logo
Coastal Carolina is in CWS finals, and retired coach Gary Gilmore is happy to watch from afar

Coastal Carolina is in CWS finals, and retired coach Gary Gilmore is happy to watch from afar

Yahoo8 hours ago

FILE - Coastal Carolina coach Gary Gilmore celebrates their 4-3 victory over Arizona to win the championship after Game 3 of the NCAA College World Series baseball finals in Omaha, Neb., June 30, 2016. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik, File)
FILE - Coastal Carolina coach Gary Gilmore participates in an interview during an NCAA regional baseball game against Vanderbilt on May 31, 2024, in Clemson, S.C. (AP Photo/Sean Rayford, File)
FILE - Coastal Carolina coach Gary Gilmore participates in an interview during an NCAA regional baseball game against Vanderbilt on May 31, 2024, in Clemson, S.C. (AP Photo/Sean Rayford, File)
FILE - Coastal Carolina coach Gary Gilmore celebrates their 4-3 victory over Arizona to win the championship after Game 3 of the NCAA College World Series baseball finals in Omaha, Neb., June 30, 2016. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik, File)
FILE - Coastal Carolina coach Gary Gilmore participates in an interview during an NCAA regional baseball game against Vanderbilt on May 31, 2024, in Clemson, S.C. (AP Photo/Sean Rayford, File)
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Considering the run Coastal Carolina's baseball team is on — 26 straight wins on the way to the College World Series finals — it would be understandable if Gary Gilmore had second thoughts about retiring after last season.
Not a one, he said by phone Thursday as he pulled out of the driveway of his home in North Litchfield Beach, South Carolina, to head to his grandson's travel team tournament.
Advertisement
The 67-year-old Gilmore attended no Coastal Carolina games this season until the Chanticleers' first two in the CWS last weekend. He sat in the stands at Charles Schwab Field, uncomfortable as it was for the man who spent 29 years at the helm, led the 2016 Chanticleers to the national championship and is regarded as the godfather of program.
Gilmore said he and his family would be back for the best-of-three finals against LSU starting Saturday night.
'Is there a piece of my DNA in this thing? Absolutely. There's no doubt about it,' Gilmore said, 'and I hope it will be for all time.'
But the 2025 Chanticleers are first-year coach Kevin Schnall's team, and Gilmore said he wanted to make a clean break and not give the impression he was looking over Schnall's shoulder. Schnall was Gilmore's assistant for more than two decades.
Advertisement
The grind of building Coastal Carolina into a perennial NCAA Tournament team and CWS contender caused Gilmore to sacrifice time with his wife and two children to chase championships, as coaches are wont to do. When he was hired as head coach in 1996, his office was in a trailer with no plumbing behind a weed-filled outfield. Twenty years later, the Chanticleers were national champions.
Gilmore could have said his work was done at that point, but he wasn't ready quite yet.
In January 2020, he got a devastating reality check when he was diagnosed with a rare form of pancreatic cancer. It had spread to his liver, but it was a type that tends to be more manageable than the more common variety that invariably carries a grim prognosis. He went through chemotherapy and traveled regularly first to Houston, and now Denver, for treatments.
In 2023, he was diagnosed with advanced prostate cancer and had surgery to remove the gland.
Advertisement
Gilmore tolerated his treatments for both cancers better than expected. He missed only three games and rarely a practice.
All he went through, though, made him realize the pull to dedicate more of himself to his family was getting stronger. He wanted to reconnect with his wife and children and build strong bonds with his four grandchildren.
'I feel awesome,' he said. 'I have what I have. I've got the best doctor in the world. His goal is to manage all this stuff. At some point I'm going to have a life-changing surgery where they can get everything in my liver completely stabilized, and they have confidence that's going to last me a long time. I'll hopefully rid myself of some of this.'
Doctors initially told him the worst-case scenario was that he would live two more years; the 'dream' was to make it 10. Now the outlook is better.
Advertisement
'How things have gone, God willing, they can keep me with a good quality of life and hopefully something else will get me before that,' he said.
Gilmore acknowledges the game isn't the same now with name, image and likeness opportunities and, soon, direct payments to athletes becoming larger factors in putting together and keeping together a team.
'The NIL, the analytics, the portal,' he said. "I honestly think this is a younger guy's game, to be honest with you. Guys like me, we coached the game with our eyes. We didn't coach with analytics and this and that. We recruited with our eyes. We didn't recruit over the internet to a large degree. We went out and saw guys play, evaluated people.
'That's not the reason I got out of it, ultimately. I've got two stage-4 cancers is my body. I feel healthy as I can, and I'm lucky and blessed I have the health I do. All that played out in my mind. You're 67 years old, you got four grandkids. What are the choices you want to make here?'
Advertisement
Right now, his choice is to be with his family while he enjoys watching the team he helped build chase a second national championship and see all that is possible for the 10,000-student school in the Myrtle Beach area that had no national athletic identity before 2016.
'Just because of the size of school, people want to label you Cinderella,' Gilmore said. 'We were a Cinderella in '16, absolutely, no doubt about it. We left Omaha still explaining what our mascot was, and Kevin's still doing it today.'
Indeed, Schnall gave a stern pronunciation lesson to the media after his team beat Oregon State on Sunday, opening his news conference: 'Everybody say it with me: SHON-tuh-cleers! SHON-tuh-cleers! Not SHAN-tuh-cleers! SHON-tuh-cleers!'
However you say it, the Chanticleers are well-suited to the cavernous CWS ballpark. They don't hit many home runs, but they get on base, get timely hits, have strong pitching and play outstanding defense.
They're also hot.
'I've never seen anything like this,' Gilmore said. 'Crazy.'
___
AP college sports: https://apnews.com/hub/college-sports

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Austin Eckroat's career-low round enough to match Scheffler after first day at Travelers Championship
Austin Eckroat's career-low round enough to match Scheffler after first day at Travelers Championship

Yahoo

time21 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Austin Eckroat's career-low round enough to match Scheffler after first day at Travelers Championship

CROMWELL – From above the 18th green, Austin Eckroat was out of sight. All that was visible from behind the scoreboard off to the left side of the fairway was the reflection of the sun on his club face. It was tight, but Eckroat was able to see the pin and managed to lift his second shot 128 yards onto the left side of the green. The putt – 17 feet, five inches – was no problem for the 26-year-old who also sunk a 35-footer for eagle on No. 13 and went into the clubhouse at 8-under-par 62, topping the leaderboard he was hidden behind. Advertisement 'I was on that side-hill lie, it was kind of thick, I was afraid if the heel caught, I could hit (the scoreboard) and that was really all my question was. But to get relief it had to be more in my way,' he said. 'Luckily it came out great, and I was able to make birdie.' It completed the best round of Eckroat's professional career, which began on a sponsor's exemption at the Travelers in 2021. Yet, it wasn't enough to hold onto the lead by the end of Thursday's opening round. Scottie Scheffler, the No. 1 golfer in the world defending his 2024 Travelers crown, matched Eckroat's eagle on No. 13 to tie the lead and jumped into the top spot with a birdie on No. 15 about three and a half hours after Eckroat finished. Advertisement Scheffler hit from the rough, across the water and over the green on No. 17. His fourth shot on the par-4, a 16-foot putt, missed right of the hole and left him with bogey to drop back into a tie with Eckroat at 8-under. Still, it was Scheffler's lowest-scoring round in five career appearances in Cromwell. 'I actually got a pretty good lie in the rough,' Scheffler said. 'I got a lucky break and wasn't able to take advantage of it, but overall, I hit a lot of good shots, gave myself a lot of looks. I got off to a good start, and like I said, it was challenging out there late in the day. The wind was blowing pretty hard, and I was able to hit some really nice shots to get some good looks.' The temperature got up to around 87 degrees by the time Eckroat's round finished and Scheffler's started. The wind picked up with the passing storm later in the day as the bogey count rose to 150, 10 more than the first round last year. Despite the threat of thunderstorms throughout the afternoon, none reached the River Highlands. There were 259 total birdies recorded, six less than the opening round in 2024, three eagles and 850 pars. Advertisement Eckroat, responsible for six birdies, came into the media tent smiling through sweat. Although he has two career wins, he has finished outside the top 25 in 13 consecutive events. 'It's funny, a lot of Wednesdays I've felt really good going into the tournament and then Thursday comes around and it hasn't been there,' he said. 'I don't know if it's just the stress of playing in a PGA Tour event, but this one, it was nice to feel good on Wednesday and then actually take it into Thursday.' Eckroat hit 10 of 14 fairways and 15 of 18 greens in regulation on Thursday, crediting the success to a minor grip adjustment. 'It was just an easy fix, which is always annoying. You want it to be – in your mind it seems like it's something crazy, but it really isn't, it's just something minor, which is nice, obviously. But it's frustrating because it was just one piece away the whole time,' he said. 'I just went a little weaker with my right hand and I was able to release the club properly at that point. I wouldn't say it was weak, it had just gotten really strong, and I hadn't paid attention to that. I was focusing on the other aspects of the golf swing, so just a little bit weaker, more on top of the club.' Advertisement World No. 2 Rory McIlroy, 2023 Travelers champion Keegan Bradley and 2023 U.S. Open winner Wyndham Clark will each enter Friday's second round two strokes back at 6-under. Cameron Young sits alone in sixth place after recovering from a double bogey on the first hole to shoot 5-under 65. He is followed by a group of eight players at 4-under: Davis Riley, Nick Taylor, Jason Day, Adam Hadwin, Max Greyserman, Tommy Fleetwood, Viktor Hovland and Brian Harman. Tom Kim, who tied Scheffler after 72 holes in last year's tournament to force a playoff, received a sponsor's exemption to play this year and shot 3-under 67. The Travelers is the eighth and final PGA Tour Signature Event of the season. It has a $20 million purse with $3.6 million and 700 FedExCup points to the winner. Scheffler holds a lead of more than 1,000 points in the FedExCup standings ahead of McIlroy; Eckroat is 34th. Advertisement Scheffler will tee-off with U.S. Open winner JJ Spaun, who shot 3-over 73, at 10:35 a.m. on Friday. Eckroat will hit off the first tee at 12:30 p.m. with Byeong Hun An. 'I felt confident, which it was nice to feel that this season,' Eckroat said. 'It's been a while.'

Kings Emerge as Best Fit For Cavaliers' Breakout Guard
Kings Emerge as Best Fit For Cavaliers' Breakout Guard

Yahoo

time21 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Kings Emerge as Best Fit For Cavaliers' Breakout Guard

Kings Emerge as Best Fit For Cavaliers' Breakout Guard originally appeared on Athlon Sports. The Sacramento Kings are at a relative crossroads. They're not quite good enough to compete for a top seed in the Western Conference, but also not quite bad enough to bottom all the way out and try for a considerable draft pick. Advertisement The Kings shocked many when they traded the face of the franchise, De'Aaron Fox, after making puzzling decisions not to draft Luka Doncic and instead select Marvin Bagley. In return, they received Zach LaVine, reuniting him with DeMar DeRozan. Fans of the Chicago Bulls could tell you the limitations of a team led by those two. Dec 28, 2024; Los Angeles, California, USA; Sacramento Kings forward DeMar DeRozan (10) moves the ball against Los Angeles Lakers guard Austin Reaves (15) during the first half at Arena. © Gary A. Vasquez-Imagn Images Kings emerge as best fit for Cavaliers' breakout guard As a result the Kings have an opening at the guard position. While Malik Monk is still under contract, he's not a traditional point guard. In a recent piece by ESPN, Bobby Marks highlights teams that could be in the mix for Ty Jerome who made a substantial leap forward with the Cleveland Cavaliers. Advertisement Marks highlights the Kings among others that would make a good fit for Jerome for a four-year, $40 million deal. "Atlanta, Brooklyn, Charlotte and Sacramento all have a void at starting or backup point guard and have the full $14.1 million non-tax midlevel exception available to offer," wrote Marks. "A starting salary of $10 million is comparable to the extension T.J. McConnell signed with the Pacers last season." © David Richard-Imagn Images Jerome's ability to facilitate was highlighted down the stretch of the season and could be a great fit with players like DeRozan, LaVine and Domantas Sabonis, while they bring along second-year guard Devin Carter, who the Kings selected at No. 13 overall in the 2024 NBA Draft. Advertisement The Kings don't have a first-round pick in next week's NBA Draft, so a signing like this could be just what they need to improve the roster and improve upon their loss in the NBA Play-In Tournament. This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 19, 2025, where it first appeared.

Monique Akoa Makani scores 21 points and Mercury hand Liberty their 1st home loss, 89-81
Monique Akoa Makani scores 21 points and Mercury hand Liberty their 1st home loss, 89-81

Associated Press

time30 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Monique Akoa Makani scores 21 points and Mercury hand Liberty their 1st home loss, 89-81

NEW YORK (AP) — Rookie Monique Akoa Makani scored a season-high 21 points, Alyssa Thomas added 18 points, 15 rebounds and seven assists, and the Phoenix Mercury beat the New York Liberty 89-81 on Thursday night for their fourth straight win. Sami Whitcomb scored eight of her 16 points in the fourth quarter, Satou Sabally had 14 points and nine rebounds, and Kitija Laksa added 13 points for Phoenix (10-4). Breanna Stewart scored a season-high 35 points for the defending champion Liberty (10-2), who lost at home for the first time this season. Sabrina Ionescu added 16 points on 3-of-16 shooting, including 1 of 10 from 3-point range. Whitcomb's 3-pointer capped a 16-6 run that gave Phoenix an 84-74 lead with 3:10 to play. She went 4 of 9 from 3-point range and Laksa hit 3 of 6. The rest of the Mercury went 0 for 16 from behind the arc. New York's Jonquel Jones left early in the second quarter with a right ankle injury and did not return. The Mercury's Lexi Held departed midway through the third quarter after a collision with Stewart while diving for a loose ball near midcourt. Kahleah Copper (injury management) did not play for the Mercury, who beat Connecticut 83-75 on Wednesday. The 2021 WNBA Finals MVP with Chicago, Copper had surgery on her right knee in May and made her season debut against Las Vegas on Sunday. Up next The Liberty kick off a four-game trip Sunday at Seattle. Phoenix plays the last four consecutive away games Saturday at Chicago. ___ AP WNBA:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store