Utah enters the redistricting battle for 2026, but not by choice

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Utah is being thrust into a national battle over redistricting because of a court order to redraw its congressional map for the 2026 midterm elections, while President Donald …

By HANNAH SCHOENBAUM

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Utah is being thrust into a national battle over redistricting because of a court order to redraw its congressional map for the 2026 midterm elections, while President Donald Trump is pushing other Republican-led states to add winnable U.S. House seats for the GOP.

Source: Utah News

Judge rules Utah’s legislature must redraw state’s congressional map for 2026 elections

District Court Judge Dianna Gibson, who ruled Monday, made few judgments on the content of the map but declared it unlawful because lawmakers had weakened and ignored an independent commission …

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — The Utah Legislature will need to rapidly redraw the state’s congressional boundaries after a judge ruled Monday that the Republican-controlled body circumvented safeguards put in place by voters to ensure districts aren’t drawn to favor any party.

READ MORE: Texas Senate passes redrawn congressional map favoring GOP, sends to governor

The current map, adopted in 2021, divides Salt Lake County — Utah’s population center and a Democratic stronghold — among the state’s four congressional districts, all of which have since elected Republicans by wide margins.

District Court Judge Dianna Gibson made few judgments on the content of the map but declared it unlawful because lawmakers had weakened and ignored an independent commission established by voters to prevent partisan gerrymandering.

“The nature of the violation lies in the Legislature’s refusal to respect the people’s exercise of their constitutional lawmaking power and to honor the people’s right to reform their government,” Gibson said in the ruling.

New maps will need to be drawn quickly, before candidates start filing in early January for the 2026 midterm elections. The ruling gives lawmakers a deadline of Sept. 24 and allows voting rights groups involved in the legal challenge to submit alternate proposals to the court.

But appeals expected from Republican officials could help them run out the clock to possibly delay adopting new maps until 2028.

Redistricting battle could shift the balance in Congress

The ruling creates uncertainty in a state that was thought to be a clean sweep for the GOP as the party is preparing to defend its slim majority in the U.S. House. Nationally, Democrats need to net three seats next year to take control of the chamber. The sitting president’s party tends to lose seats in the midterms, as was the case for President Donald Trump in 2018.

Trump has urged several Republican-led states to add winnable seats for the GOP. In Texas, a plan awaiting Gov. Greg Abbott’s approval includes five new districts that would favor Republicans. Ohio Republicans already were scheduled to revise their maps to make them more partisan, and Indiana, Florida and Missouri may choose to make changes. Some Democrat-led states say they may enter the redistricting arms race, but so far only California has taken action to offset GOP gains in Texas.

WATCH: California legislature approves special election on new congressional map favoring Democrats

The U.S. Supreme Court is unlikely to intervene, and the Utah Supreme Court may be hesitant to entertain an appeal of Monday’s ruling after it had sent the case back to Gibson for her to decide.

The nation’s high court in 2019 ruled that claims of partisan gerrymandering for congressional and legislative districts are outside the purview of federal courts and should be decided by states.

Voting rights groups celebrate legal victory

David Reymann, an attorney for the voting rights advocates who challenged the map, called the ruling a “watershed moment” for the voices of Utah voters.

“The Legislature in this state is not king,” Reymann told reporters Monday evening.

Leaders from the Democratic National Committee and the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee applauded the ruling as a victory for democracy.

Republican Gov. Spencer Cox said he disagrees with the decision but holds respect for Utah’s judiciary. Meanwhile, the state’s GOP Chairman, Robert Axson, dismissed the ruling as “judicial activism.”

Utah’s Republican legislative leaders, Senate President Stuart Adams and House Speaker Mike Schultz, said in a joint statement that they are disappointed by the ruling and are carefully considering their next steps.

In 2018, voters narrowly approved a ballot initiative that created an independent redistricting commission to draw boundaries for Utah’s legislative and congressional districts, which the Legislature was required to consider. Lawmakers repealed the initiative in 2020 and replaced it with a law that transformed the commission into an advisory board that they could choose to ignore.

The following year, lawmakers disregarded a congressional map proposal from the commission and drew one of their own that carved up Salt Lake County among four reliably Republican districts.

READ MORE: Utah high court scrutinizes process that sliced state’s most Democrat-heavy county into 4 districts

Voting rights advocates sued, arguing the map drawn by lawmakers constituted partisan gerrymandering that favored Republicans. They also said the Legislature violated the rights of voters when it repealed and replaced the 2018 initiative.

The case made its way to the Utah Supreme Court, which ruled that the Legislature cannot change laws approved through ballot initiatives except to reinforce them, or to advance a compelling government interest. The five-member panel sent the case back to Gibson in the lower court to decide whether lawmakers would have to redraw boundaries set as part of a redistricting process that happens every 10 years.

Lawmakers and voters clash over redistricting

The ruling Monday reinstates the voter-approved redistricting standards that lawmakers had overturned.

Utah was one of four states where voters approved measures designed to reduce partisan gerrymandering in 2018. As in Utah, Missouri’s Republican-led Legislature quickly sought to repeal key provisions. Missouri voters approved the Legislature’s revisions in 2020, before the original plan was ever used. Independent commissions approved by Colorado and Michigan voters remained in place and were used after the 2020 census.

The redistricting measures aren’t the only instances where state lawmakers have altered voter-approved measures.

Earlier this year, Missouri lawmakers repealed a paid sick leave law passed by voters and referred a proposed repeal of an abortion rights amendment to the ballot. In South Dakota, voters approved a public campaign finance system, tightened lobbying laws and created an ethics commission in 2016. Lawmakers repealed and replaced the measure the next year with a narrower government watchdog board and looser limits on lobbyist gifts to public officials.

Associated Press writer David Lieb contributed from Jefferson City, Missouri.

We’re not going anywhere.

Stand up for truly independent, trusted news that you can count on!




Source: Utah News

WWE, UFC returning to Utah

WWE and UFC will return to Utah with three upcoming events. On Tuesday, Smith Entertainment Group and TKO Group Holdings announced the three events, which will be held at the Delta Center.

WWE and UFC will return to Utah with three upcoming events.

On Tuesday, Smith Entertainment Group and TKO Group Holdings announced the three events, which will be held at the Delta Center.

“We are thrilled that live WWE entertainment and UFC action will return to Utah,” said Chris Barney, president of revenue and commercial strategy at Smith Entertainment Group.

Advertisement

WWE will be the first to return, with Friday Night SmackDown on Friday, Oct. 31 and Saturday Night’s Main Event on Saturday, Nov. 1.

Wrestler Akira Tozawa goes airborne during his match with Carmelo Hayes during the WWE Monday Night RAW event, Monday, March 6, 2023, in Boston. | Charles Krupa

Wrestler Akira Tozawa goes airborne during his match with Carmelo Hayes during the WWE Monday Night RAW event, Monday, March 6, 2023, in Boston. | Charles Krupa

UFC will head to Utah and the Delta Center in 2026.

“Our expanded partnership with TKO and Smith Entertainment Group offers yet another opportunity to position Utah as a premier destination for key global sports and entertainment events,” said Jeff Robbins, president and CEO of the Utah Sports Commission.

Hosting both “a major WWE event in 2025 and the UFC again in 2026 is a tribute to our growing sports and entertainment ecosystem in Utah, the State of Sport,” Robbins said.

Advertisement

UFC in Utah

Three sold-out UFC events have been held at the Delta Center over the last three years: 2022’s UFC 278: Usman vs. Edwards 2; 2023’s UFC 291: Poirier vs. Gaethje 2; and 2024’s UFC 307: Pereira vs. Rountree Jr.

“In recent years, Salt Lake City and Delta Center have become a top destination to bring exciting, action-packed UFC and WWE events to our fans in Utah, and we’re thrilled to continue that relationship into 2026,” said Peter Dropick, executive vice president of event development and operations for TKO.

UFC Event SLC_ja_3758.jpg

UFC announcer Bruce Buffer introduces main card fighters during Ultimate Fighting Championship at the Delta Center in Salt Lake City on Saturday, Oct. 5, 2024. | Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News

Those three events generated a combined $74.1 million in economic impact for the Salt Lake City region, per the press release. They’re the three highest-grossing Delta Center events, according to SEG.

Advertisement

“Every TKO event Delta Center has hosted has captivated fans and brought people from across the country into Salt Lake City, creating opportunities to showcase Utah’s world class sports and entertainment landscape,” Barney said.

He said that SEG looks “forward to setting new records together when these incredible experiences take over Delta Center.”

Ticket info for WWE and UFC events at Delta Center

Downtown Smith Redevelopment_ja_00028.jpg

The Delta Center and the skyline in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, May 8, 2024. | Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News

More details on ticket sale dates for both the WWE and UFC events, the fight cards, and participating WWE Superstars will be released at a later date.

Registration for the WWE ticket presale is available online now.

VIP experiences for the events will be available through On Location, with more information to come.

Source: Utah News

Judge rules Utah’s congressional map must be redrawn for the 2026 elections

The current map divides Salt Lake County, the state’s population center and a Democratic stronghold, among four congressional districts.

The Utah State Capitol, March 14, 2013, in Salt Lake City.

Salt Lake City — The Utah Legislature will need to rapidly redraw the state’s congressional boundaries after a judge ruled Monday that the Republican-controlled body circumvented safeguards put in place by voters to ensure districts aren’t drawn to favor any party.

The current map, adopted in 2021, divides Salt Lake County — Utah’s population center and a Democratic stronghold — among the state’s four congressional districts, all of which have since elected Republicans by wide margins.

District Court Judge Dianna Gibson made few judgments on the content of the map but declared it unlawful because lawmakers had weakened and ignored an independent commission established by voters to prevent partisan gerrymandering.

Source: Utah News

Utah judge tosses congressional maps, creating Democratic opportunity

Democrats lauded a Tuesday evening order by a judge in Utah directing the state legislature to quickly draw new congressional maps.

Democrats lauded a Tuesday evening order by a judge in Utah directing the state legislature to quickly draw new congressional maps.

“The Legislature is directed to design and enact a remedial congressional redistricting map in conformity with Proposition 4’s mandatory redistricting standards and requirements,” Judge Dianna M. Gibson wrote in granting summary judgement to a group of plaintiffs who were seeking to invalidate the current congressional maps as designed by the state legislature.

Under Proposition 4, Utah voters in 2018 enacted an independent redistricting process, seeking to end partisan gerrymandering. State lawmakers then effectively invalidated that process by passing a state law in 2020 amending the redistricting act. Gibson gave the legislature until Sept. 24 to draw new lines that comply with the law enacted through Proposition 4.

The new map will likely include at least one Salt Lake City-based district that could offer better political terrain for Democrats.

“In throwing out the current, gerrymandered congressional map, voters in Utah will now have an opportunity to elect leaders that best represent their values, and not have their representation dictated by politicians,” Rep. Suzan DelBene of Washington, chair of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, said in a statement. “This choice is what the current debate in Utah and other states is about — a free and fair midterm election. Donald Trump and House Republicans know they cannot win the midterms based on their abysmal governing record, so they are actively attempting to rig the outcome before a single vote is cast.”

Utah is one of several states, headlined by Texas and California, with active redistricting fights this cycle. All four members of Utah’s current congressional delegation are Republicans.

Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, criticized the ruling, arguing that it undermines the state legislature’s authority under the state constitution.

“Make no mistake, this decision will make the process of drawing legislative districts in Utah less accountable to voters, not more,” Lee posted on X. “It’ll also result in maps that are far more generous to Democrats, and that’s the whole point.”

“This is yet another example of how ‘independent commissions’ are often used to give the left an unfair, unearned advantage in red states — one they could never otherwise secure,” Lee said.

Source: Utah News

Utah judge strikes down Republicans’ congressional maps in gerrymandering case

Judge Dianna Gibson rules Utah legislature gerrymandered congressional districts to benefit Republicans, requiring new maps for 2026 midterm elections.

NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

A judge ordered the Utah legislature on Monday to redraw its congressional maps in time for next year’s midterm elections, finding the state legislature unlawfully gerrymandered its districts in favor of Republicans.

Judge Dianna Gibson said in a 76-page order that the legislature must pass a “remedial congressional map” by the end of September. State lawmakers have already signaled they plan to appeal, meaning the case is likely headed for the Utah Supreme Court and possibly the U.S. Supreme Court.

Gibson’s order comes after a fight between two of the country’s largest states, Texas and California, thrust gerrymandering into the national spotlight. Gerrymandering is the practice of changing the boundaries of a congressional district in a state to benefit one political party, which critics say dilutes votes.

TRUMP URGES TEXAS REPUBLICANS TO SWIFTLY PASS REDISTRICTING MAPS WHILE NEWSOM, CALIFORNIA DEMS COUNTER

Gavin Newsom on redistricting

California Gov. Gavin Newsom speaks about the “Election Rigging Response Act” at a press conference on August 14, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

The lawsuit in Utah arose from redistricting changes that began in 2018. Utah voters passed Proposition 4, also known as the “Better Boundaries” initiative, that year to reform the redistricting process and create an independent commission to oversee it.

But the state legislature passed a bill two years later that overrode that measure and stripped the commission of its power by reducing it to an advisory body. Lawmakers then bypassed the commission entirely by drawing congressional maps seen as strongly favoring Republicans.

The new map split Salt Lake City four ways, which voting rights groups, including the League of Women Voters of Utah and the Mormon Women for Ethical Government, alleged illegally broke up the state’s only blue-leaning urban region in violation of the standards set forth by Proposition 4.

TRUMP, ABBOTT VS. NEWSOM: MAD DASH TO REDO CONGRESSIONAL MAPS IN CALIFORNIA, TEXAS

Utah Capitol Building

State Capitol Building overlooks Salt Lake City skyline and Wasatch Mountain range with snow, Utah. (Joe Sohm/Visions of America/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

Sen. Mike Lee

Sen. Mike Lee speaks during a Senate Foreign Relations confirmation hearing at Dirksen Senate Office Building on January 15, 2025, in Washington, D.C. (Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah, warned Monday ahead of Gibson’s ruling that “almost anything promoted as an ‘independent commission’ is often a strategy to give Democrats an edge they can’t win through fair elections.”

“We the people need to halt this trend. To do so, we must first grasp what these independent commissions truly represent,” Lee wrote in a lengthy X post. “In a state like Utah, they’re essentially a mechanism for the left to grab power they can’t get through democratic elections.”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Utah’s redistricting dispute comes after Texas’ legislature passed new maps this month that give Republicans an advantage in the upcoming midterms. President Donald Trump encouraged the move and celebrated it as a “BIG WIN,” while state Democrats temporarily fled the state in protest over the new map.

California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, responded to what he said was a Trump-led power grab by advancing a hasty plan to suspend his own state’s map, drawn by an independent commission, and pass a new one in a special election this year to offset Republicans’ gains in Texas. In a press conference, Newsom said Democrats need to “play hardball” to stand a chance against a Republican Party led by Trump. Trump vowed on Monday to sue Newsom over the map.

Source: Utah News

Judge orders redrawing of Utah’s congressional map

A Utah judge ruled on Monday that the state must redraw its congressional map ahead of the 2026 U.S. midterm elections, saying Utah’s Republican-controlled legislature had overstepped in overruling an …

A Utah judge ruled on Monday that the state must redraw its congressional map ahead of the 2026 U.S. midterm elections, saying Utah’s Republican-controlled legislature had overstepped in overruling an …

Source: Utah News

How a dog helped a Utah man survive an 11-hour night crawl through the mountains

The Salt Lake Tribune reports a man’s survival after a UTV crash, aided by his dog, Buddy, during an 11-hour crawl to safety.

Jake Schmitt looked up, droplets from the cool stream dribbling down his chin, and locked eyes with his best friend, Buddy. The 6-year-old German shorthaired pointer also had water dripping from his black snout.

Advertisement

Schmitt, 34, has been a hunter for most of his life and a hunting guide in Utah for almost a decade. He knew he shouldn’t be drinking from a stream, that his stomach could violently cramp from giardia once the water and parasites worked their way inside. But that was a tomorrow problem. He wasn’t even sure he would make it through the night — or if he would even notice the pain with so much of it already wracking his body.

It had been hours — four? Eight? Schmitt wasn’t sure — since his Polaris Ranger had tumbled down a hillside deep in the Uinta Mountains. In the rollover, he shattered both ankles, two ribs and his leg. By the time they reached the river, he and Buddy had been crawling down a rutted logging road, both on all fours, for so long that while the reinforced patches on the knees of Schmitt’s hunting pants remained intact, the skin on his kneecaps was shredded and bleeding. He needed this respite. He could see Buddy needed it, too.

“We looked at each other, and I was like, ‘Dude, this water is so good.’ And he was like, ‘Yeah, can we just take a minute? This water is really good,’” Schmitt recalled. “And I was like, ‘We can take five minutes, Buddy. I’m so sorry.’”

Schmitt had gotten them into this — what would end up being an 11-hour slog to his truck and another 40-minute drive to help. What got them out, he said, was Buddy.

Advertisement

The Salt Lake Tribune shares the story of how Schmitt and Buddy made it through the night after a crash in the Utah wilderness.

‘I had everything you could imagine’

Before he moved to Ogden in 2022, Schmitt made an annual pilgrimage from his home in Buffalo, New York, out West to Montana, Canada or Utah every August to subcontract for four months as a hunting guide. And he always brought Buddy, who had been Schmitt’s sidekick since he was 8 weeks old.

With another hunting season around the corner, the pair took a Sunday drive toward Whitney Reservoir, deep into the Uinta Mountains, to scout for big game. It was July 20, and the trip was going well. Schmitt had rescued an elk fawn from a bear trap and also spotted a large buck. Trying to get a better look at the buck, Schmitt steered his Ranger onto a trail about four miles into the forest that he said he’s “been on a million times.”

Map demonstrating the distance between the UTV crash site and Oakley Diner. - Christopher Cherrington // The Salt Lake Tribune

Map demonstrating the distance between the UTV crash site and Oakley Diner. – Christopher Cherrington // The Salt Lake Tribune

Quickly, though, he realized the trail had become unsafe over the winter. He decided to backtrack and shifted the Ranger into reverse. Before he even put his foot on the accelerator, Schmitt felt the back end start to slip down the incline.

Advertisement

“I knew it was going to flip, and I tried to jump out,” Schmitt said. “And upon trying to jump out, it started to roll, and it took my body with it.”

Schmitt believes the machine rolled over twice before it spit him out a quarter of the way down the steep hill. It rolled about 15 more times before coming to a rest in a heap in a dry creek bed. The frame was contorted. The roof had been ripped off. The tires were flung dozens of feet away.

Buddy had been inside a crate in the back of the Ranger. The crate was nowhere to be seen. But there Buddy was, standing in front of Schmitt, wagging his stubby tail, not a scratch on him.

Schmitt hadn’t been so fortunate.

Advertisement

He didn’t know the extent of his injuries, but when he put weight on his right leg to stand, his ankle popped and he collapsed back to the ground. Then he looked at his left leg and couldn’t comprehend what he was seeing: His foot was folded back and his lower leg was skewed at a strange angle.

Even on healthy legs, it would have been difficult to stand on the incline. In his state, it would be impossible. So, Schmitt opted to roll down to the wreckage instead. Along the way, he hoped he would spot his satellite phone, or his radio or his cellphone, or at very least the gun he carried to scare away bears — anything he could use to signal for help.

“I had everything you could imagine,” he said. “But it doesn’t matter when it just gets flung off of you.”

The one usable thing he found? A small roll of duct tape. Through the tumult, it remained stuck inside the Ranger’s center console.

Advertisement

Schmitt sized up his situation: “I have no communication. I’m screwed. I’m going to have to drag myself out, as painful as that is.”

First, though, he had to set his broken leg.

The breaks

Schmitt wasn’t just some tourist lost in the woods. His years of guiding and backcountry exploration had left him uniquely qualified to deal with his perilous predicament.

He was so familiar with the old road that he knew he had to make six stream crossings before he would reach his truck. He knew to drink only from the most rapidly moving sections of those streams to mitigate the chances of contracting giardia. And, he had experience with self-administered wilderness first aid.

Advertisement

“If you don’t know how to literally drag yourself out at the end of the day, then probably don’t go out there,” Schmitt said, “because you’re going to die.”

Schmitt knew he needed to survive, even if only to make sure Buddy made it out alive. He found a straight piece of metal that had broken off the Ranger, scooted over to it and set his broken leg on top of it. Then, he pulled.

“I was way more scared to lose my leg than to rebreak that back,” Schmitt said of his rationalization for putting himself through that pain. “I was terrified.”

He created a splint with a mostly straight and sturdy stick and affixed it to the side of his leg with his belt and, of course, the duct tape.

Advertisement

By then, the sun had begun to set. So Schmitt called Buddy over and switched on the walnut-sized light on his collar. With just a crescent moon overhead, it would be their only light source for the next 10 hours as they lurched through the dark forest.

Crawling through the night

It didn’t take long for the adrenaline to wear off. Shock, fatigue and disorientation took its place.

Schmitt started the long journey to his truck by scooching backward, using his arms to drag his body down the road. Later, spooked by animal sounds he heard in the forest, he turned onto his belly and, with a rock in each hand for protection against the gravel and the wildlife, began to crawl. His ankle flopped helplessly behind him, and he could feel the bone shards grinding against one another. Ahead of him, Buddy zigzagged back and forth, picking up scents on the wind.

Advertisement

Their progress was glacial. At the second stream crossing, Schmitt convinced himself it was the fifth one. When a bend in the road jogged his memory, Schmitt broke down; they still had so far to travel.

They stopped often. Sometimes sleep would overtake Schmitt, but he would always be jolted back awake by the sensation of Buddy’s black nose nudging his head. When Schmitt felt like he just couldn’t go on, Buddy would lie down on the road 20 feet ahead of him. Compelled by the dog’s forlorn look, Schmitt would find the energy to scoot over to comfort his friend.

“I would pet him, and then he’d go 20 feet more,” Schmitt recalled. “And now I know he was just helping me, step by step.”

When daylight broke the next morning, Schmitt called it the “worst sunrise I’ve ever seen in my entire life.” It meant he hadn’t been crawling for three or four hours, like he’d thought, but closer to 10. The adrenaline kicked in, though, when the sunlight illuminated his truck in the distance.

Advertisement

Thankfully, he’d left his keys inside it.

An unexpected visitor

Yenni Saiz was putting yard games out in front of the Oakley Diner, as the 19-year-old waitress usually does to prepare for the 8 a.m. breakfast crowd, when the mud-colored Toyota pulled up next to her. The man inside rolled down his window, and Saiz grew nervous.

“You can tell he was in pain,” said Saiz, a Weber State student and Oakley resident, “and he had scratches on his face. He had a dog in the back seat, too.”

Schmitt had driven his broken body and best friend more than half an hour to the diner, the nearest place he thought might be open so early. He asked Saiz to call 911 and relayed to her the details of his ordeal and his injuries. Four minutes later, paramedics were on the scene.

Advertisement

Schmitt was loaded into an ambulance bound for Park City Hospital. Buddy had to stay behind. But the Oakley Fire Station kept him until Schmitt’s mom flew in the next day from New York to collect him.

Schmitt spent a week in the hospital while doctors inserted a rod in his broken leg and gave his ribs time to heal. On his final day, the nurses gave Schmitt’s mom, Mel Lenz, who is also a nurse, the go-ahead to bring Buddy to the hospital. The dog could barely be restrained from climbing into bed with Schmitt.

“He cried. I cried,” Schmitt said. “It was pretty wild.”

Both are back at home in Ogden now. Schmitt, who is uninsured, is trying to distract himself from his mounting medical bills by managing his welding fabrication company and committing himself to his physical therapy. His ambitious goal is to be guiding again by early September.

Advertisement

As for Buddy, he has all the bones — and all the cool, clean water — a dog could want. And, Schmitt said, he always will.

“He’s the little man that got me out of there for sure,” Schmitt said. “If he wasn’t there, I probably wouldn’t have made it mentally, spiritually.”

A GoFundMe has been set up to help Schmitt pay for medical expenses and loss of equipment. To date, the fund had received more than $29,000 in donations.

This story was produced by The Salt Lake Tribune and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.

Source: Utah News

After getting cut 4 times, this Utah mom finally got to share her story on ‘American Ninja Warrior’

Jenedy Paige isn’t in the running to win this season of “American Ninja Warrior,” which concludes Monday night, but her time on the show marked a significant personal victory …

Before swinging her body through the air on the “American Ninja Warrior” obstacle course, Jenedy Paige stood at the start line with her husband and kids, holding up high a painting of her 3-year-old son, Victory Morgan, that she had made not long after he died from a drowning accident more than a decade ago.

She then lowered the painting and tightly wrapped her arms around her family. As they hugged, the portrait of Victory was still in the center, still in focus.

No matter where she’s lived, that painting has always had a place in the entry of her home, right at the front door.

Now, temporarily, it was on the set of “American Ninja Warrior,” joining her cheering family on the sidelines as she ran the qualifying course for the show’s 17th season.

Jenedy Paige and her family stand at the starting line for the “American Ninja Warrior” qualifying obstacle course, holding a portrait of her 3-year-old son, Victory Morgan, who died 14 years ago after drowning in a swimming pool. | Trae Patton/NBC

With the name Victory written in capital letters on her left arm, the 40-year-old artist from Pleasant Grove, Utah, almost made it through the third obstacle of the six-obstacle course before splashing down and ending her time on Season 17.

Paige may not be in the running to win this season of “American Ninja Warrior,” which concludes Monday night, but her time on the show marked a significant personal victory because she was finally able to share her story with viewers — a message she’s been trying to share on “ANW” for a while.

Although this season marked the first time Paige officially appeared on “ANW,” it was actually her fifth time competing. She’s been competing since 2019, but the show has never aired her run — until now.

To watch it all unfold, I just wept. You just see all of these years, from the loss and the brokenness to God recreating you into a different, better version of yourself.

—  Jenedy Paige

As she watched her “ANW” run finally play out on TV earlier this summer, she didn’t just see herself in that moment. She saw everything leading up to it — a physical, spiritual and mental refining that got her to this place that years ago would’ve seemed unreachable.

“I’m just kind of holding my breath, and then to watch it all unfold, I just wept,” Paige recently told the Deseret News. “You just see all of these years, from the loss and the brokenness to God recreating you into a different, better version of yourself.”

‘Let’s do this, Mom’

Perhaps no one is more shocked to be a five-time “American Ninja Warrior” competitor than Paige.

Growing up, the artist described herself as more of a “nerdy musician” type than an athlete.

But in 2011, when her 3-year-old son died after drowning in a swimming pool, she started searching for a new outlet to channel her grief. She already knew painting to be cathartic, but she needed more.

When her family moved to Utah in 2015, she began working out at a nearby gym and gradually started building up her strength in mom fitness classes. That eventually led to rock climbing. Not long after that, while at the gym, an unexpected thought popped into her head: She should try out for “American Ninja Warrior.”

“That’s weird,” she recalled thinking, since she believed her only qualification to be that she had watched “ANW” with her husband.

“When I felt that feeling, I just kind of brushed it away,” Paige said. “But I’ve just learned in my life that God is really persistent with me, and if I ignore him, then he will keep telling me the same thing until I listen.”

The thought kept coming back, so she knew what she had to do.

Paige filmed an application video at Airborne, a trampoline park in Lindon, since there weren’t any ninja-themed gyms in her area at the time.

“As I went to start, all of a sudden I felt my son, who had passed away, and I felt him say, ‘Let’s do this, Mom,’” Paige recalled. “It was totally unexpected. I didn’t anticipate to feel him there, but then as soon as he said that, I was like, ‘Well, let’s freaking go,’ because I’ve got an angel on my side. And then I went through it, and I did the whole thing — all this stuff I had never done before.

“In that moment, because I felt my son with me, all that hesitation and the fear, it just left.”

After filming her submission video, where she surprised herself by completing stunts she never imagined doing, she looked at her husband.

“Maybe I could be a ninja,” she said.

A powerful lesson

A few months later, Paige got the exciting call from a casting producer, inviting her to compete on the show.

She made her “ANW” debut in Tacoma, Washington, and surprised herself by reaching the fourth obstacle of the course — an impressive feat for a then-34-year-old mom of four’s rookie season.

As she competed, she said, she did so with a sense of conviction, believing she knew exactly why God had led her to this moment.

“I thought, ‘I know, it’s because I lost a son, and I was totally broken, and God put me back together, and he wants me to share about that on national TV.’ That’s why I’m here,” she recalled.

Jenedy Paige competes on Season 17 of “American Ninja Warrior.” | Trae Patton/NBC

Paige was excited when she returned home from filming, but couldn’t disclose to her curious friends how she had done because she’d signed an NDA. She assured them, though, that they would be able to see it for themselves when it aired.

“And then all of that anticipation ended in a really depressing email from the casting producer that said, ‘Oh, Jenedy, you did really great for your rookie season, but you competed with too many celebrities, and we don’t have time for you, sorry,’” Paige said.

“It was just like the biggest letdown,” she continued. “I remember when I read that email just crying, because I really put myself out there, and I thought I was going to be in this really faith-promoting experience. And then it just all seemed like it didn’t even matter, like nobody was going to see it, like it didn’t happen.”

But for all of the disappointment, Paige still felt like she needed to keep training, to stay with “American Ninja Warrior.”

So every week she would go to the gym and try to conquer one obstacle, focusing on one thing she could improve on. And then the next week she would shift her focus to something else.

“ANW” invited Paige to compete again the following year. And the year after that. And the year after that.

In 2023, her fourth season competing, the artist had a hard time accepting that the show would again not be featuring her run.

“I’m just mad at this point,” she said, noting how her qualifications for the show had grown over the years to include becoming a coach at the Ninja Playground in Lehi, and also competing at the World Ninja Finals.

But then, she said, she felt a strong message from God that completely shifted her perspective.

“God was kind of like, ‘Oh wait, Jenedy, did you think this was about TV? Did you know I actually care way more about the development of an individual than I do about TV?’” she recalled. “‘Look at yourself: You are a completely different person than you were four years ago, and I needed you to become a different person. I needed you to become a stronger person. This was just a path that I gave you to help you become a stronger person.’”

It was a powerful lesson — one she said she’ll never forget.

At first she thought that message would serve as an exclamation mark of sorts, bringing a dynamic end to her time on “American Ninja Warrior.”

That my son’s name was Victory, that really motivated me to keep trying.

—  Jenedy Paige

When Season 17 rolled around, though, she found herself wanting to compete again — but this time it was with no expectations. She just wanted to take part in a sport she had grown to love.

“And that my son’s name was Victory, that really motivated me to keep trying,” she said.

A stamp of ‘Victory’ on ‘American Ninja Warrior’

Paige had a feeling Season 17 would be different.

“ANW” filmed her run last September — 13 years to the day that she pulled her son out of a swimming pool.

A couple of months later, she got a call from the show saying that her run would finally be shown. That message came on Nov. 12 — 13 years to the day that her son died.

“It just seemed like his little stamp on this whole thing,” Paige said.

Although her Season 17 run wasn’t the best of her “ANW” career, the artist says she was proud of the outcome.

In featuring her run, she said the show actually pieced together footage from all of her different submission videos over the years. It was like watching a timeline of her story — her grief, her transformation, her healing.

“You grieve differently in different years,” she said. “My son would be 17 now — I would have this big teenager, and he’s not here, and so I kind of feel like doing these videos every year is just kind of like another stepping stone, helping me process my grief. … I feel like these videos kind of offered me that opportunity to find a new purpose in my grief every year.”

Jenedy Paige competes on Season 17 of “American Ninja Warrior.” | Trae Patton/NBC

Since her run aired, Paige said she has received emails and messages from viewers who were touched by her story. It meant a lot to her, and in somewhat of a full-circle moment, it brought her back to her “American Ninja Warrior” debut six years earlier.

“The thing that’s really beautiful to me is that I originally wanted to be on TV to share my story, to be some kind of beacon of light to some other parent out there that’s lost a kid, and I got exactly what I wanted,” she said. “Even though I didn’t get the buzzer in a moment of glory, NBC still gave me almost 5 minutes of their time, and showed my art and the story of my son. And so even though it didn’t look exactly like what I had hoped for, it was still such a gift.”

So now that she finally got airtime, and finally got to share her story with viewers, will she return to “American Ninja Warrior”?

She’s already made her submission video for Season 18.

“If they’ll let me, I’ll keep coming back,” she said.

Source: Utah News

Utah Jazz Game Viewer’s Guide 2025: Stories to watch

The 2025-26 NBA schedule has been released for public consumption. Go ahead and take a sample — I won’t mind. But as your waiter, I feel it’s my responsibility to properly guide you through this …

CAN WE BE HONEST with each other for a moment? Last year’s Utah Jazz season was … challenging.

There’s no way to sugar-coat a 17-win season where Coach Hardy was tasked with fielding some of the least competitive lineups one could conceive. The strategy has been drafted with the end in mind — at the harrowing expense of the present.

Advertisement

But this is the pickled herring the Utah Jazz begrudgingly stomached when they detonated a playoff-standard depth chart for a total renovation. Vile and inedible as it may seem, the powers that be deemed a from-the-ground-up renovation to be the only way forward.

Through surprise success and suboptimal development, three years of the expedition have been endured. Provisions are depleted. The biting cold at the base of the summit cautions of the conditions of the climb. Steep cliffs. Setbacks. The unescapable fear of a premature collapse. This brave team of explorers squares their shoulders to the path ahead, accepting that before they can ascend, they’ll spend another season at the bottom. Preparing. Scavenging. Training. Gathering adequate courage for the intrepid journey before them.

The 2025-26 NBA schedule has been released for public consumption. Go ahead and take a sample — I won’t mind. But as your waiter, I feel it’s my responsibility to properly guide you through this delicious smattering of Utah Jazz basketball we see before us.

I won’t stand here and pretend that the year will be one to remember. Beyond a few fun introductions and reunions, the win total may be eerily similar to that of last year’s body of work, but for those with an open mind, the 2025 season may just introduce some treasured bursts of fanatic euphoria. Yes, there’s a little something for everyone, even though the team’s Yelp reviews have been a touch unsavory over the past few seasons — we’ve been in a dark place.

Advertisement

Let us say grace, and dig in.

Utah Jazz Viewer’s Guide

Before you are three genres of viewership appetizers: milestone, reunion, and wild card. Each will be properly analyzed in its time, but for every fan, there rests a reason they’ll be sitting in front of their couch watching a half-baked basketball team take the floor of an honest-to-goodness NBA-scheduled matchup.

Do you need trail posts for key periods of the season? We’ve marked the path in the Milestone Section.

Are you thrilled to see the return of a departed member of the Jazz family? Take a gander at the Reunion Section.

Curious about my professionally-appraised selection of contests for the year? An excellent choice. To the Wild Card Section with you, you aficionado.

Advertisement

Are you itching to learn about the tastiest apples for the harvest season? You’re at the wrong place. I can’t believe it took you this long to figure that out.

Season Milestones

Opening Night – October 22, 2025

Opponent: Los Angeles Clippers

Opening night: the first tip-off of the year. The first shot. The first score. The first time you’ll scream at the inanimate television in your living room. It’s a beautiful moment, and we only get one of them per year. Embrace the moment. Absorb the feeling.

For two players on the roster, however, this will be their first taste of NBA basketball. For Ace Bailey and Walter Clayton Jr., this night marks a lifelong dream finally fulfilled, and a chance to showcase their talents in real professional minutes. Maybe Jon Tonje, too, who knows?

Advertisement

Finally, this night marks the birth of a new era in team branding. Mountain basketball at its finest, the new purple-popping, baby blue-crested uniforms will put the final nail in the coffin for the hideous eyesore that was yellow and black. Long live mountain basketball.

The NBA Cup Begins – October 31, 2025

Opponent: Phoenix Suns

The NBA Cup technically provides an opportunity for the Jazz to compete for a championship. Sure, it’s a long shot that almost certainly won’t come to fruition. The special edition court designs will likely be hideous yet again. And yes, I understand that the NBA community has yet to place any historical significance on the trophy, since the postseason crown remains the only meaningful prize of the year if we’re being candid.

Advertisement

But for at least this night, the Utah Jazz are competitors with a non-zero chance of raising a banner. Especially when their first matchup is against one of the worst-run organizations in the sport.

Don’t hold your breath, though.

Final Game Before the Deadline – February 3, 2026

Opponent: Indiana Pacers

The Utah Jazz, in their current state, are one of the most exciting franchises in the final moments leading up to the NBA Trade Deadline. Though activity is never a guarantee, recent history suggests the roster may not look the same on the night of the fifth. So yeah, take one final look on the third of February, because it may be your last. … Especially if Lauri Markkanen rumors are for real this time.

Advertisement

The Home Stretch – March 5, 2026

Opponent: Washington Wizards

Twenty games remaining on the schedule, this is the point in the year where every result matters. Last season’s squad emerged victorious in a whopping two of their final twenty matchups.

Expect more of the same this year.

This meeting with Washington will be an important head-to-head in which the loser gets the slightest of nudges closer to the top overall pick (at least according to the totally trustworthy draft lottery odds). Washington will be the generals of a formidable tank themselves, and tank enthusiasts will have this milestone pinned to the top of their NBA League Pass priority list. But I’m getting ahead of myself…

Player Reunions

John Collins’ Return – October 22, 2025

Opponent: Los Angeles Clippers

Advertisement

Hilariously, opening night in Salt Lake City will also play the setting of John Collins’ welcome back to Utah after the Jazz dealt him to the Clippers in the offseason. We’re double-dipping in the viewer’s guide. Sorry. His nearly 50/40/90 season may have completely revived his career, and he’s in a better place now. Now he heads to Utah in the days leading to Halloween with a thirst for blood and a target virtually incapable of defending itself. That’s means, motive, and opportunity. If I didn’t know any better, I’d say this sounds like the premise of an Agatha Christie novel. Time to Face the Music.

Collin Sexton’s Revenge – January 10, 2026

Opponent: Charlotte Hornets

For a while there, I really thought Collin Sexton would be Utah’s starting point guard on a playoff roster. Just seeing the pure, concentrated look of murder in his eyes convinced me that he would jump through someone’s torso to dive for a loose ball. Pure basketball mania — I’m really going to miss him.

Advertisement

But he returns to Utah in a Charlotte Hornets uniform in January, where Jazz fans will get to witness a Tony Parker-esque discomfort in watching a beloved family member don the — erm — distinct turquoise and purple.

Jordan Clarkson’s Homecoming – March 11, 2026

I can recall witnessing a black Lamborghini cruising down I-15 earlier this year. Such a car is a rare occurrence in Utah, a place where conservative values typically bleed into purchasing minivans and pickup trucks, so my wife and I swung our heads to catch a glimpse of the driver. Who in the state of Utah could boast so much swagger, roll with so much style, as to get in the cockpit of a Lambo?

Dreadlocks and face tattoos, the moment we saw his face, the pilot was unmistakable. He was none other than Jordan Clarkson of the Utah Jazz. An icon of fashion. A flamethrower on the basketball court. He delivers heat in every aspect of his life. JC always stood out with the Jazz and was a fan-favorite during his time with the squad. Now, battling for a championship with the New York Knicks, he’ll visit Utah once in 2026.

Wild Card

Rutgers Rivalry – December 27, 2025

Opponent: San Antonio Spurs

Advertisement

Utah may have “lost” the NBA Draft Lottery, but they effectively won it with their second wind, grabbing Ace Bailey as he slid to the fifth spot in the draft. Despite all the murmuring and rumors, Utah got their guy and couldn’t be happier about it.

But his teammate and second overall pick has gathered plenty of his own headlines. Dylan Harper outshone Ace in college and stole the spotlight at Rutgers. They’ll meet as opponents for the first time as pros two days after Christmas in what may turn into one of basketball’s most fascinating interpersonal rivalries.

Tank Warfare – Multiple Dates

Opponent: THE WORLD

Advertisement

The Utah Jazz aren’t aiming to win the NBA Championship this season. Please take a moment to regain your composure. No, they have their gaze fixed upon the NBA Draft Lottery, and the competition is just as stiff. At this point in the year, it’s impossible to know which teams will be competing for the number one pick and who will actually make a competitive effort (good for them), but we can list out the usual suspects and set the dates from there.

Here is every first matchup with other well-known tank commanders across the league.

Washington Wizards: March 5, 2026

New Orleans Pelicans: February 26, 2026

Advertisement

Charlotte Hornets: November 2, 2025

Brooklyn Nets: December 4, 2025

Toronto Raptors: February 1, 2026

Happy watching, and may your viewership return whatever you hope to get out of this edition of the Utah Jazz.

Calvin Barrett is a writer, editor, and prolific Mario Kart racer located in Tokyo, Japan. He has covered the Utah Jazz and BYU athletics since 2024.

Source: Utah News