At first, the substitution didn’t seem like a big deal.
Missouri
How one lineup reveals the fragility of Missouri’s short rotation
Anthony Robinson II stood at the free-throw line, hoping to finish a four-point play after Texas’ Chendall Weaver fouled him on a clumsy closeout. Robinson’s step-back three had just nudged Missouri ahead by one with 1:35 left in the half, and Missouri coach Dennis Gates took the chance to swap T.O. Barrett for Jacob Crews.
On paper, the move made sense. With Robinson and Jayden Stone, Barrett gave the Tigers three ball handlers. Trent Pierce and Mark Mitchell stayed in to match Texas’ small-ball lineup with Nic Codie at center.
Yet the move only looked standard.
Instead, Gates had inserted a lineup with the smallest margin for error. Ninety-three seconds later, Missouri lost its lead. Tramon Mark used a high ball screen, turned the corner, and drew a foul. His three-point play put the Longhorns ahead for good in an 86-85 loss that pushed Mizzou back onto the bubble.
That sequence isn’t meant to blame that lineup alone. It’s a snapshot of a bigger problem. As the season has gone on and the rotation has gotten smaller, there aren’t many options left. That’s how some tough combinations end up playing during key moments.
That’s why Robinson, Barrett, and Stone matter in this discussion. They show what happens when MU is limited by its options. In about 71 minutes together, that trio has a minus-34 scoring margin and gives up almost 1.3 points per possession.
The problem gets worse when Pierce and Mitchell are in the front court. Opponents grab nearly 38 percent of their missed shots against this lineup, almost six percent worse than MU’s average in SEC play.
That lineup’s struggles are jarring given its members. Stone, Pierce, Robinson and Mitchell all have net ratings above 8.0 points per 100 possessions, per Synergy Sports data. In Bayesian Performance Ratings, Mitchell, Stone, Robinson and Pierce are all above 3.0, which is generally the cutoff for a starter at a high-major program.
While Robinson’s offensive struggles persist, he still grades out as an above-average defender. Barrett’s steadily improved to the point where, at worst, he can replace Robinson’s diminished production. Even if Stone’s not a secondary creator, he can leverage shooting 38.8 percent from deep during SEC play to attack closeouts.
EvanMiya’s projection system for lineups indicates this group should have a net rating of plus-24.84. That’s not elite, but it would be strong enough to justify Gates using it for five to seven minutes per game. Those minutes typically come toward the end of the first half or just before the close of the second half.
Instead, the inverse happens. Going to the tape helps uncover why, and it doesn’t require a fine-grained analysis.
Let’s start with turnovers. They’ve plagued the roster all season, but they’re particularly acute for this group, especially against pressure. Barrett owns a 35.7 percent turnover rate when teams roll out a press, while Robinson gives the ball away 16.7 percent of the time.
Remember how MU almost let Auburn rally from a 12-point deficit in the final four minutes? It was this group that initially caved in to that pressure. While the Tigers were mostly sound last week in College Station, this lineup had the loosest grip against Texas A&M.
An opponent doesn’t always cash in those giveaways, but leaking possessions helps explain why the group stalls at a break-even 100.0 offensive rating.
Now, this group is vulnerable in transition. Yet it’s not a matter of effort. Often, MU has sprinted back, but it still gives up paint touches. Against Auburn, for example, the culprit was shoddy closeouts.
In College Station, the wall MU built to stop a break was still porous enough that Zach Clemence reached the left block before dropping the ball off to Ali Dibba. This was also the group that allowed Thomas Haugh’s three-point play on a press break cut Missouri’s lead against Florida to 76-74.
Those woes compound when slip-ups unfold in the half-court on defense.
Point-of-attack defense bends too easily. Screen navigation breaks down. Off-ball rotations are sometimes too aggressive, but that’s partly by design. You can also see in the clip packet that Barrett aggressively rotates down against a drive at Texas A&M, leaving a shooter wide open in the slot.
So, here’s the real question: If this lineup compresses the margin this tightly, what lever does Gates have left to pull?
There’s one easy solution: break up the Robinson-Barrett tandem. The Tigers have a minus-49 scoring margin when they play together and allow 122.7 points per 100 possessions.
Examining potential combinations shows that Stone pairs well with Robinson or Barrett. Toggling between Crews or Pierce doesn’t produce drastically different outcomes either. It also reinforces a theme from broader lineup data: sliding Barrett to combo guard and Stone to the wing produces poor results.
Even if you accept that the roles are constrained, there’s another inevitability: Stone will need a break. The question is how Gates staggers those minutes. Well, Sebastian Mack is still around.
The UCLA transfer represents the cleanest theoretical fix. The junior’s defensive efficiency ranks in the 59th percentile nationally, and he allows 0.759 points per possession when guarding spot-ups and pick-and-rolls. Slotting him into a small-ball lineup might also ease some of the spacing issues that hinder his downhill style.
However, the chart shows that swapping him for Robinson doesn’t produce stellar outcomes. Pairing him with Robinson can work if there’s a reliable shooter on the wing. Dusting off Mack, though, seems unlikely. He’s taken seven DNPs in conference play and only played more than 10 minutes in one of his five appearances, and that was a blowout at Alabama.
Barring an extremely late renaissance, Mack’s utility probably is still speculative.
And that’s the unpleasant truth. Gates will likely keep returning to this lineup, because that’s what life looks like when your rotation functionally stops at seven players. The math says the group should work. The individual grades say it should hold. But the margin says otherwise.
This isn’t about effort. It ‘s about whether a talented group can find a way to do boring tasks like valuing the ball, preventing paint touches and closing out under control. The projection model assumes neutral environments. The SEC rarely offers them.
There’s no clean fix. Splitting Robinson and Barrett might buy stability. Dusting off Mack might buy defense. But every adjustment robs something else from a roster already overextended.
The wider arc makes this familiar. Coming out of non-conference play, Missouri throttled tempo, tightened the bench, and embraced gap principles because the roster demanded it. That adaptation has kept the Tigers competitive. Yet it has created a thinner margin to defend.
That’s MU’s challenge over the next three weeks: find a bit more breathing room. Whether it can will determine if the Tigers make a return trip to the NCAA Tournament – even if the starting point might be Dayton.
Missouri
Gov. Kehoe announces mid-Missouri gubernatorial appointments
Gov. Mike Kehoe announced two gubernatorial appointments Friday to vacant positions in mid-Missouri counties.
Doug Miller, of California, Mo., was appointed as Moniteau County associate commissioner, district one.
Miller is a Moniteau County native who has worked as a middle school physical education and health teacher in the county for 27 years. Since 2021, he has worked as an office manager for Rackers Manufacturing and a bus driver for the California school district.
Rodney Southard, of Rolla, was appointed as Maries County eastern district commissioner.
Southard is a fifth-generation Missouri farmer who previously worked as a support specialist for NEW Solutions and a surface water specialist for the U.S. Geological Survey. He is currently the chairman of MU Extension in Maries County.
Missouri
Scouting Future Saints: Missouri edge rusher Zion Young
Edge rusher turned out to be a strong position for the New Orleans Saints last season. Saints edge rushers combined for 28.5 sacks in 2025, with Chase Young and Cameron Jordan accounting for 20.5 sacks and 52 pressures. Jordan is currently a free agent and will be in his 16th season if he does return. This leads most believing that the team will pursue a young edge rusher in the draft. One option could be Missouri Tigers pass rusher Zion Young if this happens. Young is one of a handful of talented edge defenders that could still be on the board midway through the second day. Here is a closer look at the profile of perhaps one of the more underrated defenders in the 2026 NFL Draft class.
Zion Young bio
- Position: Edge
- College: Missouri Tigers
- Height: 6-feet, 6 inches
- Weight: 262 pounds
Out of Westlake High School in Georgia, Young initially committed to the Michigan State Spartans in the Big Ten. He’d see limited playing time during eight games in 2022 but still managed a sack and 2.5 tackles for loss among 21 total stops. Young was much more involved for the Spartans in 2023, recording 4.5 tackles for loss and 1.5 sacks. He’d enter the transfer portal after that season, landing with the Missouri Tigers in the SEC.
A stout Missouri defense was strengthened with Young’s addition. He contributed 2.5 sacks and 5.5 tackles for loss among his 42 total stops in 2024. Last season, Young solidified his attention from NFL scouts. He led the Tigers with 16.5 tackles for loss, second best in the SEC, in addition to 6.5 sacks. Those numbers earned him 1st Team All-SEC honors.
Strengths
- Prototype size and length for both 3-4 and 4-3 fronts
- Displays good power and leverage on contact
- Strength to muscle through double-teams
- Sets the edge extremely well against the run
- Keeps blockers off–balance with combination of speed and power
- Sets up inside moves with good arm extension
Weaknesses
- Inconsistent pass rush production
- Lacks refined counter moves
- Not a great bend around the outside of tackles
- Must do a better job at disengaging for pursuit
- Questionable agility for a stand-up edge rusher
Zion Young 2026 draft outlook
Most predictions have Young being selected in the second or third round. He does have the power and upside to be a surprise first round selection for the right scheme. While his agility and athleticism creates some questions, there is little doubt that he has the raw power and tenacity to be a defensive contributor.
New Orleans is expected to add an edge rusher within the first two days of the draft. With an emphasis on an improved run defense, Young could be a welcomed addition to their system as a strong side defender. Young’s upside as a pass rusher would govern how much he plays early, but he would likely be an immediate part of any defensive rotation along the outside.
Missouri
Thousands show up to protest current administration at ‘No Kings’ rally in Kansas City, Missouri
KSHB 41 reporter Lily O’Shea Becker covers Franklin and Douglas counties in Kansas. Share your story idea with Lily.
—
Thousands showed up to Mill Creek Park on Saturday in Kansas City, Missouri, in a wave of protests across the country criticizing U.S. President Donald Trump and his administration.
Thousands show up to protest current administration at KCMO ‘No Kings’ rally
Multiple protesters told KSHB 41 News they participated in the protest because they feel like it is the only way their voices can be heard.
Chris Morrison/KSHB
“Congress is not working for us,” said Sharon, a protester at Mill Creek Park. “I have called my Congress people numerous times.”
It was the third wave of ‘No Kings’ protests across the country since June 2025.
“I’ve been here for each of the ‘No Kings,’ and I’ll admit that I’m frustrated that I have to be back here again,” protester Carter Taylor said.
Taylor is a teacher for Kansas City Public Schools with AFT Local 691, and she said she showed up to represent her students.
“I hope that everyone here doesn’t just stay here today — that they donate to food banks, that they check in on their public schools,” Taylor said.
Will Shaw/KSHB
Protesters held signs critiquing the current administration’s stances on tariffs, ongoing wars and immigration enforcement, among other things.
Chris Morrison/KSHB
“It means that people care,” protester Lonnie Beattle said. “People care about what’s going on in this country, and people are not happy with what’s going on in the country.”
—
-
Sports1 week agoIOC addresses execution of 19-year-old Iranian wrestler Saleh Mohammadi
-
New Mexico1 week agoClovis shooting leaves one dead, four injured
-
Miami, FL4 days agoJannik Sinner’s Girlfriend Laila Hasanovic Stuns in Ab-Revealing Post Amid Miami Open
-
Tennessee6 days agoTennessee Police Investigating Alleged Assault Involving ‘Reacher’ Star Alan Ritchson
-
Minneapolis, MN4 days agoBoy who shielded classmate during school shooting receives Medal of Honor
-
Politics1 week agoSchumer gambit fails as DHS shutdown hits 36 days and airport lines grow
-
Science1 week agoRecord Heat Meets a Major Snow Drought Across the West
-
Technology1 week agoYouTube job scam text: How to spot it fast