
From surgery to baseball, Sam Horn's unique path to Mizzou QB battle
Missouri quarterback Sam Horn is back on the field, perhaps a bit improbably, for the Tigers’ fall camp.
Missouri quarterback Sam Horn is back on the field, perhaps a bit improbably, for the Tigers’ fall camp.
The Missouri offensive line is getting a little funky.
Talking over dinner before Southeastern Conference media days a few weeks ago in Atlanta, Missouri coach Eli Drinkwitz asked center Connor Tollison who needed to step up on the defensive side of the ball for the Tigers to find success in 2025.
The battle endures. Missouri football began its third and final full week of fall camp on Monday, still seeking separation in its quarterback competition.
How do you say goodbye when someone is already gone? Because Marquis Johnson isn’t done doing so.
Man, in an NIL world, Mizzou’s Zion Young could have fun in Columbia, Missouri, with the famous scoop from his scoop-and-score touchdown – ice cream shops to dog waste cleanup to, heck, even the journalism school (“From the football field to the J-school newsrooms, Mizzou students get scoops”).
Watching Missouri’s defensive ends practice is a lesson in ballistics, a matter of precision and explosion.
Mizzou’s best football player? Mean Cayden Green. Pound for pound, here’s thinking he’s better than quarterbacks Beau Pribula and Sam Horn, running back Ahmad Hardy, safety Jalen Catalon or receiver Kevin Coleman Jr.
Picture this: Beau Pribula seated in the passenger seat of an upscale car, with Eli Drinkwitz driving.
If there ever was a honeymoon period at the start of Missouri’s fall camp, it’s over now.