Skip to main content
Partner logo
Mobile Icon Link Mobile Icon Link Mobile Icon Link
Softball To Close Out Home Stand On Wednesday Night
Softball  . 

Softball To Close Out Home Stand On Wednesday Night

Carolina welcomes Charleston Southern to town

COLUMBIA, S.C. —- South Carolina softball is set to close out its five-game home stand this Wednesday when it plays host to Charleston Southern for a pair of games at Carolina Softball Stadium at Beckham Field. The duo of games is scheduled to start at 4:00 p.m. ET on SEC Network+ before closing out at 7:00 p.m. on SEC Network.
 
Eric Frede and Tennessee legend Madison Shipman will be on the call for both games.
 
GAMECOCKS IN THE SEC… AND SOME FUN NOTES

  • South Carolina comes into the SEC week with a 260-360 (.413) record all-time in SEC play.
  • The Gamecocks have won the SEC once in program history (1997, the first year of the conference). Carolina went 25-1 that year in SEC play on its way to a first-place finish in the SEC East Division.
  • Carolina has won 20+ SEC games in a season twice (1997 and 2002) and has won 10+ 13 times (1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2014, 2015 and 2018).
  • The Garnet and Black posted a 9-14 record in 2019 SEC play. Carolina went 1-2 last year with a series loss to Georgia before the season was ended.
  • South Carolina opened the SEC slate in 2018 on the road against Ole Miss and took the series 2-1 while outscoring the Rebels 12-6. Carolina has won the past two three-game series in Oxford.
  • The Gamecocks hit .262 as a team in those three games. Alyssa VanDerveer led the way at the plate with a 5-for-10 weekend. Mackenzie Boesel posted a 4-for-10 series with three RBI. Kenzi Maguire had a team-best six RBI.
  • Cayla Drotar finished the weekend with nine innings of work with a 0.78 ERA and a win while holding the Ole Miss hitters to a .212 batting average.
  • Dixie Raley stole the show in the circle, as well, throwing a complete-game performance with just one earned run allowed and seven strikeouts. She held Ole Miss hitters to just three hits (.125 batting average).
  • Kelsey Oh earned the win in the 2019 meeting between the two teams that ended in a 1-1 split. She went seven innings with just three hits allowed and nine strikeouts.
  • Alyssa Kumiyama and Alexis Lindsey had the two RBI in the series for Carolina.
  • The two games against Charleston Southern on Wednesday will be just the third and fourth games against South Carolina foes in 2021. Carolina took down Coastal Carolina twice on Feb. 24, outscoring them 18-0 in 11 innings of work.

 THIS IS CAROLINA… TRADITION LIVES HERE

  • South Carolina softball has made 22 trips to the postseason, a number that started in 1982. The Gamecocks have reached two super regionals and three WCWS. In conference play, Carolina owns two SEC Championships.
  • Carolina rolls into the 2021 season with a 45-48 record all-time in those crucial postseason games and a 14-15 mark under Beverly Smith.
  • Fans and opponents have become accustomed to seeing the Gamecocks play on Sundays in the postseason. Carolina has reached the regional final four-straight completed years. The Gamecocks are 2-3 in those past five Sunday games.
  • A historic trend Carolina will look to change is its record against host schools in regionals. Since 1982, the Gamecocks are just 2-11 against host schools and 0-7 under Smith. On the flip side, South Carolina is 4-2 at home in the postseason under Smith having advanced to just the program’s second super regional in 2018 with two win-or-go-home games against Liberty.

 THE GAMECOCKS

  • South Carolina comes into the 2021 season looking to build off a 17-6 shorted season highlighted with wins over Ohio State, Iowa State, No. 8 Michigan and No. 12 Georgia.
  • The Gamecocks are set to welcome 10 freshmen to the program (Maddie Gallagher, Carlie Henderson, Kylee Gleason, Zoe Laneaux, Aaliyah White, Skylar Trahan, Leah Powell, Carly Robbins, Riley Blampied and Chooch Carroll.
  • Carolina will have nine left-handed batters available in the lineup. It had five in 2020, seven in 2019, eight in 2017 and six in 2016. Of the nine left-handed batters, four (Carlie Henderson, Kylee Gleason, Haley Simpson and Aaliyah White) are listed as slap hitters.
  • 13 Georgia natives help make up the Gamecock roster. It’s the most from any single state for the 2021 season. For comparison, Georgia has 14 on its 2021 roster while Georgia Tech has 17.

 THIS NEW CLASS… IT’S A 10/10

  • South Carolina will have 10 newcomers on the 2021 roster. The group (Maddie Gallagher, Carlie Henderson, Kylee Gleason, Zoe Laneaux, Aaliyah White, Skylar Trahan, Leah Powell, Carly Robbins, Riley Blampied and Chooch Carroll) bring a mix of power and speed to the plate and plenty of versatility defensively.
  • Two newcomers (Gallagher and Blampied) bring national team experience with them after playing on the gold winning U-17 squad this past summer.
  • The freshmen class is comprised of five infielders, two outfielders, two pitchers and one catcher.
  • Majors in the group include pre-business (Gallagher), retailing (Henderson, Laneaux, Trahan, Powell, Blampied and Carroll), exercise science (Gleason), cardiovascular technology (White) and biological science (Robbins).

 GUESS WHO’S BACK… BACK AGAIN. GO TELL A FRIEND. 

  • They aren’t Slim Shady… but the four 2020 Carolina seniors are back to finish what they started in 2021. Cayla Drotar, Lauren Stewart, Kenzi Maguire and Mackenzie Boesel all announced over the summer they’d be returning.
  • With their return, nine of the top-10 individual batting averages from the 2020 season will return for this upcoming year. The returning pitching staff of Bailey Betenbaugh, Drotar, Kelsey Oh and Rachel Vaughan bring back 12 of Carolina’s 17 wins in 2020 (71 percent) and its lone SEC winner in the circle last year (Ochs).
  • As a team, Carolina brings back 85 percent of its 2020 runs scored, 86 percent of its hits, 83 percent of its doubles, 85 percent of its home runs and 87 percent of its RBI.
  • Boesel returns looking to secure her spot as one of the all-time greats at Carolina. She comes into her final season as one of just five Gamecocks ever to be in the top-10 for 10 or more career offensive records and is on pace to break many of them. Off the field, she’s also a three-time Academic All-American.

 THAT’S… INTERESTING! 

  • South Carolina will have at least one student-athlete on from the state of California for the 26th-consecutive year dating back to 1994 in 2021. With a signing class that includes two more (Marissa Gonzalez and Emma Sellers), the streak could continue on for three decades.
  • Kenzi Maguire’s 2021 season will be her sixth season in Columbia, meaning she’s been here for more than half of the Beverly Smith era (11 years).
  • Carlie Henderson won’t be the first in her family to achieve at a high level in sports. Her grandpa, Billy Shaw, played football at Georgia Tech and went on to play offensive line for nine years with the Buffalo Bills before being inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1999. Her father, Chip, played baseball at Shorter University and has been the baseball head coach at Calhoun High School for 26 years. He’s won more than 600 games with three state titles (and had eight players drafted into MLB).
  • Maddie Gallagher has actually played for one of her teammates. Maguire was her assistant coach this past year on Gallagher’s travel ball team. The team was coached by Maguire’s dad, Kevin, and was based out of Tampa, Fla., even though Gallagher lived in Port Washington, N.Y.

 MUST WIN AT HOME! AND THE GAMECOCKS DO

  • South Carolina is 193-89 (.665) at home during the Beverly Smith era, which does not include a 4-1 record at home while hosting a regional at Carolina Softball Stadium at Beckham Field.
  • The Gamecocks have lost more than 10 games at home in a single season just three times in her ten years.
  • Carolina has finished .500 or better at home seven of Beverly Smith’s ten years.
  • South Carolina has not lost double digit games at home in seven years and has won 20 or more six of the past seven seasons (2020 included).

 NON-CONFERENCE SUCCESS IS NOTHING NEW FOR SC

  • South Carolina is 198-51 (.780) over the past eight years in games outside the SEC. Notable wins include Texas, Penn State, Houston, Arizona State, North Carolina, Florida State, California, Virginia Tech, USF, Long Beach State, Hofstra and Liberty. 
  • The 198 wins are notable because they account for 64 percent of the Carolina wins during that time (yeah, it’s really tough to win SEC games and of course there are more opportunities to win non-conference games. But still).
  • This year Carolina is set for at least 27 more non-conference games.
  • Carolina had won 26-straight non-conference games (regular season) before the loss to Texas Tech in the second weekend of the year.

 CAROLINA RUNS THIS STATE

  • Under the direction of head coach Beverly Smith, Carolina owns a 66-7 mark against other Palmetto State schools.
  • That mark includes a 31-game winning streak that stretched over five seasons before Coastal snapped the incredible streak three seasons ago on April 11.
  • South Carolina went 2-0 last season against in-state foes, outscoring them 12-2.
  • Carolina is set to face in-state opponents eight times this season, including the first-ever meeting with rival CLemson on April 21 in Columbia.