Category: Sports

  • Crowned

    WINNSBORO – Senior Grier Hensley, left, was crowned Miss RWA in Richard Winn Academy’s pageant last Thursday. Hensley was also awarded Best All Around. Also crowned were Lacey Peake, center, Jr. Miss RWA and Jr. Miss Congeniality, and Haley Autry, right, Little Miss RWA

  • Miles unveils new car during RWA ceremony

    Danika Miles shows her new dragster to students in the Richard Winn gym. | Barbara Ball

    WINNSBORO – Ridgeway drag racing rising star Danika Miles unveiled her new dragster Thursday at a special event at Richard Winn Academy, where she’s a sixth grader.

    Miles’ new ride was not only a sign of the preteen’s intentions to seek a championship this year, but showcased her accomplishment of having two national sponsors to back her efforts this racing year.

    “It was really awesome and exciting,” Danika stated of the unveiling.

    “It was really great to see that my friends supported me so much.”

    Miles has had a busy 2019 already. Earlier this month, she and her father Gabe Miles traveled to New York City to sign contracts and make official two national sponsors – school cafeteria food supplier ES Foods and ice cream maker A La Mode

    E S Foods spokesperson Amy Josephson said the company chose the 11-year-old as the face of E S Foods because she embodies everything the company was looking for in a school-aged role model.

    “In many ways, Danika is your average school kid, yet also is a role model leading an extraordinary life,” Josephson stated. “We thought this was a fun, unique way to promote E S Foods while honoring a successful middle school student.”

    Danika’s image will now be on all E S Foods posters and material, and in the coming weeks she will be filming her very first commercial slated for release on social media platforms.

    The title sponsorship will not only make Danika a more prevalent name across the world as one f the youngest rising stars in the drag racing sport, but will help her team accomplish goals that were once out of reach for financial reasons.

    In addition to Danika’s new dragster, the sponsorships have enabled the team to purchase a new trailer and provided financial assistance for travel, equipment and repair costs.

    Gabe Miles said the freedom of those financial restraints will free Danika from holding back in future races.

    “Before, this was all out of our own pocket. So, any repairs or replacements we paid for, and she would worry about taking risks that might cause extra expenses. Now, that worry has been removed and she only has to focus on racing,” Miles stated.

    Danika’s first race of the 2019 season will be March 2 in Darlington, and she said she already has her eye on the big prize.

    “I want the championship. That’s what my goal is for this year,” she stated.

    Despite the big changes occurring in her life, Danika remains the quiet, unassuming girl her family has always known, Miles said. She’s on the RWA basketball team which placed second in the region standings, and she is preparing to compete in her school’s beauty pageant.

    “She’s still being a girl, still being a kid. She might be a force to be reckoned with on the track, but in her personal life she’s the same sweet, shy little girl who gets nervous when she has to talk on the phone,” Miles stated.

    Miles’ racing journey can be followed on social media on the Facebook page Miles Custom Racing.

  • Jackson nominated for McDonald’s All Star Game

    Jackson

    BLYTHEWOOD – Blythewood’s Tre Jackson had a superb 33-point showing at the MLK bash this weekend, but that is not the only feather the Iowa State-commit can add to his cap. Jackson was selected as one of 400 nominees for the 2019 McDonald’s All-American Game in Atlanta at the State Farm arena on Mar. 27.

    Twenty-four of the top players will be selected by the Games’ Selection Committee to play in the event. The McDonald’s All-American Game has been a running tradition since its inception in 1977 and has showcased a slew of some basketball’s most decorated superstars.

    Michael Jordan, Lebron James, Magic Johnson, Kobe Bryant and numerous other all-stars and hall of famers have participated in the showcase. Jackson was among six players to be selected from the state of South Carolina. Jackson has average 23 points per game this year to go with almost seven rebounds, four steals and nearly four assists per contest.

  • Blythewood’s Clemson champions

    Greg Huegel leaps in the arms of a teammate after Monday’s championship game. | Ben Margot/AP

    SANTA CLARA, CA – The college football world sat back in amazement on Monday night as the Clemson Tigers picked apart the mighty Alabama Crimson Tide. The Tigers brought home their second National Title in the last three seasons with a 44-16 win, and there were two former Bengals present for the program-defining victory.

    Huegel

    Huegel joined the Tigers as a walk-on and is still the only player in Clemson history to earn All-American honors while not on scholarship. He was voted Second-Team All-American by Sports Illustrated in 2015, first-team freshman All-American by USA today and nailed 27 of his 32 field goal attempts in 2015.

    He also set a school single-season record for points scored in a season with 138. He was a Lou Groza award semi-finalist during the 2016 national championship run and broke another Clemson single season record with 71 successful extra point conversions.

    Greg Huegel (92) | Richard Shiro/AP

    A torn ACL robbed Huegel of the 2017 season, but he made a furious return in 2018. He went 68-68 on regular season extra point attempts and earned Honorable Mention on the All-ACC team. Huegel became only the sixth player in school history to score at least 300 points and broke Chandler Catanazaro’s record of 203 successful point-after attempts.

    Huegel held the record for most field goals made in a game in Blythewood history with three until Miles Heitman tied his record in October.

    Williams

    Graduate linebacker Jalen Williams and senior place kicker Greg Huegel added their second championship rings to their collections with the rout. Williams and Huegel’s places were forever etched in history after the blowout win. The 2018-2019 Tigers were the first Football Bowl Sub-Division team to go 15-0 since the Penn Quakers in 1897.

    Williams recorded 186 tackles in his Bengals career, 18 tackles for a loss, an interception, six forced fumbles and six fumble recoveries. He was the 29th ranked player in South Carolina by ESPN when he came out of Blythewood and was named MVP of North-South All-Star game.

    Jalen Williams (30) | Kim Klement-USA TODAY Sports

    Williams recorded his first sack against Miami in 2015 and went on to finish the 2015 season  with 15 tackles, 2.5 tackles for loss and two sacks. He earned his Psychology degree in 2017, and finished his Clemson career with 77 total tackles, 6.5 tackles for loss and three sacks. He also picked off two passes, including one this season against No. 16 NC State.

  • RW drag racer snags national sponsor

    Danika Miles will start the Spring racing season in her new race car, to be painted by her father. | Barbara Ball

    RIDGEWAY – Ridgeway preteen drag racer Danika Miles has proven to be a rising star in her sport as she prepares to sign with a national sponsor next month.

    Miles, 11, will fly to New York in February to sign a contract with ES Foods, a school foods supplier, to be the company’s spokesperson and face of the company’s future marketing campaign. While ES Foods has sponsored other student athletes around the country, this is the first time it has sponsored a professional student

    Danika Miles takes her last ride in her first dragster, which her father Gabe Miles built, painted and maintained. He is now upfitting and painting her new race car, made possible through the sponsorship of ES Foods. | Photo provided by Danika Miles Racing Team

    athlete.

    During her time in New York, Miles will also appear at a special announcement event and sign autographs.

    “It’s amazing. I’ve never done anything like this and I’m just really excited about it; I can’t wait,” Miles stated.

    Her father, Gabe Miles, who owns a paint and body shop in Ridgeway and has some racing experience, himself, takes care of his daughter’s car’s mechanical maintenance, body work and even airbrushes the designs on the finished product.

    Miles said the title sponsorship has allowed the team to purchase a new, more powerful car, new trailer and the company will cover travel, equipment and other expenses.

    Gabe Miles said it will also help his daughter test her limits on the drag racing circuit and boost her confidence.

    “She’s going from a car that ran an eighth of a mile in 10 seconds at 64 miles per hour to a car that has an estimated time of 7.90 seconds at 90 miles per hour,” Gabe Miles stated. “She loves the faster car.”

    Founded in 1998, ES Foods is a major supplier of food products to school systems across the country.  After signing the contract, Miles will display the company’s logo on her new dragster for the 2019 year and have the company’s support as she strikes out in her second full year of racing.

    “It is a big deal, and it means a lot to me to know that I have a big company’s support,” Miles stated. “It makes me even more excited to get behind the wheel and see what I can do.”

    “Before, this was out of our own pocket. So, any parts or repairs were made out of what we could afford. Now, she doesn’t have to be afraid to try something in case it doesn’t work and then we have to make repairs. This gives her the freedom to really see what she’s capable of,” Miles stated.

    Searching for a major sponsor was a mission that Miles’ father set out on last year to help support his daughter’s drive to succeed on the track, but only having one year of racing under her belt put her at a slight disadvantage, he stated.

    “A lot of folks were a little hesitant to sponsor her because she was so new to racing. Some were afraid that maybe it was just a hobby or that she wasn’t serious, but I think now they can see that she is very serious about this,” he stated.

    Miles began racing in 2018 after she accompanied her father to a Charlotte track in late 2017 for his own race. Having just expected to be there to cheer on her father, it wasn’t until she saw younger drivers climbing into their own cars that she realized she could join in on the fun as well.

    “It was just this moment of ‘wow’ for me. I didn’t even know that was a thing, that kids could do this, and as soon as I realized it, I knew that was something I wanted to do,” she told The Voice in a November interview.

    Gabe Miles said that was a defining moment for his daughter. Having always been a shy, quiet child who avoided crowds and attention, climbing into a dragster gave her a boost of confidence he never could have expected.

    “She has grown so much, on the track. She used to be afraid to ride an elevator and next month she’ll be getting on a plane for the first time to go to New York – and she’s thrilled about it. As a parent, you never want to push them to do anything, but this is something she loves and wants to do,” he stated.

    Miles’ 2019 racing season will begin this spring, and while she has the national sponsorship spot filled, her father said there are several smaller, local sponsors that have come on board including Capitol City Cycles, Blown Away Hair Salon, Danny’s Automotive and Brown’s Oil & Lube.

    “She’ll have those local business logos on her car and suit, too. It’s a great way to represent where she comes from.”

  • Fairfield buck may be new state record

    A four-year quest ended when Sims bagged Waldo on Nov. 30. | William Ladd

    FAIRFIELD COUNTY – The four-year saga of James Sims and Waldo finally ended Nov. 30 when Sims finally bagged the Fairfield County buck with the massive 13-point rack that could become South Carolina’s new state record.

    Four years of frustration finally ended with Friday’s hunt, four years when the buck seemingly taunted Sims, who recently moved to Blythewood from Fairfield County where he grew up. The buck was a regular on Sims’ trail cameras – at night. He flirted from time to time with Sims appearing in front of his stand when there was not enough light to see through the rifle scope.

    And then, to add insult to injury, the monster buck would appear on camera in broad daylight – when Sims was not there. He was so elusive that Sims tagged the buck Waldo as in “Where’s Waldo?” He even created a Snapchat account with that name for him and his hunting buddies to keep up with sightings of the buck.

    Sims first saw the buck four years ago this past August when he was scouting a new hunt lease in Fairfield County. A check of the area on Google Maps showed a thicket with an opening and he walked in there to check it out.

    “I jumped two deer, a big 8-point and a big 10-point. So I put some trail cameras in there and I’d always have pictures of the big 8-point. The big 10-point would be in the background. He was not camera friendly but I knew he was a good young deer.”

    For a good part of the fall of 2016 the big buck was a no-show, then he suddenly appeared right in front of one of the trail cameras in mid-November.

    “He was an absolute monster,” Sims said. But he showed at the wrong time for Sims, who had not been hunting a lot because of an infected foot from stepping on a nail, plus his son was born on Dec. 2. But he hunted the buck as hard as he could until the season’s end and never saw the deer.

    With his cameras out Sims knew the buck was there when deer season began in 2017. On opening day of rifle season the buck teased Sims with an appearance.

    “I was in a spot where I could see for about 300 yards and this deer stepped out about 225 yards from me,” he said. “I put the gun on him and looked through the scope. The deer turned and looked my way and I could see a huge mass of rack. But he was walking steadily through some tall vegetation and I could not get a clear shot.”

    He hunted the buck every chance, but by Thanksgiving he had not seen him again so he and his brother-in-law went duck hunting that morning.

    “We only killed two ducks, not a great hunt. When I checked my cameras the buck was right there after daylight. That broke my heart,” Sims said.

    After that he took two weeks off from work and hunted the buck every morning and afternoon. He did not see the buck in daylight, but it appeared on his trail cameras almost every night in December.

    “On Dec. 20, I saw a small 8-point come out. Then a few more small bucks came out along with some small does,” Sims said. As the evening grew darker, the deer turned into just silhouettes and he could no longer see them through his scope.

    “I saw a big-bodied deer come out at about 100 yards and run the other deer off the corn pile. I could not shoot because all I could see was the silhouette. So I sat there for probably half an hour to 45 minutes so I would not scare him as I walked out. I changed memory cards in my camera on the way out and when I got home and viewed the card I could see it was him.”

    “I kept telling my Dad, my brother-in-law and my buddies at work that the buck was torturing me. I never saw him again the rest of the year except on camera.”

    By late June this year Sims had his cameras in place. The buck appeared on camera two nights in a row, then disappeared. But those two nights revealed how massive his rack had grown, how much mass had been added, plus the addition of a split brow tine.

    As the season wore on Sims began to worry. Shooting on adjacent properties made him wonder if someone else might take the huge buck. But in the previous years the buck had not shown up until mid-October and this year was no exception. On Oct. 22 he appeared again and added to Sims’ frustration in the process.

    “I had to go into work earlier than normal that morning so I checked the cameras that afternoon after work and he was there at 7:57 a.m. I was happy to see him, but I was disappointed that he was there in daylight when I had to be at work.”

    Sims’ resolve grew and he began hunting every morning from 6 to 8 a.m. and every evening the last hour and a half of daylight. But the only time he saw Waldo was when he appeared at night on camera.

    Last Friday morning was the end of a long, hard week at work and rain was in the forecast. Sims said he did not feel much like hunting, but dragged himself out of bed and headed to the deer stand where he fought sleep by playing on Facebook and Instagram.

    By 6:30 the sky was beginning to lighten up and Sims laid the phone down and got his hat and face mask on.

    “I could see the silhouette of a deer feeding, so I put the scope on it and kept watching. As it grew a little lighter, he turned and faced me, and I could see it was him,” Sims said. For the next several minutes he prayed silently, “Please don’t let me miss.”

    Then the buck turned sideways, giving him a clear shot and he squeezed the trigger. The buck fell instantly and Sims shot a second time to make sure it did not suffer or get up and run off. Then he climbed down from the stand and ran the 120 yards to where the deer lay.

    With his eyes filling with tears, he dropped to his knees, grabbed the antlers and prayed to God for “letting me even hunt that deer, for letting me be a part of that deer’s life.”

    Then Sims changed the group name on Snapchat from “Where’s Waldo?” to “Found Waldo.”

    With a 19-inch inside spread the rack features a 28 1/8-inch right main beam and a 27 3/8-inch left main beam with a 5 ¼-inch circumference at the base for both. The shortest antler is the left G5 at 4 3/8 inches, but all the other antlers are over 6 ½ inches and the G3 and G4s are all over 8 inches.

    “Based on the pictures, it is a very impressive buck and I feel certain it will likely be in the top 15 all-time,” said Charles Ruth, the SC DNR Deer Project Supervisor and Big Game Coordinator who maintains deer antler records. “It is truly a giant.”

    It definitely is the largest rack ever for Fairfield County, according to the records, and if the overall green score of 188 inches holds up when it is officially scored it would become the No. 1 typical buck for South Carolina. The current record is 176 0/8, taken by William C. Wyatt in Pickens County in 1994.

    A rack has to dry for 60 days before it can be officially scored, so it will be February before the verdict is in on Sims’ buck. But one thing is for sure – Waldo has finally been found.

  • Enter The Voice’s U Pick ‘Em Contest

    BLYTHEWOOD – Need some extra cash to pay off some of those Christmas bills that are adding up right now? Then you might want to consider entering The Voice’s annual College Bowl U Pick ‘Em contest.

    Two $100 dollar bills will be presented to the winner of the contest after the Jan. 7 College National Championship game. The contest entry form will be published again in the Dec. 20 issue of The Voice or you can fill out our form online here. Only one entry per person, no photo copies of entry forms, and all entries must be postmarked by midnight Dec. 28 (and don’t forget the tie-breaker!). Online form will also close at midnight Dec. 28.

  • Smith to play in All-American Bowl

    Cam Smith (1)

    SAN ANTONIO, TX – Westwood standout defensive back and University of South Carolina commit Cam Smith now has another accolade he can pin to his already impressive resume. Smith, the third-ranked prospect in the state according to Rivals.com, has been selected to participate in the All-American Bowl in San Antonio, Texas.

    The All-American Bowl will be televised on NBC on Jan. 5, and its 4.4 million viewer average makes it the most-watch high school sporting event in the nation. Prominent names such as Andrew Luck, Odell Beckham Jr., Tim Tebow and Jalen Ramsey have participated in the All-American Bowl in past years.

    Smith received a bevy of offers from power-five schools, but officially made his decision to join the Gamecocks after Westwood’s season opener against Lugoff-Elgin. Rivals also has Smith listed as the 37th best cornerback in the class of 2019, and is listed as a four-star prospect.

  • Brandon Wilds called up by Jaguars

    Brandon Wilds (22) showing a glimpse of what made him a star at Blythewood and the University of South Carolina.

    JACKSONVILLE, FL – Leonard Fournette was a stellar collegiate football talent at LSU and was the fourth overall pick by the Jacksonville Jaguars in the 2017 draft. However, Fournette went down with a strained hamstring in the opening week of the 2018 season, and this opened the door for Blythewood native Brandon Wilds to be activated from the Jaguars’ practice squad.

    Wilds, a former PrepStar All-American and North-South All-star, was a running back for the Bengals from 2007 until he graduated in 2011, and he had superb career at Blythewood. As a junior, he became the first player in school history to accumulate 1,000 rushing yards in a single season. He finished his junior year with 1,551 yards and 20 touchdowns.

    He followed his stellar junior season with another strong season the following year. Wilds tallied 881 yards and eight touchdowns in his senior year. After his Blythewood career was said and done, he had racked up 500 carries for 2,700 yards and 29 touchdowns.

    He was ranked a three-star prospect and the 29th best player in the state by Rivals.com coming out of high school. Scout.com slated Wilds as the 115th running back in the country and also named him as a three-star prospect.

    East Carolina, Illinois, Arkansas and Maryland were among the major universities that showed interest in recruiting the tough running back. Eventually, Wilds elected to take his talents to the University of South Carolina and play for Steve Spurrier.

    Wilds was listed as the fifth running back on the Gamecocks’ roster heading into his freshman season in 2011, but team injuries allowed him to make an immediate impact. He started five games as a true-freshman and ran for over 147 yards against the University of Tennessee, 120 against Florida and hung 109 on the Citadel. His 486 rushing yards in his freshman season were good enough for the third highest total on the team.

    A high-ankle sprain led to Wilds being red-shirted in 2012. He kicked off the 2013 season by earning the Joe Morrison Offensive Player of the Spring at the Garnet and Black game. Despite the positive spring performance in sophomore year, he had to fight through injuries most of the 2013 season and only started two games.

    Wilds had a much better season in 2014, finishing second on the team in total rushing with 570 yards on 106 carries with four starts in 12 appearances. He had a 24-yard, game-winning touchdown that season to knock off the number-six ranked Georgia Bulldogs, and, in a game against Auburn, he became the 42nd Gamecock to ever amass 1,000 total rushing. His 143-yard performance against Tennessee that year turned out to be a career-high, and he also had a career-long 70-yard touchdown in the same game.

    The 2015 season was a big one for Wilds. He led the team in rushing in his senior year with 567 yards in nine starts and was invited to play in the National Football League’s Player’s Association Collegiate Bowl. He finished his Gamecock career as the 20th leading rusher in school history with 1,844 yards and piled up seven 100-yard rushing games.

    Wilds was not selected in the 2016 NFL Draft, but quickly signed a free agent deal with the Atlanta Falcons. He had 26 yards on 10 carries and one touchdown in his NFL preseason debut against the Washington Redskins. The following week against the Cleveland Browns, he had 49 yards on eight carries and a 32-yard touchdown. Shortly after the Browns game, Wilds was waived by the Falcons.

    After his release from the Falcons, he signed to the New York Jets practice squad and got his first shot of regular season action in late 2016. His first regular season game was against the San Francisco 49ers in December, and he had four yards on two carries. He played again a couple of weeks later in a loss to the New England Patriots, but was waived the following offseason.

    Wilds had a short stint with the Cleveland Browns after his Jets’ tenure, but injuries prevented him from seeing any playing time. He signed to Jaguars practice squad on Oct. 9, 2017. He will wear no. 34 for Jacksonville.

  • Smith is officially a Texan

    Smith joins five other native South Carolinians on the Houston Texans roster. | Yi-Chin Lee / Houston Chronicle

    HOUSTON, TX – Vyncint Smith, a former Westwood High School and Limestone College offensive threat, signed with Houston Texans in April as an undrafted free agent, and impressed team officials enough to earn his spot on the official 53-man roster.

     

    The German-born Smith had quite the preseason. He has racked up four reception for 94 yards and his 41-yard touchdown against the 49ers was a game-winner. He ended his Limestone career with 153 receptions, 2,371 yards and 11 touchdowns.