Los Angeles Times

Need a scapegoat in Goff situation? Slam Snead

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The more accurate question that needs to be asked is: Who looks better/worse in the current Rams saga: the underachie­ving player who signed a $134-million contact or the GM who signed the underachie­ving player to a $134-million contact?

Sad to say, the quarterbac­k seems to be the smarter one here. So if Jared Goff is sent packing, Les Snead should not be far behind. Larry Herrera

Redondo Beach

Sean McVay says that Jared Goff will have to compete next season for the starting job, and Rams fans go berserk. What in the world is wrong with players having to fight for a starting position? McVay is without doubt one of the best head coaches in the NFL. Take a deep breath and let him do his job. Ralph S. Brax

Lancaster

Elsewhere in NFL

Josh Allen may be out of the playoffs, but Sam Farmer’s moving portrait of the young man and the agrarian community from which he came will continue to resonate with those of us who hold a jaundiced eye toward this red portion of the state. Politics may differ, but you can’t argue about genuine, hard-working people who have unabashed pride in their community. Hardscrabb­le Joe Biden would be proud too.

Mario Valvo Ventura

I didn’t realize that the Tampa Bay Buccaneers hired Vlade Divac to teach their receivers the art of flopping. David Van Proyen Palmdale

While LZ Granderson is correct in criticizin­g the lack of minority coaching hires in the NFL, there is some progress being made ... from an unlikely source.

Washington was the last NFL team to integrate its roster. It was the first to have to change its name due to negative racial connotatio­ns. Yet today, the Washington Football Team has a Black team president, a Black general manager and a Hispanic head coach. And it just hired a Black female assistant coach.

There’s light at the end of the tunnel.

Steve Mehlman Beaumont

I have the solution for the NFL hiring more coaches of color: Stock Sean McVay’s Rams staff with only coaches of color. What he has over Andy Reid, Eric Bieniemy’s boss and one of the great all-time coaches, is unknown to me, but the rest of the NFL seems to think McVay is a better breeder of coaches. Rich Sieger Valley Village

Sad anniversar­y

Little did anyone know that Kobe Bryant’s death was the beginning of what would become the worst year in all of our lives. For us Lakers fans, Kobe was part of our family.

His death hit us all hard. It still does. A year later, I still tear up when I think about the moment I heard the news. Kobe Bryant was, is and will always be my favorite player. But the Kobe I got to see and speak to will always be one of my favorite people. Geno Apicella

Placentia

OK, I admit it. Tears flowed while reading your emotional feature on Kobe’s tragic death last year. He was, indeed, a very special player, and even more of a very special man. I mean, how many NBA Hall of Famers also win an Oscar?

Among the multitude of quotes and tributes, one from Magic Johnson really stands out: Upon hearing of Kobe’s fate, Magic says: “Kobe? Nah, not Kobe. He’s invincible. He’s Superman, you know?”

If only.

Marty Zweben Palos Verdes Estates

Bill Plaschke’s eloquent elegy about Kobe may be the best column he’s ever scribed. I say this as, first, a longtime

Celtics fan and then a Clippers fan, so not a Kobe fan. Clearly, Bill developed a strong tie with Kobe and he effectivel­y painted the greatness of the man as he knew him, while pointing out his foibles. Bill’s paean and ode to Kobe has begrudging­ly led me to a more nuanced memory of Kobe. Unlike Bill I won’t have dreams about Kobe. Bruce N. Miller

Playa del Rey

Hail to the king

I’ve been watching just about every Lakers game since they came to L.A., and I have to say after being able to watch LeBron James night after night, and especially after his recent performanc­es, he might not be the greatest Laker because he won’t play as long as Kobe and Magic and Kareem, but he is hands down the greatest player in NBA history. He’s Magic with Elgin’s hops and jets. It’s not even close. Dell Franklin

Cayucos

Going organic

While I look forward to seeing the new game-day enhancemen­ts that Wanton Davis will bring to Kings games, I truly hope that the first sound I hear upon entering Staples Center will come from Dieter Ruehle’s organ. For years, Mr. Ruehle’s performanc­e at Dodgers and Kings games has provided a soundtrack for the in-game dramatics and larger-thanlife personalit­ies on the ice and between the foul lines. “Go-Kings-Go!” Rob Demontever­de

Brea

The Hall story

The Baseball Hall of Fame is intended to be a museum not a mausoleum. The fact that Pete Rose, Barry Bonds and Roger Clemens are not first-ballot Baseball Hall of Fame inductees is a travesty. To simply ignore they ever existed is contemptib­le.

If Curt Schilling is being kept out of the HOF because he’s a jerk or doesn’t meet someone’s perceived moral standards, then we better start removing Ty Cobb, Connie Mack and all of the other racists from that era. Ron Yukelson San Luis Obispo

So right wing mouth Curt Schilling doesn’t make it into Cooperstow­n, and his allies scream what about his freedom of expression. Where were they when Colin Kaepernick was basically blackliste­d by the NFL?

Fred Wallin Westlake Village

It is good to know that former baseball players who got up each morning and stuck a needle in their arm to cheat against other players will not be honored by induction into the baseball Hall of Fame. Much of America has lost its way and this is a clear signal that we have a few of the old guard who still care about what is right and what is wrong.

Kevin H. Park Westlake Village

Thanks, old-timers

In last Saturday’s letters, Gordon Cohn of Long Beach wrote about spotting Don

Sutton in a booth at a Westwood deli reading The Times the day he was to be interviewe­d for a broadcasti­ng job with the Atlanta Braves.

As a Times staff writer, I did a phone interview with Sutton in the mid-’90s. He was home in Atlanta and at the time had been a full-time Braves commentato­r since 1990.

“I read your column every Friday,” Sutton told me. When I asked how he did that, he said, “I read you on The Times’ website.”

The Times website had just been launched and its readership was minimal. It was apparent to me that, in the tech world, Sutton was way ahead of the curve. Larry Stewart

Arcadia

Thank you for reprinting Jim Murray’s 1987 homage to Henry Aaron. It was great to read, once again, the words of the most talented columnist to ever grace the sports pages of the Los Angeles Times. Rhys Thomas

Valley Glen

Ungrateful dread

If Commission­er Larry Scott is the person responsibl­e for Bill Walton’s continued employment as color commentato­r during Pac-12 basketball games, he should have been relieved of his position a long time ago. Who at ESPN, the Pac-12 or the NCAA thinks that Walton’s belittling and harassment of his broadcast partners and constant spewing is entertaini­ng?

Larry, if you’re going to step down, why not take Walton with you?

Scott Grieve

Carpinteri­a

The Los Angeles Times welcomes expression­s of all views. Letters should be brief and become the property of The Times. Email: sports@latimes.com

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