Game week has finally arrived for BYU, Utah and USU. Now the real fun begins

Bronco Mendenhall’s magic at Utah State and the underselling of Utah Ute and BYU Cougar defenses set the stage as the local college football season kicks off this weekend. Utah travels to UCLA, BYU …

Bronco Mendenhall’s magic at Utah State and the underselling of Utah Ute and BYU Cougar defenses set the stage as the local college football season kicks off this weekend.

Utah travels to UCLA, BYU hosts Portland State and Utah State will open the Mendenhall era against UTEP on Saturday. It’s about time we get actual games and see these guys play against someone else.

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Everybody loves a nice quarterback story this time of the year. They’re the faces of the program. Their roles are critical and their performances are scrutinized to oblivion.

Yes, the Devon Dampier story for the Utes is a tremendous storyline. What will he do? How can he use Jason Beck’s offense to lift Utah past its 2024 injury-plagued woes? Will he dash and dart his way to first downs and touchdowns behind a top-notch, respected O-line? Is he capable of executing the passing game at a high level with new receivers and backs so he doesn’t have to take a huge burden with his legs?

Oh, and this Bear story in Provo is intriguing as BYU starts a true freshman in Bear Bachmeier for Game 1 of the season. Never happened before. Is the gamble worth it? Is his offer sheet out of high school (Alabama, Georgia, Arkansas, Notre Dame, Michigan, Oregon, Stanford, Georgia) reflective of mind and athletic abilities?

All this QB stuff inside these Big 12 teams is captivating and tantalizing. No question it is the headline of August and September as teams enter the starting chute.

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But let’s explore a different take on preseason week and chatter: Defense.

BYU led the Big 12 in defense last year and tied for the most forced turnovers in the NCAA. Jay Hill has assembled personnel more suited to what he needs to excel. And yes, that includes former Ute defensive tackle Keanu Tanavasa. The Cougar defense will take a step forward this season.

Utah’s defense had to shoulder far more than it should have in a disappointing 5-7 season in 2024. It didn’t receive the credit it deserved for what was asked after Cam Rising got hurt against Baylor and freshman Issac Wilson was thrown into the gauntlet.

This week, both Utah and BYU have the opportunity to shut out UCLA and Portland State. Both will deliver bad news to Big 12 offenses from beginning of the season to end and that may be a major factor in who makes it to Arlington. Let’s say these two defenses will have more to say about who the Big 12 champion will be than any other factor in the league.

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Utah Utes

Arizona State running back DeCarlos Brooks runs away from Utah defensive end Logan Fano (0) and safety Tao Johnson (15) in the first half during an NCAA college football game, Friday, Oct. 11, 2024, in Tempe, Ariz. | Rick Scuteri

Arizona State running back DeCarlos Brooks runs away from Utah defensive end Logan Fano (0) and safety Tao Johnson (15) in the first half during an NCAA college football game, Friday, Oct. 11, 2024, in Tempe, Ariz. | Rick Scuteri

At Utah, defensive coordinator Morgan Scalley became a bogeyman for Pac-12 offenses. More than capable of applying QB pressure with a four-man rush, his man defense coverages became elite through Kyle Whittingham’s philosophy. The Utes set a scary standard for physical play, literally kicking butt and intimidating opponents with their dominating front-seven play.

The Big 12 is more physical than the old Pac-12, so it will be a challenge in Year 2, but Utah is built for it and Scalley is the difference if his transfers pan out.

Utah needs tackles Dallas Vakalahi and Aliki Vimahi to step up. Scalley needs production from defensive ends John Henry Daley and Logan Fano. Linebacker Landon Barton and nickel back Smith Snowdon are huge keys in Scalley’s plans. He needs Elijah Davis and Blake Cotton to be lockdown corners and must get transfers (Auburn) JC Hart, and (Texas A&M) Donovan Saunders oriented and ready for reps.

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Utah is missing some very talented defenders, but it’s a defense that regularly reloads and recognizes developmental prospects. The biggest challenge for Scalley is to fix missed tackles and get more turnovers than a year ago in the Big 12.

BYU Cougars

BYU safety Tanner Wall celebrates after making a tackle against Southern Illinois on Aug. 31, 2024 in Provo. | Aaron Cornia/BYU

BYU safety Tanner Wall celebrates after making a tackle against Southern Illinois on Aug. 31, 2024 in Provo. | Aaron Cornia/BYU

In Provo, Hill is king of the hill.

His transformation of BYU’s defense in such a short time was amazing, and he did so with overachieving linemen who were not exactly built for his schemes. Now, he’s got more of what he wants in Tanuvasa, Oklahoma transfer Justin Kirkland and returning John Taumoepeau. He will still deploy multiple-look fronts.

His defensive ends are more capable of getting sacks now that his middle tackles are a threat to gobble up blocks. They include Bodie Schoonover, Logan Tuutui, Texas transfer Tausili Akana, Ephriam Asiata, Hunter Clegg, and Villiami Po’uha

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BYU’s linebacking corps is deep and talented, maybe the best in the Big 12, with league TFL leader Isaiah Glasker and Jack Kelly on the outside and redshirt sophomore Siale Esera in the middle. With Ace Kaufusi and Choe Bryant-Strother holding off Miles Hall as backups, that trio could start on most Big 12 teams.

Corner Evan Johnson, the highest-rated defender a year ago, returns at corner with returning starter Mory Bamba. The safeties are experienced Tanner Wall, Raider Damuni, Tommy Prassas and Faletau Satuala.

Hill’s defense must be far better at stopping the run and has to be more efficient in stopping third-down conversions this fall.

Utah State Aggies

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Utah Utes defensive end Van Fillinger (7) grabs the arm of Utah State Aggies quarterback Bryson Barnes (16) in Logan on Saturday, Sept. 14, 2024. | Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News

In Logan, Mendenhall is doing what he is in the profession to do: To rebuild and fix.

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There’s no bigger challenge before him than taking a newly assembled staff, coaching up 70 new roster players, and putting them on the field chasing Mountain West teams in hopes of a winning season and bowl berth.

On its face, this seems like the Battle of Thermopylae, the thousands of Persians against Greece’s 300 Spartans. And believe it, Mendenhall will bring that up often.

USU football isn’t the only Aggie appendage to lose key personalities to the transfer portal. On July 21, athletic director Diana Sabau left Logan for a post at Maryland. Back in Feb, USU president Betsy Cantwell left to be president at the University of Washington. Key figures who hired Mendenhall Dec. 6, 2024 are no longer there.

If this isn’t a chip on the shoulder for Bronco, what is? He dines on this kind of stuff.

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USU’s defense was leaky last year and defensive coordinator Nick Howell will have his hands full converting that unit into stoppers. He’ll do so without All-MWC preseason corner Ike Larson, who was suspended for six weeks this summer.

Howell brought corners Noah Avinger, Bryson Taylor and safety Bobby Arnold with him from New Mexico and added P4 transfers, including safety D’Andre Barnes (Nebraska) to help.

Offensively, USU will be blessed with the return of Utah transfer and Pig Farmer Bryson Barnes, who did not have a full season but threw for 12 touchdowns and averaged eight yards per carry.

Offensive coordinator Kevin McGiven hauled in running back Javon Jacobs from New Mexico, and added Carlos Orr-Gillespie (Illinois), receiver Brady Boyd (Texas Tech), and quarterback Anthony Garcia (Arizona) to push Barnes.

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Mendenhall’s biggest challenge falls within his wheelhouse — to build a winning culture, a fighting attitude to a program that has had three head coaches in three years and lost administrators en masse this past year.

Can he do it? The opener against UTEP at home will give us the biggest clue.

Source: Utah News

Utah Jazz 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.

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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.

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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.

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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?

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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.

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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.

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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

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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.

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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

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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

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.

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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

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

The first touchdown of the college football season was scored by a player from Utah

The first game of the 2025 college football season on Saturday — a Big 12 Conference matchup featuring the 22nd-ranked Iowa State Cyclones and the 17th-ranked Kansas State Wildcats — got off to a …

The first game of the 2025 college football season on Saturday — a Big 12 Conference matchup featuring the 22nd-ranked Iowa State Cyclones and the 17th-ranked Kansas State Wildcats — got off to a rather slow start, as neither team scored for the first 11:34 of the contest.

But with 3:26 remaining in the first quarter, Iowa State found the end zone, and it was a player from Utah who scored the touchdown.

On a first and 10 play from the 23 yard line, Cyclones quarterback Rocco Becht lined up in the shotgun and faked the handoff. With plenty of time in the pocket despite the Wildcats rushing five players, Becht threw long.

Receiver Dominic Overby, who graduated from West Jordan High, had gotten past his defender and barely had to reach out to grab the ball as he entered the end zone.

Listed at 6-foot-5 and 200 pounds, Overby was a prospect in the Class of 2024. He was the fourth-ranked recruit in the class in the state of Utah, according to 247 Sports’ rankings.

As a freshman in 2024, Overby appeared in six games before redshirting and registered one catch for nine yards. Beside the touchdown reception Saturday, he had one other catch for six yards as Iowa State beat Kansas State, 24-21.

Source: Utah News

Post Malone finds his country rhythm in Utah with horses, fly fishing, and going ‘naked in the woods’

Post Malone, a hip-hop artist turned country singer, shared insights about parenting his daughter in Utah and taking fatherhood one day at a time.

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Post Malone fully embraced his country origins after making a name for himself in the world of hip-hop. 

The “Sunflower” singer recently planted roots in Utah, which he claimed is the perfect place to raise his 3-year-old daughter.

Malone, whose full name is Austin Richard Post, admitted that he takes it one day at a time when it comes to fatherhood, and strives to enjoy the little moments with his baby girl.

GRAMMY NOMINEE POST MALONE’S COUNTRY MUSIC CHALLENGES TRADITIONAL STEREOTYPES: EXPERT

Post Malone wears a cowboy hat

Post Malone posed in the Utah country for a new SKIMS campaign. (SKIMS)

The “Circles” singer pondered lessons learned among the highlights he’s experienced as a dad.

MORGAN WALLEN BOWS OUT OF GRAMMY RACE DESPITE RECORD-BREAKING COUNTRY ALBUM

“Kids are little s—s and they’re beautiful at the same time,” Malone told GQ as the new SKIMS ambassador. “And… well, being a dad, I take it a day at a time. I think it’s important that way. We’re learning every day. 

“I don’t know what the hell I’m doing, and neither does she. She’s just figuring it out.”

“Well, being a dad, I take it a day at a time. I think it’s important that way. We’re learning every day.” 

—  

He added, “It’s really sweet. My house has been under construction for about two years now, and we finally just finished the main bit of it. And there’s this big hallway where she can ride her bike and she has this little toy horse, and she rides up and down and just f—ing giggles the whole f—ing time.”

“It is the most beautiful thing I’ve ever experienced in my life. I’m pretty pumped on that. It’s pretty cool. It’s bada– to be a dad.”

Post Malone sits on a gate wearing jeans and cowboy hat.

Malone, 30, admitted his 3-year-old daughter loves listening to George Strait. (SKIMS)

Singer Post Malone wore a white shirt and jeans as her posed while riding a horse for a new Skims ad.

Post Malone posed on horseback for a new ad campaign for Skims. (SKIMS)

Malone secretly welcomed his own child in 2022 with his former partner. During an appearance on “The Howard Stern Show,” the artist casually recalled, “[At] 2:30 in the afternoon, I went and I kissed my baby girl.”

“What baby girl? Are you referring to your girlfriend or you have a baby?” the radio host asked. “No, that’s my daughter,” Post responded, adding he would keep details of his daughter private. “I want to let her make her own decisions.”

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The “Congratulations” musician admitted he’s listening to a few different tunes though with his little one around.

“She loves ‘Paw Patrol.’ She loves the ‘Pup Pup Boogie,’” Posty said. “She loves ‘Pororo,’ it’s like a Korean penguin. And they sing a bunch of great songs, and they’re catchy as f—. I might steal some melodies, but probably not. I don’t want to get in trouble.”

Post Malone wears cowboy hat and camouflaged underwear.

The “Sunflower” singer showed off his tattoos while posing in SKIMS camouflaged underwear. (SKIMS)

He added, “And she loves George Strait. She loves the steel guitar, which I’m pretty pumped about.”

Malone praised his daughter’s dance moves and noted her quick wit keeps him on his toes. 

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“Jelly [Roll] was opening up [on tour] and she went out to watch Jelly and her grandparents asked her, ‘Who’s a better singer, Jelly Roll or your dad?’” he recalled. 

“She goes, ‘Jelly Roll.’ And I know she’s f—ing with me.”

Malone isn’t afraid to have fun, and admitted the opportunity to become an underwear model landed – quite literally – in his lap.

“In Utah, it gets very, very, very cold. And some way or another I found this comforter robe,” he told the outlet. “Whenever I went out to smoke at night, I would always put this on, and it was probably the most comfortable thing I’ve ever worn in my entire life. 

Post Malone smiles alongside Morgan Wallen and HARDY at country music awards.

Post Malone released “I Had Some Help” with Morgan Wallen. (Getty Images)

“From there, it just snowballed out of control to the point [where now] I’m naked in the woods. Well, not naked. But you can’t see the underwear anyways. They’re camouflage.”

Malone made a name for himself in the hip-hop world with his 2016 debut album, “Stoney,” which featured the wildly successful song “Congratulations.” He returned to his southern roots for his sixth studio catalog dedicated entirely to country music, “F-1 Trillion.”

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The “Sunflower” singer was born in New York and moved to Texas at a young age after his father became the manager of concessions for the Dallas Cowboys. While Malone recorded much of his older music in studios around LA, he worked on his new album in Nashville.

When he is in Los Angeles, he explained to Kelleigh Bannon for Apple Music, “it’s always like someone wants something from you. And that’s something I didn’t see often in Nashville.” 

In LA, he said, “there’s always something to do, which isn’t bad, [but] it’s just not conducive to a work environment for me at least.”

Source: Utah News

Here are the big concerts coming to Utah this fall

The summer outdoor concert season is winding down, and fall’s shows go indoors in Utah. Here’s a roundup of the major concerts between now and November.

As summer turns to fall, the outdoor concerts around Utah start to wind down — and the indoor venues pick up steam.

Here’s a rundown of major concerts in the Salt Lake City area and beyond through November.

That includes the final shows at Red Butte Garden, Deer Valley and other locations — and concerts at the Delta Center, Eccles Theater, Kingsbury Hall and more.

Outdoor shows

Utah First Credit Union Amphitheatre

(Becky Fluke | Live Nation) The country quartet Little Big Town performs in Rogers, Arkansas, on July 24, 2025, at the start of the band’s summer tour. The tour is scheduled to arrive at the Utah First Credit Union Amphitheatre in West Valley City on Aug. 28, 2025.

5150 Upper Ridge Road, West Valley City. For ticket information, go to livenation.com.

Tuesday, Aug. 26 • ’90s rock band Goo Goo Dolls, with Dashboard Confessional opening.

Wednesday, Aug. 27 • A night of ’70s and ’80s pop, headlined by Toto and featuring Men at Work and Christopher Cross.

Thursday, Aug. 28 • Country quartet Little Big Town, with Wynonna Judd and Shelby Lynne in support.

Friday, Aug. 29 • Pop band Big Time Rush headlines, with Katelyn Tarver and Stephen Kramer Glickman in support.

Friday, Sept. 5 • Classic rock performer Billy Idol headlines, with Joan Jett and the Blackhearts opening.

Saturday, Sept. 6 • Indie rock band The Offspring, with Jimmy Eat World and New Found Glory in support.

Saturday, Sept. 13 • Pop icons Jonas Brothers, with Boys Like Girls opening.

Saturday, Sept. 20 • Country singer Thomas Rhett, with Tucker Wetmore and The Castellows supporting.

Saturday, Sept. 27 • Hard rock bands Breaking Benjamin and Three Days Grace co-headline, with Return to Dust opening.

Wednesday, Oct. 1 • Pop star Conan Gray, with support from Hemlocke Springs.

Sunday, Oct. 12 • Metal legends Judas Priest and Alice Cooper co-headline, with Corrosion of Conformity opening.

Red Butte Garden

(Piper Ferguson) Indie rock band OK Go is scheduled to perform at Red Butte Garden in Salt Lake City on Sept. 14, 2025.

Red Butte Garden, 300 Wakara Way, Salt Lake City. For ticket information, go to redbuttegarden.org/concerts.

Monday, Aug. 25 • Blues musician Keb’ Mo’ and Grammy-winner Shawn Colvin.

Thursday, Sept. 4 • Singer-songwriter Gregory Alan Isakov with Seattle songwriter Dean Johnson.

Monday, Sept. 8 • Jazz and blues icon Jon Batiste.

Tuesday, Sept. 9 • Pop band Train with Edwin McCain.

Sunday, Sept. 14 • Rock group OK Go.

Tuesday, Sept. 16 • Latin instrumental band Hermanos Gutiérrez.

Granary Live

(Samantha Martucci) Hip-hop duo Atmosphere is scheduled to co-headline with Cypress Hill on Aug. 27. 2025, at Granary Live in Salt Lake City.

The outdoor venue in Salt Lake City’s Granary district, at 742 S. 500 West. Tickets at granarylive.com.

Sunday, Aug. 24 • The “Kick Back in the City” series continues with an all-ages concert headlined by rap legend Warren G.

Wednesday, Aug. 27 • Hip-hop pioneers Cypress Hill and Atmosphere co-headline, with Lupe Fiasco and The Pharcyde supporting.

Saturday, Sept. 6 • Reggae bands The Movement and Tribal Seeds co-headline, with Kbong and Johnny Cosmic in support.

Sunday, Sept. 14 • The “Kick Back in the City” series concludes with an all-ages concert headlined by Mexican band Los Desvelados.

Tuesday, Sept. 23 • Electronic-pop act Empire of the Sun performs.

Saturday, Sept. 27 • Canna FanFest, a daylong event celebrating Utah’s medical cannabis community, headlined by Krooked Kings. (Must be 21 and older.)

Friday and Saturday, Oct. 3-4 • The On High music festival, featuring reggae bands. Friday’s headliner is Dirty Heads, supported by Rome, Satsang and Tribe of I; Saturday’s headliner is Rebelution, with Iration, Steel Pulse, Nick Sefakis and Native Leaves supporting.

Sandy Amphitheater

(Orchee Sorker | courtesy Red Butte Garden) Folk-pop musician Mat Kearney is scheduled to perform at Sandy Amphitheatre on Sept. 17, 2025.

Under the stars at 1300 E. 9400 South in Sandy. For tickets and information, go to sandyamp.com.

Monday, Sept. 1 • Country singer Max McNown.

Saturday, Sept. 17 • Indie-pop performer Mat Kearney.

Tuesday, Sept. 30 • French electronic duo Air.

Sunday, Oct. 12 • Reggae musicians Ziggy Marley and Burning Spear co-headline.

Other outdoor shows

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Post Malone performs at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City on Tuesday, April 29, 2025. Post Malone, who lives in Utah, is scheduled to return to the stage on Oct. 11, 2025, as a headliner at the three-day RedWest festival at the Utah State Fairpark in Salt Lake City.

Sunday, Aug. 24 • The Deer Valley summer concert series continues with ‘90s rock band Big Head Todd and the Monsters, with Bill Murphy and the Blood Brothers opening. Go to DeerValley.com for tickets and information.

Thursday, Aug. 28 • Rap/country/soul performer Teddy Swims, with opening act Freak Freely. The Plaza at America First Field, 9256 S. State St., Sandy. Tickets available at seatgeek.com.

Thursday, Aug. 28 • Concerts on the Slopes continues with ’80s-’90s rock bands Blues Traveler and Gin Blossoms. Canyons Village, 4000 Canyons Resort Dr., Park City. Presented by the Park City Institute.

Thursday, Aug. 28 • Concerts on the Slopes closes with country singer Clint Black. Canyons Village, 4000 Canyons Resort Dr., Park City. Presented by the Park City Institute.

Friday, Aug. 29 • The Deer Valley summer concert series continues with rock band The Revivalists. Go to DeerValley.com for tickets and information.

Monday, Sept. 1 • The Deer Valley summer concert series continues with Icelandic rock star Kaleo. Go to DeerValley.com for tickets and information.

Friday, Sept. 5 • Twilight Concert Series continues with indie pop icon Japanese Breakfast, supported by Ginger Root and Utah group Tomper. Gallivan Center, 239 S. Main St. Tickets available at 24Tix.com.

Wednesday, Sept. 10 • ‘90s rock band Third Eye Blind performs at the Utah State Fair, in the Days of ‘47 Arena, Utah State Fairpark, 1000 W. North Temple, Salt Lake City. Tickets at UtahStateFair.com.

Thursday, Sept. 11 • Stand-up comedian Gabriel “Fluffy” Iglesias performs at the Utah State Fair, in the Days of ‘47 Arena, Utah State Fairpark, 1000 W. North Temple, Salt Lake City. Tickets at UtahStateFair.com.

Wednesday, Sept. 17 • Ogden Twilight Concert Series continues with The Flaming Lips, a psychedelic rock band that started in Oklahoma. Ogden Amphitheater, 343 E. 25th St., Ogden. Tickets available at 24tix.com.

Monday, Sept. 22 • Twilight Concert Series closes with indie folk band Big Thief. Library Square, 210 E. 400 South. Tickets available at24Tix.com.

Monday, Sept. 22 • ‘80s pop acts Howard Jones and Haircut 100 co-headline, with Richard Blade as emcee. The Ballpark at America First Square, 11111 S. Ballpark Drive, South Jordan. Tickets at theballparkatafs.com.

Thursday, Sept. 25 • Ogden Twilight Concert Series closes with dance/electronic duo Polo & Pan will headline. Ogden Amphitheater, 343 E. 25th St., Ogden. Tickets available at24tix.com.

Friday, Oct. 3 • Reggae-pop performer Quinn XCII, with Allen Stone opening, at The Plaza at America First Field, 9256 S. State St., Sandy. Tickets available at SeatGeek.com.

Friday-Sunday, Oct. 10-12RedWest Festival, a three-day country music event. Headliners: Kacey Musgraves on Friday; Post Malone on Saturday; Noah Kahan on Sunday. Utah State Fairpark, 1000 W. North Temple, Salt Lake City. For full line-ups and tickets, go to redwestslc.com.

Indoor shows

Delta Center

(Charlie Denis) Pop singer Tate McRae is scheduled to perform at the Delta Center in Salt Lake City on Oct. 7, 2025.

301 W. South Temple, Salt Lake City. For tickets and information, go to deltacenter.com.

Monday, Oct. 6 • Icelandic pop/jazz performer Laufey, supported by Suki Waterhouse.

Tuesday, Oct. 7 • Pop singer Tate McRae, with Alessi Rose opening.

Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday, Oct. 8, 9 and 11 • Pop singer Benson Boone performs three shows — all sold out.

Thursday, Oct. 23 • Country icon Eric Church performs, with Charles Wesley Grodin opening.

Saturday, Oct. 25 • Pop-rock band Maroon 5 performs; Claire Rosinkranz is the opening act.

Sunday, Oct. 26 • Comedy legend Adam Sandler performs stand-up.

Saturday, Nov. 15 • Pop/Americana singer Ben Rector, with Utah’s own The National Parks opening.

Maverik Center

(Andy Ford) Masked progressive-metal band Sleep Token is scheduled to perform Oct. 5, 2025, at the Maverik Center in West Valley City.

3200 S. Decker Lake Drive, West Valley City. For tickets and information, go to maverikcenter.com.

Friday, Aug. 29 • Mexican regional band Marca Registrada headlines, with support from Gerardo Ortiz, Edgardo Nuñez and Joel De La P.

Thursday, Sept. 11 • Country singer Warren Zeiders, with Chayce Beckham opening.

Wednesday, Sept. 17 • Rap icon Ice Cube.

Thursday, Sept. 18 • Country singer Megan Moroney, with Emily Ann Roberts opening.

Tuesday, Sept. 30 • Rock band Bring Me the Horizon, with support from Motionless in White, The Plot in You and Amira Elfeky.

Thursday, Oct. 2 • Comedian Bert Kreischer.

Sunday, Oct. 5 • Progressive-metal band Sleep Token.

Saturday, Nov. 1 • Conservative stand-up comic Tony Hinchcliffe.

Sunday, Nov. 2 • Mexican singing legend Chelo, with support from Juan Valentin, Beatriz Adriana, Graciela Beltran, Mercedes Castro and Yesenia Flores.

Saturday, Nov. 8 • A capella pop group Pentatonix.

Thursday, Nov. 13 • Christian singer Brandon Lake, with support from Franni Cash and Pat Barrett.

Thursday, Nov. 20 • Pop/jazz/soul icon John Legend.

Eccles Theater

(Mary McCartney) Pianist Ludovico Einaudi is scheduled to perform at the Eccles Theater in Salt Lake City on Oct. 18, 2025.

131 S. Main, Salt Lake City. For tickets and information, go to live-at-the-eccles.com.

Saturday, Aug. 30 • Mexican pop duo Jesse & Joy.

Friday, Sept. 19 • ‘70s rock band America.

Friday-Saturday, Sept. 26-27 • “My Favorite Murder,” true-crime podcast hosted by Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark, performs two live shows.

Sunday, Sept. 28“Twilight: Live in Concert,” screening of the 2008 movie, with a live band.

Wednesday, Oct. 15Celtic Thunder, the Irish-themed singing quartet.

Thursday, Oct. 16“The Witcher” in concert, orchestral performance of music from the video game, featuring the Polish folk-metal band Percival.

Friday, Oct. 17 • Mexican singer Alicia Villarreal.

Saturday, Oct. 18 • Classical pianist Ludovico Einaudi.

Friday, Oct. 24Jonathan Van Ness, from “Queer Eye,” presents a live show on his “Hot & Healed” tour.

Saturday, Oct. 25 • Stand-up comedian Sal Vulcano performs.

Saturday, Nov. 1iLuminate, light and music stage show.

Wednesday, Nov. 5 • Author and humorist David Sedaris performs.

Wednesday, Nov. 19 • Indie rocker Neko Case performs, with John Grant opening.

Thursday and Friday, Nov. 20-21 • Stand-up comedian Fortune Feimster performs.

Capitol Theatre

50 W. 200 South, Salt Lake City. For tickets and information, go to live-at-the-eccles.com.

Friday, Sept. 5 • Stand-up comedian Chris d’Elia.

Saturday, Sept. 6Marisela, Mexican-American singer.

Monday, Sept. 15 • Christian pop singer Amy Grant.

Tuesday, Sept. 16 • Norwegian folk act Wardruna, with Chelsea Wolfe opening.

Saturday, Sept. 20“The Screwtape Letters,” play based on C.S. Lewis’ religious commentaries.

Kingsbury Hall

(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) Emma Hardyman, of Little Moon, pictured in 2024. Little Moon is scheduled to perform Hardyman’s “To Be a God” on Nov. 13 and 14, 2025, at Kingsbury Hall in Salt Lake City.

1395 E. Presidents Circle (200 South), University of Utah campus, Salt Lake City. For tickets and information, go to artstickets.utah.edu.

Friday, Aug. 29 • Country legend Randy Travis, with his original band and guest vocalist James Dupré.

Thursday, Sept. 4 • Jazz legend Arturo Sandoval, as part of the “Jazz at Kingsbury” series.

Friday, Oct. 17The McElroys, podcasting brothers, perform a live show.

Saturday, Oct. 18 • Stand-up comedian Jimmy Carr, performing two shows.

Wednesday, Oct. 22 • A screening of the horror classic “The Evil Dead,” accompanied by a live band.

Thursday, Oct. 23 • Jazz saxophonist Lakecia Benjamin, as part of the “Jazz at Kingsbury” series.

Friday, Oct. 24 • Comedian and magician Justin William performs.

Saturday, Oct. 25 • Stand-up comedian Sarah Millican.

Wednesday, Nov. 5 • Ukrainian avant-garde music duo Kurbasy.

Friday, Nov. 7 • Stand-up comedian Nate Jackson.

Thursday-Friday, Nov. 13-14Little Moon, Utah folk-pop act, performs its show, “To Be a God.”

Saturday, Nov. 22Nurse Blake, medical-themed comedian.

The Great Saltair

12408 W. Saltair Dr., Magna. Go to thesaltair.com for tickets and information.

Wednesday-Thursday, Oct. 1-2 • Provo rock band The Backseat Lovers, with support from Over Under and Jill Whitt.

Saturday, Oct. 5 • Indie pop trio Haim, with Dora Jar opening.

Source: Utah News

Utah violinist detained by ICE; loved ones work to bring him home

Noland Arbaugh, who lost movement and sensation below his shoulders in 2016, became P1 at Neuralink in 2024 and it’s opened up a host of opportunities for him. The television star played a memorable …

Noland Arbaugh, who lost movement and sensation below his shoulders in 2016, became P1 at Neuralink in 2024 and it’s opened up a host of opportunities for him. The television star played a memorable …

Source: Utah News

Utah Jazz Would Be Foolish to Trade This Young Player

The Utah Jazz were recently urged to deal one key young player on their roster– here’s why that’d be a mistake.

The Utah Jazz’s latest offseason of moves can be defined by the trend of shipping out veteran players to further push the needle forward on this roster’s youth movement and younger players, effectively setting the stage for a year of development for the 2025-26 season, and helping maximize this young talent with an extended dose of responsibility on both ends.

However, in the eyes of Bleacher Report’s Zach Buckley, in the midst of the Jazz’s first, second, and third-year players on the roster for next season, there might be one name who might be best served finding a new home: Keyonte George.

Buckley recently sorted out five under-23 players around the NBA who might need a fresh start elsewhere, and George was right in the mix coming off an up-and-down sophomore year.

“After spending the No. 16 pick of the 2023 draft on George, the Jazz didn’t have to wait long to see flashes that suggested he’d already become one of the most important pieces of their rebuild,’ Buckley wrote. “Even if there was a lot more quantity than quality in his first go-round, he still found his way onto the All-Rookie second team while averaging 13 points and 4.4 assists with an interesting mix of off-the-dribble scoring and playmaking.”

“After some stagnation as a sophomore, though, his future with the franchise suddenly feels far less certain,” he continued. “That’s not to say he has played his way out of the plans, but Utah has given itself alternatives in the backcourt, like 2024 No. 29 pick Isaiah Collier and this year’s No. 18 pick Walter Clayton Jr… “If George needs to mature, he could find a better growth environment elsewhere. He’d log fewer minutes on a contender, but he might develop better habits and perhaps find his calling as an instant-offense reserve.”

So would the Jazz be right to ship off Keyonte George just two years into his pro career?

In my eyes, it’s far too early to give up on George. Here’s why:

Apr 6, 2025; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Utah Jazz guard Keyonte George (3) dribbles against the Atlanta Hawks in the fourth quart

Apr 6, 2025; Atlanta, Georgia, USA; Utah Jazz guard Keyonte George (3) dribbles against the Atlanta Hawks in the fourth quarter at State Farm Arena. Mandatory Credit: Brett Davis-Imagn Images / Brett Davis-Imagn Images

Sure, year two wasn’t the perfect outcome for George.

George suffered from inefficiencies as a shooter across the floor with 39.1% from the field and 34.2% from three, never quite finding his groove as a consistent shot-maker, albeit showing notable flashes in pockets throughout the year.

As a passer, George still had issues with ball security and giveaways, being one of the many components of the Jazz rotation that led to Utah topping the league in turnovers. His defensive ability is extremely questionable, and while his intensity on that end of the floor began to turn up late last season, can that continue into year three?

All valid concerns to be had for the Jazz guard and his ability to stick as a quality starter at the NBA level. But for George, it’s super important to consider the inexperience factor.

George still has fewer than 150 regular-season games under his belt, and hasn’t even hit 22 years old yet. Especially for high-level NBA guards, oftentimes, it’s rare you see them storm onto the scene as an instantly dominant and efficient player, with that process taking a few years to incubate.

It took Tyrese Haliburton five seasons to make his first All-Star game. It took the same amount of time for Devin Booker, and he shot 32% from three the season before his first selection. Jalen Brunson, while a second round pick, had five years before he truly nestled into his role as the MVP-quality player he is today.

George may never become an All-Star-level talent like the aforementioned names, but it goes to show that young guards take time to develop in the NBA game. Especially for ball-dominant point guards or combo guards like George is, defenses are becoming harder to attack, defenders are getting better, and it makes for an even taller challenge for young guys to make that jump to being that quality starter or star talent.

But at this point in the rebuild, the Jazz can afford to have the patience to let George grow into his own. The Baylor product has shown enough offensive upside to be, at the very worst, a quality sixth man if he can level up to a mediocre defender, and has room to find an even bigger impact on this roster if he can remain more consistent on a night-to-night basis.

This season and next can act as a major test as to whether he can handle the reins of being a premier piece of this backcourt for the future. However, when it comes to a trade this early in the juncture, that seems a bit premature.

Source: Utah News

New data ‘dashboard’ can help shine a light on Utah’s domestic violence problem, officials say

For the last two years, law enforcement officers in Utah who respond to domestic violence calls have been required to ask victims a series of 12 questions to assess how much danger they are facing in …

For the last two years, law enforcement officers in Utah who respond to domestic violence calls have been required to ask victims a series of 12 questions to assess how much danger they are facing in their own homes.

The numbers, now available on a state database, are alarming. Of the 23,000 interviews performed from July 2023 to July 2025 under the state’s Lethality Assessment Protocol, more than 60% showed people in those homes were facing “a potentially lethal risk,” Utah Department of Public Safety spokesperson Hillary Koellner said.

DPS’s new dashboard, unveiled at a news conference Thursday at West Jordan’s Veterans Memorial Park, makes that data available to everyone — lawmakers, law enforcement officers and people who provide services to those who experience intimate partner violence. The data, officials said, will be updated once a month.

“We can all have a better grasp of what is going on in this world, and where the gaps are,” said Beau Mason, DPS commissioner. The next step, Mason said, is to ask “how do we start moving the needle even further, to identify those gaps and address them?”

(Sorina Szakacs | The Salt Lake Tribune) Commissioner Beau Mason of the Utah Department of Public Safety spoke about the state’s fight against domestic violence, and the importance of data gathering and distribution, at a news conference at Veterans Memorial Park in West Jordan on Thursday, Aug. 21, 2025.

Mason and others at Thursday’s event noted that Sunday’s shooting deaths of two Tremonton police officers, Officer Eric Estrada and Sgt. Lee Sorensen, happened when the lawmen responded to a domestic disturbance.

Funerals for Estrada and Sorensen are scheduled for Thursday and Friday, respectively, at The Spectrum at Utah State University, Logan, DPS has announced. The accused gunman, Ryan Michael Bate, is being held in the Weber County jail and has been charged with two counts of aggravated murder. Prosecutors have announced they will seek the death penalty.

The shooting, Mason said Thursday, “brings urgency to how important this cause is.”

The shootings in Tremonton highlight the fact that intimate partner violence can happen in communities of any size, the Utah Domestic Violence Coalition said.

“While we would like to think that there are places in Utah that remain untouched by interpersonal violence, that is simply not the case,” the coalition said in a statement Friday. “We must acknowledge that no community is exempt from this type of violence, even in our smaller towns and rural enclaves.”

Around 20% of Americans live in rural areas, the coalition said, and homicides in rural communities are three times as likely to involve an intimate partner than in large cities.

The coalition added that “the connections between all those directly involved when domestic violence occurs in smaller communities can be profound and overlapping.”

At Thursday’s news conference, Sgt. Jen Faumuina at DSP said she and others have been training law enforcement officers statewide on the new protocol — how to ask the 12 standard questions, and how to initiate help for victims based on their answers.

“It all stems from having the victim know and be told, ‘Hey, there is a chance that you could be killed in the future,’” Faumuina said. “So, with all the data we collected by using that protocol, we can now be more transparent and share that information with the public.”

Domestic violence is an “epidemic” in Utah and affects everyone, said Lindsey Boyer, director of South Valley Services, which provides shelter and support to partners and children harmed by such violence.

“It is imperative that we invest, and we find solutions to help prevent this from continuing,” Boyer said. “This is not happening out there, to those people. It is happening here. These are our people. … Victims need your support. Their lives literally depend on it.”

Note to readers • Those who are experiencing intimate partner violence, or know someone who is, can call the Utah Domestic Violence Link Line, 1-800-897-LINK (5465), or the statewide sexual assault line run by the Utah Coalition Against Sexual Assault at (801) 736-4356 and in Spanish: Línea de Apoyo de Violencia Sexual las 24 Horas de Utah: (801) 924-0860.

Source: Utah News

Utah Mammoth Chief Comms Officer Caroline Klein Leaves Lasting Message After Dying At 40

The Utah Mammoth’s chief communications officer, Caroline Klein, died on Thursday due to complications of lung cancer. She was 40.

The Utah Mammoth’s chief communications officer, Caroline Klein, died on Thursday due to complications of lung cancer. She was 40.

From 2022 onward, Klein was an important part of Smith Entertainment Group, which owns the NBA’s Utah Jazz and brought the NHL to Salt Lake City in 2024.

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On Aug. 22, Klein’s family posted a message to her LinkedIn account on her behalf, titled, “Remember me for the way I lived.”

“If you’re reading this, it’s because my lungs have taken their final breath, and my soul is on a thoughtful search for its next great adventure,” her message read.

“After a 38-year run of never getting sick – I got a mild cold once every few years and only took ‘sick’ days to enjoy a day off to explore a new hike – my August 2023 cancer diagnosis hit me like a Mack Truck.”

Klein said less than weeks after she moved to Utah, she developed foot drop in September 2022.

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“That ailment evolved into Stage 4 Proximal Type Epithelioid Sarcoma in my lungs — a very rare, very aggressive soft tissue cancer for which there aren’t enough answers, research, or treatment options,” she wrote. “But, being the pragmatist I am, my attitude from the start was, ‘it’s what it is,’ and instead of wasting any time obsessing about how not to die, I spent my cancer journey focusing on how to live the fullest life as much as I could control. And boy, did I live.”

Remember me for the way I lived.

Remember me for the way I lived.

Remember me for the way I lived. If you’re reading this, it’s because my lungs have taken their final breath, and my soul is on a thoughtful search for its next great adventure. I asked my family to post this message on my behalf.

What followed from diagnosis to death resembled driving a Formula 1 car full-speed to soak up every possible moment with her loved ones and seek adventure, laughter, joy and more, Klein said.

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While Klein wrote she wished she could love another several decades, she loved her life and wouldn’t have changed a thing.

“It was an amazing run filled with opportunities to push myself to my limits and feel more alive than ever, as well as times that took me to the bottom and made me dig deep into my soul’s legacy of being a warrior spirit to channel an infallible resilience and overcome incredibly hard things. I was at peace leaving the world knowing that I didn’t leave anything on the table and that I made a great impact on others around me.”

Klein said the messages she received brought a smile to her face, and she hopes people don’t wait to truly live and do the things that bring them joy.

“I want everyone to remember me for the way I lived, not the way I died. And with that in mind, will you do me a favor? Keep asking yourself ‘why not?’ and ‘why wait?’ and pursue all of your dreams with an unapologetic determination. We only have one life to live, and it’s on you to live it to the fullest. So please, try to see every day as a license to LIVE, not just pass the time.”

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Klein thanked her husband, Mike Gartlan, for helping her do it all and supporting her without hesitation. Klein and Gartlan were married last August.

“To all of my other dear friends and family, I’ll look forward to seeing you in your dreams where we’ll be dancing to 90s hip hop, eating all of the dumplings, popcorn, soft serve ice cream, and sour candy, hiking mountain after mountain, cheers’ing endlessly while exploring cities abroad, and laughing and dancing all day and night.”

You can read her full message here.

‘Truly One Of A Kind’

Ryan Smith, the chairman and CEO of Smith Entertainment Group, said Utah lost a legend on Thursday.

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“She was truly one of a kind. (Ashley, my wife) and I and the rest of the SEG team will miss her every single day,” he said to NHL.com.

NHL.com said Klein helped develop SEG+, a streaming platform for the Mammoth and Jazz, and played a crucial role in the production of the documentary, Note Worthy: 50 Seasons of Jazz Basketball, which launched in 2024.

The NHL also said Klein was “front-and-center” in launching the Utah Hockey Club when the NHL granted SEG an expansion team in April 2024. After receiving the hockey assets from the Arizona Coyotes, Utah began play six months later for the 2024-25 campaign.

The NHL said its family is deeply saddened by Klein’s passing.

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“Caroline’s effervescence and her tireless work to establish the Utah franchise were marvels in themselves, but all the more remarkable given the valiant fight she was waging with cancer,” the league’s statement said.

“Our time working together, like Caroline’s life, was too short. But we and everyone fortunate enough to have met her are endlessly richer for the experience. We send our condolences to her family, the Utah Mammoth and Jazz organizations and her many friends throughout the sports world.”

Source: Utah News

Inside the conflict over Utah candidate debates

The Utah Debate Commission leaves an impressive track record, according to Edwards, hosting nearly 60 debates over the past 10 years with nearly 100% participation from candidates, and collaborating …

KEY POINTS

  • Lawmakers defunded the Utah Debate Commission after years of complaints from GOP officials.
  • Hinckley Institute Director Jason Perry said they are working on a new debate format.
  • The University of Utah and Utah Valley University will have $600,000 to organize debates in 2026.

Utah lawmakers shifted the future of state election debates away from an independent commission this year, but candidate debates will remain nonpartisan, fair and accessible, according to the two men tasked with leading the transformation.

After providing varying levels of support for nearly a decade, the Utah Legislature voted in March to cut off funding for the Utah Debate Commission, a nonprofit board that has organized dozens of debates for statewide and congressional races since its creation in 2013.

The money requested by the Utah Debate Commission for a two-year election cycle was instead split between the University of Utah’s Hinckley Institute of Politics and Utah Valley University’s Herbert Institute for Public Policy to establish a new state-funded debate organization.

“The intent from my perspective is to minimize disruption, and to find the best way forward for these debates to have really big impact — and that really is the goal,” Hinckley Institute Director Jason Perry said in an interview with the Deseret News.

Perry, and former Utah Gov. Gary Herbert, who founded UVU’s Institute for Public Policy, said they have already had multiple discussions with Utah Debate Commission board members, which include representatives from the state’s institutions of higher education, business and news media.

While plans are still in early stages as Perry and Herbert prepare to present recommendations to the Legislature this fall, Perry said the partnerships established by the Utah Debate Commission will only be “expanded” in the restructure, which will likely incorporate many aspects of the commission.

“We’re going to try to find a way to make sure that nonpartisan debates continue to happen in the state of Utah,” Perry said. “So I just push back on the notions out there that the approach that we’re working on is intended to be run by the Legislature — that’s not what they intended.”

Why the change?

Case Lawrence and Stewart Peay, two of the five candidates in the Republican primary for Utah’s 3rd Congressional District, take part in a televised debate at the Eccles Broadcast Center in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, June 12, 2024. Also debating are JR Bird, John Dougall and Mike Kennedy. | Spenser Heaps, for the Deseret N

According to Herbert, the Legislature’s decision was “surprising” to members of the Utah Debate Commission, including himself. He had been tasked by the commission to make a budget request of $600,000 to his former colleagues during the 2025 legislative session to fully fund the commission’s activities.

Instead, House Speaker Mike Schultz, R-Hooper, asked Rep. Nelson Abbott, R-Orem, to sponsor HB557, a bill that would have established the Utah Debate Committee at UVU with a budget of $600,000 for 2026, with members appointed by the governor and leaders of both parties in the Legislature.

Since its founding, the Utah Debate Commission has relied mostly on private donors. Starting in 2016, it received $125,000 in one-time taxpayer funds and began receiving $65,000 in on-going funds the following year, with a massive surge in 2019 to help host the vice presidential debate at the University of Utah.

The Legislature increased the commission’s funding to $225,000 in 2024. But Herbert had told lawmakers that if they wanted to permanently improve the debate commission then they would need to “put up some money” to support its activities, Herbert said in an interview with the Deseret News.

Over the years, particularly since the Utah Debate Commission began hosting Republican primary debates in 2018, GOP officials have criticized the commission for what they feel is unfair treatment of candidates and biased debate moderation, echoing complaints made by national GOP candidates like President Donald Trump.

In April 2022, the Republican National Committee voted to withdraw from the Commission on Presidential Debates, first established in 1987, accusing the organization of failing to provide fair and unbiased debates.

That same year, then-GOP chair Carson Jorgensen said candidates would not participate in the Utah Debate Commission’s primary debates, and Utah Rep. Burgess Owens later pulled out of a general election debate, citing disagreements with the moderator.

“They thought it was not balanced, it was more left-leaning and contrary to Republicans,” Herbert said. “That was the perception, and in politics, perception becomes reality.”

Legislative leadership was set on disrupting that perception regardless of whether new legislation could be passed.

Abbott’s bill, introduced in the final weeks of the session, failed to pass through committee, with some lawmakers on both sides of the aisle questioning whether a separate debate organization was needed since the Utah Debate Commission was already established and receiving state funding.

But senior appropriators ensured the plan would still move forward by allocating the money in the final-night “bill of bills” with legislative intent for Perry and Herbert to “collaborate on a proposal to host nonpartisan candidate debates” and to establish “a statewide, nonpartisan debate organization.”

The organization will be located at the Hinckley Institute of Politics, the bill instructed. But the Hinckley and Herbert institutes would be required to schedule debates at degree-granting campuses across the state “to foster civic engagement, voter education, and public discourse.”

In statements to the Deseret News, Utah Democratic Party Chair Brian King said Democratic candidates look forward to discussing “policies that affect Utahns and Utah” during debates, while Utah GOP Chair Rob Axson criticized the Utah Debate Commission for “bias, unfair rules, (and) condescension.”

“We will stand with those who elevate the process and respect voters, not those who manipulate it to protect their own power or promote their preferred outcomes,” Axson said. “The Legislature was right to reject a well intended — but broken system — by directing funds away from a structure that continued to come up short.”

Will the Utah Debate Commission survive?

The Utah Debate Commission did not receive any of the funding it asked for and members remain uncertain about its future role in Utah debates.

During the session, Utah Debate Commission co-chair Becky Edwards expressed concern about how the bill would impact the political independence of debates. But she said the conversation will be beneficial as long as it can “keep voters at the center.”

“The legislature has their own mechanisms to fund efforts that they have a strong belief in, and that was certainly what ended up happening,” Edwards told the Deseret News. “This is an opportunity to build on what works to expand access and explore innovations that strengthen our democratic process.”

The Utah Debate Commission leaves an impressive track record, according to Edwards, hosting nearly 60 debates over the past 10 years with nearly 100% participation from candidates, and collaborating with colleges across the state to take production teams from St. George to Logan amid increasing costs.

Utah’s formation of a debate commission has been used as a model for other states around the country, Edwards said. But the organization has also responded to feedback, especially after 2022, she said, and remains open to changing its policy on polling thresholds, which has garnered some criticism.

Ed Allen, a former co-chair of the commission, said he never identified “a single, specific indication where a moderator was obviously biased.” He did notice, however, that as the Utah Debate Commission became more involved in primaries, and got more state funding, GOP officials applied more pressure on the commission.

“Nationally, there certainly has been a very … strong attack on independence of media, and I think there’s concern related to that in the state of Utah as well,“ Allen said. “The dominant party is not used to having independent voices that receive attention, and they’re not very happy about that.”

But those tasked with improving the next iteration of Utah debates say the change is not political. Perry foresees an organization that combines the independence and relationships of the Utah Debate Commission with the expertise of the Hinckley Institute, which has hosted debates for decades, including the vice presidential debate in 2020.

Perry disagrees with suggestions that the Legislature was trying to replace the Utah Debate Commission with an organization that is more pliable to their desires. At the core of the new organization will still be the same partners in higher education and newsrooms helping voters to make the most informed decision, according to Perry.

“Those are still the key foundational attributes that have been left intact, untouched by anyone else,” Perry said. “I’ve not received any information from the legislature saying we want debates to be run in a specific way.”

While the Utah Debate Commission no longer has funding from the state, it will likely continue to exist in some form, according to Herbert, who said there was never any intent to “do away with the Utah Debate Commission.”

Herbert said he hopes he and Perry could continue to collaborate with the Utah Debate Commission to increase the number of debates every election cycle to include municipal elections in addition to congressional and statewide races.

The fundamental reason why the Legislature wants to make this change, according to Herbert, is because if taxpayers are going to foot the entire bill for debates every election cycle then the process needs to be more transparent and responsive.

“It’s not a bad thing that they want to have oversight and accountability,” Herbert said. “There’s no bad people here trying to take over control — it’s really about making sure we have a good debate commission and a process providing for good, unbiased, fair debates.”

Source: Utah News