Former Missouri coach Gary Pinkel is facing a class B misdemeanor after a July 7, 2025, DWI arrest in Camden County, and court documents say the stop began when he waved down a state trooper for help.
The probable cause statement, reviewed by the Tribune, says the trooper saw Pinkel flagging him down around 11:30 p.m. in the Big O Tires parking lot on Bagnell Dam Blvd. in Lake Ozark. Pinkel was outside a tire shop after blowing a tire on his car, and the officer wrote that the back right tire on the SUV had been driven on the rim “for a significant distance based on the damage.”
Once the trooper started asking questions, the encounter quickly shifted. The officer reported a “strong odor of an intoxicating beverage emitting from (Pinkel’s) breath and person,” along with slurred speech and swaying while he talked.
Pinkel first said he had “just a very small drink” and had stopped drinking three hours before the tire blew. He later told the trooper he had “like two drinks” and that his last drink was two hours earlier.
Field sobriety testing did not go well for the former coach, according to the statement. The trooper wrote that Pinkel could not recite the alphabet beginning at E and stopping at R, and also could not count backwards from 78 to 62. The officer also noted “lack of smooth pursuit” when asking Pinkel to follow his finger with his eyes.
A preliminary breath test showed a blood alcohol concentration of 0.128%, above Missouri’s legal limit of 0.08%. Pinkel was arrested, held at Camden County jail and later released.
Pinkel, 74, coached Missouri from 2001-15 and led the Tigers to multiple Big 12 North and SEC East division titles. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 2022.
This was not his first DWI case. Court records show Pinkel previously pleaded guilty to a DWI in Boone County after a Nov. 16, 2011, arrest.
He has been summoned to appear in Camden County court on July 28, 2026, and plead to the charge.
In Other News...
Cardinals Face A Risky Decision On Two Young Cornerstones
The Cardinals are already staring at a familiar front-office crossroads, this time with two players from Monti Ossenforts first draft class. Paris Johnson Jr. and Michael Wilson both matter to the long-term picture, but the timing of their next contracts makes the decision feel more complicated than routine roster maintenance. Johnson has become the more expensive of the two to project, while Wilsons case is tied to whether Arizona wants to reward him now or let the market do more of the work later.
Wilson, in particular, has a path that could be shaped by patience if he goes through another season and boosts his standing. Johnsons situation is trickier because the Cardinals have to weigh a major investment against the fact that he has not played a full season since his rookie year. With Arizona still trying to sort out its broader direction after a rough run, these are the kinds of calls that can say as much about a teams confidence in its own evaluation as they do about the players themselves. [Read more 🡒]
One Rams Offseason Question Suddenly Matters More Than Ever
Puka Nacua has already reminded everyone why Matthew Stafford leans on him so heavily, and the Rams still look like one of the leagues deepest and most respected rosters heading into the season. USA TODAY has them sitting at the top of its power rankings, and CBS Sports Pete Prisco put five Rams on his NFL Top 100, including three in the top 10, which says plenty about how much talent this group has assembled around Stafford.
The bigger issue for Los Angeles may be how much it has to protect that window if the roster keeps getting more expensive in the wrong places. The backup quarterback battle has not produced an obvious winner yet, but there is no immediate alarm there. The more delicate question is on the defensive front, where Kobie Turner has become the kind of player teams hate to lose track of because a contract extension could change the way the Rams have to budget for everything else around him. [Read more 🡒]
Cardinals Fans Just Got The Offseason Reset They Dreaded
Arizonas offseason reset has been less of a splash than a scramble, with the Cardinals coming off a 3-14 finish and trying to rebuild around a new coach after firing Jonathan Gannon. Mike LaFleur now inherits the job, and the early moves have been cautious: the team kept veteran Jacoby Brissett in place under center and used the draft to add rookie running back Jeremiyah Love, giving the roster at least one fresh piece to build around.
LaFleurs arrival comes with real questions attached, since this is his first shot at running a team and his reputation is still being shaped after time working under Sean McVay in Los Angeles. Arizona also brought in Nathaniel Hackett as offensive coordinator, a hire that adds another layer of intrigue to a staff that will be judged quickly in a division where patience is rarely part of the equation. For Cardinals fans, the bigger issue is whether this reset actually points to a cleaner future, or just another transition year with more uncertainty than answers. [Read more 🡒]
