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May 10, 2016

Wednesday’s Game Information

Date: May 11, 2016

First Pitch: 12 p.m. EDT

Location: Mississippi State, Miss.

Stadium: Nunz Park

Live Video: Watch ESPN or on SEC Network

Live Stats: SEC.StatBroadcast.com

GamecockSoftball.com

Feature Stories

Family Influences Guide Snaer to Success
Ard Excited to Make Impact On and Off the Field
Gamecock Seniors: Changing the Culture
Gamecock Seniors: Leaving a Legacy
Page – The Loose Leader
Gamecock Freshmen Build Connection before Columbia
Unique Recruiting Trip Impacts Future Gamecocks
Accountability Program for Gamecock Softball
Plew Whitlock Returns Home
Elliott Driven for Success
Augustus Honing Leadership Skills
Video: Softball – The First 18
Gamecock Softball Part of Week of Giving
Webb Part of Mission Trip to Honduras
Gamecock Alums Reunite for Wounded Warrior Amputee Game
Page Goes Behind the Scenes at Colonial Life Arena
WWP Makes Jen Castro Gamecock for a Day

Gamecocks And No. 17/15 Missouri Tigers Tangle in SEC Tournament Opening Game

  • Three days after closing the 2016 regular season against each other, South Carolina and No. 16/14 Missouri match up again in the first game of the 2016 SEC Tournament hosted at Mississippi State.
  • First pitch is set for 12 noon EDT at Nunz Park, with Adam Amin, Amanda Scarborough and Laura Rutledge providing the coverage on the SEC Network.
  • In addition, all 11 games of the tournament will be broadcast on Sirius XM Radio and the TuneIn Radio app. The games will air on Sirius channel 218 and XM channel 190.
  • The winner of the game plays again at 12 noon on Thursday against No. 2 seed Tennessee, also on the SEC Network.

South Carolina’s Offense Producing Early

  • South Carolina’s offense has been clicking early, and it starts with leadoff batters reaching base at a .430 clip.
  • On 10 occasions have the Gamecocks not gotten the leadoff runner on more than once, including in seven losses: in series openers to No. 17/15 Kentucky, No. 12/12 Georgia and No. 3/3 Auburn, in the loss to Georgia Southern and in all three games at No. 14/15 LSU.
  • The quick start also translates into 53 first-inning runs, second most in a frame the Gamecocks have tallied (behind the 55 in the fourth).
  • When the Gamecocks score first, they are 24-5. More win-loss breakdowns are on pages 4 and 11.
  • The Gamecocks lead the SEC with 79 HBPs this year, which is the program’s single-season record, breaking the previous best of 60 in 2013.
  • Twelve came in two games, as six Gamecocks were hit against UNC Greensboro (2/19) and Michigan State (3/5).
  • The Gamecocks have struck out looking 53 times in 55 games, the third-lowest total in the SEC.
  • South Carolina also has tallied 78 RBI in 123 chances with a runner on third and less than two outs.
  • That .634 conversion rate is third in the league, behind Auburn (.668) and Tennessee (.637).
  • Leading that charge is the trio of Alaynie Page (10-for-11), Krystan White (14-for-19) and Kennedy Clark (9-for-13).

Gamecocks Have Solid Pitching, Defense Too

  • South Carolina’s defense has been outstanding thus far, posting a .971 fielding percentage, which stands fourth in the SEC.
  • If the year ended today, that percentage would be the fourth best in Gamecock history.
  • Freshman Kenzi Maguire has helped the defense in her 39 starts at shortstop.
  • She has 90 assists, which is just outside the top 15 in the SEC.
  • In the circle, South Carolina has a team ERA of 2.91, which if it stands would be the first time since 2008 that a Gamecock team held an ERA under 3.00 since 2008.
  • Gamecock pitching has allowed the third-lowest home runs per game (0.41) in the SEC.

Snaer Owns SC, SEC Single-Season Doubles Record

  • Junior first baseman Kaylea Snaer broke the SEC single-season record on Tuesday, April 26 against Furman with her 24th double of the year.
  • Second in NCAA Division I leader in doubles, she earned a spot on the 2016 CoSIDA Academic All-District 4 team, the 17th Gamecock to garner selection.
  • Her double in game one at No. 14/15 LSU tied her with Georgia’s Megan Wiggins (2011) and Tennessee’s Kelli Fitzgerald (1998) for the SEC single-season record.
  • She claimed South Carolina’s record with a seventh-inning double against Georgia Southern on April 19.
  • Five times, Snaer has posted two doubles in a game, including Sunday’s game at Arkansas when she tied SC’s record.
  • Snaer saw a eight-game hitting streak end at USC Upstate, a streak that included multiple hits in each game, boosting her batting average at that time to a team-best .408.
  • Snaer hit the game-winning home run in the eighth against No. 12/12 Georgia on Monday, March 21, clinching the series win.
  • A year earlier, she ended a nine-inning contest with a single against No. 9/15 Tennessee, capturing the series for South Carolina.
  • Snaer now ranks first in SC history in doubles per game and walks per game and is in the top five in a number of other categories (see full updates on page 10).

South Carolina Softball Historical Record

  • South Carolina has played 2,179 games in its softball history, going 1413-759-7 (.650) in its 41st season of sponsorship.

South Carolina Team Notes

  • South Carolina pitchers Nickie Blue and Jessica Elliott combined for the first no-hitter in six years for the Gamecocks on Tues., March 1, blanking Western Carolina in a 1-0 victory.
  • The Gamecocks posted a 10-game winning streak from Feb. 26-March 8, the second time under Beverly Smith and the fourth since the start of 1998 (others in 2002, 2009 & 2014).
  • South Carolina is the only SEC team to improve its win total in each of the past three season, going from 23 wins in 2012 to 38 in 2015.
  • Two of South Carolina’s signees for next season, Cayla Drotar and Mackenzie Boesel, made the USA Today High School/American Family Insurance All-USA Preseason Softball Team.
  • The Gamecocks started the season 9-1, the best start since the team went 12-1 to begin 2009.

Blue Starting to Climb Gamecock Pitching Charts

  • Junior Nickie Blue enters 2016 with her name already showing up in South Carolina’s career top 15 in many pitching categories (see page 10).
  • She once again anchors the South Carolina staff with her heavy drop ball, which produced ground outs at a 65 percent rate (506-269) in her first two years on campus.
  • Last season, Blue posted over 200 innings in the circle and an ERA under 2.00, one of two in the SEC to post such numbers (Lauren Haeger of Florida the other).
  • Blue tossed the first five innings of the no-hitter against Western Carolina on March 1, the first no-no for the Gamecocks since the second game of 2011.
  • She added a one-hitter in a complete-game shutout of Troy on Sat., April 2, holding the nation’s 17th-ranked scoring offense entering the weekend scoreless in six innings.
  • Blue became the third pitcher to throw a shutout against Arkansas, holding the Razorbacks to three hits in the 14-0 (5) win on Friday night.
  • She also tossed at two-hitter at No. 16/14 Missouri in SC’s 3-1 win, which included forcing the Tigers’ top-three batters to go 0-for-9 in the game.

We Schedule Tough

  • On this year’s schedule, the Gamecocks are set to play 23 of their 56 regular-season games against teams who made the 2015 NCAA Tournament.
  • Ten of those come against Women’s College World Series participants, the season opener vs. Michigan and three each in SEC play at Auburn and LSU and at home against Alabama.
  • A total of 37 of the Gamecocks’ scheduled games come against teams that finished in the top 101 of the NCAA’s Ratings Percentage Index last year.
  • The Gamecocks played four defending regular-season conference champs: Michigan (Big Ten), Longwood (Big South), SIUE (Ohio Valley) and USC Upstate (Atlantic Sun).
  • Three of SC’s foes won their league’s regular-season titles: Michigan, Longwood and USF (American Athletic).
  • Thirty-three games are set for Carolina Softball Stadium at Beckham Field.
  • Three former Gamecocks turned assistant coaches visited this spring: Chelsea Hawkins (UNC Greensboro), Kaela Jackson (Michigan State) and Chrissy Schoonmaker (Connecticut).

Some Win-Loss Breakdowns

  • The Gamecocks bring home 70.3 percent (71-of-101) of runners from third with less than two outs in wins and just 31.8 percent (7-of-22) in the 20 losses.
  • With runners in scoring position, the Gamecocks hit .341 (129-of-378) in wins and .139 (19-of-137) in setbacks.
  • That trend is more pronounced in bases loaded situations: .339 (21-of-54) versus .083 (2-of-24).
  • South Carolina has scored two runs or less 20 times, going 5-15 in those.
  • All the losses came against SEC foes (3 vs. No. 17/15 Kentucky, 1 vs. No. 12/12 Georgia, 2 at No. 3/3 Auburn, 2 vs. Mississippi, 3 at No. 14/15 LSU, vs. No. 4/4 Alabama, 2 at No. 16/14 Missouri).
  • South Carolina is 3-10 when not collecting an extra-base hit during a game.
  • In games when the team has 10 or less total bases, the Gamecocks are 11-16.
  • When the Gamecocks draw zero or one walk, they are 6-12.
  • SC’s pitchers do better with runners on in wins (.178, 67-of-376) than in losses (.320, 85-of-266).
  • The other thing Gamecock pitching does better in wins is end innings, with foes batting .195 (53-of-272) in triumphs and .301 (46-of-153) in losses with two down.
  • South Carolina is 18-3 when its foes don’t record an extra-base hit, seven coming in shutouts.
  • Other win-loss breakdowns can be found in the chart on page 11.

South Carolina Has Performed Well in SEC Tournament Play

  • For the 14th year and fourth in a row under Beverly Smith, South Carolina earned a spot in the SEC Tournament field.
  • The Gamecocks are 17-18 all-time in the event, winning the title in 1997 and 2000.
  • Since the event shifted to a single-elimination setup, SC has gone 2-4, winning opening-round games in 2013 (at No. 18 Kentucky) and 2015 (vs. No. 22 Texas A&M).

2016 Accolades and Accomplishments for Alaynie Page

  • Senior Alaynie Page is the only Gamecock in history with 20 home runs and 50 stolen bases in a career.
  • She tied McKenna Hughes for South Carolina’s career home-run record (33) on Sat., April 30, part of her leading the Gamecocks to a 2-1 win over No. 4/4 Alabama.
  • She scored both runs, going 2-for-2 with the homer and two walks against the Crimson Tide.
  • She reached base at a .550 clip in the first five home games, stealing four bases, posting six RBI and hitting her second homer of the season.
  • Her two home runs against No. 12/12 Georgia on Sun., March 20, the third time in her career to post two round-trippers in a game, helped the Gamecocks take the 5-4 win.
  • She provided all the offense in the Charleston Southern win, posting the first run with an RBI single while walking, moving to second on a sacrifice, taking third on a wild pitch before scoring the game-winner on a passed ball.
  • Page drove in four, including her seventh homer of the year, in the UNCW win.
  • Page was selected as one of 30 candidates for the Senior CLASS Award, which stands for Celebrating Loyalty and Achievement for Staying in School®.
  • The returning first-team All-American also ranked as 50 players placed on the USA Softball National Player of the Year watch list.

Ard Advancing on All Fronts

  • Senior outfielder Ansley Ard has become the Gameocks’ clutch hitter this season.
  • Six times, she’s produced the game-winning hit: vs. Coastal Carolina, Western Carolina, the first game against Buffalo, in the second Georgia game, in the Furman triumph and at No. 16/14 Missouri.
  • Her grand slam against the Bulls propeled the Gamecocks to the 7-4 win, while she tied game two with an RBI bunt single.
  • She hit a walk-off home run against the Bulldogs on Sunday night on the SEC Network, two innings after starting the rally that tied the game with a hit.
  • Those moments helped Ard capture the SEC Player of the Week as well as the College Sports Madness Field Player of the Week on March 21-22.
  • She had a two-out, two-run triple that provided the edge in the 4-1 win over Furman on April 26.
  • Ard also went 2-for-3 with a two-RBI single that led the Gamecocks to a 3-1 win at No. 16/14 Missouri.
  • For Ard, however, something bigger was when she learned she had made it into physical therapy school on the same day that she won the game vs. Coastal Carolina.
  • She’s also quite proud of her one-inning appearance in the circle vs. Southern Utah on Feb. 26, picking up the win without allowing a run in her firsr pitching chance since high school.

Scouting Missouri

  • The Tigers, ranked in both major polls, hold a 39-13 overall record and a 14-10 mark in SEC play, finishing sixth in the league.
  • The Tigers use power and speed to their advantage and have plenty of both.
  • Ranked second in the country in stolen bases per game, the Tigers have five players with double-digit steals.
  • Taylor Gadbois leads that pack with 51 stolen bases, tops in NCAA Division I.
  • Both Sami Fagan (25) and Emily Crane (22) have 20-plus swipes and over 30 walks, ranking first and second on Mizzou in on-base percentage at .551 and .515, respectively.
  • Fagan (.424) and Gadbois (.400) boast of batting averages of .400 or better, while Crane (.399) is one hit from the mark.
  • The Tigers rank 14th in the nation in scoring and 13th in home runs per game, 22nd in batting average and 23rd in slugging percentage.
  • Crane has added 15 doubles and 16 home runs, both leading the Tigers, and 55 RBI, second on the squad, while Fagan is third on the team with 11 home runs and 49 RBI.
  • Chloe Rathburn ranks second in doubles (9) and home runs (13) while leading the pack with 56 RBI, helped by her NCAA Division I-best six sacrifice flies.
  • Regan Nash (18 SB) and Rylee Pierce (12 SB) add more speed to the order, while Pierce (nine doubles, seven homers) is a dual threat like Fagan and Crane.
  • In the circle, Paige Lowary leads the way with 162 innings of work, where she’s struck out 125 and walked 94 en route to a 3.37 ERA.
  • She’s allowed 14 home runs and a .248 batting average while uncorking 23 wild pitches.
  • Danielle Baumgartner ranks second on the team in innings (108.2) but leads the way with a 1.81 ERA. She’s only struck out 53 while walking 24, and opponents hit .274 against her.
  • Missouri’s opponents have committed 89 errors, tallying a .939 fielding percentage.

Missouri and South Carolina Against Common Foes

  • There are five common opponents between the Gamecocks and the Tigers, both going 4-9 against the slate.
  • Both lost to No. 2 Michigan in neutral site affairs, SC 15-3 (5) and Mizzou 13-0 (5).
  • Both lost the series to Alabama two out of three, Missouri in Tuscaloosa and SC at home.
  • Georgia went to Missouri and swept the Tigers, a team the Gamecocks took two of three from at home.
  • The Tigers took two of three at Mississippi, a team the Gamecocks lost two of three to at home.
  • Both fell to Kentucky, the Tigers getting the middle game in Lexington while the Gamecocks were swept at home by the Wildcats.
The Last Meeting
South Carolina 0
Missouri 2
May 8, 2016
Columbia, Mo.
Gamecocks Fall in Finale at No. 16/14 Missouri 2-0
South Carolina (35-20, 7-17 SEC) won the hit category, but No. 16/14 Missouri (39-13, 14-10 SEC) took the category that matters in a 2-0 win on Sunday afternoon at University Field.

Ties Between South Carolina and Missouri

SC History vs. the Tigers

  • Missouri leads the series 8-4, taking eight of nine of the SEC games.
  • South Carolina owns three neutral-site wins in the series, coming in 1992, 1995 and 2002.

The Last Series – South Carolina at Missouri – May 6-8, 2016

  • The Gamecocks and Tigers played three close games last weekend, with Missouri claiming two of three.
  • The Tigers won Friday night 5-2 thanks to three Gamecock errors and two steals of home by Sami Fagan.
  • Nickie Blue tossed a two-hitters on Saturday to lead the Gamecocks to a 3-1 win.
  • Mizzou took the finale 2-0, despite the Gamecocks getting five hits. South Carolina left eight on in the loss.
  • Both Kamryn Watts and Ansley Ard went 3-for-8 in the series for SC, Ard going 2-for-3 with two RBI in Saturday’s victory.

Clark Leading Gamecock Newcomers at the Plate

  • Freshman outfielder Kennedy Clark has started all but two games and leads the team in on-base percentage (.458) while ranking third with four home runs.
  • Clark tied the program record with two round-trippers in the Ohio win.
  • The freshman has driven home nine runners from third with less than two outs in 13 tries while also advancing runners at a .586 clip (65-for-111).
  • Clark shared SEC Freshman of the Week honors for the week of March 6 with Kentucky’s Abbey Cheek after hitting .588 with seven RBI, both team highs, in a 5-0 week.

Other Newcomers Contributing Early for South Carolina

  • The other four newcomers to the 2016 Gamecocks have all made their presence known.
  • Junior Jessica Elliott has gone 17-8 with a 2.77 ERA in 43 appearances.
  • Alexis Mack, a freshman who set Ohio high school’s all-time stolen base record, is second on the team in stolen bases (14), runs scored (34) and batting average (.356).
  • Mack has moved up runners at a .607 clip, tops on the team, hitting mainly in the No. 2 spot in her 40 starts. Her team-best eight sacrifice bunts has helped in this situation.
  • Freshman Kenzi Maguire has started 39 games at shortstop and leads the team with 14 HBPs, second in a single season at South Carolina.
  • Mack, Maguire and Clark, hitting 2-3-4 in the lineup, combined to go 15-for-23 in wins over UConn and Kennesaw State, scoring nine runs and driving in eight as a group.
  • Finally, Lex Hull is 6-for-31 and has started behind the plate in eight Gamecock wins.
  • The series win also stretches a streak of gaining at least one road SEC series win to four years.

Gamecocks Off the Diamond

  • The 2015 Gamecocks posted the team’s best GPA at 3.442.
  • Thirteen Gamecocks garnered NFCA Scholar-Athlete honors in 2014-15, the most under in the past five seasons.
  • Victoria Williams became the 16th Gamecock selection to CoSIDA’s Academic All-District team with her pick last year.
  • Off the 2015 roster with 22 students, 19 Gamecocks earned SEC Academic Honor Roll nods last year.
  • Sophomore Jordyn Augustus is one of 15 South Carolina students on the Columbia campus selected to participate in the Carolina Leadership Initiative for this academic year.
  • Many Gamecocks have been on mission trips during their summers, including Augustus, Effie Manahan and Macey Webb.
  • The softball team has won the department’s Community Outreach Team of the Year twice under Bev Smith in 2011 and 2013.
  • Gamecock signees Mackenzie Boesel, Cayla Drotar and Alexis Lindsey, during their official visit this fall, joined the team and community helping Columbia recover from the historic floods that devastated the Midlands in early October.

Single-Season Chart Movements

  • Kaylea Snaer has already broken the program’s single-season doubles record of 21, set by current volunteer assistant Tina Plew in 1995.
  • Alaynie Page’s next homer ties her with Debralee Troesh’s 2003 total of 10 in fifth,
  • Page’s next RBI ties her for eighth with two others, while three ties her for sixth with two more. Five RBI matches her production from last year, which stands fifth in SC history.
  • Two RBI for Snaer ties her for 15th with three others with 39 on the year.
  • One sacrifice fly for Page, Snaer or Krystan White would put that person into a tie for seventh with seven others.
  • The next walk to Page or Kennedy Clark ties that person with two others in 14th for a year at South Carolina with 27.
  • The next stolen base for Page ties her with two others in 11th, while Alexis Mack is one from tying six in 15th.
  • Nickie Blue is one appearance from matching her total from 2014, which ranks third.
  • Jessica Elliott’s next appearance ties two others in 10th.
  • Elliott’s next start ties her with Darlene Gareis’s 1995 tally in 10th.
  • Blue’s next save matches her NCAA-leading total from her freshman year of seven, which ranks second in program history.

White Hits Her Way into Lineup

  • Sophomore Krystan White has hit her way into the lineup this spring, starting with a career-best day against Winthrop, going 3-for-4 with a homer and five RBI against the Eagles.
  • She’s now drawn 40 starts and played all four spots in the infield.
  • She’s driven in 14 runners from third with less than two outs in 19 tries.
  • She tied her career high with a 3-for-4 Saturday against Troy while adding three RBI in the series finale.
  • Her first career triple capped the seventh-inning comeback in the Saturday win at Arkansas.

Gamecocks Have Memorable Weekend in Series Win at Arkansas

  • Both of South Carolina’s wins at Arkansas came with notes galore.
  • Friday night’s 14-0 win in five innings marked the largest margin of victory for the Gamecocks in SEC play and the most runs scored in an SEC game by South Carolina.
  • The Gamecocks tallied 19 hits, also a high mark in SEC play.
  • Eleven different Gamecocks had hits, including all nine of the starters.
  • On Saturday, the Gamecocks rebounded from a 5-1 deficit to take a 7-5 win, scoring five runs in the seventh to complete the comeback.
  • That’s the first win for SC when entering the seventh trailing since March 30, 2014, when the Gamecocks came back to down Mississippi on Sunday 7-6 with a pair of bases-loaded walks.
  • Sophomore Krystan White drove in the game-winning run with her first career triple in that fateful seventh.
  • The Gamecocks won their fifth-consecutive series against the Razorbacks, including their third straight at Bogle Park.
  • The series win also stretches a streak of gaining at least one road SEC series win to four years.

Preseason Nuggets for the Gamecocks

  • Fledgling outlet College Sports Madness honored senior Alaynie Page on its Preseason All-America second team, while she also made the Preseason All-SEC team from the site and the league’s coaches.
  • Junior Nickie Blue made College Sports Madness’s All-SEC second team in the preseason.
  • In a preseason poll of SEC coaches, the Gamecocks ranked 11th of 13. It’s a prediction South Carolina has bettered in each of the previous two seasons.

Offensive Records Falling Regularly for Gamecocks under Smith

  • In head coach Beverly Smith’s first six years, the Gamecocks have broken team offensive records 25 times (tracked on page 15 in these notes), already adding to the total this year.
  • This year, the Gamecocks have been hit 79 times, already tops in SC history.
  • South Carolina snapped four more team offensive records in 2015: home runs (60), HR per game (1.00), on-base percentage (.391) and slugging percentage (.473).
  • Smith’s teams have set the home run and slugging percentage records now in four-straight seasons and the on-base percentage mark in each of the last three.
  • While not a record, the Gamecocks have hit .291 over the past four seasons, 75 points higher than the year before Smith came to Columbia.

Gamecock Pitching Making Strides

  • Beverly Smith’s pupils in the circle have improved greatly in her first five seasons.
  • Gamecock pitching has improved its strikeout-to-walk ratio in each of the past three seasons.
  • Junior Nickie Blue, who led the nation in saves as a freshman, posted over 200 innings in the circle and an ERA under 2.00 in 2015, one of two in the SEC to post such numbers (Lauren Haeger of Florida the other).
  • Blue’s 165 strikeouts last season rank 14th in Gamecock history.
  • Graduate Julie Sarratt put her name in the career top 10 for pitchers in eight major categories, including a tie for third in appearances (142).

Roster Notes

  • Seven position player starters return for the Gamecocks from last year’s squad.
  • SC lost four seniors who combined to start 143 games, including every start at catcher and 57 of 60 starts in centerfield.
  • Every major offensive category leader from 2015 returns for the Gamecocks, 14 of those by Alaynie Page.
  • The Gamecocks return over 70 percent of its offense in most categories, from 79.9 percent of their walks to 71.7 percent of the home runs.
  • The highest percentage lost in any offensive category is triples at 37.5, with five of those by Kristen Struett.
  • Forty of the Gamecocks’ 41 stolen bases return.
  • In the circle, 53.1 percent of the innings return, most by staff ace Nickie Blue.
  • Blue also brings back 61.4 percent of the team’s strikeouts.
  • Five newcomers join the squad, led by NJCAA Pitcher of the Year Jessica Elliott.
  • The team is dominated by South Carolina natives, with 25 percent of the roster (five players) hailing from the Palmetto State. California is second with four players.
  • The Gamecocks hail from 11 states this year, with the newcomers coming from California, Florida, Kentucky and Ohio.
  • Nickie Blue and Hayley Copeland are the first Gamecock duo who are both over six-feet tall.
  • While both Williams’ and juniors by class, Taylor and Victoria are not sisters.

South Carolina Staff Has Top Credentials

  • Gamecock head coach Beverly Smith has been a part of 11 NCAA Tournament teams as a coach (eight at UNC, three at South Carolina).
  • Associate head coach Lisa Navas has been to five NCAA Tournaments as an assistant coach (three at SC, one each at UNC and Missouri) and eight as a head coach (six Division II at Barry, two at NC State). Her 1998 Barry squad played in the national championship game.
  • Assistant coach Calvin Beamon has three titles to his credit as a player, the biggest a College World Series title at Texas during 2005.
  • He also won the NJCAA Division I title in 2003 at the College of Southern Nevada and a high school state championship at Smoky Hill High School in Cherry Creek, Colo.
  • Volunteer assistant Tina Plew Whitlock played on the last Gamecock team to make the Women’s College World Series and has coached teams to the NCAA Tournament at the Division II level.

Gamecocks Have a Rich History in NCAA Tournament

  • South Carolina earned its 18th bid in the NCAA Tournament last season, its third straight under head coach Beverly Smith.
  • The Gamecocks are 34-35 in those trips, making three Women’s College World Series in their history (1983, 1989 and 1997).
  • The program has five AIAW World Series trips in its history as well prior to 1982.