Missouri had to go shopping for the back end of its defense, and the Tigers didn’t just add bodies. They added a different kind of skill set with each one.
That matters, because this secondary is replacing a lot. Drey Norwood, Toriano Pride Jr. and Stephen Hall are gone from cornerback, while Daylan Carnell and Jalen Catalon have moved on at safety.
Four of those five ended up on NFL rosters after helping Missouri build a pass defense that finished 11th nationally. Now Corey Batoon’s group has six new defensive backs to sort through via the transfer portal, including four corners and two safeties.
Chris Graves Jr. is the one who brings the clearest SEC track record. Missouri needed help replacing the massive snap totals left behind by Pride (573), Norwood (514) and Hall (496), and Graves is the only corner in the room with more than 400 snaps in a season. He logged 683 outside corner snaps for Mississippi during its CFP run last year and has 1,012 career snaps overall.
Kensley Louidor-Faustin gives the Tigers something a little different at STAR. That spot has been a key piece in Corey Batoon’s defense, and it asks for a player who can work near the line of scrimmage.
Louidor-Faustin has played 144 snaps in the slot and 79 in the box over two seasons, which is less than what Daylan Carnell gave Missouri, but still the most box work of any of the transfers. Auburn clearly trusted him close to the action, and his PFF run defense grades - 72 and 67.4 over the last two seasons - back up the idea that he plays with a downhill edge.
The issue is missed tackles, where his percentages were 21.7 and 28.6% in the last two seasons.
Jahlil Florence comes in with a different selling point: tackling. His Oregon career has been interrupted by injury, and he played only 22 defensive snaps between 2024 and 2025.
But the 2022 and 2023 seasons give a much better picture. He logged 211 defensive snaps in 2022 and 392 in 2023, and the tackling numbers moved in the right direction.
His PFF tackling grade rose from 48.7 to 76, while his missed tackle percentage dropped from 22.2% to 9.4%. Missouri’s top corners from last season - Pride, Norwood and Hall - were steadier tacklers, but Florence has shown enough to suggest he can be a solid piece if he gets a full season.
Sione Laulea brings size Missouri didn’t have at corner a year ago. At 6-foot-4 and 196 pounds, he is the tallest cornerback Eli Drinkwitz has had in Columbia.
He arrives from Oregon, where the Ducks had 11 defensive backs at 6-foot-1 or taller. Laulea’s frame gives him a clear edge as a boundary corner, especially when it comes to high-pointing the ball.
He also has the speed to stay with receivers, and his coverage grades have been above 75 in each of the last two seasons. That makes him a natural fit against an X receiver.
Elijah Dotson is the versatile one. Michigan used him as both a corner and a slot defender as a true freshman, with 48 snaps at corner and 41 in the slot.
Missouri currently lists him as a safety, but his ability to move around should matter over the course of a long season, especially when injuries force depth to be tested. He also comes with strong tackling numbers, including a 76.7 tackling grade as a freshman.
Then there’s JaDon Blair, the projection. The former four-star recruit spent one season at Notre Dame before entering the portal, and his sample size is tiny.
He played 19 snaps in a Week 13 70-7 win over Syracuse, where Notre Dame used him as a high safety late in the blowout. At 6-foot-5, 205 pounds, he has the size and range to be intriguing, but the early look suggests he still needs work on his aggressiveness, run fits and taking on blocks.
That said, his role should be limited at first if everything goes according to plan.
Missouri’s secondary has a fresh look, and each newcomer arrives with a different calling card. Some bring experience, some bring length, some bring versatility, and some are still more promise than proof. All six will get a shot to carve out a place in a defense that has been one of the country’s best over the last three seasons.
In Other News...
These Mizzou Transfers Could Decide How Far 2026 Really Goes
Missouri spent the 2025 offseason working the transfer portal with a clear purpose, and the early returns suggest the Tigers were targeting experience as much as upside. After losses to the NFL draft and more portal departures, the staff went out and added pieces at cornerback, linebacker, receiver and right tackle, bringing in Graves from Ole Miss, Woodyard from Auburn, Cayden Lee from Ole Miss and Josh Atkins from Arizona State to help patch some of the biggest holes on the roster.
The real question for 2026 is not whether Missouri got active, but which of those newcomers will matter most once the season starts. Graves, Woodyard, Lee and Atkins all arrive with resumes that make them easy to project into important roles, and the Tigers need that kind of immediate help if they want to keep building on last seasons momentum. How quickly those transfers settle in will go a long way toward shaping just how far Missouri can push next fall. [Read more 🡒]
Missouris Most Important New Piece Comes With Real Pressure
Missouris roster is in the middle of a major reset, with several seniors and transfers gone and plenty of new faces arriving to fill the gaps. Among the additions, Bryson Tiller stands out most immediately. The 6-10 forward brings size, experience and a rsum that already suggests he can handle a heavy role after starting nearly every game as a freshman and producing solid numbers in the frontcourt.
For Missouri, the pressure comes from what Tiller could become right away. The Tigers are expected to give him a real chance to emerge as a starter and a playmaker next season, which puts a spotlight on how quickly he adapts to a new system and a new level of responsibility. With so much turnover around him, his development may end up shaping not just the rotation, but the ceiling of the team itself. [Read more 🡒]
Mizzou Fans Have One Big Summer League Question Right Now
Missouris mens basketball program had a little summer rooting interest this week, sending out a good-luck note to five former Tigers who landed on NBA Summer League rosters. Caleb Grill is with the Celtics, Tamar Bates is in the Jazz mix, Sean East joined the Cavaliers, Mark Mitchell landed with the Nuggets and Jevon Porter is getting a look with the Grizzlies, giving Mizzou fans a handful of familiar names to track while the college game stays quiet.
Bates has already given that group something to follow, putting up 9 points in 21 minutes as Utah fell to Washington. The broader question for Missouri supporters is how many of these ex-Tigers can turn a summer invite into something more meaningful, and one name in particular has left the door open for even more intrigue as the rosters continue to settle. [Read more 🡒]
