South Carolina’s lone bye comes exactly halfway through the SEC season. Here are five things the Gamecocks will be watching over the second half of the conference season. 1. Super Bowl Showdown On February 9 South Carolina visits Texas for what may be the most important game left in the SEC.
No. 2 South Carolina rode a hot start to the second half and withstood a late run by No. 18 Tennessee in the 70-63 women's basketball win.
Georgia (15-6, 3-5 SEC) pulled away early and South Carolina never led at Stegeman Coliseum. USC fought back to make it close midway through the period, but UGA outscored the Gamecocks 17-5 in the latter portion of the first half and led 35-21 at the break.
On Monday night, they get another chance with No. 2 South Carolina (19-1 ... They made 9 of 17 against Texas. Now comes the challenge of balancing the job of coaching and being a mother.
Here's how South Carolina women's basketball was able to beat five consecutive ranked teams and get to 8-0 in the SEC.
Halfway through SEC play, South Carolina women's basketball is undefeated. Here's what February looks like for Dawn Staley and the Gamecocks.
South Carolina Treasurer Curtis Loftis says calls for him to resign over an accounting error that left the state sorting out what happened to a $1.8 billion fund amounted to a witch hunt.
Kyle Field is primarily known for hosting Texas A&M Aggies football games. The stadium also hosts other events such as concerts and graduation ceremonies. The best public transportation option is to take the Aggie Spirit bus, which provides free transportation on game days.
The Old Farmer's Almanac, which has been in business since 1792, recently released its spring weather forecast. The outlook? "Warmer-than-normal temperatures for most of the country, with a few exceptions: southern and central California, Desert Southwest, southern Florida, and western Ohio Valley, where it will be near to below normal."
Tennessee Baseball will start the new season with the fourth-lowest odds to repeat as national champions, according to odds released by Circa Sports. The Vols are fourth at +1100, behind Texas A&M at +600,
Real estate and climate change now go hand-in-hand. As temperatures and sea levels continue to rise, many homes face some risk of natural disasters. In 2024 alone, almost 45 percent of homes in the United States confronted at least one type of severe or extreme climate risk from either flood,
WalletHub released a report ranking the safety of states in the US. Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas were the three least safe states.