South-Carolina
Volleyball Finalizes 2024 Schedule
COLUMBIA, S.C. – South Carolina volleyball announced its 2024 fall schedule on Thursday, featuring seven non-conference matches at home and a new-look Southeastern Conference schedule that pits the Gamecocks against newcomers Oklahoma at home and defending national champion Texas on the road.
The team’s annual Garnet and Black Scrimmage will be on Saturday, Aug. 17 at 5 p.m. with a home exhibition against Coastal Carolina set for the following Saturday, Aug. 24 at 6:30 p.m. The regular season opens on the road, with three games over three days hosted by Duke. The Gamecocks start the tournament on Aug. 30 against 2023 NCAA tournament participant Kansas, which held a 24-6 overall record and won its first-round match last postseason. On day two is Colgate, the defending Patriot League champions and winners of 22 games a year ago. The weekend wraps up on Sept. 1 against the host Blue Devils, who finished with a 19-10 mark last fall.
The bulk of the team’s pre-conference schedule will come in the friendly confines of the Carolina Volleyball Center, starting Sept. 6-8 when the Gamecocks host Temple and North Carolina. The weekend opener against the Owls will be the fourth meeting between the two programs, first since 2012. South Carolina hosts the Tar Heels on Sunday, Sept. 8 in a return game from 2022’s meeting in Chapel Hill.
After a one-off midweek match at home against College of Charleston on Sept. 10, the Gamecocks will host a four-team tournament the following weekend. The team plays a Friday doubleheader on Sept. 13, facing Stetson at 1:30 p.m. with a 7:30 nightcap against FIU. After a day off, the weekend closes with a 2 p.m. match against Wake Forest on Sunday, Sept. 15. South Carolina has not faced Stetson since 1986 and will play FIU for the first time since 2013. The Wake Forest game is also a 2022 return game, the Deacons won on their home court two seasons ago. The non-conference season wraps up with a pair of one-off games, hosting East Carolina on Sept. 17 at 6:30 and ending with the next chapter of the Clemson rivalry on Sept. 20 in the Tigers’ home gym. South Carolina is 7-1 in the series dating back to 2015.
Conference play begins at home on Sept. 27, with a home match against Mississippi State that precedes a challenging three-game road swing that starts on Wednesday, Oct. 2 with a trip to Austin for Texas’ first-ever home SEC match. After an early bye weekend, the Gamecocks then go to Georgia on Oct. 11 and Florida on the 13th. Other SEC home games include Ole Miss (Oct. 18), the team’s first meeting ever with new SEC foe Oklahoma (Oct. 20), Auburn (Oct. 27, Senior Night), Kentucky (Nov. 1, Alumnae Night), Tennessee (Nov. 3), Florida (Nov. 27) and Texas A&M (Nov. 30) will be the regular season finale.
Entering its seventh season under head coach Tom Mendoza, South Carolina returns seven veterans who played in 20 or more matches last season, aided by a recruiting class of two freshmen and two transfers.
Full ticket information for the season will be announced at a later date, for updates on the team heading into preseason practice in August, follow @Gamecockvolley on Twitter and Instagram.
South-Carolina
ICYMI: South Carolina Adds Several 2027 Targets During Huge Recruiting Week
Shane Beamer and the Gamecocks had a nice last seven days on the recruiting ground as they have landed three players and in the top five of some elite talent. Here’s everything you missed recruiting wise from last week and an updated look at the Gamecocks’ 2027 class.
Judah Lancaster, the team’s most recent commit, is a 6-foot-5 and 230+ pound tight end from Brentwood Academy in Brentwood, Tennessee. His weight and frame are the type of build power four teams covet. Having a great tight end can create mismatches for modern college football offenses. Should Lancaster become that level of player, future Gamecock quarterbacks should be excited for the weapon at their disposal.
South Carolina found its highest rated recruit of the 2027 class so far in the form of big 314 pound defensive lineman John Archer. The top ten player in the state of North Carolina is a “disruptive” interior force on a defensive line. Archer has the potential to be a star at the next level given the right situation. Should he reach his potential in Columbia, the Gamecocks would have a force along the interior of their defense that could help them with a playoff push.
DJ Huggins is a 5-foot-10 and 165 pound wide out from Kennesaw, Georgia. The Harrison High School star held offers from Alabama, Arkansas, Boston College, Georgia, and others before ultimately choosing South Carolina.
South Carolina’s 2027 Class
Archer, Huggins, and Lancaster join a class that features safety Jernard Albright, quarterback Jerry Meyer III, and offensive lineman Will Endicott. A class that was ranked outside the top 60 just a few days ago, is now squarely inside the top 40. Shane Beamer and his team aren’t nearly finished with this class and will be looking to find themselves once again inside the top 25 recruiting rankings when this cycle finishes.
The South Carolina coaching staff has their eyes set on a few key targets as the summer recruiting period picks up. Four-star running backs David “Tre” Segarra and Brayden Tyson, four-star safety Jayden Aparicio-Bailey, and four-star edge rusher James Pace III all listed the Gamecocks among their final five schools for this cycle.
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South-Carolina
Former South Carolina wing, Lexington native, lands at new program via transfer portal
Former Gamecock basketball wing Cam Scott has found a new home. Following a second offseason in which the Lexington, South Carolina native entered the transfer portal, the Temple Owls have announced that Scott has signed with the program.
A former five-star prospect (though he was a four-star by the time he signed), Scott’s South Carolina basketball career did not go the way many envisioned when he flipped from the Texas Longhorns in the class of 2024.
During his high school days, Scott was a two-time Gatorade Player of the Year in the Palmetto State. He also set numerous records at Lexington High School. He signed with Texas before eventually winding up with the Gamecocks.
Scott then spent two years in garnet and black. As a freshman, he struggled mightily, averaging 2.5 points while shooting 27.8% from the field and 17.8% from 3-point range. After entering and withdrawing from the transfer portal, he returned to USC for a second season. However, Scott never played again, choosing to redshirt the 2025-2026 campaign.
Because of the redshirt, Scott will have three years left to play at Temple.
The Insiders Forum: Discuss South Carolina basketball!
Scott joins six former teammates in finding new homes via the transfer portal. All seven of South Carolina’s transfers this cycle have dropped down to mid-major programs.
Forward EJ Walker (Western Kentucky), forward Jordan Butler (Furman), forward Elijah Strong (St. Louis), post player Christ Essandoko (Bowling Green), guard Eli Ellis (Charlotte), and wing Abu Yarmah (Longwood) have all revealed commitments this transfer cycle.
Following another tough season in Columbia, South Carolina will have a very different roster next year. With five graduates and seven transfer portal defections (plus multiple staff changes), the Gamecocks nearly experienced complete turnover.
So far, six players have pledged their services to Lamont Paris’ team out of the transfer portal. Kory Mincy (George Mason), Camden Heide (Texas), Aleksas Bieliauskas (Wisconsin), Shane Blakeney (Drexel), Jakub Necas (Duquesne), and Davion Hannah (Alabama) have committed as of the time of this writing.
South-Carolina
LSU completes sweep of South Carolina, 7-0
BATON ROUGE, LA (USC SID) – The University of South Carolina baseball team fell to LSU, 7-0, Sunday afternoon (May 3) at Alex Box Stadium.
Omar Serna gave LSU a 2-0 lead in the third with a home run to left. Cade Arrambide’s sacrifice fly put the Tigers up 3-0 in the fifth. Tanner Reaves’ RBI single gave LSU a 4-0 lead but Ethan Lizama’s throw to the plate was called interference by Derek Curiel, holding the Tigers to one run.
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LSU scored a pair of runs in the sixth and added on in the seventh to make it 7-0.
KJ Scobey had two of Carolina’s five hits in the contest. Alex Valentin took the loss, allowing three runs on four hits in four innings with six strikeouts.
POSTGAME NOTES
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Josh Gregoire came in to pitch in his hometown of Baton Rouge. He pitched 1.1 innings and allowed a hit with no runs.
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Carolina had three errors on the day.
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Carolina played in Baton Rouge for the first time since 2011.
UP NEXT
Carolina will take the midweek off for final exams and return to action on Friday afternoon (May 8) against Alabama. The game will start at 5:30 p.m. and will be televised on SEC Network.
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