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NEW STORY FOUR DOWN TERRITORY

JHamilton23

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Jun 18, 2022
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Welcome to Four Down Territory.

So, I’ll give you three thoughts on Missouri football or college football in general. Then, the last thought will be whatever I want it to be.

1. Retaining Kirby Moore and Blake Baker.

It appears that the Tigers will get to spin the block with their coaching staff and build on the team’s impressive 2023 season.

Over the weekend, head coach Eli Drinkwitz said to expect news that offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach Kirby Moore and defensive coordinator Blake Baker would be returning to the Tigers in 2024.

Does that necessarily mean contract extensions? No. Moore is in the first year of his deal, and Baker just got an extension last season.

Regardless, this is great news for Missouri and its fans.

It only took until the midway point of the season for rumblings about Moore being on the move this offseason to take place, but for good reason.

Last year, in his first year as an offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Fresno State, Moore helped the Bulldogs become the 53rd-ranked offense at 402.8 yards per game and the 51st-ranked scoring offense at 30.8 points per game on the way to a Mountain West Conference Championship, LA Bowl win and 10-4 record.

That was in a MWC that featured four of the nation’s top 50 defenses.

This season, he’s taken Missouri’s previously 82nd-ranked offense and moved them up 57 spots to the 25th-best offense in the nation at 442.9 yards per game and up 63 spots from 88th to the 25th-ranked scoring offense at 34.1.

He added explosivity to the offense, helped mold Cody Schrader and Luther Burden III into All-Americans, helped quarterback Brady Cook destroy the game-manager conversation, helped turn Xavier Delgado and Connor Tollison into viable starters and developed tight end Brett Norfleet into not only a serviceable receiver in the passing game but a All-SEC Freshman selection.

The offense flowed and was much more dynamic than it had been in the last nine or 10 years.

Moore's name had been linked to the Boise State and San Diego State head coaching jobs but not much came out of those rumors.

Now, the Tigers will lose at least three starters with Foster, Delgado and Schrader running out of eligibility. Nonetheless, the offense is in good shape heading into 2024, and that’s before you add in the pieces the team will add via the transfer portal and or through their recruiting class.

Baker, on the other hand, seemed like a likelier candidate to leave between the two coordinators. He had a terrific first season in 2022 and helped Mizzou become a top-35 defense. Ultimately, that defense was the main reason the Tigers won six games.

He lost three starters from last year’s team and had to start from scratch at defensive end with the departure of his top four defensive ends. But yet again, he led the defense to a top-40 defense (38th at 347.2 yards per game). Also, the scoring defense ranked 42nd at 22.33 points per game. That’s almost three points less than in 2022.

Baker’s name was attached to the Tulane head coaching job, his alma mater, and the LSU defensive coordinator job if it became open.

But Tulane hired Jon Sumrall and LSU still has Matt House as the defensive coordinator.

Regardless, there was a decent chance the Tigers would lose maybe one coordinator, but they actually will end up retaining both. Big-time wins for the program.

2. The Tigers start making splashes in the transfer portal.

The transfer portal opened on Dec. 4 and it seemed like there wasn’t much activity from the Tigers on both fronts in the first few days. Sure, several Tigers entered the portal with linebacker Dameon Wilson, who played in six games and had two tackles, being the headliner of that group.

Although the Tigers will inevitably lose some players after the bowl game, it's good that they'll have a full roster going into the Cotton Bowl. However, Missouri will need some players to make decisions, so it can have enough scholarships to go around.

On the flip side, Mizzou didn’t add anyone from Dec. 4-7, but then they finally jumped in the pool and made a splash by adding Toriano Pride, formerly a cornerback at Clemson, on Dec. 8.

Pride was a former four-star prospect in 2022 and is currently ranked by Rivals as a four-star transfer and the 33rd-best transfer available.

He had 14 tackles and four pass deflections this season.

This is a big-time addition. The Tigers will almost certainly be losing both starting cornerbacks Kris Abrams-Draine and Ennis Rakestraw to the NFL. Both players have already accepted their invites to the Senior Bowl, which is a good indication that they’re on the way out.

Missouri doesn’t have to add another cornerback but it might be beneficial.

However, with Dreyden Norwood, Marcus Clarke, Shamar McNeil, Nicholas DeLoach already on the roster, it might not need another corner.

The Tigers made another move on Monday by adding former Georgia State running back Marcus Carroll, who was the nation’s seventh-leading rusher with 1,350 yards to go with 13 touchdowns.

Carroll is ranked as a three-star transfer and the 133rd available transfer in Rivals’ transfer portal tracker rankings.

He will be replacing Schrader, who had a magical season and finished the regular season as the nation’s third-leading rusher at 1,499 yards. He also had 13 rushing touchdowns.

He won the Burlsworth Trophy, awarded to the nation’s best former walk-on, was named an All-SEC first-team selection, an AP All-American first team selection, a second-team FWAA All-America Team selection and finished eighth in the Heisman voting.

It would be hard to ask anyone to come in and live up to that, but Carroll can certainly do enough to maintain the run game’s efficiency.

He’s like Schrader in some ways.

First, they’re built similarly.

Schrader is 5-foot-9 and 214 pounds while Carroll is 5-foot-10 and 214 pounds.

Both players have good vision, are good in between the tackles, have good balance and keep their center of gravity low to shed tacklers and neither one would probably be considered a burner but they can break one loose.

According to PFF College, the players ranked closely in yards after contact with Schrader finishing 13th in the nation in yards after contact with 788 yards (3.18 yards after contact per attempt) while Carroll finished 16th with 757 yards (2.79 yards after contact per attempt).

Just think about it, when Tyler Badie departed from the team after a magical season the Tigers added Schrader and Nathaniel Peat for the 2022 campaign.

They’ve collectively performed well and the coaching staff knocked it out of the park, but remember Schrader was a walk-on. Meaning the team didn’t expect him to have a significant role on the team.

Not too many players go from a walk-on to a top-10 Heisman finish.

The picture seems a little more clear this time around when you go from the third-leading rusher to the seventh-leading rusher.

Missouri will still probably look to add two or three more running backs via the portal or its recruiting class, but the addition of Carroll is a great start.
 
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