Former Utah S Tao Johnson plans to visit Oregon soon

Former Utah standout safety Tao Johnson plans to visit UCLA and Oregon in the coming days, sources tell @CBSSports. He’s also already taken visits to Ole Miss and Kentucky, per sources. Made 34 career …

Just days after Utah transfer cornerback Smith Snowden announced that he’ll visit the Oregon Ducks in the near future, another member of the Utes‘ secondary has announced the same intentions.

First reported by CBS Sports’ Matt Zenitz, Utah transfer safety Tao Johnson “plans to visit UCLA and Oregon in the coming days.” The former standout Ute has already visited Ole Miss and Kentucky.

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Johnson is rated as three-star in the transfer portal and is ranked as the No. 16 safety and No. 248 player overall. The 6-foot-1, 193-pounder was a four-star athlete in the class of 2022 out of Idaho Falls, ID.

Johnson saw time early at Utah, starting 12 games in 2023 as a redshirt freshman before starting 11 games in 2024. He had even more of an impact for the 11-2 Utes this season, as he amassed 51 tackles, four passes defensed and two interceptions.

With a significant number of Oregon secondary members entering the transfer portal themselves, adding at the position has to be near the top of the list for head coach Dan Lanning. In Johnson, he could add an experienced player to the safety room, a trait that could potentially be missing if junior Dillon Thieneman declares for the NFL draft.

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This article originally appeared on Ducks Wire: Former Utah S Tao Johnson plans to visit Oregon Ducks in coming days

Source: Utah News

New made-in-Utah pipe organ signals rebirth for church after fire, flood and ‘plague’

The Church of the Epiphany’s priests clambered up on the truck’s loading dock, tossed on stoles and blessed the long-awaited instrument. Their prayers were punctuated by the sound of confetti cannons …

New York • The organ arrived from Utah on a warm August morning. Greeted by holy water, incense and slide whistles, it came in a 53-foot-long truck that was double-parked on Manhattan’s Upper East Side.

The Church of the Epiphany’s priests clambered up on the truck’s loading dock, tossed on stoles and blessed the long-awaited instrument. Their prayers were punctuated by the sound of confetti cannons shot off by about 30 parishioners.

Then, for hours, children, adults and elders into their 90s hoisted pipes and boxes up flights of stairs to the church’s second-floor sanctuary. The biggest spectacle was the entrance of the 600-pound organ console, which parishioners and organ builders spent over 30 minutes wrangling up an external staircase.

“What has been the most beautiful part of this organ is the way it has brought our entire community together,” Denise Cruz, a vestry member, speech pathologist and mother of two, told Religion News Service. “It was all hands on deck.”

Even with reports of declining worship attendance in the U.S. — and an overall reduction in the numbers of professional organists — some churches are investing in new versions of the age-old instrument to fill their sanctuaries with music and possibly attract community members to come inside. The new organ on East 74th Street joins others in New York City, where a special concert series introduced new instruments at Trinity Church in September and at St. Thomas Church in 2018.

To the Rev. Matthew Dayton-Welch, the new, handcrafted organ at Church of the Epiphany represents more than a commitment to quality music; it is emblematic of the final phase of a multiyear, $70 million effort to relocate and rebuild the Episcopal congregation, an investment in community as much as sound. The organ costs totaled $2.5 million.

“So many churches make difficult decisions because they’re shrinking and they’re consolidating and they’re trying to survive. And that wasn’t the case here,” Dayton-Welch, the church’s rector, said. “This was the church that was healthy, but it was still willing to risk everything it had in order to create an even better platform in a city where churches don’t get up and move.”

In 2018, space constraints led the nearly 200-year-old Episcopal parish to consider moving from its location at the time, on York Avenue. The congregation set its eyes on the former Jan Hus Presbyterian Church, a larger space just one block west that needed a remodel. But, as Dayton-Welch put it, “crossing First Avenue, for us, we might as well have been crossing the Red Sea.”

The church’s then-rector, the Rev. Jennifer Anne Reddall, was elected bishop of Arizona, propelling Church of the Epiphany into an unexpected rector search. Then, a 2020 excavation of the new property revealed that it sat over a natural creek, and the threat of flooding required a redesigned building foundation.

“We had things flood in the basement of the church,” said Christian Vanderbrouk, who has attended Epiphany for about a decade.

Located in the middle of a medical hub, the church’s community was also hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic. Congregants recall refrigerated morgue trucks circling the neighborhood. And in 2021, hot steel beam rafters didn’t cool as expected, briefly setting the church ablaze.

“You had a flood, a fire and a plague,” said Dayton-Welch, who arrived at the church in 2023, by which time the church had officially moved to its current location on East 74th Street.

(Bigelow Organs) The Bigelow & Co. workshop, where hand-built organs are made, is in this historic 1903 former Latter-day Saint meetinghouse in American Fork.

Meanwhile, Church of the Epiphany contracted with Bigelow & Co. Organ Builders in American Fork, Utah, in 2020 to design a new organ for the new space. Bigelow founder Michael Bigelow is a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and his workshop is in an old Latter-day Saint meetinghouse whose tall ceilings allow for organ assembly.

In April, RNS visited Bigelow’s workshop, where builders were completing the trackers, the mechanical linkages that pull open the valves releasing air into the correct pipe. Like most of Bigelow’s organs, the Epiphany organ uses mechanical tracker action in contrast to electric-action pipe organs, where pressing a key sends an electric signal to open the valve under the corresponding pipe.

Initially, the organ’s sound had a German flair, focused on volume and power, but church leaders’ feedback led the builders to swap some of the neo-Baroque style stops in favor of producing a more expressive, versatile sound.

“That decision was made basically to better serve the Anglican style of liturgy,” said Conner Kunz, an experienced woodworker and member of the Bigelow team. He said Bigelow added a Flute Celeste stop, creating an “ethereal, sort of wavy, shimmery effect” that is “less boisterous than our shrieky little harmonic pipes that are sort of traditional in the neo-Baroque style.”

Builders were also completing an initial phase of voicing the pipes, cutting the ends, adjusting the openings and nicking the edges to shape the sound. David Chamberlin, the tonal director and vice president of Bigelow, is also an organist, with a master’s degree in organ performance. He oversaw the voicing, blowing on each pipe to test the sound quality.

“We want to do something that will create, uplift, enrich, spiritually, the lives of our listeners,” he said.

By late summer, the organ had been disassembled and loaded into semitrucks. To prepare for its arrival, the church building underwent a litany of preparations. A team of engineers and heating, ventilating, and air-conditioning workers reset electrical lines, adjusted the temperature and humidity, and excavated holes in the 140-year-old brick wall to create pathways for the air system “so the organ’s lungs can breathe,” Dayton-Welch explained.

He said that, typically, you build an instrument after a room, but the construction of the new location created an opportunity for both to be designed in tandem. “The room is part of the organ, the room is part of the instrument,” he said.

Church of the Epiphany leaders envision the organ not solely as a source of music for their sanctuary, but as a tool to bring people in — and not solely for Sunday morning worship, where 60 to 80 people gather each week. They hope to build on already developed relationships, with decadeslong members going to dinner with young couples who are newly attending, and the church continuing its Wednesday night dinner program that feeds housing-insecure neighbors, college students and others needing a meal.

“What we’re trying to do is meet the needs of our community by creating a place of belonging,” Dayton-Welch said. “And our hope is that the music program facilitates that.”

Alex Nguyen, who began as Epiphany’s new director of music in September, envisions using nontraditional ways to introduce the organ to the community, such as hosting jazz ensembles or multimedia events.

“Of course we will have recitals,” he said, “but I think we’d like to try some different things, unconventional pairings with the organ, doing things with the kids to help create that interest.”

Cruz, who lives near Epiphany and was first inspired to attend in 2023, after a hospitalization, said the church has “felt like home” since day one. Anticipating the organ, she said, has been part of what’s drawn the congregation together, and she compared the instrument’s arrival to a birth.

“The organ has almost breathed a new sense of life or purpose,” she said, “and we get to share now this musical ministry with our community.”

Andrew Gingery, vice president of Associated Pipe Organ Builders of America, a trade organization, said some churches — often Catholic, Episcopal, Lutheran or Presbyterian — continue to appreciate pipe organs. And high-quality organ building companies are “all very busy right now,” since the end of the height of the pandemic.

“There are still churches with means, and they want to have good music,” said Gingery, who is also executive vice president of C.B. Fisk, a pipe organ builder based in Gloucester, Massachusetts, which is developing an organ for the St. Vartan Armenian Cathedral in New York for 2027. “That’s one of the things that makes them an active church. Frankly, you put on a good show and people are likely to come.”

This past fall, Epiphany’s congregation heard the organ played during worship for the first time. Though the voicing of the organ pipes wasn’t yet complete, parishioners told RNS that even hearing the unfinished organ was profoundly moving. On Tuesday, the Feast of Epiphany, which celebrates the wise men’s visit to the infant Jesus, the voicing process was nearing completion. The organ will be blessed Tuesday by the bishop of New York.

Cruz said that for her Puerto Rican family, Epiphany, also known as Three Kings Day, is “almost bigger than Christmas.”

“We’re all like little kids,” she said, “waiting to see how it is going to sound that day when it’s absolutely, fully complete.”

Vanderbrouk, who served as junior warden when the plans for the organ were first made, noted that Epiphany’s congregation has moved numerous times over the nearly two centuries it’s been around. To him, the organ is now like an anchor for the “itinerant” church.

“It’s a signal to the parish and to our neighbors that after all that moving and construction, we’re fully invested, and we’re here to stay,” he said. “There’s a sense of permanence.”

Source: Utah News

Utah Jazz vs Dallas Mavericks recap: Markkanen’s 33, Sensabaugh’s heroics win the day

This game began with the visiting Dallas Mavericks just a game and a half ahead of the actively losing (while graciously hosting) Utah Jazz. The Western Conference is, once again, remarkably deep this …

The Utah Jazz pushed their season series with Dallas to a 2-0 advantage on Thursday night with a 116-114 final score. That result nudged the Jazz and Mavs one notch closer to one another in the Western Conference standings, adding Utah’s 13th win of the year and first in their last six contests. Like it or not, this team is too feisty, too energetic to sit around and lose every night.

This game began with the visiting Dallas Mavericks just a game and a half ahead of the actively losing (while graciously hosting) Utah Jazz. The Western Conference is, once again, remarkably deep this season, but to see a team like Dallas go from holding sincere NBA Finals aspirations to struggling to remain in the Play-In conversation is baffling, no matter how you view it.

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This team traded for Anthony Davis in an effort to win, and win immediately (if you don’t subscribe to the Adam Silver Draft Lottery string-pulling conspiracy theories), and still managed to acquire one of the most NBA-ready 18-year-olds the sport has ever seen in Flagg with the number one pick.

Flagg has delivered exactly as advertised: a do-it-all, no apparent weaknesses type of player who dishes out like catnip for winning basketball. Scoring? Check. Playmaking? Check. Defending? Check. Hustle? Check, check, and check. He’s the reason Utah nose-dived to the bottom of the NBA standings in 2024-25. Players like Flagg are the reason that tanking is practiced at all. Despite all this, I will never pass up a chance to poke fun at his ridiculous Van Dyke goatee.

Even with Kyrie Irving sidelined with injuries, players like Ryan Nembhart, Max Christie, Klay Thompson, and Daniel Gafford seem like the pieces of a highly competent basketball team, no?

I must be delusional or horribly misinformed about the Dallas Mavericks, because the product doesn’t match my mental narrative in the slightest.

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Then, on the other side of this matchup, we have the Utah Jazz. Just a season ago, when observing the Utah Jazz in a vacuum, the early returns of the team’s rebuilding era weren’t very promising. Taylor Hendricks, when healthy, has been a mouse. Slipping through each game silently, unnoticed. Cody Williams has been much the same. Sensabaugh, Collier, and Filipowski, while offering servicable production, don’t typically move the needle towards winning basketball games.

Even this year, Ace Bailey and Walter Clayton Jr. have been hot-and-cold, glass-half-full types of evaluations more often than not. Their production is promising because we believe it can be, so Jazz fans have taken every ounce of positive output they can get.

So it’s odd to me, the dichotomy between these two basketball teams. They clashed tonight in the Delta Center as peers, when the finer details suggest to me this should have been Dallas’ runway to their 20th win or so at this point in the year — at least. But basketball doesn’t care about what’s reasonable, nor rational. Basketball exists in its own sphere, and tonight, the Jazz won their second game of the year against Dallas.

But this season, the emergence of Keyonte George as an honest-to-goodness star point guard has breathed life into a franchise stuck treading water. Suddenly, George and the already-established Markkanen are one of the NBA’s most potent scoring combinations. Tonight, they dropped 19 and 20, respectively.

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Sensabaugh came up huge in the final stretch of this game. With the lead changing hands over and over again down the stretch, a top-of-the-key three-ball pushed the Jazz ahead. Dallas’ next possession was cut short when Ice Brice stole an inbound from Cooper Flagg and slipped a layup through the rookie’s swinging wings.

I don’t do this often, but I’d like to show some appreciation to Cody Williams for his efficient, productive night. With a final stat sheet reading eight points (4-for-5 from the floor), four assists, three rebounds, and two steals from the starting lineup. It’s typically much more fun to talk about his shortcomings during his first two years of NBA play, but I have to hand it to him; he’s been steady in his recent appearances. Two blocks and a steal against OKC? 18 points in 26 minutes against the Clippers? Give it up for Cody.

The Jazz advance to 13-23 and line up their next game against Kon Knueppel and Charlotte on Saturday.

Calvin Barrett is a writer, editor, and prolific Mario Kart racer located in Tokyo, Japan. He has covered the NBA and College Sports since 2024.

Source: Utah News

‘Games you live for’: No. 9 BYU turns attention to rival Utah after walloping Arizona State

Second-year BYU basketball coach Kevin Young says rivalry game against Utah on Saturday will have a “little personal flavor” for the No. 9 Cougars.

After scoring a career-high 31 points in BYU’s 104-76 thrashing of Arizona State on Wednesday night in front of more than 18,000 fans at the Marriott Center, senior Richie Saunders was more interested in talking about the No. 9 Cougars’ next game than their last.

That’s because the Cougars still feel like there is some unfinished business to attend to at the Huntsman Center after they lost 73-72 in overtime on the Hill a year ago. Then-first-year coach Kevin Young and the Cougars avenged that bitter defeat 85-74 in Provo nearly two months later, but the sting really won’t dissipate until they can get a win in Salt Lake City.

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Tipoff is at 8 p.m. MST Saturday, and the Utes (0-2, 8-7) and Cougars’ third meeting as Big 12 foes will be televised by ESPN. While BYU was embarrassing ASU Wednesday, Utah was losing 85-73 at Colorado.

Kenpom says BYU is a 14-point favorite and has an 89% win probability. But the Cougars to a man say it will be much more difficult than that. Last year was a prime example, as favored BYU attempted just 10 free throws and home-standing Utah went to the line 32 times.

“Playing there is tough. I am excited to go and get a win for my senior year there,” Saunders said. “But yeah, they turn up the jets. Everything is a lot more crazy than any other game. Those are the games that you live for.”

“I am still ticked that we lost that one. … We just want to go up there and get a win, bottom line. … I never really grew up a super huge BYU fan. I always respected the program and what it stood for and things like that. But I didn’t grow up with the hate (for Utah), right?”

BYU coach Kevin Young on Saturday’s game at Utah Saturday night

BYU point guard Rob Wright III also hit a career high Wednesday night, scoring 27 points on 9 of 15 shooting. Wright was 3 of 6 from 3-point range and has now shot 40% or better from 3-point range in 11 straight games.

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The Baylor transfer who is from Wilmington, Delaware, said he has already been filled in on the rivalry.

“I think I watched a little bit of the game last year and it looked pretty crazy,” Wright said. “I think it is going to be a crazy game. That’s all I know.”

After scoring 23 points on 7 of 13 shooting against the Sun Devils, superstar AJ Dybantsa told BYUtv that he is looking forward to his first and probably only visit to Utah’s arena, and called on BYU fans to turn the Huntsman Center blue.

Dybantsa has scored 20 or more points in 10 games this season, the third most by a BYU freshman; Danny Ainge leads that category with 18. Dybantsa has scored 20-plus points in eight straight games, which is tied for the eighth-longest all-time at BYU.

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Arizona State coach Bobby Hurley had nothing but praise for BYU’s “Big 3” after the game, but reserved the most for Saunders, who has averaged 29.0 points in three Big 12 games against ASU dating back to last year.

“He’s a very good player and I have a lot of respect for him,” Hurley said. “He’s not even talked about because of just all the hype (for Dybantsa). And it is deserving for AJ, but I think I voted for (Saunders) for Player of the Year in the conference last year. He was that good.

“You can’t lose him,” Hurley continued. “He knows how to play. We have guys sometimes off the ball who just have no clue that they are guarding a guy who can make shots like that.”

The Cougars surpassed the 100-point plateau for the first time in a Big 12 game and the fourth time in two years. It was the first time BYU has scored more than 100 points against a Power Five opponent since it put 112 on Stanford in 2013.

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The Big 3 combined for a season-high 81 points, five more than ASU’s entire team.

“Those are three really mature guys that understand the game and that allows them to be great,” Young said.

As far as facing Utah in Salt Lake City again is concerned, Young said that “Trevin Knell is somewhere mad that he missed those free throws” in overtime in the 1-point loss.

“I am still ticked that we lost that one. … We just want to go up there and get a win, bottom line,” Young said. “I never really grew up a super huge BYU fan. I always respected the program and what it stood for and things like that. But I didn’t grow up with the hate (for Utah), right?

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“Now that I’ve been here and kind of experienced it, I just want to go up there and beat those guys,” he continued.

Young said there will be a “little personal flavor” for him because he’s known new Utah coach Alex Jensen and new Utah general manager Wes Wilcox for a long time from their days coaching in the NBA and the G League.

“So it will be fun to compete against those guys,” he said. “You tack on the rivalry component, and it will mean a lot for guys like Richie. It will be his last time to be able to try to get a win in that building.”

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BYU Cougars guard Richie Saunders (15) celebrates after dropping a dagger 3 after Cougars guard Robert Wright III (1) saved the ball from going out of bounds and flipping it backwards to Saunders as the Cougars and Arizona State Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars guard Robert Wright III (1) is defended by Arizona State Sun Devils guard Anthony Johnson (2) as he drives toward the lane as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars guard Richie Saunders (15) maintains his stance watching a 3-point shot drop in as the Cougars and Arizona State Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars guard Robert Wright III (1) and BYU Cougars forward AJ Dybantsa (3) celebrate after a sequence of plays ending in a BYU Cougars guard Richie Saunders (15) 3-point bomb as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars forward AJ Dybantsa (3) reaches for the ball ahead of Arizona State Sun Devils forward Andrija Grbovic (14) as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars guard Robert Wright III (1) eyes the hoop as he drives into the lane as the Cougars and Arizona State Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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Arizona State Sun Devils head coach Bobby Hurley makes a face as he watches the action as the BYU Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars forward AJ Dybantsa (3) prepares to go to work on Arizona State Sun Devils guard Anthony Johnson (2) as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars forward Tyler Mrus (2) pushes up a shot as the Cougars and Arizona State Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars guard Robert Wright III (1) saves the ball from going out of bounds and flips it backward toward BYU Cougars guard Richie Saunders (15), who drained a 3-point bomb, as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars forward AJ Dybantsa (3) fakes Arizona State Sun Devils forward Allen Mukeba (23) as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars students during a timeout as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars guard Richie Saunders (15) celebrates after dropping a dagger 3 after teammate BYU Cougars guard Robert Wright III (1) saved the ball from going out of bounds and flipping it backward to Saunders as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars forward AJ Dybantsa (3) brings the ball across midcourt as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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Arizona State Sun Devils head coach Bobby Hurley makes a face as he watches the action as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars guard Richie Saunders (15) brings the ball up court as the Cougars and Arizona State Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars forward AJ Dybantsa (3) defends Arizona State Sun Devils guard Noah Meeusen (15) as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars Abdullah Ahmed rips down a rebound as the Cougars and Arizona State Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars forward AJ Dybantsa (3) catches Arizona State Sun Devils guard Maurice Odum (5) in the chin with an elbow as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU students try to disrupt Arizona State Sun Devils center Massamba Diop (35) on a free-throw as the BYU Cougars and Arizona State Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars guard Richie Saunders (15) pushes the ball up for a layup over Arizona State Sun Devils guard Anthony Johnson (2) as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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Arizona State Sun Devils head coach Bobby Hurley grimaces after BYU Cougars guard Richie Saunders (15) dropped in a 3-point shot as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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Arizona State Sun Devils guard Anthony Johnson (2) looks for help as he grabs a loose ball as the BYU Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars forward AJ Dybantsa (3) goes in for a dunk as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars head coach Kevin Young yells out instructions as the Cougars and Arizona State Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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Arizona State Sun Devils forward Allen Mukeba (23) fouls BYU Cougars forward AJ Dybantsa (3) as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars forward Mihailo Boskovic (5) battles Arizona State Sun Devils guard Noah Meeusen (15) as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars guard Richie Saunders (15) drives to the basket with Arizona State Sun Devils guard Maurice Odum (5) defending as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars forward AJ Dybantsa (3) fakes then goes up for a shot with Arizona State Sun Devils center Massamba Diop (35) defending him as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars forward AJ Dybantsa (3) reacts after being fouled as the Cougars and Arizona State Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars guard Robert Wright III (1) crashes into Arizona State Sun Devils forward Allen Mukeba (23) as he tries to defend Arizona State Sun Devils guard Anthony Johnson (2) as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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Arizona State Sun Devils center Massamba Diop (35) and Arizona State Sun Devils forward Andrija Grbovic (14) battle for a rebound with BYU Cougars guard Robert Wright III (1) as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars forward AJ Dybantsa (3) puts up a 3-point attempt over Arizona State Sun Devils center Massamba Diop (35) as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars forward Khadim Mboup (7) tries to get away with the ball as Arizona State Sun Devils center Massamba Diop (35) grabs onto his arm as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars guard Richie Saunders (15) puts in a layup as the Cougars and Arizona State Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars guard Richie Saunders (15) puts up a 3-point shot as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars forward Dominique Diomande (24) takes the ball after Arizona State Sun Devils guard Noah Meeusen (15) lost it as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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Arizona State Sun Devils head coach Bobby Hurley yells at an official as the BYU Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars guard Robert Wright III (1) drives on Arizona State Sun Devils guard Anthony Johnson (2) as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars’ Abdullah Ahmed blocks a shot by Arizona State Sun Devils forward Santiago Trouet (1) as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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BYU Cougars guard Richie Saunders (15) drives past Arizona State Sun Devils guard Noah Meeusen (15) as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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Arizona State Sun Devils forward Allen Mukeba (23) snags a rebound as BYU Cougars’ Abdullah Ahmed (34) reacts as the Cougars and Sun Devils play in the Marriott Center in Provo on Wednesday, Jan. 7, 2026. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

Source: Utah News

Michigan Wolverines land Utah star to boost defense in transfer portal

Kyle Whittingham will be reuniting with one of his Utah players, seeing defender John Henry Daley make his way to the Michigan Wolverines.

Michigan Wolverines land Utah star to boost defense in transfer portal appeared first on ClutchPoints. Add ClutchPoints as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Kyle Whittingham and the Michigan Wolverines landed an experienced player in the 2026 offseason, earning the commitment of defender John Henry Daley.

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Daley announced his commitment to the Wolverines on Thursday, per On3 insider Pete Nakos. He last represented the Utah Utes, leaving the program after two seasons. He first represented the BYU Cougars for two years before joining Utah.

Daley boasts a four-star ranking with a 93 score on 247Sports. He stands out as the ninth-best player at his position and 49th-best player in the transfer class. When he came out of high school, he had a three-star ranking with an 87 score. He listed ninth in the state of Utah and 47th among athletes in the 2021 class.

What’s next for Michigan after landing John Henry Daley

Matt Pendleton-Imagn Images

Matt Pendleton-Imagn Images

It’s quite the pickup for Kyle Whittingham and Michigan to make in the defensive unit, landing the talents of John Henry Daley.

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Daley will have two years of eligibility remaining, meaning that the Wolverines would have him for the 2026 and 2027 campaigns if he stays there to conclude his career.

The experienced defender is rehabbing his Achilles, having torn it last November. Prior to the injury, he was playing at an incredibly high level.

He tied for the FBS lead with 17.5 tackles for loss and ranked second in the country with 11.5 sacks. Despite missing the end of the season, he earned All-America honors from Walter Camp (First Team), AFCA (Second Team), AP (Second Team) and CBS Sports (Second Team). He also earned All-Big 12 First Team honors after getting votes from the league’s coaches.

It also helps Daley that he is already familiar with Whittingham, following him from Utah. That will give him an advantage in obtaining a solid role in the defense, providing a significant boost to that side of the ball.

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The Wolverines enter a new era of college football with Whittingham leading the way. They moved on from Sherrone Moore following controversial events, going 16-8 with him at the helm after two seasons. Whittingham will look to bring the program back into national championship contention, a standard that Michigan holds itself to.

Related: Louisville Cardinals land 7-sack North Carolina star in transfer portal

Related: USC Trojans lose former 5-star QB to transfer portal

Source: Utah News

Utah football transfer news: Utes pick up one offensive weapon but could lose another

The Utes have also reportedly secured a talented wideout to help new offensive coordinator Kevin McGiven. Utah State transfer wide receiver Braden Pegan, who had more than 900 receiving yards last …

If you ask Morgan Scalley, he’ll tell you he has a long-term plan for Utah football.

But on Tuesday, the Utes’ new head coach spoke off the cuff.

He had no speech prepared. There were no notes in hand. At his first news conference in Utah since taking the top job, Scalley wanted to speak from the heart.

“I’m a baby,” he said while growing emotional inside Rice-Eccles Stadium. “But, man, is our team gonna rip your face off.”

With longtime coach Kyle Whittingham stepping down last month and unexpectedly leaving for Michigan — taking a conglomeration of BYU and Utah staffers with him — Scalley has had to swiftly pick up the pieces and establish Utah’s new identity.

He’s hired a new staff and has now turned his focus to building next season’s roster.

With the transfer portal open and set to close on Jan. 16, Scalley’s been focused first on player retention.

“You’re always recruiting your own guys,” he said. “They need to know that they’re loved. They need to know that they’re appreciated. A coach’s job is to provide clarity, accountability and support, and as long as you’re giving them constant feedback … That constant feedback is huge. You don’t get many surprises with that.”

(Bethany Baker | The Salt Lake Tribune) From left, University of Utah President Taylor Randall, head football coach Morgan Scalley, and athletic director Mark Harlan hold up a jersey during an introductory news conference at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City on Tuesday, Jan. 6, 2026.

He’s also had to keep his eye on bringing new players in, too.

The Utes have been active in the transfer portal early in the cycle.

“We will bring the ones that want to be here, and we will develop them and love them,“ Scalley said. ”The future is bright here. At the end of the day, you’re either in the boat or you’re out.”

Pickups in the portal

The Utes have received a handful of commitments since the transfer portal opened on Jan. 2.

Former Oklahoma freshman safety Marcus Wimberly committed to the program on Monday. He redshirted with the Sooners in 2025 and was a three-star recruit in the previous recruiting cycle.

Utah also picked up North Texas sophomore defensive end Ethan Day, who had 53 tackles and 4.5 sacks this season. The Utes needed to find production on the edge after Logan Fano declared for the 2026 NFL Draft and All-American John Henry Daley entered the portal and committed to Michigan on Thursday.

(Jessica Tobias | AP) North Texas defensive lineman Ethan Day (90) before a game against Temple in November. Day has committed to play for the Utah Utes in 2026.

Alongside Day, the Utes added Wyoming sophomore defensive tackle Lucas Samsula. He finished the season with eight solo tackles and 1.5 sacks.

“You’ll always have to be physical,” Scalley said of establishing Utah’s identity in the trenches. “[That starts with] establishing the offensive and the defensive lines. I also believe that you have to be innovative. You have to be creative.”

The Utes have also reportedly secured a talented wideout to help new offensive coordinator Kevin McGiven. Utah State transfer wide receiver Braden Pegan, who had more than 900 receiving yards last year under McGiven, is set to join the Utes, according to multiple reports.

If Utah’s bowl performance was any sign of what’s to come, the Utes could let it fly more often than they did under Whittingham.

Player retention

So far, the Utes have earned several commitments from key contributors set to return in 2025.

The Utes have locked down wide receivers Creed Whittemore and Daidren Zipperer.

They’ve also picked up commitments from safeties Jackson Bennee, Rabbit Evans and Nate Ritchie. On Wednesday, running back Wayshawn Parker announced he had re-signed with the Utes.

But the Utes also appear to be saying goodbye to some key contributors from last season. Tight end JJ Buchanan and defensive tackles Jonah Lea’ea and Dallas Vakalahi all entered the transfer portal this week.

Scalley is still waiting on official word from quarterbacks Devon Dampier and Byrd Ficklin, who already signed a deal to return.

(Bethany Baker | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Utes running back Wayshawn Parker (1) runs the ball during the game between the Utah Utes and the Arizona State Sun Devils at The University of Utah in Salt Lake City on Saturday, Oct. 11, 2025.

After bringing McGiven to Salt Lake City to replace offensive coordinator Jason Beck, Scalley’s hoping to sell last year’s top weapons on his new play caller.

“It doesn’t hurt that we already have the skill players that have [been in] a similar system, ” Scalley said. “That’s the beauty for them.”

Source: Utah News

Buffs keeping winning, knock off Utah with balanced attack

In a high-scoring, up-tempo affair, the Colorado Buffaloes pulled away late from the Utah Utes for their 12th win of the season. Neither team could guard each other, nor protect the rim, but it was …

In a high-scoring, up-tempo affair, the Colorado Buffaloes pulled away late from the Utah Utes for their 12th win of the season. Neither team could guard each other, nor protect the rim, but it was the Buffs who made winning plays down the stretch to ultimately win 85-73.

Colorado had a balanced attack in the first half, running their motion offense through off-ball screens and backdoor cuts, with their guards finding incisive passes or drives. Sebastian Rancik did his usual best drawing fouls, Josiah Sanders had some shifty drives, and star guards Barrington Hargress and Isaiah Johnson hit timely jumpers.

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Utah’s scoring was more star-driven, but it was no hero ball. Don McHenry and Terrence Brown scored 30 of 38 first half points, with McHenry particularly hot making 7 of 9 shots. Where head coach Alex Jensen succeeded was countering CU’s 1-2-2 zone press. Utah kept the ball moving and worked their way to open shots, sometimes taking one or two dribbles total per possession.

CU switched to a 2-3 zone and found some success there, at least until the Utes cracked the code to that one too. During this brief stretch of solid defense, the Buffs enjoyed a 10-point lead for seven or eight minutes. Bangot Dak had some nice inside finishes and a triple, Felix Kossaras and Alon Michaeli hit catch-and-shoot threes, and the Buffs had some exciting fast breaks after causing turnovers.

Utah hung around a bit too long. That 2-3 zone didn’t last long before Tad Boyle oscillated between man-to-man and the same zone press as before. None of them worked, as the Utes’ sharp passing beat the zone, while CU’s lackadaisical help defense left the perimeter defenders exposed. The Utes cut the deficit to 65-63 and remained down 2 or 4 for the next five minutes.

That was as close as Utah got before the Buffs pulled away. They certainly had their chances, but were denied at the rim, twice by Kossaras, and then again by Dak who followed up his rejection with a put-back slam on the other end. Once CU had some breathing room, it was Rancik and Johnson getting to the rack and drawing fouls, just as they did last weekend in Tempe.

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There’s a lot to be desired on the defensive end, but it’s another deserved win for the Buffs. They’re now 12-3 on the season, 2-0 in Big 12 play, and looking like they can compete in a loaded conference. It helps when you assist more than half your baskets, even better when you shoot 19/21 from the free throw line.

Colorado will be tested on Saturday (5 PM, CBS Sports Network) when they host the #14 Texas Tech Red Raiders, an elite offensive unit led by consensus All-American JT Toppin and the shifty Christian Anderson who’s averaging 19.6 points and 7.5 assists per game.

Source: Utah News

Utah survives its early struggles, late rally from Kansas to earn Big 12 road win

Utes trailed by 10 early in second quarter before Gavin Petersen’s squad turned things around and eventually made some big 3s.

For a half Wednesday night, Kansas had the Utah women’s basketball team out of its usual rhythm on offense.

That helped the Jayhawks take an eight-point lead through one quarter and lead by as many as 10 points.

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In the second half, though, the Utes began to better resemble themselves offensively, particularly from 3-point range, and it helped Utah earn a hard-fought 62-59 victory at Phog Allen Fieldhouse in the Utes’ first game since they knocked off No. 8 TCU last Saturday.

“We have to have a response every game. I mean, we lost a couple ones that we should have won early in the preseason,” Utah senior guar Lani White said in a postgame interview on ESPN+. “This entire season, we just try to respond every game, fixing the things that we need to change, and honing in on things that we’re really good at.”

The methodical comeback and victory still had a tense ending, though, after Kansas trimmed a 62-50 lead down to a single possession in the final minute, as Utah went the final four and a half minutes without a point.

It was reminiscent of Utah’s win over Arizona to start Big 12 play, when the Utes led by 16 but had to get a defensive stop on the final possession to win.

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Elle Evans’ 3 with 39.3 seconds to go made it 62-59, and the Jayhawks chose to play defense instead of foul on the next possession. White shot a fadeaway that didn’t draw iron, and it left Kansas with 7.9 seconds and with a chance to tie.

Following a timeout, S’mya Nichols, who had 19 points and five assists for Kansas, got a good look from straightaway, but her 3-point attempt came up short and Utah rebounded the ball.

The nerve-wracking moments weren’t over — Reese Ross was fouled after the 3-point miss and went to the free-throw line, but she missed both and gave Kansas hope with 0.8 seconds to play.

Lilly Meister’s 3 was well short, though, and Utah hung on.

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“We have been working all week on our defense. Kansas had a lot of sets, so we were just trying to be (connected) within our defense, switching everything, just trying to talk. But we’ve come a long way defensively,” White said.

White was a catalyst for the Utes’ second-quarter rally, when they turned a 20-10 game into a 20-all tie and eventually went into the half down two.

She scored seven straight for the Utes in just over a minute and a half, and it helped a once-moribund offense start to get on track.

White ended up scoring 17 points and finishing with five rebounds, two steals and an assist — to go with two turnovers — in pacing the Utes.

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Ross, the Utes’ hard-nosed front court player, nearly had another double-double with 11 points and nine rebounds, and Chyra Evans had 10 points and six rebounds.

Those two, in particular, helped Utah finish with a 42-30 rebounding edge, and the Utes turned that into a 12-7 edge in second-chance points after grabbing 11 offensive rebounds to four for Kansas.

Utah’s second-half 3-point shooting, albeit inefficient, also played a big role in the win.

At one point in the third quarter, both Utah and Kansas had hit just two 3-pointers each — a rare poor shooting effort from two of the best 3-point shooting teams in the Big 12.

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The Utes, though, finally created some separation by hitting from outside. First, White made a step-back 3 to give Utah a then game-high four-point lead at 41-37.

Then, freshman guard LA Sneed drilled two 3-pointers, including one as the shot ticked down in the final seconds of the third quarter, to make it 47-41 Utes going into the final period.

Utah shot 57.1% in the third quarter and 4 of 8 from 3-point range.

The Utes ended up making 9 of 28 3-point shots — not the most promising outside shooting night, but far succeeding Kansas’ 3 of 16 struggles.

It was enough to helped offset the Utes losing the turnover battle 17-9 and getting outscored 14-6 in points off turnovers.

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In conference play, a win — no matter how it comes — counts the same way in the victory column, and for the Utes, they’ll take a two-game win streak into a road game at Kansas State on Saturday.

“It means everything,” White said, of winning on the road. “Our motto is, we’re down on the road always. I mean, it’s us against the crowd, it’s us against traveling, it’s us against the refs. Always. So (the) mentality for us, is we got to fight.”

Source: Utah News

3 takeaways from Utah’s road loss at Colorado

There were some other bright spots for Utah. That included Utah finishing with seven turnovers, to 11 for Colorado, and the Utes owned a 15-11 edge in second-chance points. It wasn’t enough, though.

Utah’s first Big 12 win is going to have to wait, after the Runnin’ Utes fell 85-73 to Colorado at the CU Events Center in Boulder, Colorado, on Wednesday.

That dropped Utah to 8-7 on the season and 0-2 in Big 12 play.

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Here are three takeaways from the game.

Buffaloes made the plays at the start and the end

Colorado got out to a quick 11-1 lead, much like the 14-2 deficit Utah found itself trailing by last Saturday against No. 1 Arizona.

To the Utes’ credit, they rallied and made a game out of this one.

Colorado, though, simply was the more consistent team in earning the win.

The Buffaloes shot better from the field, 46.8% to 39.4%, outrebounded the Utes 41-35 and outscored Utah in bench points, 33-8.

The Utes made it tough, eventually whittling a 10-point Colorado lead down to two points in the last 10 minutes.

After a Keanu Dawes jumper made it 69-67 with 3:58 to play, the Buffaloes responded with a decisive 8-0 run over the next couple of minutes and Colorado pulled away for the win.

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The Buffaloes ended the game on a 16-6 run.

Utah’s Big 3 showed up big-time

As is becoming the norm, Utah’s top three players carried the effort for Utah.

Don McHenry led all scorers with 24 points, with 18 of those coming in the first half. He finished with seven rebounds and an assist, to just one turnover.

Keanu Dawes contributed across the board, with 16 points, seven rebounds, two assists and a steal.

Terrence Brown, meanwhile, also had 16 points and added three assists and two steals. He shot just 5 of 17 from the field, though.

There were some other bright spots for Utah. That included Utah finishing with seven turnovers, to 11 for Colorado, and the Utes owned a 15-11 edge in second-chance points.

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It wasn’t enough, though.

Colorado’s balance won out

The Buffaloes entered the night with five players averaging in double-figures.

They ended Wednesday night’s contest with four players scoring in double digits. That was led by Sebastian Rancik, who had 19 points, four rebounds and two assists.

Bangot Dak was big in the paint, as he posted a double-double with 16 points and 12 rebounds and added two assists.

Colorado also made more 3-pointers, eight to five, and was better at the free-throw line, going 19 of 21 while Utah was 16 of 23.

In a game where Colorado led for more than 39 minutes but Utah still hung around, too many little things went against the Utes.

Source: Utah News