
A dunk of faith: How last summer's baptism changed life of Mizzou's Trent Pierce
Trent Pierce’s freshman year of college was a baptism by fire.
Trent Pierce’s freshman year of college was a baptism by fire.
The two Missouri men’s basketball players who have become so adept at adapting made “SportsCenter” this morning.
The tag team of Mark Mitchell and Caleb Grill powered a triple-digit offensive showing for Missouri Wednesday.
Time takes away a lot of things, particularly if you look at time as age (Father Time is undefeated), but time also gives us plenty. It gives wisdom.
The last time Missouri blew Oklahoma rubble off the Mizzou Arena floor like this, the Tigers’ coach was effusive in his praise.
Oklahoma might as well have had a ghost defending the post.
Missouri wrote its lead in pencil, only for Tennessee to break out an eraser.
The sun shone brightly upon Missouri men's basketball. Guard Caleb Grill continued to drain 3-pointers like he's the best shooter in the nation, which he probably is.
They don’t just score, they pour – 3 after 3, if only because they can’t shoot a 4. The rain won’t let up in Columbia, where Mizzou’s Tigers are among the Southeastern Conference’s top 3-point shooting teams.
Pick a transportation metaphor divisible by two and toss in some personification. That was No. 22 Missouri men’s basketball after Saturday’s 83-75 victory over No. 16 Mississippi: