Brandon Goforth
It looks as though the SPC is pessimistic on the tornado threat south of IA due to frontal forcing on the cold front producing a squall line. I'm having a lot of difficulty making sense of this assessment, as the surface cold front is forecast to be up in the northern Plains at 00Z! The boundary depicted by the models to be initiating convection in MO/KS/OK is not a cold front, but a dryline. Perhaps they're expecting the models' placement of the surface cold front at 00Z to be off by 200-300 miles, and for the front to have already caught up to the dryline by 00Z instead of closer to 06Z? That doesn't seem likely given the placement of the 500mb vort max at 00Z, but maybe I'm wrong about that.
I too am curious about the reasoning behind this, as the forecast discussion does not address convection along the dryline to the south through KS/OK in the afternoon. This leads me to believe that SPC is expecting the area ahead of the dryline to remain capped, holding off convective initiation until after dark as the front sweeps south with storms firing along a line to the SW...obviously creating primarily a hail/wind threat. Maybe?