When Oklahoma visited the Hearnes Center for the first time after coach Billy Tubbs was hit by a car while jogging, the Antlers dressed up in jogging gear and walkmans and bandaged their heads. The Antlers ran onto the court and one of the members made a cardboard car ran over them with it.
Before the 1994 Braggin' Rights game against Illinois, members (who were suspended for that year and could not attend in their jerseys) sent Illini guard Kiwane Garris two bricks in the mail. These were references to his play in the legendary '93 game, where he missed two free throws with no time left in the first overtime period: Mizzou would later go on to win in three extra times. The neutral-site game is also notable for the Antlers, as it is the only match they allow themselves to attend under the influence of alcohol; the group (voluntarily) does not imbibe before home games, and will refuse entry to any member who has drank. Another Braggin' Rights game saw an Antler, among several other MU students, tackle Chief Illiniwek as he did his dance at center court of the Kiel Center, as much a show of dislike towards UI as it was a protest over what Tiger fans deemed a racist symbol.
Iowa State center Dean Uthoff's was the center of another Antler prank when they obtained the phone number at his dorm in Ames and called him. They posed as huge fans and wanted to show their appreciation by ordering him a pizza, and they told him and it should be downstairs in his lobby in a half hour. Uthoff fell for the scam and waited nearly an hour for the pizza. The Antlers later called again to ask how the pizza tasted. Two days later when Iowa State visited Mizzou, all of the Antlers were waving empty pizza boxes at him when he ran onto the court.
During a 2007 game at the Tigers' current home, Mizzou Arena, against Texas Tech, one of the Antlers dressed up as Bob Knight. The Knight impersonator began to walk around the student section and hit all the students, parodying Knight's reputation of being difficult on his players.
In another well-known moment, the Antlers held up pictures of former Kansas coach Larry Brown and Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi and asked, “Which one's the terrorist?”
For every game, the Antlers make signs that correspond to the opposing team's starting players, usually playing off their names. They can also reference the players' family or notorious events they were involved, such as Kansas State forward Bill Walker being called "MC Pee Pants" in reference to a game against Oregon in which he urinated into towels on-court. In recent years, these signs have been censored by the athletic department, whose staff has begun checking them at the door. The Antlers occasionally make other signs for use throughout the game, including this infamous one that was shown on a national CBS broadcast:
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