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Wildfires in Maui stir bitter memories of destruction for SC residents

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Wildfires in Maui stir bitter memories of destruction for SC residents


Upon seeing images of the devastation caused by wildfires that for weeks have ravaged the Hawaiian island of Maui, leaving death and destruction in their wake, Joe Gosiewski called his granddaughter who lives roughly 100 miles west on the island of Oahu to make sure she was safe.

But in that moment, the family also couldn’t help but mentally relive their own tragedy from 14 years earlier when a wildfire consumed their North Myrtle Beach home.

“My heart and my gut hurt,” Gosiewski said. “I felt so bad. My wife and I had flashbacks.”

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The Barefoot Resort resident still gets emotional talking about the events that occurred in the early morning hours of April 23, 2009, when Horry County residents, too, would know what is was to flee from a flame.

While wildfires in South Carolina don’t often rage to the extent seen other regions, the Palmetto State has had major blazes over the years, including two in recent history.

Driving through flames in North Myrtle

Gosiewski, a former Barefoot Resort Residential Association board member and president, recalls being awakened by the sounds of North Myrtle Beach firetrucks and police car sirens and public safety officials going door to door on Windy Pines Drive, telling residents they needed to evacuate immediately.

“They were driving through flames,” he said. “The houses on (nearby) Club Course Drive were already in flames. The fire was 60 feet high, as tall as our trees. It was creating its own fire tornado.”

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Gosiewski and his wife Nancy only had the chance to grab themselves and their cellphones. The fire destroyed everything else they had, including their home.

“We pulled out of the driveway and I put down the garage door and my wife said, ‘My car, my car,’ because her car was still in the garage. I got probably 60 feet down the street and I looked in the rearview mirror and I said, ‘Honey, we ain’t going back because the lot next to us is on fire.’ “

Gosiewski said he is grateful for the city’s quick response and the help they received in the aftermath of the fire.

“If it was not for public safety, firefighters and the city of North Myrtle Beach, we would be dead,” Gosiewski said.

In fact, no lives were lost in the blaze. Although firefighters had to take shelter within their fire shields, everyone came through without injury.

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myrtle beach fire 1892.jpg

Wayne Cordiner (left) and Kyle Cahill, from the St. Johns Fire Department, sift through the rubble of a home that was destroyed by the wildfire at Barefoot Resort in North Myrtle Beach on April 24, 2009. File/Grace Beahm Alford/Staff  



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Residents of Hawaii, particularly in the historic town of Lahaina, have not been as fortunate.

The death toll in Hawaii has risen to 111 and more than 1,000 people are unaccounted for. Gosiewski listened on the phone as his grandaughter, Carly, told him of people who went into the ocean to escape the blaze and haven’t been recovered.

The causes of the Maui fires have yet to be officially declared, but reports and video have emerged showing an electrical malfunction and spark from a power line may have started the first of the blazes reported on Maui last week. The flames were fanned by powerful winds from Hurricane Dora over drought-stricken grasslands in the central part of the island.

By comparison, the fire that over took the Gosiewski’s house in Barefoot Resort — a North Myrtle Beach community of more than 2,500 homes, condos, golf villas and townhouses — was started when a Conway resident was burning yard waste and lost control. Firefighters responded and thought the fire had been extinguished, but it later reignited and spread.

Commonly known as the Highway 31 Fire, it would go on to burn more than 19,000 acres, leveling 76 homes and damaging 97 others, causing $25 million in property damage and $17 million in agricultural damage over the course of nearly a month.

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Humans cause SC fires

“Almost every fire we go to is human-caused; they aren’t naturally occurring,” said Darryl Jones, forest protection chief at the S.C. Forestry Commission, the lead agency to respond when a wildfire breaks out anywhere in 13 million of the state’s roughly 20 million total acres, or about 65 percent of South Carolina’s land mass.

Jones said about 55 percent of wildfires in South Carolina come from outdoor burning that gets out of control, someone burning leaves or pine straw trying to clean up their yard. Another 20 percent is from arson. The rest are attributable to miscellaneous causes — a downed powerline, a vehicle in high grass. Lightning strikes account for less than 2 percent.

Between 2,000 and 3,000 wildfires break out in the Palmetto State annually, burning about 20,000 acres and 50 homes. The average size varies from year to year — 6 acres in a slow year, 25 acres in a bad year, Jones said.

Wildfire season in South Carolina stretches from late winter to early spring — peaking in February through April.

“There are days in that time of year where we’ll have 100 or more wildfires in one day,” Jones said.

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South Carolina has a long growing season and gets a lot of rain — 55 or 60 inches a year. But in the fall, plants go dormant and dry out. In January, high-pressure weather systems blow in, bringing low humidity and high winds.

'Our hearts are grieving' – Emotions, connections run deep from SC to Maui

Federal researchers at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration say climate change has been a key driver in increasing the risk and extent of wildfires in the western United States, where rising heat and extended drought doubled the number of large fires between 1984 and 2015. And from 2020 to 2022, above-average acreage was consumed by wildfires.

Jones said he thinks more data needs to be collected on South Carolina’s fire season, but over his more than 30 years fighting wildfires, he’s noticed the season has gotten longer, starting earlier in January and later into May.

“We’re going from normal conditions to really dry and bad conditions quicker than we used to,” he said. “It’s not like it used to be and things are more extreme.”

State Rep. William Bailey was the director of public safety for North Myrtle Beach when the Highway 31 fire burned. So when he turned on the national news and saw flames and smoke billowing out of homes and businesses in Maui, his thoughts ran back to April 2009 when police officers and firefighters were trying to hold off flames at Barefoot Resort with sprinklers, water hoses and whatever equipment they could grab at the time.

“It’s a horrible, helpless feeling that I hope very few people ever have to go through because I’m telling you, I went home that night, once we got a break where I could change clothes,” Bailey said. “I just stood in front of the sink and threw up.”

Bailey said the devastation of the Maui wildfires is overwhelming, especially with the loss of life.

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“We were very fortunate, I think, because we were able to get the cars moving out of Barefoot and getting them away from the fire, where it appears in this particular fire those cars didn’t have the same ability to move around and get where they needed to go,” Bailey said.

More than 7½ years after the Highway 31 Fire, South Carolina would experience its largest-ever mountain fire at Pinnacle Mountain.

Mountaintops on fire

Pierce Womack was the Pickens County deputy director of emergency management during the November 2016 fire. He currently holds the same title in Greenville County.

Early on, he said, a statewide call for help went out, bringing an extra 200 firefighters every day to help. Firetrucks were stationed in nearby neighborhoods in case falling ash were to ignite any fuel such as leaves on a roof or dry grass.

Again there were no fatalities or major injuries to homeowners or firefighters.

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Rachel Snuggs was a freshman studying forestry at Western Carolina University, nearby in North Carolina. She remembers walking to class and looking out to see the mountaintops on fire.







Pinnacle Mountain Fire

Firefighters battle the Pinnacle Mountain fire in the Upstate in 2016. The blaze, which started in November of that year, took weeks to control, becoming the largest mountain fire in South Carolina history. S.C. Forestry Commission/Provided 

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The Pinnacle Mountain Fire, started by some Boy Scouts camping in Table Rock State Park whose campfire got out of control, was one of a series of fires burning across eastern Tennessee, northern Georgia and western North Carolina at the time.

Now Snuggs is a forester with South Carolina’s state parks charged with managing the forests within those parks, including wildfire mitigation efforts.

In an effort to reduce the occurrence of wildfires that spread out of control, S.C. Forestry conducts controlled burns across the state, with about half a million acres burned prescriptively each year, Jones said. And controlled burns are routinely conducted in 16 of South Carolina’s 47 state parks.

“Fortunately for us, the landscape is in better shape than a lot of the U.S. where they don’t do a lot of active management and they don’t get the ability to burn,” Jones said.

Snuggs said having a history of management makes it less likely an area will be impacted in a catastrophic way when fire does break out.

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But changing factors complicate these types of controlled burns.

Fire risk in SC evolving

As more people move to South Carolina and the Southeast, cities and suburbs are expanding into once-rural areas. Health concerns over smoke inhalation and trouble breathing can make burning impossible if there’s a neighborhood nearby.







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Remnants of household items from homes  burned in the Barefoot Landing Resort in North Myrtle Beach stand near woods on April 25, 2009. File/Grace Beahm Alford/Staff

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For example, Givhans Ferry State Park in rural Dorchester County is in the path of residential growth sprawling out of Charleston, Snuggs said. And Sesquicentennial State Park in the fast-growing area of northeast Columbia is surrounded by neighborhoods, several of which back directly up to the park.

In the case of Sesquicentennial, Snuggs said foresters have instead turned to “fuel breaks,” cutting out midlevel growth in the forest to reduce burnable material and make it possible for first responders to get into areas where homes are at risk.

When a fire does break out, Jones said his team turns to heavy equipment, including bulldozers, to clear down to the dirt and contain the flames, which can be complicated in residential subdivisions or when homes are built close to tree lines.

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South Carolina high school football scores: Live updates, live streams (11/8/2024)

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South Carolina high school football scores: Live updates, live streams (11/8/2024)


The 2024 South Carolina high school football season is in high gear and SBLive Sports is the place to follow of the live scoring updates and finals.

Follow the action get the most to date scores by tracking the SBLive South Carolina High School Football Scoreboard. We will have in-game score updates and all of the final scores from every corner of the state. You can also search for full schedules and complete scores from all of your very favorite teams.

Here’s a guide to following all of the South Carolina high school football this week.

STATEWIDE SOUTH CAROLINA FOOTBALL SCOREBOARD

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CLASS 5A SCORES | CLASS 4A SCORES

CLASS 3A SCORES | CLASS 2A SCORES

CLASS 1A SCORES

SCISA CLASS AAAA | SCISA CLASS AAA

SCISA CLASS AA | SCISA A

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2024 SOUTH CAROLINA FOOTBALL SCHEDULES: FIND YOUR TEAM

Can’t make it to your favorite team’s game but still want to watch them live? You can watch dozens of South Carolina high school football games live on the NFHS Network:

WATCH LIVE ON NFHS NETWORK

We also invite you to visit the brand new South Carolina homepage on High School on SI, powered by SBLive Sports, for the latest news, highlights, analysis, scores, photos and information on South Carolina high school sports. Follow our live game coverage and read our feature stories, breaking news, the latest recruiting news, rankings and much more.

Follow SBLive South Carolina throughout the 2024 high school football season for Live Updates, the most up to date Schedules & Scores and complete coverage from the preseason through the state championships!

Be sure to Bookmark High School on SI for all of the latest high school football news.

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To get live updates on your phone – as well as follow your favorite teams and top games – you can download the SBLive Sports app: Download iPhone App | Download Android App

— Mitch Stephens | mitch@scorebooklive.com | @highschoolonsi



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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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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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