Los Angeles Times

USC, UCLA already look finished at the start

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Clay Helton’s Trojans are undoubtedl­y the worst 2- 0 team in the history of college football. In both wins, their opponents literally snatched defeat out of the jaws of victory. Turnovers, penalties and poor clock management were the hallmarks of both games. Suffice to say, this Trojans team should thank its lucky stars the pandemic resulted in cancellati­on of the Alabama and Notre Dame games. Helton was born with a horseshoe up his rear end!

Mark S. Roth

Los Angeles

Relieved the USC Marching Band isn’t playing live at games this season. After the first two “wins,” the traditiona­l playing of “Conquest” would now be capped by the Trojans’ updated battle cry of “Beat ... Ourselves!”

Christophe­r Smith

Lake Forest

USC’s in- game struggles are not just about Xs and O’s but also Zzz’s because Helton’s Trojans are soft as pillows and they sleepwalk through the first 58 minutes.

Wake me when this bad dream is over.

Steve Ross Beverly Hills

Like many UC Berkeley alumni, I am accustomed to regular reports of Bruin sport triumphs over Cal. However what sticks in my craw is news of UCLA’s ( taxpayer- funded) purchases of unnumbered peanut- butter and jelly sandwiches at the catered cost of $ 4.95 apiece.

While my proposed solution ( Wonder Bread + Smuckers and Jiffy) would not solve our state’s current budget challenges, it probably would not adversely affect UCLA’s success versus the Bears, particular­ly if UC Berkeley administra­tors were likewise asked to purchase spoons and knives and prepare their own sandwiches. Indeed, many noncollege attendees are capable of self- assembling the product.

Konrad Moore Pacific Beach

The article says: “Pac- 12 athletic directors live in fear of losing their coaches to other conference­s.” I cannot imagine that the athletic directors of UCLA or USC have this problem, especially with respect to their football coaches.

Paul Hunt Sierra Madre

Going south

What all those bemoaning the Chargers’ close losses ignore is that as long as they are in Los Angeles, which is not where they were wanted, they will be under a curse, or bad karma. No amount of personnel or coaching moves will change this. Even if there was no pandemic, we still would have seen thousands of empty seats.

Can the media now start calling them the Bumblers so they take the hint and go back to a fan base that really wants them?

Bruce Liebman

Los Angeles

Winning coaches don’t need to be a Leo Durocher tripping his mother rounding third, or Bill Belichick, an inveterate cheater, but LZ Granderson sets too low a bar when saying Anthony Lynn deserves another season.

Being a good guy, instilling a never- say- quit attitude, and bad luck are not reasons to justify the status quo for the Bad News Bolts.

Mario Valvo

Ventura

LZ Granderson laid out his argument as to why Anthony Lynn should retain his job. He basically believes that Lynn is such a great guy he deserves yet another chance to prove he’s not responsibl­e for the losing. That argument, however, does not hold water.

Granderson admits there have been failings by Lynn in play calling, use of timeouts and preparatio­n. He recognizes Lynn and his team have lost games every which way possible. And in postgame interviews Lynn called out his own players, saying some guys out there today won’t be out there next week. That doesn’t sound like a mea culpa to me.

Maybe Lynn is not the great guy Granderson thinks he is.

Maybe it’s time for a new coach and a new environmen­t. Maybe.

Allan Kandel

Los Angeles

Let them play?

Eric Sondheimer has got it right, as usual. It’s time to let profession­als, coaches, ADs, etc., let the kid athletes do what they train to do. Other states have been able to get kids back on fields, in gyms, etc. California officials can survey the states that are allowing competitio­n, pick the best protocols and use them to get the kids back to practice and into competitio­n where they belong.

Dave Wright

Van Nuys

Nice hire

As a father of two young women, I was beyond thrilled when the Marlins’ Derek Jeter named Kim Ng as the first female general manager in baseball history. I’ve been following her career since she worked for the Dodgers’ front office and I kept pulling for her to make this historic leap year after year. Coming the same week the U. S. voted in the first female VP only adds to the hope my daughters can be anything they want! Bravo!

Vincent Martinez South Pasadena

Talkin’ layoffs

So the Dodgers have decided to lay off an unnamed number of employees because of the pandemic. Just out of curiosity, what were the combined salaries of all those hard- working men and women who have dedicated their lives to the Dodgers? Let’s generously put that figure at $ 3 million, no make that $ 5 million. Or the cost of a sub- par journeyman infielder. Shame on the Dodgers.

Greg Nersesyan North Hollywood

The small business down the street that’s hit hard from the economy slowing due to COVID- 19, yes you’d expect layoffs ... but the Dodgers organizati­on owned by one of the largest and most successful hedge funds in the country? Really? The Dodger organizati­on that just a few years ago signed a huge TV deal with Spectrum?

Just another reason to never set foot in Dodger Stadium again.

Shame on all of the Dodgers’ executive decision makers: Guggenheim, Magic, Kasten and Guber should all be embarrasse­d, all millionair­es, all approving layoffs for the struggling Dodgers employees.

Brian Haueter Ventura

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Email: sports@ latimes. com

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