Connect with us

South-Carolina

Everything Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney said after loss to South Carolina

Published

on

Everything Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney said after loss to South Carolina


Clemson head football coach Dabo Swinney spoke to the media following the team’s 17-14 loss to South Carolina on Saturday. Here’s everything he had to say.

[SILLY SEASON SALE: Subscribe for $1 for 7 days]

Opening statement

“Well, first of all, congratulations to Shane (Beamer) and South Carolina. I mean, what an unbelievable college football game. That was college football at its best, for sure. I thought both teams both laid it on the line. It was an incredibly physical game. And games like that usually come down to a couple plays. That’s what happened, and they made the couple plays.

Advertisement

“But we had every opport(unity)… We never trailed in the game ’till, what a minute, eight (seconds)? And we go right down the field and we just make one mistake right there, but you got to give them credit. Again, they made a couple of plays. Obviously, the quarterback – I mean, he made two of the greatest runs you’re ever going to see. He was spectacular – just, incredible individual effort by him, and (he) was certainly the difference in the game.

“So, third-and-15 there late, we got a spy on him, and he was just better than us right there. He made an unbelievable play. Then, I was really proud of how we responded. Obviously, we’re in position to, at a minimum, get a field goal. We’ve got a timeout, we’re in a good spot. And we just made a bad decision right there. We wanted to take a shot outside, and for some reason, he scrambled. Even if it’s complete, it doesn’t help us. Now, I got to use the timeout. So, just one mistake.

“But, man, I thought I thought the kids competed their butts off. I mean, you saw the heart of the team. These games are, obviously, painful when they don’t go your way, anytime you lose – but, certainly, when you lose a rivalry game. I thought Cade (Klubnik) played his heart out. We just missed a few play plays. We had a slant that probably might go to the house, and we were inches off. But you saw some young guys out there really compete their tails off. And then I thought, defensively, they were relentless in creating some turnovers. It was, again, (a) very physical game. But at the end of the day, I thought Sellers was the difference in the game.

“I thought our crowd was awesome. I mean, it was probably as loud as I’ve heard (Death) Valley in quite a while. It was an incredible environment. And, man, it’s really disappointing that we couldn’t reward them with the win. Again, we had every opportunity (and) didn’t get it done. So, you got to give credit where credit’s due, and that’s to South Carolina – they got it done.

“So, for us, as I said going in, we had a good year. We could have had a great year, but you got to win that game to have a great year. But we’re 9-3. We got better in a lot of ways this season, in our regular season – so many positives that we can build on. We got a heck of a team – a lot of the core of our guys will be back. I thought our quarterback – even though, like I said, he had a critical mistake right there at the end – he had a heck of a year and really did a lot of great things. So, (we have) a lot to build on.

Advertisement

“But, man, this one… This is tough, and it hurts. It really hurts when you lose a game like that. And, again, I thought both teams laid it on the line. I mean, (they) absolutely competed to the last play. And at the end of the day, they (South Carolina) made the two plays that were the difference. So, credit to them.”

On LaNorris Sellers’ performance

“I mean, he was he was special. Again, there was just a couple times we had him. We had a few sacks. I don’t know what the number was… What do we have, three sacks? Is that what we had? (We) probably should have had six. And he just escaped – and you saw that on tape. He’s won a couple of games for them. I saw the same thing in the Missouri game. We had a couple that we had him – like, big-time, negative yardage – and, somehow, he got out. And then the couple of runs were just huge. The first one was a scramble run. And, just, he’s fast, he’s strong, he’s a really good player, he’s a competitive guy. And he was just a little bit better on a couple of those plays that were the difference in the game.

[Win two tickets to the South Carolina-Clemson MBB game]

“Again, we had plenty of opportunities. We missed a couple opportunities on offense to capitalize that were disappointing. But, again, that’s championship football. It was a great college football game, for sure. Both teams wanted it. Both teams competed with everything they had. And they made a couple critical plays that ultimately made the difference.”

Advertisement

On whether Swinney received explanation for officiating calls

“There were several questionable things out there today, but we still had plenty of opportunities to win the game. We had it set up – (it) just got look like we got stepped on, and we’re tripping. So, the play didn’t just get up. It was the right situation, and I think we were going to have a good a good play right there. (It) just was a tough break. We thought he (Phil Mafah) was down, but all the reviews went against us today. And then, I think we had a completed pass when they blew the whistle on that one. There’s been some strange things happening this year that I really don’t have any explanation for. But, again, we had every opportunity. They had some tough breaks, too.”

On whether Swinney’s decision for Clemson to attempt a fourth-down conversion on its second drive

“Yeah, (it was a) missed. They made a good play, and it was a huge, huge missed opportunity right there. That’s one of them. When it comes down to two plays, those are things that you look back on and, just, man, it’s frustrating. So, that was a huge play for them.

“We thought we’d get it. If I kicked the field goal, then you’re probably saying, Why didn’t you go for it in fourth-and-inches?’ But we just made a decision in the moment that we believed in, and it didn’t work. They they made the stop.”

Advertisement

On the performance of Clemson’s offensive line

“They protect protected well. I thought they really protected well. That was a real positive in the game. We never felt stressed. There was another one (where) they sacked us. We thought they were offside, but they never felt stressed. I thought they held up really well. So, that was a positive from it.”

On Sammy Brown’s absence in some of Clemson’s fourth-quarter plays

“We (were) just working the packages that we’ve worked all week. (There’s) nothing wrong with Sammy (Brown) or anything – we just we got in a little bit more nickel (plays). We got into some some, what we call, ‘cyclone,’ as well, especially on some of the long-yardage stuff. I’m feeling like they’re going to have to change the how they were going to play but nothing more than that.”

On future Palmetto Bowl matchups where South Carolina is a competitor

Advertisement

“They’ve always been a competitor. I mean, I’ve always had respect for this rivalry – it’s a great rivalry. But this is just one game. They won today. They’re state champions this year. It’s a year-to-year deal. But, again, I think Shane deserves a lot of credit for the season that they’ve had they’ve had. They’ve had a great season, and we’re both 9-3 We had an opportunity to really have a great season with a win today, and we didn’t get it done.

“But, again, it’s always been a competitive game. Last year was a competitive game. I’ve been in a bunch of these – it’s my 21st game, so (I’ve) been in a bunch of them. But it’s all about this game ,and we didn’t get get it done today. So, you give them credit and keep moving.”

[On3 App: Get South Carolina push notifications from GamecockCentral]

On Swinney’s message to Clemson’s seniors

“Just, your heart breaks for them. I mean, it’s just part of it when you sign up for this deal, and you’re part of high-level competition. Sooner or later, it ends. And we all want to write the script that we want for it to end. Sometimes, it goes the way you want it, but, oftentimes, it doesn’t. But at the end of the day, ‘How’d you play?’ Those guys competed their butts off, man. Barrett (Carter) – he came up with a big fumble recovery today. I can’t ask more of our guys than what I saw today from a heart standpoint, a competitive (standpoint). They were physical. Sometimes, you just get beat, and you got to give the opponent credit. I mean, they made a couple of great plays – and that’s the bottom line. And, sometimes, that happens.

Advertisement

“Again, we never even trailed ’til one minute, eight (seconds) in the game. Our kids competed their tails off. We had a couple critical mistakes that cost us. They made a couple of great plays that they just made. And that’s what great players do. I saw a great player in (LaNorris) Sellers today – I mean, that was pretty special. There was a couple (plays) you just tip your hat, and you got to give him credit for that. (He) seems like a great young man, seems like a great leader. But I thought the heart was on full display on both teams. And it’s a shame somebody’s got to lose the game. But there’s going to be a winner and a loser – and today, we lost, and they won. So, (we) got to own that.”

On Clemson defenders’ ability to limit Sellers

“Certainly, you try to hang on, but I give him credit. I mean, we had him dead to rights a few times, and all you got to do is watch… What was this, game 12? Just watch every game it’s like it’s a rerun. It doesn’t matter who they’re playing – everybody they played, he did that. So, (it) certainly wasn’t just us. I mean, we made some great plays on him, too. We did some really good stuff, but he made a couple of the biggest plays in the game that were the difference in the game. I mean, the two runs were spectacular. The third-and-15 – you’re two downs from winning the game right there, and he runs off a 20-yard touchdown run on third-and-15 with a spy, and he just escaped and made a play.

“But if you watch all 12 games, it’s the same thing every week. He was a huge difference for them. This year, their quarterback was a huge difference in them being (9-3). We’re not 9-3 without our quarterback our quarterback he had two great plays with his legs today. We certainly aren’t sitting here where we are without him having the type of year he had, and Shane would be the first to tell you they’re not where they are without without the year that their quarterback had. It’s two great quarterbacks battling it out today, and he was the difference in the end.”

On the performance of Clemson’s defense as a whole

Advertisement

“I mean, it’s rare that we win the turnover margin and lose – that’s a very rare thing. And, again, that happened today. But Cade – I think he had a hundred, or something, completions or throws in a row without an interception. And, again, that was just a bad decision right there in that situation. Like I said, even if it’s completed, we’re going to have to kick it in that spot, as opposed to just throw it away or whatever. We’re trying to win the game. We had plenty of opportunities to win the game in that situation – and with a timeout to kick the field goal.

“But, yeah, I mean, win the turnover margin, get beat – and it’s couple plays. You think, at least, you’re going to probably go to overtime right there, but it was a great college football game – there’s no denying that. It stinks to be on this side of it, but that was a hell of a college football game and a bunch of young people battling it out with everything they got, and we came up short.”

On Swinney’s frustration with Clemson’s pass rush

“Yeah, we’ve been much better. I thought we had a couple games… Obviously, the Louisville game was a poor performance – we had a bad day. But we really rallied back (and) did a great job at Virginia Tech and Pitt. Again, we did a really good job at times today, but their quarterback just made some plays that created some problems for us. It’s just got to keep getting better. We got good players, and we got a lot of guys back. And, again, those kids are are going to keep improving.”

On RJ Mickens’ injury status

Advertisement

“I don’t have anything.”

[Get our free newsletter! Don’t rely on search engines and social media for your Gamecock info.]

On what Swinney wants Klubnik to take away from Clemson’s final series

“It’s a great learning opportunity for him. Like I said, just, the situation right there – we were really just were trying to just take a shot outside to the end zone, and for some reason, he flushed. Okay, that’s fine. I think it was first down, might have been second down. Was it first or second down? (It was) second down, so, yeah, just throw it away if you didn’t… There’s no reason to create the scramble. And, like I said, with that situation, even if it’s complete to Mafah – if it’s the first quarter, that’s fine. But if it’s complete to Mafah right there, we’re going to have to use the last timeout and kick it.

“So, that’s just a decision he’ll learn from right there. (He) should have just thrown it out of bounds, and let’s go to third down. We got one more shot, and then, we kick it, and we we go to overtime and see what happens. He made a lot of great plays, and I know that play will be magnified – and that was a mistake. So, he’ll learn from that. That kid’s got a lot of football ahead of him, and he’s hurting from it. And, again, their kid (Demetrius Knight) made a good play. I mean, that was a tough, tough play. Tips are usually picks, and that was what happened in that situation. It was a nice play by him.

Advertisement

“So, he’ll learn from it. He’ll file it, just like he learned from a lot of mistakes last year and came back, and he had a great year this year. At the end of the day, that’s one play in a great year that kid had. But it was a heck of a drive down the field – a heck of a drive. Hey, we didn’t finish it.”

On how Swinney feels knowing this year’s Palmetto Bowl was winnable

“Yeah, it’s (a) missed opportunity. I mean, I’ve done this a long time. There’s been a lot of opportunities that haven’t gone on my way. You only really lose in life if you quit – just keep going. I mean, this is football. Sometimes you get beat. (You) never ever want to lose a game. I wish I could tell you that every year we go undefeated and never lose a game, and that’s not reality. There’s a lot of high stakes. (It was a) missed opportunity, and we had it – just didn’t get it done.

“Again, sometimes, you got to give the opponent credit. And they deserve credit because I thought they made the critical plays. And we had every opportunity – we didn’t do it. But you pick yourself up, and you get back in the fight, you keep moving – that’s it. I mean, there’s nothing else to say about it other than congratulations to the opponent. You’re disappointed that it didn’t go your way, but you got to keep going.

“We got another game. I’m not sure where we’ll play, or whatever, but we’ll have another game and an opportunity to, hopefully, finish with a win, and a 10th win, and another postseason win, and build on that. (There’s) a lot of football ahead, and that’s why we’ve had such a great program for a long time. It hasn’t always gone perfect – we just keep going. You keep going. We’ve had some really, really good moments, and we’ve had some really, really crappy moments. But we have a great program because we’ve always kept going. That’s what we’ll continue to do.”

Advertisement

On Clemson players’ plans after the loss and whether he will watch the Miami-Syracuse game

“Everybody’s pissed. There’s a lot of disappointment, man. There’s no gathering. We didn’t get the job done today. But, yeah, certainly I’ll watch and see what happens. Whatever God’s got for us, he’s got for us – that’s just how I look at it. We’ll know our our next step here pretty soon, and then pick ourselves up, dust off and see if we can go finish the way we want to finish, and then, learn and grow from everything this year and see if we can get better for next year.”



Source link

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

South-Carolina

‘It’s very emotional:’ hundreds of SC National Guardsmen deploy to D.C.

Published

on

‘It’s very emotional:’ hundreds of SC National Guardsmen deploy to D.C.


EASTOVER, S.C. (WIS) — Hundreds gathered at the McCrady Training Center Sunday afternoon to send off approximately 400 members of the South Carolina National Guard.

The 122nd Engineer Battalion held its departure ceremony for service members and their families before deploying to Washington, D.C.

The National Guard members will be in the nation’s capital for the “Make D.C. Safe and Beautiful Mission,” which is a collaboration between the Guard and law enforcement following a federal push cracking down on crime in several communities across America.

Emotional sendoff

The ceremony highlighted the emotional bridge between South Carolina and the mission ahead. Kids clung to their parents’ uniforms while spouses shared quiet words.

Advertisement
Approximately 400 members of the 122nd Engineer Battalion left for the nation’s capital to support crime reduction efforts(WIS)

“It’s very emotional, but I’m very proud that he is going and helping keep the peace and serving our country,” said one U.S. Army National Guard member’s wife.

Robert Graham, a member of the 122nd Engineer Battalion, said the separation will be difficult.

“It’s very emotional. We spend a lot of time together, and that is going to be the hardest part about this mission,” Graham said.

Jay Sirmon, commander of the 122nd Engineer Battalion, said the turnout demonstrated the dedication of the service members.

“I think this is a testament to their dedication, and when the nation calls and when the state calls, they leave their civilian jobs, they leave their schools, and they go wherever they are called to serve,” Sirmon said.

Advertisement

The number one goal is to keep citizens, tourists, and everyone coming to D.C. safe, according to Sirmon.

“We will be assisting the metro police department and other federal agencies to make sure that everybody in the D.C. area is safe this summer,” Sirmon said.

For some families, while this is not their first deployment, they say this mission feels different as the nation prepares to celebrate its 250th birthday.

Cody Puckett, operations NCO of the 122nd Engineer Battalion, said the deployment stands out.

“It’s very different, especially considering being in the capital, knowing that you have so many people in one spot, all the special events that are coming up, and just having that many soldiers on the ground,” Puckett said.

Advertisement
Community support

Sirmon said the community involvement never fails to surprise him.

“The community involvement, especially with the National Guard, is tremendous, and it never fails to surprise me when we have events like this, you’re able to see how many people showed up in support, and that means a lot,” Sirmon said. “When these soldiers go away from home, whether that’s overseas to a combat zone, or in the United States to a mission such as this, they remember this event, and they remember the support that we have.”

One wife said the ceremony was not a goodbye, just a see you later.

“I’m so proud of him and everything that he does and everything for the military as well as for our family. I’m going to get emotional, but yeah. I’m glad he’s getting to go on this experience and get to help out and do everything he needs to do, but he’s definitely going to be missed, and I’ll be glad when he’s back home,” she said.

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.

Advertisement

Copyright 2026 WIS. All rights reserved.



Source link

Continue Reading

South-Carolina

Clyburn’s redistricting win fuels SC’s pitch to keep early primary position. An army of influencers are helping.

Published

on

Clyburn’s redistricting win fuels SC’s pitch to keep early primary position. An army of influencers are helping.








052526-bradshaw-scdpdinner-15.jpg

Congressman Jim Clyburn holds his hand over his heart during the singing of the national anthem at the South Carolina Democratic Party’s Blue Palmetto fundraising dinner in Columbia, SC at the South Carolina State Fairgrounds on May 29, 2026.

Advertisement




COLUMBIA — Congressman Jim Clyburn’s annual fish fry, now in its 34th year, is considered one of those can’t-miss dates on South Carolina’s political calendar.

Beyond its role as prelude to the following day’s Democratic convention, it’s an opportunity for the common folk — unable to afford the fee for the party’s annual fundraising dinner — to rub shoulders with both the powerful and wannabe powerful: city council candidates, state representatives, even future candidates for president.

It also serves as a barometer of the party’s energy for the upcoming election cycle to assess the party’s chances up and down the ballot in a state Republicans have dominated for the better part of the past quarter-century.

This year’s felt different.

Advertisement

The convention, an occasionally dry affair, was raucous, with brass bands and deafening crowds that simply weren’t present in recent years. The fish fry, always crowded, was packed wall-to-wall, while the convention was so well-attended that there weren’t enough chairs for all the attendees — the $2 per chair rental cost threatening the party’s already stressed convention budget.

The difference wasn’t a matter of star power, even with potential 2028 hopefuls in Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear and California Congressman Ro Khanna in attendance.

Recent speakers like vice presidential candidate Tim Walz and Maryland Gov. Wes Moore, who spoke in 2025, earned enthusiasm but not as much. Even renowned orators like New Jersey Sen. Corey Booker, one of two presidential hopefuls to make the trip to Columbia for the event in 2024 alongside Georgia Sen. Raphael Warnock, didn’t see as much enthusiasm ahead of a presidential election where Democrats lost the popular vote for the first time since 2004.

It was about belief in the message, a belief Clyburn said was lacking two years ago. The night of that year’s election, Clyburn said, he received a phone call asking him when he planned to arrive back in Washington for then-candidate Kamala Harris’ victory party.

Clyburn, in response, was blunt: “I’m not coming to Washington,” he said at the time, “because I don’t think there’s going to be a victory party.”

Advertisement

“It was simply because I do not believe that people have emotionally bought into our campaign,” he added. “That’s what I think it’s going to take for us, to run a campaign that people will buy into emotionally. People can hear the words, but they’ve gotta feel it.”







scdpcon_Bradshaw_13.jpg

An attendee waves during the South Carolina Democratic Party’s annual convention in Columbia, SC on May 30, 2026.

Advertisement




A vibe shift

Democrats say they’ve got something to believe in this year.

A recent Republican-led effort to redraw the state’s congressional maps to eliminate Clyburn’s seat earlier in the week had failed, driven largely by massive Democratic turnout at the start of early voting credited with giving statehouse Republicans cold feet to continue. State legislative seats around the country had begun to flip, while South Carolina Democrats in recent special elections in areas like Dorchester and Sumter Counties have outperformed expected margins.

And as the Democratic National Committee meets in the coming months to reconsider South Carolina’s place in the presidential nominating calendar for 2028, a state party that recently reached superminority status in the statehouse now seems like a place worth watching again.

Beshear, a Democratic governor in a state that voted for Trump by a two-to-one margin in 2024, told reporters he believed South Carolina should be “the first of what I think should be two southern states” in the opening group of four early primary states. Khanna, a potential presidential candidate who has maintained a frequent presence in South Carolina, upped the ante, saying recent on-the-ground events should “settle the question” of South Carolina’s role in the calendar.

Advertisement

“South Carolina should be the first state in the South with the DNC,” Khanna told reporters. “I don’t even see how, after what they have done, that this can be an open question.”

But the South Carolina Democratic Party still has to demonstrate they deserve it.

Throughout the weekend, the party enlisted the help of a small army of social media influencers to help sell the message, recording the weekend festivities and interviewing candidates to share with their followings.

It’s a new program, started in December 2025 as part of the party’s outreach efforts, and is currently unpaid, meant primarily as an effort to glean neutral commentary from creators with pre-existing audiences who simply want to help Democrats win. It’s also a means of humanizing party messaging many may perceive as overly polished, or inauthentic, allowing non-political consumers to better understand or buy into the messages candidates are selling them.

“As influencers we build relationships with the people that follow us,” said Tabatha Andonian, a Fort Mill activist who built an audience in part by her work tracking ICE agents in Charlotte last year. “They trust us.”

Advertisement

Selling the party

The project also has a purpose, part of a growing trend among party leaders in response to the massive leveraging of social media personalities by Republicans in the years after the COVID-19 pandemic.

Donald Trump’s White House, for example, has begun incorporating sympathetic content creators into its rotating press pool in part of an effort to reach new audiences, while national Democrats for several years have begun paid influencer programs to get their messages out.

South Carolina is looking to follow suit. While redistricting helped inspire voters, the message was spread to voters directly by social media personalities across the state, helping get the message to vote early out to thousands of people who might not otherwise have tracked the redistricting debate through traditional media.







Zackary Kirk Dem Convention.jpg

Advertisement

Zackory Kirk, a social media influencer from Atlanta, GA, films content during the South Carolina Democratic Party’s annual convention in Columbia, SC on May 30, 2026.




“The way politics has been done forever has been ‘let’s spend millions of dollars to pay a corporation owned by billionaires to air a commercial to one specific demographic 35 times a day,’ instead of, ‘Hey, let’s invest in people who are actually part of the community and can reach people,’” comedian Steve Hofstetter, a participant in the program who counts millions of followers across his social media platforms, told The Post and Courier at the convention. “I think that makes a lot more sense.”

It also serves a practical purpose for the party itself. The content generated over the weekend, the party’s creator director and Barack Obama campaign alum Michael Ceraso told The Post and Courier, would likely become part of the party’s pitch to the DNC in the coming weeks, while also serving as a means of communicating the upsides of South Carolina’s nuanced Democratic electorate to party leaders and the public.

Advertisement

Zackory Kirk, an Atlanta-based content creator with a sizeable Instagram following, told The Post and Courier he believed the electorate of places like South Carolina, rather than his home state of Georgia, could help nominate the type of candidate who could survive in a general election environment, able to appeal to rural and urban voters in ways more cosmopolitan candidates could not.

Georgia, a battleground state, has often been raised as a national focus for the party’s efforts to win in the South. But it’s hard for people to learn what South Carolina is capable of, he said, if they aren’t able to see for themselves.

“As much as I love Georgia — it’s home, right? — I don’t want Atlanta to pick the Democratic nominee,” he said. “Atlanta is a microcosm; it’s a small place, it’s unique, but it’s not representative of America in the way that South Carolina is representative now.”





Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

South-Carolina

South Carolina Lottery Powerball, Pick 3 results for May 30, 2026

Published

on

South Carolina Lottery Powerball, Pick 3 results for May 30, 2026


play

The South Carolina Education Lottery offers several draw games for those aiming to win big.

Advertisement

Here’s a look at May 30, 2026, results for each game:

Winning Powerball numbers from May 30 drawing

01-27-35-44-52, Powerball: 12, Power Play: 2

Check Powerball payouts and previous drawings here.

Winning Pick 3 Plus FIREBALL numbers from May 30 drawing

Midday: 1-3-8, FB: 9

Evening: 7-1-4, FB: 4

Advertisement

Check Pick 3 Plus FIREBALL payouts and previous drawings here.

Winning Pick 4 Plus FIREBALL numbers from May 30 drawing

Midday: 7-1-9-2, FB: 9

Evening: 1-2-3-3, FB: 4

Check Pick 4 Plus FIREBALL payouts and previous drawings here.

Winning Cash Pop numbers from May 30 drawing

Midday: 09

Advertisement

Evening: 04

Check Cash Pop payouts and previous drawings here.

Winning Palmetto Cash 5 numbers from May 30 drawing

07-14-15-18-29

Check Palmetto Cash 5 payouts and previous drawings here.

Winning Powerball Double Play numbers from May 30 drawing

04-27-65-66-69, Powerball: 04

Advertisement

Check Powerball Double Play payouts and previous drawings here.

Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results

Are you a winner? Here’s how to claim your lottery prize

The South Carolina Education Lottery provides multiple ways to claim prizes, depending on the amount won:

For prizes up to $500, you can redeem your winnings directly at any authorized South Carolina Education Lottery retailer. Simply present your signed winning ticket at the retailer for an immediate payout.

Winnings $501 to $100,000, may be redeemed by mailing your signed winning ticket along with a completed claim form and a copy of a government-issued photo ID to the South Carolina Education Lottery Claims Center. For security, keep copies of your documents and use registered mail to ensure the safe arrival of your ticket.

Advertisement

SC Education Lottery

P.O. Box 11039

Columbia, SC 29211-1039

For large winnings above $100,000, claims must be made in person at the South Carolina Education Lottery Headquarters in Columbia. To claim, bring your signed winning ticket, a completed claim form, a government-issued photo ID, and your Social Security card for identity verification. Winners of large prizes may also set up an Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT) for convenient direct deposit of winnings.

Columbia Claims Center

Advertisement

1303 Assembly Street

Columbia, SC 29201

Claim Deadline: All prizes must be claimed within 180 days of the draw date for draw games.

For more details and to access the claim form, visit the South Carolina Lottery claim page.

When are the South Carolina Lottery drawings held?

  • Powerball: 10:59 p.m. ET on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
  • Mega Millions: 11 p.m. ET on Tuesday and Friday.
  • Pick 3: Daily at 12:59 p.m. (Midday) and 6:59 p.m. (Evening).
  • Pick 4: Daily at 12:59 p.m. (Midday) and 6:59 p.m. (Evening).
  • Cash Pop: Daily at 12:59 p.m. (Midday) and 6:59 p.m. (Evening).
  • Palmetto Cash 5: 6:59 p.m. ET daily.

This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a South Carolina editor. You can send feedback using this form.



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending