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Gamecocks Welcome Mercer Thursday Night

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Gamecocks Welcome Mercer Thursday Night


­COLUMBIA, S.C. – South Carolina (2-2) returns home for a Thursday night matchup with Mercer (2-2) at Colonial Life Arena. Tipoff is slated for 7 p.m. (ET) with Dave Weinstein (pxp) and John Williams (analyst) on the call for the SEC Network+ broadcast.

It’ll be the seventh all-time meeting between the Gamecocks and Bears and first since Dec. 30, 2001, in Dave Odom’s inaugural season as head coach at South Carolina.

The contest will be an unbracketed game part of the Fort Myers Tip-Off, which takes place next week at Suncoast Credit Union Arena Nov. 25 and 27.

Road closures for the annual Vista Lights on Nov. 21 will affect traffic for the campus community and fans heading to the men’s basketball game at 7 p.m. against Mercer.

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Starting around 5 p.m., the city of Columbia will close the following streets:

  • Gervais Street from Gadsden to Assembly streets
  • Lincoln Street from Senate to Lady streets
  • Park Street from Senate to Lady streets

Members of the university community are advised to find alternate routes home from campus or to Colonial Life Arena.

Season tickets remain available and more information can be found here. Single-game tickets are now available as well and can be purchased here.

GAME INFORMATION

TIME: 7 p.m. (ET) with doors opening at 6 p.m.

VENUE: Colonial Life Arena

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TV: SEC Network+

PLAY-BY-PLAY: Dave Weinstein

ANALYST: John Williams

RADIO: Gamecock Radio Network  

IN COLUMBIA: 107.5 The Game

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  PLAY-BY-PLAY: Derek Scott

  ANALYST: Casey Manning

SIRIUSXM: 385 | SXM APP: 975

WATCH: ESPN.com/watch/

LIVE STATS: GamecocksOnline.com

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SERIES: SC leads, 4-2

in COLUMBIA: SC leads, 4-2

SERIES TREND: SC has won three-in-a-row dating back to Jan. 2, 1993, a 68-66 victory.

LAST MEETING: Dec. 30, 2001 in the non-conference finale of Dave Odom’s first season ; Gamecocks won 88-52 in what would be the final season of Frank McGuire Arena.

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The Gamecocks head south for a two-game MTE in the program’s debut at the Fort Myers Tip-Off. Carolina opens vs. Xavier (4-0) on Monday. Tip is 8:30 p.m. (ET) on FS1 with Jeff Levering (pxp) and Donny Marshall (analyst) on the call. The team will face ei­ther Virginia Tech or Michigan Wednesday night at Suncoast Credit Union Arena.

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South Carolina woman Dana Kinlaw fatally shot, set on fire after she was ambushed by trio during meeting to buy puppy

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South Carolina woman Dana Kinlaw fatally shot, set on fire after she was ambushed by trio during meeting to buy puppy


A South Carolina woman who believed she was buying a puppy was ambushed by three brutes who fatally shot her, set her body on fire and left her to burn inside a car on the side of the road.

Dana Marie Kinlaw, 40, was lured to a rural road in Effingham, South Carolina, on Jan. 22 when she was allegedly killed by 19-year-old Iryanna Jarissa Fleming and 31-year-old Daquinn Taheen Thomas and Nikko Christopher Carraway, according to the Florence County Sheriff’s Office.

Officials believe Kinlaw’s death was part of a retaliation murder for a recent killing in neighboring Darlington County, WBMF reported.

Dana Marie Kinlaw was found shot dead and burned inside a car in Effingham, South Carolina, on Jan. 22, 2026. Dana Kinlaw / Facebook

Kinlaw was driving with Fleming when they stopped on Atlantic Road near Springbranch Road in rural woodlands 95 miles east of the state capital in Columbia.

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“Supposedly, they went there together,” Florence County Sheriff TJ Joye told the outlet. “Miss Fleming, she was 19 years of age, a friend of Miss Kinlaw, and they rode there together supposedly to buy a puppy.”

Fleming and Thomas are accused of setting up the fake sale for a pooch Kinlaw had been eyeing to persuade her to travel to the area where they allegedly launched their ambush attack.

Kinlaw, a South Carolina resident, was fatally shot before the suspected killers poured a liquid over her body and set her on fire inside the car, the sheriff’s office said.

Deputies were called to the area about a car on fire and discovered the vehicle still engulfed in flames with a human body inside.

Iryanna Jarissa Fleming, 19, allegedly rode with Kinlaw before the alleged shooting. Florence County Detention Center
Daquinn Thomas was charged with murder, arson and possession of a weapon during the commission of a violent crime. Florence County Detention Center
Nikko Carraway was arrested on Jan. 28, 2026. Florence County Detention Center

Florence County Coroner Keith Von Lutcken identified the remains as Kinlaw’s body.

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Von Lutcken ordered Kinlaw’s body be sent to the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston for an autopsy. The results have not been released.

Fleming and Thomas were both arrested hours after Kinlaw’s death and charged with murder, first-degree arson and possession of a weapon during the commission of a violent crime.

Carraway was arrested on Wednesday and was charged with the same three crimes as his alleged accomplices.

Atlantic Road near Springbranch Road in rural woodlands 95 miles east of the state capital in Columbia. Google Maps
Von Lutcken ordered Kinlaw’s body be sent to the Medical University of South Carolina in Charleston for an autopsy. The results have not been released. Legacy

Officials said the murder was related to another killing 35 miles away in Darlington County and involved Kinlaw’s son, but didn’t share further information.

“We believe there was a murder committed in Darlington County, which we made the arrest in Lake City that connects them to that arrest with Darlington County officials,” Joye told WBMF. “We feel that her son was involved in that in some way, shape, or form, and we feel this is a retaliation to that murder.”

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Both Thomas and Carraway have a laundry list of criminal cases in Florence County dating back as far as 2014, according to court records viewed by The Post.

Thomas faced multiple attempted murder charges and violent armed robbery cases.

He was sentenced to 9 months in prison back in March 2025 for possessing a firearm as a convicted criminal.



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South Carolina baseball top pitcher Jake McCoy to miss 2026 season with injury

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South Carolina baseball top pitcher Jake McCoy to miss 2026 season with injury


COLUMBIA — South Carolina baseball junior left-handed pitcher Jake McCoy will miss the 2026 season due to a tear in his UCL, a ligament on the inner side of his elbow.

The program announced the news on Jan. 28. The season opener is Feb. 13 vs Northern Kentucky at Founders Park. The news release didn’t specify when the injury occurred.

McCoy would have played his third season with the Gamecocks, and came into this year with 26 appearances, including 15 starts. Of those 15, 14 were his sophomore season last year. He was expected to be the Friday night starter for South Carolina this season.

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“I’m disappointed to share that I’ll be out for the 2026 season after suffering a UCL tear that will require Tommy John surgery,” McCoy said in the news release. “Even though I can’t pitch, I’m still going to be with the guys every day — supporting them, staying locked in, and doing whatever I can to help the team.”

McCoy is 5-5 with a 7.11 ERA in two seasons at South Carolina.

McCoy has 97 strikeouts in 76 innings and had 12 against Clemson in the rivalry series last March. That marked a career-high. He’s gone seven games striking out seven or more batters.

The Gamecocks are now in their second season under coach Paul Mainieri, who came out of retirement in June 2024 to coach at South Carolina beginning last season.

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In his first year, they went 28-29 and 6-24 in SEC play, the worst conference record in program history.

“My heart breaks for Jake because I knew that this was going to be a very important year for him,” Mainieri said in the same news release. “He’s worked so hard at becoming the best pitcher he can be and worked so hard on developing a changeup this offseason that we all thought was going to make him a more complete pitcher. He obviously has a great arm and I felt that he was going to blossom this year, so it’s a shame that he’s going to have to go through this.”

McCoy is from Fort Mill, South Carolina, and played in the Cape Cod Baseball League this past summer, pitching three innings for the Harwich Mariners.

Lulu Kesin covers South Carolina athletics for The Greenville News and the USA TODAY Network. Email her at LKesin@usatodayco.com. Follow her on X@Lulukesin and Bluesky‪@bylulukesin.bsky.social‬



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South Carolina’s Alicia Tournebize may be shy, but don’t doubt her drive, ex-teammate says

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South Carolina’s Alicia Tournebize may be shy, but don’t doubt her drive, ex-teammate says


COLUMBIA — Alicia Tournebize, 18, is South Carolina women’s basketball’s youngest player.

But that’s nothing new. The 6-foot-7 forward was on the younger side of Tango Bourges Basket’s roster, the professional French club she played for before moving to Columbia.

With four-game sample size, Tournebize has shown glimpses of promise in a situation that doesn’t demand excellence anytime soon but greatly benefits from whatever she’s able to give.

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“Alicia learns very quickly, over the year she joined the first team of Bourges, she has proven that she has her place among us,” said Tournebize’s former teammate Kariata Diaby in an email to The Greenville News.

Now Tournebize is starting to find her place for the No. 3 Gamecocks (20-2, 6-1 SEC).

Diaby, 30, played 13 games for the Connecticut Sun in the WNBA in 2025 before returning to France to play for Bourges. She is averaging 11.6 points, the second most on the team.

The 6-4 center watched as Tournebize navigated the jump to the professional level.

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“For her first season, she was observant, given her age, which is quite normal, but over time she will become a great player and very complete on all levels,” Diaby wrote.

Tournebize arrived in Columbia Jan. 1 but didn’t play until Jan. 15, with practices beginning a week before she took the floor. She watched three games from the bench before checking in during the first quarter in the top-5 game vs Texas.

She scored no points in five minutes then scored eight points in 13 minutes against Coppin State on Jan. 18. In the loss to Oklahoma on Jan. 22, she scored nine points on 4-of-6 shooting from the field and had three rebounds in 14 minutes, one of two players to finish with a positive plus/minus.

Against the Sooners she cut to the basket to catch an easy pass from Raven Johnson by the rim, hit a 3-point shot and nailed a short stop-and-pop jumper.

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She can jump and elevate in ways most 6-7 players can’t. Diaby confirmed the ability to drive and shoot from both midrange and 3-point territory will stick around as a core part to Tournebize’s game. She had zero points vs. Vanderbilt on Jan. 25.

“She is able to counter and outsmart the opponent on defense,” Diaby wrote. “It’s complicated to score against her. She is a player who manages to do everything on the court whether it is near or far from the rim.”

Tournebize is averaging 4.3 points, 1.3 rebounds and 11.5 minutes ahead of Auburn (13-8, 2-5) on Jan. 29 (9 p.m. ET, SEC Network).

South Carolina has not made Tournebize available for interviews so far.

“I think she is someone who will quickly evolve in the world of basketball because she wants to learn and progress,” Diaby wrote.

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Alicia Tournebize is South Carolina’s new quiet competitor

South Carolina coach Dawn Staley called Tournebize “unafraid” after two games.

“She is very competitive, she wants to win especially and does not like to lose, even if her shyness does not show it,” Diaby wrote. “She puts all the chances on her side and fights on all aspects and gives energy to her team.”

This maturation process requires attention to detail as she follows the blueprint that South Carolina has already laid out this season.

“Alicia is very kind, easy to live with on and off the court, she listens to others, that’s what I loved about her,” Diaby wrote. “She really has talent and wants to succeed at the highest level simply, all I wish her success in her career and in her life. She is someone who wants to shine everywhere.”

Lulu Kesin covers South Carolina athletics for The Greenville News and the USA TODAY Network. Email her at LKesin@usatodayco.com. Follow her on X@Lulukesin and Bluesky‪@bylulukesin.bsky.social‬

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