Wacey Schalla is turning heads this season for his battle for number one in the world standings in both the bull riding and the all-around race. Both, especially the all-around, have been dominated by …
Wacey Schalla is turning heads this season for his battle for number one in the world standings in both the bull riding and the all-around race. Both, especially the all-around, have been dominated by …
The Utah Jazz are beautiful again. Like a flower in full bloom, this recapturing of the Jazz identity is indicative of the transformation beneath the surface. The petals appear and spread out wide, …
Calvin Barrett is a writer, editor, and prolific Mario Kart racer located in Tokyo, Japan. Currently writing for SB Nation and FanSided, he has covered the Utah Jazz and BYU athletics since 2024 and graduated from Utah Valley University.
I WAS PERUSING my social media feed like the socially inept 20-something that I am. Brainless. Thoughtless. Careless. Images and comments light up the glossy film at my fingertips, designed for pure brain stimulation. Sometimes I’m fully cogniscent that such activities are destined to sear my dopamine receptors; abusing the very hormones designed to keep my life fulfilling. I’m on a roll, though, and refuse to let science and reasonable life choices stand in the way of steamrolling through a forgettable hour or two of my day.
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Often, the decision to dissolve into an amorphous blob on the couch as my retinas take in an essence-consuming array of photos and short-form swipable videos surpasses self-awareness. It’s not until I’m reminded of the clock that realization consumes me like a Vertigo dolly zoom. My vision blurs. Heartbeat intensifies. The second hand lands like a sledgehammer with every tick.
THUD. THUD. THUD. THUD.
Wait a minute. Am I going to let this tiny icon on a phone screen erase me from an entire world for the day? Mountains stand firm and immovable, beckoning the next 1,000 adventurers to scale their mighty peaks. Birds conduct a symphonic melody, resonating from treetop to treetop. The delicate babble of a stream is a rushing superhighway below the surface, with an assortment of fish species rushing past one another in a heated grand prix.
And I allow my habitat to start and end at the pleather-saddled edge of my sofa. I am the engineer of my own decay.
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Forget this. I’m going to do something. I’m going to be something. Leave this forsaken land for one better. An entire world awaits my arrival, and I’m going to make an impression.
Raising the phone in one hand, a triumphant fist constituting the other, I make a solemn vow that from this day for—
Whoa. That’s what the new court looks like?
The nerdy girl took off her glasses and became hot.
It’s a trope almost as old as Superman himself (apologies for those who remained in the Clark Kent bubble, but your second favorite writer of all time is actually an alien from the planet Krypton. Grow up). The ugly duckling swims through its entire childhood to emerge as a beautiful and elegant swan. The very hungry caterpillar begins as the poster child for gluttony before entering its chrysalis to emerge as a spectacular butterfly.
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Well, the Utah Jazz have been gestating since the onset of basketball’s most heinous and straight-up wrong rebrand that traded a cascading palette of desert color for a Sharpie highlighter from the Dollar Tree.
But all wrongs can be made right, and what Utah has done in the second iteration of their rebrand is so, so right. The decedent, rich purple, soaking up the spotlight with a gentle, comforting baby blue as its accent. The cascading mountains cresting at the center of it all. The remastered font from the late 90s now spells out “Utah” in a bold, classic, and stunning arrangement sure to set the fashion world ablaze.
It’s just a shame Jordan Clarkson won’t be here to enjoy it.
We were already treated to the opening course of this meal with the “Mountain Basketball” campaign over a year ago in June 2024, where the world was introduced to the pure majesty of the incoming white jersey (to make its debut this season).
This is Mountain Basketball. We have arrived.
Oh yeah. That’s the stuff.
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The Utah Jazz are beautiful again. Like a flower in full bloom, this recapturing of the Jazz identity is indicative of the transformation beneath the surface. The petals appear and spread out wide, welcoming the admiration and awe of its onlookers. Stunning in every sense of the word.
Unfortunately, pure aesthetic appeal does not provide a boost to the win column, nor Utah’s championship odds. Though the bloom is stunning for now, I feel it is best to remind us of what happens to flowers around the time basketball season begins. That’s the product you’ll see on the floor. But surely we can appreciate the absence of the bright yellow stain in Jazz history.
With a fresh coat of paint, so arrives a fresh outlook for Utah’s prospects moving into the future. Though the team itself is still years removed from proper competition, today, they lay the groundwork for a prosperous tomorrow.
“…five-time NBA All-Star Kevin Love is actively exploring potential pathways out of Utah after he was dealt by Miami to the Jazz as part of the three-team Norman Powell trade.” Like Stein said, Love …
According to Marc Stein, Kevin Love is looking for a way to be traded away from the Utah Jazz.
Here’s what Stein said about Kevin Love:
“…five-time NBA All-Star Kevin Love is actively exploring potential pathways out of Utah after he was dealt by Miami to the Jazz as part of the three-team Norman Powell trade.”
Like Stein said, Love came to Utah as part of the Norman Powell trade. It appears that it was mostly dependent on his contract, which expires this season.
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We’ve heard from other sources that Utah has set up its books so that Lauri Markkanen is the only long-term veteran on the team, which means there won’t be a chance for another contract. Hence, this news from Kevin Love. Yes, I know Jazz fans are quick to lament the “no one wants to be here” narrative. But if Utah was willing to give Kevin Love a contract, I’m sure he’d be tweeting about how much he loves Utah real quick. The fact is, Utah is acting with a lot of discipline and is keeping its books clean for after next season when it adds another strong piece in the draft.
Now, Utah may not win the draft and doesn’t come away with a core player, but they’ll have clean books for deals at that point. They can be open for business to move young players they don’t see as part of the future, or bring in money for more picks. Or maybe they can make a big move in free agency. Whatever the case, it’s smart for Utah to be financially ready for any potential move it wants to make.
Ty Burrell, who played Phil Dunphy on Modern Family, moved from Los Angeles to Salt Lake City, Utah with his wife and daughters after the show ended in 2020.
Ty Burrell, who played Phil Dunphy on Modern Family, moved from Los Angeles to Salt Lake City, Utah with his wife and daughters after the show ended in 2020.
AI has the potential to energize and strengthen Utah’s economy. To unlock those benefits, we need regulatory approach that fuels innovation instead of hitting the brakes on it.
AI has the potential to energize and strengthen Utah’s economy. To unlock those benefits, we need regulatory approach that fuels innovation instead of hitting the brakes on it.
Former BYU star Daniel Summerhays is tied for 8th place entering Sunday’s final round of the Korn Ferry Tour’s Utah Championship …
Utah native Daniel Summerhays’ amazing comeback from having back surgery last winter continued Saturday in the third round of the Korn Ferry Tour’s Utah Championship.
Summerhays, the 41-year-old PGA Tour veteran from Kaysville, shot a 4-under 66 to remain in contention for the title at Ogden Golf & Country Club.
At 12-under, he’s just four shots off the lead, which is co-owned by Robby Shelton and Taylor Montgomery.
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Bio Kim of Korea is alone in third place at 14-under, followed by Kensei Hirata of Japan and three others at 13-under.
Tied for eighth, Summerhays was sailing along nicely until he hit his tee shot over the green on No. 16 and made bogey to fall out of the top five.
Former Arizona State standout Preston Summerhays, who is Daniel’s nephew, continued to master the course as well, posting a 67 on Saturday.
With his sister, Grace, on his bag, Preston is tied for 16th at 10-under.
All told, three Utahns are in the top 25 and six are in the top 52 heading into Sunday’s final round.
Former BYU golfer Cole Ponich is in the lead among Utahns not named Summerhays, having posted a 68 on Saturday to get to 9-under for the tournament.
He’s currently tied for 24th place after having received a sponsor’s exemption.
Ponich won the Provo Open in June in his professional golf debut. He flourishes at Ogden Country Club, having won the 2024 Utah State Amateur there last summer.
Former University of Utah golfer Mitchell Schow, the 2020 State Amateur champion, vaulted up the leaderboard with his second consecutive 66 on Saturday. A Monday qualifier, Schow is currently tied for 41st place at 7-under for the tournament.
North Ogden’s Connor Howe is also tied for 41st at 7-under.
Former BYU golfer Peter Kuest, No. 150 on the KFT points list, shot a 67 on Saturday and is tied for 52nd entering Sunday’s final round.
Two golfers with Utah ties — incoming BYU freshman Kihei Akina and former Weber State golfer Hayden Banz — did not make the cut.
The leaders will tee off at 3 p.m. on Sunday to accommodate the broadcast on the Golf Channel.
Daniel Summerhays will tee off at 2:20 p.m. with Trace Crowe of Raleigh, North Carolina.
Bill Armstrong doesn’t care about “winning the summer,” but that hasn’t stopped him from making some important moves this offseason.
Run this story whenever you need one this weekend
Utah Mammoth GM Bill Armstrong has repeatedly made it known that “winning the summer” means nothing to him if it doesn’t translate into success in the winter — but like it or not, he’s had a pretty good summer.
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Here’s a letter grade for each of his offseason moves. Factors in these grades include:
On-ice and off-ice qualities of the players
Contract values
Contract terms
Trade returns
Trades
JJ Peterka
Buffalo Sabres right wing JJ Peterka (77) skates during the first period of an NHL hockey game against the Minnesota Wild Wednesday, Nov. 27, 2024, in Buffalo, N.Y. | Jeffrey T. Barnes
The Mammoth had a lot of middle-six forwards and bottom-four defensemen — too many to keep long-term. As beloved as Josh Doan and Michael Kesselring were in Utah, JJ Peterka’s ceiling is probably much higher than either of theirs, meaning this was an upgrade.
Peterka’s age and position are exactly what the Mammoth needed. They had the third-most overtime losses in the league last year, and Peterka’s offensive game should provide that extra bit of offense to help them avoid those tight situations this season.
If you’d told Arizona Coyotes fans a year ago that Matias Maccelli would be traded for a conditional third-round pick, they’d give the deal an F. But it was clear from the first month of the season that things just weren’t clicking for him in Utah.
The trade was good for both the team and the player. Maccelli gets a fresh start with a good team, and likely some great opportunities with a Mitch Marner-sized vacancy on Auston Matthews’ wing. The Mammoth free up a roster spot and the morale in the locker room is no longer weighed down by a player who didn’t get the playing time he wanted.
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There’s a good chance that Maccelli turns back into the top-tier playmaker that he was two seasons ago. If that’s the case, Leafs fans will be glad to dunk on the Mammoth for giving him up for so cheap — but remember: things weren’t going to work out for him in Utah, so any resurgence will be a result of the change of scenery.
By the way, if Maccelli hits 51 points and the Leafs make the playoffs, the third-round pick that Utah receives will become a second-rounder. That should give Mammoth fans another reason to cheer for him next year.
Stop me if you’ve heard this story before: An offensive defenseman has a number of excellent seasons with a team in the desert. He gets traded to the Vancouver Canucks, where things don’t work out for him. He eventually gets bought out, signs a league-minimum deal with the Florida Panthers, plays well, wins the Stanley Cup and then signs a decent-sized deal elsewhere the following summer.
That was the story for Nate Schmidt this year and Oliver Ekman-Larsson the following year.
Ekman-Larsson had a decent season with the Toronto Maple Leafs after leaving Florida last year, and there’s no reason to believe Schmidt won’t do the same — but it is risky to give a 34-year-old a medium-term, medium-dollar value deal when things didn’t work out just a season ago.
Off the ice, though, Schmidt will be a great addition. Utah needed a big personality who can keep things light, and that’s exactly what he does.
Brandon Tanev poses for his official headshot for the 2024-2025 season on September 18, 2024 at the Kraken Community Iceplex in Seattle, Washington. (Photo by Liv Lyons/NHLI via Getty Images) | Liv Lyons
Speaking of guys who keep the atmosphere light off the ice, Brandon Tanev is another good addition. Like Schmidt, his contract is a little long for someone approaching the end of his career, but the dollar value is low enough that it shouldn’t matter too much.
Tanev replaces Doan as a crash-and-bang, high-energy player who can round out the third or fourth lines. He also adds to the penalty kill group, which is an area that can always use more depth.
As much as everyone hopes Connor Ingram is ready to return soon, Utah needed surety in the crease to give Karel Vejmelka occasional breaks. Vítek Vaněček does exactly that — and if Ingram does come back, there’s always a market for goalies like Vaněček.
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His contract is a year long and it comes at a modest $1.5 million. That’s a tidy bit of business by Armstrong and his staff.
With the number of defensemen Utah has, it’s hard to imagine Scott Perunovich playing much of a role for the Mammoth. That being said, you can never have enough depth.
He’s on a two-way deal, so it’s likely that he mainly plays in the AHL and gets called up if needed. In that case, he’s a great guy to have around.
Contract extensions
JJ Peterka
Grade: B
The details of Peterka’s contract weren’t particularly shocking, which means it was likely a fair deal for both sides. Much can change over the course of his five-year term, but as of right now it seems to be nothing but fair.
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Jack McBain
Grade: C-
The general assumption about McBain was that he’d either get good term or good money. He got both.
He’s had a few decent seasons and his teammates love him, but giving that kind of commitment to a role player almost never works out. Remember when Jim Benning did that for Antoine Roussel, Jay Beagle, Brandon Sutter and Micheal Ferland? Those deals killed his career and they ruined a franchise for years.
It’s not the end of the world to sign one player to that contract, but if it becomes a habit, the Mammoth could quickly dry up their cap space.
You can’t go wrong with a depth player on a league-minimum deal. Michael Carcone had a decent season last year and he’s not from removed from a 21-goal campaign. He has the potential to severely outplay this contract.
Nick DeSimone
Grade: A-
Like Perunovich, Nick DeSimone could be an odd man out with the number of defensemen Utah has. Regardless, his contract is barely above league minimum and he proved last season that he belongs in the NHL.
There’s not much differentiating the situations of Daniil But and Dmitri Simashev, so we’ll group them together here.
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It was a win for Utah to get them signed. Sometimes, Russian players are more comfortable playing at home, so they reject the NHL altogether. The Mammoth dodged that bullet by signing them.
A lot remains to be seen about where they’ll play and what impact they’ll have, but fans have lots of reasons to be optimistic about both guys.
Every draft has steals and busts. As of right now, it seems like the Mammoth fared pretty well at the draft, but time is the only thing that will be able to tell how they actually did.
Other business to take care of
Utah Hockey Club center Logan Cooley (92) takes a shot on the goal while guarded by Calgary Flames defenseman MacKenzie Weegar (52) during an NHL game held at the Delta Center in Salt Lake City on Tuesday, April 1, 2025. | Isaac Hale, Deseret News
Next up is Logan Cooley’s contract extension. Much of the franchise’s future depends on this deal. Once it’s done, management will have the clarity they need to start planning how they’ll allot the remainder of the budget.
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The club locked Dylan Guenther up after just 78 games’ worth of NHL experience, and at this point it looks like a steal for the team. As much as they’d love to get Cooley signed at a similar number, it’s probably not going to happen.
He became eligible to sign on July 1. Guenther signed his deal during training camp in September, so there’s no need for fans to worry right now.
FAQs about a new Utah law requiring a hunting or fishing license to access certain Wildlife Management Areas, many of which are popular with birders, mountain bikers, trail runners and photographers.
FAQs about a new Utah law requiring a hunting or fishing license to access certain Wildlife Management Areas, many of which are popular with birders, mountain bikers, trail runners and photographers.
Utah’s 8 federally recognized tribes, a variety of state agencies and other stakeholders meet up to learn and discuss issues.
The sound of drums echoed throughout the ballroom as the members of the drum circle sang a song. The music continued as the American flag, the Utah state flag and flags representing each of Utah’s federally recognized Native American tribes were carried in for the start of Utah’s annual Native American Summit on Friday.
The summit was held at Utah Valley University, which has hosted it for the last 18 years. The event brings together Utah’s eight federally recognized tribes, a variety of state agencies and other stakeholders.
Utah’s eight tribes are the Navajo Nation, the San Juan Southern Paiute Tribe, the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah, the Confederated Tribes of the Goshute Reservation, the Skull Valley Band of Goshute, the Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation, the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe and the Northwestern Band of Shoshone Nation.
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The event was hosted by the Utah Division of Indian Affairs, which works on “bettering the relationship between tribal governments and the state government,” according to division director Dustin Jansen.
Throughout the day the event included speakers and breakout sessions, as well as a special youth track just for teenagers and young adults. One of the event’s speakers was Utah Lt. Gov. Deidre Henderson.
Lt. Gov. Deidre Henderson speaks during the Indigenous Youth Leadership Program Changemaker Awards ceremony during the opening session of the youth track of the 2025 Utah Native American Summit at Utah Valley University in Orem on Friday, Aug. 1, 2025. | Rio Giancarlo, Deseret News
“We have a lot of challenges in the state,” Henderson said. “You have a lot of challenges in your communities, and I want you to know, on behalf of the state of Utah, that we value you. We love you as Utahns. We value you and we love you as members of your sovereign tribes.”
Utah’s Native American Summit helps bring people together
James Toledo, the deputy director of the Utah Division of Indian Affairs, shared why holding this summit annually matters.
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“It matters to to convene, you know, Native people. We are community oriented, and coming together to share ideas, I think, is great. And it’s a way to problem solve,” he said.
The summit is open to the public and all Utahns: both Native and non-Native people are invited to come and participate.
“It also serves the purpose of educating our non-Native communities to say, Hey, this is who we are. We welcome allies,” Toledo said.
“This isn’t just a Native community event, it’s an event for everyone to come that might possibly just want to learn more, or may have access to resources or work in an area that could benefit tribal governments or just tribal communities, whether they be on reservations or in the urban areas,” Jansen said.
Elvira Murphy leads the Cultural Creation Activity breakout session where attendees learn how to make “eye of god” Christmas ornaments during the 2025 Utah Native American Summit at Utah Valley University in Orem on Friday, Aug. 1, 2025. | Rio Giancarlo, Deseret News
He continued: “The hope is, that everyone that comes here just learns a little bit more about each other, about the opportunities and resources available, so that things can run a lot smoother.”
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The first day of the summit, Thursday, was not open to the public and was full of meetings between state agencies and tribal leaders. Utah Gov. Spencer Cox was also in attendance on Thursday.
Bridging between the state government and Utah’s Native American tribes
One thing that was repeatedly mentioned at the summit was building the relationship between the state government and the different tribal governments around the state.
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As part of her duties as lieutenant governor, Henderson has been assigned to oversee Indian Affairs in the state.
“A lot of people don’t realize that Native American tribes are their own sovereign governments, and they need to be respected as such,” Henderson said.
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“But it’s complicated because they’re also part of our state,” she continued. “They’re Utahns, you know, they they have a lot of different hats they wear, so to speak, and we have to respect their sovereignty while also recognizing that we have an obligation to them as Utahns.”
Jansen said that there have been big challenges when bringing together tribal governments with state agencies, but once they get together, they are able to find common goals and solutions to problems. He added that both Cox and Henderson have been focused on addressing tribal issues since taking office in 2020.
The goal is “that policy can be developed in a way that’s advantageous for for both parties. It helps benefit the state, but then at the same time it benefits the tribal nations‚” Jansen said. That is done by listening to each other’s ideas and concerns.
Keynote speaker James Junes delivers his speech during the 2025 Utah Native American Summit at Utah Valley University in Orem on Friday, Aug. 1, 2025. | Rio Giancarlo, Deseret News
A focus on youth leadership
For the past couple years, the summit has had a youth track for teenagers and young adults, but this year, the track was renamed to the “Indigenous Youth Leadership Program.”
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“That was intentional, because we’re wanting to focus on education of the next generation,” Toledo said.
“It’s just providing them with some tools and resources that will help them achieve their personal goals. And then we’ve also interwoven cultural elements emphasizing how culture can help these young people be resilient as they as they enter their early adulthood,” he added.
Henderson was also a part of the youth program and presented the Youth Changemaker awards, which recognized three young people for the work they are doing in their communities.
“The events that involve young people, I think, are some of the most impactful on me, just because we place so much burden and hope on the shoulders of our young people, and it’s really fun to see them stretch and learn and grow and blossom. And I learn a lot from them,” Henderson said.
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Jansen added that one of the goals of the youth leadership program is to help young people be a part of cultural preservation and language preservation, as well as work to help solve some of the issues in their communities.
Supplies lay on a table during the Cultural Creation Activity breakout session during the 2025 Utah Native American Summit at Utah Valley University in Orem on Friday, Aug. 1, 2025. | Rio Giancarlo, Deseret News
“We’re trying to to share that we each have a part in this, and you can be young and still have a part in this, and have not just a part, but be part of the solution,” he said.
Focusing on issues relevant to all of Utah’s tribes
The summit’s breakout sessions featured presentations from a variety of state agencies and other stakeholders covering a variety of issues. Jansen shared that they tried to find issues and topics that were relevant for all of Utah’s tribal governments.
Different topics covered by these breakout sessions were government to government relationships and communication, economic development, health, and mental health education, as well cultural and language preservation.
There were also presentations from the Utah Division of Arts and Museums about how the new Museum of Utah has worked to include and share indigenous voices from all of Utah’s tribes in the museum.
Attendees listen to opening remarks during the 2025 Utah Native American Summit at Utah Valley University in Orem on Friday, Aug. 1, 2025. | Rio Giancarlo, Deseret News
Utah State has cycled through university presidents, athletic directors and coaches in recent years. Will Mendenhall be the exception?
Utah State athletics is in desperate need of stability. Some might call it loyalty. Particularly its football and men’s basketball programs.
Since 2020, here’s every university president, athletic director and coach (football and men’s basketball) who has come and gone from Logan:
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That list doesn’t include any of the interim presidents, ADs or coaches who’ve held down the fort when people have left either.
Include those in, and over the last five years Utah State has had at least 15 people fill the four most important jobs on campus, as it relates to college athletics.
Making matters even more difficult, during that same period the football program has been under investigation from the U.S. Department of Justice, NIL and the NCAA transfer portal became a thing in full force — both Utah State football and men’s basketball have been hit especially hard by transfer portal defections — and now revenue sharing has arrived, which means more money is needed for USU athletics than ever before.
“Total underestimation on our part. This is a magical place. And the valley, the people and the values.”
Utah State coach Bronco Mendenhall on the Cache Valley
Oh, and Utah State will become a member of the Pac-12 Conference next summer and is currently embroiled in litigation alongside the other departing Mountain West schools in an attempt to lower and/or do away with significant fees associated with leaving the MW.
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To say the Aggies need some stability is probably an understatement and anyone even slightly connected with Aggie sports knows it. So of course, Bronco Mendenhall — Utah State’s new head football coach — is well aware.
“I think more than anything at Utah State we’re craving stability,” Mendenhall said in an interview with KVNU at Mountain West media days last month. “I think we’re craving consistency and direction and leadership that can be connected with and relied on over time.”
That Mendenhall sounded all-in at Utah State was interesting, given the departures of the two women who hired him, Cantwell and Sabau. Plus the fact that he was only at New Mexico for a single season and prior to that he had abruptly retired from coaching altogether after a successful run at Virginia.
But on Tuesday at Utah State’s annual football media day in Logan, Mendenhall doubled down, noting that even without established permanent leadership right now, he feels that Utah State is more committed to athletics than ever. The unsaid part being that he is too.
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He singled out the hire of interim AD Sandy Barbour and his interactions with interim president Alan L. Smith as evidence and sounded as committed to Utah State as ever.
“Her (Barbour’s) interim hire, reflected to me the continuation of the direction we’re already going,” Mendenhall said. “And so I’m really excited. The commitment to the Pac-12, interim AD hire, the trajectory, the momentum to keep all that going. I haven’t seen one sign yet that reflects anything other than we might be more committed now than even when I was hired.
“And so while the president has changed and the athletic director has changed, what I’ve seen, the decisions made in the meantime, have reflected doubling down on the direction rather than stepping away from the direction.”
Mendenhall also praised the community of Logan as a whole, his face genuinely lighting up when he talked about a Cache Valley atmosphere that he had long admired from afar.
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“I think Holly and I, we knew we would like it here after being here before, being raised in the state (of Utah), and playing games here,” he said. “I’ve been called lots of names here, for sure, as a former coach of a different place, but the community itself, we always thought, how come we’re not there? That would be a great place.
“Total underestimation on our part. This is a magical place. And the valley, the people and the values.”
Mendenhall is a realist and he didn’t shy away from the fact that he needs to win in order to remain the football coach at Utah State. Maybe not in Year 1 — Utah State is predicted to win fewer than five games this season, per ESPN’s FPI — but before too long.
“Winning absolutely matters,” he said. “Championships are fun and are expected.”
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He later added that winning is what will keep him in Logan, in addition to the development of his players, on and off the field.
“My job is to help that be enough for wins to happen too, and that’s how I get to stay in Logan,” he said. “And if I don’t, I don’t.”
In modern college football there is little guarantee of anything, really. Not with the sports landscape changing at a pace never before seen. At Utah State that has included a coach being around one year to the next. But with Mendenhall, it really does feel as though Utah State has landed upon a football coach who can be in Logan for a long time, given his track record for building winning programs and his own statements about Utah State and Cache Valley.
And maybe, just maybe, if everything goes right, Mendenhall will be the one to usher in a golden age for Aggie football.
Utah State players take a knee to listen to USU head coach Bronco Mendenhall during spring football practice at Maverik Stadium in Logan, Utah. | Utah State Athletics