How much is basketball really worth to UCLA?
Lacking sufficient students willing and able to pay for costly basketball tickets to fill the new Pauley Pavilion, why should UCLA cough up millions any topmarket basketball coach would feel himself to be worth? Bill Plaschke writes admiringly of the fired coach’s recruiting success in attracting seven NBA firstround draft picks, but doesn’t mention how many of those NBA future superstars actually graduated. How much did it cost UCLA to serve as an uncompensated NBA training camp?
My vision of UCLA basketball is somewhat different from Plaschke’s: Ticket prices reduced precisely because the coach is not being paid the stellar wage commensurate with a rock star status, and students cheering for actual student-athletes who might go into fields other than pro. Would that really be such a bad change?
Huntington Beach ::
Jay Bilas said something very prescient in commenting on the UCLA basketball search: “If you have someone who knows what they’re doing, I don’t know if they need to form committees like that.” Ding! Exactly. The simple fact is that UCLA does not have someone who knows what he is doing and therein lies UCLA’s problem over the past 16 years of Dan Guerrero’s tenure.
Success at the highest level in the two major sports, football and basketball, requires not only a top-flight coach, but also a top-flight athletic director. Can you imagine an A.D. telling Moses Brown that he has to fly coach on Southwest? John Wooden would not have achieved what he did without the stewardship of J.D. Morgan. Going forward, UCLA will not achieve the pinnacle of either sport with Dan Guerrero running a “think small” athletic department.
UCLA’s consistent underachievement in the two major sports starts at the very top. Dan Guerrero has shown no ability to attract the very best coaches to Westwood. Likewise, he doesn’t seem to be a “talent spotter” in identifying the next big thing in coaching. Perhaps Chancellor Block needs to replace Guerrero before he makes yet another poor appointment.
Rod Hersberger
Santa Barbara ::
Bill Plaschke, just what was the purpose of your hatchet job description of the UCLA basketball program in your column on New Year’s Day? Did you try to make it sound like the USC program to scare off prospective coaches? Why would a local sportswriter be inclined to do such a thing? And after spending the first half of your column suggesting that no highly respected coach should consider the job, you switch to saying that Dan Guerrero must get a highly respected coach. Do you even understand the insanity of your words? Alan Abajian
Alta Loma ::
A week ago I watched UCLA play basketball, fall behind by double digits by halftime, then come back to win by seven. They played with passion, determination, patience, and discipline. I marveled during the second half at how well UCLA executed a wellthought-out plan that was the result of halftime adjustments by the coach and staff. I saw a head coach who was bright, inspirational and in command. Of course, I was watching the Lady Bruins and their coach, Cori Close.
Now that the men’s program is looking for someone to take over for coach Alford, perhaps UCLA look no further than its own campus.
Mike Feix
Chino Hills
For front-page news on New Year’s Day we are offered Bill Plaschke’s lament on the failure of basketball at UCLA. He scolds the university for inept coach recruiting, penny pinching, and bad TV contracts, as if UCLA basketball was a central mission of higher education. Amid the growing commodification of university athletics, I find the concerns expressed in Plaschke’s article far too elaborate.
William K. Solberg
Professor Emeritus, UCLA Purple pain
The Lakers have blown more fourth-quarter leads than any other NBA team this season. This result has little to do with the Lakers’ age or lack of talent. It has everything to do with coaching. I cannot blame Luke Walton for the pathetic free throw shooting, but I put the blame squarely on his shoulders when it comes to personnel on the court, discipline and execution.
The Lakers have no identity on offense or defense. Walton allows the players to continue to make the same mistakes without any repercussion. When you continue to lose the same way, the buck stops at the coach.
Lost in Paul George’s 37-point chest-thumping, rim-hanging, backboardslapping performance was the fact that his Thunder struggled to defeat a Lakers team missing LeBron, Rondo, and Kuzma for most of the game. In interviews afterward, a real superstar would have acknowledged that a team with title aspirations would have to play way better. George instead basked in adulation. You’re a big peacock on a small farm, Paul. Good luck to you.
Same old bowls
Clemson and Alabama in the national championship game is not exactly a surprise. We could have skipped the regular season and scheduled this one in September. In fact, we could skip this game and just crown Alabama now.
PJ Gendell
Beverly Hills
::
I was shocked and appalled on Christmas morning to find that there were zero football games being televised. As bad as it might have been, I am taking up a petition to bring back the dreaded Blue-Gray Classic in order to prevent future travesties. Who’s with me?
Larry Herrera
Redondo Beach ::
Bill Plaschke was spot on regarding his opinion on Urban Meyer. He also provided sound career advice. If I would have known 30 years ago that I could have gotten promoted, received new offers and banked millions of dollars all while I lied and had multiple arrests under my watch, I would have a had a completely different approach to my own career.
Todd Montgomery
Laguna Niguel ::
After blotting coffee from my morning paper, I reread the source of my spit-take: Pac-12 Commissioner Larry Scott saying, “a handful of season-ending games are not a key indicator of a conference’s strength .... ”
I can think of only one world where that makes any sense — Dodgers world.
The rant is due
A few simple requests to sportswriters and broadcasters for 2019:
In football, can we finally dispense with “Third and manageable”? We fans know anything is possible. And please, stop ringing that inane bell, foghorn or train whistle on third downs. We know it’s third down.
In baseball, retire the tired phrase, “That’s a nice piece of hitting.” You’re bright people, think of something else. And to Victor Rojas, what in the world is a “big fly” other than an unfortunate image of Jeff Goldblum?
In basketball, can we please stop talking about who belongs on Mt. Rushmore? What’s the point? Comparing players from different generations is an exercise in absurdity. Let’s just accept the fact that Wilt Chamberlain was, is and always will be the greatest of all time.
Rhys Thomas
Valley Glen
That was quick Thanks, Kliff. Move on!
David Marshall
Santa Monica ::
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