Garden Grove fire chief to retire

GARDEN GROVE — The Garden Grove fire chief notified the city manager of his decision to retire, effective Sept. 14, but at the city manager’s request, he will continue to serve until the end of the year while a decision is made on whether to retain the city fire department or transfer to the Orange County Fire Authority, officials announced.

“It’s been my deepest privilege to serve and protect Orange County for 34 years,” Fire Chief Tom Schultz said in a statement Friday. “This is an amazing community that has shown me their care and support since Day 1.”

Voters in Garden Grove will decide Measure O, a proposed one-cent sales tax which, if passed Nov. 6, would provide a reliable source of locally-controlled revenue for Garden Grove’s public safety and quality-of-life services, according to a statement from the city.

“I have the highest of commendations for the quality leadership Chief Schultz has provided for the Garden Grove Fire Department,” City Manager Scott Stiles said. “Chief Schultz was pivotal in getting the department through a critical period early on, and he was instrumental in refocusing the department on the important and critical mission of providing fire service to the community.”

Schultz will continue to perform his fire chief duties at the same hourly rate he currently receives, but will not receive pension or non-hourly rate benefits and will only be allowed to serve up to 960 hours in the fiscal year, per CalPERS requirements, according to Garden Grove Human Resources Director Laura Stover.

Schultz was named Garden Grove Fire Chief on April 29, 2015, following a 30-year career with the Fullerton Fire Department, leading its management consolidation with the Brea Fire Department when he served as deputy chief.

“It’s bittersweet leaving a job and the people I truly love, but I feel this is a good decision and the right time to retire,” Schultz said. “My family has been instrumental in helping me make this important decision and is supportive of my remaining with Garden Grove during this very crucial period when important decisions must be made.”

10.09.2018No comments
Why USC’s offense struggled in first loss at Stanford

A rare scoring opportunity emerged for USC in the third quarter of a 17-3 loss at Stanford on Saturday evening.

The Trojans were set up inside the red zone. On second down, quarterback JT Daniels threw a pass toward receiver Amon-Ra St. Brown in the corner of the end zone. St. Brown, draped by a cornerback, leapt to corral the football, but as he landed onto the Stanford Stadium grass, his left heel straddled the end line. He was ruled out of bounds. There was no touchdown.

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The sequence was a fitting snapshot of USC’s offense in a game in which it failed to reach the end zone on potential scoring drives.

On the play before St. Brown’s near-tip toe catch, running back Aca’Cedric Ware was hit at the line of scrimmage, before bouncing off the potential tackler to pick up 2 yards. To begin second down, receiver Michael Pittman drew a 5-yard penalty for illegal motion.

So when Daniels lofted the high-difficulty throw toward St. Brown, USC had been left in an inauspicious second-and-13. The incompletion only furthered to decrease their scoring chances, putting them in a third-and-long. The red-zone trip ultimately ended with a field goal.

The offense has underwhelmed early in the season for a variety of factors, including the chemistry between a true freshman quarterback and his receivers, pass protection, poorly timed penalties, red-zone efficiency and stalled drives. USC piled it on late for a 43-21 win over UNLV in its season opener on Labor Day weekend, but many of the issues emerged in  sharper focus against Stanford, its first significant test.

The three points were the fewest the Trojans had scored in a game since being shut out by Washington in 1997. They failed to score a touchdown for the first time since a thumping by Alabama in 2016. They gained 332 yards, their lowest since last September’s loss at Washington State.

“It was a collective non-execution,” Daniels said.

After the loss, USC’s players passed through a dimly lit hallway outside the visiting locker room at Stanford Stadium, where they expressed various feelings of frustration.

They had shown signs of life on offense, moving six times into opposing territory and seeing a third of their drives last for 40 or more yards, but they rarely left with anything to show for it.

“When we had the ball, we’d go 30, 50 yards, fall flat toward the end zone,” left guard Chris Brown said. “It’s just kind of frustrating because I knew we had it.”

“It’s more annoying,” center Toa Lobendahn said. “It definitely didn’t feel like a couple years ago against ‘Bama when we weren’t moving the ball at all at a certain point. This time, we were flipping the field most of the time. And we just weren’t finishing in those situations.”

Their six trips past midfield ended with two punts, along with a missed 53-yard field goal attempt and a fumble by Daniels as he took a sack on fourth down. Daniels was sacked four times.

Offensive coordinator Tee Martin frequently cited poor execution when asked about the struggles following the loss.

Coach Clay Helton said a day later that had the Trojans finished drives, “it’s a totally different ballgame.”

The Trojans have in particular been ailed by a poor red-zone offense. They ranked 86th in the Football Bowl Subdivision last season with a touchdown percentage above 57 percent in the red zone. In this season’s opener, they scored three touchdowns over the six times they moved inside the 20-yard line. In two red-zone trips against Stanford, they managed one field goal. As they mounted a last-minute comeback attempt, Daniels was intercepted at the goal line, their second trip.

After throwing for 282 yards against UNLV, the most ever by a USC quarterback in a debut, along with a touchdown, Daniels ran into trouble in his second college game. He completed 16 of 34 passes for 215 yards and threw two interceptions.

“I didn’t do my part,” Daniels said. “I think the biggest blame goes on me. Age is not an excuse, and neither is experience. If coach puts me as the starter, then I have to get the job done. I didn’t get the job done.”

His performance may have been limited by an injury to his throwing hand, causing him to miss a series in the first half, though the 18-year-old passer downplayed the significance.

Helton said that an MRI on Sunday revealed that Daniels had suffered a hand contusion and would rest until practice Tuesday. Helton was optimistic Daniels would be available to play at Texas because the MRI results showed no ligament damage. X-rays during the game were initially negative.

Amid the defeat, Helton kept upbeat about the rest of the team’s prognosis, as well.

“This team can be an exceptional football team,” Helton said. “It’ll grow and get better with every game. I believe we’re very talented at quarterback and have a quarterback learning lessons with each game rep he gets. We’re learning with him as a staff, where his strengths are, where his areas of growth are.

“I can tell you this is not the end of the world, the sky is not falling. It’s one game early in the season against a top-10 team.”

10.09.2018No comments