Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Teams’ fates tied to their front offices

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Let’s compare the decisions of L.A. teams’ general managers.

Les Snead gets the Rams perennial Pro Bowl player, great leader and future Hall of Famer Bobby Wagner for $10 million a year. A lot of money, sure, but almost a lock to elevate the defense and be a fan favorite for years. The Lakers GM, LeBron James, gets thinskinne­d, underperfo­rming Russell Westbrook for the bargain rate of $40 million a year.

Maybe we let the front office do its job and ask players just to play.

Jeff Heister

Chatsworth

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The Rams extend the contracts of Sean McVay and Les Snead. Hooray! Great move. But it is Aaron Donald who drives the Rams, the heart and soul of the team. In years past, his phenomenal play set the example. Von Miller taught him to be a vocal leader as well. Donald is clearly the Lawrence Taylor of this generation and should be the highest paid defensive player in the league. If money is tight, there is a precedent. Give him 5% partial ownership a la Magic Johnson and the Lakers. Donald deserves every penny the Rams can muster.

Cy Bolton

Rialto

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Dodgers could have signed Kenley Jansen for the same money they’ll pay Craig Kimbrel and wouldn’t have lost AJ Pollock.

Jack Wishard Los Angeles

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It was truly great to see the Dodgers renew Andrew Toles’ contract for the 2022 season. I stand a better chance of actually playing for the Dodgers this season than does Toles. His $700,000 salary is a “rounding error” to the team, but along with it comes a healthcare plan second to none, which will allow Toles to continue getting the first-class medical help he needs for his mental health issues. Kudos to ownership for a move that is meaningles­s on the field but a life-saving one off of it. Erik Schuman Fountain Valley

Lowdown on NBA

The Lakers have officially become the NBA’s version of the Washington Generals. Maybe LeBron can jump ship, again, to the Globetrott­ers. Move over Meadowlark, there’s a new Barney Fife in town.

Brent Montgomery Long Beach

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In the early 1970s, Washington football coach George Allen led the “Over the Hill Gang” to the NFL playoffs. Now, if Lakers coach Frank Vogel could just channel his inner George Allen, the Lakers might make the playoffs as well.

Chris Sorce Fountain Valley

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The problem with the L.A. Lakers is this: They aren’t Lakers. They are guns for hire. These current Lakers have made no meaningful connection­s to the city or to the purple and gold — they just wear the uniform and collect monies for services rendered. The last of the homegrown Lakers — Alex Caruso and Kyle Kuzma — are playing elsewhere, making LeBron — currently in his third season with the club — the longest serving Laker. Where we once had a young, royal guard getting ready to take on enemies in our house, we are now left with mercenarie­s who care nothing for the brand that we fans are loyal to.

Stephen Scheff Woodland Hills

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So Clippers coach Tyronn Lue is upset that 76ers GM Daryl Morey had the audacity to criticize communist China, a country involved in genocide and slave labor, because his comments “cost the NBA a billion dollars.” Let’s not let justified moral outrage get in the way of more cash.

Bert Bergen La Cañada Flintridge

What the Halo

The Angels are about to start the 2022 Major League Baseball season. What are we going to see this season? Nothing we haven’t seen before. Management basically tied its hands with the contracts of Albert Pujols and Mike Trout ($425 million?). They bring in a few guys that offer nothing because they have no money, Anthony Rendon is a complete bust; he’s batting .143 in spring training. Then we all wake up one morning and a local boy from El Modena High School, just five minutes from Angel Stadium, Freddie Freeman, gets signed by the Dodgers. Man, somebody within the Angels organizati­on was asleep at the wheel on that one. Steve DeMont

Orange

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I usually turn to Sports to read about the Angels. Lately I’ve been looking for updates in the obituary section. Since daily coverage of the Angels this spring has been nonexisten­t, clearly they are dead to you.

Paul Haddad

Los Feliz

New rules

Due to the length of nineinning games, MLB should instead replace the extra innings outcome with a coin flip.

David Marshall Santa Monica

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So, the NFL overtime rules change to an intelligen­t, reasonable, fair system, but

only for playoff games.

Then the only reasonable, intelligen­t response and fair question is: Why only for the playoffs? Regular-season games have influence on who makes the playoffs. Arthur A. Fleisher II

Northridge

March Madness

Letters to The Times Sports section the last two weeks have claimed that

Mick Cronin didn’t know how to coach offense or defense. How did the Bruins win 27 games with all of their injuries, illnesses and difficult schedule to make the Sweet 16 with a coach who couldn’t coach?

Sol Bialeck

Van Nuys

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Other than slight interest in Johnny Juzang, no other UCLA player is drawing attention from the NBA. The Bruins have no big man who can dominate in the low post. They are not a great shooting team. Despite this they have achieved success in Cronin’s tenure as coach. Critics of his offense ignore that UCLA is one of the leaders in the country in fewest turnovers. Most importantl­y, unlike the previous coach, Cronin’s teams play hard.

Jim Woodard Woodland Hills

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As a Bruin alumnus and longtime ticket holder, I, as many others, blame Cronin for the loss to North Carolina after the late meltdown. My thought was that maybe the Bruins and Lakers could trade coaches. Then, after the Lakers’ loss to Philadelph­ia after holding a 20-point lead at halftime, I realized that “if it’s broke, you can’t fix it.”

Michael Gesas

Beverly Hills

Better crystal ball

I feel a whole lot better now that Dave Roberts guaranteed a World Series championsh­ip and NOT Bill Plaschke.

Wayne Kamiya El Segundo

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The Los Angeles Times welcomes expression­s of all views. Letters should be brief and become the property of The Times. They may be edited and republishe­d in any format. Each must include a valid mailing address and telephone number. Pseudonyms will not be used.

sports@latimes.com

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