Jevon Porters Mizzou Return Ended In Another Painful Twist

Jevon Porter's journey with Mizzou men's basketball has been marred by injuries and struggles, underscoring a challenging season and a promising yet uncertain future.

Jevon Porter’s return to Columbia never really got the runway it needed.

When he came back to Mizzou to finish his college career, the reaction was understandable. The Porter name has carried plenty of baggage around men’s basketball, and not the good kind.

Michael Porter Jr.’s near season-ending injury and the fallout that followed. Jontay Porter’s preseason injury and the gambling mess that came later.

Then Coban, who didn’t have direct ties to the university outside of family, ended up in jail after a DUI crash that killed someone. So yes, there was some built-in unease when Jevon announced he was coming home.

Strip away the last name, though, and the appeal was obvious.

Porter is a 6-foot-10 forward with mobility and skill, the kind of player Dennis Gates has liked to use in different ways. He can pass.

He has shown flashes as a finisher. On paper, he fit.

The season opened with real opportunity. Porter started the first 10 games as Gates tried to roll out a big lineup with Mark Mitchell, Porter, and Shawn Phillips all on the floor together. His job was pretty straightforward: defend, rebound, and knock down shots with enough consistency to keep defenses honest.

That last part never really came around.

Even before arriving in Columbia, Porter had struggled to be a reliable shooter, and that issue followed him to Mizzou. He hit multiple threes in two games, but in his shortened season he made only 7 from deep and finished at 25% from behind the arc. That’s not enough to make anyone treat him like a real perimeter threat.

After the kU loss, Gates changed things up and brought Porter off the bench against Alabama State. The move barely got off the ground.

Porter played just one minute, Alabama State made its run, and Gates sat him the rest of the way. He got 16 minutes against Bethune-Cookman in the next game and scored an efficient 6 points, but that turned out to be his final appearance of the season.

Somewhere between the Bethune-Cookman game and the Illinois game, Porter hurt his leg. The exact injury was never disclosed, only that it was some kind of lower leg issue. It seemed possible Mizzou was aiming for a medical redshirt, letting the injury heal fully the way the program handled John Tonje and Caleb Grill.

That never quite played out. After the season, Porter entered the transfer portal and requested a medical redshirt.

Then just yesterday, he was listed on the Memphis Grizzlies summer league roster. So the college chapter appears to be over.

Good luck to Jevon. For Mizzou, though, it’s another Porter story that ended in disappointment.

I’ll always separate the men’s and women’s sides when it comes to the Porters, because despite the injuries, both Cierra and Bri had solid careers on the women’s side.

In Other News...

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Missouris defense is already looking at a couple of familiar SEC names to help shape the 2026 season, and both came out of Auburn with roles that could translate quickly in Columbia. Robert Woodyard Jr. arrives with the kind of linebacker profile that usually earns immediate trust, while Kensley Louidor-Faustin brings the sort of versatility that gives a staff options in the secondary and at the STAR spot.

For Missouri, the appeal is obvious: Woodyard projects as a fast path to stability in the middle, and Louidor-Faustin could give the Tigers a movable piece who fits multiple looks without needing a long adjustment period. The bigger question is how quickly both can turn that promise into lineup certainty, because if they settle in the way Missouri hopes, the defense may not need much time to look different. [Read more 🡒]