South-Carolina
South Carolina’s Dawn Staley, Kamilla Cardoso ring opening bell at New York Stock Exchange
South Carolina women’s basketball coach Dawn Staley and now Chicago Sky forward Kamilla Cardoso are living it up in the Big Apple.
Shortly after being at the Brooklyn Academy of Music in Brooklyn, New York on Monday night to see Cardoso be drafted in the WNBA draft, the two Gamecocks were in Lower Manhattan to ring the bell to open the New York Stock Exchange on Tuesday.
Cardoso’s mom, Janete Soares, and sister, Jessica Silva, were also on hand for the moment as were South Carolina assists Lisa Boyer, Winston Gandy and Jolette Law as the NYSE celebrated the Gamecocks’ 2024 national championship win over Iowa. Both Soars and Silva were in attendance last night and have been in the States from their native country Brazil since South Carolina’s Senior Day back on March 3.
REQUIRED READING: South Carolina’s Kamilla Cardoso dazzled in red at WNBA Draft, ready for career in Chicago
South Carolina defeated Iowa 87-75 back on April 7 at Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse in Cleveland to win its second national championship title in recent years while also becoming the 10th team in NCAA women’s basketball history to go undefeated for an entire season.
Shortly after ringing the bell to open up Wall Street, Staley and Cardoso joined CNBC’s ‘Squawk on the Street’ to talk about the future of women’s basketball and where the sport is going.
“We are at a point where there are more eyeballs on the game and our sport so they are seeing the disparities (and) salary disparities. But I will say the WNBA is moving in the right direction,” Staley said. “We are still a very young league. A very very young league just like the NBA. The NBA didn’t become what it has become in 28 years.
“… I do think our future is bright. I do think people are going to look at our sport and pour into it because they see dollar signs at the end of the day.”
She added: “I hope every school treats women’s basketball, women’s sports like the University of South Carolina. They invest in my salary, they invest in student-athletes.”
Cardoso was selected with the No. 3 overall pick in the 2024 WNBA Draft by the Sky. The Brazilian forward averaged 14.4 points, 9.7 rebounds and 2.5 blocks per game this season.
South-Carolina
People From These States Are Moving To South Carolina | Digg
According to the latest available IRS tax return data, South Carolina saw a net gain of nearly 33,000 households in 2022 — and a handful of states lost far more residents to the Palmetto State than others.
Using analysis by SmartAsset, we mapped the net number of households that moved into South Carolina from the rest of the US in the 2022 tax year.
South Carolina attracted more people from New York than anywhere else, with 5,476 Empire State households making the move. North Carolina (3,252), New Jersey (2,978), Pennsylvania (2,657) and California (2,563) followed behind.
At the other end of the ranking, just three households from the District Of Columbia joined the state.
The highest-earning households to relocate to South Carolina came from Arkansas, and brought an average adjusted gross income of $202,256 with them.
The only state to take more residents from South Carolina than it gave was Tennessee, who saw a net of 51 South Carolinian households move in over the year analyzed.
Via SmartAsset.
[Image credit: Ben Baker]
South-Carolina
SEC Power Rankings: South Carolina women’s basketball set to dominate new era of conference
SEC women’s basketball is back in more ways than one.
With newcomers Texas and Oklahoma, the SEC is looking stronger than ever, and it shouldn’t really be a debate about if it’s the best conference anymore. The last three national championships were won by SEC teams, including South Carolina going 38-0 last season, and the conference is only going to get more dominant.
Now, onto the preseason power rankings:
1. South Carolina
What to know: Dawn Staley’s daycare has a year of experience – and by experience, I mean an undefeated national championship run – to their credit. I have no reason to doubt the Gamecocks here.
2. LSU
What to know: Kim Mulkey’s strategy of pulling big names out of the portal has worked, and I don’t see why it wouldn’t work once again, especially with Flau’jae Johnson leading the charge.
3. Texas
What to know: I’m high on Texas as Vic Schaefer returns to the SEC, but he has to face Staley and the Gamecocks twice. Just ask him how that went when he was at Mississippi State.
4. Oklahoma
What to know: The Sooners have enough redshirt seniors to fill a starting lineup, and with their experience, they’ll make a splash their first year in the SEC.
5. Ole Miss
What to know: Coach Yo has turned the Rebels into a solid SEC program, which makes it all the more confusing why she was desperate enough to hire someone on staff who would only pass an Ole Miss basketball background check.
6. Kentucky
What to know: Kentucky is ranked this high purely because of Georgia Amoore. No, I will not be explaining further.
7. Alabama
What to know: Alabama brings back all but one of its starters, so if it can’t keep its place in the upper half of the SEC, things are looking bleaker in Tuscaloosa than I thought.
8. Tennessee
What to know: There’s a new kid on the block – well, actually, make that two – at Tennessee, which is about to find out if going young and bold is the path to national relevance again.
9. Auburn
What to know: Johnnie Harris’ defense paired with a pure scorer in Taliah Scott? Yeah, sign me up. Don’t be surprised when Auburn wins some big games this season.
10. Florida
What to know: The Gators have always been a middle of the pack, not horrible, but not great, type of team, and that hasn’t changed under Kelly Rae Finley. Here’s to hoping her talented youngsters can shake things up in a good way.
11. Vanderbilt
What to know: Everyone messed around and let Shea Ralph get a roster with more depth than she has ever had at Vanderbilt. Women’s basketball might be on a Vandy football vibe this season.
12. Texas A&M
What to know: The Aggies never really reached their full potential last year and lost two starters. I can’t guarantee they’ll be exciting, but I’ll bet Joni Taylor’s defense will still give a lot of teams problems.
13. Mississippi State
What to know: I can count on one hand how many returners Mississippi State has. And maybe that’s a good thing based on how last season ended.
14. Georgia
What to know: Georgia was abysmal last season and didn’t add the players to make me believe it will be any better this season in a loaded SEC.
15. Arkansas
What to know: Mike Neighbors went international to fill some holes left by a mass exodus after last season. That’s one way to not have to deal with NIL, I guess.
16. Missouri
What to know: Missouri went from being the last team to hand South Carolina a loss in SEC play to last in the conference in two seasons. My, how times have changed and the coach hasn’t.
Cora Hall covers University of Tennessee women’s athletics. Email her at cora.hall@knoxnews.com and follow her on Twitter @corahalll. If you enjoy Cora’s coverage, consider a digital subscription that allows you to access all of it.
South-Carolina
Who’s in, who’s out for South Carolina football vs No. 11 Texas A&M in Week 10 SEC matchup
COLUMBIA — South Carolina football has a tough test Saturday against No. 11 Texas A&M, but as of Wednesday, it has a short injury report, a good sign for coach Shane Beamer.
The Gamecocks (4-3, 2-3 SEC) have been without wide receiver Jared Brown since the Ole Miss game on Oct. 5, but he is listed as probable in the first injury report of the week. He has 103 yards on eight catches this season, plus 27 rushing yards on two carries. South Carolina is coming off its second open date of the season, and most recently won on the road in Norman, beating Oklahoma 35-9.
Texas A&M (7-1, 5-0) defeated LSU 38-23 last week, and come to Williams-Brice Stadium on Saturday riding a seven-game winning streak.
The SEC injury report is released on Wednesday night of a conference game week and is updated each day, with a final report 90 minutes prior to kickoff.
Here’s the latest injury news for both South Carolina and Texas A&M.
South Carolina football injury report vs Texas A&M
This story will be updated daily to reflect the latest information
South Carolina
- OL Jakai Moore (out)
- DT DeAndre Jules (out)
- WR Jared Brown (probable)
Texas A&M
- RB Rueben Owens (out)
- DB Tyreek Chappell (out)
- OL Mark Nabou Jr. (out)
- OL Chase Bisontis (out)
- WR Jahdae Walker (out, 1st half)
- QB Jaylen Henderson (questionable)
Lulu Kesin covers South Carolina athletics for The Greenville News and the USA TODAY Network. Email her at lkesin@gannett.com and follow her on X, formerly known as Twitter, @Lulukesin
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