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Georgia 24, South Carolina 14: Bulldogs Wake Up To Stop Cocks’ Crowing

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Georgia 24, South Carolina 14: Bulldogs Wake Up To Stop Cocks’ Crowing


I am a firm believer that there are two types of people in this world: Drive-By Truckers fans and everyone else. Within the subset of DBT devotees there are two additional groups: Patterson Hood people and Mike Cooley people. Most everyone who is devoted to the band likes both, but in the end you probably hew a little more closely to one than the other (with the occasion Isbell aficionado thrown in).

I’m more of a Cooley man myself. While all write lyrics that speak to me, few DBTs lyrics speak to me more than those in the song Carl Perkins’ Cadillac. One of his sage observations in that song is that in the end, “life ain’t nothing but a blending up of all the ups and downs.”

That sentiment applies to college football too. You play an entire season and the outcome is nothing but an amalgamation of the high points and low points. Let’s all hope that the first half of this game was one of the low points. Because if it was one of the high points, it’s going to be a very long year.

Georgia slumbered and stumbled its way through a drizzly, dreary first half in Athens and went to the locker room trailing the underdog Gamecocks 14-3. But they found some energy (and even a running game) in the second half, scoring 21 unanswered points to down the visitors 24–14.

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This one had a little bit of everything that makes a Coach (or fan) pull his or her hair out. Special teams miscues. Poorly timed penalties. Coverage breakdowns. Lack of physicality on both lines. This one could have ended a lot worse than it ultimately did, and if it had, the Bulldogs would have no one but themselves to blame. There were plenty enough mistakes to absolutely torpedo the Athenians if they’d been playing a better football team.

That’s not to cast aspersions on Shane Beamer’s team. The Garnet and Black came out gunning, with Spencer Rattler completing his first 10 passes. Carolina offensive coordinator Dowell Loggains called a very well-timed screen game and Rattler did a great job in the downfield passing game.

That was probably a good thing, as the Gamecocks only managed 53 yards on the ground. Georgia on the other hand ran the dang ball with an effectiveness we haven’t seen so far this season. The Dawgs churned out 189 yards on 44 attempts, most of them in the second half. The result was a whopping 20:09 to 9:51 time of possession advantage for Georgia in the second half, which in turn kept the defense off the field and fresh to harass Rattler un mercilessly after the intermission.

Carson Beck on the other hand looked a good bit less bothered after the break than he had before. He finished 27 of 35 passing for 269 yards. 177 of those yards came in the second half, after I presume Mike Bobo reminded him that the downfield receivers could be thrown to as well. At times early Beck continued to look unsure, as if finding the check down receiver had become his entire personality. That’s a worrying pattern, though it’s a little less worrying when the running game puts him in 2nd and 5 or 3rd and 2.

The biggest difference in that running game was obviously Daijun Edwards, who went for 118 yards and a touchdown on 20 carries in his first action of the season. Edwards’ patent refusal to lose yardage on any carry, under any circumstances, is something I cherish almost as much as my family and personal liberty. I suspect it’s going to be something we really thank our lucky stars for a lot this season.

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The Bulldogs forced two turnovers defensively, which was nice. But balancing that was freshman kicker Peyton Woodring’s two missed field goals. One was from 28 yards out. The other was from 43. Neither was particularly close. Woodring appeared to simply rush his approach and hook the 28 yarder, which gave the Gamecocks a solid shot of momentum.

Bulldog fans have learned to take field goals from inside 40 yards almost for granted since at least Rodrigo Blankenship’s sophomore season. He and Jack Podlesny each missed so infrequently, and usually in such inconsequential situations, that it never really mattered. With this offense, that may not be the case in 2023. Woodring absolutely has the leg to kick in the SEC. He bombed at least one 61 yarder as a senior in high school. Here’s hoping things slow down for him and that he finds his stroke before one of those misses truly matters.

The ‘Dawgs return to action in Sanford Stadium next week for the last of four season-opening home games against UAB. One would have hoped that by this point it would be clear that they had simply reloaded rather than rebuilding after two consecutive titles.

That’s sadly not the case. There continue to be questions in all phases of the game, but most acutely on offense and in the kicking game. This feels like a team that could find itself in a lot of trouble against an offense that can find the plays to score. That being said, there were also some questions after the Bulldogs struggled with Missouri last season. Ultimately you have to win your clunkers, and even championship teams usually have one or two. Again, let’s hope this one was a learning experience we don’t repeat, rather than a recurring nightmare. Until later…

Go ‘Dawgs!!!

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South-Carolina

ESPN's College Football Playoff Predictor has updated again. Here's where South Carolina stands

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ESPN's College Football Playoff Predictor has updated again. Here's where South Carolina stands


ESPN.com’s College Football Playoff predictor isn’t perfect because it applies analytics to a situation that ultimately will be decided by a committee of humans. But it does provide a nice guide and discussion piece about which teams have the best chance to make this year’s College Football Playoff.

Because of that human element, the predictor has been updating twice each week, once on Sunday to account for Saturday’s games and again after the latest CFP rankings are released.

[More for subscribers: What latest rankings mean for South Carolina’s College Football Playoff chances]

While the Gamecocks won their game on Saturday and got a lot of help from the teams around them last week, the logjam of SEC teams ahead of them in Tuesday’s rankings is still limiting their upside at this time.

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With the committee putting South Carolina behind fellow three-loss SEC teams Alabama and Ole Miss, the predictor currently gives South Carolina a 20 percent chance of making the 12-team field, which is three percentage points lower than its chances in Sunday’s update.

The Gamecocks do, of course, have one more huge opportunity to pad their resume when they travel to Clemson this weekend to renew the annual rivalry in what may be the biggest game in the matchup’s history.

Beat the Tigers, who are currently No. 12 in the CFP Top 25, and South Carolina’s chances of making the playoff jump to 46 percent, according to the predictor.

While that’s just under a coin flip, it’s also 12 percentage points lower than it was in Sunday’s update.

South Carolina is still very much in the hunt but is going to need to win and play very well against Clemson and get more help around it.

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[GamecockCentral: $1 for 7 days]

As a reminder, the CFP committee’s top 12 teams won’t correlate exactly with the 12-team field.

The CFP will consist of the top five highest-ranked conference champions and the next seven highest-ranked at-large schools. The top four conference champions will receive the top four seeds and a first-round bye. The fifth conference champion will be seeded by its CFP ranking. If that ranking is outside of the top 12 it will be seeded 12th as the final team in the field.

The teams seeded 5 through 12 will fight it out in the first round with the winners advancing to the quarterfinal round to face the top four seeds.

The Gamecocks and Tigers are set for a noon showdown Saturday in Clemson.

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ESPN Analytics uses FPI to simulate the entire college football season 200,000 times. A committee model is applied to mimic College Football Playoff selections and seeding in order to generate a 12-team bracket for each simulation. The most likely CFP teams are provided for user selections. After user inputs, a likely bracket is generated and randomly simulated using FPI.



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The Verdict: South Carolina was built for this moment

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The Verdict: South Carolina was built for this moment


South Carolina football superfan Chris Paschal writes a weekly column during the season for GamecockCentral called “The Verdict.” Chris is a lawyer at Goings Law Firm in Columbia.

It will have been 44,592 days since Clemson students marched onto our campus with guns drawn when the Gamecocks take the field this Saturday in Death Valley.  Back in 1902, Clemson students were mad because of a cartoon that depicted a Gamecock whipping a Tiger.

They marched on our campus, ready to cause bodily harm, over a cartoon. For 44,592 days, Clemson students, fans, coaches, players, and administrators have done everything but declare war on South Carolina to ensure they remain the superior football program in the state. 

In 1902 there was more than just the cartoon. In 1902, Carolina beat Clemson.

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The Atlanta Journal-Constitution put it best following the game: the Clemson Tiger “was so successfully tamed this morning by Carolina. Its tail was twisted and twisted by the sturdy ‘pig skin pushers’ of Carolina, and after two hours and more of hard battle it gave up further fight, for time was called and it became as tame as the proverbial lamb.”

Carolina upset Clemson who at the time was led by John Heisman and was considered one of the great southern football powers. I think that too probably had a little something to do with the hostilities and hurt feelings coming from the Clemson students. 

[GamecockCentral: Subscribe for $1 for 7 days]

For the 121st time this Saturday, it will be Carolina and Clemson playing a football game against each other. And while we are past the days of armed invasions, you can’t help but think this Saturday’s showdown may be the most consequential in the series’ history.

There have certainly been big matchups in years past. I am not discounting 1987. I am not overlooking 1979. I understand 2011-2013 featured some great teams. But this coming Saturday, both Clemson and Carolina will still be alive and in contention to bring home a national title.

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The chances for both are not significant, but they are legitimate. For the first time in the entirety of the rivalry’s history, both Carolina and Clemson fans can hope that with a win over their hated rival they are one step closer to a playoff berth, which means one more step closer in the quest for a national championship. 

Hopefully, the players donning the garnet and black won’t think similar thoughts as they run out onto the field for what should be a cold but sunny day. This game to the players needs to be about one thing: beating a team they are better than.

In continuing the list of firsts, for the first time in roughly a decade, South Carolina will have what I consider to be the better football team when they kick the ball off against Clemson. I think we have a better defense, I think we have a better offensive line, I think we have skill position players that are just as good as Clemson’s (if not better), and I think we have the better quarterback.

But that is what I think. I am an attorney. I am a fan.  Clemson players won’t just roll over because I declared we have the better team. In fact, I expect this Dabo Swinney-led Clemson football team to fight like hell in an effort to keep their thumb still firmly on top of us. 

Like Clemson fans, I think Clemson football players and coaches also think it is their birthright to beat the Gamecocks. And why shouldn’t they?

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Clemson has won eight out of the last nine against Carolina. They have danced on our sidelines in the fourth quarter to Sandstorm, they have talked about how they think they will dominate us; they have talked about how we aren’t the real USC nor are we the real Carolina.

Underneath this façade of respect and admiration for this year’s Carolina team, Clemson fans (and I assume players) quietly assume 2024 will be just like most other recent years. They assume the moment will be too big, they assume the ghosts of years past will be too much, and they assume that by about 3:30 in the afternoon, Carolina will have once again not been physically or mentally strong enough to defeat Clemson. 

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But I also think these assumptions, which often manifest themself in a holier-than-thou arrogance, stem from a small shred of doubt and fear that has crept into their minds. Carolina fans had no idea Clemson was passing the Gamecocks as a football program until it was too late. From 2009-2013, Carolina won five straight over Clemson. They assumed Clemson and their bumpkin coach were finally second fiddle to the Gamecocks. They ignored Clemson’s recruiting successes, they explained away Clemson’s double-digit win seasons as illegitimate due to being in the ACC, and they watched Clemson build a juggernaut that had passed Carolina in a very real and lasting way by 2014. 

All it took was one whipping in 2014 for Carolina fans to realize that Clemson was now on a path that would destroy Gamecock hopes and dreams for many years to come. That feeling of “oh, crap” that Carolina fans felt in the few weeks leading up to the 2014 Clemson games, I wonder if Clemson fans are feeling that very same thing leading up to this Saturday’s game.

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Maybe the thought of Carolina passing Clemson as a program hasn’t even crossed their minds. Maybe it is absurd that I would mention that in this column. Maybe by the final snap on Saturday, Clemson will have soundly defeated Carolina and made me and so many hopeful Gamecock fans look foolish. 

Or maybe Harbor, Kennard, Stewart, Hemingway, Sanders, Knight, Emmanwori, Sellers, and so many other Gamecock stalwarts are capable of handling business and showing we do have the better team.

A win this weekend could be program defining. It at the very least could be season defining.

Is Shane Beamer and this Gamecock program always a bridesmaid but never the bride?  Or is this team going to let this state and this nation understand that this is a new type of Gamecock football program?

We won’t know until Saturday, but I will be in Clemson cheering Carolina on, with the hope – the belief – that we will see that latter. Let’s tame the tiger once again into the proverbial lamb.

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Forever to thee. 



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Warde Manuel discusses how Clemson-South Carolina winner could see College Football Playoff resume boosted

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Warde Manuel discusses how Clemson-South Carolina winner could see College Football Playoff resume boosted


Ranked No. 12, Clemson is just on the outside looking in at the College Football Playoff. But the Tigers could help their case on Saturday.

Hosting in-state rival and No. 15 ranked South Carolina, Clemson could notch a very meaningful win. And on top of being the best win the Tigers would have notched all season, it would be a strong final argument to make for the selection committee — assuming Clemson doesn’t back into the ACC title game.

While he didn’t comment on specifics of a hypothetical, CFP selection committee chair Warde Manuel acknowledged a win would surely help Clemson’s case to snag an at-large bid, when asked directly about the Tigers.

“I’ll continue to say we don’t look forward and we don’t project, but winning always helps. I will say that,” Manuel said. “When teams win, we value what they do. I don’t know what that would mean towards where they will be in projecting, but there is value in winning games.”

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And it’s a boost that could cut both ways. As much as a win could help Clemson, it could be equally valuable to South Carolina as the Gamecocks try to get in position for an improbable at-large bid, one that would require some chaos ahead in the rankings.

Manuel also explained why Clemson slotted at No. 12 ahead of a cadre of SEC teams.

With Clemson slotted in at No. 12 in the latest College Football Playoff rankings, ahead of the likes of Alabama and Ole Miss, the decision of skeptics, despite the Tigers having a slightly better win-loss record.

Both the Crimson Tide and Rebels are 8-3, but have arguably better resumes than Clemson, which lacks many big wins. Nevertheless, the selection committee found the Tigers resume to be just enough to put them ahead, according to Manuel.

“Well, Clemson slid up with some losses ahead of them by Alabama and Mississippi, and they had a win against Citadel, obviously, but that wasn’t the big reason,” Manuel said. “Obviously they’re at 9-2, with only two losses. The teams right behind them have three losses. We just felt as a committee as we looked at their body of work, with three straight wins after their loss to Louisville, including back-to-back wins against Virginia Tech and Pitt, that they deserved to move up into that 12th position.”

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Manuel also discussed how the committee came to the decision to delineate Alabama and Ole Miss as the No. 13 and No. 14 teams, respectively.

Three SEC teams – Alabama, Ole Miss and South Carolina – have three losses, and all eyes were on where they’d come in during the fourth rankings reveal.

Ultimately, Alabama came in as the highest-ranked of the group at No. 13, followed by Ole Miss at No. 14 and South Carolina at No. 15. According to Manuel, that decision was largely due to head-to-head matchups.

Manuel said the Crimson Tide’s resume – which includes wins over GeorgiaMissouri and LSU – was a separator in the committee’s decision. But since Alabama and Ole Miss both have wins over South Carolina, that led them to come in at 13, 14 and 15, respectively.



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