USC Gamecocks Baseball

Florida wins series against South Carolina. How does USC look for the SEC tournament?

South Carolina Gamecocks head coach Mark Kingston disputes a call against the Alabama Crimson Tide during their game at Founders Park in Columbia, SC, Saturday, April 30, 2022.
South Carolina Gamecocks head coach Mark Kingston disputes a call against the Alabama Crimson Tide during their game at Founders Park in Columbia, SC, Saturday, April 30, 2022. Jeff Blake Photo

The South Carolina baseball team dropped its final road series of the season to Florida, losing to the Gators 8-0 on Friday night after dropping Game 1 on Thursday.

Mark Kingston’s Gamecocks already came into the weekend outside of the NCAA tournament picture and didn’t do themselves any favors. USC (26-27, 12-17 SEC) ranked No. 76 in the RPI before Saturday’s game, well outside of the field of 64, and now the team is below .500 on the season and is 3-14 in road games.

But the Gamecocks did qualify for the SEC tournament, which includes the 12 top teams in the 14-team SEC conference in terms of winning percentage. To earn a regional berth, USC will more than likely need to win the Hoover, Alabama tournament title outright. Under Kingston, the Gamecocks have gone 1-4 in the SEC tournament.

Both Missouri and Mississippi State failed to qualify for the SEC tournament. The Gamecocks project as the No. 10 seed, above Alabama and Kentucky, both teams USC won series against and hold the tiebreaker for.

The Gamecocks fell to Florida 14-5 on Thursday and couldn’t find any success offensively on Friday. The Gators tagged USC starter Noah Hall for three runs Friday, chasing him after three innings, while scoring three more runs against reliever Cam Tringali.

At the end of the fifth, Kingston got ejected from the game for arguing with the umpire, possibly in an attempt to fire up his team.

Next USC baseball game

Who: South Carolina at Florida

When: 2 p.m. Saturday

Where: Ben Hill Griffin Stadium in Gainesville, Florida

Watch: SEC Network Plus

This story was originally published May 20, 2022 at 10:34 PM.

Michael Lananna
The State
Michael Lananna specializes in Gamecocks athletics and storytelling projects for The State. Featured in Best American Sports Writing 2018, Lananna covered college baseball nationally before moving to Columbia in 2020. He graduated from the University of North Carolina in 2014 with a degree in journalism. Support my work with a digital subscription
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