Scientists Investigate Strange Rumbling Beneath Utah

A mysterious earthquake deep below northern Utah had scientists scratching their heads back in 1979. The rumble seemingly occurred far lower beneath the Earth’s crust than scientists had believed was …

A mysterious earthquake deep below northern Utah had scientists scratching their heads back in 1979. The rumble seemingly occurred far lower beneath the Earth’s crust than scientists had believed was …

Source: Utah News

St George Police Department officers wake terrified residents during Utah apartment fire

Residents of an apartment building in Utah woke to St. George Police Department officers working to rescue them from a late night apartment fire on June 7, 2026. Credit: St. George (Utah) Police Depar …

Residents of an apartment building in Utah woke to St. George Police Department officers working to rescue them from a late night apartment fire on June 7, 2026. Credit: St. George (Utah) Police Depar …

Source: Utah News

A key trail connection in northern Utah finally nears completion

Logan • For almost a year, traffic has plagued the south end of Main Street in Logan, congesting one of the primary arteries into and out of the city. But city officials have said that once the …

Logan • For almost a year, traffic has plagued the south end of Main Street in Logan, congesting one of the primary arteries into and out of the city. But city officials have said that once the …

Source: Utah News

Utah Jazz Exec Shares How Secret Their Draft Process Actually Is

Ainge recently appeared on KSL Sports Zone’s Scotty G. & The Coach to discuss a bit of the Jazz’s draft process and how this month has panned out, where he also dove into just how secret his …

The Utah Jazz are only a few days away from deciding who they’ll be landing on with their second-overall pick in this year’s draft.

With final workouts for guys like AJ Dybantsa and Darryn Peterson reportedly happening this coming week, Utah is in the final stages of deciding upon how they’ll be setting up the draft board rolling into the end of the month, and sorting out who their top two names in the class might ultimately be.

But don’t expect those on the inside of the Jazz’s building to be spreading much information around as to who they’ll be preferring–– especially not for team president Austin Ainge.

Austin Ainge Explains the Secrecy of Utah’s Draft Process

Ainge recently appeared on KSL Sports Zone’s Scotty G. & The Coach to discuss a bit of the Jazz’s draft process and how this month has panned out, where he also dove into just how secret his decision-making actually is behind-the-scenes.

Simply put, the circle of who Ainge is discussing his upcoming plans with is extremely small–– to the point where his own wife won’t even know how the Jazz’s pick will go.

“Everywhere I walk, people ask. But, we don’t tell anybody,” Ainge said. “I don’t tell my wife. I don’t tell some of the people on my staff that I work with every day where I’m leaning. On top of the competitive advantages, and the trades that that could kill, and some of the other things that would harm.”

“There’s huge betting markets now. Some guy I play golf with makes half a million dollars on who the draft is, then the FBI is knocking on my door. We can’t be having that.”

There’s clear limited upside and obvious downside to airing out your pick to more people than necessary. Knowing this, Ainge is keeping his and Utah’s plans close to the vest, and it seems like he’ll continue to do so.

But we at least have some inkling as to who the Jazz will be narrowing down from between three names, based on how the top of the board is shaping up to be for this year’s class: BYU’s AJ Dybantsa, Kansas’ Darryn Peterson, and Duke’s Cameron Boozer.

Jan 24, 2026; Columbia, Missouri, USA; Kansas Jayhawks guard Darryn Peterson (22) looks to pass against BYU Cougars forward A

Jan 24, 2026; Columbia, Missouri, USA; Kansas Jayhawks guard Darryn Peterson (22) looks to pass against BYU Cougars forward AJ Dybantsa (3) during the first half at Mizzou Arena. Mandatory Credit: Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images | Jay Biggerstaff-Imagn Images

In some order, those three are virtual locks to be picks one, two, and three off the board.

Various scouts and experts have had those three prospects graded in every combination there is. And in due time, the Jazz will be finalizing their own rankings so they’ll be ready to go once draft night comes.

Jazz Nearing the Final Steps of Scouting Process

As to how far along the Jazz and Ainge are in that process, those final rankings will be settled once the team gets everyone in the building for a visit. Most of their work, to this point, has already been done. But now just comes the time to finish up what’s been a diligent, careful, and months-long scouting process.

“You have [decide] to at some point, right?” Ainge said of the Jazz’s draft board. “I think at some point after we get everybody in and spend our time with them, that’s kind of the final bit of information that we haven’t been able to gather. I don’t want to overrate that and say everything comes down to a few meetings with us. But, we’ll just try to not lock it in until then.”

“And pretty shortly thereafter, we’ll kind of just say, ‘Alright, this is what we’re going to do. This is number one, this is number two. If one’s there, we take him. If one’s gone, we’ll take two. And that’s the way we’ll do it.”

The clock is slowly ticking before the final verdict is revealed on who Utah will add as the next cornerstone of their franchise. Expect Ainge and Co. to keep Jazz fans on the edge of their seats until then.

Be sure to follow Utah Jazz On SI on X for daily Utah Jazz news, rumors and analysis!

Add us as a preferred source on Google

Source: Utah News

Utah finalizes college sports’ first single-school private equity deal, sets up new commercial entity

AD Mark Harlan said he was “very comfortable” with the governance structure and steps the Utes have taken to protect themselves financially.

Utah has finalized its deal with the private equity group Otro Capital, the Utes announced Friday.

The announcement has been in the works for months; the school’s board of trustees approved the general idea in December. But Friday’s announcement officially makes Utah the first athletic department in college sports to team up with private equity.

Advertisement

Terms of the agreement were not disclosed, but Utah officials have touted a nine-figure impact to the program. Athletic director Mark Harlan called it a “really innovative solution that could carry the University of Utah into the future in a really productive manner.”

The deal includes the formation of a new entity, Crimson Brand Partners, that is intended to modernize and streamline the Utes’ 19 sports. Former New Orleans Saints and Cleveland Browns executive Matt Webb will serve as the entity’s CEO. Harlan will chair its board.

When it launches July 1 at the start of the fiscal year, Crimson Brand Partners will handle the commercial aspects of Utah sports like ticketing, branding and sponsorships. The Utes will retain control of issues like fundraising, coaching, recruiting and scheduling.

Although Otro — an investment group with a portfolio that includes Alpine’s Formula 1 racing team — will have a stake in Crimson Brand Partners, the company will make annual reports to the university’s board of trustees and foundation.

“There’s no road map,” Webb said. “We’re certainly building the plane as we’re flying.”

The reasons for embracing private equity outlined Friday were largely the same as they were in December when Utah made its first public steps to this deal. The Utes are in a Power 4 conference (the Big 12) but are not a financial juggernaut like Ohio State or Georgia. That puts Utah in a tough position as it competes at the national level against bigger, richer programs. Instead of pursuing more money from the academic side or cutting sports, the Utes decided outside investors could allow their athletics to keep competing at a high level.

Questions and concerns arose as terms were being finalized. A letter from the state auditor to the board of trustees last month raised “significant risks” about the deal unless the Utes slash spending or spike revenue. Utah athletics reported $4.69 million more in revenue than expenses in 2025, but only after, auditor Tina Cannon said, using $19.4 million in reserves.

Advertisement

“There is a profound risk that financial gains and investor returns may be prioritized over long-term and long-held institutional values,” the letter from Cannon said.

In a news conference Friday, Harlan said he was “very comfortable” with the governance structure and steps the Utes have taken to protect themselves financially. Harlan said inaction also brings uncertainty.

“I would argue there’s more risks of not doing anything based on the climate we’re in and the rising costs,” Harlan said.

Private equity has been circling around college sports outside Utah, too. In April, the Big 12 closed on a deal with a venture from RedBird and Weatherford Capital that will provide at least $12.5 million to the conference as the start of a broader partnership. Other schools, including Florida State, have also considered private equity.

Utah’s deal comes in the wake of the athletic department clearly searching for more significant revenue streams.

This week, the Salt Lake Tribune obtained detailed documents from a consulting firm Utah hired to review the university’s athletic department operations in 2024. Employees were granted anonymity during the firm’s interview process, and among the chief concerns were tickets to games given away for free, an inadequate  game-day experience and employee burnout.

According to the report from the Tribune, employees from various departments said they had inconsistent communication with the department’s leadership.

“It’s just week-to-week survival,” said one employee in the report.

In the year since the report, Utah had a ticket revenue increase of $3.3 million from football, men’s basketball and gymnastics.

Source: Utah News