Column: Bring on the undefeated tigers
By Abe Danaher | Nov. 9, 2015Sitting in Neyland Stadium, surrounded by South Carolina fans, I began to hear groans.
Sitting in Neyland Stadium, surrounded by South Carolina fans, I began to hear groans.
Saturday is that game for Gamecock fans as South Carolina travels to Neyland Stadium to take on Tennessee.
Week 10 has an incredibly competitive slate of games, including four top-flight match-ups between teams with a combined one loss or fewer.
The South Carolina women’s soccer team begins postseason action Wednesday when the fifth-seeded Gamecocks take on the fourth-seeded Auburn Tigers in Orange Beach, Alabama.
With the emphasis on safety increasing by the day and the mounting number of former stars wishing they had never played, football as we know it could be on the way out.
After a rough 4-2 loss Thursday night, the South Carolina hockey team destroyed the rival Clemson Tigers Friday night 9-0.
Dallas Cowboys defensive end Greg Hardy is a phenomenal football player, having racked up a three sacks, a forced fumble and an interception in just three games so far this season.
From running track and field to dancing to community service to academics, it would be hard to find something that middle distances runner Maya Evans isn’t involved in.
The 2015 World Series ended just as dramatically as it began.
On the night South Carolina honored the team’s eight seniors, defenders Emily Bollinger and Carly Ray combined for three goals in the opening 15 minutes, sparking a 4-0 win over the Tennessee Volunteers.
South Carolina men's soccer defeated Old Dominion on a clear Halloween Night and kept their undefeated home record going with a final score of 3-1.
The South Carolina volleyball team went 1-1 on the weekend, falling to No. 12 Florida 3-0 on Friday and defeating Ole Miss 3-0 on Sunday.
Perry Orth started his second straight game Saturday afternoon, as the Gamecocks fell to the Texas A&M Aggies 35-28.
If you look at the recent trend of world series winning teams, they tend to be led by a strong rotations, not unlike this year's New York Mets.
The women’s soccer team has one more chance: one more 90 minute match to prove itself in its regular season schedule.
Saturday, 3-4 South Carolina clashes with a skidding Texas A&M team.
The Daily Gamecock recently got in touch with Carter Karels, email interview sports editor of (Texas A&M's premiere student newspaper) for an interview about Aggies football and this week's game.