College Sports

Shane Beamer featured on Jimmy Fallon TV show, and not for bowl game mayo bath

Shane Beamer’s first bowl game as a head coach will be memorable for plenty of reasons.

The first is, of course, because South Carolina won the 2021 Duke’s Mayo Bowl, beating North Carolina 38-21 on Dec. 30.

The second reason — because of how much publicity the first-year coach has received since that victory. The win included a celebratory “mayonnaise bath” that has subsequently landed the moment on multiple national sports and talks shows.

A Twitter exchange between Beamer and national college football writer Dennis Dodd also went viral last week in discussing the bowl game and the hype around the mayo bath.

A photo of Beamer then made late-night television on NBC’s “The Late Night Show with Jimmy Fallon” this week for a reason other than mayonnaise.

Fallon showed a picture of Beamer celebrating the bowl win by holding up live mascot Sir Big Spur following the game. Above was a caption that read “South Carolina coach celebrates victory.”

“But, the headline could’ve been, ‘New “Lion King’ Reboot Bombs at Box Office,’ ” Fallon joked.

Beamer has yet to comment on his late-night appearance, though he did note Thursday of being one week removed from the bowl game.

“Hard to believe this was 1 week ago today,” he said Thursday on Twitter. “Thanks again to all the amazing #Gamecocks that were in Charlotte with us.”

The season finale marked the first time the Gamecocks have made a bowl since 2018 and the first time they’ve won a bowl since 2017. Beamer capped off his program debut with a 7-6 record, also the program’s first winning record in three years.

This story was originally published January 6, 2022 at 12:14 PM with the headline "Shane Beamer featured on Jimmy Fallon TV show, and not for bowl game mayo bath."

Alexis Cubit
The State
Alexis Cubit serves primarily as the Clemson sports reporter for The (Columbia) State newspaper. Before moving to South Carolina in 2021, she covered high school sports for six years and received a first-place award in the sports feature category from the Texas Associated Press Managing Editors in 2019. The California native earned a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Baylor University in 2014.
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