so many great opponents. Here, Theo Wease watches a pass sail way over his head.

3. Roar of the Aggies


Texas A&M fans sound off before a third down in the first half of a game on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, at Kyle Field in College Station, Texas. (CAL TOBIAS/ROCK M NATION)

I am certain that there is nothing I’ve ever heard in my life as loud as the Texas A&M fans were on Saturday. After that first drive was called back, they all yelled so loudly I couldn’t even think about taking pictures. 97,000 strong— fewer than normal because of their students’ “fall break”— made the stadium shake. It’s not hard to see why it’s rated as one of the toughest places to play.

4. Down at the 5


Missouri running back Marcus Carroll (9) is stopped at the goal line by Texas A&M defenders in the second half of a game on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, at Kyle Field in College Station, Texas. (CAL TOBIAS/ROCK M NATION)

One of the more interesting turns of events during the game was a sequence just before the end. Missouri finally drove all the way down the field and was hoping to at least get seven more points on the board before the end. However, given seven (!!!) chances inside the five-yard line, none of them scored. Here, in their second attempt, Marcus Carroll was stopped by two Aggie defenders. They eventually settled for a field goal.

5. “Don’t let us get one”


“That’s one!” says Missouri defensive end Zion Young after a Mizzou touchdown in the second half of a game on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, at Kyle Field in College Station, Texas. It would be the only Missouri touchdown of the game. (CAL TOBIAS/ROCK M NATION)

After Theo Wease’s touchdown in the third quarter, I spotted Mizzou defensive end Zion Young telling players, “That’s one!” He was encouraging as he spread the idea that it could be the beginning of a comeback. However, the state of the game stayed the same after the score and Mizzou only mustered a field goal by the end of the game.

6. Burden of Defeat


Missouri wide receiver Luther Burden III (3) looks up at the scoreboard as Missouri fell behind by more than 30 points in the second half of a game against Texas A&M on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, at Kyle Field in College Station, Texas. (CAL TOBIAS/ROCK M NATION)

As the end result of the game became apparent, the players began to show it on their faces. This was especially apparent with Luther Burden III, who looked as displeased with the final result as anyone.

7. Wide receiver wizardry


Missouri wide receiver Luther Burden III (3) makes a catch over Texas A&M defensive back BJ Mayes (20) in the second half of a game against Texas A&M on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, at Kyle Field in College Station, Texas. (CAL TOBIAS/ROCK M NATION)

Despite the loss, Mizzou wideout Luther Burden III had a great game, hauling in 7 catches for 82 yards (it would have been more and a TD if not for an early penalty.)

Here, he gets a great leaping grab over TAMU’s BJ Mayes in the third quarter.

8. Who’s on the phone?


Missouri quarterback Brady Cook (12) talks on the phone as Missouri was down 24-0 to Texas A&M in the first half of a game on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, at Kyle Field in College Station, Texas. (CAL TOBIAS/ROCK M NATION)

In the third quarter, Brady Cook picked up the phone on the sideline to call someone. (It could have been anybody. In the Super Bowl, the 49ers’ Joe Montana found out that the sideline phone had an outside line and called his wife.)

As he was calling, the Aggie fans started yelling at him, “It’s 24 to 0!!” But Cook, the class of the league, just responded with a charming smile, seen here.

9. Pep Talk


Missouri defensive line coach Brian Early gives a talk to defensive end Eddie Kelly Jr. (97) as Missouri fell behind by more than 30 points in the second half of a game against Texas A&M on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, at Kyle Field in College Station, Texas. (CAL TOBIAS/ROCK M NATION)

Around the end of the game, I saw Missouri’s Eddie Kelly pacing around the sideline. Whatever he was feeling, I saw him find his D-line coach, Brian Early, who appeared to be giving him a great pep talk about the game. He looked as if he was calming Kelly and helping him. Early, in his first year, appears to be making a positive impact.

10. Coach & QB Alike


Missouri head coach Eli Drinkwitz hugs Texas A&M quarterback Conner Weigman (15) after after the end of a game on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, at Kyle Field in College Station, Texas. (CAL TOBIAS/ROCK M NATION)

After the game ended, I went to go find Eli Drinkwitz and found him here hugging with Texas A&M’s Conner Weigman, who played an excellent game (18-22, 276yds.) Of note is the fact that Drinkwitz had said he did not expect to face Weigman, instead preparing for TAMU’s previous signal-caller, Marcel Reed. Overall, Weigman lit up the Tiger defense and completed 82% of passes.

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Tobias Ten from Texas

Tobias Ten from Texas

Missouri wide receiver Luther Burden III (3) looks up at the scoreboard as Missouri fell behind by more than 30 points in the second half of a game against Texas A&M on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, at Kyle Field in College Station, Texas. (CAL TOBIAS/ROCK M NATION)...

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Mizzou Hoops Player Preview: Peyton Marshall

Dale Zanine/Overtime Elite

The freshman has dramatically reshaped his physique and worked on his passing reads, but his strength on defensive and the glass might earn steady minutes.

Over the weeks leading up to the season, this series will dive deep into the players we see making a push for time in the rotation for the 2024-2025 Missouri basketball squad. The pieces read like a birds-eye scouting report. They skew more toward the offensive end of the court for two reasons. First, a player’s offensive metrics are more reliable than defensive data and less team-dependent. Second, it’s considerably easier to describe a player’s qualities with more well-known offensive statistics. As always, we encourage interaction from our readers. Please drop us a comment or find me on Twitter @DataMizzou.

The film credits are given to Matt Harris. Matt has provided all of the film used in this series, and the team has plenty more video and analysis on every player that can be found on https://rockm.plus.


The Player

If you’re unaware, we’ve rigorously documented Peyton Marshall’s development through his commitment to Missouri and his senior campaign at Overtime Elite.

So, if you’re looking for a genuinely granular analysis of the big man’s game, there’s some background reading available.

The abridged version: Marshall, who grew up in St. Louis before moving to Atlanta, was an early priority for MU, which hosted him for an unofficial visit in the fall of 2022. Yet Auburn, which has built a pipeline into Marshall’s grassroots program, scored a pledge as the year wound down. Yet Bruce Pearl kept pursuing Flory Bidunga, an effort that might have prompted Marshall to reconsider his options. In April 2023, Marshall decommitted. Four months later, he picked MU.

Once the recruiting drama wound down, Marshall joined OTE and promptly reshaped his body. Earlier this year, he’d only shed eight pounds, but diligently working with the program’s nutritionist and strength staff had changed the distribution of that mass on his frame. After a summer in MU’s program, he’s dropped another 28 pounds. The Tigers’ updated roster recently listed Marshall at 7 feet and 300 pounds.

We’ll get to on-court matters shortly, but Marshall’s sweat equity is telling: He started working to prepare himself for life in the SEC long before he dropped bags in Columbia. Should that focus carry over to attacking skill development, there’s certainly reason for optimism about what Marshall can offer.

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While Marshall’s quality fluctuated in the eyes of evaluators, the layover at OTE was helpful in several ways.

For starters, Marshall gained early exposure to life as a rotational player. Early on, he played for Cold Hearts, splitting time with Ole Miss commit John Bol. Then, he moved to RWE, which was without future Georgia big man Somto Cyril as he battled an injury. When Cyril returned in February, he and Marshall platooned at center.

Next, RWE coach Corey Frazier, another St. Louis native, steadily integrated tasks that would also be included in Marshall’s portfolio at Mizzou, like reading high and low split cuts on offense and playing in different pick-and-roll coverages. As we’ll see, the results could be mixed, but there’s no ideal time for growing pains, either.

Marshall got a jumpstart on foundational aspects of adjusting to high-major life: boosting stamina, adjusting to life as a role player, and digesting the first principles of MU’s scheme. And after this spring’s exit of Jordan Butler, that head start might only be more valuable if Marshall’s pressed into longer stretches of floor time.

The Numbers


Adam Hagy/Overtime Elite

When Marshall still suited up at Kell High School, his formula for success was rudimentary: catch the ball on the right block, pound out a dribble and finish at the rim. If necessary, he might drop step to the baseline. And if an opponent sent a double team, Marshall made simple passing reads out of the post to hit open teammates.

Yet life as a low-block operator hasn’t been so straightforward for a while.

When Marshall ventured out on the Adidas-backed 3SSB circuit, the scout was out, and the defenders trying to front or harass him were of a higher caliber. Last June, a trip to the Adidas Eurocamp exposed Marshall to some of the top rising talent abroad. Then, he capped his summer with a few days at Adidas’ All-American Camp. And finally, there was the move to OTE.

For the better part of 18 months, Marshall has routinely faced high-end prospects. That’s optimal for improvement, but it also dampens a stat line. Once Marshall’s run ended on the grassroots circuit, he settled into life as a player earning roughly 16 minutes per game with a usage rate of around 20 percent. This dosage of PT also happens to be toward the top end of the normal range for freshmen of his caliber.

Without a doubt, Marshall’s freshman season will expose him to another jump in talent. Still, for him and us, it’s handy that he’s already experienced a reasonable proxy to life in a high-major rotation.

Marshall’s bread and butter remains burying defenders on the block, but he’s steadily diversified how he dispenses punishment. One solution was simple: go to the other side of the lane. Working on the left block, Marshall could still vacate space with his shoulder, but slimming down means he’s lighter on his feet — and not solely reliant on pivoting to the baseline as a counter.

Yet RWE’s roster included a slew of high-major prospects, including five-star wing Karter Knox. The offense did not revolve around Marshall, and he often spent the early portion of a possession as a screener or reader. That meant rolling or cutting from the perimeter to the post. The tactics weren’t always cutting-edge. For example, Marshall might set a down screen for a guard, creating a mismatch he could exploit if a teammate fed him a quick entry pass.

The more notable evolution was RWE’s use of Marshall as a connector and reader in the kinds of actions and sets that are hallmarks of Gates’ system: delay, point, and chin. Those added responsibilities supplemented Marshall’s typical reads from the post.

What ties these actions together is how they invert the floor, lift the defense off the baseline, and task a big man with deciphering action in front of them. Those off-ball actions can be a thumbprint distinct to each program. In Columbia, the Tigers use split cuts, and there could be up to a dozen options. By contrast, the menu at OTE was more limited, and Marshall’s processing speed lagged somewhat.

While at OTE, Marshall’s assist rate was modest (9.39%), and he finished the season with a 0.4 assist-to-turnover ratio. We wouldn’t be surprised if Marshall’s decision-making remained boggy during freshman season. Again, the reads have multiplied, and bigger, stronger, and wiser defenders will harass Marshall.

The number we’ll keep monitoring is Marshall’s turnover rate. At OTE, he gave the ball away on nearly a quarter of his possessions. That has to come down. But we also need to monitor what kind of turnovers Marshall racks up. Is he plowing through defenders while forcing a post-up? Is he getting stripped going up for a putback? Or are his passes to teammates a split-second late or a bit off-target? If it’s the third variety, we can accept that as a byproduct of trying to create for others.

On the other end, Marshall’s no stranger to doing work early, winning the battle for post position and leaning on an opposing big. But his time at OTE’s facility in downtown Atlanta was about growing his comfort zone. That meant leaving the safe harbor of the lane and playing in space.

Over the winter, Frazier was adamant with me that he wasn’t going to hide Marshall as the backline anchor. When Marshall sat more than two steps below a pick-and-roll, that positioning was dictated by the scouting report to counter craftier guards or take away passing angles from screeners rolling toward the rim.

When we saw Marshall in mid-February, the baseline for RWE was sitting him in drop coverage. There were instances where Marshall blitzed a dribbler, but again, those were wrinkles dictated by opposing personnel and only in specific actions. He looked agile enough to stay attached to a driver’s hip and make finishing a tricky task, while his wingspan lets him have a cushion and contest pull-ups.

His agility improved to where he can reliably stay attached to a guard’s hip and complicate finishing angles. His length also allows him to concede some ground and contest some pick-and-pops.

And even on nights when he’s not guarding a traditional low-post operator, Marshall’s presence can be a deterrent as a timely help defender.

But again, Marshall could go about his work cleaner. He averaged 7.9 fouls per 40 minutes last season, a rate that would even make Jeremiah Tilmon blush. So, it’s not surprising that Marshall doesn’t cause disruption cleanly. For example, he committed two fouls for every block or steal he tallied. An efficient defender would have a balanced ledger.

It’s not hard to see negative downstream consequences. MU’s base coverage demands bigs show hard, pivot quickly and recover. Marshall’s feet are better than you think, but it’s not hard to envision some opponents targeting him and seeing if they can’t run up a foul count that relegates him to the bench.

This is why MU’s decision to pursue Gray looks heady. Over three seasons at South Carolina, he averaged 13.5 minutes per game against teams that finished in the top 100 of KenPom. Between him and Marshall, the Tigers could deploy brawnier post players for 30 minutes per game.

The Role


Dale Zanine/Overtime Elite

Perhaps the biggest question in Peyton Marshall’s role this year is not whether Mizzou should be able to use a true post on the floor but whether they will choose to do so.

As it pertains to Marshall, he and Gray are locked into one positional slot. There’s no sliding up the positional ladder, and under Gates, MU’s never used a twin-towers approach. These two imposing men represent the entirety of Mizzou’s true-post rotation. Viewing Marshall and Gray as a binary choice risks missing the plot. Using this frame is better: Is this a situation where they play well enough for their position to exist?

It’s fair to say Mizzou has lacked interior players with Gray and Marshall’s profiles. However, there’s still some helpful context that comes with looking at how much playing time Gates has dispensed to traditional post players. Among those who’ve passed through Columbia, here’s how their minutes have shaken out:

  • Mohamed Diarra: 8.2 MPG
  • Jordan Butler: 10 MPG
  • Connor Vanover: 9.6 MPG
  • Mabor Majak: 4.9 MPG

It’s not hard to claim that perhaps Marshall — and Gray — will be better players than the ones who came before. But it’s also worth pointing out that if they’re not, Gates hasn’t hesitated to go a different direction.

Looking outside the program, a dozen freshmen arrived at high-major programs with similar composite rankings in the past four years. Their average minute rate was 24.5% — just under 10 minutes a game. However, that has been boosted greatly by two first-year standouts in Cameron Corhen and Mouhamed Gueye. If you were to remove those two players from the sample, the rate drops to 15.6% — 6 minutes per contest.

With the uncertainty of how the battle for post supremacy between Marshall and Gray will shake out, coupled with the question of how often a center is utilized, I find that minutes projection to be a solid approximation, especially when that player is competing with 15 bodies for minutes. Marshall will see regular time in the back of the rotation, but it may well depend on the matchup whether it ever goes over a few minutes per half.

No matter, the staff has done well injecting size and physical brawn into this group for future years, and none better epitomizes that than Marshall. His minutes will go a long way in shaping the best-case scenario for the future of Mizzou’s program.


PPP: Points Per Possession
Min %: This is simply the percentage of minutes played by a given player.
Usage %: A measure of personal possessions used while player is on the court. This includes making a shot, missing a shot coupled with a defensive rebound and a turnover.
eFG%: Same as traditional FG% with the added bonus of 3-point shots given 50% more weight to account for additional point.
OR%: The percentage of possible offensive rebounds a player gets.
DR%: The percentage of possible defensive rebounds a player gets.
AST%: Assists divided by field goals made by player’s teammates while on the court.
TO%: The percentage of personal possessions a player uses on turnovers.
FTR%: A rate which measures a player’s ability to get to the free throw line.
FT%: Free Throw shooting percentage.
2PT%: 2-point field goal percentage.
3PT% 3-point field goal percentage.

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Mizzou Hoops Player Preview: Peyton Marshall

Mizzou Hoops Player Preview: Peyton Marshall

Dale Zanine/Overtime Elite The freshman has dramatically reshaped his physique and worked on his passing reads, but his strength on defensive and the glass might earn steady minutes. Over the weeks leading up to the season, this series will dive deep into the players...

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MO’s Monday Musings: Did That Really Happen?

Much sadness in Tiger Nation | Missouri wide receiver Luther Burden III (3) walks off the field after an unsuccessful drive in the first half of a game against Texas A&M on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, at Kyle Field in College Station, Texas. (CAL TOBIAS/ROCK M NATION)

Yes, unfortunately it did.

Some quick observations from week number six of the college football season, served up in four quarter style. Legal Disclaimer: these views are my own and may be really dumb.


1st Quarter – Mizzou: Some friendly advice for Tiger fans

Doling out life advice after your team gets curb stomped on national TV is an interesting way to start the week, but here we are. We all saw what happened Saturday in College Station. It was unexpected. It was shocking. It was awful. It was the type of outcome that could leave a mark on the psyche of Tiger fans for awhile. Hopefully it doesn’t leave a lasting mark on this team, but we’ll see what kind of culture is inside the locker room going forward. The team culture has seemed strong the last couple of years under Coach Drink, so let’s hope that’s a foundation built on brick and stone that keeps people together, and not one built on sand that falls apart during times of trouble.

It was fun having our Tigers be part of the national conversation and being featured on all of the talking head podcasts, studio preview shows, national media outlet stories, etc. for the season’s first six weeks. It’s not going to be fun going forward, and you’re going to hear the terms ‘fraud’ or ‘paper tiger’ or any number of ways that the pundits will be labeling this team for the time being.

My word of advice is this. If you are the type that gets easily upset by what media types say about your team, if you are the type that takes the jabs personally, if these things make your blood boil and make you get in wars of words online – just take a break this week. Do yourself a favor and steer clear of football social media/podcasts to help your peace of mind. Give yourself a break and don’t go there this week, unless you’re the type that can see that stuff and let it roll off your back. Focus on having a great week at work, with your family or your friends, and when you wake up Saturday morning, turn the TV on ESPN2 and at 11 am (central), grab your drinks and snacks and root like hell for the Tigers to have a great day.

Of course, we fully expect you to digest every single piece of content produced this week by the Rock M Nation team. There will be demerits issued for deserters there.


2nd Quarter – SEC: Thanks, Vandy, for easing the pain a bit

Holy cow is football a crazy variance game. Three unbeaten SEC teams in the top-10 got beat Saturday. In the only game that wasn’t an upset, our #9 Tigers got boat raced in College Station. Unranked Arkansas, which just might be in the process of saving Sam Pittman’s bacon, upset #4 Tennessee, 19-14 in a surprising result. And the ultimate coup was Vanderbilt erasing decades of futility against #1 Alabama and knocking the Tide off their pedestal with a 40-35 upset win that was their first over ‘Bama in 40 years. That reminded me of when Mizzou finally beat Nebraska in 2003 for the first time since 1978, that was such an watershed moment for the program and the fans.

On behalf of Mizzou fans, I’d like to thank Vandy for taking the spotlight off of our clunker against A&M. If ‘Bama and Tennessee had won their games, the Tigers would be getting 100% of the attention in SEC circles, but now we’re just part of what happened to be a random crazy week in a crazy sport.

I liken it to a dark day in Mizzou hoops history – the 2012 NCAA Basketball Tournament loss to Norfolk State. After we lost that game, it felt like the world had ended and we’d never live it down. But then just an hour later, mighty Duke suffered just as humbling of an upset to Lehigh to soften the blow just a bit. That helped me chalk it up to a bad, random day and that ultimately, sh%# happens, you know?

So thanks Vandy. And thanks Arky, for that matter. Us Mizzou fans appreciate you lessening the pain a bit. Oh, and screw you, Norfolk State. There, I feel better now.


3rd Quarter – National: It was madness, madness I tell you!

If you were wondering where all of the upsets had gone recently, then you really enjoyed the national landscape in week #6. After several weeks of very few surprises overall, this week delivered the drama big time.

Seventeen top-25 teams saw action this week. Seven of them went down in flames, including #1 Alabama, #4 Tennessee, #9 Mizzou, #10 Michigan, #11 USC, #22 Louisville and #25 UNLV.

An eighth ranked team should have been added to the mix, but #8 Miami, Fla. pulled yet another one out of the fire when they erased a 25-point second half deficit to post a 39-38 road win at California. That comes on the heels of Miami winning one of the luckiest games ever when they survived a successful Hail Mary touchdown pass on the last play of the game against Virginia Tech, only to have the Hokie score erased by a questionable replay review.

That’s two unbelievably lucky wins in a row for the ‘Canes, who are fast becoming very hateable again, akin to their dynasty days of the 1980s and early 90s.


4th Quarter – Potpourri: Mizzou’s offense had the right idea

With the catch-all category, I’m going to wrap up with one more thought about the Tigers.

On the lead up to Mizzou’s game at Texas A&M this past week, there was much discussion about the Tiger offense and would they look improved or any different than they had the first four games. I was part of that discussion on Rock M, as I was hopeful that the bye week would lead to being more aggressive.

On Saturday, SEC Nation was live from College Station, and they did an arrival interview with Coach Drinkwitz where he mentioned something that piqued my interest. I’m paraphrasing here, but at one point he acknowledged that the team had been playing “reserved” and that the coaches had been coaching “reserved” and that it was time to cut it loose.

Those were words I was wanting to hear, and despite the disastrous final outcome on the day, I do feel like the Tiger offense showed a more aggressive mindset initially. Unfortunately, things went sideways so fast that any game script quickly went out the window.

Throwing mid-range on the first play of the game was great to see, and then I liked the call to go on 4th down once the Tigers got into A&M territory. We all know that Mizzou got screwed royally by the overturning of the DPI call, and who knows how that might have changed the day? But aside from that, big plays were there to be had when the game was still in the balance, and the Tiger offense took their shots. Brady Cook and Theo Wease just missed on a potential house call when a pass down the left seam went off Wease’s fingertips. Hard to know if the missed connection was the throw being a little too inside the seam, or if Wease needed to bend his route out more than he did. Or perhaps it was both? Either way, you’ve got to make that play if you’re going to win a game like this on the road against a good team.

Of course, on the very next snap, Cook rolled the pocket right and found Luther Burden behind the coverage for a 75-yard catch-and-run TD to momentarily make it 10-7. An unfortunate lineman downfield penalty wiped that out to the collective disbelief of Tiger fans. After that happened, it seemed like Mizzou’s collective resolve went in the crapper, which was surprising and disappointing.

In the end, it was a butt-kicking in impressive fashion by A&M, and I am in no way trying to paint a rosy picture by saying the Tiger offense was better than it looked, because 10 points won’t cut it. However, I do feel good that they had the right gameplan and mindset going in on a day that just went haywire. Sometimes, the best-laid plans just don’t work. This was one of those days. If the Tiger defense had held up better, I like to think we would have seen the offense do some exciting things.

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MO’s Monday Musings: Did That Really Happen?

MO’s Monday Musings: Did That Really Happen?

Much sadness in Tiger Nation | Missouri wide receiver Luther Burden III (3) walks off the field after an unsuccessful drive in the first half of a game against Texas A&M on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, at Kyle Field in College Station, Texas. (CAL TOBIAS/ROCK M NATION)...

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BREAKING NEWS: Mizzou Gym announces HUUUUUUUge roster addition

2022 NCAA Division I Women’s Gymnastics Championship - Raleigh Regional
Photo by Eakin Howard/Getty Images

I still cannot believe this is happening despite knowing about it for weeks.

I JUST CANNOT BELIEVE IT.

I’ve known this for WEEKS and I still can’t believe it.

On Sunday afternoon, the official team account put out a teaser. A figure in the darkness. Audio playing with the voices of gym commentators John Roethlisberger and Alicia Sacramone Quinn talking about being one of the best in the country on a particular event. Hmmmm…

By Sunday night, the gymternet started asking questions.

“IS THIS HELEN HU????????? PLEASE I NEED TO KNOW NOWWWWW.”

“ARE WE GETTING HELEN HU BACK?????? OH MY GOD.”

“NO WAY IS THIS HELEN HU OH MY GOD?!”

“WHAT WHAT WHAT PLEASE LET IT BE PLEASE PLEASE PLEASE”

And so many more. In all caps. That harmless lil’ hype video had gone viral.

And then on Monday morning at 9am, as promised, the news arrived.

HELEN HU IS BACK.

If you aren’t interested in hearing how I came to find this out weeks ago, feel free to skip the next few paragraphs and to what this means, lineups, and all that stuff.

If you’re still with me, here goes.

Back in mid-August, Shannon Welker responded to an email I sent him with the statement, “We have one more surprise for Gym World. Stay tuned.” I know, I know, super detailed. So every time my twitter notifications went off for the past TWO months, I wondered, is THIS the news?!? Is it scheduling? Is it a recruiting coup? Is one of the major 2025ers joining the team early? The latter is kinda what my gym friends had decided upon, as scheduling, unless it’s something wild like welcoming in UCLA and we get to see Jordan Chiles, just doesn’t seem “Gym World-ly”, and as hard as I tried to get “HEZ to MIZ” happen, it just wasn’t picking up steam and now Hezly Rivera is going to be wearing Tiger stripes of another color. Awkward…

I came upon this top-secret information purely by coincidence as it was a case of someone (not me, actually) being in the right place at the right time. I was sitting at my desk at the J-School, minding my own business and working very diligently on Wednesday, September 25 around 8:30am, when a **ping** sounded in Microsoft Teams from a J-School professor, [redacted]. “Are you here? Go outside. Or look out your window? Mizzou Gym was just shooting their poster in the amphitheater!” it said. I didn’t see anything from the window and so I ran outside to the concrete structure outside of Reynolds Journalism Institute that’s not easily visible to passersby (quite sneaky in retrospect to shoot there)— but the team was gone already. Sadness.

But the story doesn’t end there, friends, because when [redacted] said she took some photos that she wouldn’t share with the public without permission from the team (such journalistic integrity at all times), I asked her to send them to me. I thought I was just receiving some fun team photos, and I was delighted. Oh, there’s all the newbies— Amy and Railey and Kaia and Olivia, et al. — everyone looks so cute. Amari’s hair looks fabulous, and ooh, Joci is wearing her hair straight. Normal stuff. But then I see it… Or rather, someone. A figure that I can’t place in the top row between Rayna and Kennedy. My reaction (and Nate’s when I sent it him) was very similar to that of the people who saw the teaser video on Sunday.

There’s no way.

Is it?

It just can’t be.

SHUT UP.

Who is that?

No way.

But she…

NO. F’ING. WAY.

Consider this my version of Charlie’s Always Sunny conspiracy bulletin board I sent to Nate Salsman.

So what does this mean?!?

I have so many questions. Questions I hope to get answers to soon enough. After graduating early as a RS-Junior and announcing her retirement from gymnastics on April 3, 2023, Helen Hu spent the last year traveling around the world visiting such places as South Korea, Finland, Italy, Vietnam, India, Ecuador, Central America, Thailand, Japan and more. When did she decide to un-retire? And did she train at all while she was away? A year-plus is a long time without gymnastics. I NEED to know details.

Per the MUTigers.com release, which was released alongside the twitter post, Hu said, “When weighing my options, I couldn’t shake the feeling that I have more to give, and that belief that I could do more,” Hu said. “I wanted to continue helping the program grow and be a part of this really special sport. It felt like I would be missing out on a special opportunity that people don’t get or can’t achieve. So, I felt like I owe it to myself, the sport and the team to come back for a year because I knew that I could.”

Hu Dat?

So, what are the Tigers getting in the return of Helen Hu? Besides one of the most gorgeous beam workers I’ve ever seen? Well, depending upon the level of training she’s kept up in the past year, an unbelievably consistent performer. The Chicago native first arrived in CoMo in 2020 and immediately found her way into the bars and beam lineups in every meet. And for more than a half-dozen meets, she competed on vault and floor as well. (We certainly don’t expect her to do that now.) By her rookie season’s end, Hu ranked 5th nationally on beam, having scored a 9.975 twice, to go along with four 9.95 scores and three 9.90 scores. Her lowest score that season? A 9.85. That’s just craziness. On bars she ended the season ranked 11th nationally after scoring a whopping six scores of 9.875 or higher, including two 9.95s and a 9.925. Here’s a 2020 routine in which she scored 9.95.

A preseason ACL tear in 2021 meant that Helen would spend the year rehabbing her knee, but she returned to competition super strong in 2022, competing in 12 meets and scoring a 9.90+ on beam seven times (including 4x 9.95 and a 9.9375 at Regional finals). After fighting some back issues, Hu also eventually rejoined the bars rotation about halfway through the season and notched four scores 9.875 or higher.

2023 was the big comeback year for the Original H^2 (sorry, Hannah Horton), as she posted a 9.90 or better on beam in 10 of 13 meets and matched her career high of 9.975 in a March quad meet, ending the season ranked 9th nationally. Below is a video of her 9.925 at NCAA Regionals.

She was just as successful on uneven bars, recording a near-perfect performance of 9.950 on the bars at the 2023 SEC Conference meet — she was ROBBED!! — which tied her career-high. Here’s the aforementioned 9.95 bars routine. Kathy Johnson Clarke was absolutely beside herself here.

And then, just when I thought we’d be watching her for at least another year or two, she went through Senior Day ceremonies and retired. Here’s what I wrote in my season-ending piece in 2023, after it was announced Hu’s gym career was ending:

I’m sad that we’ll never see another jaw-dropping Helen Hu beam routine though. Oh man, did she deserve a 10. Jerks.

So maybe another reason she’s back is to get that long lost 10? It took Sienna Schreiber five years to get hers, after all? Or because she knows just how good this team can be and she wants to be a part of it? College Gym News did just name Mizzou one of its seven teams that could surprise everyone this season, and that’s without this information. Or maybe she just missed it?

Where She Fits

Remember those beautiful way-too-early lineup previews I worked so hard on during the summer with the help of The Maneater’s Nate Salsman and CGN’s Claire Billman? Well, those digital pages can just be ripped up now, because there are new, even harder to predict— AND EXCITING!!! — line up decisions to be made, and OH BOY, I CANNOT WAIT. Nate and I convened within the hour to not only celebrate the team’s good fortune and try to figure out what this all means for the black & gold, but to marvel at the fact that no one else knew about this and we would be the ultimate secret keepers. These lineups, you guys… SO MANY OPTIONS… just chef’s kiss. (scores listed are career-highs)

BEAM

1. Addison Lawrence— 9.975 | 2. Helen Hu— 9.975 | 3. Lauren Macpherson— 9.925 | 4. Grace Anne Davis— 9.925 | 5. Amari Celestine— 9.925 | 6. Olivia Kelly— 9.95 equivalent

Others in consideration: Kennedy Griffin— 9.875 | Railey Jackson— 9.85 equivalent | Kaia Tanskanen | Hannah Horton— 9.825 | Rayna Light— 9.80 | Amy Wier | Lisa Szeibert— 9.75+ equivalent

BARS

1. Mara Titarsolej— 10.0 | 2. Helen Hu— 9.95 | 3. Jocelyn Moore— 9.925 | 4. Amari Celestine— 9.925 | 5. Lauren Macpherson— 9.925 | 6. Kyra Burns— 9.90

Others in consideration: Kaia Tanskanen | Rayna Light— 9.85 | Addison Lawrence— 9.85 | Abby Mueller— 9.85 | Rayna Light— 9.85 | Hannah Horton— 9.80 | Lisa Szeibert | Ayla Acevedo

What it Means

This is massive news. HUge news, if you will. If you are a listener of Majority Rules, our Rock M Olympic Sports show, you’d know I gave away an Easter egg with using the word HUUUUUGE repeatedly towards the end of Wednesday’s episode. Adding another insanely good gymnast like Helen Hu to the mix just makes this team that much deeper. It propels them higher into potential SEC rankings. It increases their chances at getting back to the National Championships in San Antonio, which is their ultimate goal this season. Teams that make it that far have superior depth and peak at the right time. In 2022, they finished just one spot out of making that elusive National Championship final and finished fifth. Helen was on that team. She remembers what it felt like. So this is it. Time to wake people up and make them pay attention to the Missouri Tigers. Let’s shock the gym world, shall we?

WELCOME BACK, HELEN!

NCAA Los Angeles Gymnastics Regional
Photo by Katharine Lotze/Getty Images
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – MARCH 30: Helen Hu of the Missouri Tigers competes on balance beam during session two of round two of the NCAA Los Angeles Gymnastics Regional at UCLA Pauley Pavilion on March 30, 2023 in Los Angeles, California.

You can read the official team announcement here.

Nate and I will be recording a special episode of Majority Rules on Monday night to dissect the news. It’s so exciting.

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A Fan’s Notes: It’s Now or Never

Missouri wide receiver Luther Burden III (3) looks up at the scoreboard as Missouri fell behind by more than 30 points in the second half of a game against Texas A&M on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024, at Kyle Field in College Station, Texas. (CAL TOBIAS/ROCK M NATION)

Mizzou flunked their midterm examine in College Station. There is still time for a successful 2024, but the situation is becoming more difficult.

As an unseasonable heat wave raised the temperature around the country, Mizzou football had the heat turned up on their season. The 2024 season that was promised is no more.

Visions of dancing joyously into the 12-playoff at 10-2 or 11-1 have gone up in flames. The warning signs from weeks 3 and 4 are now full-blown emergencies, and the Tigers will have to rally to meet their goals.

It was a complete and total system failure. The preparation was poor, despite a bye week, as shown by Texas A&M’s ruthless execution on offense. The team’s motivation and mindset were lacking, evidenced by a few humiliating moments. Execution was completely missing; not one unit of the team had a good day (except for punting).

Did the Tigers expect to walk into College Station and be handed a win instead of earning it?

All off-season we have talked about this team making the inaugural 12-team playoff field. Not only is the team now squarely behind the 8-ball for achieving that goal, they have not played to a level of performance that deserves to make it. As Sam wrote in his Sunday pourover, this season can no longer be judged through the lens of 2023. Take it only as a five-point data set and ignore your priors.

Eli Drinkwitz said something potentially illuminating in his press conference, a line that will be like the proverbial unfilled glass of water: is it half-full or half-empty? He said “our season starts now.”

What do you make of that? Are you annoyed by the admission that the team treated a few imminently losable games as warmups? Or do you believe THIS is the week the team locks in and belatedly shakes off the rust?

If it is the latter, Drinkwitz’s track record at Mizzou should give you reason to believe. Both the 2021 and 2022 teams easily could have folded — plenty of ball clubs in similarly tough situations have. We have seen every year that his teams are tough, have excellent chemistry, and play to the final whistle.

That is what makes Saturday’s result so concerning. For the first time I can remember, other than a dud late in the COVID season, a Drinkwitz team had never completely no-showed like this. Some teams laid an early egg and rallied late – 2022 at Auburn, 2023 at Kentucky. Some got blown off the ball and were severely outclassed – mostly 2021 – but the effort and body language were never as poor as this week.

Those teams had Javon Foster, Darius Robinson, Kris Abrams-Draine and Ennis Rakestraw. Some of them had Cody Schrader. The best college teams are player-led. Missouri had excellent player leadership for the first few Drinkwitz years.

I am holding onto hope that they still do. Brady Cook, Theo Wease, Chuck Hicks, and Kristian Williams are team captains and all have received praise for their leadership. I hope there are some other veterans too, like a Cooper, Noel, Bryant, McClellan, Flagg or Carnell who also are ready to be a supporting voice.

There are a lot of things that need to happen for this team to have a successful season, a realistic goal that is still on the table, even if their biggest dreams now seem impossible. Many of them are tangible, football related challenges. But for the intangibles, it’s time now for Drinkwitz and his veteran leaders to exhibit again the ability to rally a wounded team.

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