Jamal Roberts Gave Missouri Fans A Border War Moment To Relive

As Missouri football counts down to the 2026 season opener, Jamal Roberts' explosive 63-yard touchdown run against Kansas last season stands as a defining moment in the celebrated Border War.

Mizzou’s Border War win last September had plenty of twists, but the play that really slammed the door came from Jamal Roberts. With 2:00 left and Missouri protecting a 35-31 lead, Roberts took a handoff on 2nd-and-9 and turned a left-side run into a 63-yard touchdown sprint that sent Faurot Field into a frenzy.

It was the kind of finish that fit the game’s chaos. Missouri had already dug itself into a 21-6 hole after early mistakes, including a blocked extra point, a Beau Pribula fumble and a bad sack. The Tigers steadied themselves enough to get to 21-21 by halftime, then traded blows with Kansas the rest of the way before Brett Norfleet’s 27-yard catch-and-run touchdown on 4th-and-1 put Mizzou ahead 35-31 with 4:14 remaining.

Kansas had one more chance to swing the night back. Instead, the drive stalled fast. Zion Young and Josiah Trotter teamed up for a tackle for loss on second down, Jalon Daniels’ pass to Emmanuel Henderson Jr. was dropped on third down, and the Jayhawks were forced to punt.

That set up Roberts, who had already started piling up yardage. He picked up 11 yards on first down to move the chains, then gained one more to bring up the decisive second-and-nine at the 37.

Missouri lined up in 11 personnel, with three receivers to the left and Jordon Harris next to right tackle Keagen Trost. At the snap, everything flowed left.

Cayden Green climbed to Trey Lathan, and the receivers handled their jobs too: Kevin Coleman Jr. took on Syeed Gibbs, Josh Manning got downfield to hit Leroy Harris III, and Marquis Johnson sealed DJ Graham II outside.

That was enough. Roberts found space, hit the sideline, and never really slowed down.

Jalen Todd got a shot at him at the 12-yard line, but Roberts slipped through and finished the run in the end zone. The 57,321 in Memorial Stadium erupted.

Drinkwitz called it simple and effective afterward: "That was a great run," Mizzou coach Eli Drinkwitz said afterward. "He trusted his path on the outside zone. I thought the receivers blocked really well and Cayden (Green) was able to get up to the play-side 'backer, and it worked out really good."

The touchdown was the longest run of Roberts’ career and the final piece of a huge day for the St. Louis native.

He finished with 143 rushing yards, his first 100-yard game, after entering the run with 80 yards on 12 carries. It was also one of three 100-yard games he posted last season.

Ahmad Hardy also crossed the century mark with 112 rushing yards, making it the first time two Mizzou backs hit 100 in the same game since Ish Witter and Larry Rountree did it against Tennessee in 2017.

The bigger picture mattered, too. Missouri’s 42-31 win was its fourth straight in the Border War, extending a streak that began with wins in 2009, 2010 and 2011 before the rivalry paused for 14 years.

Roberts’ path to that moment had been a long one. He starred at St.

Mary’s in St. Louis and helped lead the school to back-to-back state championships as a junior and senior.

He drew as many as 16 college offers, including plenty from mid-majors and some FCS programs, before Missouri offered the summer before his senior year and he committed a month later. After a slow start to his college career, he worked his way up to RB2 behind Hardy heading into 2025.

The Border War is set to continue this season when Missouri heads to Lawrence for the first time since 2005. Kansas won that game 21-3. The Tigers’ last win in Lawrence came in 2001, Gary Pinkel’s first season, when Missouri erased a 14-0 deficit and won 38-34 behind Dwayne Blakley’s go-ahead 14-yard touchdown catch from Kirk Farmer in the fourth quarter.

Last year’s meeting followed a similar script. Missouri trailed early, then overwhelmed Kansas down the stretch. Norfleet gave the Tigers the lead, and Roberts made sure it stayed there.

In Other News...

Mizzou Softball Great Ashley Fleming Earns Long Overdue Program Honor

Ashley Flemings name has been part of Missouri softball history for years, and now it finally has the formal recognition that has always felt inevitable. The former Tigers infielder is set to be inducted into the Mizzou Athletics Hall of Fame Class of 2026, a fitting nod to a career that helped define one of the programs most successful stretches and left a lasting mark on Columbia.

The honor lands in a week when Mizzou also kept adding across the board, with football securing a pledge from wide receiver Charles Tre Britton III for its 2027 recruiting class and baseball bringing in Adam Kilburn and Charlie Wortham, both with ties to the area and previous college experience. For Missouri fans, it is another reminder that the programs past is getting its due even as the roster churn keeps pushing the other sports forward. [Read more 🡒]

Mizzou Fans Should Start Watching Two Young Defenders Closely

Missouris defense is already built around older, more proven pieces, but two young defenders are starting to look like names worth filing away for later. Redshirt freshman defensive end Daeden Hopkins and safety Blair both fit the profile of players who are not quite ready to carry big weekly loads, but have shown enough tools to suggest they will matter down the road.

Hopkins got into four games in 2025 to keep his redshirt intact and still flashed with his first-year production, while Blair arrived from Notre Dame with the kind of size and athleticism that can change how a secondary is built. Neither needs to be rushed, and that is part of the appeal for Missouri, but if the development keeps trending the right way, both could be in line for much larger roles in 2026. [Read more 🡒]