Huff scores 22, Fogle has 19 as No. 13 Gonzaga beats 1Southern Utah 122-50

Braden Huff scored 22 points on 11-for-13 shooting and Davis Fogle had a career-high 19 points as No. 13 Gonzaga beat Southern Utah 122-50 on Monday night. Mario Saint-Supery added 16 points, seven …

SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) — Braden Huff scored 22 points on 11-for-13 shooting and Davis Fogle had a career-high 19 points as No. 13 Gonzaga beat Southern Utah 122-50 on Monday night.

Mario Saint-Supery added 16 points, seven assists and six steals in his first career start for the Bulldogs (5-0), who secured the second-largest scoring output and margin of victory in program history. Graham Ike and Adam Miller had 13 points apiece for Gonzaga.

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Elijah Duval scored 10 points to lead Southern Utah (1-4) as it fell to its worst start under third-year coach Rob Jeter. The Thunderbirds struggled offensively all night, finishing with more turnovers (23) than made field goals (18).

Gonzaga jumped out to a 17-2 lead behind smothering defense and transition scoring. One early sequence began with Ike blocking a layup attempt from Zach Bell, nearly pinning the ball against the backboard. It ended with Adam Miller hoisting a lob to Tyon Grant-Foster for a two-handed finish.

On another wild fastbreak run, Mario Saint-Supery intercepted a pass in the backcourt and threw a lob to Grant-Foster, who missed the dunk, but Miller cleaned it up with a tip-in to make it 36-14.

As the half was winding down, Saint-Supery poked the ball away from Duval for his fifth steal. It set up a layup from Grant-Foster on the other end as Gonzaga went into halftime with a 59–27 lead.

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Meanwhile, the Thunderbirds struggled to handle Gonzaga’s ball pressure, finishing the half with 14 turnovers and 10 made field goals.

Miller scored Gonzaga’s first bucket of the second half on a transition 3 from the top of the key, and the Bulldogs kept rolling from there. Huff continued the surge by scoring 10 points in the next five minutes to push the lead to 79-37, one which Gonzaga never relinquished.

Up next

Southern Utah: At Washington State on Wednesday.

Gonzaga: Faces Alabama in Las Vegas on Monday.

___

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Source: Utah News

Oregon Coach Ross Douglas Playing Critical Role In Pursuit To Flip Utah Recruit

The early signing period for the recruiting class of 2026 is under a month away, and the Oregon Ducks are still pushing to add pieces to boost the team. Three-s …

The early signing period for the recruiting class of 2026 is under a month away, and the Oregon Ducks are still pushing to add pieces to boost the team. Three-star wide receiver recruit Hudson Lewis committed to the Utah Utes in September, but Oregon coach Dan Lanning and the Ducks are pushing for a flip.

Hudson visited the Oregon Ducks when the program hosted the Wisconsin Badgers. With a strong visit, On3’s Steve Wiltfong made an expert prediction that the Ducks would land the three-star recruit.

Oregon Ducks Dan Lanning Ross Douglass Utah Utes Hudson Lewis Recruiting Flip Commitment College Football Big Ten USC Trojans

Oct 22, 2022; Eugene, Oregon, USA; Oregon Ducks head coach Dan Lanning watches the clock during the second half against the UCLA Bruins at Autzen Stadium. The Ducks won the game 45-30. Mandatory Credit: Troy Wayrynen-Imagn Images / Troy Wayrynen-Imagn Images

Per the Rivals Industry Ranking, Hudson is the No. 191 wide receiver and the No. 5 recruit from Idaho. With the early signing period approaching, the Oregon Ducks could flip Lewis’ commitment and add another recruit to their class of 2026.

Oregon recently extended another Hundson a new offer, making a big push for the flip. Lewis shared with Rivals that he was planning to have an official visit with the Ducks when they host the USC Trojans, but his high school team will be playing in their state championship, and the dates overlap.

“It was just a blessing,” Lewis told On3 of receiving a new offer. “This has been my dream school since I was a kid, and so seeing the opportunity come true is just a blessing.”

Oregon Ducks Dan Lanning Ross Douglass Utah Utes Hudson Lewis Recruiting Flip Commitment College Football Big Ten USC Trojans

Nov 18, 2023; Tempe, Arizona, USA; Oregon Ducks head coach Dan Lanning against the Arizona State Sun Devils at Mountain America Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images / Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images

One of the main reasons that Oregon has the chance to pull off the flip for Lewis is the Ducks’ wide receiver coach Ross Douglas. He has been leading Lewis’ recruitment, and the communication he has had with the wide receiver is helping heighten the chances of the flip.

MORE:  Dan Lanning Provides Kenyon Sadiq Injury Update After Tight End’s Big Performance

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Douglas has done well as both a recruiter and a coach with the Oregon Ducks. The Ducks’ passing game this season has been a substantial part of a well-balanced offense. Oregon has a talented passing game with several wide receivers stepping up amid injuries.

Oregon Ducks Dan Lanning Ross Douglass Utah Utes Hudson Lewis Recruiting Flip Commitment College Football Big Ten USC Trojans

Nov 8, 2025; Iowa City, Iowa, USA; Oregon Ducks head coach Dan Lanning enters Kinnick Stadium before the game against the Iowa Hawkeyes. Mandatory Credit: Jeffrey Becker-Imagn Images / Jeffrey Becker-Imagn Images

The Ducks’ on-field success alone helps with recruiting, but adding Douglas’ success coaching the position is an appealing reason Oregon could flip Lewis.

Lewis had an unofficial the Ducks when the team defeated the Wisconsin Badgers on Oct. 25. It was a gritty win in poor weather, and the recruit was there to see not only the team’s performance, but also the atmosphere at Autzen Stadium.

In his senior season, Lewis racked up 61 receptions for 1,021 yards and 14 touchdowns. He is a speedy player who would fit right in with an explosive Oregon offense.

Oregon Ducks Dan Lanning Ross Douglass Utah Utes Hudson Lewis Recruiting Flip Commitment College Football Big Ten USC Trojans

Oregon head coach Dan Lanning looks on as the Oregon Ducks host the Montana State Bobcats on Aug. 30, 2025, at Autzen Stadium in Eugene, Oregon. / Ben Lonergan/The Register-Guard / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

The Oregon Ducks recruiting class of 2026 ranks No. 3 in the nation and No. 2 in the Big Ten, per On3. The team features 18 commits, which include four five-star and 12 four-star recruits.

The recruiting class features two talented wide receivers in four-stars Jalen Lott and Messiah Hampton. The Ducks have the chance to add another receiver after sending the Utah commit a new offer, pushing for a late flip. The early signing period is approaching quickly, and a flip from Lewis will be something to watch for throughout the next couple of weeks.

Source: Utah News

Analysis: How blue is red-state Utah’s new congressional district, really?

Utah’s new judicially adopted congressional map creates a Democratic-leaning district for the first time in decades. But how blue is the new seat?

Democrats in Utah are abuzz this week after a judge adopted a map for the 2026 congressional elections that creates a district that leans their way for the first time in decades.

This new district, built around the northern portion of Salt Lake County, does indeed include the bluest portions of a red state. And depending on which elections from the past decade are included in the analysis, it favors Democrats by somewhere between 13 points and 17 points.

But there have actually been several electoral anomalies in Utah over that span, so it’s best to look at a range, rather than a precise number.

Consider the gubernatorial election last year. If we just approach it as Republican Spencer Cox vs. Democrat Brian King, then King got 11.5 percent more of the vote than Cox inside the new district. But remember the race also had former Rep. Phil Lyman running a write-in campaign. Ten percent of voters in that election cast a ballot for someone other than Cox or King, most of them for Cox’s challenger from the right — Lyman.

(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) Republican Utah Gov. Spencer Cox, who is running for reelection, debates Democratic challenger state Rep. Brian King and Libertarian opponent Robert Latham, from left, at Salt Lake Community College on Wednesday, Sept. 11, 2024.

So that either counts as an 11.5 percentage point victory for the Democrat or something closer to 1.5 percentage points, considering.

Next, let’s look at the President Donald Trump factor.

Trump has been on the presidential ballot three times in Utah in the last decade — 2024, 2020 and 2016. By Republican standards in Utah, he did poorly, losing the district by between 21 and 24 percentage points.

He never cracked 60% statewide. That’s historically bad for a Republican in Utah. In races without a significant third-party candidate, Trump’s 2024 and 2020 performances were the worst for a Republican presidential candidate since Barry Goldwater lost to Lyndon Johnson in 1964.

And looking at races where there was a major third-party candidate on Utahns’ ballot — Evan McMullin in 2016, H. Ross Perot twice in the 1990s, and segregationist Gov. George Wallace in 1968 — the only GOP showing that compares to Trump’s 46% in 2016 is George H.W. Bush’s 43% the first time Perot ran in 1992.

Those races change the perceived lean in a big and questionable way.

Speaking of McMullin, he also is responsible for another strange Utah election that complicates the math. In 2022, Democrats opted not to nominate a candidate to run against U.S. Sen. Mike Lee, instead tossing their support behind McMullin.

(Leah Hogsten | The Salt Lake Tribune) From left, Sen. Mike Lee and independent challenger Evan McMullin participate in a debate ahead of the election for U.S. Senate at Utah Valley University, Wednesday, Oct. 17, 2022.

The independent dominated in precincts that now make up the new congressional district, beating Lee by nearly 32 percentage points. But how many of those are actual Democrats? It’s hard to tell.

In the congressional races that same election, Democratic candidates received 52% of the vote, while McMullin got 57% — meaning there was crossover, but it wasn’t massive.

There is one more flukey election in 2016.

That year, in the race for attorney general, the Democratic candidate dropped out before Election Day, and Republican Sean Reyes won the area now part of the new district by just over two percentage points — the only Republican in a decade to do so. But how do we consider the results in a race without a real opponent?

Based on Salt Lake County results from 2024, eight out of 10 of the “other” votes cast in the gubernatorial election were write-ins, presumably for Phil Lyman. Those are votes cast by people who thought Cox was not conservative enough, meaning they aren’t likely to vote for a Democrat in 2026. Considering that, lowering King’s 11.5 percentage point win by those eight points results in a 3.5 percentage point win for Democrats.

Along those lines, based on the larger county-wide voting patterns, reducing McMullin’s victory in those precincts by 5 percentage points to about 27 points — which falls roughly in line with Trump’s losses.

Making those two adjustments, and keeping the 2016 attorney general race, results in a Democratic advantage is 12.4 percentage points.

If you leave the Cox defeat and the McMullin win in the district unadjusted and only go back as far as the 2018 elections, a Democrat has a 17-point advantage.

That is not a cakewalk. Republicans have had similar advantages in districts and lost. Still, it is considerable and the kind of daylight that Utah Democrats have not seen in decades.

Here are four ways to approach trying to gauge how much the Utah’s new 1st Congressional District in Salt Lake County favors Democrats:

Including the statewide races for president, U.S. Senate, governor and attorney general since 2016: Democrats +13

Adjusting the margin of Gov. Spencer Cox’s 2024 loss in the new district by accounting for voters who cast ballots for write-in candidate Phil Lyman, and also adjusting Evan McMulin’s margin of victory downward to account for those who voted for him, but not Democratic congressional candidates in the same election: Democrats +12%

Only taking into account elections starting in 2018 forward, without adjusting the results: Democrats +17%

Counting elections since 2018, but including the same downward adjustment as above for the margins for Cox and McMullin: Democrats +15%

Note to readers • This story is available to Salt Lake Tribune subscribers only. Thank you for supporting local journalism.

Source: Utah News

Recap: Utah’s Keyonte George delivers the dagger against the reeling Chicago Bulls

With seconds on the clock, curling around a screen on the right wing, Keyonte caught a laser in rhythm, and his catch-and-shoot sledgehammer snapped through the net to drive the final nail into …

Are the Utah Jazz making a play-in push? I don’t know, maybe, but in emotional and exciting battles like this one against the Chicago Bulls, it’s hard not to smile as Utah shreds its own lottery ticket.

Defense? Never heard of her. How strange is it that we live in a world where basketball teams regularly stretch near 100 points before the end of the 3rd quarter? Without a defensive anchor, Walker Kessler, roaming the hardwood plains, the Utah Jazz hemorrhaged points against the Chicago Bulls, while piling a second, third, and even fourth helping of points onto their scoring total with no regard for their belt, the limits of the scoreboard, or their viewers’ ability to stomach such indulgent quantities.

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Complaining about the lack of defense in today’s league makes me feel like an old man, and I haven’t even eclipsed a quarter of a century. Yuck. Though I suppose, in a double-overtime epic like this one, who cares about point totals?

The post-Jordan era Chicago Bulls have been one of basketball’s greatest enigmas in the sport’s professional history. No championships, a smattering of mediocrity, and team after team that promises glory while garnishing a hollow trophy case since the year 2000 (with respect to the ne’er-to-be-forgotten Derrick Rose MVP season, of course).

Perhaps we can chalk this up to a John Stockton-Karl Malone curse? The Utah Jazz have reached the NBA Finals just twice in franchise history, in back-to-back seasons as the MJ buzzsaw sliced through one of the most potent basketball duos the game has ever seen.

With all this in mind, please forgive me if I’m a bit skeptical of this season’s apparent success for the Chicago Bulls. They began the year with an incredible 6-1 record behind tremendous play by Josh Giddey and Nikola Vucevic, as the team officially shed the chains of the DeMar DeRozan, Zach LaVine era of, well, mediocrity in the Windy City. The Sacramento Bulls thank you for your donation.

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But since that sixth win, the Bulls have lost four straight to teams with winning records. This meeting against the red-hot combo of Markkanen and Bailey (how I’ve longed to say that) promises a change for the faltering Bulls, however, as point guard Coby White (owner of the greatest hair in the league) is set to make his season debut after nursing a calf injury.

Correcting course and setting sail for familiar territory in the draft lottery, Utah’s front office has to understand that games against Chicago are not for the Jazz to be winning, no matter how capable the team may be. In all honesty, this team at full strength may very well be play-in caliber with the surging production of Keyonte George, Lauri Markkanen, and Ace Bailey.

But let us remember, with an eye on the horrific records dwelling near the bottom of the standings, Utah cannot afford to miss out on this apparently stacked draft class.

Judges, today the Utah Jazz have baked a tanking tart, complete with a smattering of ghostly defense, plenty of minutes in the oven for rising star Svi Mykhailiuk, and a raspberry filling. Recalling the objective of this season, having seen enough of Cam Boozer, AJ Dybatnsa, and Darryn Peterson to understand that falling anywhere outside of the top three could be a crime punishable by death.

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…But sometimes winning is just so much fun. More on that in a minute.

Ace Bailey has finally been put into the starting lineup and is kicking all kinds of butt on his way… that is, until foul trouble threw off his groove, and saw him spending most of the night’s game with his butt planted firmly on the bench.

In the previous two games, Bailey’s stat sheet read as follows:

vs Indiana: 20 pts, 4 reb, 1 ast, 53.8% FG, 50% 3PT
vs Atlanta: 21 pts, 5 reb, 3 ast, 2 stl, 61.5% FG, 57.1 3PT

Against Chicago, Bailey’s six fouls in 10 minutes stifled his production:

vs Chicago: 5 pts, 1 reb, 1 blk, 40% FG, 33% 3PT

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Despite the poor overall showing today, Ace’s recent production has Utah finally buzzing about star potential.

Speaking of star potential, I’d like to say a quick word about one Keyonte George, who turned a slow start (5 points in the first half) into one of the primary reasons why this team remained competitive throughout this contest, as he finished with 34 points, 6 dimes, and 4 steals, including repeated buckets in clutch moments. His ability to draw fouls and hit free throws (shooting over 92% on the year) has completely expanded the limits of his production. A leader on the team, having matured both mentally and physically, Keyonte George’s leap in year 3 has been revelatory.

Related story: Keyonte George’s transformation goes deeper than you think

And by primary reasons, I mean non-Lauri Markkanen reasons, as the Finnisher lathered layer after layer of paint coats onto his stable and steady Delta Center home. Lauri, already averaging over 30 a night, stuffed the points column with 47 points all his own. Unreal. Down the stretch, he was a guaranteed basket. Collecting fouls, knocking through pick-and-pop jumpers, and reliably finding the next gear to answer every Chicago punch. Truthfully, it will take a severe fall from grace for Lauri to whiff on the All-Star game this season, right?

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The Utah Jazz have an undeniable star in their midst. Whether you’re in camp ‘Trade Lauri’ or camp ‘Keep Lauri’, his value as an asset may be at an all-time high — we are witnessing his prime.

Brice Sensabaugh, buddy, welcome back to the show. After a quiet first half, Sensabaugh ignited an explosion of production, whipping absurd passes to open teammates and torching the nylon on the other end for his own stat line. On defense, his effort was undeniable — he was everywhere, whether that reflected in production or not. This is why he was on the floor in OT — he’s earning Will Hardy’s trust.

Even Isaiah Collier enjoyed a strong night, tallying 17 points and 7 assists on excellent efficiency and sharing the floor well with Keyonte. Unfortunately, Collier’s reliability came at the expense of minutes for Walter Clayton Jr, though the decision to run with the second-year USC product is an understandable one.

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The fourth quarter was as cinematic as the script-writers could have drafted it, with this game seeing so many lead changes that ESPN’s win probability chart in the late game read exactly like my heartbeat; my eyes firmly glued to the screen. Everybody shut up — I’m watching the Jazz.

Do you know what’s even better than four quarters of basketball? May I introduce you to my dear friend, overtime? Keyonte’s fallaway jumper missed everything as time expired, and overtime began.

Keyonte George, Lauri Markkanen, and Brice Sensabaugh became the super friends in the final period. George splashed stepback threes. Sensabaugh rattled a contested elbow jumper through the cylinder. Markkanen, in defiance of Isaac Newton’s life’s work, snuck a heavily contested mid-range flip shot through the rim while fully parallel to the Earth.

The final seconds of OT drained like oatmeal. Moments turned to minutes, and minutes physically aged me by years at a time. With Utah up two points, Coby White — head on a swivel — forced a jump ball and the Bulls converted a layup on the other end.

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The second OT started out all Utah. The Bulls were caught with foul after foul, and the Jazz bought a timeshare at the foul stripe. Markkanen and George converted the charity shots at a high rate, and points were tallied without the passage of time. Chicago kept itself within an arm’s reach, and a Coby White pump-fake-jump-forward shot with his foot on the line opened the door for White to sink his 13th and 14th free throws and knot the score, 147-147.

With seconds on the clock, curling around a screen on the right wing, Keyonte caught a laser in rhythm, and his catch-and-shoot sledgehammer snapped through the net to drive the final nail into Chicago’s coffin. Keyonte George drilled his 34th point in the evening’s climax.

Keyonte would not miss his second chance to seal the win. His release was pure, the result even more so. Ball game.

Calvin Barrett is a writer, editor, and prolific Mario Kart racer located in Tokyo, Japan. He has covered the NBA and College Sports since 2024.

Source: Utah News

Coby White leads the Chicago Bulls off the bench, but the Utah Jazz win 150-147 in 2OT

Lauri Markkanen scored 47 points and the Utah Jazz beat the Chicago Bulls 150-147 on Sunday night in the NBA’s highest-scoring game of the season.

SALT LAKE CITY — Keyonte George made a 3-pointer with 2 seconds remaining in the second overtime, Lauri Markkanen scored 47 points and the Utah Jazz beat the Chicago Bulls 150-147 on Sunday night in the NBA’s highest-scoring game of the season.

George finished with 32 points — including six in the second OT. Isaiah Collier and Brice Sensabaugh each had 16 points, and Kevin Love and Svi Mykhailuk each added 10 as the Jazz won for the second time in three games after losing six of seven.

Coby White scored 27 points and Josh Giddey had 26 points, 12 rebounds and 13 assists for the Bulls, who have lost five straight. Nikola Vučević had 21 points, Matas Buzelis and Ayo Dosunmu each scored 18 and Julian Phillips scored 10.

White, whose layup with 0.2 seconds left in the first OT tied the score at 136, made two free throws with 8.4 seconds to go in the second OT to tie it at 147. After George’s go-ahead 3, Vučević missed a potential tying basket at the buzzer.

Utah led 136-132 in the final minute of the first OT, before Buzelis had a dunk with 27 seconds to go and White made his tying layup to send it to a second OT.

The Jazz trailed by seven early in the fourth quarter before using an 8-0 run to take a 102-101 lead on Sensabaugh’s 3 with 9:23 remaining. Collier followed with a layup to push the lead to three less than 30 seconds later.

Jalen Smith’s 3 tied the score with 8:41 to go, and there were several lead changes and seven ties the rest of the quarter. Markkanen, who had 12 points in the fourth, hit a free throw with 19 seconds remaining to tie it at 127.

Markkanen had 13 points in the third quarter to help Utah cut Chicago’s nine-point halftime lead to 98-94 heading to the fourth.

Giddey and White each scored 12 points to help the Bulls take a 70-61 lead at halftime. Markkanen had 18 points to lead the Jazz.

Source: Utah News

‘It’s a really loving relationship between me and my best friend’: Byrd Ficklin and Devon Dampier’s bond has strengthened Utah’s QB situation

Byrd Ficklin stole the show in Utah’s 55-28 win at Baylor. In a freshman season full of memorable moments, Ficklin delivered a few more on Saturday. It was the start of a 21-0 Utah scoring run as the …

WACO, Texas — Byrd Ficklin stole the show in Utah’s 55-28 win at Baylor.

In a freshman season full of memorable moments, Ficklin delivered a few more on Saturday.

He had touchdown runs of 67 and 74 yards, the latter of which featured a stiff arm that moved the last man Ficklin had to beat out of the way.

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The 74-yard touchdown run, which came with Utah up just eight points early in the third quarter, broke the game open. It was the start of a 21-0 Utah scoring run as the Utes blew out Baylor 55-28 to improve to 8-2 on the year.

“It was just more of, take care of the ball, don’t give them more momentum,” Ficklin said of his mindset on the touchdown drive. “Come out here and be a vibe killer and when we broke that long run, that’s pretty much what it did. It killed their whole entire vibe for the rest of the game.”

Prior to that key touchdown in the third quarter, Ficklin had already been in the end zone. Starting quarterback Devon Dampier went to the locker room ahead of Utah’s fourth drive of the game, with Wayshawn Parker taking the wildcat snap of the first play of the series.

Dampier was back in to hand the ball off to Parker on the next play, then lined up wide on the third play of the drive as Ficklin took the snap, faked the handoff and then took off down the sideline for a 67-yard touchdown run to put Utah up 21-7.

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“It can be nothing but fun … We talk about this especially all the time in our hotel room. What are we going to do whenever we’re both in and we score? It is just something that we both love, we both have fun with and it’s a really loving relationship between me and my best friend,” Ficklin said.

Dampier was one of the first players down to the end zone to celebrate with Ficklin.

Utah’s usual starting quarterback was playing through injury and was not at 100%. Ute coach Kyle Whittingham said if the game was last week, that Dampier wouldn’t have been able to play.

Without Dampier’s usual dynamic play — he finished with 80 yards and two touchdowns on 46% completion and just 23 yards rushing — Whittingham and the Utes turned to Ficklin to provide their offense a spark.

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The freshman quarterback finished the game with 166 rushing yards and two scores and even completed two of three passes for 23 yards.

“A lot of confidence during practice (and) again, he’s gone in there and he’s been perfect when he goes in. So not a far drop off at all. It’s pretty similar,” Dampier said.

It was telling of Dampier’s leadership that while he was no doubt frustrated that he could not play at his full potential in the win in Waco, he was genuinely happy and supportive of Ficklin.

“Dev has been the most help out of anybody that’s been here,” Ficklin said on an ESPN 700 coaches’ show. “… He’s been really pushing me on and off the field to not just be a better player, but also be a better person. And that’s what I mainly love about Dev.”

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Throughout spring and fall camp, Dampier took Ficklin under his wing, helping show the freshman the ropes as he went from starring at Muskogee High to becoming the backup quarterback at Utah. That wasn’t something Dampier had to do, and it speaks to his willingness to lead.

“Yeah, well that’s who he is. He’s an absolute team guy as well. We got a bunch of guys that are just, I can’t pick out a selfish player in this football team and say this guy needs to come to the party a little bit as far as being a team guy,” Whittingham said. “It’s a bunch of guys all pulling in the same direction, caring more about the team than they do about themselves.”

After the win, Dampier spoke glowingly about Ficklin and seemed genuinely happy for his success.

“We got a very loving relationship. There’s no hate involved in anything, so anytime we get to see each other shine, we’re all for it. So Byrd stepped up as a freshman, he’s earned those rights today to get in the game. I mean he proved it tonight why he’s in,” Dampier said.

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After the blowout win where each contributed a pair of touchdowns, the two teammates walked off the field and into the locker room side by side. That’s a common sight around Utah’s football facility, in the locker room, and in the pair’s day to day life.

When they’re not together in person, they’re FaceTiming each other — Dampier says they talk probably five times a day on the phone.

“It is literally almost like if Dev’s going to be there, Byrd’s going to be there. It’s almost literally like that,” Ficklin said. “… We just happen to hang out together almost all the time, almost every day.”

Utah has one of the better quarterback situations in the Big 12 Conference due to having complete confidence in its backup quarterback. The previous two seasons showed the Utes just how vital having a good backup is. In the transfer portal era, it’s become a luxury to have two good quarterbacks on their roster, and having Ficklin waiting in the wings has already been key in at least two Utah wins.

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While Dampier should continue to be the starter as long as he can play on Saturday — Whittingham seemed sure of that during the postgame press conference — the Utes may need to call on Ficklin again at some point in the next two games, starting with Saturday afternoon’s game vs. Kansas State (2 p.m. MST, ESPN2).

He’ll be ready.

“Byrd Ficklin was probably the biggest catalyst for us when we needed it. He provided two huge runs for us and the guy’s just a really good football player,” Whittingham said “… He’s got a bright future as I’ve said several times before he’s just really provides a spark for us.”

Source: Utah News

How Utah overcame an abnormal defensive outing to beat Baylor in decisive fashion

Kyle Whittingham most likely wouldn’t have believed it if he had been told prior to Saturday’s Big 12 bout against Baylor that Utah would go on to win by double …

Kyle Whittingham most likely wouldn’t have believed it if he had been told prior to Saturday’s Big 12 bout against Baylor that Utah would go on to win by double-digits while giving up over 500 total yards, running 30 fewer plays and losing the time of possession battle by a difference of roughly 6 minutes.

Oh, and that the engine of his offense would be limited all night due to injury, requiring some in-game adjustments and faith in a true freshman quarterback to close out a must-have win on the road.

Those factors and obstacles made for one of the more unique outcomes Whittingham’s been a part of in his 24 full seasons at the helm of the Utes, who managed to overcome an abnormal defensive outing in a 55-28 victory over the Bears from McLane Stadium on Saturday.

“It’s the most unique win, I guess you could say in the the short term past,” Whittingham said after the game. “It was definitely a back and forth and defensively, we usually control things a little bit better.”

Indeed, Utah had been stout all season, allowing just 156.8 yards through the air per game going into Saturday’s matchup against the league’s top-ranked air attack.

The Utes caught some breaks early on but eventually let a few big plays slip through the cracks, leaving the door open for the Bears to hang in the first half despite a rough start from Sawyer Robertson. The nation’s leader in touchdown passes heading into Week 12 missed on eight of his first 11 throws — some of which were gimmes for someone of his talent — though he connected on a 64-yard bomb to Kole Wilson to get Baylor in field goal range, making it 21-10 in the second quarter, then hit Josh Cameron for a score in the final seconds of the first half after a perfect pass to Ashtyn Hawkins got the Bears within striking distance.

Utah’s pass rush was disruptive in key spots, though outside of a few stops in the red zone, the secondary had to try to keep up with Baylor’s plethora of talented receiving threats.

“That receiving core is outstanding, and the tight end (Michael Trigg), you’ll be seeing him play on Sunday for a long time,” Whittingham said. “But we got to do a little better job of winning more of the 50-50 balls.”

Just as Whittingham could’ve expected in the lead up to Saturday’s game that Baylor’s potent air attack would present quite the challenge for his defensive backs group, it would’ve been reasonable for him to think the Utes offense would have success on the ground much they like did through their first nine games of the season.

Even so, he probably didn’t account for three 60-plus yard scores being the difference makers.

Utah, which entered the game with 16 scoring drives of 10 plays or more on the season, didn’t need to worry about moving the chains with Wayshawn Parker and Byrd Ficklin ripping off chunk plays every time they touched the ball. Ficklin broke off a 67-yard score in the second quarter courtesy of some solid blocking up front, giving the Utes a spark while Devon Dampier took it easy due to an injury.

Parker’s turn came a few minutes later, as the sophomore back took advantage of Baylor putting just five defenders in the box with a 64-yard burst right up the middle, extending Utah’s lead to 28-10 with just over 4 minutes left in the first half.

Just like that, Utah went from 11 rushes for 43 yards in the first quarter to 19 for 179 at the halftime break. Baylor, though, racked up 362 total yards of offense, the most Utah had allowed in a first half since 2022, but had to settle for three field goal tries inside the Utes’ 25-yard line after failing to put the ball in the end zone.

Baylor finished with 563 total yards of offense — the most Utah’s allowed through its first 10 games — and ran 91 total plays to the Utes’ 59. Scooby Davis’ 65-yard interception returned for a touchdown in the first quarter probably skewed how the final stats looked, though the junior’s first touchdown of the season set the tone for the kind of night it was going to be for Utah.

Ficklin kept it rolling in the third quarter with an incredible individual effort on a 74-yard touchdown run, in which he shrugged off a tackle attempt from Bears safety Tyler Turner with a stiff arm to record the Utes’ longest rush of the season from scrimmage. That made it 35-20 in favor of the Utes after Robertson and company cut their deficit to eight on the previous drive.

The Utes continued to lean on their offensive line to get the job done in the trenches for the remainder of the second half. Between Ficklin and Dampier, Utah attempted just five passes after halftime, yet the Utes never relinquished control when it seemed like the Bears were ready to make a late push.

Led by Ficklin’s 166 rush yards, Utah tallied 380 yards on the ground while averaging 8.8 per carry. Parker crossed the 100-yard threshold for the third consecutive game, finishing with 129 on 15 attempts. As a team, the Utes went for over 200 rush yards for the fifth consecutive game, their longest such streak since 2018.

“That offensive line is a huge reason why we’re able to do that week in and week out,” Whittingham said. “Credit the way they played.”

Despite its inconsistencies all night, Utah’s secondary helped deliver the final nail in the coffin early in the fourth quarter with a second interception off Robertson, who got drilled on a nickel blitz by Jackson Bennee as his pass was picked off by Trey Reynolds, setting the Utes up on the Bears’ 9-yard line following a 31-yard return from the 6-foot-1 junior.

Utah scored moments later after Dampier swung a short pass out to Parker for his second touchdown of the night, making it 49-20 with just over 11 minutes left in regulation.

And so, in a game where Robertson throws for 430 yards and Baylor has two 100-yard receivers, plus a running back who had almost 100 yards on the ground, Utah’s knack for explosive plays wound up outweighing its defensive lapses and subsequently, keep the Utes’ College Football Playoff hopes alive with a decisive victory.

Even if it wasn’t the script Whittingham had drawn up in his head going in.

“There was a lot of back and forth there for a while, but we just kept, kept at it, and answered the bell every time,” Whittingham said. “A lot a lot of things in that game that both sides did well, but we did enough to get the win.”

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Source: Utah News

What Utah’s Kyle Whittingham said following big win over Baylor

It’s unclear whether Kyle Whittingham’s been part of a game quite like Saturday’s in his head coaching career, though it’s safe to assume it’s up there with som …

It’s unclear whether Kyle Whittingham’s been part of a game quite like Saturday’s in his head coaching career, though it’s safe to assume it’s up there with some of the more unique outcomes he’s experienced in his 24 seasons at the helm of the Utah football team.

Whittingham most likely wouldn’t have believed it if he had been told prior to Saturday’s Big 12 bout against Baylor that his team would go on to win by double-digits while giving up over 500 total yards, running 30 fewer plays and losing the time of possession battle by a difference of roughly 6 minutes to the Bears.

Then again, he probably wasn’t accounting for three 60-plus yard scores from his offense, as well as an interception for a touchdown out of his defense, during his preparation process throughout the week.

Explosive plays and another dominant performance on the ground offset what was an abnormal night defensively from the Utes, who pulled away from the Bears in the second half to leave McLane Stadium with a 55-28 victory, despite getting gashed for 563 total yards of offense, 430 of which were through the air.

Utah answered Sawyer Robertson’s resilient effort with unrelenting physicality in the trenches, totaling 380 rushing yards and five touchdowns behind an impressive outing from Byrd Ficklin, who ripped off scores of 67 and 74 yards to finish with 166 rush yards on just six carries.

The true freshman quarterback stepped up while Devon Dampier battled an injury that forced him to take a brief locker room visit early in the second quarter. The dual-threat signal-caller returned but wasn’t featured heavily in the second half, allowing Ficklin an opportunity to gain more valuable reps as the Utes closed out the Bears with 21 unanswered points in the second half.

Here’s what Whittingham had to say about the team’s defensive struggles, Dampier’s health and Ficklin’s impact after the game.

“Our offense has done pretty good this year, and we’re first or second the league in a lot of categories. When you consider how much we struggled last year; I mean, the turnaround has been remarkable. Very proud of those guys.”

“Devon’s a little bit beat up, there’s no secret about that. But he’s a competitor, he’s a warrior. He goes out unless he absolutely can’t function at all.”

Utah Utes quarterback Devon Dampier

Nov 15, 2025; Waco, Texas, USA; Utah Utes quarterback Devon Dampier (4) is tackled by Baylor Bears linebacker Keaton Thomas (11) during the first half at McLane Stadium. / Chris Jones-Imagn Images

“He’s gonna want to play, and he wasn’t his normal self tonight, but good enough to go out and do some good things.”

“He’s maturing and becoming more seasoned every single week. He has not had a game that he was inserted in, where the stage was too big. He’s responded well every single time he’s been in the game, and so, like I said, the moment is not too big for for Byrd, and he’s, he’s going to be a really good one.”

“Well, just the fade balls … you throw up those 50-50 balls, and and we didn’t make enough of a percentage of them for our liking. They’re going to connect on some — like I said that receiving core is outstanding, and the tight end, you’ll be seeing him play on Sunday for a long time. But we got to do a little better job of winning more of the 50-50 balls.”

Baylor Bears wide receiver Josh Cameron

Nov 15, 2025; Waco, Texas, USA; Baylor Bears wide receiver Josh Cameron (34) runs with the ball after the catch against the Utah Utes during the second half at McLane Stadium. / Chris Jones-Imagn Images

“Scooby lost his cool a little bit, and obviously the other guy had some something to do with it as well or he wouldn’t have got flagged.”

“You got to keep it cool. I’m not making excuses for Scooby. I don’t know enough about the situation right now to tell you a definitive course of action for us, but we’ll find out.”

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Source: Utah News

Utah’s Kyle Whittingham provides injury update on QB Devon Dampier after blowout win over Baylor

Devon Dampier wasn’t at full strength during Utah’s 55-28 win over Baylor on Saturday, according to head coach Kyle Whittingham. In fact, if the Utes (8-2, 5-2 …

Devon Dampier wasn’t at full strength during Utah’s 55-28 win over Baylor on Saturday, according to head coach Kyle Whittingham.

In fact, if the Utes (8-2, 5-2 Big 12) were scheduled to play last week, their dual-threat quarterback wouldn’t have been able to go.

“Devon’s a little beat up, but he’s a warrior, he’s tough,” Whittingham said after his team’s impressive outing against the Bears. “He wants to be out there. No doubt about that.”

Dampier didn’t appear on any of Utah’s availability reports leading up to Saturday’s contest from McLane Stadium. He started and finished the Nov. 1 game against Cincinnati after missing the previous week due to injury.

“If we had to play last week, Devon would not have been available to play, Whittingham said.”

Dampier toughed it out for the Utes in their Week 12 bout in Waco, Texas, though he had to make a brief locker room visit in the second quarter following Utah’s second scoring drive of the night. He returned for the Utes’ ensuing drive off the Bears’ first touchdown, but wasn’t heavily featured in the pass or run game during the second half.

Dampier’s status gave backup quarterback Byrd Ficklin a chance to lead the offense. The true freshman seized his opportunities from the get-go, providing the Utes a much-needed spark with a 67-yard rushing touchdown to make it a 21-7 game, followed by an electric 74-yard score in the third quarter to extend his team’s lead to 15 points after Baylor trimmed its deficit to eight with a field goal on the previous drive.

Ficklin was also 2-of-3 through the air for 23 passing yards. Utah leaned heavily on the run, though, especially in the second half, with only five pass attempts between Ficklin and Dampier after halftime.

Ficklin accounted for 166 of the Utes’ 380 rush yards on the night, marking their fifth consecutive game with over 200 rushing yards. That’s the program’s longest such streak since 2018.

Ficklin helped extend the streak three weeks earlier, when he tallied 151 yards on the ground in his first career start against Colorado on Oct. 25.

Time will tell whether the Muskogee, Oklahoma, product makes his second career start next Saturday for Utah’s home tilt against Kansas State. The Utes will look to keep their College Football Playoff hopes alive when they host the Wildcats (5-5, 4-3 Big 12) at Rice Eccles-Stadium.

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Source: Utah News

Utah is getting one of its veteran frontcourt players back. What that means for the Runnin’ Utes

James Okonkwo missed the Utes’ first three regular-season games due to transfer rules. He’ll return to the court against Sam Houston …

When the University of Utah takes the Huntsman Center court against Sam Houston on Saturday night, James Okonkwo won’t have to stay on the sideline this time.

The fifth-year transfer forward can finally suit up for the Runnin’ Utes in the regular season.

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While the 6-foot-8 forward was able to play in Utah’s two exhibition games, he missed the Utes’ first three regular-season games due to transfer rules.

“It’ll be good, because then we’ll get a better feel for our rotations, just when we were starting to get a little continuity there,” Utah coach Alex Jensen said of having Okonkwo available.

“You know, first year, all new players, all new coaches, it’s going to be discombobulated in some ways. But it’ll be good to get them out there and see different combinations with James.”

That allowed other front court guys like JUCO transfer Josh Hayes and true freshman Kendyl Sanders an opportunity to gain some valuable extended minutes they might not have gotten if Okonkwo had been available.

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“I think it is a blessing in this, (it) gives other guys opportunities they might not have necessarily had,” Jensen said. “Hopefully, it kind of puts us ahead of the curve a little bit in figuring out what’s best for us.”

Utah and Sam Houston will meet at the Huntsman in a 7 p.m. MST tip that will be livestreamed on ESPN+.

The Utes bring a 3-0 record into the matchup, while the Bearkats are 1-1, including a 98-77 loss over another Big 12 team, No. 11 Texas Tech, a week ago.

“Sam Houston, I think, is a good team. (They) did a good job against Texas Tech and they’re aggressive,” Jensen said. “I think it’s another good test to see kind of where we are. I think we’ve improved in our first three games, and hopefully we continue that trend.”

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Okonkwo is expected to play a major role in the interior for a Utah squad that is short on height and has reshaped 80% of its roster, after losing nearly every rotation player to the transfer portal or graduation.

The Utes are already short a couple of big men, with Babacar Faye out for the season due to injury and Ibi Traore having yet to play as he continues to recover from an injury that forced him to miss all of last season.

With Okonkwo unavailable for the team’s first three games, that forced Utah to make adjustments up front and play guys out of position. The Utes struggled with rebounding over the first two games before looking improved in that area in game three.

“It’s definitely going to be a big, big addition for us,” Utah forward Seydou Traore said of Okonkwo’s return. “Just being able to see the physicality that he brings to the court, especially being (around) him this whole summer, just seeing how much he improved on and off the court, that’s a big addition for us.”

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When Okonkwo played in Utah’s two exhibition games against Nevada and Oregon, he started each game at the 5 position.

“It’s going to benefit us a lot having James playing the five so me and Keanu (Dawes) can play our normal positions. (It’s) definitely gonna help us a lot,” Traore said. “But I feel like us not playing our normal position definitely helped us, too. I kind of feel like it’s 50/50 in a way, just being able to go down there, bang down with big guys, grab rebounds and stuff like that.”

Okonkwo’s absence gave Hayes, who started the first three games, and Sanders a chance to showcase their skillsets in extended minutes.

1110bkcutes.spt_KM_526.JPG

Utah Utes forward Kendyl Sanders (13) shoots as Holy Cross Crusaders guard Gabe Warren (21) guards him during a basketball game at the Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City on Monday, Nov. 10, 2025. | Kristin Murphy, Deseret News

Over Utah’s first three games, Sanders averaged 24 minutes, 7.3 points and 5.7 rebounds per game while shooting 52.9% from the floor. He’s also shot 4 of 10 from 3-point range, helping Utah space the floor.

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“I wasn’t expecting to really play as much as I am right now, but I think I’ve taken full advantage of the opportunity, and it means a lot to me,” Sanders said.

Hayes, who stands 6-foot-9, is averaging 13.3 minutes, 5.3 points, 4.3 rebounds and 1.3 blocks. In Monday’s win over Holy Cross, he had nine points, five rebounds, two blocks and an assist.

“There’s nothing like minutes in real games. There’s the experience. You can’t match it,” Jensen said. “You can’t get it really elsewhere. I think it was good for him. I think it gave him confidence. In a good way, (it) raised our expectations of what he’s capable of.”

Now, this front court will get some reinforcements in Okonkwo.

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“Having him back is definitely gonna help our rebounds. We could always do better on rebounds, and then obviously we could space the court even more,” Sanders said.

“We have a bigger team now with him. I don’t have to play the five as much as I have been playing, but having him and Josh, that’s gonna help a lot with rebounds, blocks and just make us look bigger on the court.”

While Jensen said there isn’t a date yet for when Ibi Traore could return and bolster the frontcourt, “he’s been doing progressively more and more with us in practice.”

The Utes could be getting some help in the backcourt against Sam Houston, too. Elijah “Choppa” Moore, who suffered a concussion in the season opener, is cleared to play, the coach said.

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Saturday’s game is the fourth straight home contest for Utah at the Huntsman Center to start the season. The Utes will also host Purdue Fort Wayne and Cal Poly next week before heading to the Acrisure Series in Palm Desert, California, during Thanksgiving week.

For Jensen, the Sam Houston game provides another opportunity to continue building a foundation that Utah hopes it can rely on moving forward.

“It took us three games, but we didn’t come in at halftime behind in rebounds the last game. I think, (this game is about) laying the foundation and preparing us, because the schedule is just going to get harder from here on out,” Jensen said.

“Hopefully we have kind of that foundation. I think that we’ve been trying to build for before we take too many steps, before we go forward and get better and give us an opportunity to win every game.”

Source: Utah News