San Diego, CA
Tom Krasovic: Chargers have run out of excuses for losing to Andy Reid’s Chiefs
The Chargers are out of excuses for losing so often to Andy Reid’s Chiefs, who’ll face them Sunday night.
Trashing their final excuse, the Chargers now have their own great coach in Jim Harbaugh, hired in January.
Sure, Reid makes it tough. An all-time great coach, he has turned the Chiefs into an NFL dynasty, winning three Super Bowls since inheriting a 2-14 club.
But divisional competition often levels the field, and when it comes to beating the Chiefs, the Chargers aren’t keeping up with the other AFC West teams. Last season, Both the Raiders and Broncos firmly defeated Reid’s Super Bowl-bound team last season.
Weeks after Brandon Staley’s final Chargers squad looked soft and confused against the Chiefs, the 2023 Raiders of rookie head coach Antonio Pierce hammered Reid’s team on Christmas Day, winning 20-14 behind two defensive touchdowns.
“Everything we talked about – ill intent, violence, physicality, execution, the will to win — we did it! ” Pierce hollered as cigar smoke wafted in the visiting locker room at Arrowhead Stadium.
Sean Payton’s first Broncos team beat the Chiefs by 15 points. Denver held the Chiefs to nine points. “They were the better football team, and I give them their props,” Patrick Mahomes said the Broncos intercepted him twice and allowed no touchdowns.
The Chargers, meantime, haven’t defeated Reid’s club since September 2021.
They’ve lost six straight games to K.C. And, between 2014-18, Reid’s program beat them nine times in a row.
Harbaugh was hired to stem the red tide of dominance.
I gave Harbaugh a mulligan for L.A.’s 17-10 September loss at the Kroenke Dome. It seemed too soon for the Chargers to match the savvy Chiefs at adjusting to adversity within the game.
But as great coaches tend to do, Harbaugh has effected better habits in short time. By now his club, at 8-4, knows how to win. A more physical style has been established. Quarterback Justin Herbert has thrown only one interception all season, and the Chargers stand among the NFL’s leaders in fewest fumbles and fewest penalties.
Besides, overcoming his team’s most capable rival is a Harbaugh speciality.
As Michigan’s quarterback, he publicly guaranteed and led a road win over Ohio State.
His first Stanford team beat USC as a 41-point underdog.
Harbaugh’s rookie year as an NFL head coach saw his 49ers defeat Pete Carroll’s Seahawks twice, leading to an NFC West title.
As the Chargers attempt to add Reid’s Chiefs to Harbaugh’s book, it wouldn’t be an achievement to stay close to the Chiefs, despite their AFC-best 11-1 record. After all, nine of Kansas City’s wins have come by seven points or fewer, within an NFL-best streak of 14 consecutive wins in “one score” games.
Nor would a fine game from Jesse Minter’s defense qualify as a major feat, given that K.C. stands a modest 11th in points scored and bogged down often in recent home games against the Raiders and Broncos.
It’ll take finishing the game; there, this year’s Broncos and Raiders showed the Chargers what not to do.
Denver positioned itself for a decisive kick only for Chiefs linebacker Leo Chanel to block Will Lutz’s 35-yard try after bowling over a Broncos blocker. The Raiders drove for a potential game-winning field goal. One play before they would’ve tried it, they lost a fumble after quarterback Aidan O’Connell, looking toward a wideout, failed to see a shotgun snap.
A Chargers victory would improve Harbaugh’s chances of landing the franchise’s first home playoff game since … well, it’s been a long time.
It was January 2014, when Norv Turner’s team, a nine-point favorite, lost a Divisional Round game in Mission Valley to Rex Ryan’s Jets.
San Diego, CA
2026 March Madness: Men’s NCAA tournament schedule, dates
The 2026 March Madness tournament began with selections on Sunday, March 15. The tournament lasts through the Final Four in Indianapolis on April 4 and 6.
BRACKET CHALLENGE GAME: Check out your bracket now
Check out the full March Madness tournament schedule below. You can also print out a bracket here.
2026 NCAA tournament schedule, dates
Here is the schedule:
- Selection Sunday: 6 p.m. ET Sunday, March 15 on CBS
- First Four: Tuesday, March 17 and Wednesday, March 18
- First round: Thursday, March 19 and Friday, March 20
- Second round: Saturday, March 21 and Sunday, March 22
- Sweet 16: Thursday, March 26 and Friday, March 27
- Elite Eight: Saturday, March 28 and Sunday, March 29
- Final Four: Saturday, April 4 at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis
- NCAA championship game: Monday, April 6 at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis
2026 NCAA men’s tournament bracket
Click or tap here for the interactive bracket
2026 March Madness tournament locations
| 2026 PRELIMINARY ROUND SITES | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Round | Dates |
City |
Venue |
Host(s) |
|
First Four |
March 17 & 18 |
Dayton, OH |
UD Arena |
University of Dayton |
|
First/Second |
March 19 & 21 |
Buffalo, NY |
KeyBank Center |
Metro Atlantic |
|
First/Second |
March 19 & 21 |
Greenville, SC |
Bon Secours Wellness Arena |
Furman |
| First/Second |
March 19 & 21 |
Oklahoma City, OK |
Paycom Center |
Big 12 Conference |
| First/Second | March 19 & 21 | Portland, OR | Moda Center | Oregon State University |
| First/Second | March 20 & 22 | Tampa, FL | Benchmark International Arena | University of South Florida |
| First/Second | March 20 & 22 | Philadelphia, PA | Xfinity Mobile Arena | Saint Joseph’s University |
| First/Second | March 20 & 22 | San Diego, CA | Viejas Arena | San Diego State University |
|
First/Second |
March 20 & 22 |
St. Louis, MO |
Enterprise Center |
Missouri Valley Conference |
|
South Regional |
March 26 & 28 |
Houston, TX |
Toyota Center |
Rice University |
|
West Regional |
March 26 & 28 |
San Jose, CA |
SAP Center |
San Jose State University |
|
Midwest Regional |
March 27 & 29 | Chicago, IL | United Center | Northwestern University |
|
East Regional |
March 27 & 29 |
Washington, D.C. |
Capital One Arena |
Georgetown University |
| Final Four | April 4 & 6 | Indianapolis | Lucas Oil Stadium |
Horizon League |
2025 NCAA men’s tournament bracket
March Madness: Future sites, dates
Here are the future sites for the NCAA Division I men’s basketball Final Four:
| FINAL FOUR DATES | CITY, REGION | FACILITY | HOST |
|---|---|---|---|
| April 4 and 6, 2026 | Indianapolis | Lucas Oil Stadium | Horizon League, IU Indianapolis |
| April 3 and 5, 2027 | Detroit | Ford Field | Michigan State University |
| April 1 and 3, 2028 | Las Vegas | Allegiant Stadium | UNLV |
| March 31 and April 2, 2029 | Indianapolis | Lucas Oil Stadium | Horizon League, IU Indianapolis |
| April 6 and 8, 2030 | North Texas | AT&T Stadium | Big 12 Conference |
| April 5 and 7, 2031 | Atlanta | Mercedes-Benz Stadium | Georgia Tech |
San Diego, CA
Servicemembers can request to carry personal firearms on military bases, Hegseth announces
Uniformed servicemembers can request to carry their personal firearms on military installations, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said in a video posted to social media Thursday, sparking mixed reaction from veterans in a community that’s at the center of the mental health conversation and knows weapons better than anyone else.
“The War Department’s uniformed service members are trained at the highest and unwavering standards,” Hegseth said. “These warfighters, entrusted with the safety of our nation, are no less entitled to exercise their God given right to keep and bear arms than any other American.”
“Our warfighters defend the right of others to carry. They should be able to carry themselves,” he continued, signing a memo on camera that he said would direct installation commanders to allow requests “with the presumption that it is necessary for personal protection.”
Previously, privately owned firearms had to be kept off base or in some places, approved for storage in the armory.
Representatives for San Diego bases – including Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego and Naval Air Station North Island – pointed inquiries on how those requests would be processed and how the new policy would be implemented to the Pentagon, which has released few details beyond Hegseth’s announcement.
A release from the department said the memo makes the undersecretary of war for intelligence and security responsible for updating the manual that lays out physical security measures and will authorize officials to review those requests.
“If a request is for some reason denied, the reason for that denial will be in writing and will explain — in detail — the basis for that direction,” Hegseth said.
He pointed to incidents on bases, including a deadly shooting last August at Fort Stewart in Georgia, and another at a New Mexico Air Force base last month, as motivation in part for the policy change.
“In these instances, minutes are a lifetime, and our servicemembers have the courage and training to make those precious short minutes count,” Hegseth said.
The change inspired mixed reaction from veterans, much like the national gun debate in a microcosm: some believed it would offer more protection while others worried shootings and suicides would rise.
“I believe this is a step in the right direction for safety,” said Marine Corps veteran Lance Gilson, who spent more than six years at Camp Pendleton.
“There were a lot of times where I thought about, you know what, if something happened right here, right now, is the military police going to be able to respond quick enough?” he said.
“It is my job to protect not only myself, but the others around me and ones who can’t protect themselves,” Gilson continued. “On military bases, it’s not just military personnel. You have civilians, families that live there. And if you’re not able to respond to them in time, you know, that to me is a concerning feeling — knowing that I can respond but I don’t have the tools necessary to be able to effectively respond in that timely manner.”
“I will definitely be more on edge,” said Navy veteran Ryan McCullough, who owned a handgun before he enlisted, storing it with his parents for his five years on base. He said he never felt he needed his personal weapon and was comforted by the fact that no one else had one. “You start hearing stories about soldiers having weapons at boot camp and turning on their own people. You’re like, ‘Oh, there’s a reason why they disarm these people on the base.’”
“I’m not just, you know, a purple hair, left-wing, somebody from California that … wants more gun control,” he said. “There were guards 24-7, right, making the rounds. There was people within your battalion checking on you. So I felt more safe there than I had ever felt before, which is surprising because I thought, ‘Okay, at home, I feel the most safe with my weapon.’”
And after a Navy buddy committed suicide with a firearm a few years ago, McCullough said he worries about more weapons on base, cautioning civilians who may cheer the change.
“It’s different for that person to own a weapon than it is for somebody who just got trained to kill and has lots of things going on and lots more stresses than you,” McCullough said.
“That does concern me, but I do hope that there’s going to be a vetted process whenever they do go through it,” Gilson said of the suicide risk. “Especially mental health check-up, and I think that the leaders will be able to gauge that pretty well, especially at the junior level. And I think that will help mitigate any further suicides, and I pray.”
San Diego, CA
Constitutional amendment needed to curb influence of money in politics
This year marks the 50th anniversary of Buckley v. Valeo, the Supreme Court ruling that first equated campaign spending with “free speech.” Sixteen years ago, Citizens United extended similar rights to corporations and unions.
The results are clear: an explosion of campaign spending and growing concern that our democracy is being dominated by a small, wealthy few. In California, outside money plays an outsized role, causing our elections to be among the most expensive in the nation.
Polling shows broad, bipartisan agreement that money has too much influence in politics.
Americans want voters and elected officials — not the courts — to set the rules.
The solution is a constitutional amendment to restore the authority of Congress and the states to regulate campaign spending. We have amended the Constitution before to correct our nation’s course. It’s time to do it again and put “We the People” back in charge.
— Rosalind Hirst, Normal Heights
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