Beecher abysmal, but Gamecocks still roll
Published 12:00 am Friday, August 29, 2008
By Pete Iacobelli
Associated Press
COLUMBIA, S.C. ó South Carolina overcame four interceptions by first-time starter Tommy Beecher to give Steve Spurrier his 16th-straight opening game victory, 34-0 against North Carolina State on Thursday night.
Mike Davis and Taylor Rank had rushing touchdowns, and Dion LeCorn and Jared Cook caught TD passes from backup Chris Smelley to lift the Gamecocks and keep alive Spurrierís first-week streak which began in 1990 at Florida.
The Wolfpack, shutout 37-0 by Maryland to end last season, was held scoreless in consecutive games for the first time since 1956.
For Spurrier, it was also the first taste of victory since last October when a 21-15 win at North Carolina pushed the Gamecocks to 6-1 and had him cocky about bigger things ahead.
Instead, South Carolina collapsed with five-straight defeats, the longest stretch of Spurrierís stellar career.
And for three quarters, this had to be torture for South Carolinaís head ball coach, famed for his quick trigger on bad quarterbacks.
Beecher was given the job by Spurrier in April despite throwing three interceptions in South Carolinaís closing spring scrimmage.
Ever since, Spurrier has stood solidly in Beecherís corner repeating the junior would have a chance to go the distance for the Gamecocks this season.
Beecher looked shaky from the start. He was intercepted by Jimmaul Simmons less than three minutes in, then took the first of his five sacks to end South Carolinaís next series.
Beecher was picked off twice more before the half. Spurrier finally showed his trademark fire, tossing his visor, headset and game notes after Beecherís third interception sailed over receiver Moe Brown and into the hands of Justin Byers.
Maybe he bit his tongue, or repeated a calming mantra, but Spurrier continued to send Beecher back out in spite of the mistakes.
Beecher finally left in the final quarter, with the Gamecocks citing a head injury.
Beecher finished 12 of 22 for 106 yards. He was two interceptions shy of the Gamecocks single-game mark, set by Glenn Morris in a 17-7 loss to Clemson in 1971.
Lucky for the Gamecocksí their defense was there to clean up the mess.
The group, headed by new coordinator Ellis Johnson, bottled up the Wolfpack throughout. North Carolina State had just 117 yards and eight first downs through three quarters.
The closest the Wolfpack came to scoring was Josh Czajkowski missing a 49-yard field goal attempt.