Utah Valley stuns Oregon 6-5 in Eugene Regional at PK Park

Oregon baseball drops a heartbreaking 6-5 loss to Utah Valley and is now forced to win four straight in order to move on.

This is why baseball is the greatest sport.

Sometimes it can be exhilarating, and then at times it can absolutely break your heart.

Oregon baseball suffered that heartbreak Friday night at PK Park as the Ducks dropped their opening game in the Eugene Regional of the NCAA tournament 6-5 to Utah Valley.

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So much went down in this game it could have been an entire season’s worth. But the biggest play of the contest came in the bottom of the eighth inning with Oregon doing it best to erase a 6-3 deficit. The Ducks scored one on Drew Smith’s second home run of the game. They had eventually put runners on the corners with no outs when Chase Meggers hit a fly ball to left.

Anson Aroz, who homered himself earlier in the contest, tagged up to score, but the Utah Valley catcher, Mason Strong, was seemingly blocking the plate and Aroz ploughed into him. Watching the play live, it looked as if Strong didn’t give Aroz a path to the plate in order to score. Knowing it was a crucial play, the Wolverines challenged, thinking Aroz was malicious in his intent to score.

After a nearly 10-minute review, the umpires decided the play was malicious and Aroz was out. Not only was he out, but he is disqualified from playing Saturday’s elimination game against Cal Poly. It was a double whammy that the Ducks just couldn’t recover from. They scored one in the ninth, but Smith grounded out to end the game.

Lost in all the controversy and action late in the game was the effort from Oregon starting pitcher Jason Reitz. The lanky 6-foot-11 hurler went six innings, allowed five earned runs, but struck out 14 Wolverines. The five earned runs are misleading as the Oregon defense didn’t exactly play its best. Aroz lost a fly ball in the outfield and then let another ball get by him for a two-base error.

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Utah Valley scored four big runs in third to grab a 4-0 lead. But the Ducks quickly bounced back on a Smith two-run homer and Aroz followed that up with a 426-foot bomb off of his bat. It was 4-3 until the seventh when the Utah Valley scored two insurance runs off of reliever Santiago Garcia.

Oregon will try to forget what just happened and focus on beating Cal Poly, who lost to Arizona 3-2 earlier in the day. First pitch is scheduled for 12 pm on Saturday.

This article originally appeared on Ducks Wire: Oregon baseball faces uphill climb in Eugene Regional after 6-5 loss

Source: Utah News

Utah Valley stuns top-seeded Oregon in opening round of Eugene Regional

The host Oregon Ducks received a mostly strong performance from pitcher Jason Reitz, save for two innings that ultimately cost the Ducks.

EUGENE – The Oregon Ducks baseball team’s run in the NCAA tournament got off to a poor start Friday night at PK Park.

No. 4 seed Utah Valley beat the top-seeded Ducks 6-5 in the first round of the Eugene Regional, sending Oregon to an elimination game against Cal Poly at noon Saturday.

The Wolverines (33-27) play No. 2-seed Arizona (40-18) at 6 p.m. Saturday. The Wildcats won 3-2 over No. 3-seed Cal Poly (41-18) in Friday’s early game.

Oregon (42-15) watched starter Jason Reitz put together a mostly magnificent performance outside of two innings.

The 6-foot-11 junior struck out 14 in six innings but allowed four earned runs in the third and put two runners on base in the seventh. Both scored after Reitz was removed from the game.

Reitz’s 14 strikeouts are tied for fourth at Oregon in the modern era and are the most by a Ducks pitcher in postseason history.

UO right fielder Drew Smith hit two home runs and drove in three runs, but left the tying run on base in the ninth when he recorded the game’s final out on a grounder to short.

Oregon played from behind all night. Utah Valley’s first assault came in the third, when the Wolverines scored four runs. Jimmy De Anda got things started with a double to left that scored Brody Block. CJ Colyer also had a run-scoring single, followed by a two-run single by Mason Strong.

Reitz got out of the inning with another strikeout.

The Ducks responded with three runs in the bottom of hte inning, two coming a two-run homer by Smith. Aroz also homered, cutting the UVU lead to 4-3.

Reitz dominated the next three innings, striking out seven batters to keep the score at 4-3. But trouble popped up in the seventh, when Reitz put the first two batters on base with a walk and a hit batter.

A pick off throw by reliever Santiago Garcia sailed into the outfield, allowing the runners to advance. Two hitters later, De Anda delivered a two-run single for a 6-3 Wolverines lead.

The Ducks trimmed the deficit to 6-4 in the eighth on a homer by Smith. Then came the fireworks.

Aroz walked, then moved to third on a single by Molony. Chase Meggers followed, teasing with a couple of long balls that drifted just foul. He then lofted a sacrifice fly that initially plated Aroz, pulling the Ducks to within one.

But Utah Valley coach Nate Rasmussen asked the umpires to review the call, saying that Aroz caused “malicious contact” in bowling over UVU catcher Mason Strong at the plate. After a review conducted at the NCAA’s replay command center in Pittsburgh, the game officials announced that Aroz was out and ejected him.

Aroz is automatically suspended for Saturday’s game against Cal Poly.

The Ducks mildly threatened in the ninth. Carter Garate led off with a walk, and eventually scored on a sacrifice fly by Walsh. But closer Cooper Littledike slammed the door, getting Smith to ground out and seal the upset win.

Source: Utah News

Why water conservation remains a ‘top priority’ in Utah after Cox’s drought order expires

Gov. Spencer Cox’s emergency drought declaration has now expired, but state water managers say conservation should “remain a top priority” as summer approaches.

Gov. Spencer Cox’s emergency drought declaration has now expired, but state water managers say conservation should “remain a top priority” as the state’s typically driest season approaches.

“Rising temperatures and increased demand will be a cause for concern this summer. Our reservoirs will get us through this year, but another year like this will stress our water supply,” Candice Hasenyager, director at the Utah Division of Water Resources, said in a state water update on Thursday.

Cox declared a state of emergency for 17 of Utah’s 29 counties late last month, citing extreme and severe drought conditions already in place across large swaths of central and southern Utah. Below-average snowpack levels in those regions were also a factor in the emergency.

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The governor ordered the Utah Drought Response Committee to review “hardships and other circumstances” caused by drought in the affected counties, recommend actions to address those challenges, and create a way for “interagency coordination” tied to those actions. It also recommended that water supplies and irrigation companies across southern and central Utah “encourage efficient landscape watering,” among other things.

Under state law, a governor’s emergency declaration may only last 30 days unless extended by the Utah Legislature. The legislative body had no special session this month, meaning it declined to extend the order.

Although Utah’s reservoir system remains at 87% of capacity, drought continues to be a challenge heading into summer.

About 70% of Utah remains in drought, including 46% of the state that is either in severe or extreme drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor’s final report before meteorological summer begins. Most areas not in drought are still considered “abnormally dry,” leaving only a section of the Wasatch Backcountry out of any type of drought category for now.

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While storms and cooler temperatures could return to the state next week following a heat wave this weekend, long-range forecasting models favor above-normal temperatures throughout most of the summer.

Those models are also uncertain about precipitation, but summer is still the state’s driest season on average. The state averaged 2.65 inches of statewide precipitation during meteorological summer between 1991 and 2020 — more than 0.8 inches below any other season, according to federal climate data.

Monsoonal moisture is beneficial for improving wildfire conditions and soil moisture levels, as well as lowering evaporation rates across the state’s reservoirs. Yet, it does very little to pad the state’s water supply, which is generally shaped by snowpack collection that melts in the spring.

State water managers are optimistic about water availability this year, regardless of how this summer plays out, but they caution there’s no way of knowing if next winter’s snowpack will help recharge the system. That’s why they’re still calling on residents to cut back on watering as much as possible this summer.

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Despite its expiration, Hasenyager said she believes Cox’s drought declaration still sent a message that “water conservation is essential for Utah’s future.” She encourages residents to find ways to reduce water consumption this summer, especially since water usage typically increases during the warmer months.

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“Let’s be mindful of how we use water,” she added. “Most of our water use happens outdoors — start there.”

The state also opened up applications last week for an Emergency Disaster Relief Loan program for farmers and ranchers before the drought order expired.

Source: Utah News

How to watch Oregon Ducks vs Utah Valley today: Time, TV channel for Eugene Regional

It’s Oregon Ducks vs. Utah Valley in the Eugene Regional. Here’s how to watch, including time, channel, TV schedule and streaming info.

After taking home the regular season Big Ten Conference Championship, Mark Wazikowski and the Oregon Ducks are looking to make a splash in the postseason, starting on Friday afternoon. Named one of the regional sites for the NCAA Tournament, the 12th-seed Ducks open up with a game against Utah Valley at PK Park.

Arizona and Cal Poly are also in the Eugene Regional and will play on Friday as well. The winners of the two games will play each other on Saturday night, while the losers of the first game meet early on Saturday afternoon. Game times on Sunday are 3 p.m. for the loser-out game and 7 p.m. for the championship game. If an if-necessary game is needed, it will be played on Monday, with a time to be determined after Sunday’s action.

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This will be the fourth time in the last 14 years that Oregon has hosted a regional, and if they advance, they could be in a great spot to host a super regional for the third time in 14 years.

Here’s everything you need to know about tuning in for the game.

Watch Oregon Ducks vs. Utah Valley on ESPN+ (Free Trial)

Here’s how to watch the Oregon Ducks vs. the Utah Valley Wolverines game today, including time, TV schedule and streaming information:

What channel is the Oregon Ducks vs. Utah Valley on today?

TV Channel: ESPNU/ESPN+

Livestream: ESPN+ (free trial)

The Oregon Ducks vs. Utah Valley game will be broadcast on ESPNU and via the streaming service ESPN+. The game will be called by Roxy Bernstein and Wes Clements at PK Park in Eugene, Oregon.

Oregon Ducks vs. Utah Valley time today

  • Date: Friday, May 30, 2025

  • Start time: 6:00 p.m. PT

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This article originally appeared on Ducks Wire: Watch Oregon Ducks vs Utah Valley game today: TV channel, time

Source: Utah News

Whataburger, a Utah-based soda shop and other chains are coming to the Rock Hill area

Whataburger, Swig Drinks, PJ’s Coffee and the first SC location of Hangry Joe’s Chicken are opening soon in Tock Hill and Fort Mill in York County.



ROCK HILL — A popular fast-food burger chain announced plans for its first location in York County.

Whataburger is planning to open in Rock Hill by the spring of 2026, a spokesperson confirmed this week.

The Texas-based restaurant is planned for Cross Pointe Drive, off Dave Lyle Boulevard, at the former site of an O’Charley’s restaurant.

Right now, Whataburger has 11 locations in South Carolina, with the closest being in Columbia and Spartanburg. The chain also expects to debut two new restaurants in the Charlotte area soon.

Swig Drinks soda shop

A soda shop made famous on social media is now open in neighboring Lancaster County, and the company announced plans to expand to Rock Hill this summer.

Swig Drinks, a drive-thru fountain soda chain based in Salt Lake City, Utah, recently opened on Worldreach Drive near the Charlotte Highway in Indian Land. Crowned as the “Home of the Original Dirty Soda,” Swig is known for mixing flavors, fruits and creams to make fountain drink concoctions.

After debuting to long lines, Swig is eyeing a second location in Rock Hill.

The Warren Norman Company, a commercial real estate developer, announced Swig Drinks is the first store to sign on at the Sharonwood Shopping Center development located at the corner of Celanese and India Hook Roads in Rock Hill.

Plans call for a 700-square-foot drive-thru with construction set to start this summer.

PJ’s Coffee








PJ's Coffee

PJ’s Coffee of New Orleans will open its drive-thru location in the Regent Towne Center, at the corner of U.S. 21 Bypass and Regent Parkway in the Fort Mill area, in the summer of 2025.  



Adding to the variety of local places to grab a cup of java, the drive-thru chain PJ’s Coffee of New Orleans is expected to open in the summer at 3080 U.S. 21, in the Regent Towne Center anchored by Food Lion, in Fort Mill.

The company, named for founder Phyllis Jordan in 1978, provides a taste of the Bayou with beignets on the pastry menu. The coffee itself takes arabica beans and roasts them in a manner that produces a less-acidic taste than other coffees. 

The Fort Mill location will be the fifth PJ’s in the Palmetto state. 

Hangry Joe’s Hot Chicken & Wings

The fast food palette in Rock Hill could get spicier soon. Just north of Dave Lyle Boulevard, east of Interstate 77, Hangry Joe’s Hot Chicken & Wings is opening its new location at 636 Crown Pointe Lane, near Target.

The chicken is served at five levels of spiciness. And the hottest level requires customers to sign a waiver. 

There are a few Charlotte locations, but the Rock Hill location will be Hangry Joe’s debut in South Carolina. No opening date is available.



Source: Utah News

Utah commit, 3-star TE reopens recruitment

Utah football commit Colby Simpson has reopened his recruitment, he announced on X this week. The 6-foot-5, 222-pound tight end from Oaks Christian High School …

Utah football commit Colby Simpson has reopened his recruitment, he announced on X this week.

The 6-foot-5, 222-pound tight end from Oaks Christian High School (California) was the Utes’ first commit in their 2026 recruiting class after verbally committing in March. Simpson has since lined up visits with Tulane (June 12) and Purdue (June 20).

Simpson is ranked by 247Sports Composite as a three-star and the No. 58 tight end recruit in the 2026 class. He holds 24 scholarship offers, according to 247Sports, including 12 from power conference teams.

Simpson previously committed to the Utes following a visit to watch spring practice.

Utah’s 2026 recruiting class is down to one commit: Preston Pitts, a three-star edge rusher from Clear Falls High School (Texas). With a big recruiting weekend on deck, though, Kyle Whittingham and his staff will have ample opportunities to make progress with a few highly-touted high school prospects.

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Source: Utah News

Supreme Court backs Utah oil railroad expansion and scales back a key environmental law

The Supreme Court has backed a multibillion-dollar oil railroad expansion in Utah in a ruling that scales back a key environmental law.

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court backed a multibillion-dollar oil railroad expansion in Utah Thursday in a ruling that scales back a key environmental law for projects around the country.

The 8-0 decision comes after an appeal to the high court from backers of the project, which is aimed at quadrupling oil production in the remote area of sandstone and sagebrush.

Environmental groups said the decision would have sweeping impacts on National Environmental Policy Act reviews. The Trump administration has already said it’s speeding up that process after the president vowed to boost U.S. oil and gas development.

The case centers on the Uinta Basin Railway, a proposed 88-mile (142-kilometer) expansion that would connect oil and gas producers to the broader rail network and allow them to access larger markets. Supporters have argued that streamlining environmental reviews would speed up development.

The justices reversed a lower court decision and restored a critical approval from federal regulators on the Surface Transportation Board. The project could still face additional legal and regulatory hurdles.

Environmental groups and a Colorado county had argued that regulators must consider a broad range of potential impacts when they consider new development, such as increased wildfire risk, the effect of additional crude oil production from the area and increased refining in Gulf states.

The justices, though, found that regulators were right to consider the direct effects of the project, rather than the wider upstream and downstream impact. Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote that courts should defer to regulators on “where to draw the line” on what factors to take into account. Four other conservative justices joined his opinion.

“Simply stated, NEPA is a procedural cross-check, not a substantive roadblock,” he wrote of the policy act reviews. “The goal of the law is to inform agency decision making, not to paralyze it.”

The court’s conservative majority court has taken steps to curtail the power of federal regulators in other cases, including striking down the decades-old Chevron doctrine that made it easier for the federal government to set a wide range of regulations.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor agreed with the outcome, but with a narrower legal reasoning. In a decision joined by her two liberal colleagues, she said the court could have simply cleared the way for the railway approval by finding the board didn’t need to take into account any harm caused by the oil that might eventually be carried on the railway.

Justice Neil Gorsuch did not participate in the case after facing calls to step aside over ties to Philip Anschutz, a Colorado billionaire whose ownership of oil wells in the area means he could benefit if the project goes through. Gorsuch, as a lawyer in private practice, had represented Anschutz.

The ruling comes after President Donald Trump’s vow to boost U.S. oil and gas drilling and move away from former President Joe Biden’s focus on climate change. The administration announced last month it’s speeding up environmental reviews of projects required under the same law at the center of the Utah case, compressing a process that typically takes a year or more into just weeks.

“The court’s decision gives agencies a green light to ignore the reasonably foreseeable consequences of their decisions and avoid confronting them,” said Sambhav Sankar, senior vice president of programs at Earthjustice.

Wendy Park, a senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity, said opponents would continue to fight the Utah project. “This disastrous decision to undermine our nation’s bedrock environmental law means our air and water will be more polluted, the climate and extinction crises will intensify, and people will be less healthy,” she said.

The project’s public partner applauded the ruling. “It represents a turning point for rural Utah — bringing safer, sustainable, more efficient transportation options, and opening new doors for investment and economic stability,” said Keith Heaton, director of the Seven County Infrastructure Coalition.

___

Associated Press writer Hannah Schoenbaum in Salt Lake City contributed to this story.

Source: Utah News

Supreme Court narrows scope of environmental reviews in Utah railroad case

The Supreme Court has narrowed the scope of environmental review under one of the nation’s bedrock environmental laws. In an 8-0 ruling Thursday, the high court determined reviews conducted under …

The Supreme Court has narrowed the scope of environmental review under one of the nation’s bedrock environmental laws. In an 8-0 ruling Thursday, the high court determined reviews conducted under …

Source: Utah News

Can the 2034 Winter Games help preserve Utah’s quality of life? Here’s what a former governor says

Here’s what the Olympics did for Utah in 2002, and what could happen when the state hosts another Winter Games in 2034.

Former Utah Gov. Mike Leavitt has a long list of ways the 2002 Winter Games moved Utah forward, including the rapid rebuilding of I-15, and wants to see the same from the next Olympics.

At an Envision Utah breakfast Wednesday in the University of Utah’s Rice-Eccles Stadium tower, Leavitt recalled a moment from the finale of the 2002 Closing Ceremonies held there that made it clear the efforts were appreciated.

“The fireworks are going. The music is playing. There’s smoke in the air and it was just fabulous,” he said, describing how a man in front of him suddenly started chanting, “Utah, Utah, Utah,” before turning around and recognizing the governor.

“He was embarrassed,” Leavitt said, but then explained he no longer feared the impact of the Olympics. “He said, ‘Governor, I was against this. And I was wrong.’ That’s really worth remembering. There was a lot of opposition on the same basis. But they were wrong.”

Hosting the 2034 Olympics and the Paralympics that follow for athletes with disabilities, and possibly more in the future, provides a way for Utahns to maintain their quality of life as the state grows, he said.

“We won’t have the quality of life we want without the Games. We can have it using the Games as a catalyst to preserve it,” said Leavitt, who was elected governor three times before serving in former President George W. Bush’s administration.

Former Gov. Mike Leavitt holds a photo of Sarah Hughes, who won the women’s figure skating gold medal at the 2002 Winter Olympics, while discussing the 2034 Olympic and Paralympic Games at Spring Breakfast with Envision Utah at the Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, May 28, 2025. | Kristin Murphy, Deseret News

In 2002, that meant creating an “internal brand” for a state then associated overseas with John Wayne but little else, said Leavitt, now president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints’ Tabernacle Choir at Temple Square.

The branding intended to put Utah on the map was part of a larger agenda, to make the state both a winter sports and a technology capital. Using the deadline of the Olympics, Leavitt said the state was able to make major transportation and other improvements.

Hosting the 2034 Winter Games offers a chance to do even more, organizing committee CEO Brad Wilson, a former Utah House speaker, assured the audience of community and business leaders.

“I would argue that the 2034 Games, if we do this right, may be the biggest opportunity in Utah’s history,” Wilson declared. “This time we have more runway and we have the ability to engage the entire state.”

The International Olympic Committee voted to give Utah a second Winter Games last year under a new bidding process. That gives organizers, who already have the necessary venues in place, two years more than they had to get ready for 2002.

Jason Brown, Envision Utah interim CEO, gives welcome remarks at Spring Breakfast with Envision Utah at the Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, May 28, 2025. | Kristin Murphy, Deseret News

Wilson said unlike many prior Olympic hosts that have abandoned costly competition venues, the Utah Olympic Legacy Foundation has been a “much better steward” of the taxpayer dollars initially invested in the sliding track, ski jumps and speedskating oval.

While those and other Olympic venues will need to be “spruced up” before 2034, he said the Games can serve as a motivator to get Utahns to “do the right thing” when it comes to issues such as saving the Great Salt Lake and improving air quality.

“There are some risks we need to lean into and be willing to take,” Wilson said, adding that Utahns should be able to look back at the lead-up to 2034 and say the community involvement “paid off big time.”

Last week, organizers began a “listening tour” to find out what that involvement should look like. The private meetings, which started in Ogden, are expected to eventually be held throughout the state.

Wilson said the job of the organizing committee is “executing the Games and doing it flawlessly,” something that will require 25,000 volunteers. They’re set to be selected in 2033, he said, with preference given to those who’ve shown “a commitment to making our community better.”

Olympic and Paralympic Cauldron Plaza is pictured at the University of Utah Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, May 28, 2025. | Kristin Murphy, Deseret News

Envision Utah interim CEO Jason Brown said the nonprofit organization focused on planning for the state’s growth can play a role in a second “era of transformation,” helping to determine what progress can be made on priorities like housing, transportation, water and education.

Growing up, he said having an Olympics in Utah made him feel like he lived in “the coolest place in the world.”

When the Olympics return in 2034, “it’s going to be a great time. I’m really excited for the Games themselves,” Brown said. “But what I really hope we don’t miss is this opportunity, this excuse, this chance and reason to make Utah everything that we really hope that Utah can be.”

Source: Utah News