South-Carolina
Beamer has 'a lot of confidence' in South Carolina quarterbacks behind Sellers
Shane Beamer doesn’t have a quarterback controversy on his hands, but instead he has a good problem at quarterback many teams would like to have.
When South Carolina returns from its bye week to prepare to face Ole Miss on Oct. 5, it should be getting back its starting quarterback. After not playing on Saturday, LaNorris Sellers, who is dealing with a sprained ankle, has been feeling good and could be ready to go for the team’s next game.
“We’ll be smart with him this week. I mean we don’t have to get him ready for a game this Saturday,” Beamer said. “Practices this week will be similar to previous off weeks, we’re not going to be out there two-plus hours every day. But we’ll get a lot of really good work in in the time we’re on the field. So, we’ll be smart with how we use him and get him back in there slowly so he can be at his best next week when we get to game week.”
[Join GamecockCentral for great coverage, great community]
Even with Sellers missing a start, he’s still “QB1.” He has been from the start of the season and will continue to be as long as he’s healthy. He’s the current and future of the program at the quarterback position.
If for some reason, though, Sellers were to ever go down with an injury again, Beamer now has real options at quarterback. In South Carolina’s 50-7 win over Akron, Robby Ashford made his first start of the year and Davis Beville later came in when the game was in hand in the fourth quarter.
Saturday proved to be a much better outing for Ashford as he looked more poised and comfortable under center. After all, he did have a week to prepare for this start compared to when he was thrown into the fire against LSU after Sellers got hurt.
Ashford completed 15 of his 21 passes for 243 yards and two touchdowns. He also ran for 133 yards and capped his night off with a 36-yard touchdown run on his final play in the fourth quarter.
“I’ve said all along I felt like we had multiple quarterbacks that we could win with. When we named LaNorris the starter, it wasn’t like Robby lost the job. We felt confident in Robby and that’s why we’ve tried to get him into games in regular situations,” Beamer said.
“… Robby did a great job (Saturday) and took a step, for sure. Nothing against the way that he practiced, but I thought he played a lot better than he even practiced this week as well. Looked very poised and calm.”
[Win two tickets to the South Carolina-Ole Miss football game]
Ashford ended up finishing as the highest-graded quarterback, according to Pro Football Focus, with a 93.8 rating in Week 4. Beamer was impressed with some of the longer throws Ashford was able to make, completing five passes for 27 or more yards. His longest pass of the night was a 44-yard throw on a crossing route to Gage Larvadain in the third quarter.
“I mean, he made some big-time throws,” Beamer said. “I mean, that throw to Gage over there on Akron’s sideline, that was a big-time throw. He released that ball before Gage even came out of his break. Some big-time throws and then you saw what he could do with his feet.”
In the 16 snaps Beville played on Saturday, he made the most of his limited opportunity. He completed 4-of-6 passes for 33 yards and threw a nine-yard touchdown pass to Connor Cox. It was his first touchdown since Dec. 30, 2021, when he was playing with Pittsburgh in the Peach Bowl against Michigan State.
“He’s been on quite the journey in his college football career and for him to get in there, he’s an awesome teammate, he’s so supportive and a great confidant, whatever you want to call it to LaNorris and Robby both,” Beamer said. “For him to be able to get in there and make some throws and throw his first touchdown pass since 2021, I was told in the locker room, it’s pretty cool for him.”
[On3 App: Get South Carolina push notifications from GamecockCentral]
And (I’m) really proud of Davis too. He’s been on quite the journey in his college football career and for him to get in there, he’s an awesome teammate, he’s so supportive and a great confidant, whatever you want to call it to LaNorris and Robby both. For him to be able to get in there and make some throws and throw his first touchdown pass since 2021, I was told in the locker room, it’s pretty cool for him.”
So, while things will return to normal once Sellers is back, Beamer and South Carolina now have a much better idea of who can play well behind him if needed. Luckily for him, he now has two quarterbacks in the waiting who can step up at any given moment.
“(I’ve) got a lot of confidence in that quarterback position,” Beamer said. “… We’ve got multiple quarterbacks that can help us win football games and proud of all three of those guys in the way they continue to help each other and how they continue to get better.”
South-Carolina
Admiral fired in Hegseth purge wins Democratic primary in South Carolina
A three-star navy rear-admiral fired by Pete Hegseth last year in the defense secretary’s purge of senior US military officials has won the Democratic primary in a closely watched congressional race.
Nancy Lacore secured the party’s nomination for the US House of Representatives in South Carolina’s first congressional district on Tuesday after defeating Mac Deford, a US Coast Guard veteran, in a runoff.
Lacore’s focus will now turn to November, when she will lead an ambitious Democratic bid to flip the Republican seat in the US midterm elections.
The district is currently represented by the Republican Nancy Mace, who chose to forgo seeking re-election to focus on her failed challenge for South Carolina governor. Jenny Costa Honeycutt, a member of Charleston county council, secured the Republican nomination for the election on Tuesday.
Lacore was among dozens of officers fired during Hegseth’s ongoing elimination from senior military roles of those considered to have crossed the Trump administration, or who do not fit the US defense secretary’s vision for the makeup of the armed services.
She is backed by several veterans’ groups, and Emilys List, which supports Democratic pro-choice candidates running for office. She raised $500,000 in her first two weeks as a candidate, and more than $1.4m through late May, according to a New York Times analysis of federal campaign finance records.
She is also one of 12 House candidates backed by the Bench, a Democratic strategy group advising candidates in districts seen as harder to win, the outlet said.
South-Carolina
Inside TCMU’s new SC 250 exhibit
South-Carolina
What to know about a cold storage warehouse fire in Los Angeles
Six days into a firefight at a massive frozen-food storage facility near downtown Los Angeles, firefighters have yet to enter the building and have begun moving parts of the exterior walls to try to gain access.
Smoke is billowing from the warehouse, which is roughly 500,000-square-foot (46,451-square-meter), covered in solar panels and insulated like a freezer. It’s located across the street from homes in Boyle Heights, a working-class neighborhood east of downtown, and city officials on Monday warned people to stay inside or wear masks due to smoke pollution.
A large warehouse fire can typically be put out in a day, but in a cold storage facility, it can take weeks, authorities said. The fire sparked Wednesday.
Here’s what to know:
Why is it taking so long to put it out?
Fires in cold storage facilities often burn for weeks because their heavily insulated ceilings, roofs and walls make them difficult to extinguish, Los Angeles Fire Department spokesperson Jamie Stewart said.
Firefighters have not been able to enter the building due to the danger posed by floor-to-ceiling heavy-duty steel rack shelving, he said. They also have been unable to quickly ventilate the roof due to the insulation, which is what they would typically do to release gas and smoke and gain visibility inside a warehouse, he said.
The warehouse has rows that are 65-feet (20 meters) tall and 650-feet (200 meters) long loaded with pallets and boxes filled with frozen food, similar to the interior of a Costco or Home Depot warehouse store, Los Angeles Fire Department Chief Jaime Moore said during Monday’s news conference. There were about 85 million pounds (38.6 million kilograms) of frozen food stored inside, he said.
“I don’t know that we’ll ever get firefighters inside because the entire roof has been compromised and it is sitting on top of (those) 65-foot towers,” Moore said. “It’s extremely dangerous, and I don’t foresee ever putting our firefighters in that type of danger.”
Firefighters have been stripping away exterior walls on certain sides of the building and dousing it with heavy streams of water.
What caused the fire?
Michigan-based company Lineage Logistics, which operates the facility, said in a statement it believes the fire began when subcontractors were working on solar panels on the roof. But the official cause of the fire hasn’t been determined, the company said.
Lineage is working with fire officials investigating the blaze, the statement said.
Moore said the fire department continues to investigate but that preliminary information shows Lineage, which rents the warehouse, was leasing the roof to a solar company that what was working on the panels when the fired started.
“They attempted to try to extinguish it. They dialed 911, and it was off to the races,” he said.
What is stored at the facility?
The facility, called Big Bear, stores products such as seafood, pork, beef and poultry before they’re shipped to grocery stores and restaurants on the U.S. West Coast, Lineage said on its website.
A message sent to Lineage seeking details about the food and the companies affected by it was not immediately returned.
What are the air quality concerns?
The South Coast Air Quality Management District extended a warning about poor air quality in the area until Tuesday afternoon, saying the blaze continues to produce smoke impacting the neighborhood and areas north and east of the fire. The smoke is carrying microscopic particles known as PM2.5 that can penetrate deep into the lungs.
Light winds will also push the smoke in all directions, potentially impacting other parts of metropolitan LA, the district said.
Residents in the most impacted area were told to avoid vigorous physical activity and close all windows, doors and vents, turn off air conditioning and bring people and pets to an inside room because of the risk of hazardous air. Those who need to go outside in the smoky conditions should wear an N95 or P100 mask, health officials said.
Los Angeles City Councilmember Ysabel Jurado, who represents Boyle Heights, said residents want to know what materials and chemicals were in the warehouse, what burned and what is still burning. She said air quality results should include that information and be released in English and Spanish in terms that regular people can understand.
Jurado said families, workers and other residents are “seeing the smoke and smelling the odors and finding ash and debris near their homes and businesses.”
“We still do not have enough clear information about what burned and what may still be burning,” she said.
Copyright 2026 NPR
-
Milwaukee, WI4 minutes agoBucks draft Burries, Ament after Giannis trade: 'We're building'
-
Atlanta, GA11 minutes agoSports with Sam: Hawks draft Kingston Flemmings & Zuby Ejiofor
-
Minneapolis, MN14 minutes agoConcerns grow over south Minneapolis homeless encampment near child care center
-
Indianapolis, IN19 minutes agoKarl E. Muszar Jr.
-
Pittsburg, PA26 minutes agoPrince of Pittsburgh: Cole Young delivers go-ahead homer in 3-2 Mariners win
-
Augusta, GA29 minutes agoAugusta-based E-Z-GO could be sold, Textron announces
-
Washington, D.C34 minutes agoKronenwetter mom in D.C. to remember son, victims of internet crimes
-
Cleveland, OH41 minutes agoCleveland Cavaliers Trade out of No. 29 Overall in 2026 NBA Draft