
ACC Network reached out to Shane Beamer to be in the. Beamer and the Gamecocks were back on the grind on Sunday as South Carolina prepares to take on the Wildcats in Lexington, Ky.

Beamer certainly seems eager to get started and, after years of salty Steve Spurrier and the dour Muschamp, brings in a new enthusiasm.Ī Palmetto State talk-off between Beamer and the equally loquacious Dabo Swinney would be epic, But South Carolina fans have to hope the words start concerning into action, at least within a few years. Shane Beamer played for his father from 1995-99, and joined his coaching staff in 2011 before leaving for Georgia after the 2015 season. It is difficult to look at the current South Carolina roster and see talent on par with Florida and Georgia in the SEC East, to say nothing of powerhouse in-state rival Clemson, a situation that needs a couple of recruiting years and some judicious use of the transfer portal to correct.

Hurricane Ian has changed their plans this week and it’ll also affect how Beamer’s team prepares heading into next week. The Gamecocks went from prepping for South Carolina State on Saturday to now having to play them tonight. I can remember Mike McGee, the previous athletic director at South Carolina, sitting in our living room in Blacksburg, Virginia, interviewing my dad when he hired Lou Holtz, and things worked out well for South Carolina, certainly things worked out well for Virginia Tech, because after that was when Michael Vick came to town, and we played for the national championship.” Shane Beamer and South Carolina have had to shift gears very quickly this week.

"I can remember all those years growing up, he always used to talk about South Carolina as a job that he thought had unlimited potential and had every resource you needed to be successful. 1:24 Dawn Staley expressed her support for South Carolina football coach Shane Beamer on Monday after he apologized for yelling at women athletes to get off the field during a game Saturday. “My dad got his start in coaching at The Citadel down in Charleston, South Carolina, so he saw up-close and personal what the potential of the South Carolina football program was and is," South Carolina's new coach said.
