Utah now has a total of seven measles cases, adding two more cases in unvaccinated individuals, according to the Utah Department of Health and Human Services.
Utah now has a total of seven measles cases, adding two more cases in unvaccinated individuals, according to the Utah Department of Health and Human Services.
It’s finally time – the NHL Draft is underway! The First Round is Friday night while Rounds 2-7 will be on Saturday. Tonight, Utah has the fourth-overall pick while the Mammoth have five additional …
Desnoyers Excited for Utah
Surrounded by family members and friends in Los Angeles, Caleb Desnoyers heard PGA golfer Tony Finau say his name as the Utah Mammoth’s fourth-overall draft pick. Desnoyers had multiple meetings and interactions with the Mammoth heading into draft night, including a dinner at General Manager Bill Armstrong’s house.
“I didn’t know much before four days ago, but I had the chance to come in and visit, meet more people on the staff,” Desnoyers shared of his experience. “Honestly, I’ve never seen a city as beautiful. It was gorgeous with all the mountains and just the streets, it’s so clean and I can’t wait to bring my family over.”
“I like sometimes to sit with the player, and get a feel a little bit of their presence in who they are and he’s a great kid,” Armstrong explained. “We got to spend time with him out here on his way out to L.A. and he came to see us and have a little bit of dinner and get to know him even better. I think it’s when you spend time with him you realize there’s two things – the player, he’s a great player but the person is also a great person and we’re fortunate.”
Armstrong and the Mammoth were ‘fortunate’ that Desnoyers was still available when Utah was on the clock. Members of the Mammoth’s scouting staff liked Desnoyers for months and wanted him to be the next player wearing Utah’s sweater.
“When you sit in that room and you listen to the scouts, and you listen to their passion about players, he was a pretty consistent passion for the scouts from the midterms all the way through,” Armstrong shared. “He was a big deal in that room the whole time. We’d just never thought we’d get to him, and we were blessed or got lucky I guess, to get the fourth overall pick, and then you wonder if he’s going to be there.”
By adding Desnoyers, Utah has another winner in their prospect pool. He’s a player that elevates those around him and Desnoyers is excited to bring his abilities to the Mammoth.
“I think they loved the fact that I’m a winner and also the fact that I make the players around me better, so I’m looking forward to bringing that to Utah,” Desnoyers explained about what drew Utah to him. “A competitive centerman that takes a lot of pride in all the small details, all these intangibles from my faceoff to creating some plays to making the players around me better in the o-zone and also a good leader, pretty vocal guy.”
One of the biggest narratives surrounding the Utah Jazz and their freshly wrapped up 2025 NBA Draft was their situation surrounding fifth-overall pick Ace Bailey, and whether the Rutgers wing may or …
One of the biggest narratives surrounding the Utah Jazz and their freshly wrapped up 2025 NBA Draft was their situation surrounding fifth-overall pick Ace Bailey, and whether the Rutgers wing may or …
While there are 82 players with Utah ties on NFL rosters right now with training camp a few weeks away, another 22 players with local ties are currently free agents — players who spent at least part …
Nearly two dozen NFL players with Utah ties are currently looking for a team in the league.
While there are 82 players with Utah ties on NFL rosters right now with training camp a few weeks away, another 22 players with local ties are currently free agents — players who spent at least part of the 2024 regular season or the 2025 offseason on an NFL roster.
That included 10 who previously suited up for the University of Utah, eight for BYU, three for Utah State and another who prepped at a Utah high school but played collegiately out of state.
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This group of free agents includes:
Four former Utah safeties who entered the league as draft picks, including Julian Blackmon, Marquise Blair, Eric Rowe and Marcus Williams. Blackmon has 62 career starts to his name, Blair has played for four teams in his career, and Rowe is a two-time Super Bowl champion, while Williams made the Pro Football Writers of America All-Rookie team in 2017.
Two quarterbacks who’ve started at least two games over the past two seasons in Utah’s Tyler Huntley and BYU’s Jaren Hall. Huntley most recently backup to Tua Tagovailoa for Miami in 2024 and even started five games for the Dolphins when Tagovailoa was hurt, while Hall was a third-stringer in Seattle.
Two undrafted rookies — Utah’s Micah Bernard and BYU’s Blake Mangelson — who didn’t make it to training camp with their respective teams.
The NFL’s rushing touchdowns leader in 2022, Jamaal Williams, who played the past two seasons for New Orleans.
Two players who briefly spent time on NFL practice squads in 2024, then the spring 2025 season on a United Football League roster. One was former Utah defensive end Bradlee Anae, who played for the Birmingham Stallions in the UFL, and BYU running back Aidan Robbins, who spent the spring with the San Antonio Brahmas.
Here’s a look at all 22 players with Utah ties who are currently free agents and spent all or part of the 2024 season, or this offseason, on an NFL roster.
Note: Players can count toward more than one school, whether college or high school, as long as they played one season at a given school. Players with multiple Utah ties are categorized by the in-state team they most recently played for.
New Orleans Saints running back Jamaal Williams (21) warms up prior to an NFL football game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers Sunday, Jan. 5, 2025, in Tampa, Fla. | Jason Behnken, Associated Press
BYU Cougars
Name | Position | Previous NFL team | Utah tie(s)
Michael Davis | CB | Washington Commanders | BYU
Jaren Hall | QB | Seattle Seahawks | BYU and Maple Mountain High
Kaleb Hayes | CB | Green Bay Packers | BYU
Blake Mangelson | DT | Pittsburgh Steelers | BYU and Juab High
Dax Milne | WR | Carolina Panthers | BYU and Bingham High
Aidan Robbins | RB | Cleveland Browns | BYU
Sione Takitaki | LB | New England Patriots | BYU
Jamaal Williams | RB | New Orleans Saints | BYU
Indianapolis Colts safety Julian Blackmon (32) leaves the field at halftime during game against the Jacksonville Jaguars, Sunday, Oct. 6, 2024, in Jacksonville, Fla. | Gary McCullough, Associated Press
Utah Utes
Name | Position | Previous NFL team | Utah tie(s)
Bradlee Anae | DE | New York Jets | Utah
Micah Bernard | RB | Tennessee Titans | Utah
Julian Blackmon | FS | Indianapolis Colts | Utah and Layton High
Marquise Blair | S | New York Jets | Utah
Cole Fotheringham | TE | Denver Broncos | Utah
Tyler Huntley | QB | Miami Dolphins | Utah
Eric Rowe | S | Pittsburgh Steelers | Utah
Marcus Williams | FS | Baltimore Ravens | Utah
Mitch Wishnowsky | P | San Francisco 49ers | Utah
Thomas Yassmin | TE | Denver Broncos | Utah
Dallas Cowboys linebacker Nick Vigil (41) blocks a punt by Cincinnati Bengals punter Ryan Rehkow (8) during game, Monday, Dec. 9, 2024, in Arlington, Texas. | Gareth Patterson, Associated Press
Utah State Aggies
Name | Position | Previous NFL team | Utah tie(s)
Patrick Scales | LS | Chicago Bears | Utah State and Weber High
Deven Thompkins | WR | Tampa Bay Buccaneers | Utah State
Nick Vigil | LB | Dallas Cowboys | Utah State and Fremont High
Los Angeles Rams wide receiver Puka Nacua, left, shakes hands with Cleveland Browns defensive tackle Siaki Ika after an NFL football game Sunday, Dec. 3, 2023, in Inglewood, Calif. | Mark J. Terrill, Associated Press
Idaho State Police have issued an Amber Alert for two missing teenagers believed to be headed to a Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints group in Utah from eastern Idaho.
Idaho State Police have issued an Amber Alert for two missing teenagers believed to be headed to a Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints group in Utah from eastern Idaho.
Arguably no draft expert was higher on the Jazz’s first round selection than Adam Finkelstein, who gave the Jazz an A grade for Bailey and an A- grade for Clayton. Bailey, he wrote, may have the …
How did the Utah Jazz do?
The first round of the 2025 NBA draft was Wednesday night and the Jazz made two selections:
Ace Bailey with the No. 5 pick.
Walker Clayton with the No. 18 pick.
The Jazz are three years (going on four) into a teardown-turned-rebuild and in desperate need of young players with star potential.
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Did they find them in Bailey and/or Clayton?
Here are what national pundits thoughts about the Jazz’s first round picks.
Jonathan Givony might be the preeminent name in NBA draft coverage right now and Givony had nothing but good things to say about the Jazz’s selection of Bailey at No. 5.
That pick — listed as one of the biggest surprises of the first round by Givony — caught many off guard after Bailey’s representation had prevented him from working out for teams in an attempt to get Bailey to a specific destination, reported to be either Washington or Brooklyn.
The Jazz nonetheless selected Bailey, who was considered a top 3 overall prospect in the draft.
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“Bailey declined multiple invite requests to visit and workout privately with Utah throughout the predraft process, as well as the Philadelphia 76ers at No. 3 and the Charlotte Hornets at No. 4, but the Jazz felt they knew enough about his game and profile to feel comfortable drafting him regardless,” Givony wrote. “New president of basketball operations Austin Ainge interviewed Bailey at the NBA draft combine as a member of the Boston Celtics’ front office, and the rest of the Jazz brass also interviewed him separately. Ainge scouted him multiple times throughout the season at Rutgers.”
When it comes to Bailey as a prospect, Givony noted that he has “All-Star potential,” something the Jazz seriously needed on their roster.
“The Jazz get an explosive wing with All-Star potential with exceptional shot-making prowess and scoring instincts who brings insatiable aggressiveness and a strong defensive motor,” Givony wrote.
Bailey was the primary focus when people reviewed the Jazz’s first round and for good reason. The former Rutgers star is viewed as having legitimate star potential on the wing and many believed Utah was the perfect landing spot.
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That includes Dann Chau, who wrote: “Honestly, as far as teams with infrastructure, commitment, and wide-open spaces go, Utah’s probably an ideal landing spot, whether Bailey realizes it or not. A win for both parties. (I love a red herring.)”
Chau, like Givony, believes Bailey has the potential to the be star Utah has been looking for for awhile now, citing Utah’s lack of excellence on the wing since Gordon Hayward left for Boston.
“The Jazz have been searching for a true star wing since Gordon Hayward’s departure damn near a decade ago,” Chau wrote. “Bailey might be the most talented player they’ve drafted in more than a decade, a long-levered contested-shot magician who has the frame and the requisite athleticism to become the kind of modern two-way star the team has hoped for years to find.”
John Hollinger and Sam Vecenie looked into both of Utah’s draft picks and on the whole both picks were praised, although Bailey’s boom or bust potential was a concern.
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Of Bailey, Vecenie noted: “The ceiling for Bailey is the second-best player in this class if he improves his areas of need. Particularly, he needs to improve his flexibility and ability to play with bend while also getting stronger. That would allow him to access more power and use his gifts across the court in a more functional manner. Once he does that, Bailey would be able to start working on improving his gathers and ball pickups around the rim on his drives to improve his finishing, which would also hopefully get defenders more off-balance and give him more options.
“That would improve his shooting percentages, which again, even on pull-ups this year, were markedly low. Then, on defense, it would allow him to play the leverage game better. Hopefully, better engagement on that end would follow, too, but he showed enough upside on that end to become a player. If all of this happens, there’s serious All-Star upside. Anyone who says that doesn’t exist is flat-out wrong. There is a chance Bailey could morph into a playmaker and star-level difference-maker on the wing.”
Hollinger was noticeably less excited about the pick though.
“I wasn’t that excited about Bailey, but I’m more pessimistic than most,” he wrote. “The other interesting part will be how he fits in a Jazz frontcourt that already has Lauri Markkanen, John Collins and Walker Kessler.”
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As for Clayton, Vecenie praised the Florida guard as a player he’s “long-loved,” with the potential to be a “high-end scorer off the bench in the NBA.”
“He’s an underrated athlete in terms of explosiveness and balance. He competes on defense and is strong, even if his size will create limitations. … There is upside beyond that if he proves capable of improving his ball-screen reads and becoming an even better passer. It’s hard to find scoring guards with this kind of pull-up gravity.”
Hollinger believes that Clayton will work best in the NBA as a secondary ball handler, seeing him as more of a combo guard than a true point guard.
“Utah has a couple of other young guards on the roster, but they’ve already been given chances and haven’t shown much,” he worte. “Clayton profiles as a combo guard whose long-distance game works best with other ballhandlers around him, so we’ll see what else the Jazz can add to the backcourt.”
Kurt Helin handed out an actual grade for the Jazz’s first round — a B.
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He was high on Bailey because of his star potential.
“The Jazz need talent,“ Helin wrote. ”Bailey has the second-highest ceiling of any player in this draft, but this feels like a boom or bust pick — and good on the Jazz for taking that swing. At this point in their team building, the Jazz should take big swings. Bailey is a prototypical modern NBA wing: he has great size, is a freak athlete, has a high motor, can create his own shot, can shoot the 3 (36.7% last season), and is a tough shot-maker. The problem is that he made tough shots because of his questionable shot selection, something Utah needs to work on. The Jazz have a very good player development staff, if they can mold Bailey, this swing could be a home run.”
Clayton was less of a win for the Jazz, in Helin estimation.
“Clayton was a clutch player for the national champion Florida. He is an impressive catch-and-shoot guy, there’s a lot to like (but enough to trade up a few spots for him?). He’s also got serious defensive questions. But he should move into the Jazz’s guard rotation and could be a quality backup for them (and maybe more eventually).”
Arguably no draft expert was higher on the Jazz’s first round selection than Adam Finkelstein, who gave the Jazz an A grade for Bailey and an A- grade for Clayton.
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Bailey, he wrote, may have the highest upside of any player in the draft.
“His upside is significant,“ Finkelstein wrote. ”He didn’t work out for them but Utah was not going to get bullied by Bailey’s representation. They took the best prospect on the board. I believe he’s a top three prospect in the draft. He’s a jumbo wing, high-level athlete and tough shot-maker. If everything clicks, he could have the highest upside in the draft. Ace Bailey is going to have an opportunity to have an immediate impact. I think in the long run this can work out very, very well for the Jazz.”
As for Clayton, Finkelstein was almost as high on high as he was on Bailey, praising Clayton’s shooting ability above all else.
“He is an elite shooter. When you’re talking about perimeter role players in the NBA, that’s the most important criteria. He is one of the very best shooters in this draft and has the versatility to play both on and off the ball. He has the body type to defend and the physical strength to be a more competitive defender in the NBA than what we saw for most of his college career.”
Kevin O’Connor may have been the harshest analyst out there when it came to the draft and he didn’t take it easy on the Jazz, handing out a B grade for the team’s selection of Bailey.
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His biggest concerns? That Bailey is still very raw and inconsistent. But if the Jazz are able to figure that out, the pick could be a good one.
“There’s a reason why he fell to No. 5, but this is a huge upside swing for the Jazz,” O’Connor wrote. “Bailey is a ridiculous shot-making machine, capable of splashing contested jumpers from every spot on the floor and with the swagger of a throwback bucket-getter. He had 39 points against Indiana, 37 against Northwestern, and 30 against Penn State, showing an ability to have masterful performances in which he can’t be stopped. But his raw edges as a shot creator and defender need sanding down to turn him into a full-on star.”
O’Connor loved the Jazz’s selection of Clayton, though, giving the pick an A+ grade. He even went so far as to compare Clayton to Golden State Warriors star Steph Curry.
“Along with Ace Bailey, the addition of Clayton makes the Jazz look like the funnest League Pass team next season,” O’Connor wrote. “Clayton is clutch and looked like Steph Curry at times. He’s also a culture creator. I’m very intrigued with what the Ainges are doing in Utah’s front office. Clayton is a fearless shooter with the versatility to take any shot at any moment, as we saw with him fueling the Gators to a national championship.”
Like many others, Zach Buckley had high praise for the Jazz’s pick of Bailey. He gave the selection a grade of A-, noted Bailey’s high ceiling as a prospect.
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“Utah bet big on his talent and sky-high upside anyway,” he wrote. “… It’s a smart move for a team that has made plenty of picks in recent drafts and still hasn’t found an obvious building block. Bailey isn’t guaranteed to get there, but his potential is far more obvious than you’d see with, say, Keyonte George, Isaiah Collier or Taylor Hendricks.
“… Bailey’s ceiling is arguably as high as that of any prospect in this class not named Cooper Flagg. For the Bailey believers, he’s a star-big-wing-in-the-making. He’ll drop some wow dribble moves (particularly for a 6′8″, 18-year-old) and finish with some head-shaking tough-shot makes. If you’re in the glass-overflowing camp of optimists, you might even envision a scoring title in his future.”
Buckley did note that Bailey isn’t a sure thing and that he may never actually reach his full potential, but the Jazz took a swing that they needed to.
Buckley was not a fan of the selection of Clayton, however, giving it a C+ grade.
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His biggest issues with Clayton were:
Other players available at the time he was selected.
The type of player Clayton profiles to be.
“I’m not sure I would have taken him with Kasparas Jakucionis and Jase Richardson both still on the board, but this isn’t some massive reach,” Buckley wrote.
He later added: “Clayton was the biggest catalyst behind Florida’s national championship run, which highlighted his shot-making and unwavering self-belief. He has one of the richest shooting menus in this class. He’s almost equally adept shooting off the catch or on the move, and he’s a skilled finisher despite not having great size or explosion.
“With all of that said, he’s still essentially a 6′3″ scoring guard, and NBA seemingly keeps moving away from that archetype. Maybe his moxie will allow him to be an exception, but with serious deficiencies as both a defender and a distributor, all of the pressure is on his shot-making to translate.”
Walter Clayton Jr. reacts after being selected 18th by the Washington Wizards in the first round of the NBA basketball draft, Wednesday, June 25, 2025, in New York. | Adam Hunger
The Utah Jazz have signed free agent RJ Luis Jr. to a two-way contract after he went undrafted in the 2025 NBA draft.
The Utah Jazz have signed free agent RJ Luis Jr. to a two-way contract after he went undrafted in the 2025 NBA draft.
Luis was one of the most accomplished college players in this year’s draft. He was a consensus second-team All-American, the Big East Player of the Year, a first-team All-Big East selection and the Most Outstanding Player at the Big East Tournament. He was also named the Haggerty Award winner, which is given to the best Division I player at a school in the New York metropolitan area.
As a junior at St. John’s, Luis quickly assumed the alpha role for a team that went 31-5. His competitiveness could help him translate to the next level, though he has plenty of work to do to become an efficient scorer.
The Utah Jazz have signed free agent RJ Luis Jr. to a two-way contract after he went undrafted in the 2025 NBA draft.
The Utah Jazz have signed free agent RJ Luis Jr. to a two-way contract after he went undrafted in the 2025 NBA draft.
Luis was one of the most accomplished college players in this year’s draft. He was a consensus second-team All-American, the Big East Player of the Year, a first-team All-Big East selection and the Most Outstanding Player at the Big East Tournament. He was also named the Haggerty Award winner, which is given to the best Division I player at a school in the New York metropolitan area.
As a junior at St. John’s, Luis quickly assumed the alpha role for a team that went 31-5. His competitiveness could help him translate to the next level, though he has plenty of work to do to become an efficient scorer.
The Utah County Commission passed a resolution Wednesday that increases the transient room tax on short-term rentals by a quarter of a percent.
The Utah County Commission passed a resolution Wednesday that ups the transient room tax on short-term rentals by a quarter of a percent.
The county brought this resolution to discussion after the Utah Legislature passed a bill this year stating counties could collect up to 4.5% on the transient room tax, compared to the previous cap of 4.25%.
Commissioner Skyler Beltran raised the question: Why raise the tax now when the travel and tourism fund is “healthy” and many of the projects planned can all be funded by the revenue the county already has?
Beltran said he spoke with hotel partners in the area and found mixed reviews about the increase. He also ran scenarios to see how much more expensive hotel stays would be for people with the increased rate.
Although it’s nice that the tax would mainly affect tourists to the county, it would still have an impact on any resident who needs to stay at a hotel elsewhere in the county, even if it’s just a few dollars difference, Beltran said.
“We’re talking minimal dollars, but I just think the overlying principle of we shouldn’t raise the tax just because we can (applies),” he said.
Commissioner Amelia Powers Gardner agreed that no tax should be raised just because it’s allowed, but she sees a value in getting extra revenue for the travel fund. She said the county has been working with the Utah Legislature to determine if the transient tax funds can be used for more things.
For example, the county currently uses the general fund to pay for search and rescue operations, canyon road maintenance and other public safety needs in popular spots. However, because many of those services are heavily used by tourists, Gardner said it could be beneficial to the county to use the extra tourism revenue on bolstering those services.
“We’re not getting lost climbing the Y. It’s people that are visiting, it’s travel and tourism who are calling search and rescue hiking the Y,” she said. “I would be in favor of passing this so that we can prepare for those expanded uses, which I think is a proper use of that. I’d rather the travel and tourism pay for that than our general fund.”
Beltran voiced concern that the travel fund is more “volatile” than others and doesn’t have as consistent revenue. He doesn’t want to build new programs that would require ongoing payments from the tourism fund compared to projects that have one-time payments, he said.
Gardner said having a healthy fund helps balance out that risk for years that don’t generate as much revenue.
The County Commission voted 2-1 in favor of the resolution, with Beltran voting in opposition. The tax increase will take effect on Oct. 1.
Utah is now up to five confirmed measles cases, including the first found in a child. State health officials officials urge people who have been exposed to call before going to a clinic or hospital.
Note to readers •The Salt Lake Tribune is making this story free to all.
A fourth and fifth Utahn have been infected with measles, according to the Utah Department of Health and Human Services.
One of the newly infected individuals is a child, the announcement noted. Of the two new patients, one lives in Utah County and the other lives in the southwest area of the state.
None of the five people with confirmed infections so far has been vaccinated, according to the department.
Two of the patients so far have been pregnant.
“Women who become infected with measles during their pregnancy are at high risk of miscarriage, stillbirth, or giving birth to a child who will experience serious medical problems,” the department said Thursday. “A pregnant woman is also much more likely to be hospitalized because of severe measles.”
The department recommended that people planning to become pregnant get vaccinated in order to protect themselves and their baby.
The measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine is 97% effective against measles if a person receives two doses, the state agency said.
So far, two of the people diagnosed with measles have been hospitalized because of complications. Both have since been released.
Measles symptoms
Measles symptoms typically appear one to two weeks after someone is exposed to the virus, according to DHHS.
They can include a fever over 102.2 degrees Fahrenheit, a cough, a runny nose and red eyes. After four feverish days, people generally develop a rash.
State health officials urge people who have been exposed and people who develop symptoms to stay away from others and call health care providers before visiting a clinic or hospital. The precautions can help the virus from spreading.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, there were 1,227 confirmed measles cases in 37 states as of Tuesday.
The first confirmed measles case to have originated in Utah was announced June 20. The second and third known cases were announced Tuesday.
State health officials planned to host a news conference midday Thursday, making the state epidemiologist available for questions.
— This is a developing story. Check back for updates.