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Tag: University of South Carolina

  • South Carolina football coach sidelined by drunk driver

    The University of South Carolina’s defensive line coach will not be returning to the sidelines soon after being hit head-on by a suspected drunk driver last month.

    Travian Robertson has undergone five surgeries following the accident and spent 10 days in the intensive care unit before being released from the hospital on September 5th.

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    In a statement, Robertson expressed his gratitude for the prayers and support he has received during his recovery.

    SEE MORE >> Driver arrested, charged for DUI crash that killed woman in Gastonia

    Details about the suspected drunk driver involved in the accident have not been disclosed, and the specific injuries Robertson sustained remain unspecified.

    (VIDEO: Some drivers say they fail DWI/DUI ignition device because of products like mouthwash, mints)

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  • Former Gamecock football recruiting boss ‘committed serious violations,’ documents say

    Former Gamecock football recruiting boss ‘committed serious violations,’ documents say

    A former top-ranking South Carolina football recruiting staffer “committed serious violations of NCAA legislation” while working for the Gamecocks, according to a USC human resources email obtained by The State.

    Taylor Edwards worked as the football program’s director of player personnel from Jan. 25, 2021 to July 3, 2024. His job duties included overseeing the Gamecocks’ recruiting operation and serving as a liaison between the football program and South Carolina’s NIL collective, The Garnet Trust.

    He left the staff this summer, and head coach Shane Beamer said very little about Edwards or his departure when asked about it by reporters on July 15.

    Internal university emails, obtained by The State through an open records request, provide some clarity about what happened that led to Edwards’ exit from USC but leave questions about what it means for potential NCAA scrutiny or any possible punishment the university might face.

    Exactly what the alleged violations were or how serious they were in nature were not immediately known. The documents only address the end of Edwards’ employment with the University of South Carolina

    Edwards did not immediately offer comment when reached Thursday by The State.

    USC spokesman Charles Bloom told The State that USC has not been served with a notice of allegations from the NCAA. Bloom otherwise did not immediately answer questions about Edwards or the violations the documents allege happened.

    It wasn’t known whether South Carolina has communicated to the NCAA the alleged violations that the emails say were connected with Edwards.

    Under Beamer, USC football self-reported two NCAA violations in 2021 and three in 2022. All five were deemed minor in nature. No violations were reported in 2023.

    Taylor Edwards departure timeline

    Edwards left the staff suddenly this summer, a few months after receiving a raise and contract extension from USC.

    Edwards, who joined the Gamecocks shortly after Beamer was hired as head coach in 2021, received an extension in January that boosted his annual salary to $300,000.

    In a note found in his personnel file that was also obtained through the records request, the raise came “in recognition of employee’s work supporting USC football NIL, recruiting, and staffing. This salary increase was requested by Head Football Coach Shane Beamer and approved by AD Ray Tanner.”

    By July 3, though, he was no longer with the program. In the wake of the news, Beamer would not delve into the reasoning for Edwards’ unexpected exit.

    The internal emails, however, provide some clarity to his final days as a USC employee.

    On June 23, South Carolina athletics human resources manager Christina Sergi emailed Edwards with the subject line reading: “Meeting with the Athletics Director.”

    “As previously discussed,” Sergi wrote, “the athletics department has determined that you have committed serious violations of NCAA legislation and your contractual obligations to the University sufficient to justify the termination.”

    Sergi went on to explain that Edwards had the right to a “pre-termination meeting” with Tanner where he “may present the reasons you believe termination of your employment is not justified.”

    Five hours after that initial email, Phoenix-based lawyer Gregg Clifton — whose bio notes that he has “represented NCAA and NAIA collegiate clients regarding rules compliance, investigatory matters and in disciplinary hearings” — responded to Sergi informing her that he would serve as Edwards’ legal representative and participate in the pre-termination meeting via Zoom.

    The in-person meeting was scheduled for the morning of June 26 inside the athletic director conference room in the Rice Athletics Complex, according to the emails.

    On July 3, Edwards emailed Sergi and Andy Humes, USC’s senior associate athletics director for compliance services.

    “As per your conversation with Gregg Clifton earlier this morning,” Edwards wrote to them, “please be advised that I will be resigning my position with the University of South Carolina, effective August 1, 2024.”

    “If you have any questions,” he added, “please don’t hesitate to contact Gregg or me at your convenience.”

    TheBigSpur, an affiliate of the 247Sports network, first reported the news that Edwards was leaving the program a day before he sent that official email about his resignation.

    Other emails obtained by The State from USC suggested that Edwards was seeking out other job opportunities while navigating his departure from the Gamecocks.

    On July 25, Humes emailed several people in the football program and the athletics department, noting that some had received calls from potential employers about Edwards. If USC folks got those calls, Humes said they can “discuss any general thoughts you may have about him as a person or his time here, but nothing about his resignation or any circumstances surrounding it.”

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  • University of South Carolina student takes the wheel to stop bus after driver is ejected in crash that injured 11

    University of South Carolina student takes the wheel to stop bus after driver is ejected in crash that injured 11

    At least 11 people — including 10 University of South Carolina students and a bus driver — were injured when a charter bus crashed in southern Mississippi Friday afternoon on the way to New Orleans for a fraternity formal, according to the university.Video of the aftermath of the crash above“The University of South Carolina was informed tonight of an accident in Mississippi involving a charter bus carrying USC fraternity members and their guests traveling to an event in New Orleans,” the university said in a statement to CNN.The bus was carrying 56 students when it crashed around 3 p.m. on Interstate 10 in Hancock County, according to a news release from the Mississippi Highway Patrol. Nine students were taken by ambulance to a local hospital, while the bus driver and another student were airlifted in critical condition.The driver lost control of the bus after one of its tires blew out, Bay St. Louis police Chief Toby Schwartz told CNN affiliate WLOX.“According to what students said, she stood on that steering wheel with every ounce of energy to keep that steering wheel straight,” Schwartz said of the driver.At one point, the wheels on one side of the bus lifted into the air, causing the bus to lean on one side. When the bus came back down on all wheels, the front windshield shattered and the driver was ejected, according to Schwartz.But the bus kept moving. The bus traveled “out of control” for half a mile on the interstate, Schwartz said.In what Schwartz described as a “heroic action,” a student grabbed ahold of the wheel and regained control of the bus, bringing it to a stop.“Because of the bus driver’s quick actions, and then the students’ quick actions, right now we don’t have any fatalities,” Schwartz said.The crash remains under investigation by Mississippi Highway Patrol.“USC is working closely with local authorities on the scene to obtain updates on our students and to assist in whatever capacity we can,” the university said. “Our thoughts go out to the students involved in the accident and those affected by it.”

    At least 11 people — including 10 University of South Carolina students and a bus driver — were injured when a charter bus crashed in southern Mississippi Friday afternoon on the way to New Orleans for a fraternity formal, according to the university.

    Video of the aftermath of the crash above

    “The University of South Carolina was informed tonight of an accident in Mississippi involving a charter bus carrying USC fraternity members and their guests traveling to an event in New Orleans,” the university said in a statement to CNN.

    The bus was carrying 56 students when it crashed around 3 p.m. on Interstate 10 in Hancock County, according to a news release from the Mississippi Highway Patrol. Nine students were taken by ambulance to a local hospital, while the bus driver and another student were airlifted in critical condition.

    The driver lost control of the bus after one of its tires blew out, Bay St. Louis police Chief Toby Schwartz told CNN affiliate WLOX.

    “According to what students said, she stood on that steering wheel with every ounce of energy to keep that steering wheel straight,” Schwartz said of the driver.

    At one point, the wheels on one side of the bus lifted into the air, causing the bus to lean on one side. When the bus came back down on all wheels, the front windshield shattered and the driver was ejected, according to Schwartz.

    But the bus kept moving. The bus traveled “out of control” for half a mile on the interstate, Schwartz said.

    In what Schwartz described as a “heroic action,” a student grabbed ahold of the wheel and regained control of the bus, bringing it to a stop.

    “Because of the bus driver’s quick actions, and then the students’ quick actions, right now we don’t have any fatalities,” Schwartz said.

    The crash remains under investigation by Mississippi Highway Patrol.

    “USC is working closely with local authorities on the scene to obtain updates on our students and to assist in whatever capacity we can,” the university said. “Our thoughts go out to the students involved in the accident and those affected by it.”

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  • Now It’s Nikki Haley

    Now It’s Nikki Haley

    Does Nikki Haley really have a shot at beating Donald Trump? Does any Republican?

    On Monday afternoon, a basketball gym in Bluffton, South Carolina, was packed with people who had come to hear Haley’s latest sales pitch. Hundreds more were waiting outside. No Republican candidate besides Trump can reliably draw more than a thousand attendees, but about 2,500 showed up for Haley. (Granted, this speech was in Haley’s home state, where she formerly served as governor. Also, the gym was a stone’s throw from the Sun City retirement community, a place where, gently speaking, people may have had nothing better to do at 2 p.m. on a Monday.) One of Haley’s volunteers told me this weekday event had originally been booked at a nearby restaurant, but that, given the current excitement of the campaign, organizers pivoted to the gym, on the University of South Carolina at Beaufort campus. Everyone in Haley’s orbit is understandably riveted. She’s squarely challenging Florida Governor Ron DeSantis for second place in the Republican presidential primary, no matter how second that place may be.

    While the former president still floats high above his dwindling field of competitors, Haley is the only person who keeps rising in the polls. Her climb is steady, not a blip. Haley’s campaign and super PAC are planning to spend $10 million on advertisements over the next eight weeks across Iowa and New Hampshire. On Tuesday, she received an endorsement from the Koch brothers’ network, Americans for Prosperity Action, and along with it an undisclosed amount of financial support. (It will be a lot.) But this year-end, all-in effort to stop Trump ignores the fact that he is a singular vortex, a once-in-a-century figure, a living martyr with a traveling Grateful Dead–like roadshow. His abhorrent behavior and legal woes do not matter. Three weeks ago, at his rally in South Florida, vendors told me that items with Trump’s mug shot are their biggest sellers. How does a mere generational figure, as her supporters hope Haley might be, compete with that?

    Haley bounded up onstage in a light-blue blazer and jeans. “We’ve been through a lot together,” she told the crowd. She meandered back and forth—no lectern, no teleprompter. When you ask people what they like about her, many point to her presence, her poise. Haley delivers her stump speech in a singsong voice. A few words, a pause, a smile. Speaking to the Low Country crowd, she seemed to be thickening her southern accent and peppering in a few extra-emphatic finger points for good measure. She’s just a down-home, neighborly southerner whose most recent job happened to be in Manhattan, serving at the United Nations. The volunteer who had bragged to me about the venue change later pulled out his phone and showed me a photo of himself and Haley at a wedding reception. He pointed to her bare feet. She’s so real, he said.

    Several women in the audience were wearing pink shirts with a Margaret Thatcher quote on the back: If you want something said, ask a man. If you want something done, ask a woman. Sue Ruby, a 74-year-old attendee from nearby Savannah, Georgia, was wearing a WOMEN FOR NIKKI button on her sweater. “I feel like we’ve given men a lot of years to straighten our society out, and they haven’t done so great, so let’s try a woman,” she said. Ruby told me she’s a Republican who begrudgingly voted for Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden in the past two elections because she viewed Trump as a threat to democracy. A Sun City resident named Lorraine, age 79, told me that “it’s time for a woman,” but that she would nevertheless vote for Trump if he wins the nomination. “I don’t want to vote for the opposite,” she said, refusing to say Biden’s name. Carolyn Ballard, an 80-year-old woman from Hilton Head, South Carolina, told me she’s a lifelong Republican who voted for Trump twice, but that she believes he’s past his prime and that Haley is her candidate. “He just irritates people and he stirs up a lot of trouble,” she said of Trump. “Although he’s very smart, and he did a lot for the country. I mean, everybody was happy when he was president.”

    Haley doesn’t lean as hard into gender dynamics as past female presidential candidates have. Nevertheless, she skillfully uses her womanhood and Indian heritage as setups for certain lines. “I have been underestimated in everything I’ve ever done,” she told the room. “And it’s a blessing, because it makes me scrappy. No one’s going to outwork me in this race. No one’s going to outsmart me in this race.” Or this: “Strong girls become strong women, and strong women become strong leaders,” which had a surprise left turn: “And none of that happens if we have biological boys playing in girls’ sports.” (Huge applause.)

    Courting Never Trump voters, exhausted Trump voters, and, yes, even some likely Trump voters simultaneously is not an easy trick. She hardly ever criticizes her former boss. Here’s her most biting critique from Monday: “I believe President Trump was the right president at the right time … and I agree with a lot of his policies. But the truth is, rightly or wrongly, chaos follows him.” (Note the passivity; she won’t even say Trump catalyzes the chaos.) Having already served as his ambassador to the UN, she may be under consideration for vice president. Compared with his attacks on Ron DeSantis, Trump has gone relatively soft on her, opting for the mid-century misogynistic slight “birdbrain.” Like most of her competitors, Haley has said she would pardon him.

    Whereas Trump has tacked authoritarian and apocalyptic, Haley has mostly kept her messaging grounded. At the rally, she bemoaned the price of groceries and gas. “Biden worries more about sagebrush lizards than he does about Americans being able to afford their energy,” she quipped. (She also called out her fellow Republicans for adding to the deficit.) She’s a military wife, and spoke about her husband’s PTSD and the persistent problem of homeless veterans. Though she lacks Trump’s innate knack for zingers, she landed one about how things might change if members of Congress got their health care through the VA: “It’ll be the best health care you’ve ever seen, guaranteed.”

    Although many of her fellow Republicans have adopted a nativist view of the world, Haley waxes at length about America’s geopolitical role. (And subsequently gets tagged as a globalist.) “The world is literally on fire,” she said Monday. She affirmed her support for both Israel and Ukraine, and went long on the triple threat of Russia, China, and Iran, paying particular attention to China as a national-security issue. In doing so, knowingly or not, she began to sound quite Trumpy. “They’re already here. They’ve already infiltrated our country,” Haley said. “We’ve got to start looking at China the way they look at us.” She called for an end to normal trade relations with China until they stop “murdering” Americans with fentanyl. She chastened the audience with images of China’s 500 nuclear warheads and its rapidly expanding naval fleet. “Dictators are actually very transparent. They tell us exactly what they’re going to do,” she said.

    Perhaps Haley’s biggest advantage right now is her relative youth. She’ll turn 52 three days before the New Hampshire primary. Trump has lately been making old-man gaffes, drawing comparisons to Biden, who was first elected to the Senate the year Haley was born. She speaks wistfully of “tomorrow,” of leaving certain things—unspecified baggage—in the past. “You have to go with a new generational leader,” Haley proclaimed. Onstage, she endorsed congressional term limits and the idea of mental-competency tests for public servants older than 75. The Senate, she joked, had become “the most privileged nursing home in the country.” Throwing shade at both Trump and Biden, she spoke of the need for leaders at “the top of their game.” Hundreds of gray-and-white-haired supporters before her nodded and murmured in approval.

    Monday’s event took place roughly 90 miles south of Charleston, where, in 2015, Dylann Roof murdered nine Black parishioners at Emanuel AME Church, hoping to start a race war. At the time, Haley was governor of South Carolina, and Trump—who had descended the golden escalator and announced his candidacy for president just the day before—still seemed like a carnival act. Photos of Roof posing with a Confederate flag ricocheted across social media. Haley had the flag taken down from the South Carolina statehouse, a reversal from her earlier position on the flag. Five years later, after the murder of George Floyd, Haley tweeted that, “in order to heal,” Floyd’s death “needs to be personal and painful for everyone.” During Monday’s rally, though, she sounded much more like an old-school Republican: “America’s not racist; we’re blessed,” she said. “Our kids need to love America. They need to be saying the Pledge of Allegiance when they start school.”

    As her audience grows, she continues to tiptoe along a very fine line: not MAGA, not anti-MAGA. In lieu of Trump-style airbrushed fireworks and bald eagles and Lee Greenwood, she’s going for something slightly classier (leaving the stage to Tom Petty’s “American Girl”) while still seizing every opportunity to own the libs. At the rally, she attacked the military’s gender-pronoun training and received substantial applause. “We’ve got to end this national self-loathing that’s taken over our country,” she said. Early in her speech, she promised that she would speak hard truths. As she approached her conclusion, one hard truth stuck out: “Republicans have lost the last seven out of eight popular votes for president. That is nothing to be proud of. We should want to win the majority of Americans.” It was the closest thing to a truly forward-thinking message that any serious Republican has offered this cycle.

    In the most generous of interpretations, the race for the GOP nomination is now among three people: Haley, DeSantis, and Trump. Mike Pence is already out. Tim Scott, Haley’s fellow South Carolinian, dropped out two weeks ago. Vivek Ramaswamy, who has struggled to break out of single digits in the polls, recently rented an apartment in Des Moines and will almost certainly stay in the race through the Iowa caucuses. Ramaswamy has also unexpectedly become Haley’s punching bag: Her campaign said she pulled in $1 million in donations after calling him “scum” during the last debate.

    At next week’s debate in Alabama, the stage will likely be winnowed to Ramaswamy, Haley, and DeSantis. (“When the stage gets smaller, our chances get bigger,” Haley told her rally crowd.) DeSantis seems to be betting his whole campaign on Iowa, and has secured the endorsement of Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds. This weekend, DeSantis will complete his 99-county tour of the state. Haley needs to beat DeSantis, but she also needs his voters if she has any serious shot of taking on Trump. If DeSantis drops out before Haley, his supporters are far more likely to flock to Trump. So maybe Haley needs a deus ex machina. In 2020, Biden’s campaign was viewed as all but cooked when, here in South Carolina, with the help of Representative Jim Clyburn, everything turned around, propelling him to Super Tuesday and the nomination.

    Haley’s campaign declined to let her speak with me. A spokesperson, Olivia Perez-Cubas, instead emailed me the following statement: “Poll after poll show Nikki Haley is the best challenger to Donald Trump and Joe Biden. That’s why the largest conservative grassroots coalition in the country just got behind her. Nikki is second in Iowa, New Hampshire, and South Carolina and is the only candidate with the momentum to go the distance. Ron DeSantis has a short shelf life with his Iowa-or-bust strategy.”

    As rally-goers made their way to the parking lot, I struck up conversation with a man in a T-shirt that read NOPE NOT AGAIN, with Trump’s hair and giant red necktie decorating the O. He wore a camouflage baseball hat with an American flag on the dome. The man, Mike Stevens, told me he was a 25-year Army veteran, and that he was disgusted with Trump.

    “He’s a bully. He’s not good. He causes hate and discontent,” Stevens said. “I mean, he didn’t uphold the Constitution. And now we’ve had a judge say that. First time ever—no peaceful transfer of power? Even Al Gore did it. I’ve always been a Republican, but if it’s him and Biden, I’ll vote for Biden, I guess.”

    He was excited about Haley, and had been texting his friends and family about her rally—trying to wean them off their Trump addiction. But he also told me he had written Haley a letter: He was dismayed by her promise to pardon Trump, and he needed her to know that.

    John Hendrickson

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