3 takeaways as Mizzou football beats Vandy in SEC opener, goes 5-0 to start season

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Mizzou football clamped down on Vanderbilt in its Southeastern Conference opener Saturday in Music City, handing the Commodores a 38-21 defeat behind a big afternoon for the Tigers' offense.

Missouri (5-0, 1-0 SEC) is still unbeaten. The last time the Tigers reached 5-0 was in 2013 — also after a game against Vanderbilt (2-4, 0-2) in Nashville.

Here are three takeaways from Missouri’s dominant day:

Missouri quarterback Brady Cook, right, congratulates wide receiver Theo Wease Jr. (1) after his touchdown against Vanderbilt in the first half of an NCAA college football game Saturday, Sept. 30, 2023, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)
Missouri quarterback Brady Cook, right, congratulates wide receiver Theo Wease Jr. (1) after his touchdown against Vanderbilt in the first half of an NCAA college football game Saturday, Sept. 30, 2023, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/George Walker IV)

That Cook and Burden connection

Luther Burden III — the poster child for flashy plays — never needed to show off his trademark elusiveness for his second-half opening touchdown. He got a step while running a fade, quarterback Brady Cook lofted it over the top, and the receiver made a play.

Simple.

It's getting easier and easier for those two.

Missouri's offense was meticulous with the ball in its hands, seldom needing to set Music City alight to put points on the board. But Cook and Burden?

The model of consistency: Cook, who set the SEC record for most consecutive passes without an interception Saturday, threw his 326th straight unpicked pass midway through the second quarter for a record dating back to 2022. Cook also had a career-high 395 yards, completing 33 of 41 passes for four touchdowns in a third straight 300-plus yard game.

Burden finished the game with 140 yards receiving and two touchdowns, the second of which was a game-icing grab late in the fourth quarter. He has four straight games with more than 100 yards receiving.

Sep 30, 2023; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Vanderbilt Commodores defensive back Jaylen Mahoney (23) tackles Missouri Tigers wide receiver Luther Burden III (3) for a loss during the first half at FirstBank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Steve Roberts-USA TODAY Sports
Sep 30, 2023; Nashville, Tennessee, USA; Vanderbilt Commodores defensive back Jaylen Mahoney (23) tackles Missouri Tigers wide receiver Luther Burden III (3) for a loss during the first half at FirstBank Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Steve Roberts-USA TODAY Sports

Theo Wease sparks 1st half lead

If he was in man coverage, Missouri was looking for him.

Theo Wease Jr. has had an efficient start to his Missouri career, but, naturally, has mostly played second fiddle behind Burden.

Not in the first half Saturday.

Cook looked for the 6-foot-2 receiver at every opportunity, mostly when he could put him one-on-one with Vandy’s corners.

On third-and-10 in the red zone on MU’s last legitimate shot to put points on the board in the first half in a one-score game, Cook high-pointed Wease on the left sideline in the end zone. Like Wease had seven times already, he came down with the ball to give the Tigers a 10-point lead at the break.

He had 94 yards receiving on eight catches (10 targets) in the first half, which was 22 yards and three receptions more than Burden ... at the time.

Wease finished the day with 118 yards on 10 catches — both highs during his time with Missouri.

Defense mostly erases early miscues

Kris Abrams-Draine was waiting for it.

Facing some pressure, Vanderbilt quarterback Ken Seals lofted a pass toward to end zone with his team down 17 late in the third quarter. It was overthrown, and Abrams-Draine barely had to move to grab his third interception of the season.

But the Tigers were there because of a busted coverage on fourth-and-3.

That was just about how the day went.

Missouri's mistakes were costly. Most of them were extremely careless. But when it mattered most, they were there to see the game out.

In Cover 3 early in the fourth quarter, Mizzou completely lost Junior Sherrill, who hauled in a 45-yard reception for a touchdown and pulled Vandy within 10.

After a fourth-quarter turnover on downs for Missouri, Seals found star receiver Will Shephard on back-to-back plays for a combined 60 yards ... and a quick touchdown.

But for the bad, there was the good.

After Sherill's touchdown, MU defensive end Austin Firestone sacked Seals on a suddenly nervy fourth down.

The Commodores were 2 of 10 on third down, a significant improvement for a struggling Tigers unit.

This article originally appeared on Columbia Daily Tribune: 3 takeaways as Mizzou football beats Vandy in SEC opener, goes 5-0 to start season

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