Manfro’s muffed-punt no “red flag” for Mora

Jim Mora not fazed by Steven Manfro's special teams miscues. photo: Eric Geller
Jim Mora not fazed by Steven Manfro’s special teams miscues.
photo: Eric Geller

Jim Mora and his Bruin gridders improved to 5-2 on the season and 2-2 in conference play after Saturday’s 21-14, PAC-12 win over the Utah Utes at the Rose Bowl.

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Mora names redshirt freshman Hundley starting QB

The Bruins will focus on Brent Hundley (17) at QB. photo: Eric Geller
The Bruins will focus on Brett Hundley (17) at QB.
photo: Eric Geller

Prior to comparing off-campus murder statistics on a local radio show, new UCLA  head football coach Jim Mora’s main focus was getting his Bruins up to speed on his spread passing offense.

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“Gridiron (not Diamond) is Forever” for QB Brehaut

Brehaut content picking football over baseball. courtesy: zimbio.com
Brehaut content picking football over baseball.
courtesy: zimbio.com

UCLA quarterback Richard Brehaut made a controversial decision when  the 2010 football season ended. He decided to also play for the Bruins baseball team immediately after the gridiron season getting then coach Rick Neuheisels blessing as long as football came first.

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Bruins drown Seawolves, 9-1, in CWS opener for 10th straight win

UCLA's Adam Plutko won his third straight game in CWS opener. courtesy: USAToday
UCLA’s Adam Plutko won his third straight game in CWS opener.
courtesy: USAToday

Much like the Los Angeles Kings, who hoisted their first-ever Stanley Cup earlier this week by being road warriors taking 10 of 11 playoff games away from Staples Center during their title run, the UCLA Bruins baseball team makes itself quite at home on the road as well.

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UCLA, Howland feeling fantastic with the “Fab 4” recruiting class

Georgia HS hoops star Tony Parker wearing his choice on his chest. courtesy: ajc.com
Georgia HS hoops star Tony Parker wearing his choice on his chest.
courtesy: ajc.com

Talk about a Spring wake-up call.

This past March, Bruins men’s head basketball coach Ben Howland was raked over the coals in a Sports Illustrated article calling him a hands-off coach that lost complete control of his team and the program.

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Bruin QBs solid in annual UCLA spring football game

Richard Brehaut (12) among a quartet of Bruin QBs that looked sharp in UCLA spring game. photo: Eric Geller
Richard Brehaut (12) among a quartet of Bruin QBs that looked sharp in UCLA spring game.
photo: Eric Geller

UCLA quarterbacks were in a passing fancy during the Bruins annual spring football game Saturday at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena. A crowd estimated at around 13,000 saw Bruin signal callers combine for six touchdown tosses.

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No Disrespect. L.A. is the pLAce for the NFL

Downtown Los Angeles skyline at dusk.

Let me immediately debunk a serious cliché, untruth and down-right lie in regards to WE Angelenos.

It states, “WE WON’T SUPPORT and NEVER HAVE SUPPORTED an NFL team in Los Angeles because there are just too many other things to do here on a Sunday afternoon.”

Well, the part about plenty of things to do on a Sunday afternoon is spot-on. But, that’s what makes the City of Angels one of the greatest cities in the world.

The part about WE WON’T SUPPORT and NEVER HAVE SUPPORTED an NFL team is the biggest bunch of absolute garbage I’ve ever heard or read.

This clichéd rhetoric is old, tired, ignorant and completely false.

It’s a complete insult to all of US Angelenos.

Seriously!

Looking at L.A. from atop the Hollywood Sign.

Los Angeles, the second largest market in the country, home to Hollywood, a pair of MLB teams (Dodgers & Angels), a pair of NBA teams (Lakers & Clippers…and maybe the Anaheim Royals soon.), a pair of NHL teams (Kings & Ducks) a pair of major division one universities (USC & UCLA) and a pair of  MLS teams (Galaxy & Chivas USA) isn’t called the entertainment capital of the world for nothing. And although a sport, football, which includes the NFL variety, is one of the greatest forms of entertainment known to man, woman and child.

All I have to do is cite the Los Angeles Rams, the gold-standard among many pro football teams that have called L.A. home, as my example of WE Angelenos SUPPORTING an NFL team.

The L.A. Coliseum opened on May 1st 1923.

Beginning in 1946, after their move from Cleveland because they couldn’t compete with the Browns, the Los Angeles Rams called Southern California home for 49 years. The first 34 at the 100,000 seat L.A. Memorial Coliseum and the last 15 at Anaheim Stadium before moving to the Midwest in 1995.

49 YEARS!

Had the Rams not been supported by WE Angelenos throughout that half-century, you figure they would have left after year five.

The Rams called the Coliseum home from 1946 to '79.

During a 13 year period in the modern Super Bowl era from 1967 to 1979, the Rams won nine division titles, seven of those in consecutive seasons, played in seven conference championship games and one Super Bowl all the while attracting crowds at the Coliseum in excess of 65,000 to over 70,000 every Sunday afternoon.

In my interview with Hall-of-Fame defensive end Jack Youngblood and tight end Bob Klein, stars for the Rams during those years, both told me they fed off the energy of those Coliseum crowds. Fans that are still devoted to them today.

The Rams averaged just under 60,000 fans per regular season game in the 34 years they played at the Coliseum including three of the top-ten all-time league attendance single-game records exceeding 100,000 fans in the stands.

Rams called Anaheim Stadium home from 1980-'94.

The  first 12 seasons in Anaheim, they averaged about 57,000 fans. The years 1992-94 saw a significant drop-off due to rumors of a potential move first to Baltimore and, later, St. Louis. The Rams averaged about 45,000 fans those final three seasons.

Most team owners in any professional sport relocate because they can’t get the city they call home to ante up, via public funding, for a brand new arena with all the modern amenities to maximize revenue for them and their team.

Ex-Rams owner Carroll Rosenbloom with a model of the Football-enclosed Anaheim Stadium.

Former L.A. Rams owner Carroll Rosenbloom left L.A. for Anaheim in ’79 because the Coliseum Commission and L.A. politicians wouldn’t fork over taxpayer dollars to upgrade the Coliseum. Anaheim DID enclosing the Big “A” without its then-primary tenant, the California Angels, reaping any benefits whatsoever, so it could gain elite status as a city that an NFL team called home.

That changed in the early 90s when Georgia Frontiere wanted upgrades to the Big A via public funding. Anaheim said not this time. Off the Rams went to St. Louis.

St. Louis city officials and the state of Missouri gave the Rams everything they wanted and more including a new stadium in 1995 to return the Gateway City to elite NFL status after the Cardinals bolted a few years earlier for Arizona.

The 17 year old Edward Jones Dome is already obsolete by NFL standards.

The tables have now turned for the Gateway City. The Edwards Jones Dome needs upgrades the Rams negotiated in their original contract. St. Louis wants the Rams to pay more than half with taxpayers footing the rest of the bill.

Currently the Rams, Minnesota Vikings, Oakland Raiders, San Diego Chargers, Jacksonville Jaguars and Buffalo Bills are the NFL franchises looking to upgrade their stadium situations and join the 21st Century NFL.

It’s why Al Davis moved the Raiders to L.A. from Oakland in 1982 and then back to Oakland in ‘95. ‘84 when Bob Irsay moved the Colts from Baltimore for Indianapolis. ‘87 when Bill Bidwell moved the Cardinals from St. Louis to Phoenix. ’95 when Frontiere moved the Rams to St. Louis from Anaheim. ‘96 when Art Modell moved the Browns from Cleveland to Baltimore. ’97 when Bud Adams moved the Oilers to Tennessee from Houston.

These owners didn’t pack up their teams and leave their former cities because of the lack of fan support. It always has been and will be about stadium upgrade issues.

PERIOD.

San Diego's Qualcomm Stadium is one of the 3 most outdated stadiums in the NFL.

Not coincidentally, the San Diego Chargers and Oakland Raiders are on the possible relocation list because they play in two of the three most outdated stadiums in the NFL. The San Francisco 49ers were on the list playing in the third.

The 49ers new stadium in Santa Clara is scheduled to open in 2014.

The 49ers will be playing in a brand new $1.2 billion facility within the next couple of years in Santa Clara. A building privately funded with the 49ers borrowing $400 million. The Santa Clara Stadium Authority borrowing $450 million. $150 million from the league’s stadium fund. $40 million from the Santa Clara City Redevelopment Agency with the final $35 million coming from a hotel tax paid by tourists and visitors to the city.

I bring these three teams up because, if you include the L.A. Coliseum and Pasadena Rose Bowl, California has the five most archaic “NFL-ready” stadiums. Anaheim Stadium’s out of play because it’s now a baseball-only stadium if you don’t count a high school gridiron clash or two.

California’s citizens and its government entities won’t consider stadium plans of any sort to be publicly-funded using taxpayer dollars. Especially in these tough economic times. We’re absolutely right not to.

That’s why the state is home to the five most archaic “NFL-ready” stadiums in the country.

This is the ONLY reason why Los Angeles hasn’t been a part of the NFL for 17 seasons and counting.

AEG is targeting a 2017 grand opening of Farmers Field in Los Angeles.

This “extended road-trip” Los Angeles has endured could be coming to an end soon with not just one, but possibly two teams, from the list relocating here.

"Tailgating L.A. Style." An artist's rendition of Chick Hearn Court on Game-Day Sunday. Nokia Theatre and restaurants on the right. Staples Center in the left foreground. Farmers Field in left background.

The Anschutz Entertainment Group (AEG) privately funded the Downtown Los Angeles Corridor Revitalization building the Staple Center and L.A. Live, and now is committed to privately fund, without taxpayer/public dollars, the entire construction of the $1.4 billion L.A. Convention Center and Farmers Field.

AEG’s already invested over $40 million, $27 million of those for an environmental impact report and the balance going to designs for the new convention center and football stadium.

Upon releasing the 10,000 page EIR earlier this month on the steps of L.A.‘s City Hall, point-man Tim Leiweke addressed AEG’s vision for the return of the NFL to the City of Angels.

A team could be calling L.A. home in September of 2013 playing its home games at the Coliseum until Farmers Field is completed by 2017.

As for which team it will be. Take a look at the aforementioned list. The Rams (if any team should call L.A. home, it should be the Rams.) and the Vikings are the top two candidates for various reasons. Who will it be?

It’s going to happen. L.A. will be back in the NFL and the NFL will be back in Los Angeles. From any angle, it’s quite overdue.

Yes. There are plenty of things to do on a Sunday afternoon in the City of Angels, one of the greatest cities in the world, and the NFL should and will be one of them.

Photo courtesy: Eric Geller, AEG, Farmers Field, Los Angeles Times, stadiumsofprofootball.com, USA Today.

Video courtesy: Eric Geller, NFL Films

UCLA, Howland land nation’s top hoops recruit, Shabazz Muhammad

Gorman HS-Las Vegas star Shabazz Muhammad chooses UCLA. courtesy: hshoops.com
Gorman HS-Las Vegas star Shabazz Muhammad chooses UCLA.
courtesy: hshoops.com

Maybe Chris Dohrmann’s Sports Illustrated article claiming Bruins men’s head basketball coach Ben Howland’s lost his team was a bit overblown.

If anything, Howland’s a superior “Xs and Os” coach as well as a superior recruiter of talent.

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UCLA’s “Love is in the air” for 3-point title

Ex-Bruin Kevin Love, now of the Minnesota Timberwolves, hoists the 3-point shooting title trophy at All-Star Weekend in Orlando. courtesy: Getty Images
Ex-Bruin Kevin Love, now of the Minnesota Timberwolves, hoists the 3-point shooting title trophy at All-Star Weekend in Orlando.
courtesy: Getty Images

Having to navigate through two tie-breakers, Minnesota Timberwolves all-star forward and former UCLA Bruin Kevin Love won the 2012 Foot Locker Three-Point Shootout during the All-Star Saturday Night events in Orlando.

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Ex-Bruin Macdonald living the dream as Lakers’ TV voice.

To read the story and view the video interview, please click on the link below.

Bill Macdonald (left) discussing the Lakers with broadcast partner Stu Lantz (right). photo courtesy: Fox Sports West

http://www.examiner.com/ucla-bruins-in-los-angeles/ex-bruin-macdonald-living-the-dream-as-lakers-tv-voice

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