Mammoth win the first NHL playoff game in Utah, beating Vegas 4-2 for 2-1 series lead

Lawson Crouse scored twice in a 5:42 span in the second period and the Utah Mammoth won the first NHL playoff game in the state, beating the Vegas Golden Knights 4-2 on Friday night for a 2-1 series …

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Lawson Crouse scored twice in a 5:42 span in the second period and the Utah Mammoth won the first NHL playoff game in the state, beating the Vegas Golden Knights 4-2 on Friday night for a 2-1 series lead.

Game 4 of the best-of-seven series is Monday night in Salt Lake City. Utah evened the series in Las Vegas on Tuesday after winning 3-2. Vegas won the series opener 4-2 on its home ice on Sunday.

The Mammoth are in their second season in Utah after leaving Arizona.

Crouse’s goals capped an early flurry that saw the Mammoth score four times over the first 30 minutes while being limited to only eight shots on goal during that stretch.

“Over the years, we’ve been a team that’s been able to generate in different ways,” Utah captain Clayton Keller said. “Sometimes we’re going to have more shots than other nights. Quality over quantity sometimes and just bearing down on the looks that you do get. I think that’s the most important thing.”

MacKenzie Weegar and Dylan Guenther scored for Utah in the first period, with Guenther striking on a power play. Crouse followed in the second. He tipped in the puck at the 4:06 mark and then struck on a long shot between the circles at 9:48 to make it 4-0.

Carter Hart stayed on the ice for the Golden Knights through all three periods despite giving up four goals by the midway point of the second.

“I have full faith in him. He wants to work through it,” Vegas coach John Tortorella said. “He has an attitude and a mental toughness about him at that position. He’ll be fine.”

Karel Vejmelka made 29 saves for the Mammoth, who had only 12 shots on goal against Hart. Keller had two assists for the first multi-point game of his playoff career.

Jack Eichel got Vegas on the board with 6:40 left in the second. Nic Dowd made it 4-2 with 3:08 left in the third.

Vegas went 0 of 4 on the power play while Utah converted its lone opportunity.

“I think (Vejmelka) was rock solid and made keys saves at key moments on the PK,” Mammoth coach Andre Tourigny said. “We had a great performance from our special teams.”

Weegar opened the scoring with 7:01 left in the first, tracking down a feed from Liam O’Brien and blasting the puck between the circles.

Guenther converted on a power play with 2:14 to go in the period on a slap shot from the top of the left circle.

___

AP NHL playoffs: https://apnews.com/hub/stanley-cup and https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Source: Utah News

Utah K-9 who helped remove hundreds of pounds of narcotics dies

A K-9 who served with the Utah Highway Patrol and helped find hundreds of pounds of illegal narcotics has died.In a Facebook post, the Grand County Sheriff’s Of …

A K-9 who served with the Utah Highway Patrol and helped find hundreds of pounds of illegal narcotics has died.

In a Facebook post, the Grand County Sheriff’s Office announced the death of K-9 Leo.

“Our hearts go out to his handler, Tyler West, during this difficult time,” the post read.

A K-9 who served with the Utah Highway Patrol and helped find hundreds of pounds of illegal narcotics has died. (Photo: Grand County Sheriff’s Office)

A K-9 who served with the Utah Highway Patrol and helped find hundreds of pounds of illegal narcotics has died. (Photo: Grand County Sheriff’s Office)

The sheriff’s office said that while Leo was not assigned to its office, he worked alongside its deputies and had a lasting impact on the community. Photos documented the hundreds of pounds of illegal narcotics the K-9 helped find in Grand County. He later transferred to Iron County, where he continued working to get dangerous drugs off the streets.

The sheriff’s office said Leo served with loyalty, dedication and courage, and his legacy would not be forgotten.

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Source: Utah News

Female Utah lawmaker accused of aggressive and unwanted sexual advances against four women: report

A female Utah lawmaker running for US Congress allegedly made aggressive and unwanted sexual advances on four women — with one accuser claiming she was choked and another saying an …

A female Utah lawmaker running for US Congress allegedly made aggressive and unwanted sexual advances on four women — with one accuser claiming she was choked and another saying an “incredibly embarrassing” incident left them in tears.

Salt Lake City Councilwoman Eva Lopez Chavez allegedly accosted the women between 2019 and 2022, with her accusers describing her as relentless and refusing to take no for an answer, the Salt Lake Tribune reported Wednesday.

The four accusers include a state senator, a state representative, a fellow councilwoman and a former political aide. The alleged encounters all occurred before Chavez Lopez assumed her current office, according to the Tribune.

Salt Lake City Councilwoman Eva Lopez Chavez was accused of unwanted sexual advances by four women. slc.gov

Lopez Chavez — a Democratic Gen Z-er seeking to represent Utah’s 1st District in Washington DC — has denied the claims outright, saying they “never occurred” and that she was “shocked by the allegations,” and even offering to undergo a lie detector test to demonstrate her innocence.

“She stands ready to submit to a polygraph test regarding these various allegations if requested,” her attorney, Greg Skordas, told the Tribune. “She is prepared to address them in any forum.”

One of the claims allegedly occurred in Sept. 2022, when Lopez Chavez went to a wedding afterparty with members of the city council — including Councilwoman Victoria Petro.

Petro claimed Lopez Chavez grabbed her throat at the party, and then “pushed me back against a pillar so that my back was against the wall and told me, ‘The only reason I still f–k men is because a woman hasn’t shown me what I really want.’”

Councilwoman Victoria Petro claimed Lopez Chavez grabbed her by the neck and pushed her at a party. Facebook/Council Woman Victoria Petro-Eschler
Utah State Sen. Jen Plumb claimed Lopez Chavez groped her at a party and came on to her. Facebook/Jennifer Plumb

“If a man had done that to me, would there be a question if it was assault or not?” Petro told the Tribune.

Petro allegedly reported the incident after the party to Council Chair Alejandro Puy, who recalled her being “shocked at what had happened.”

Lopez Chavez allegedly told Petro to stop telling people about the incident after she won her city council election in 2023.

Her attorney claimed photos and video from the wedding afterparty refuted Petros’ allegations — explaining the two seemed to be getting along fine in the images — and that “nothing inappropriate happened and no one ever expressed any concern about Eva’s conduct.”

The other alleged incident happened two months later in Nov. 2022 at a birthday party, where State Sen. Jen Plumb (D-Salt Lake City) claimed Lopez Chavez shoved her into a wall and groped her.

“It absolutely was a sexual advance. She leaned into me, grabbed onto my a–, got up in my face and said in my ear, ‘You’re sure you’re straight?’” Plumb claimed. “I just pushed her away. Come on. Knock it off.”

“I would not be comfortable with someone doing that to my daughter, to my mom, my best friends,” she added. “I’m not comfortable with it being brushed away anymore.”

State Rep. Hoang Nguyen claimed Lopez Chavez tried to force force a kiss while the pair were driving in 2022. Instagram/rephoang_ut23
Former mayoral campaign aide Maggie Regier said Lopez Chavez made aggressive advances at a 2019 event. Facebook/Maggie Regier

The same year, Democratic State Rep. Hoang Nguyen claimed she was driving Lopez Chavez home from an event when the councilwoman asked to pull over.

“Next thing I know she has leaned over and she’s on top of me, holding my shoulders down,” Nguyen told the Tribune. “I said, ‘What are you doing?’ And she said, ‘Kiss me,’” Nguyen said. “She said, ‘I’m not going to get off you until you kiss me.’ I gave her a peck and she got off.”

Lopez Chavez’s attorney also refuted that story, explaining she and Nguyen have had numerous friendly text messages with each other since the supposed incident.

The first alleged incident happened in 2019, when former mayoral campaign aide Maggie Regier said Lopez Chavez was being extremely “flirty” at a fundraising event.

Regier tried to politely get out of the situation, but Lopez Chavez allegedly took Regier “into a literal corner in the hallway,” pinned them to a wall and wouldn’t let them leave. It supposedly took a friend to step in and pull Lopez Chavez away, the Tribune reported.

But the advances allegedly continued on the dance floor, with another friend ultimately stepping between Lopez Chavez and Regier and saying ‘Leave Maggie alone,’” Regier claimed.

Regier allegedly reported the incident to the campaign supervisor, Corey Cronin, who recalled the aide being brought to tears recounting it. Regier then posted about the incident on social media in 2023 as Lopez Chavez was running for City Council, calling it “harassment.”

“It made me feel incredibly unsafe,” Regier wrote, according to the Tribune.

Lopez Chavez’s attorney denied that she ever had to be pulled away from Regier, explaining a friend merely told her Regier wanted to be left alone and that the councilwoman complied.

Lopez Chavez vehemently denied the allegations against her, with her attorney said she was willing to take a polygraph. AP

The allegations emerged publicly after Lopez Chavez spoke out against misogynistic comments one of her congressional race opponents, Nate Blouin, made online about women and sexual assault about 10 years ago.

Lopez Chavez called for Blouin to drop out of the race after the posts emerged earlier in April, and called herself a sexual assault survivor.

That statement is part of what spurned her accusers to come forward, according to the Tribune.

It remains unclear how the Salt Lake City Council will address the allegations, but Chairman Puy told the Tribune that in February he ordered a review of the council’s internal policies because of claims he’d heard about Lopez Chavez’s behavior.

Lopez Chavez’s attorney could not be reached for comment by The Post by the time of publication.

Source: Utah News

Utah OT Caleb Lomu was drafted No. 28 by the New England Patriots. Here’s what their GM and NFL analysts think of the pick

The New England Patriots wanted Utah offensive tackle Caleb Lomu and were willing to trade up to get him.

The New England Patriots wanted Utah offensive tackle Caleb Lomu and were willing to trade up to get him.

The Buffalo Bills traded their No. 28 selection in Thursday’s first round of the 2026 NFL Draft to New England in exchange for picks No. 31 and No. 125 to select Lomu. In the process, the Patriots helped make University of Utah history, as the selections of Lomu and Spencer Fano (No. 9, Cleveland Browns) marked the first time that two Ute players were picked in the first round of the NFL draft.

“Ultimately, with Caleb still on the board, we just felt like giving up the extra pick to make sure that we could acquire him was important,” said Patriots general manager Eliot Wolf.

In Lomu, the Patriots are getting a player who has proven himself over two years as the Utes’ starting left tackle. Named to the All-Big 12 first team after the 2025 season, Lomu allowed only eight pressures and no sacks in his redshirt sophomore season in Salt Lake City.

The 6-foot-6, 313-pound Lomu has exceptional athleticism for his size and excels when getting to display that, like when he is blocking in space. Per NFL.com, Lomu’s combine “production score” was the third-best among offensive tackles and helped him move up some draft boards.

Lomu’s footwork and technique pop when watching tape.

“Big athletes like this are hard to come by, especially later in the first round like this, so don’t want to set him up for any wild comparisons or anything like that, but just really, really happy that we were able to acquire him,” Wolf said.

Entering the draft, New England was confident that Lomu would be gone when it selected and actually canceled the former Ute’s pre-draft visit to its facility (the Patriots visited with Lomu at the NFL draft combine), but when the board fell in a favorable way, Wolf knew he had to make his move.

“There’s still some good players at tackle and guard as well, but we felt like there was a dropoff (after Lomu) and we felt like, again, just this best player available type situation for us at that point,” Wolf said.

What does the future look like for Lomu in his rookie season in Foxborough? Despite an up-and-down rookie season, the Patriots will continue to roll with Will Cambpell at left tackle, meaning any playing time for Lomu would come on the right side of the ball.

With veteran Morgan Moses holding down the right tackle spot, the plan appears to be to have Lomu learn from Moses and possibly take on a bigger role in 2027.

“Caleb has some versatility, so we feel like some of the pro day workouts that he did were on the right side and we were comfortable with that. Again, he’s very athletic, so I don’t think either side will be a problem for him,” Wolf said.

Lomu, surrounded by friends and family at a watch party in Arizona, hugged his wife immediately after receiving the life-changing phone call.

“Just saw my phone ringing. It kind of went blank from there, and then I answered the phone and talked to all the coaches and the owner and all that,” Lomu said.

“I’m trying to remember the whole thing. It kind of went blank, but it was such a surreal feeling, something I’ve been waiting for my entire life, so when it actually happened, it’s a moment I’ll remember for the rest of my life.”

Lomu has the opportunity to join a Patriots team on the upswing. New England is a season removed from a Super Bowl appearance and has a young, exciting quarterback in Drake Maye.

“What they got going there, especially their offense that I’ll be a part of and just their team, they’re on the rise and it’s amazing,” Lomu said. “Drake Maye is such a talented quarterback. I’m so excited to be able to work with him every day, be able to protect him.

“I’m a protector. I’m an offensive lineman. It’s my job to protect that guy, and I’m going to do everything that I can to protect him, so being able to go to work with him now is going to be amazing.”

One of the first of many people to text Lomu after the selection was Campbell, his future New England teammate, who told him that he couldn’t wait to work with him.

As the picks wore on Thursday night, there was nothing Lomu could do except wait, and when the waiting came to a merciful end, it was euphoria.

“It was definitely a long evening. I mean, just the whole day in general. I always just knew God that had a plan for me wherever I was to go. A lot of emotions going through my body throughout the entire round, but I always knew wherever I ended up is going to be the right place for me in the right situation,” Lomu said.

“And I can tell you that it is going to be, and so a lot of emotions going through — nerves, excitement, all of the above, but once I saw that number pop up on my phone, it was all excitement.”

As he met with New England reporters for the first time, Lomu made sure to thank Kyle Whittingham and Utah for preparing him for the NFL.

“Kyle Whittingham was an amazing coach. I’m very excited for what he’s going to do over at Michigan, but the way that Kyle Whittingham prepares his players, he gets him ready for the NFL, gets him ready for the league, and I think that’s why Utah produces so many players,” Lomu said.

“We got Spencer Fano that got drafted to the Browns, which is amazing, so they produce really good talent. I think that starts with coach Whittingham, how he conducts the University of Utah, how he conducts football and just everything that Utah football’s about. He just prepares you for what’s later to come in life, and then also just life in general outside of football. He just prepares you for every situation. I think that’s why we’re all so prepared for the next level.”

What did NFL analysts think of the pick?

CBS Sports’ Mike Renner: “Grade: A+. To get a tackle with Lomu’s tape in pass protection at 28 overall is nothing short of a steal. He falls here because he needs to get stronger, more consistent, and play with more edge, but he goes to a great spot to develop himself in all three areas. He has special feet and hand usage on tape to be their future starting tackle.”

ESPN’s Matt Miller: “Watching Will Campbell struggle in Super Bowl LX and realizing Morgan Moses is 35 years old, it felt as if offensive tackle was a very important position for the Patriots in Round 1. Lomu’s experience is exclusively on the left side, and he didn’t give up a sack last season, but there’s an opportunity to try him on the right side if he can add strength in his lower body. As a run blocker, he’s a work in progress, but as a pass protector, he’s incredibly clean. A redshirt season might be in his future, but he could be the team’s long-term play at right tackle.”

Games are won up front and the Patriots made a solid move to give up a fourth-round pick (125) to move from No. 31 to 28 to ensure they landed the last first-round-caliber tackle before a notable drop-off at the position.

ESPN’s Mike Reiss: “Lomu, 21, probably will become the immediate swing tackle behind Will Campbell (left) and Morgan Moses (right). He ultimately could be the heir apparent for the 35-year-old Moses, who enters his 13th NFL season, while also providing insurance should Campbell’s development get derailed. Moving inside to guard also is a possibility, with Patriots executive vice president of player personnel Eliot Wolf noting the 6-foot-6, 313-pound Lomu’s athletic physical traits.”

Yahoo Sports’ Charles McDonald: “Grade: A. This pick can be a two-for-one upgrade for the Patriots. Lomu can slide in as a legit long-term left tackle prospect and allow Will Campbell to play elsewhere along the offensive line if that’s what they choose to do. The Patriots desperately needed to upgrade their frontline play after getting sledgehammered by the Seahawks in the Super Bowl, and this pick should help them get better up front.”

The Athletic’s Nick Baumgardner: “Grade: A- Really good value here. I had Lomu graded about even with Miller and maybe a tick higher than Iheanachor, as Lomu should be ready to start at right tackle immediately opposite Will Campbell. This gives the Patriots two very athletic tackles who are plus run blockers.

Lomu isn’t a flashy player, but he gets the job done. He’s very versatile, and he could play right or left tackle, and maybe even guard. The 49ers (who traded down from 27 to 30) also might’ve been looking to select an offensive tackle, so I don’t hate the trade-up. Nice pick.”

Source: Utah News

Utah football right tackle depth chart after Spencer Fano selected in NFL draft

Utah offensive lineman Spencer Fano was picked by the Cleveland Browns with the No. 9 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft on Thursday. Fano, a consensus All-Amer …

Utah offensive lineman Spencer Fano was picked by the Cleveland Browns with the No. 9 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft on Thursday.

Fano, a consensus All-American and Outland Trophy recipient who played in 37 games across three seasons with the Utes, became the 11th player in program history to be picked in the first round of the draft, and the third tackle overall since 2003. He was the first tackle off the draft board and the fifth Utah player to ever be drafted by Cleveland.

In many ways, Fano’s draft outcome had been expected by many for the past year or so. The 6-foot-6 Spanish Fork native began receiving draft buzz heading into his junior season, and his prolific play as Utah’s starting right tackle only solidified his profile as one of the top prospects in the 2026 class. Fano didn’t allow a single in over 350 pass blocking opportunities and helped pave the way for the most-potent rushing attack at the Power 5 level last season.

That being said, Fano’s draft declaration in December only confirmed Utah would have to slot in someone new at his spot on the O-line for the 2026 campaign. The Utes did retain a few lineman with a lot of snaps under their belts, but didn’t return a single starter from the 2025 group and as such, had to plug some holes via the transfer portal.

Utah also snagged one of the top high school tackle recruits in the 2025 class in Kelvin Obot. However, we’re predicting that he’s going to fill Caleb Lomu’s vacancy at the left tackle spot.

As for the Utes’ right tackle spot: Here’s a few names to get familiar with as we predict the position’s depth chart

Predicting Utah’s right tackle depth chart

Cedric Jefferson

After starting all 16 games for Montana State’s Football Championship Subdivision title squad in 2025, the 6-foot-5, 300 pound junior from Temecula, California, is our pick to start at right tackle for Utah in 2026.

While it remains to be seen just how ready Jefferson is to compete at the power conference level, there’s little to question about his fit with the Utes. He’s coming from an offensive scheme that, like Utah, was very much oriented on the run game. The Bobcats were No. 2 in the FCS in rush attempts (635) and No. 5 in rush yards per game (226.1) during their championship-winning season.

Under first-year offensive coordinator Kevin McGiven, Utah might not lean on the run as heavily as it did in 2025, when it posted a program-record 3,462 rush yards and recorded 41 rushing yards in 13 games. If the run game is going to be dominant in its own right again, Jefferson will likely be a major reason why.

Keith Olson

Olson, a redshirt senior with 25 career games under his belt, isn’t our pick to start at right tackle, though it wouldn’t be a surprise if Utah went with the 6-foot-6 Washington native instead of Jefferson given his experience and versatility.

That being said, it also wouldn’t be shocking if Olson slotted in at one of the guard spots instead of tackle. He spent time at both right and left guard, as well as right tackle, at various points of the 2025 season, making one start as an extra lineman during Utah’s regular season finale at Kansas. In totality, Olson allowed just two pressures and no sacks in 98 pass blocking opportunities, with most of his snaps coming in run blocking situations.

Olson could end up playing at guard, though because he’s listed at 6-foot-6 and 307 pounds, we’re picking him to play tackle with a legitmate chance to start.

Other potential right tackles

  • Kelvin Obot (6-foot-5, 295 pound freshman): Four-star prospect and the No. 7-ranked tackle in the 2026 class
  • Mataalii Benjamin (6-foot-7, 315 pound freshman): Four-star recruit and the No. 21-ranked tackle in the 2026 class
  • Soren Shinofield (6-foot-6, 304 pound sophomore): Three-star recruit in 2025 class who didn’t play as a freshman
  • Isaiah Garcia (6-foot-5, 310 pound redshirt sophomore): Four-star prospect in 2024 class who didn’t see the field in 2025 after playing two games in 2024

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Source: Utah News

Utah Utes NFL Draft picks 2026: Full list of selections and landing spots

A few Utah football stars will have their dreams of playing in the pros come one step closer to realization over the next 72 hours as the 2026 NFL Draft plays o …

A few Utah football stars will have their dreams of playing in the pros come one step closer to realization over the next 72 hours as the 2026 NFL Draft plays out from the North Shore near Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

The first round of the draft kicked off Thursday at 6 p.m. MT on ESPN. The second and third rounds will be televised Friday at 5 p.m., with the fourth, fifth, sixth and seventh rounds wrapping up the draft on Saturday at 10 a.m.

Follow along below as we track each Utah draftee and where they’re headed to start their pro careers.

Refresh this page for the latest draft update.

Utah Players Selected in the 2026 NFL Draft

  • Spencer Fano (OL): Drafted No. 9 overall by the Cleveland Browns
  • Caleb Lomu (OL): Selected No. 28 overall by the New England Patriots

Spencer Fano is first offensive lineman off the board

Utah’s star right tackle is headed to Cleveland after capping off a decorated three-year collegiate career as a consensus All-American, the Polynesian College Football Player of the Year and the Outland Trophy recipient. He became the second-highest Utah tackle drafted behind Jordan Gross (No. 8 overall in 2003).

Fano racked up multiple accolades at the end of his junior season with the Utes following a highly-efficient 2025 campaign, in which he allowed just five pressures and five hurries across 357 pass blocking opportunities, according to Pro Football Focus. In addition to not allowing a sack, the 6-foot-6 Fano helped pave the way for one of the best ground attacks in the country, with Utah recording a program-record 3,462 rushing yards across 13 games (266.3 per game, No. 1 among Power 5 teams).

Fano continued to impress scouts and other NFL personnel during the scouting combine in Indianapolis, where he checked out holding the highest athleticism score (93), the highest production score (85) and the best total score (89) of any offensive tackle prospect who participated in the drills and testing. He recorded a time of 4.91 seconds in the 40-yard dash, a 32-inch vertical jump and a 10-yard split of 1.72 seconds.

Fano and Lomu Make Utah Draft History

Caleb Lomu going No. 28 overall to New England marked the first time ever that two Utah players were selected in the same first round of the NFL draft.

Lomu, an All-Big 12 selection and two-year starting left tackle with the Utes, was the seventh offensive tackle off the board, following his teammate Fano (No. 9), Miami’s Francis Mauigoa (No. 10), Alabama’s Kadyn Proctor (No. 12), Clemson’s Blake Miller (No. 17), Georgia’s Monroe Freeling (No. 19), and Arizona State’s Max Iheanachor (No. 21).


How many Utah players have been drafted into the NFL?

Entering Thursday, Utah had churned out 189 draft picks in school history, including 10 first-round selections, 16 second-rounders and 15 third-rounders.

At least one Utes players has been drafted in 16 of the past 17 drafts, with the 2017 class standing out as the most voluminous (eight players selected, including All-Pro tackle Garett Bolles at No. 20 overall).

Who were the most recent Utah players to be drafted?

Last year, former college basketball standout and Utes tight end, Caleb Lohner, was the program’s lone representative in the draft, going No. 241 overall to the Denver Broncos.

Five Utah players heard their names called during the 2024 draft, including standout defensive back Cole Bishop (No. 60 overall to the Buffalo Bills) and stud defensive end Jonah Elliss (No. 76 overall to the Denver Broncos).

Has Utah ever produced a No. 1 overall pick?

All-American quarterback Alex Smith is the only Utes player to ever be selected with the top pick in the NFL draft.

Smith went on to play 14 seasons professionally, including including seven with the San Francisco 49ers, five with the Kansas City Chiefs and two with Washington, after being drafted No. 1 overall by San Francisco in 2005. He finished his career as a three-time Pro Bowler and recipient of the 2020 NFL Comeback Player of the Year award following a gruesome leg injury he suffered while with Washington.

Who is the most recent Utah player to be drafted in the first round?

Entering Thursday, Dalton Kincaid was the most recent first-rounder Utah churned out. The standout tight end was taken No. 25 overall by the Buffalo Bills in the 2023 draft.

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Source: Utah News

Mikayla Matthews Breaks Down in Tears as She Reveals How Chronic Illness Has Stripped Her of ‘So Much Happiness’

Matthews previously opened up about her fear of returning to Utah following a trip out of the country, citing worries that her health would decline …

NEED TO KNOW

  • Mikayla Matthews is sharing an update on her chronic illness

  • After opening up about her fear of returning to Utah because of concerns that being back in the state would cause a flare up of her chronic illness, the Secret Lives of Mormon Wives star opened up about dealing that she was dealing with some symptoms of her disease

Mikayla Matthews is opening up about a flare-up of her chronic illness.

In a video posted to Instagram on April 22, the momfluencer shared that, within two days of returning to Utah following a brand trip to Costa Rica, she had begun experiencing symptoms of her chronic illness again.

“As you can tell, like my hands flared up really bad. My neck flared up really bad,” Matthews said, as she showed her hands to the camera.

“I’m sitting here truly feeling like… in Utah, in this environment, I am just surviving with chronic illness,” she added, before saying, “When I was in Costa Rica, when I was in California, I’m living with chronic illness. My life is still going on. It’s not at the forefront of my mind.”

Mikayla Matthews on March 24, 2026 in Los Angeles, Calif.Credit: Monica Schipper/Getty

Mikayla Matthews on March 24, 2026 in Los Angeles, Calif.
Credit: Monica Schipper/Getty

Earlier this month, on April 16, Matthews posted a message to her Instagram Stories as she returned from a trip in Costa Rica with former Dancing with the Stars pro Lindsay Arnold’s The Movement Club. Posting from her airplane seat, the momfluencer shared that she had the “worst anxiety going back home to Utah.” Matthews said that she was scared to lose “all the progress” she had made with her health while she was away from home. Online and on the Secret Lives of Mormon Wives, Matthews has been open about dealing with her illness, recently revealing that the name of her disease is a chronic inflammatory response syndrome, or CIRS, which she said was “brought on [by] prolonged exposures to toxins (mold).”

Now, having returned to Utah, Matthews said that her skin “is in a lot of physical pain,” which has caused her to “say no” to events she has coming up.

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“I hate doing interviews on the carpet, taking pictures, and that’s out there for everyone to see,” she added, touching on how online comments about her appearance have gotten to her.

“I’m in so much pain laying on my bed not able to go up and get my kids from school or wake up with them and take them to school,” she said. Matthews also said she had considered selling her Utah home, but was afraid she would still be dealing with the same conditions in another one if she did.

“Nobody is ever going to understand the impact, chronic illness, and skin condition, and the way that it has completely, completely stripped me of so much happiness, stripped me of so much time with my family, with my kids, that I’m never gonna get back,” she said.

Mikayla Matthews.Credit: mikayla__matt/Instagram (2)

Mikayla Matthews.
Credit: mikayla__matt/Instagram (2)

Matthews first opened up about her chronic illness in a post on Instagram in September 2024, revealing that she had been “fighting for my life” while filming the first season of Mormon Wives, in part because of mysterious skin flare-ups.

Back in 2023, Matthews shared that she’s experienced chronic eczema since childhood, but suspected her other symptoms that would later be diagnosed as CIRS began after getting breast implants in March of that year.

The influencer, who is mom to son Beckham, 8, and daughters Haven, 5½, Tommie, 3, and Lottie June, 8 months, with her husband Jace Terry, also said that, as a result of her struggles with her chronic illness, her “mom guilt” has “eaten [her] alive.”

Read the original article on People

Source: Utah News

Fireball seen over northern Utah early Thursday morning

An early morning fireball could be seen shooting across the sky in northern Utah on Thursday. Footage from a FOX 13 News viewer shows a blue-green ball moving across the sky before getting brighter as …

SALT LAKE CITY — An early morning fireball could be seen shooting across the sky in northern Utah on Thursday.

Footage from a FOX 13 News viewer shows a blue-green ball moving across the sky before getting brighter as it fell.

Watch: Ring camera captures fireball in Cedar City

Watch: Ring camera captures fireball in Cedar City

No official meteorite reports have been issued by the American Meteor Society, although there are more than half a dozen unverified reports.

FOX 13 News is reaching out to officials to learn more.

Source: Utah News

Utah vs Vegas Turns Personal as Mammoth Launch Jersey Exchange for Fans

Utah is taking its playoff rivalry with Vegas beyond the ice, launching a jersey swap aimed at flipping longtime Golden Knights fans into Mammoth supporters.

A playoff series has turned into a full-on identity battle in Salt Lake City—and Utah is making its pitch loud and visible.

When the Utah Mammoth dropped the puck on their inaugural season in 2024, the Vegas Golden Knights already had a foothold in the region, having spent years cultivating a fanbase across Utah. Now, with the two clubs meeting in the Stanley Cup Playoffs for the first time, Utah isn’t just trying to win games—it’s trying to win people over.

On Friday, the Mammoth will stage their first-ever jersey exchange outside Delta Center, inviting fans to trade in Golden Knights sweaters for a clean, logo-only Mammoth home jersey. The offer is simple: first come, first served, no cost attached—just a symbolic reset of allegiance, while supplies last.

“It’s been incredible to see the way Utah has embraced this team from day one,” owners Ryan Smith and Ashley Smith said in a joint statement.

The timing isn’t accidental. The exchange begins at noon local time, just hours before Utah hosts its first-ever home playoff game. The series itself is already simmering, tied 1–1 after the Mammoth stole Game 2 in Vegas with a 3–2 win Tuesday night.

Long before Utah had a franchise to call its own, Salt Lake City existed in a kind of hockey gray area—one the Golden Knights were quick to claim.

From their inception in 2017, Vegas—backed by owner Bill Foley—aggressively pursued a broader regional identity, branding themselves as a team not just for Nevada, but for the entire Mountain West. Broadcast reach through AT&T Sports Network helped extend that footprint, and Utah became a natural extension of their audience.

That strategy paid off. For years, Golden Knights jerseys dotted crowds in Salt Lake City, a visual reminder of a market without its own team.

That dynamic began to change in 2024, when Smith Entertainment Group secured an NHL franchise in the wake of the Arizona Coyotes relocation. Suddenly, Utah wasn’t a secondary market—it was center stage.

Foley, for his part, downplayed the shift at the time.

“We give up Salt Lake City as a secondary territory, but we get Arizona, so we’re OK,” he told KLAS-TV. “We still have our sphere of influence. But we love Salt Lake. We have a lot of fans there.”

That may still be true—but the Mammoth are clearly intent on shrinking that number, one jersey at a time.

Friday’s exchange won’t officially change anyone’s loyalty. But visually, at least, it’s a bold attempt to redraw the map—and in the middle of a playoff series, it adds another layer to an already charged matchup.

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Source: Utah News

Utah football secures commitment from 3-star defensive lineman in 2027 class

Tiki Teeples, one of the top defensive lineman recruits from the state of Arizona, has committed to the Utah football program. The Utes secured the Canyon View …

Tiki Teeples, one of the top defensive lineman recruits from the state of Arizona, has committed to the Utah football program.

The Utes secured the Canyon View High School product’s pledge Wednesday evening, giving Morgan Scalley and company their third commitment in the class of 2027.

Teeples, who chose Utah over competing interest from multiple Power 5 programs, announced his commitment via X with the caption: “After a lot of prayer, hard work, and talks with my family, I’m blessed to announce that I am %100 COMMITTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF UTAH! Thank you to all my coaches, teammates, and everyone who has supported me through this journey. This is just the beginning. #GoUtes”

Teeples committed to the Utes as 247Sports’ No. 118-ranked defensive line recruit in the nation and the No. 24 overall prospect from Arizona. Only two other defensive line players from Arizona — Basha High School’s T.K. Cunningham and Desert Edge High School’s Yahzeen Zion — were graded higher than Teeples on the recruiting site’s database.

Utah beat out a few Big 12 schools to land the 6-foot-4 rising senior, including Iowa State, Texas Tech and West Virginia. Other programs out West, like Fresno State, Idaho and Utah State, had also extended offers.

Teeples’ recruitment picked up steam following a highly-productive junior season in which he recorded 63 tackles, including 18 for loss and 12.5 sacks, earning first-team all-region and second-team all-state defensive line honors.

About a month after the 2025 season ended, Teeples had coaching staffs from all over the West Coast, including representatives from Arizona, Arizona State, San Diego State and Boise State, among others, pay him visits during the January contact period. He also got to check out Texas Tech and New Mexico while on unofficial visits in February.

Utah didn’t officially join the mix until defensive tackles coach Luther Elliss pitched the Utes and extended Teeples an offer in March. Just four weeks later, the three-star recruit shared on social media that he’d scheduled an official visit with Utah for June 5-7.

Obviously, Teeples didn’t need to take his official visit with the Utes to be sold on what Scalley and his staff are selling him. For Utah, it secures its second defensive lineman and its third overall prospect in the 2027 class, which also features commits from three-star edge Jack Henderson and three-star wide receiver Kingston Parks.

Teeples shared on social media earlier this month that he’d arranged a visit with Iowa State for May 28-30; time will tell whether he goes on that visit.

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Source: Utah News