KICKOFF: 5:00 p.m. (central time).
STADIUM: Perry Stadium (30,599). This will be MU's first appearance there.
RADIO: Tiger Network (Mike Kelly, play-by-play/John Kadlec, color). Carried on 55 stations statewide, and on the Internet at
www.mutigers.com.
TV: No television for this contest.
POSTGAME HIGHLIGHT FEED: None.
RANKINGS (AP/ESPN-USA): MU (RV/ RV); BGSU is not ranked.
SERIES: BGSU leads, 2-1, including a 20-13 win in Columbia last season.
COACHES:
Missouri: Gary Pinkel (Kent, '75), 6-7 at MU (2nd year) and 79-44-3 overall (12th year). Pinkel is 5-6 vs. Bowling Green and is 0-1 vs. Urban Meyer. Bowling Green: Urban Meyer (Cincinnati, '68), 9-3 at BGSU (2nd year) and 9-3 overall (2nd year). Meyer is 1-0 vs. Missouri and is 1-0 vs. Gary Pinkel.
TIGERS HIT THE ROAD FOR TOUGH TUSSLE AT BOWLING GREEN
The Missouri Tigers (2-0 overall) will look to improve to 3-0 on the young season, but they'll face a tough task this week, as they play at perrenial Mid-American Conference stalwart Bowling Green (1-0). Kickoff at Perry Stadium is set for 5 p.m. (CST).
Mizzou is coming off a solid 41-6 home win over Ball State last Saturday. The Tigers broke open a tight game by exploding for 27 points in the third quarter. MU forced five Cardinals turnovers on the night, and turned those into 20 points, while the Tiger offense scored touchdowns on all four of its third-quarter possessions.
Bowling Green is coming off a bye week, after opening their 2002 season with a 41-7 home victory over Tennessee Tech on Aug. 31. The Falcons return 14 starters from a team that went 8-3 last season, and earned a 20-13 win over Missouri in the 2001 season opener in Columbia.
UPSTART TIGERS LOOK FOR 3-0 START
It's been said that good things come in threes. Tiger fans certainly hope that the number three comes into play this Saturday, in terms of Missouri wins.
The Tigers venture to Bowling Green looking for their third straight win to open the 2002 season. A win Saturday at Bowling Green would give Missouri a 3-0 start for the first time in 21 years, since the 1981 Tigers opened 5-0 on the way to an 8-4 record.
Mizzou moved to 2-0 on the 2002 season with its 41-6 win over Ball State on Saturday. It marks only the 4th time in the last 20 years that Mizzou has won its first 2 games of the season.
Additionally, the back-to-back wins give Mizzou its first winning streak in 3 years (since winning games #1 and 2 in 1999). Since then, Mizzou had never managed to win consecutive games.
MU-BOWLING GREEN SERIES
Missouri and Bowling Green will meet for only the 4th time when they tangle Saturday evening. The Falcons own a 2-1 edge in the brief history of the series, which began in 1995.
All three of the previous meetings have come in Columbia. The Falcons claimed wins in 1995 (17-10) and 2001 (20-13), sandwiched around a Tiger win in 1998 (37-0).
MU Head Coach Gary Pinkel is certainly no stranger to going up against Bowling Green, as he went 5-5 against the Falcons in his 10 years at Toledo. He is 5-6 overall against BGSU following last year's game in Columbia.
A LOOK BACK AT LAST YEAR:
bowling green 20, missouri 13
Gary Pinkel's Missouri debut got spoiled, as visiting Bowling Green scored two touchdowns in the final 11 minutes of the game to post a 20-13 win in Columbia, Mo.
The Falcons' Joe Alls scored on a 2-yard run with 3:40 to go to provide the winning points, which were set up by the first of two interceptions by BGSU's Janssen Patton. Patton picked off MU quarterback Darius Outlaw at the Missouri 35-yard line to set the stage for Alls' score, then later picked off his second pass with 1:37 to at the BGSU 31 to seal the upset win.
Mizzou took a 13-7 lead on a 15-play, 80-yard drive capped by a 2-yard pass from Outlaw to Joe Chirumbolo with 12:49 to play. The Falcons answered immediately with an 80-yard drive to tie it on John Gibson's 5-yard run with 10:07 left. Missouri's lone score in the first half was a 30-yard field goal by Brad Hammerich on the game's opening possession.
Bowling Green followed with its only score of the first half, a 5-yard pass from Andy Sahm to David Bautista with 4:28 to go in the first quarter.
The BGSU defense held Missouri's offense in check, as the Tigers managed just 76 yards rushing on 28 attempts (2.7 ypc), and finished with a season-low 234 total yards.
A WIN SATURDAY WOULD...
Give MU its first 3-0 start to a season since 1981 (started 5-0)...
Give MU its first 3-game winning streak since 1998 (won games #4-5-6)...
Give Head Coach Gary Pinkel his 80th career victory...
Bring Pinkel's record at Missouri to an even .500 (7-7)...
Give MU as many or more wins (3) than the Tigers have recorded for 11 of the past 18 seasons...
With one non-conference regular-season game left, give MU a chance to do something it has done only 9 times in the last 75 seasons - go undefeated in regular-season non-league play. The only other times MU has done this since 1927 were: 1999, 1981, 1973, 1969, 1967, 1962, 1961, 1960 and 1938.
IN HOSTILE TERRITORY
Saturday will represent MU's first true road game of the 2002 season. The Tigers have already played away from home once thus far, when they defeated Illinois at neutral-site St. Louis to open the season.
Head Coach Gary Pinkel's Tigers went a respectable 2-3 on the road in 2001, notching wins at Oklahoma State and Kansas. With the season-opening win in St. Louis vs. Illinois, Pinkel now stands 3-3 at MU in games played away from Columbia.
The two road wins last season came in MU's first two road games, and made Pinkel the first MU coach to win his first two road games since Frank Broyles in 1957.
The list of Tiger coaches since Broyles who couldn't accomplish that feat include: Dan Devine (1958), Al Onofrio (1971), Warren Powers (1978), Woody Widenhofer (1985), Bob Stull (1989) and Larry Smith (1994).
WILD, WACKY STUFF
Missouri has totaled EXACTLY 437 yards of total offense in each of its first two games this year (285 rush, 152 pass vs. Illinois; 221 rush, 216 pass vs. Ball State).
MU's opponents have been nearly identical in their offensive yardage, too, as Illinois gained 313 yards in total offense while Ball State came in just one yard over, at 314!
MU-BALL STATE POST-GAME NOTABLES
After a sluggish first half offensively (MU led 7-6 at halftime), the Tigers exploded for 27 points in the 3rd quarter to cruise to a 41-6 win over Ball State in Columbia.
Missouri forced 5 Ball State turnovers Saturday, and turned them into 20 points. MU was +5 in the turnover category, as the Tigers did not commit a turnover on the night.
MU's defense shut out an opponent in the 2nd half for the first time under Head Coach Gary Pinkel.
The 35-point win marked the largest margin of victory for Gary Pinkel at Missouri.
Freshman QB Brad Smith was brilliant for a 2nd-straight game, as he rolled up 281 yards of total offense (176 passing, 105 rushing). He ran for a 39-yard touchdown, and threw his first career TD pass, on a 2-yard strike to Justin Gage.
TB Zack Abron scored a career-high 3 TDs on the night, on rushes of 1, 3 and 5 yards. He now has 5 TDs on the year, and is just 1 shy of his single-season best total.
LB James Kinney led the way defensively with 17 tackles, while fellow LB Sean Doyle tallied 16 stops.
DE Antwaun Bynum forced his 3rd fumble of the season during a 1st-quarter sack of BSU quarterback Talmadge Hill. He pounced on the ball at the BSU 1-yard line, which set up MU's first TD of the night.
WR Darius Outlaw caught his first career pass (20 yards from Brad Smith), and later nabbed his first career receiving TD, on a 27-yard catch-and-run from Kirk Farmer. Outlaw ended the night with 3 catches for 49 yards.
Freshman PK Mike Matheny saw his first action, and the Columbia, Mo. native went 5-of-6 in PATs.
QUICK STRIKE OFFENSE
Missouri was opportunistic on both sides of the ball Saturday vs. Ball State, as the Tiger defense created numerous scoring chances of which the Tiger offense took advantage.
MU's first four scoring drives Saturday averaged ONLY 2.5 plays, 27.0 yards and took an average of just 36 seconds per drive.
a perfect quarter?
There might not be such a thing as a perfect quarter of football, especially if you ask any coach. But on Saturday, the Tigers came as close to perfect in the 3rd quarter vs. Ball State as one could hope for.
Leading just 7-6 at halftime, Missouri exploded for 27 points in the 3rd period, and when the dust settled, the Tigers held a commanding 34-6 lead heading into the final 15 minutes.
The MU defense was brilliant in the 3rd quarter, as the Tigers forced 2 BSU fumbles, held once on 4th down, and forced 1 punt.
On the flip side, the Tiger offense was opportunistic, as it scored touchdowns on all 4 of its 3rd-quarter possessions.
The 27 points scored in the 3rd quarter Saturday were more than Missouri scored in 7 of its 11 games during the 2001 season.
BIG PLAYS
Missouri's offense has shown a propensity for coming up with big plays thus far in the early going.
The Tiger offense has totaled 11 plays of 20 yards or more from scrimmage, compared to just 3 for opponents. The Tiger defenders held Ball State without a play of 20 or more yards from scrimmage.
Freshman QB Brad Smith has had a hand in 9 of the 11 plays, as he's rushed for 5 plays of 20 or more yards, and thrown for 4.
Smith had runs of 39 (TD) and 34 yards vs. Ball State, and scampered to runs of 39 (TD), 24 and 20 vs. Illinois in the season opener. His big pass plays have been 33 and 28 yard strikes to Thomson Omboga, 25 yards to Justin Gage and 20 yards to Darius Outlaw.