South-Carolina
South Carolina softball bows out of SEC Tournament, awaits selection show
ATHENS, Ga. — And now they wait.
South Carolina softball is out of the SEC Tournament after a 1-1 week at Jack Turner Stadium in Athens, following a 6-2 win over Alabama with a 12-4 loss to Texas A&M on Thursday night.
An ugly night for the Gamecocks defensively saw five errors scattered across the night, and Texas A&M (44-9) scored two unearned runs off the mistakes.
“Obviously really disappointed with the result of the game,” head coach Ashley Chastain Woodard said. “Texas A&M is one of the best teams in the country. You have to play really well to beat them, and we did not. That’s one of the lesser defensive performances we’ve had all year. We’ve been really good on defense even fro the start.”
South Carolina (40-15) spent most of the game battling back from an early 4-1 hole. The Gamecocks did strike first on an Abigail Knight RBI single, but a pair of two-run homers in the second inning by Kennedy Powell and Mya Perez off South Carolina starter Sam Gress quickly erased the lead.
From there it was a story of the Gamecocks getting within arm’s length, but not being able to fully close the gap. Karley Shelton homered in the third and a run off a fielder’s choice in the fourth made it 4-3, only for a two-error bottom half of the fourth to lead to two Texas A&M runs. Quincee Lilio responded with a lead-off home run in the fifth inning off the scoreboard in right field, but it was four straight innings with a single run for the Gamecocks while the Aggies managed to put up crooked numbers.
“I think it’s just how to handle our emotions a little bit better,” Gress said on what her team learned this week. “It’s just having a next pitch mentality, especially in the circle. I thought we gave them a lot of momentum early on, and didn’t really take a punch at it.”
And finally, the hammer blow came in the fifth inning. Texas A&M ended the game early with a six-run fifth inning to clinch the contest on the run rule. KK Dement’s three-run double moved the Aggies to the brink, and then in what felt like the only way the game could have ended, the game-clinching run scored on an error after a ground ball to second base ended up in shallow right field.
Now the question is all about the NCAA Tournament. South Carolina should be more than secure as top-16 seed and a regional host. By any possible metric from RPI to strength of schedule to conference wins, the Gamecocks are comfortably one of the 16 best teams in the country and should expect to host a regional at Beckham Field next weekend.
“We have to carry ourselves liike we belong if we want to want to be at the top of this league,” Chastain Woodard said. “It’s just lessons learned that will I think serve us well as we start postseason next weekend, and then future teams as well. I think that’s a really key piece for me as we continue to build the program. These lessons will carry team to team.”
But the question of if South Carolina has done enough to get a top-eight national seed — and thus would host all of its postseason game up until the Women’s College World Series — remains in the air. The Gamecocks had the No. 7 RPI entering play Thursday, but a 13-11 conference record falls a little bit below the usual standard of a top-eight national seed.
With no more games left to play and nothing to do but cross their fingers, Chastain Woodard got her final pitch in for the selection committee.
“The facts are the facts,” she said. “We have 17 Quad I wins. That is I believe tied for second in the country. Personally I think that that’s the most important thing when you’re deciding 1-8 and who is going to be able to host a super. There is no arguing that, we earned all 17 of those. And I think we have 23 top-50 wins. No quad III losses, no quad IV losses.”
Chastain Woodard also talked about her team’s bold non-conference scheduling, lining up March series against Duke and Texas Tech with a 5-1 record across the two weekends.
“We went five for six there,” she continud.”They can’t argue that, and I think that shoudl n something when looking at our resume. Especially for a team and program which, let’s just be honest, people didn’t have much expectation for. It was something we didn’t py much attention to. They earned it. I think we have a really valid argument for a top-eight seed.”
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South-Carolina
Source: Lamont Paris returning to South Carolina next season
NOTE: The above video is a livestream of WIS featuring current newscasts, Soda City Living and Gray Media’s Local News Live.
COLUMBIA, S.C. (WIS) – Lamont Paris will remain the head coach for South Carolina men’s basketball next season.
A source confirmed to WIS that Paris will return for his fifth season at the helm.
The Gamecocks have gone 62-67 under Paris, which included an NCAA Tournament appearance during the 2023-24 season. In the two seasons since, however, South Carolina has gone 12-20 and 13-18, respectively.
Paris’s tenure has also included a 23-49 record against the SEC as of Tuesday.
The Gamecocks will face Oklahoma on Wednesday in the first round of the SEC Tournament in Nashville. Tipoff is scheduled for 9:30 p.m. The game will also be televised on the SEC Network.
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Copyright 2026 WIS. All rights reserved.
South-Carolina
Alexander brothers convicted of sex trafficking in Manhattan federal court
NEW YORK — Three brothers, including two of the nation’s most successful luxury real estate brokers, were convicted of sex trafficking Monday after a five-week trial over accusations that they drugged and raped scores of women they had dazzled with their wealth and opulent lifestyle.
The verdict came after 11 women testified in Manhattan federal court they were sexually assaulted by one or more of the brothers: twins Oren and Alon Alexander, 38, and Tal Alexander, 39. All three shook their heads as the jury foreperson said “guilty” 19 straight times, a powerful reckoning that could put them behind bars for the rest of their lives.
Tal Alexander dropped his head into his crossed arms. Their stunned parents sat in the gallery behind them. Alon Alexander’s wife shielded her face with her hand and appeared to fight back tears.
Judge Valerie E. Caproni set sentencing for Aug. 6. The brothers, jailed since their 2024 arrests, will appeal the verdict, their lawyers said.
“We believe in our clients’ innocence and we’re not going to stop fighting until we prevail, and we believe that we will one day prevail,” defense lawyer Marc Agnifilo said outside the courthouse.
U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton lauded the verdict as vindication for victims of crimes that often go unreported and unpunished.
“The truth is sex trafficking and other federal sex offenses are present in many walks of life and we have not done enough to root it out,” Clayton said in a statement.
Dozens of women say they were drugged and assaulted
The verdict represented a spectacular fall for Oren and Tal Alexander, once known as real estate’s “A Team” for their high-ticket sales and celebrity clientele. After smashing sales records at industry powerhouse Douglas Elliman, the brothers started their own firm. Alon Alexander ran their family’s private security company.
Victims testified that they met the brothers at nightclubs, parties and on dating apps, and were attacked after accepting their invitations to all-expense paid getaways to the Hamptons; Aspen, Colorado; and a Caribbean cruise. More than 60 women say they were raped by one or more of the brothers, according to prosecutors.
Defense lawyers suggested the accusers had faulty memories or were hoping to cash in on the brothers’ fortunes. The brothers were womanizers, their lawyers conceded. But they insisted any sex was consensual.
In addition to the top charges, Alon and Tal Alexander were also convicted of sex trafficking of a minor while Alon and Oren Alexander were convicted of aggravated sexual abuse by force or intoxicant and sexual abuse of a physically incapacitated person. Oren Alexander was also convicted of sexually exploiting a minor after prosecutors showed the jury a video he recorded of himself appearing to assault a drugged 17-year-old.
Lawsuits expose an open secret in the real estate world
Besides the criminal case, the brothers have faced about two dozen lawsuits over the last two years, including one filed last week in which Tracy Tutor, a star of Bravo’s “Million Dollar Listing Los Angeles,” alleges Oren Alexander drugged and assaulted her while she was in New York City for a real estate event.
When the first of the lawsuits were filed, multiple women came forward claiming they had also been assaulted, and that the brothers’ misconduct had been an open secret in the real estate world. The government took notice and opened a criminal case.
During the trial, many women who testified said they believed the brothers had spiked their drinks. Some described feeling like they’d lost control of their bodies.
One woman testified that she met the brothers in 2012 at a party at actor Zac Efron’s Manhattan apartment. She said she had almost no interaction with the actor, who was not accused of any misdeeds, and went to a nightclub later in the night before waking up naked with a nude Alon Alexander standing over her.
“I don’t want to have sex with you,” she testified telling him. “Haha, you already did,” she recalled him snapping back as he “laughed in my face.”
Testimony challenges claim that money drove allegations
Prosecutors pushed back against the idea that the accusers were hoping to cash in on lawsuits. Only two have lawsuits pending, prosecutor Elizabeth Espinosa told jurors, and both are wealthy.
One woman who testified said she was raped by Alon Alexander in Aspen, Colorado, in 2017, when she was 17. She said she was the daughter of a billionaire.
“I don’t want their money. I just don’t want them to have it,” she told jurors.
Lindsey Acree, an artist and gallery owner, testified she was raped by Tal Alexander and another man at a home in the Hamptons in 2011 after taking a drink that left her feeling paralyzed.
The woman said she sued last year even though she will “never need their money” because the Alexanders “kept calling us gold diggers, shake down artists, con artists.”
“If there’s a kid with a stick who keeps hitting people, you take their stick away,” she told the jury. “Money is their stick, so you take it away so they can’t hurt people anymore.”
The Associated Press does not typically identify people who say they are victims of sexual assault unless they choose to come forward publicly, as Acree and Tutor have done.
Copyright 2026 NPR
South-Carolina
Lulu Kesin of Greenville News wins writing awards for South Carolina basketball
Lulu Kesin of the Greenville News was honored two times by the Associated Press Sports Editors in its annual sports journalism contest.
Sports editors and journalists throughout the country voted on top-10 placements in various writing, website, print newspaper and photography categories, which were split into four divisions based on newspaper circulation and digital readership size. The Greenville News is in the D Division.
The exact order of finish in the writing contests will be announced later.
Kesin was selected in the top 10 for beat writing and short feature.Kesin covers South Carolina’s athletic department with a focus on women’s basketball and football. Her work on the women’s basketball beat was honored in both categories, as she followed coach Dawn Staley’s journey to a second straight national championship game and fifth consecutive Final Four.Her short feature on Sania Feagin highlighted the then senior’s journey to an SEC Tournament title. Kesin spoke with Feagin’s mother fresh off the joyful win, capturing the emotional element to the day.She then dove into Staley’s timeout philosophy to learn more about one of the most successful coaches in college basketball through a fresh, new perspective.She rounded out her March Madness reporting with a story on a young fan whose life was changed by the women’s basketball team before Kesin broke the biggest women’s basketball transfer news of the offseason, reporting that star guard MiLaysia Fulwiley was going to leave the program before all other media outlets did.
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