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South Carolina coach Shane Beamer has to be restrained after Illinois' Bret Bielema taunts USC sideline with substitution gesture

'Beamer could hardly believe it at first. He taunted Shane Beamer and Beamer had enough and snapped.'

Illinois head coach Bret Bielema, right, and South Carolina head coach Shane Beamer chat on the field before the Citrus Bowl NCAA college football game, Tuesday, Dec. 31, 2024, in Orlando, Fla. (AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack)
South Carolina coach Shane Beamer and Illinois coach Bret Bielema in happier times before the kickoff of the Citrus Bowl. (AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack)

South Carolina coach Shane Beamer was incensed during an injury timeout late in the third quarter of his team's loss in the Citrus Bowl to Illinois.

As Illinois’ Jaheim Clarke was being attended to by trainers near the South Carolina sideline, Illinois coach Bret Bielema walked over to where Clarke was. Bielema then turned to the South Carolina team and staff and made a substitution signal with his arms as there had been some gamesmanship regarding subs earlier in the game.

That appeared to infuriate Beamer, who had to be restrained and was screaming at the officials.

ESPN sideline reporter Quint Kessenich was right behind Beamer as the sequence of events unfolded.

“Bret Bielema walked across the field to take care of his injured player and taunted Shane Beamer with the substitution posture the refs do, the matching signal, he did it repeatedly,” Kessenich said on the broadcast. “Beamer could hardly believe it at first. He taunted Shane Beamer, and Beamer had enough and snapped. Shane just turned to me and said, ‘You saw what he did.’ I did see it. I did see it. He taunted the opposing coach.”

After Beamer went berserk, ESPN's cameras captured Bielema smirking when he was back on his sideline. A common defensive tactic is to take as long as possible when subbing to match offensive personnel to slow an offense down and potentially force a delay of game penalty.

There was little animosity between the coaches after the game, however. After Illinois' 21-17 win, the two coaches shook hands without incident in the middle of the field. Bielema was directly asked by Kessenich about the incident after the game, but did not answer the question and instead talked about the victory.

Beamer addressed the kerfuffle in his postgame news conference.

“In all my years of coaching I’ve never seen that happen,” Beamer said after the game. “An opposing coach come over while his player’s hurt and basically have something to say to the opposing head coach.”

Meanwhile, Bielema explained his side of the story and what prompted the gesture.

"I love Shane. he's a good person. I know somebody said that he thought I did [the gesture] to him. I did it to the whole damn sideline," Bielema said. "I wasn't going personally at him. I did it to their whole sideline. I just wanted them to understand that I know what just happened."

The win means Illinois finishes the season at 10-3 for the program's first 10-win season since 2001. South Carolina finishes the season at 9-4.