Gamecock Fanatics

This is a sample guest message. Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

Questions the Gamecocks must answer before spring practice begins

FeatheredCock

“Let It Be”
Staff member
Messages
55,912
Fanatics Cash
65,804
Points
13,373
Questions the Gamecocks must answer before spring practice begins


South Carolina capped its 2021 season on a high note  South Carolina finished Shane Beamer’s first fall as the head coach in Columbia by throttling North Carolina 38-21 in the Duke’s Mayo Bowl. And while there’s a lot of optimism surrounding the Gamecocks right now, there’s a handful of questions to answer between now and the start of spring ball in mid-March. Here are three big questions that South Carolina is facing:

CAN THE GAMECOCKS OFFENSIVE SHOW UP EVERY SATURDAY ?

The Gamecocks ranked 11th in the league in rushing and 13th in passing, scoring and total offense. That won’t fly most years in Columbia. South Carolina’s romp of North Carolina silenced some doubters as the Gamecocks racked up 543 total yards and over 300 yards on the ground. In theory, it was a preview of what the offense could look like when clicking on all cylinders. Couple the bowl game success with having to start four different quarterbacks this fall  a borderline death knell for just about any offensive staff  and there’s enough to feel the Gamecocks’ issues were as much about awful luck and general inconsistency as anything else.

Oklahoma transfers Spencer Rattler and Austin Stogner give the Gamecocks two legitimate stars to work with in 2022. Add in whatever other transfer portal additions will be made over the coming months and the Gamecocks could flip an offensive switch quickly. Crazier things have happened, but giving Satterfield another shot to run the offense with a handful of legitimate playmakers and  in theory  more stability at the quarterback position might be the move for a program that has had five different offensive coordinators since 2015.

WHO FILLS IN AT NEEDED SPOTS ON GAMECOCKS DEFENSE FOR 2022?

 Clayton White deserves praise and then some for the work he and his staff did flipping what was projected as a historically bad South Carolina defense entering the season. The Gamecocks finished second in the SEC in passing defense and sixth in total defense in 2021. By contrast, The Gamecocks capped the 2020 season seventh in passing defense and 10th in total defense in the conference. Now comes the hard part: replicating that success. All-American safety Jaylan Foster has exhausted his eligibility and is off to the NFL. Edge lineman Kingsley “JJ” Enagbare has also chosen to pursue a professional career.

The Gamecocks received good news over the weekend when safety R.J. Roderick announced his return. South Carolina will also bring back Edge Jordan Strachan  who announced his return on Tuesday  defensive lineman Zacch Pickens and linebackers Brad Johnson and Sherrod Greene to comprise the core of the 2022 defense.

The next few weeks should help resolve how much help the Gamecocks might need out of the transfer portal. A linebacker could bolster the depth of that room. Another safety might help mitigate the loss of Foster as well. It’s not out of the question that South Carolina looks to add another defensive lineman even if it also brings Strachan and potentially defensive tackle Rick Sandidge who was hurt before the season began and could return. The Gamecocks signed six players who are considered safeties in their 2022 recruiting class. Don’t be surprised if there is a freshman or two that enter the secondary mix next fall, too.

WHAT OTHER OFFENSIVE PIECES COULD SOUTH CAROLINA ADD THIS OFFSEASON?

The additions of Rattler and Stogner were at or near the top of South Carolina’s wish list. Who else could be added to the fray? That’s TBD. The transfer portal is always going to be a bit of a moving target, but the Gamecocks have needs at receiver, running back and on the offensive line. Leading receiver Josh Vann will be back for 2022. Vann proved to be the Gamecocks most indispensable playmaker in 2021, recording 13 catches and almost 200 yards more than anyone else on the roster. South Carolina needs another legitimate pass catching option. Stogner will help.

So, too, will tight end Jaheim Bell who could theoretically move into more of a receiver role. Dakereon Joyner showed flashes see the Duke’s Mayo Bowl as evidence  of the athleticism that made him a superstar high school player, but he’s yet to totally put it together at receiver.

Georgia Tech transfer Ahmarean Brown also never quite cracked the lineup consistently enough to feel comfortable with the room at present. Beyond receiver, South Carolina a running back import would make up for the NFL departures of Kevin Harris and ZaQuandre White. MarShawn Lloyd and Juju McDowell figure to get their shot at being bell cows in 2022, but another body in addition to Rashad Amos would round things out there. Offensive line, too, could be a need after the Gamecocks struggled throughout the season to find consistency up front. That said, transfer offensive linemen are fewer and further between than skill position guys and it’s no guarantee they pan out.

 
Last edited by a moderator:
I've been beating this drum for awhile. I'm sure you're all sick of hearing about it, but we need some stout dudes on our offensive line. 

 
I've been beating this drum for awhile. I'm sure you're all sick of hearing about it, but we need some stout dudes on our offensive line. 
You're right.  We need more physical and aggressive OL that play with an attitude. 

 
I've been beating this drum for awhile. I'm sure you're all sick of hearing about it, but we need some stout dudes on our offensive line. 
I hear you but we are where we are and OL help through the portal not there. Not much on big ugly's. Will have to gain the upper-hand in recruiting these guys for the 2023 class... To late for 2022.....

 
What we really need IMO is for our OL coach and our OC to work together on a scheme that maximizes the talent of the players we have on hand.

 
What we really need IMO is for our OL coach and our OC to work together on a scheme that maximizes the talent of the players we have on hand.
You're right. I noticed in the games where we played a mobile qb our offense performed really well. Of course, the Clemson game was the exception. It looks like the three qbs for 2022 (Rattler, Doty and Joyner) are all mobile. Until we can get a more dominate OL we can still be productive by having a qb that can run as well as throw. Luckily, most of the teams we play next year are not as good on defense as Georgia or Clemson. 

 
I've been beating this drum for awhile. I'm sure you're all sick of hearing about it, but we need some stout dudes on our offensive line. 
I agree, but unfortunately, that takes much more time to develop than the skill positions. Hopefully, as stated above, the current guys will learn and gel more, and the recruits will start coming in.

 
I've been beating this drum for awhile. I'm sure you're all sick of hearing about it, but we need some stout dudes on our offensive line. 
Our OL is stocked with 4-star guys and veterans. IMHO the issues last season had little to do with talent and more to do with a new scheme, coaching issues, and overall confusion. Most of the time there was poor play on the OL last year (again, IMO), it was because they looked confused, not physically overmatched. We have a proven OL coach, and I drill down to this being a square peg/round hole issue between him and Satt, to be perfectly frank.

 
Our OL is stocked with 4-star guys and veterans. IMHO the issues last season had little to do with talent and more to do with a new scheme, coaching issues, and overall confusion. Most of the time there was poor play on the OL last year (again, IMO), it was because they looked confused, not physically overmatched. We have a proven OL coach, and I drill down to this being a square peg/round hole issue between him and Satt, to be perfectly frank.
I attribute the woes on the OLine to 2 separate issues.  
1) I think we only lined up against 3 maybe 4 teams that didn’t look at the WR position and say “if we cover this guy for X amount of time then we get home.  
2) square peg round hole issue, weather it was adjustments, play calling, or play it didn’t work a large portion of the time.  
You combine those 2 things and you also start to see some confidence issues.  The games that were won you can see confidence in the team.  2022 has to solve for both issues to keep that confidence up and headed in the right direction.

 
Top