COLUMBIA, Mo. — Now, for a look at what’s happened on the hardwood over the past 25 years.
After ranking the 25 best Missouri football games since 2000, the Post-Dispatch’s attention is turning to Mizzou men’s basketball for its best showings.
What qualifies a game for this list is subjective. Most, but not all, were wins. Many featured memorable shots or performances. Some made the cut for the impact they had on the MU program.
These rankings are part of a Mizzou-centric “top 25” series that has been rolling out occasionally during this point in the summer. The next batch will sort out the top MU athletes across all sports of the past 25 years.
But for now, a drive into memory lane for the best Missouri men’s basketball games since 2000, ranked from No. 25 to No. 1.
25: Missouri 86, Clemson 78 (March 19, 2010)
No. 10-seeded MU swarmed seventh-seeded Clemson in the first round of the NCAA Tournament, forcing 20 turnovers as Kim English and Keith Ramsey each scored 20 points.
24: Missouri 69, No. 21 Kentucky 60 (Feb. 3, 2018)
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander may be the NBA’s Most Valuable Player now, but Cuonzo Martin’s defense held him to five-for-16 shooting from the field as the Tigers beat the Wildcats for the first time in 11 tries.
23: Missouri 63, No. 12 Gonzaga 61 (Dec. 30, 2004)
Neither team scored in the final 85 seconds, but the frigid finish let Kevin Young’s free throw — one of just two points scored by the Tigers in the last eight minutes — stand as the clinching moment.
22: Missouri 81, No. 6 Illinois 78 (Dec. 13, 2020)
Braggin’ Rights looked a little different in its pandemic-affected 2020 edition, held in Mizzou Arena instead of 51şÚÁĎ’ Enterprise Center. A late floater from Xavier Pinson was the icing on the cake with just 578 fans in attendance.
21: Missouri 83, No. 5 Florida 82 (Jan. 14, 2025)
The Gators went on to win a national championship, but they couldn’t beat the Tigers earlier in the season. Timely defense and free throws allowed Mizzou to hold on for a remarkable upset of UF on the road.
20: Missouri 63, No. 5 Florida 60 (Feb. 19, 2013)
That wasn’t the first time the Tigers knocked off a top-five Florida team. Laurence Bowers’ double-double helped Mizzou wipe a 13-point deficit to beat the Gators in Columbia.
19: Missouri 70, Georgia 68 (March 15, 2001)
MU’s last play of this NCAA Tournament win was drawn up for Kareem Rush. But when the Bulldogs double-teamed him, he off-loaded the ball to Clarence Gilbert, who sank a 15-footer with 0.9 seconds left to set up a second-round game against Duke.
18: Marquette 101, Missouri 92 (OT, March 22, 2003)
It takes a lot for a loss to make this list, but individual showings from two Tigers qualify it. Rickey Paulding scored 36 points with nine made 3s, while Arthur Johnson added 28 points with 18 rebounds. Dwyane Wade posted 24 points, eight boards and seven assists for Marquette.
17: Missouri 83, Marquette 79 (March 22, 2009)
Mizzou’s revenge came six years later in the second round of the 2009 NCAA Tournament, when a freshman English rose from the bench to make a pair of free throws with 5.5 seconds left in the stead of an injured J.T. Tiller.
16: No. 15 Missouri 110, No. 4 Alabama 98 (Feb. 19, 2025)
Smoke alarms forced an evacuation of Mizzou Arena after this game and prompted Alabama coach Nate Oats to joke that he’d known the Tigers were on fire much earlier in the night. The Tigers outpaced a notoriously high-octane Tide for their third top-five win of the season, which hadn’t happened since 1988-89.
15: Missouri 102, Memphis 91 (March 27, 2009)
John Calipari’s No. 2 seed Memphis team had won 27 games in a row before it met third-seeded Mizzou in the Sweet Sixteen. Big 12 Defensive Player of the Year J.T. Tiller brought the scoring punch with 23 points for MU. Freshman Marcus Denmon swished a first-half buzzer beater from three-quarters of a court away.
14: No. 15 Missouri 85, Vanderbilt 82 (OT, Dec. 8, 2010)
Denmon stole the ball from the Commodores with 5.8 seconds left and created a three-point play the old-fashioned way to take command of an overtime win.
13:ĚýMissouri 86, No. 6 Tennessee 85 (Feb. 11, 2023)
Down two points with 4.2 seconds left, DeAndre Gholston caught an inbounds pass under his own basket and made it halfway up the floor to the second S in the “Tennessee” script across the Vols’ hardwood when he pulled up for his second made buzzer-beater of the season.
12: Missouri 73, No. 4 Oklahoma 64 (March 4, 2009)
Sooners star Blake Griffin scored 16 with 21 rebounds, but Mizzou held OU to a season-low in points to finish the 2008-09 season undefeated at home.
11: Missouri 69, No. 16 Texas 65 (Feb. 4, 2009)
Zaire Taylor carved into the lane for a tough bucket and foul with 5.5 seconds to beat the Longhorns in Austin for the first time since Norm Stewart was still coaching the Tigers. And just five days later…
10: No. 17 Missouri 62, No. 16 Kansas 60 (Feb. 9, 2009)
…Taylor struck again, knocking down a 10-footer from just outside the lane with 1.3 seconds on the clock to beat the Jayhawks. Fans stormed the court after the Tigers completed a comeback from down 14 points at halftime. The next season…
9: Missouri 69, Iowa State 67 (OT, March 2, 2010)
…Taylor did his thing once more, driving the length of the floor to bank in a layup at the overtime buzzer for a road win against the Cyclones.
8: Missouri 112, No. 18 Iowa State 109 (4OT, Jan. 13, 2001)
It was the first and only quadruple-overtime game in Mizzou men’s hoops history. Gilbert shot, shot and shot some more, scoring 43 points and blocking a last-second shot in the final overtime to seal the win.
7: Missouri 93, No. 6 Oklahoma State 92 (2OT, Feb. 24, 2004)
Paulding scored 31 and Johnson added 29 — including the game-winning part of free throws with 30 seconds left in the second overtime — to snap an 11-game winning streak for the Cowboys and send fans rushing the Hearnes Center floor.
6: No. 5 Missouri 90, No. 12 Baylor 75 (March 10, 2012)
The Tigers left the Big 12 as conference champs behind 19 points from English, winning in front of an MU heavy crowd in Kansas City.
5: No. 14 Missouri 73, Baylor 60 (March 14, 2009)
Which Big 12 tournament title win was more rewarding? The 2009 edition, led by DeMarre Carroll’s 20 points, was Mizzou’s first since Stewart’s last Big Eight title in 1993 cleansed the palate after a trying few seasons in the â€00s.
4: Missouri 89, Kansas 86 (OT, Jan. 16, 2006)
Thomas Gardner scored 40 points, draining two free throws with one minute left in overtime to sink the Jayhawks — but the story of this game were free throws that didn’t go in. KU’s Christian Moody was fouled while trying to dunk with 0.4 seconds left in regulation and the score tied. A made free throw would’ve won the game for the visiting Jayhawks, but with the help of a rowdy crowd, he missed both, sending the game to OT and an eventual Mizzou win.

Missouri’s Tamar Bates, right, celebrates a basket in front of Kansas’ Zeke Mayo during the first half Sunday, Dec. 8, 2024, in Columbia, Mo.
3: Missouri 76, No. 1 Kansas 67 (Dec. 8, 2024)
Since resuming in the 2020s, the nonconference version of the Border War hadn’t been especially competitive. That changed when the top-ranked Jayhawks came to sold-out Mizzou Arena in December. The Tigers led for 38 minutes, holding on past a KU rally thanks to a key triple from Mark Mitchell before a late flurry enhanced the margin of victory and cued a court-storming. Down went No. 1 Kansas at the hands of Missouri.
1 and 2: No. 4 Missouri 74, No. 8 Kansas 71 (Feb. 4, 2012); No. 4 Kansas 87, No. 3 Missouri 86 (OT, Feb. 25, 2012)
It’s a magical thing when one sporting event lives up to its narrative billing by becoming a classic. It’s something else entirely when two games between two bitter rivals pull it off, and why the final two regular season meetings between MU and KU in the Big 12 are etched together in memory.
With ESPN’s GameDay in town for the Columbia matchup, the Jayhawks led 71-63 late in the second half. Then Denmon rattled off nine straight points in 72 seconds, single-handedly flipping the game to the Tigers.
A few weeks later when the rivals met in Lawrence, controversy became the lasting image. A 19-point Missouri lead withered away, but Phil Pressey had the ball with the score tied in the final seconds of regulation. He drove to the rim where he was bodied by Kansas’ Thomas Robinson, who got away with a block — but should it have been a foul? No whistle arrived, and KU came out on top in overtime.
Mizzou men's basketball coach Dennis Gates speaks with the media on Thursday, March 20, 2025, after a first-round NCAA Tournament loss to Drake. (NCAA/Veritone)