Speaking Frenk-ly about athletics
Los Angeles Times
|November 26, 2025
An open letter to the UCLA chancellor, with football team adrift, cloudy future at the Rose Bowl.
AMONG Julio Frenk's many worries is finding a coach for the embattled football team.
(LUKE JOHNSON Los Angeles Times)
Dear Chancellor Frenk, It’s time we talked.
Your predecessor, Gene Block, never granted me that courtesy, and look where UCLA athletics are now.
A football team adrift, an athletic director less popular than student fees locked up on a long-term contract and more questions facing your athletic department than the 466 yards the Bruins gave up to Washington on Saturday in what might have been their last game at the Rose Bowl.
(As a side note, if you’re contemplating not keeping your word with regards to the Rose Bowl lease, do you have to fulfill the terms of Martin Jarmond’s contract?)
I've heard from so many people who care so much about UCLA sports, and I’m wondering if you're listening to any of them. They’re saddened and angered and want some answers — and deservedly so given the lack of transparency around here.
So let me start with some questions in the event your many public relations advisors and crisis management experts tell you to go the Gene Blockade route and remain mum or offer another statement that doesn’t say much of anything.
How did that Jarmond contract extension come about? It was signed by Block in the spring of 2024 and curiously announced the following November — in the wake of a three-game winning streak by the football team that took considerable heat off Jarmond for his questionable hiring of coach DeShaun Foster.
Why was there a rush to grant an athletic department boss with a shaky track record an extension before you took over and how do you feel about it? And what was the role of interim chancellor Darnell Hunt, if any, in pushing this thing through? Unless you make a bold move to part ways with Jarmond or he leaves for another job, you're stuck with him through 2029.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition November 26, 2025 de Los Angeles Times.
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