Month: January 2020

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Invité ce soir sur C8 dans l’émission Au Tableau, le Premier ministre Édouard Philippe livre quelques secrets de son enfance à une classe d’élèves âgés de 8 à 12 ans.

Après avoir vu défiler face à elle quatre des principaux candidats à l’élection présidentielle de mai dernier, la classe d’élèves de l’émission Au Tableau, sur C8, accueille ce soir trois nouveaux invités. Samedi 5 novembre à 21 heures, l’émission ouvrira ses portes à la maire PS de la ville de Paris, Anne Hidalgo, au comédien préféré des Français, Omar Sy, ainsi qu’au Premier ministre, Édouard Philippe. C’est d’ailleurs du passage du locataire de l’hôtel de Matignon que le magazine Paris Match s’est procuré quelques extraits.

Lors de sa rencontre avec les bambins âgés entre 8 et 12 ans, Édouard Philippe aborde tous les aspects de son quotidien, de sa vie privée, à ses obligations professionnelles. Ce retour soudain à l’école semble cependant replonger l’homme politique en enfance un court instant. De mauvais souvenirs refont alors surface dans la mémoire du protégé d’Alain Juppé. « Quand j’étais petit, on se moquait de mes oreilles », finit-il par confier aux élèves. « On se moquait vraiment de moi, ce n’était pas très grave mais ça me touchait beaucoup, ça me rendait assez malheureux à vrai dire. »

Au travers de cette histoire, le Premier ministre a fait d’une pierre deux coups. D’une part, il a transmis un message de prévention contre le harcèlement à l’école. D’autre part, il prouve aux enfants qui se retrouvent dans le même cas de figure que lui à l’époque, qu’ils parviendront un jour peut-être en haut de l’échelle. Le témoignage du Premier ministre, boxeur à ses heures perdues, a en tout cas dû donner quelques sueurs froides aux camarades de classes qui s’amusaient à le martyriser à l’école et qui, aujourd’hui, doivent croiser les doigts pour ne jamais plus croiser sa route.

Crédits photos : PATRICK BERNARD / BESTIMAGE

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Quand Michel Sardou inspire les curés

January 2, 2020 | News | No Comments

Le curé de l’église du XIIe arrondissement de Paris a décidé de pousser la chansonnette pour convaincre les fidèles de participer au denier pour les fêtes de fin d’année.

“Lorsqu’est venu le denier, j’ai voulu participer… En chantant !” Le curé de l’église du XIIe arrondissement de Paris a trouvé la parade pour inciter les fidèles à donner pour les fêtes de fin d’année et palier ainsi à la baisse des dons : chanter devant son public le célèbre titre de Michel Sardou, En chantant. Sortie en 1978, la chanson a remporté à l’époque un véritable succès, tant et si bien que 40 ans plus tard, la mélodie est restée dans les mémoires.

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Beaucoup de jeunes n’ont pas conscience que l’Eglise a vraiment des besoins, ils croient qu’on reçoit des subventions. C’est bien qu’ils se rendent compte que, non seulement il y a des besoins, mais aussi que le curé est tellement motivé qu’il est prêt à chanter des chansons“, glisse le père François Lainé au micro de BFMTV/RMC, selon un reportage publié en ligne ce jeudi 4 janvier.

Fort de ce buzz, il a déjà une petite idée du titre qu’il reprendra l’année prochaine. “Je me disais, je vais chanter ‘Je te donne’ de Jean-Jacques Goldman la prochaine fois“, plaisante-t-il. Il faut savoir que 40% du denier de l’Eglise est récolté pendant la période des fêtes – un moment primordial, donc, pour inciter les fidèles à être généreux.

Crédits photos : AGENCE / BESTIMAGE

Column: Happy New Year! But not for long

January 2, 2020 | News | No Comments

WASHINGTON — 

In each of the last 12 years, the Council on Foreign Relations has surveyed more than 500 foreign policy experts to find out what worries them most about the year ahead.

In 2020, the answer is just about everything.

“We’ve never seen this level of anxiety in the past,” Paul B. Stares, who runs the survey, told me. “There’s tremendous concern about where the world is going and what it means for the United States.”

The foreign policy mavens’ top worries are cyberattacks from Russia, China and other countries; terrorism, inspired by foreign groups like Islamic State or carried out by domestic extremists; and escalating U.S. conflict with Iran.

Note that those problems aren’t hypothetical; they’re happening already.

Next, add simmering tensions on the Korean peninsula and in the South China Sea; the conflict between Russia and Ukraine; violence-fed instability in Central America and Mexico; and the wars in Syria and Afghanistan.

Now add another factor: This is a U.S. election year. That tempts foreign countries and terrorist groups to see what they can get away with.

“Election years — times of political transition or potential political change — are always periods of heightened vulnerability for any country,” Suzanne E. Fry, one of the CIA’s top analysts, said when the survey was released. “The United States is no exception.”

FBI Director Christopher A. Wray has warned Congress that he expects Russia and other countries to try to intervene in the presidential election, both by using social media to spread propaganda and disinformation, and by trying to hack into election software used by local governments.

Russia did all that in 2016. This time, China, North Korea and Iran could try, too.

Terrorists also can have outsized effects in an election year. In 2004, Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden released a videotape taunting then-President George W. Bush only four days before the election. The gambit backfired; it helped Bush win.

During the 2016 campaign, terrorist attacks in San Bernardino and Orlando, Fla., probably boosted the prospects of then-candidate Donald Trump, who argued that the United States needed stricter immigration polices to stop the violence.

Countries that use military power to intimidate their neighbors — including Russia (in Ukraine), China (in the South China Sea), North Korea (South Korea and Japan) and Iran (much of the Middle East) — may be tempted to escalate in an election year to see if a U.S. president hesitates to push back.

Iran, whose allies attacked U.S. forces in Iraq last week, appears to be using that strategy already.

Or they may try the opposite tack — offering deals to a president who wants something to show U.S. voters in an election year. He might try to strike a splashy deal with Kim Jong Un, the dictator of North Korea, or a quick peace agreement with the Taliban in Afghanistan. Just be sure to check the fine print.

On Tuesday, Trump boasted that he will sign a “very large and comprehensive Phase One trade deal with China” in the White House on Jan. 15, and that he will travel to Beijing later this year to seek a wider agreement.

Trump has announced this same “phase one” trade deal several times now. Despite his grand claims, it appears quite limited, not “large and comprehensive.” And the Chinese have confirmed neither a White House signing nor a Beijing visit.

The heightened pressures of an election year can make it harder to keep foreign policy on an even keel, especially for a president who’s running for a second term.

But in Trump, we have a president who doesn’t mind international disruption; he embraces it as a principle.

And that leads to the biggest worry for foreign policy experts: The world is becoming unglued, and the Trump administration appears less interested than its predecessors in acting as a global stabilizer.

“The U.S. president historically has been a source of reassurance about rules and norms in the international system,” Stares said. “This president is not. All the certainties we once had about international norms and alliances have been fundamentally weakened, and President Trump is one of the reasons.”

Trump isn’t the only reason there’s instability in the world; most of those problems were already there, and would have bedeviled any president. But Trump has made many of them worse, not better.

So, two thoughts as we begin this election year.

One is: Fasten your seat belt. There are surprises ahead, many of them unpleasant.

The second is: Foreign policy belongs on the ballot this fall.

Trump has sought to change our global role in a fundamental way. He’s making the United States a disrupter instead of a stabilizer.

So far, his foreign policy has produced neither great successes nor catastrophes. But he’s only been in office three years; in eight years, his impact will be far greater — and more disruptive.

Before I forget: Happy New Year.


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WASHINGTON — 

A president in Latin America skirts term limits to run for office again.

He wins, but allegations the election was rigged ignite mass street protests.

A team from the hemisphere’s main diplomatic body — the Organization of American States — finds widespread fraud and recommends new elections.

That chain of events unfolded in recent years in both Honduras and Bolivia.

But when it came to the U.S. response in each place, the Trump administration appeared less concerned about fraud than another question: Was the leader in question friend or foe?

U.S. Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo recently described its Latin America policy as “realism, restraint and respect.”

“I’m proud of what we’ve done in the region,” he said in a speech last month. “There is more democratic cooperation in our hemisphere today than at any point in history, and we’re proud of the fact that we have been a part of helping them get to that place.”

But current and former U.S. officials say the administration’s stated goals of supporting democracy and fighting corruption in Latin America have been subsumed by the outsize influence of ideologues inside the White House.

Geopolitical concerns, of course, have often beat out principle when it comes to U.S. policy in Latin America, most notably when the region was a Cold War battleground.

Now as then, experts say, the pursuit of short-term political gains such as certain election results has the potential to waste U.S. money, prop up corrupt or oppressive governments and undermine U.S. authority in the region.

U.S. government actions “are no longer grounded in coherent policy,” said Benjamin Gedan, a former National Security Council official who is deputy director of the Latin America program at the nonpartisan Wilson Center think tank in Washington. “The real credibility problem here is for U.S. foreign policy.”

That could make it difficult for the administration to deal with the unrest now sweeping many parts of Latin America — from Chileans protesting economic inequality to Colombians demanding an end to corruption and violence.

The contrast between its handling of election fallout in Honduras and the nearly identical scenario in Bolivia offers a stark lesson in how the Trump administration approaches the region.

Even as votes were still being counted in Honduras in December 2017, the U.S. congratulated Juan Orlando Hernandez on victory.

The endorsement, which came despite OAS recommendations for new balloting because of rampant election fraud, shocked numerous Latin American leaders as well as Democratic lawmakers in the United States.

In a briefing at the time, a senior State Department official falsely contended that the OAS was changing its assessment about malfeasance and that the U.S. recognition of Hernandez was appropriate.

The U.S. stance was widely seen as a reward for Hernandez, a right-wing politician who has played by the U.S. rules and heaped praise on President Trump. He had complied with U.S. demands to help cut off the flow of immigrants into the United States.

And days after the election, Honduras became one of only a handful of countries that voted with the U.S. in the United Nations in support of Trump’s decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and move the U.S. Embassy there from Tel Aviv.

Trump has continued support for Hernandez, who visited senior administration officials in Washington last month despite having been named by federal officials as a co-conspirator in his brother’s drug-trafficking trial.

A Manhattan court in October found Tony Hernandez guilty of running a “state-sanctioned” multimillion-dollar operation funneling drugs into the United States. Juan Orlando Hernandez has denied involvement.

The U.S. approach to Bolivia after its presidential election Oct. 20 could not have been more different.

There, the Trump administration opposed Evo Morales, the left-wing indigenous leader who has frequently denounced what he considers U.S. “imperialism” in the region.

The U.S. embraced OAS findings denouncing election fraud and celebrated when Morales fled the country on Nov. 12 after losing support of the military — a departure his supporters call a military coup.

Trump administration officials quickly congratulated Bolivia on its ouster of Morales and heaped praise on Jeanine Anez, a conservative senator who waved a Bible and declared herself interim president while future elections are arranged.

There is still no date for another election, while the interim government has moved to reestablish diplomatic relations with Washington, expel dozens of Cubans and cut ties with the socialist government in Venezuela.

“We support @JeanineAnez in Bolivia as she works to ensure a peaceful democratic transition through free elections,” Trump tweeted on Dec. 17. “We denounce the ongoing violence and those that provoke it both in Bolivia and from afar. The U.S. stands with the people of the region for peace and democracy!”

Gedan, of the Wilson Center, said that while the Bolivian election appeared to be seriously flawed, the administration rushed to judgment without adequate examination of the evidence. “They treated the findings [prematurely] as gospel,” he said.

Carlos Trujillo, the U.S. ambassador to the OAS, had steered the group’s election-monitoring team to report widespread fraud and pushed the Trump administration to support the ouster of Morales.

Trujillo, a 36-year-old former state representative in Florida, was appointed to his post in the wake of the Honduras election controversy. He is a staunch ally of Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), a hawk on Latin American issues who has gained inordinate influence over U.S. policy in the region.

At his swearing-in ceremony, Trujillo delivered an unusually partisan speech that condemned President Obama and his policy in Latin America, especially the opening with Cuba. He has also led the successful campaign to expel Venezuela from the OAS.

Venezuela, which plays a far bigger role than Honduras or Bolivia in the region’s geopolitics, has presented an entirely different set of challenges to the United States.

The Trump administration would like to remove Nicolas Maduro, the country’s socialist president, saying it seeks to restore democracy.

But Maduro has been able to hang on to power despite helping drive the country into economic crisis and a concerted U.S. effort to prop up an opposition-led government.

It is the loyalty of the military that has allowed him to hang on. Venezuelan security services were systematically groomed in ideology under Maduro and, more important, the late Hugo Chavez, a former army commander who ruled the country from 1999 until his death in 2013.

Francisco Santos, the Colombian ambassador to Washington who has been active in the Venezuela crisis, contrasted the situation with Bolivia, where the chief of the armed forces turned against Morales.

“There has been some fracturing in Venezuela, but the top guys are still there,” he said.

Wilkinson reported from Washington and McDonnell from Mexico City.


WASHINGTON — 

The breach of the U.S. Embassy compound in Baghdad has prompted Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to postpone his trip to Ukraine and four other countries.

Pompeo was to arrive in Ukraine late Thursday in his first visit to the country at the center of President Trump’s impeachment, then on to Belarus, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Cyprus.

He delayed the trip “to continue monitoring the ongoing situation in Iraq and ensure the safety and security of Americans in the Middle East,” State Department spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus said Wednesday. She said he intends to reschedule soon.

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Protesters burn property in front of the U.S. Embassy compound in Baghdad on Tuesday.  

(Khalid Mohammed / Associated Press)

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Iraqi protesters use a plumbing pipe to break the bulletproof glass of the U.S. Embassy’s windows. 

(Ahmad al-Rubaye / AFP/Getty Images)

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Smoke rises behind protesters at the embassy.  

(Khalid Mohammed / Associated Press)

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Protesters pry the U.S. Embassy plaque from the entrance of the compound.  

(Ahmad al-Rubaye / AFP/Getty Images )

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Demonstrators scale a wall to reach the U.S. Embassy grounds in Baghdad.  

(Ahmad al-Rubaye / AFP/Getty Images)

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Smoke pours from the embassy entrance.  

(Ahmad al-Rubaye / AFP/Getty Images)

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A man waves an Iraqi national flag as he exits a burning room at the U.S. Embassy compound.  

(AFP/Getty Images)

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Protesters wave militia flags during the embassy siege.  

(Associated Press)

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A fire burns during the embassy protest.  

(Khalid Mohammed / Associated Press)

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An Iraqi militia leader takes a selfie at a gate to the U.S. Embassy during the siege.  

(Ahmad al-Rubaye / AFP/Getty Images )

In Baghdad, Iran-backed militiamen withdrew from the U.S. Embassy compound after two days of clashes with American security forces. The U.S. has sent hundreds of additional troops to the Middle East to increase security in the volatile aftermath of the embassy attack and as tensions with Iran rise.

In Kyiv, Pompeo was to meet Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky, whose July 25 phone call with Trump triggered the whistleblower complaint that led to Trump’s impeachment.

In that call, and through aides at other times, Trump pressed Zelensky to investigate potential 2020 election rival Joe Biden, his son, Hunter, and a discredited theory that Ukrainians and Democrats colluded to influence the 2016 election.

Pompeo also planned to meet Ukrainian religious, civic and business leaders to discuss human rights, investment and economic and political reform, the department said before the postponement.

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Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders announced Thursday that he had raised more than $34.5 million in the final three months of 2019, a haul that will allow him to run an extensive campaign in the new year as Democratic voters begin the process of selecting a nominee.

That’s a few million dollars shy of what 2016 Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton raised in the same period in that election cycle, but Sanders’ campaign notes that his fourth-quarter contributions came from more than 1.8 million individual donations and the average donation during that period was $18.53, indicators of grass-roots support.

“Bernie Sanders is closing the year with the most donations of any candidate in history at this point in a presidential campaign,” said campaign manager Faiz Shakir. “He is proving each and every day that working-class Americans are ready and willing to fully fund a campaign that stands up for them and takes on the biggest corporations and the wealthy.”

This 2020 presidential campaign is shaping up to be the most expensive in history, in part because billionaires Michael R. Bloomberg and Tom Steyer have each already spent more than $100 million of their own money on advertising since their respective late entries into the race.

Sanders revealed his fundraising haul one day after former South Bend, Ind., Mayor Pete Buttigieg announced that he had raised more than $24.7 million in the fourth quarter. It’s an impressive figure for a candidate who was a virtual unknown one year ago.

Entrepreneur Andrew Yang’s campaign has said it expects to bring in more than $12.5 million in the fourth quarter.

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No other candidates have released their fundraising numbers, though Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s campaign has indicated that contributions have slowed as she has dipped in the polls.

Neither Sanders nor Buttigieg released a key figure — the amount of cash they have on hand entering the new year. A Sanders spokesman said the campaign did not plan to release the number at this time; the Buttigieg campaign didn’t respond to an inquiry about the subject.

Campaign finance disclosures that detail cash on hand, donors, spending and other granular information are not due to be filed with the Federal Election Commission until Jan. 31.

Sanders and Buttigieg released top-line numbers as the candidates gear up for a dizzying month in the final push before the Iowa caucuses on Feb. 3, and as the race has increasingly revolved around the power of the wealthy, including campaign donors.

Sanders and Warren, who have both renounced big-dollar fundraisers in the 2020 campaign, attacked Buttigieg at the December Democratic debate in Los Angeles for holding a closed-door fundraiser at a Napa Valley wine cave and having billionaire benefactors. (It would later emerge that Warren herself had held a fundraiser at a winery prior to her presidential run.) During the debate, Sanders also went after former Vice President Joe Biden and his wealthy donors.

Buttigieg’s average donation in 2019 was $38, considerably higher than Sanders and Warren. At the end of December, his campaign announced a contest that was widely viewed as a ploy to lower that figure. Days before the fourth quarter closed, supporters were asked to take part in a competition over who could contribute the smallest unique donation to the campaign. Buttigieg’s average donation in the fourth quarter declined to $33.


UCLA lost its top tight end to the NFL draft when redshirt junior Devin Asiasi announced Wednesday that he is giving up his final season of college eligibility.

Asiasi, who closed last season with his two best games, indicated that he was conflicted about his choice.

“This decision was not easy,” Asiasi wrote on Twitter, “because while it has been a dream to play in the NFL, leaving the Bruin family behind made the decision difficult, but I am excited for this next step in my life.”

Asiasi finished the season with career highs in catches (44), yards receiving (641) and touchdowns (four), numbers that topped the combined totals of the rest of the team’s tight ends. He was especially strong late in the season, making five catches for 141 yards against USC and six catches for 99 yards against California on the way to being an honorable mention All-Pac-12 Conference selection.

The 6-foot-3, 260-pound Asiasi was also one of the team’s better blockers. His departure leaves Jordan Wilson, Greg Dulcich and Mike Martinez as the team’s top returning tight ends, though they combined for only 18 catches last season.

Asiasi played two seasons for the Bruins after beginning his college career at Michigan and transferring after the 2016 season. A native of Shoreview, Calif., who starred at Concord De La Salle High, Asiasi finished at UCLA with 50 catches for 771 yards and five touchdowns.


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San Diego State finally exorcized its recent demons against Fresno State, prevailing 61-52 on Wednesday afternoon to end the Bulldogs’ three-game winning streak at Viejas Arena and remain one of two undefeated teams in Division I.

It was an ugly, sloppy, disjointed game with few offensive highlights. Fresno State didn’t reach 30 points until midway through the second half, but at this point the 13th-ranked Aztecs (14-0, 3-0) will take it without complaint or apology.

Their two best interior defenders and offensive rebounders — starter Nathan Mensah and backup Aguek Arop — were sidelined. And looming on the horizon are the two most taxing trips in the Mountain West, at defending conference champion Utah State on Saturday and at Wyoming the following Wednesday.

“It’s back-to-back road games,” SDSU coach Brian Dutcher said a day earlier, “which obviously makes the home game that much more important. You don’t want to drop a home game and go on the road for two. That’s always a recipe for a tough stretch. We know what that is. You have to take care of home court in this league and then go steal some on the road.”

Each team was missing a starting big. Mensah wasn’t at the arena with an undisclosed “respiratory issue,” and Fresno State senior Nate Grimes — a double-double machine with a history of big games against the Aztecs — was out with a wrist injury.

That meant the Aztecs started a different lineup for the first time all season, inserting 6-foot-6 sixth man Matt Mitchell and going small. The Bulldogs (4-10) went the opposite direction, giving 7-2 Assane Diouf of Senegal his first career start.

The early story, though, wasn’t about players but the ball. SDSU, which as home team picks the ball, used the new Nike model with a tracking sensor implanted to conform with the Mountain West’s contract with ShotTracker, a system designed to provide real-time analytics to teams and fans.

The Aztecs noticeably struggled to shoot and control the slicker ball in the two previous Division I games it was used, and that continued in the first half Wednesday. At the first media timeout, the teams combined to shoot 1 of 8 and had eight turnovers.

At halftime, they were a combined 4 of 21 behind the 3-point arc.

The teams traded 10-2 runs before the Aztecs created some semblance of separation with a 25-17 margin at the break. They got a stop to open the second half, then Mitchell drew a foul and made two free throws to push the lead to double figures for the first time.

The Bulldogs — who were also without injured senior guard Noah Blackwell — cut it to five with 11 minutes left, but an 11-2 run sparked by a pair of baskets from Mitchell sealed their fate.

Malachi Flynn had 16 points and reached the 1,000-point career milestone with a twisting left-handed layup midway through the second half. Mitchell finished with 15 points and six rebounds in a season-high 35 minutes.

Freshman guard Jarred Hyder, playing his first extended minutes after returning from a knee injury, had a game-high 23 points. But senior guard New Williams, an Auburn transfer, was held to five on 2 of 12 shooting.

—Mark Zeigler

at No. 24 Wichita State 75, East Carolina 69: Erik Stevenson scored 10 of his 17 points after halftime for the Shockers (12-1, 1-0 American), who trailed midway through the second half thanks to East Carolina’s Jayden Gardner scoring 20 of his 29 points after halftime.

Jamarius Burton had 15 points for Wichita State while Tyson Etienne and Trey Wade added 11 each for the Shockers.

J.J. Miles scored 12 points for the Pirates (6-8, 0-1 American), and Tremont Robinson-White added 11.

Gardner, who entered the game leading the American in scoring at 20.7 points a game, was 11 of 19 from the floor and had a game-high 10 rebounds.

—Associated Press


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As Oregon and Wisconsin took the field Wednesday afternoon at the Rose Bowl, Knute Rockne’s voice blared from a tiny room in the bowels of the nearly 100-year-old stadium.

After the Rose Bowl opened in 1922, the small space was used as a locker room for six years before being turned into a storage room. Two years ago, it was converted into a small museum to honor a past that included Rockne standing in the center of the room as he addressed “The Four Horsemen” and Notre Dame before the Irish took on Stanford, coached by Pop Warner.

“There’s something special about this place,” said Daryl Dunn, CEO and general manager of the Pasadena stadium. “There’s something about Fenway Park. There’s something about Wrigley Field and there’s something about the Rose Bowl. There’s very few places like this that have been around for 100 years.”

The 106th Rose Bowl on Wednesday was the last football game before the opening of SoFi Stadium, the $5-billion future home of the Rams and Chargers. SoFi Stadium will be the first football stadium built in Los Angeles since the Rose Bowl and Coliseum opened in 1922 and 1923.

The Rose Bowl, which completed a $183-million renovation in 2016, has been the city’s premier football stadium for the last 40 years. It hosted five Super Bowls, most recently in 1993, which is the second most of any venue. It hosted the 1994 FIFA World Cup final, 1999 FIFA Women’s World Cup final and the 1984 Olympic gold-medal soccer game. It also hosted five BCS national championship games and the first College Football Playoff semifinal game in 2015.

Much of that history is captured on the walls of the museum but Dunn understands the stadium’s future as a big-event venue outside of serving as the home of UCLA football and the annual Rose Bowl game will rely on how the stadium improves and evolves with the opening of SoFi Stadium in July.

“We’ve been preparing for an NFL stadium to open up here for 20 years,” Dunn said. “We’ve always realized that was going to be our biggest challenge. So we locked in UCLA and the Tournament of Roses long term. We’ve had an amazing run and we’re going to continue that run. We’re not naive. We know SoFi is going to get a lot of business but we’re not going anywhere.”

UCLA and the Tournament of Roses, which organizes the annual Rose Bowl game, have leases with the stadium that run through 2043. But some of the other big events that have historically gone to the Rose Bowl will now start going to SoFi Stadium in the future.

Taylor Swift, who performed before more than 60,000 at the Rose Bowl in 2018, will open SoFi Stadium with concerts on July 25 and 26. Kenny Chesney, who has performed at the Rose Bowl and has an autographed guitar hanging in the stadium’s museum, will have a concert at SoFi Stadium on Aug. 1. Over the next eight years, SoFi Stadium is scheduled to host the Super Bowl in 2022, College Football Playoff national championship game in 2023, possible World Cup matches in 2026, parts of the opening and closing ceremonies at the Summer Olympics in 2028, and other events that used to be held at the Rose Bowl.

“We need to evolve and we need to figure out how to get better,” Dunn said. “The day we stop looking at the future is the day we’re in a lot of trouble.”

The Rose Bowl Operating Company recently hired Jerde Partnership, the architectural firm behind Bellagio in Las Vegas, Universal CityWalk and Santa Monica Place mall, to revamp the site surrounding the stadium.

The focus will initially be on the open areas to the west and north of the stadium. The goal is to look into programming possibilities as well as addressing access and parking.

“As facilities and venues continue to change and evolve and amazing amounts of money get put into them, there’s something to be said for staying with your roots,” Dunn said. “This is still the Rose Bowl. SoFi Stadium is going to be an amazing venue in the future for what it is, but it’s going to be a different venue. We’re looking forward to our future too.”


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Oregon quarterback Justin Herbert scores the go-ahead touchdown in front of Wisconsin cornerback Faion Hicks during the fourth quarter. 

(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

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Wisconsin takes the field before the start of the Rose Bowl Game against Oregon. 

(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

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Oregon cornerback Thomas Graham Jr. intercepts a pass by Wisconsin quarterback Jack Coan during the second quarter. 

(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

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Wisconsin’s Aaron Cruickshank beats Oregon’s Tyler Shough to score on a kick return during the first quarter at the Rose Bowl. 

(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

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Wisconsin wide receiver Quintez Cephus reacts after scoring a touchdown against Oregon in the second quarter during the Rose Bowl. 

(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

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Oregon cornerback Decommodore Lenoir, left, scoops up a fumble by Wisconsin quarterback Jack Coan during the second quarter. 

(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

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Wisconsin quarterback Jack Coan dumps off a short pass to running back Garrett Groshek during the second quarter. 

(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

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Oregon quarterback Justin Herbert completes a pass to tight end Hunter Kampmoyer during the first quarter. 

(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

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Oregon quarterback Justin Herbert scores a touchdown against Wisconsin during the second quarter. 

(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

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The Oregon defense swarms around Wisconsin running back Jonathan Taylor during the third quarter. 

(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

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Oregon safety Brady Breeze breaks up a pass intended for Wisconsin receiver Kendric Pryor during the third quarter. 

(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

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Wisconsin running back Mason Stokke dives into the end zone against Oregon during the third quarter. 

(Luis Sinco / Los Angeles Times)

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Wisconsin wide receiver Quintez Cephus makes a catch in front of Oregon safety Jevon Holland during the third quarter. 

(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

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Oregon quarterback Justin Herbert breaks loose from Wisconsin safety Reggie Pearson to score a touchdown in the first quarter. 

(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

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Oregon wide receiver Juwan Johnson makes a critical first down catch against Wisconsin cornerback Caeser Williams in the closing moments of the fourth quarter. 

(Luis Sinco)

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Wisconsin running back Garrett Groshek is upended by the Oregon defense during a fourth-quarter carry. 

(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

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Oregon cornerback Deommodore Lenoir picks up a fumble against Wisconsin in the second quarter. 

(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

18/19

Oregon running back CJ Verdell is stopped by the Wisconsin defense in the first quarter at the Rose Bowl. 

(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

19/19

Oregon coach Mario Cristobal hugs a player after the Ducks’ win over Wisconsin in the Rose Bowl. 

(Wally Skalij / Los Angeles Times)

The old bowl shook. Thousands of Midwesterners clad in Wisconsin red were doing their thing, lifting themselves off the cement in unison to the pounding bass of House of Pain’s “Jump Around” with their team leading by a field goal late in the third quarter.

Oregon’s offense had touched the ball three plays the entire second half, and the Badgers were about to mount yet another efficient drive that felt like an hourglass. The game flow said the first Rose Bowl Game of the 2020s was headed toward the predictable Pac-12 disappointment that defined the aughts, but at least the Ducks’ shiny Nike helmets reflected the orange sunset falling behind the San Gabriel Mountains.

The game was not nearly as picturesque. It was brutal, the way the Badgers have liked it for three decades now, the way Mario Cristobal’s Ducks are learning to like it. Oregon trailed by six in the middle of the fourth quarter, Wisconsin had the ball again, and somebody had to do something or it would soon be over.

Then a couple of kids from Oregon — natives of the actual state, not just attendees of the university with the Phil Knight-created football factory — swooped in. Brady Breeze, a senior safety from Lake Oswego, forced a fumble on a jet sweep at the Wisconsin 30-yard line. On the next play, Justin Herbert, a senior quarterback from Eugene, faked a handoff and darted to his right toward daylight and galloped for what would be the game-winning touchdown.

Oregon stole the 106th “Granddaddy of Them All” from Wisconsin, turning three Badgers turnovers into three touchdowns in a 28-27 victory that made a statement the statistics could not support on their own.

“The Oregon Ducks are the leaders of the West Coast, and I think everyone is kind of realizing that,” Oregon offensive guard Shane Lemieux said. “We’re the up-and-coming program. We won the Rose Bowl. And I think the way we’re recruiting, we’re not even close to being where we should be.”

It was easy to get caught up in the hype afterward in the Oregon locker room, where the Ducks posed for pictures with red roses poking from their mouths and grooved to booming hip hop.

“That’s two rings!” exclaimed one fluffed-up Duck, referring to the back-to-back wins over top-10 opponents that made them Pac-12 and Rose Bowl champions.

No. 6 Oregon (12-2) will be voted into the top five, a stylish finish to Cristobal’s second season. Those results, combined with the Ducks’ momentum in recruiting, particularly in Cristobal’s declared “home state” of Southern California, have made them the Pac-12’s best candidate — by far — to produce a national contender in the coming years.

“For all the recruits out there, this is it, man. This is Oregon,” said sophomore left tackle Penei Sewell, named this year’s Outland Trophy winner as the nation’s top interior lineman. “We ain’t going nowhere but up from here.”

Highlights from Oregon’s win over Wisconsin in the Rose Bowl on Wednesday.

With Washington transitioning from Chris Petersen to Jimmy Lake, Stanford suddenly stumbling under David Shaw and USC giving Clay Helton another year, Oregon and Cristobal are set up to rule. But can they improve to a level where they don’t drop a game like that one at Arizona State, a loss which kept them from the College Football Playoff this season? How soon can they compete with the Southern bloc that has lorded over the sport for more than a decade now?

The Rose Bowl win over No. 8 Wisconsin (10-4) was important for show, but the numbers spelled out a murkier reality.

The Badgers had 322 yards to the Ducks’ 204. Wisconsin controlled the ball for 38 minutes. Oregon averaged just 2.2 yards per rush and could not get yards when it needed them up the middle of the Wisconsin defense.

That isn’t a good sign for the Ducks, who lose five of their top six offensive linemen to graduation and will be counting on Sewell’s monstrous talent to lead a quick turnaround this offseason.

“We take pride in being a physical team,” said offensive guard Dallas Warmack, a transfer from Alabama. “We want the whole nation to know that we’re physical and just because we’re in the Pac-12, we play just as well as any other SEC or ACC team.”

The Ducks deserve credit for holding Wisconsin running back Jonathan Taylor, the back-to-back Doak Walker Award winner, to 94 yards on 21 carries. And, of course, for being opportunistic, which is a quality the great programs somehow conjure up when things look bleak.

Like in the third quarter, when Breeze picked up a fumbled punt snap by Wisconsin and carried it in from 31 yards out to give Oregon a short-lived 21-17 lead.

Herbert did not have a passing day that will excite NFL scouts, completing 14 of 20 passes for 138 yards and an interception, but he rushed for three touchdowns to make up for it.

Cristobal got plenty of attention this week for his successful recruitment of California, but it was two Oregon players who dreamed their entire lives of being Ducks and playing in a Rose Bowl that got them this win.

“We’ve been down and out,” Breeze said. “We’ve had three head coaches in four years. Seeing them run out the clock at the end, it was amazing to see. Everyone cheering and high-fiving and people crying because we’ve been through so much — 4-8 my freshman year.”

A year from now, the Rose Bowl will host a CFP semifinal. Oregon would like to be there. Is it feasible?

“We know we have a good football team, and we know we’ve done all the things in regard to becoming physical, disciplined, tough, with so much room to grow,” Cristobal said.

“And we go hard now. What we do is not kind and cuddly, and it’s certainly not for everybody. So we all stuck to a blueprint that is as demanding as it gets and that will push you right to the edge until you get a breakthrough. That’s what these guys had.”


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