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July 23 Gamecock Central Members of the Day (10 winners)

rsoye3qo88kd3jdmhepe


Drum roll, please

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Today's winners are ...

@ktkenned (last online: Wednesday at 7:20 PM)
@Corndogcory (last online: Yesterday at 11:31 PM)
@Hungryneck (last online: Yesterday at 11:44 AM)
@David Benjamin Hughes (last online: Jun 16, 2021)
@ocock (last online: Yesterday at 10:54 AM)
@rls# (last online: Today at 6:12 AM)
@jodya (last online: Wednesday at 1:15 PM)
@cwhall (last online: Yesterday at 6:33 PM)
@Catdogsentme (last online: Tuesday at 2:00 PM)
@usc_phan (last online: Today at 5:45 AM)

Congratulations!

To claim your free time, reply to this post by 8 a.m. tomorrow.

Thank you for being a member of Gamecock Central.

What is Gamecock Central Members of the Day?

It's a way to thank you and other loyal members.

Each weekday, 10 members are randomly selected and their usernames are posted here on The Insiders Forum.

Each winner receives three months of Gamecock Central (the renewal dates are pushed back three months).

rsoye3qo88kd3jdmhepe

Quick Oscar Delp note…

It does sound like Gamecock TE target Oscar Delp made the decision to attend the cookout event at Clemson today.

Reminder - he will stay home next weekend while Georgia and South Carolina have events, and he’s expected back in Columbia for a game early this season, in all likelihood.

It has been UGA and South Carolina at the top of his list.

How I learned to stop worrying and love the expanded CFB Playoff

It was because Jay Phillips told me to “look ya’ll” enough times that I just caved! 😃
JK

Seriously- the thing I like about potentially expanding the playoffs is that it gives us the ability to potentially eliminate some of the subjectivity around selection if we make some/most of the top slots automatic for conference champions of the major conferences. I’d prefer even 6 major conferences- 2 divisions each with the conf championships being the first round and a 6 team playoff of the champions from there, but that would be too sensible, organized and reasonable to expect for CFB. If we can have some automatic conference championship slots and a few buy ins for “other” good teams who did not win their conf championship- I could see that working out well without diminishing the importance of the regular season. We SHOULD also go back to 11 game seasons if they are going to expand the field to 12 teams, and eliminate FCS games IMO to limit the potential increase of games a team making the playoffs might have to play but that is tertiary.

I’m with Texas A&M

I genuinely see no point in bringing Texas or Oklahoma into the SEC. They need us, we don’t need them at all so why ruffle feathers not needed? A&M has been a valuable member and on top of that, we are messing with what makes college football so great, the rivalries, historical conference matchups among other things. I get how it could bring more money but shoot, I would rather enjoy the product on the field more so…just my 2 cents

*** Inside the commitment: Keenan Nelson Jr.

What started as a battle between Penn State and Notre Dame in the earlier stages of the process, seemed destined to come down to Penn State and South Carolina as Keenan Nelson Jr.'s recruitment progressed.

While many believed Penn State was the favorite throughout the process, after taking official visits to both South Carolina and Penn State in June, the Gamecocks ultimately won out, landing the four-star cornerback on Tuesday and giving Shane Beamer and Co. their highest-rated commit to date.

The Gamecocks, led by defensive backs coach Torrian Gray and area recruiter Pete Lembo, who has been excellent in helping the Gamecocks make northeast inroads, steadily gained ground on the in-state Nittany Lions before seemingly passing them during or shortly after his official visit to Columbia.

The 6-foot, 197-pounder works out with multiple private DB trainers. In Philly, he trains with Philadelphia Skills Academy founder Keita Crespina.

But Nelson also makes trips to the Atlanta area to train with Oliver Davis, popular DB trainer for top prospects and NFL players in the southeast. Davis is also former Gamecock and first-round draft pick Jaycee Horn's trainer and it's there that Horn put in an early good word for South Carolina as a school and program with Nelson.

It's impossible to quantify exactly how much that helped, but it never hurts when the top defensive player taken in the NFL Draft talks up your program with a prospect who looks up to him.

Past the help from Horn, Nelson singled out the job that Gray has done recruiting him when he talked to him after his OV, mentioning both the consistent contact from Gray and his proven track record of putting players in the NFL.

From a perception standpoint, Nelson gives the Gamecocks another key out-of-state recruiting win as they now have the Nos. 3 (Nelson) and 5 (Ryan Brubaker) prospects in Pennsylvania for 2022 in their class.

On the field, Nelson gives the Gamecocks another versatile defensive back prospect with the skillset to play multiple positions and match up with receivers big and small. While Nelson doesn't have the track exploits of the more-raw Emory Floyd, he's further along in his development and probably has a chance to make an early impact at South Carolina as a patient, physical DB who could play corner or provide strong coverage ability at nickel or safety.

Nelson isn't afraid to come up and hit from the cornerback spot and also is patient in maintaining his position in phase with receivers before breaking on the football at the last moment.

Nelson was a standout at the Rivals Camp Series regional event in the northeast where he took home defensive back MVP honors and earned an invite to the Rivals Five-Star Challenge and impressed analysts Adam Friedman and Josh Hemholdt with his performance.

The defensive backs group was loaded with impressive upper and underclassmen but Nelson was the most consistent throughout the day. He has the size, speed, and instincts to compete with any style of receiver that lines up across from him. Nelson can play off the ball or press coverage and knows when to be physical and when to use his speed to his advantage. He made a lot of plays on the ball and kept pretty much everything in front of him.

Keenan Nelson Jr. is a very savvy and patient defensive back that does a good job making plays on the ball. He may not have been the fastest defensive back on the field but he closed on the ball well and showed the technical skills that college coaches love seeing from recruits. Against smaller receivers, Nelson was able use his physicality and strength to disrupt the receivers. Nelson was strong enough to throw off the timing between quarterbacks and bigger receivers, but his speed, quickness and instincts really shined in these situations.


Nelson is ranked the No. 18 CB and No. 134 overall prospect in the 2022 class.

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I've been enjoying the Olympics today. I didn't think I'd watch much of them, but...

...I got to watching, and it's all been great. Swimming, gymnastics, butt...um, beach volleyball, badminton. I wish there were fans present.

My only complaint is, I'm presently watching men's volleyball on NBCSN, and they are giving out player information in the metric system. Hey, NBCSN, we won the war so I don't have to do conversions!
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