Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Sending Lakers to the offseason

- Email: sports@latimes.com

I find the current state of the Lakers consistent with their 2021 postseason acquisitio­ns. Great teams have a desired mix of promising new draft picks along with veterans still in the prime of their careers. There is no doubt the play of LeBron James at this age is amazing. But the questionab­le acquisitio­ns of former All-Stars that have lost their sparkle and have had a season of multiple injuries only add to the fated mix. It is time to move on.

Alan Karlin

Walnut

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It pains me to say it, but I really enjoyed Bill Plaschke’s column about the Lakers.

What is really surprising is that as I was reading the line about “Cold as Ice” playing in Sacramento, the song was playing on my Sirius XM. If that isn’t the season in summary, I don’t know what is. John Schiermeie­r

Valencia

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Thanks so much for the laugh-out-loud headline Thursday: “Pelinka, Rambis Face Difficult Rebuilding.”

What’s difficult about resigning? The letter? If you need some guidance, there are thousands of Laker fans willing to help.

Cy Bolton

Rialto

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It seems like everyone is analyzing what went wrong with the Lakers this season, but the truth is that the media and fans overrated this team from the outset. The trades for Anthony Davis and Russell Westbrook decimated team depth, leaving the Lakers able to sign only players who were going to be inconsiste­nt at best and terrible at worst.

Richard Raffalow

Valley Glen

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The 2021-22 Lakers made NBA history as the only team with five future Hall of Fame players to miss the playoffs. With all due respect to Joe DiMaggio’s 56-game hitting streak and other previously believed untouchabl­e records, I dare say this ignominiou­s Lakers season will never be equaled.

Mark Roth

Los Angeles

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Before we hear talk of firing Vogel (a good coach) or trading Westbrook (a sure Hall of Famer), let’s remember who got us into this mess: the Pelinka and Rambis duo. First step should have ownership replacing them with savvy, experience­d NBA management profession­als with the guts to say no to LeBron and Rich Paul.

Jack Wishard

Los Angeles

Dodgers blues

Watching the Dodgers on opening day I was thinking of how they have paid over $40 million to Trevor Bauer not to pitch. I was about to feel bad for management until I realized how proud Andrew Friedman felt about having made a last-minute secret plunge to sign him away from New York last year. Not to mention the increases in parking and concession fees that made me realize we are the ones paying off this megamistak­e.

Bob Goldstone Corona del Mar ::

I thought one of the jobs of a manager was to put their players in the best position to excel and win. But it seems to me that Dave Roberts’ “guarantee” of a World Series title this year has just quadrupled the pressure on his players. Games in September and the playoffs are magnified enough as it is, but can you imagine what the clubhouse will be like if they are struggling or behind in a playoff series?

Bruce Fischer Huntington Beach

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Regarding Bill Plaschke’s recent pronouncem­ents about the Dodgers, when is the parade?

Rhys Thomas Valley Glen

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Surely Cody Bellinger has had enough batting practice in his life that he can hit a ball — at least for a single — in his sleep, as long as he sees it.

Forget his stance, his “firing position,” his “flexion” or his “levers”: Can he SEE the ball?

Seriously, has anyone checked his eyesight lately? Sarah Tamor

Santa Monica

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I’d like to cast a vote for Trea Turner as leadoff hitter. I’m thinking that with his speed and hitting .328 last year, he would be the best choice. Mookie Betts is no slouch, but as the No. 2 hitter in front of Freddie Freeman, he should get a lot of good pitches to hit.

Mike Schaller

Temple City

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The Dodgers aren’t the only game in town. You should give the Angels equal coverage. If you do a story on the Dodgers, you should do one on the Angels. I’m more interested in the Angels’ rotation, which is probably more questionab­le than the Dodgers.

Murray Zichlinsky

Long Beach

Clippers comparison

Interestin­g how the Clippers can make the play-in tournament as a competitiv­e team while their two superstars sat out almost the entire season. Yet, the Lakers can’t do the same when their three superstars were rotating in and out all year long. David Waldowski

Laguna Woods

Getzlaf ’s glory

Ryan Getzlaf of the Ducks is retiring after 17 years in one place. Good or bad, he stayed. He probably could have made more if he’d left at some point. But like everything else in his illustriou­s, trophy-covered career, he was steady. No controvers­ies. No he said/she said. No ugly contract holdouts. Just rock-solid play. He was truly a rare gift to us fans. Jeff Heister

Chatsworth

Final Foursome

This year’s Final Four should at least put to bed the latest two college basketball musings that are going around. The first is that UCLA coach Mick Cronin can’t coach offense. Just as the Bruins are wont to do, Kansas, Duke and North Carolina, in the waning minutes of their tight games, had player after player rush down court and chuck brick after brick.

The more egregious, East Coast-biased given is that Coach K was better than Coach Wooden. Duke, with superior talent, came up short as they have so many years. Wooden’s teams never underperfo­rmed and won playing any which way. Case closed.

Allan Kandel Los Angeles

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