South-Carolina
BYU Women’s Basketball Finds Replacement For South Carolina Game
PROVO, Utah – The primary BYU ladies’s basketball non-conference schedule of the Amber Whiting period is out.
One sport, specifically, was noticeably absent from the schedule. That was the unique season-opener towards the defending nationwide champion South Carolina Gamecocks.
Coming quickly… pic.twitter.com/GF7VjEGpBo
— BYU Ladies’s Hoops (@byuwbb) September 15, 2022
On September 2, South Carolina coach Daybreak Staley introduced that the home-and-home sequence with BYU was canceled because of the alleged racial slurs hurled throughout a volleyball match towards a Duke participant. BYU has since accomplished its investigation, saying they discovered no corroborating proof into the allegation.
Staley remained dedicated to upholding the cancelation, regardless of BYU’s investigation. “I proceed to face by my place. After my private analysis, I decided for the well-being of my group. I remorse that my college, my athletics director Ray Tanner and others obtained drawn into the criticism of a selection that I made.”
BYU will open the 2022-23 season at Colorado State
That transfer by South Carolina left BYU to search out one other sport. BYU will now tip off the 2022-23 season at Colorado State in Moby Enviornment on November 8. It will likely be the primary common season sport of Amber Whiting’s head teaching tenure at BYU.
#BYU ladies’s basketball finds alternative for South Carolina sport.
The Amber Whiting period will start at Colorado State on November 8.#BYUWBB @kslsports
— Mitch Harper (@Mitch_Harper) September 15, 2022
Whiting replaces Jeff Judkins, who turned the winningest coach in BYU basketball historical past (males’s or ladies’s) throughout his 21 years as coach. BYU employed Whiting from Burley Excessive Faculty in Idaho, the place she gained a state championship final season.
Whiting inherits a BYU ladies’s basketball program that earned a six-seed within the NCAA Match and was a constant Prime 25 group a season in the past. However there will probably be lots of new faces main the best way for the Cougars after they misplaced star guards Paisley Harding to commencement and Shaylee Gonzales, who transferred to Texas.
BYU brings again All-American candidate ahead Lauren Gustin and rising sophomore Emma Calvert within the publish.
Different notable video games on the non-conference schedule embody a house sport towards the Oklahoma Sooners within the Marriott Middle on November 15. The Cougars may even play within the North Shore Showcase on the campus of BYU-Hawaii towards Washington State on November 18 and Troy on November 19.
BYU rounds out the non-conference schedule with a pair of in-state video games towards Utah State in Logan on December 6, then a house sport towards Utah on December 10. WCC play opens up December 17 towards Gonzaga in Spokane.
BYU Ladies’s Basketball 2022-23 Schedule
Oct. 27: Westminster (Exhibition)
Nov. 8: at Colorado State
Nov. 12: Montana State
Nov. 15: Oklahoma
Nov. 18: vs. Washington State (Lai’e, Hawaii)
Nov. 19: vs. Troy (Lai’e, Hawaii)
Nov. 23: Carroll Faculty
Nov. 26: Ball State
Dec. 1: at Boise State
Dec. 6: at Utah State
Dec. 10: Utah
Dec. 17: at Gonzaga
Dec. 19: at Portland
Dec. 29: Pacific
Dec. 31: Saint Mary’s
Jan. 7: San Diego
Jan. 12: at LMU
Jan. 14: at Pepperdine
Jan. 19: San Francisco
Jan. 21: Santa Clara
Jan. 26: at Saint Mary’s
Jan. 28: at Pacific
Feb. 4: at San Diego
Feb. 9: Pepperdine
Feb. 11: LMU
Feb. 16: at Santa Clara
Feb. 18: at San Francisco
Feb. 23: Portland
Feb. 25: Gonzaga
Mitch Harper is a BYU Insider for KSLsports.com and host of the Cougar Tracks Podcast (SUBSCRIBE) and Cougar Sports activities Saturday (Saturday from 12–3 p.m.) on KSL Newsradio. Comply with him on Twitter: @Mitch_Harper.
South-Carolina
McMaster announces new acting director of DSS
COLUMBIA, S.C. (WIS) – Governor Henry McMaster announced Thursday that the South Carolina Department of Social Services (DSS) officially has new leadership.
Tony Catone, who previously served as General Counsel at DSS, has been named Acting State Director of the agency until a new permanent director is appointed by McMaster and confirmed by the Senate.
Catone has served as a member of the department’s leadership team for 10 years, according to the Office of the Governor.
“As Acting State Director, our top priority for our agency will be to continue the positive reform trajectory we have forged under Director Michael Leach’s outstanding leadership,” said Catone. “His energy and deep commitment will be sorely missed.”
Catone said he intends to work on “large-scale reform efforts” for South Carolina’s foster care system as well as strengthening the agency’s Adult Protective Services. He also said he wants to continue providing support for households in need of food and improve child care affordability.
Prior to Catone, DSS was led by Michael Leach, who announced his resignation in October. Leach led DSS for over five and a half years, maneuvering the state agency through multiple hurricanes and the COVID-19 pandemic.
“It’s exhausting, and I want to spend more time present with my family, and so it’s time to go,” Leach said in an interview.
Feel more informed, prepared, and connected with WIS. For more free content like this, subscribe to our email newsletter, and download our apps. Have feedback that can help us improve? Click here.
Copyright 2025 WIS. All rights reserved.
South-Carolina
Xs and Oats: South Carolina is the most paradoxical team on the SEC road schedule
For a variety of reasons, basketball is the most difficult of the Big Four North American sports in which to notch a road win. Mercurial performances between home and away games are the norm as often as not. (FWIW, the most recent data from last January pegged the chances of picking up a road win at 31%). That’s why teams like Indiana and UCLA can get pimped in Lincoln by the thoroughly average Cornhuskers, and then that same Nebraska team can lose by 37 to Michigan State (which actually happened this year). Teams often stand on their head at home and are able to score seemingly-improbable upsets.
But fresh off a defenestration of No. 12 Oklahoma that was so thorough it would make Russian oil tycoons nervous, the No. 5 Crimson Tide travel to South Carolina to face one of (perhaps the) most baffling team on its SEC road schedule. Because these ‘Cocks can play well enough to beat 12-3 Clemson, yet are simultaneously bad enough to lose four games with the 271st ranked SOS, including to North Florida (7-8, No. 217). And do both at home.
Let’s take a look at USCe and what the Tide can expect to see Wednesday when it opens SEC road play.
Tale of the Tape: No. 74 South Carolina (10-4) vs No. 5 Alabama (12-2)
Preliminary Spread (certainly subject to change): Alabama -16.5 (O/U 153.5)
Opponent KenPom: 74 (103 offense, 65 defense, 259 tempo)
Opponent Evan Miya: 78 (101 offense, 69 defense, 266 tempo)
Opponent Bart Torvik: 93 (137 offense, 79 defense, 190 tempo)
Opponent NET: 93 (Q2)
Opponent RPI: 54
Opponent Best KenPom Win: Clemson (32)
Opponent Worst KenPom Loss: North Florida (217)
UA Ken Pom: 9th (5 Off, 44th Defense, 5th Tempo)
UA Evan Miya: 7th (3 Off, 25th Defense, 1st Tempo)
UA Bart Torvik: 7 (4 Off, 34th Defense, 4th Tempo)
UA NET Ranking: 9 (7-2 Q1/2)
UA RPI: 3
UA Best KenPom Win: No. 4 (N) Houston
UA Worst KenPom Loss: No. 26 at Purdue
You’d like to be able to point to any one thing for the Gamecocks and say “That! That is what they do well.” But, the problem is, outside of getting to the free throw line, there’s absolutely nothing about South Carolina — offensively or defensively — that takes them out of average-to-sometimes-bad territory. But, if you were going to hesitantly pin any label on USC, it would “team that is defined by its post play, with a lot of asterisks.”
If “almost” were a team, it would be South Carolina. They are almost good at stuff without truly being good in any one area.
- As we saw last week with Oklahoma, the Gamecocks run a five-out system, with Lamont Paris emphasizing “action with pace.” The problem is, the USC guards are good enough of a shooting threat to put some pressure on opposing backcourts — but there’s no true must-guard perimeter player: three guys shoot right at average, with only sixth man Morris Ugusk well above that.
- It’s a team that minimizes turnovers, and leans into defense — while at the same time not being very good at forcing turnovers and being merely average in both floor and perimeter defense.
- It it a team that does its best work when it feeds the two forwards out of a painfully slow offense — while not being a good offensive rebounding club.
- It is a team that does an outstanding job of getting to the free throw line (perhaps their biggest strength) — while also being a terrible free throw shooting team and sending opposing shooters to the line far too often.
There’s no balance, certainly no pace, and too often USC finds itself playing a two-man screen-and-roll game, praying for an easy bucket in the post or a trip to the line. However, it’s also a risky strategy, one that affords little room for error. And when it’s just not panning out, when opponents are cleaning up on the glass or not sending USC to the stripe, there’s not enough firepower to shoot USCe back into the game.
So they are almost good at a lot of stuff, and on any given night, USC can be a competent basketball team. But is is a team of generalists trying to win with ugly basketball and marginal talent, which means that they have to win by drawing fouls, making opponents play their pace, and trying to keep the score in the low 70s. In fact, that is the magic number: USC has not lost a game where they have hit 71 points.
All of this has resulted in a first for the Tide this year. South Carolina is the only Alabama opponent to-date to under-play its schedule. Depending on your analytical service of choice, the Gamecocks are 1 to 2.3 games below their expected win total. And that shows in the results too. They’re 1-3 against T1 and T2 opponents vs. their very soft schedule, and even picked up a loss to a T4. For the Tide, this will be a Q2 NET opponent solely because it is on the road, but based on the first third of the season, USC will flirt with the 90s in NET all year. And that assumes they hold serve against some of the conference’s weaker opponents (Missouri, LSU, perhaps Vanderbilt, etc.).
You want to at least be complimentary of Nick Pringle’s new team. And Lamont Paris is a genuinely likable guy. But this club reminds you a lot of Ben Howland’s Mississippi State squads: all-defense with little counterpunch…though with less individual talent (taken as a whole).
Key Personnel
USC’s offense is driven by the forwards on a team that will be one of the smallest the Tide face all season.
Hometown sophomore Collin Murray-Boyles is having a great season, leading USC in floor shooting by a wide margin (61.7%), scoring (15.8), rebounds (9.4), blocks (1.4), and is second behind only PG Jamarii Thomas in assists (2.5). The biggest knock on CMB is that he’s really gimpy, and will turn it over a bunch. Per-touch, he leads the Gamecocks in TO rate, and in raw terms averages 3 a night. But in that same Gamecock paradox we’ve seen almost across the board, he’s also a good on-ball defender, and has nimble klepto skills.
He’s joined in the frontcourt by the ever-energetic Nick Pringle. The former ‘Bama F finally got the minutes and starting job he was after, and he’s making the most of it. Pringle is USC’s third leading scorer (10.5), and second in rebounding and blocks. He’s cut down on his turnovers too from those reckless ‘Bama years, and is having a solid all-around season. How good? He’s almost 2:1 assist-to-turnovers on the year. Good for him. We love Pringle. And while CMB is probably going to get the most attention, Pringle is the best interior defender for USC, and you can bet he’s going to sell-out to stop Alabama’s post game.
Among the guards, the man to watch is PG Jamarii Thomas. He leads the Gamecocks in minutes played, assists, steals, and is second in scoring. He’s the most valuable ballhandler and small defender on the team, and one of four players in their thin rotation that all shoot around 35-36% from the perimeter.
Zachary Davis is their Little Engine That Could, and the best rebounder of the bunch. While a limited offensive player, he’s very physical and hammers the glass on a team that is relatively poor at chasing their misses. Meanwhile, Jacobi Wright is probably USC’s second-best overall guard in terms of ballhandling, perimeter shooting, defense, and distribution. Weirdly, for a combo guard, he’s pretty awful from the free throw line (sub-70%). But that’s not out of the ordinary for the Gamecocks: among the starters, the “best” shoots just 77% on a team that is sub-70% overall. Yuck.
The Gamecocks only go eight deep (seven, most nights), and their bench scoring is even more limited than the starting rotation. It’s the worst in the SEC, and in the bottom third nationally, with just 28% of their scoring coming from guys 6-13.
CMB and Jamarii will be the defensive focus, without doubt.
How To Watch
Wednesday, Jan 8, 6:00 Central SEC Network
Prediction
The biggest threat to the Tide in this game is losing focus. USC is not a great shooting team, though it has some competent shooters. It’s not a great rebounding team overall, but it’s a high-energy team. It’s not a sloppy team, and it has limited weapons, but it will try to force its style of play, bleed clock, and make Alabama get impatient.
Consider this a trial balloon for what we will see much of the season. This is going to be the first of many games where the opponent tries to drag Alabama into a mudwrestling contest, bleed the clock, and take the air out of the ball. It’s up to the Tide to not get the big head, not get frustrated, and then make the most of their offensive opportunities — even if they have to shoot 30 free throws to get there. If Alabama leverages size and speed, and if they put forth some of that defensive energy we saw the first half of Oklahoma, this could be a rare road rout.
Alabama 84
South Carolina 65
Hope for the best.
Roll Tide.
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South-Carolina
Pentagon agrees to settle historic lawsuit with LGBTQ+ veterans over discharge status
Despite that the ban on gay troops ended more than a decade ago, a surprisingly small fraction of the tens of thousands of vets affected have accessed benefits they are due.
The Pentagon has now agreed to settle a class action lawsuit that may change that for about 35,000 veterans.
“This settlement is not just about correcting records; it’s about restoring the honor and pride that LGBTQ+ veterans have always deserved but were denied,” said Lilly Steffanides, a U.S. Navy veteran and plaintiff in the case. “I hope this brings justice to others who served with courage, only to face exclusion and discrimination.”
Steffanides told NPR in 2023 that the stigma of being suddenly “outed” to their family in 1988, led to years of addiction and homelessness. Having an “other-than honorable” discharge meant no automatic access to VA benefits or health care. It’s a scarlet letter when employers ask about military service; many veterans would deny they ever served rather than reveal paperwork that showed they were kicked out for homosexual activity.
In 2011, after a long campaign by LGBTQ veterans and activists, the Obama administration ended the ban. In the years since, the integration of gay and lesbian troops has been heralded as a huge success with no effects on unit cohesion or combat readiness, according to the Pentagon. But the plaintiffs in the lawsuit say the lingering stigma and a mountain of red tape kept many veterans from even applying to upgrade their military discharge status and get the benefits they had earned.
The Pentagon announced a proactive review of discharges under “don’t ask, don’t tell” — the 1993 Clinton administration policy that banned troops from being open about their sexuality — last October, but this proposed settlement agreed to Monday will speed up that process considerably if approved by California’s Northern District Court. Instead of individual applications, the settlement will allow veterans to have their records reviewed in large groups, delivering access to VA benefits and Honorable Discharge papers as early as this summer.
“This proposed settlement delivers long-overdue justice to LGBTQ+ veterans who served our country with honor but were stripped of the dignity and recognition they rightfully earned due to discriminatory discharge policies. It marks a crucial step in addressing this deep-seated injustice and ensuring these veterans receive the acknowledgment and respect they have long been denied,” said Jocelyn Larkin, an attorney on the plaintiffs’ legal team.
The Pentagon referred questions to the Department of Justice, which declined NPR’s request for comment.
Copyright 2025 NPR
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