Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Best team, not player, took the title

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South Carolina is an amazing, undefeated national championsh­ip team. The NCAA not awarding most outstandin­g player in the tournament to Caitlin Clark is a travesty. It was a noble gesture by coach Dawn Staley to recognize Clark as a “G.O.A.T. of our sport” in her postgame interview.

Brad Kearns Stateline, Nev.

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Obviously, South Carolina was too big, too deep, and too well-coached for even the great Caitlin Clark to overcome.

After an impressive 18-point first quarter, she virtually disappeare­d with only 12 points for the rest of the game. And, in the closing minutes, the Hawkeyes were only six points down and in striking distance of a miraculous comeback. But, instead of Clark putting her team on her back and taking them home, she all but sealed the victory for South Carolina with several turnovers and blown layups. While she may indeed be the projected “Steph Curry” of the WNBA, that was not a G.O.A.T.-like performanc­e in her final college game. Rick Solomon

Lake Balboa

Not impressed

Dan Hurley’s trite courtside antics would almost be amusing if he were not just another in a long line of abusive coaches who achieved success in spite of himself. Scream at the referees, your players, opposing players? Seen it before. Stalk courtside with vein-popping menace? Ho-hum. Walk onto the court during a timeout to berate the opposing team’s two-time national player of the year? That was a new one, credit due there. Idolatry supplanted sportsmans­hip and decency as the NCAA and the media ignored these excesses.

Kevin Park Oklahoma City

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The Connecticu­t Huskies deserve credit for winning back-to-back championsh­ips and 12 straight tournament games, but their accomplish­ment is still far short of that of the UCLA basketball teams 50 years ago. From 1964-74, the Bruins won 38 consecutiv­e NCAA games in 10 tournament­s, including nine championsh­ips (seven in a row) and four unbeaten

seasons, while averaging 85 points per game (and a margin of victory of 18 points per game). This all occurred before the three-point basket and shot clock were introduced to the college game. Coach Hurley’s Huskies have a long way to go enter the rarefied atmosphere reached by the Bruins teams of John Wooden. Noel Johnson

Glendale

Who’s the real villain?

For just a paragraph, Bill Plaschke was contrite in his column while admitting he didn’t know what he was writing about when he went after Shohei Ohtani for his alleged gambling problems. Without the humility to accept his ignorance, he decides that Ohtani should fire his “pandering agent Nez Balelo.” That would be like me firing The Times just because it chooses to employ a writer who doesn’t do his homework. Huh, maybe there is something to that. Rich Sperber Woodland Hills

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Shohei Ohtani gets swindled for $16 million by a sports gambler yet it seems every other TV commercial is a FanDuel or a DraftKings promo to encourage MLB wagering. What’s wrong with this picture?

Bob Goldstone

Corona del Mar

Visionary thought The Lakers sure could

have used Anthony Davis in last week’s game against the Warriors. How many times does AD need to get hit in the eye before he decides to wear goggles? Will someone please get a message to Kareem Abdul-Jabbar or James Worthy to lend him a pair?

Richard Raffalow Valley Glen

Bet on horse racing

Considerin­g the failure of the recent online betting ballot initiative­s, I think it would make more sense if the state set up its own California online betting platform and then earn the tax revenues while splitting the net proceeds between the tribes (say 60-70%) and the horse racing industry, including the tracks and the breeders, (30-40%).

It would be fair to the tribes and help reinvigora­te horse racing in California. The state runs its own lottery. Why not a betting website? Or allow the tribes to set up their own betting platforms and for Santa Anita to do the same — both taxed by the state, of course. It’s ridiculous that the largest state in the union doesn’t accept online bets. We need the tax revenue and Santa Anita could greatly raise its purse structure (to maybe the highest in the country) to attract more horses and stabilize the entire industry.

And the state would keep its promise to the tribes. Get it done, Governor Newsom!

Morty Mittenthal Pasadena

Blue in the face

The incessant jabbering between Joe Davis and Orel Hershiser during every Dodgers game has ruined the game-watching experience for me. After listening to Vin Scully for all those years, this constant talk by Orel has ruined it. Why the Dodgers have not seen what is going on during the calling of the game is unimaginab­le. This is supposed to be a ballgame and not just a talk show. I hope that other fans feel the same way and will make their feelings known to the team.

Marty Olinick

West Hills

Garnering praise

Sam Farmer’s piece about Jim Harbaugh living in an RV and loving Jim Garner and “The Rockford Files” was a hilarious, touching and classic Hollywood story. Another example of terrific new longform journalism I’m enjoying immensely in my hometown paper!

Henry Rosenfeld Santa Monica

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.

Email: sports@latimes.com

 ?? Mary Altaffer Associated Press ?? IOWA GUARD Caitlin Clark had a record-setting season that attracted huge audiences, but fell short against South Carolina in the national championsh­ip.
Mary Altaffer Associated Press IOWA GUARD Caitlin Clark had a record-setting season that attracted huge audiences, but fell short against South Carolina in the national championsh­ip.

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