Connect with us

South-Carolina

South Carolina football: Keep calm and settle in for the stretch run

Published

on

South Carolina football: Keep calm and settle in for the stretch run


Scott Davis has followed South Carolina athletics for over 40 years and provides commentary from a fan perspective. He writes a weekly newsletter year-round (sign up here) and a column during football season that’s published each Monday on GamecockCentral.com.


Sometimes, I wonder why anyone bothers to speculate on an ongoing college football season.

Should we just pass a law today that makes it illegal to talk about what’s happening during a football season while it’s still happening? Things change so quickly and so profoundly and so ridiculously that it’s a wonder any of the leading analysts and opinionators are able to maintain a job for longer than 15 minutes.

No one knows what’s happening, not really, not even with all the numbers and all the stats and all the rock-solid analytical predictions and percentages.

Advertisement

And for regular old fans like us? We have about as much business trying to forecast what’s next as we do teaching a graduate-level class on the Principles of Microeconomics, so little do we actually have any idea about what’s getting ready to happen.

As much as all of us have made about the sheer, spectacular unpredictability of South Carolina football during the Shane Beamer Era, college football itself is what’s genuinely incomprehensible right now.

Let’s start with South Carolina’s 2024 football schedule, shall we?

Before the season began, all of us – and I do mean all of us – looked towards the month of October with deep foreboding and extreme gravity. October was going to be when the rubber met the road, when the story was told, when the die was cast.

Ole Miss at home. Alabama on the road. Oklahoma on the road.

Advertisement

South Carolina would either make a stand or be overwhelmed like driftwood amidst a tidal wave. October was the test, and it would make or break the 2024 season.

Just a month ago, when we stepped out onto the shores of the first of two Bye Weeks in 2024, I wrote a column in which I compared the middle portion of the schedule – the October Onslaught – to the second film in a movie trilogy. October represented “The Empire Strikes Back” or “The Dark Knight” for our Gamecocks. How would our heroes respond at the moment of their greatest peril?

A couple of weeks later, that neat and tidy summation of the current season has been scrambled like eggs in a Waffle House.

Ole Miss, while still potent offensively, no longer appears to be a legitimate College Football Playoff contender. Defending SEC champion Alabama lost twice in October and the Tide have struggled just enough in the post-Saban Era to get the notoriously entitled Bama fan base ready to start sharpening pitchforks.

Meanwhile, Oklahoma (which appeared in the College Football Playoff as recently as 2019 and started the preseason ranked No. 16) has fallen completely off the map in their first season as a member of the Southeastern Conference. After collapsing in Oxford on Saturday, the Sooners have lost four SEC games before November has even arrived.

Advertisement

On the other hand, this last phase of the schedule, the phase that looked at least somewhat more manageable when we glanced at it back around Labor Day, is suddenly beginning to loom as a gauntlet every bit as arduous as the one South Carolina just completed (and maybe even more).

When we all last convened here during the first Bye Week to take stock on where we’d been and where we were going, we didn’t know what we didn’t know.

As September closed, we still didn’t know much of anything about Texas A&M under new coach Mike Elko. Since then, the Aggies have reeled off win after win, and after a come-from-behind victory over LSU in College Station on Saturday night, A&M now stands at 7-1 and is the lone program that is still undefeated in Southeastern Conference competition. Guess where their next game is located? (I’ll give you a hint: They open games by playing “2001” there).

As September closed, Clemson appeared to be continuing its slow decline from the glory days of the 2010s. But as October closes, the Tigers have surged into the Top 10 amidst a series of dominating offensive performances. South Carolina gets to finish its season on the road against that program, in case you’d forgotten.

Missouri – which the Gamecocks play on November 16 – looks slightly less formidable than they did at the beginning of the season, but then again, they’ve still won six football games. And Vanderbilt? Forget about it. Since we last did this Bye Week thing, the Commodores took down mighty Alabama, beat South Carolina nemesis Kentucky and nearly defeated Texas (which was ranked Number One in the nation a little over a week ago). What the @#$% is going on in Nashville?

Advertisement

We thought if we could merely survive October, we’d have a chance to thrive in November. But the October Onslaught has simply given way to the November Knockout.

And we still don’t know what we don’t know. All that hangs in the balance is a bowl berth, the future of the Shane Beamer Era and an epic battle between the forces of good and evil.

So keep calm and carry on, friends. The stretch drive has arrived.

[Join GamecockCentral for fast, accurate, and in-depth coverage of Gamecock sports and recruiting]

What Just Happened?

Considering everything we just stipulated above, it’s worth wondering whether we even need to bother taking stock of what South Carolina just accomplished in October.

Advertisement

But since most of us like to believe we can make sense of chaos and confusion, let’s take stock anyway. It’s good for our emotional well-being.

As October dawned, I wrote that a satisfactory result for the Gamecocks in that month would be for them to win one of their three games and look competitive in all three. That is more or less what happened, though I will definitely hear and perhaps listen very intently to arguments that South Carolina was not competitive in its head-scratching performance against Ole Miss.

Still, let’s accept that some positive things happened this month. South Carolina won on the road in Norman, something few teams have done historically: We’re just not accustomed to seeing the Sooners get walloped that thoroughly by anyone inside the confines of their own stadium.

South Carolina very nearly – and probably even should have – won in Tuscaloosa against an Alabama team that featured many of the key players that won the SEC last year. And if we allow ourselves to stretch back into September and take into account the Gamecocks’ battling LSU to the wire in Williams-Brice Stadium, it should be obvious to all of us that we are rooting for a team that is capable of competing with and even beating just about anyone on any given Saturday.

How will that team handle A&M, Clemson and (I can’t believe I’m saying this) Vandy?

Advertisement

[Win two tickets to the South Carolina-Texas A&M football game]

Time to Take Offense

Can the Gamecocks make it through the November Knockout without a few strong showings by the offense?

I’m inclined to say no.

Of course, South Carolina just defeated Oklahoma 35-9 despite being outgained in Total Yards by the Sooners, so anything’s possible.

But as well as the Gamecocks are playing defensively – and can we have a warm round of applause for Clayton White’s unit, please? – they’re getting ready to match wits with some intriguing offensive heavyweights.

Advertisement

Texas A&M runs the football as well as anyone in the SEC. Does South Carolina’s defense – which specializes in causing havoc, creating disruption and attacking the passer – have the answers for a bruising attack or for the elusive Marcel Reed at quarterback, who stepped into the spotlight against LSU and ran wild over the Tigers?

More challenges loom: Clemson suddenly seems to be lighting up the scoreboard, the Gamecocks just simply haven’t matched up well with Missouri’s offense in recent years no matter who’s been playing for either team, and no one really knows what to expect from Vanderbilt at this point.

Won’t South Carolina need to make something happen offensively – and maybe even make a lot of things happen – to succeed over the next few weeks? You would certainly think so.

Then again, South Carolina 35 – Oklahoma 9.

We don’t know what we don’t know. On the other hand, here’s what we do know…

Advertisement

The SEC is Deeper Than Ever

We’d all agree with the following, right? The Southeastern Conference has been, by far, the most dominant and potent force in college football for at least the last 20 years. No one could – or would – seriously dispute this.

But if there’s been a knock against the league over the last few years, it’s been that its handful of most powerful teams (Alabama, LSU, Georgia) have masked the reality that there have been quite a few mediocre programs filling out the lineup. South Carolina, sadly, would have been included among the also-rans.

No longer.

In 2024, it feels like just about anyone in the SEC could beat just about anyone anywhere. With the exception of an undeniably struggling Mississippi State, everyone else in the league rises to the level of “pretty darn good, and to be honest, I really wouldn’t want to play them right about now.” Including your South Carolina Gamecocks.

No one, for example, considers Arkansas to be a contender to win the SEC. And yet the Razorbacks have routinely been posting offensive performances of 500 or more – and sometimes even 600 or more – total yards per game. Would it shock you to see Arkansas (or Kentucky or South Carolina or almost anyone in the conference) defeat someone like Oregon or Penn State or Ohio State? It shouldn’t.

Advertisement

Many of us believed the rise of the Transfer Portal and the infusion of cash from NIL deals might result in a top-heavy game in which the same five teams dominated annually. And that may still happen, because as noted above, nobody knows anything.

But for now, the SEC’s teams all seem to be rising to meet the challenge. And with the expansion of the College Football Playoff, we could be nearing a result in which a three-loss SEC team still wins the national championship. Under the old system, an absolutely loaded team – like last year’s Georgia squad – could lose a single game and be denied an opportunity to play for a title. That won’t happen again.

Let’s put it this way: If Tennessee were to work its way into the Playoff this year, would you be stunned to see them win a title? You wouldn’t. That’s because anyone from the SEC can beat anyone anywhere.

That makes an already difficult November for South Carolina even more difficult.

Then again, the Gamecocks are one of those teams that could beat anyone anywhere.

Advertisement

And who knows? Maybe they will.

Tell me how you’re feeling about the November Knockout by writing me at [email protected].



Source link

South-Carolina

What exactly was Ted Cruz doing in SC for Alan Wilson? Dreaming of the White House, perhaps.

Published

on

What exactly was Ted Cruz doing in SC for Alan Wilson? Dreaming of the White House, perhaps.


COLUMBIA — Republican U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas was very clear when he told people his reason for being in South Carolina this past week: he wanted to help Alan Wilson become the next governor of the Palmetto State.

For a full day in the blazing South Carolina heat, Cruz and Wilson traveled across the Midlands June 22 to deliver the closing argument for Wilson’s candidacy, from lakeside ice cream socials to full VFW halls and closed-door meetings with law enforcement.

They posed for photos with seemingly everyone who packed into the dining room of a Columbia barbecue restaurant owned by local Republican powerbroker Kirkman Finlay. The Texan played to the crowd with a quip that the state made some “mighty fine barbecue.”

And Cruz — putting his money where his mouth was — directed a quarter-million dollars in cable television advertising support to boost Wilson’s candidacy in opponent Pamela Evette’s backyard of Greenville County through his Truth and Courage political action committee.

Advertisement

“My philosophy is simple: I support the most conservative candidate who can win,” he told the crowd in Columbia the night before voters went to the polls.

The political play

But what was Cruz really doing here? Reporters tried to find out, but had little luck.

Was it a play for 2028?

Cruz side-stepped the question, noting he had campaigned for conservative candidates in multiple states since his election to the Senate more than a dozen years ago.

Advertisement

“I care deeply who the leaders are that have the responsibility with steering our nation — with steering our states — in the right direction,” he told reporters after more than one hour shaking hands with supporters.

But plenty already think he is.

Texas U.S. Senate colleague John Cornyn said he believes Cruz covets the presidency during a recent interview with D.C. outlet Semafor. Others say his recent actions show Cruz “is clearly running for president,” as Vice President and potential 2028 candidate J.D. Vance said during a podcast appearance with conservative commentator Megyn Kelley on June 17. The local press seemed to think so too.

  • “Sen. Ted Cruz makes Iowa appearance, fueling speculation about another presidential bid” Texas Tribune — May 2, 2026

  • “Is Ted Cruz building up to another presidential run?” San Antonio Express-News — April 14, 2026.

Was it a jab at President Donald Trump?

Cruz this election cycle had endorsed opposite Trump in multiple races, lending his backing for Wilson shortly before Trump surprisingly abandoned his “complete and total endorsement” of Evette to co-endorse Wilson in the June 23 runoff.

He has also shown a propensity to criticize Trump behind closed doors, as recordings of conversations with donors detailed by news site Axios earlier this year describe.

Advertisement

But he dodged several attempts by a Post and Courier reporter to lock down the significance of that decision, including a question whether Trump occasionally failed to choose the most conservative candidates available.

“President Trump has been an extraordinary president, and I’m proud to work hand in hand with him,” he said. “He makes his determinations, I make my determinations. They are often usually one and the same; occasionally, they differ.”

So how serious is the prospect of a run for president in 2028? For Republicans and Democrats alike, South Carolina will continue to be a key early primary state in 2028.

  • Multiple possible contenders for the Democratic nomination that year — California Gov. Gavin Newsom, Arizona politicians Mark Kelly and Ruben Gallego, Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear, New Jersey Sen. Corey Booker and Silicon Valley-area Congressman Ro Khanna — have already been active here, while Republicans plot their next moves in anticipation of the winding down of the 80-year-old Trump’s hold on the contemporary GOP.

  • Cruz has also been here before, appearing with Wilson during a series of town halls the then-attorney general held with multiple presidential hopefuls during Cruz’s bid for the presidency in 2016.

Cruz seems to be playing the long game. Asked one of the essential questions of any candidate seeking South Carolinians’ vote — their preferred barbecue sauce — Cruz remained non-committal.

“The best sauce is no sauce at all,” Cruz said. “Cook the meat right, you don’t need sauce.”

Advertisement

He even continued to decline a response on the crucial follow-up: what sauce he preferred for pulled pork.

“Pulled pork would be delicious,” he said. “Brisket is fantastic. I’m kind of partial to jalapeno and cheddar sausage. That is a quality piece of art.”

Of note: There was, in fact, sauce present at a barbecue spread Cruz prepared for New York Democratic Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand as the result of a wager between the pair of them on the outcome of the recent NBA finals matchup between the New York Knicks and San Antonio Spurs.

Quote of the week

“I’m gonna go donate to him again, to encourage him to run again.”

Advertisement

State Rep. Jay Kilmartin, R-Lexington, after the House Republican Caucus banded with Democrats to recommit his bill to legalize the over-the-counter sale of human-grade Ivermectin June 25 after previously passing both the House and Senate by unanimous vote.

Kilmartin, a member of the House Freedom Caucus, said the motion by House Majority Leader Davey Hiott to kill the bill was a penalty for his financial support of Statehouse candidate John Allen in his primary bid against incumbent Lexington Republican Rep. Chris Wooten in this past month’s elections.





Source link

Continue Reading

South-Carolina

South Carolina State Museum marks America 250 with free admission, new exhibit

Published

on

South Carolina State Museum marks America 250 with free admission, new exhibit


The South Carolina State Museum opened its doors Saturday for a day of free admission, live entertainment and hands-on activities as it marked America’s 250th anniversary and unveiled a new exhibit focused on the Palmetto State’s role in the Revolutionary War.

The event, billed as “Salute to 250 Day,” included the grand opening of “American Battleground: South Carolina’s Revolution,” an exhibition exploring South Carolina’s role in the fight for independence.

“When we think of the revolution, of course we think about Bunker Hill, and George Washington, and crossing the Delaware, and in Yorktown and the battles up there,” said Christopher Graham, curator of the Revolution exhibit.

But on two occasions, the British attempted to invade the southern colonies. The first occasion, 1776, South Carolina drove off the attempt and British returned in 1780 and captured Charlestown, and moved into the backcountry attempting to reestablish rural control. That’s when the backcountry militia rose up and begin fighting the British without much government support, and eventually driving the British out of South Carolina into North Carolina and toward their fate at Yorktown.

Organizers said the exhibit is intended to help visitors learn about the Revolutionary War in the South, with artifacts meant to connect people of all ages with the state’s history.

Advertisement

Among the items on display is what Graham described as a significant South Carolina artifact.

“There is an iconic South Carolina artifact in here. It’s the flag of the second South Carolina regiment that was given to the regiment just a couple days after the battle of Sullivans Island, and carried for several year,” Graham said. “It was captured at the siege of Savannah carried back to Britain, where lived for 200 years, and now it’s back and it’s on exhibit.”

Chandler Mack, PR manager for the South Carolina State Museum, said the exhibit is part of a broader effort to begin a year of commemorating America’s 250th anniversary.

“we played a very pivotal role in our nations quest for independence during the revolutionary war. So that’s why we wanted to open ‘American Battleground: South Carolina’s Revolution’ to tell that story and tell the story of what life was like for every South Carolinian,” Mack said.



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

South-Carolina

Myrtle Beach is a hotspot for sharks and the potential to be bit

Published

on

Myrtle Beach is a hotspot for sharks and the potential to be bit


play

  • South Carolina has the third-highest number of historical shark attacks in the United States.
  • Despite a high number of encounters, there have been no confirmed fatal unprovoked shark attacks in the state’s modern history.
  • Myrtle Beach is ranked as the second-highest location for shark-bite risk nationally, though the odds remain very low.
  • Most shark bites in the area are unintentional nips from smaller species mistaking humans for fish in murky water.

As summer crowds return to South Carolina’s beaches, new data highlights how influential the Palmetto State is on America’s shark risk.

The state has 118 recorded historical shark attacks, the third‑highest total in the nation. Two unprovoked bites have already been reported in 2026, according to Vegas Insider’s Summer Hazard Odds study.

Advertisement

South Carolina remains one of the country’s most closely watched coastal hotspots where incidents from shark bites to lightning strikes are likely to occur. Myrtle Beach, in particular, stands out, as it ranks No. 14 overall in hazard risk and No. 2 nationally for shark‑bite risk.

How likely is a shark bite in Myrtle Beach?

The odds of a shark bite in Myrtle Beach are estimated at 1 in 720,000 during a two‑week trip, equivalent to a 0.00014% likelihood, according to Vegas Insider’s Summer Hazard Odds study.

Even with Myrtle Beach’s national ranking, the numbers make one thing clear: shark encounters remain pretty rare.

Has there ever been a fatal shark attack at a South Carolina beach?

Despite its high risk of recorded shark encounters, there has never been a confirmed or fatal unprovoked shark attack in South Carolina in modern history.

Advertisement

The only such incident on record dates all the way back to 1852 in Charleston Harbor, according to America Surf, a magazine dedicated to surfing.

Myrtle Beach is among America’s top shark hotspots

With new national rankings spotlighting Myrtle Beach as one of the country’s most closely watched shark hotspots.

Vegas Insider’s Summer Hazard Odds study reveals it stems largely from the area’s intense swimmer density and environmental conditions.

With over 17 million visitors each year, Myrtle Beach does see an increase in accidental shark interactions. At the same time, the region’s warm, murky coastal waters create ideal shark-hunting conditions.

What types of sharks are at Myrtle Beach? Blacktips to bull sharks

As concerns about coastal safety rise each summer, understanding which sharks are actually responsible for bites in Myrtle Beach helps put the risk into perspective.

Advertisement

Most incidents in South Carolina involve small to medium coastal species, not large predators, according to americansurfmagazine.com

Along the beach, sharks most often linked to bites include blacktips, spinners, bull sharks, sandbar sharks, and Atlantic sharpnose sharks.

Reality of shark encounters in Myrtle Beach

Understanding why shark bites happen in Myrtle Beach helps make sense of the danger.

As reported by americansurfmagazine.com, most incidents aren’t aggressive attacks but quick, unintentional encounters driven by shark behavior.

Bites are typically unprovoked yet non‑aggressive, often involving single, rapid nips when a shark mistakes a hand, foot, or ankle for a small fish in the surf.

Advertisement

Juvenile sharks feeding in shallow, turbid water are the usual culprits, especially fast‑moving blacktips and spinners, which strike at baitfish near the shoreline and may accidentally contact swimmers.

Ways to reduce shark bite risk this beach season

As the summer beach season approaches, safety experts say that most shark encounters can be prevented with simple habits in the water.

According to the Florida Museum, ways to keep yourself and others safe include swimming in groups, staying close to shore, and avoiding the ocean during dawn, dusk, or nighttime, when sharks are most active.

It also means minimizing behaviors that attract attention, avoiding excess splashing, and steering clear of shiny jewelry or bright, high‑contrast clothing that resembles prey in murky waters.

Travis Jacque Rose is the trending news reporter for the Greenville News, part of the USA TODAY Network. Reach him at trose@gannett.com.

Advertisement



Source link

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending