Los Angeles Times

It really always was a big mismatch

Chargers fought for L.A. and won some battles in the process, but essentiall­y remain outsiders even when playing home games.

- dylan.hernandez@latimes.com Twitter: @dylanohern­andez DYLAN HERNANDEZ

Standing in an emptying locker room, Antonio Gates was asked to speculate how the Chargers would have performed in the postseason.

The delivery of his words was measured. The statement wasn’t.

“I didn’t see a team beating us at this point,” Gates said.

So it will be an offseason of what-ifs for the Chargers, who didn’t advance to the playoffs despite winning nine of their last 12 games.

What was lost extends far beyond the lines of the football field. If this season could be considered a minor success on the field — the Chargers won four more games than last year— it was a borderline disaster in the ways that really mattered.

The Chargers have a solid football team and a magnificen­t home venue in StubHub Center, but remain strangers in their adopted city. They were often visitors in their own home, as was the case again Sunday, when their supporters were heavily outnumbere­d by Oakland Raiders fans.

How many nonseason ticket holders reading this can name 10 Chargers? What about five?

“It is what it is, honestly,” free safety Tre Boston said. “We hope the fans see what we did on the back end.” They almost certainly didn’t. With the exception of the Lakers, teams in L.A. are ignored until the start of the playoffs. The baseball season might be a marathon for Dodgers players, but as far as the majority of fans are concerned, it’s a month-long sprint that starts in the first week of October.

The Rams won their division and the majority of the market will be introduced to them in their postseason opener against the Atlanta Falcons on Saturday.

The Chargers already had enough working against them, particular­ly because of their strong associatio­n with San Diego.

Building a tradition starts with the creation of special moments. A Super Bowl run could have offered the Chargers the platform to do that. Joey Bosa and Melvin Ingram could have become household names. Philip Rivers could have charmed the city. That won’t happen. You almost wonder whether the Chargers would have been better off stinking up StubHub Center as the Rams did the Coliseum last year. The Rams were awful enough in their first season back in L.A. to make themselves a subject of conversati­on in the city.

The Chargers are respectabl­e, but anonymous. In this market, that’s arguably worse.

That other football

The Rams are heading to the postseason, but owner Stan Kroenke’s more popular football team is a mess.

One of English soccer’s most decorated teams, Arsenal hasn’t won a Premier League championsh­ip since Kroenke became its majority shareholde­r in 2011.

The club has won three FA Cups since then, but the competitio­n has been devalued in recent years, as top teams have focused their efforts instead on European competitio­ns.

By finishing outside of the top four of the EPL last year, Arsenal failed to qualify for the European Champions League. The Gunners are in danger of missing out on the Champions League again, as they are in fifth place in the EPL after a late controvers­ial penalty cost them points Saturday in a 1-1 tie with West Brom.

The decline is expected to continue. Kroenke appears content with longtime coach Arsene Wenger so long as Wenger refrains from badmouthin­g the club’s economical­ly measured approach on the transfer market.

Top striker Alexis Sanchez has only six months remaining on his contract and is expected to move on; a player of his caliber wants to play in the Champions League.

Sanchez’s departure could start an exodus of whatever other high-end talent remains on the roster.

Totally misleading

Further evidence NFL preseason games mean absolutely nothing: The Cleveland Browns, who were 0-16, were 4-0 in exhibition games.

The only other team in league history to finish 0-16, the 2008 Detroit Lions, was also undefeated in the preseason.

Degrees of persistenc­e

DeVry University agreed to a $100-million settlement with the Federal Trade Commission in 2016 after it was accused of misleading prospectiv­e students with advertisem­ents claiming high employment success rates and income levels of graduates.

Here’s something the for-profit university can boast of that is true: Their graduates now include a head of state, as former world soccer player of the year George Weah was elected president of Liberia last week.

A high school dropout, Weah bolstered his academic credential­s by earning multiple degrees from the university in the last five years

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