The Sentinel-Record

Missouri tries to finish on high note

- DAVE SKRETTA

The senior class that arrived at Missouri four seasons ago was joining a program that had reached back-to-back Southeaste­rn Conference title games, one that had surpassed just about every expectatio­n after it bolted from the Big 12 for the powerhouse conference.

They’ve experience­d the collapse of the program, the hiring of a new coach in Barry Odom and now the return of the Tigers to prominence heading into their regular-season finale on Friday.

What better way to go out than with a win over rival Arkansas (2-9, 0-7)?

“We’ve gone through a lot,” said Odom, who won just four games his first season and seven last season, but has a chance to finish 8-4 and perhaps make a New Year’s Day Six bowl game with a win over the Razorbacks.

“There’s been some lows and some highs and they’ve been able to hold tight together and hold true to them, and that’s going to help them down the road.”

The Tigers (7-4, 3-4) are certainly finishing strong. They’ve followed a 0-4 start to league play by beating Florida (8-3, 5-3), Vanderbilt (5-6, 2-5) and Tennessee (5-6, 2-5) — two of those games on the road.

Their winning streak has coincided with standout performanc­es by senior quarterbac­k Drew Lock, who began the year as a Heisman Trophy candidate before a rough stretch. He’s thrown for at least 250 yards and seven total touchdowns the past three weeks, sending his draft stock soaring.

Some believe he could be the first quarterbac­k selected when April rolls around.

“To Drew’s credit, he started believing in who he is and what he’s capable of becoming,” Missouri offensive coordinato­r Derek Dooley said, “and he’s stayed the course.”

The Razorbacks hope to the spoil party and provide first-year coach Chad Morris with a victory upon which he can build. Arkansas took Ole Miss (5-6, 1-6), Texas A&M (7-4, 4-3) and LSU (9-2, 5-2) down to the wire, but wins have been painfully hard to come by outside of games against Tulsa (2-9, 1-6 American Athletic Conference) and Eastern Illinois (3-8, 3-5 Ohio Valley Conference).

“Losing will never be acceptable in this program,” Morris said. “I’m not going to compromise. I’ve been here before, I know what it looks like and I know what it looks like moving forward. We’ve got a lot of people pouring their hearts and souls into this program but we need more.”

Like a win over the Tigers in their annual rivalry game.

Missouri running back Damarea Crockett grew up in Little Rock and wasn’t offered a scholarshi­p by his home-state team, so to say that he’s craving an opportunit­y to play the Razorbacks would be an understate­ment. And not even an ankle injury sustained in last week’s win over Tennessee is expected to keep him out. “I’m just trying to swallow that pride,” he said. Tigers tight end Albert Okwuegbuna­m, a finalist for the John Mackey Award, has missed more than two games with a shoulder injury. He practiced a bit this week and could play, though Odom has promised not to jeopardize his future by rushing him back.

Arkansas defensive backs Kamren Curl and Ryan Pulley are suspended for this week’s game after they were flirting with Mississipp­i State cheerleade­rs rather than warming up with the team last week. Both are starters.

“That’s not something I would do, but some people have different focus,” Razorbacks linebacker Dre Greenlaw said. “I just hope everybody considers the seniors for this last game and plays their all, gives their all.”

The Tigers are 21-point favorites to beat Arkansas, and a closer look at where the Razorbacks rank statistica­lly explains why. They are No. 113 nationally in total offense and No. 82 in total defense.

“I’m not worried about what their record is or isn’t,” Odom said. “We need to prepare really, really well. They have good players, a really good staff. We know we’ll get their best shot. We need to prepare and go play our game.”

Odom wanted the stands packed on Senior Day, so he vowed to buy a ticket with his own money for anybody wanting to attend a game on the day after Thanksgivi­ng. More than 1,000 tickets have been ordered and paid for by him.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? STAYING THE COURSE: Missouri quarterbac­k Drew Lock (3) drops back to pass Saturday against pressure by Tennessee defensive lineman Kyle Phillips (5) during the first half of the Tigers’ 50-17 drubbing of the Volunteers in Knoxville, Tenn.
The Associated Press STAYING THE COURSE: Missouri quarterbac­k Drew Lock (3) drops back to pass Saturday against pressure by Tennessee defensive lineman Kyle Phillips (5) during the first half of the Tigers’ 50-17 drubbing of the Volunteers in Knoxville, Tenn.

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