Utah Hockey Club may have accidentally leaked new name

Utah Hockey Club center Nick Schmaltz celebrates a goal with center Clayton Keller against the Nashville Predators. / Steve Roberts-Imagn Images The NHL’s newest expansion team, the Utah Hockey Club, …

The NHL‘s newest expansion team, the Utah Hockey Club, is expected to officially debut a new name before the start of the 2025-26 season However, fans may have got an early glimpse at what the permanent name could be.

On Wednesday, eagle-eyed fans noticed that the team’s official YouTube page changed its URL and handle from “@UtahHockeyClub” to “@UtahMammoth.”

Mammoth was among the finalists to become the expansion franchise’s new team names.

The page was deactivated shortly after it was spotted, but everything on the internet lives on forever and screenshots of leaked “@UtahMammoth” handle quickly went viral on social media.

Lindsay Aerts of KTVX in Salt Lake City spoke to Smith Entertainment Group executive Mike Maughan about the YouTube channel and he provided a vague response.

Smith Entertainment Group owns the Utah Hockey Club.

“Progress continues on exploring all three of the name options that were chosen as finalists by our fans,” Maughan said. “We’re fully on track to announce a permanent name and identity ahead of the 25-26 NHL season and look forward to sharing that with our fans when we do.”

What does that mean exactly? We’ll have to wait and see, but for now, the team is just “fully on track to announce a permanent name and identity” ahead of next season.”

Along with the Mammoth and the Utah Hockey Club, the Utah Outlaws is being considered.

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Source: Utah News

Did you feel it? Earthquake rattles parts of Utah early Thursday morning

A small earthquake rattled parts of Utah Thursday morning. Just after midnight, the University of Utah seismograph stations reported a 3.9 magnitude earthquake. The quake occurred about 5 kilometers …

A small earthquake rattled parts of Utah Thursday morning. Just after midnight, the University of Utah seismograph stations reported a 3.9 magnitude earthquake.

The quake occurred about 5 kilometers west of Independence but could be felt across the Utah and Salt Lake Valleys, including Springville, Provo, Orem, and parts of Salt Lake City.

Read more at fox13now.com.

Related: This group is tasked with preparing Utah for the ‘Big One.’ Utah leaders voted to get rid of it.

Source: Utah News

3.9 magnitude earthquake shakes Utah; no damage or injuries reported

A 3.9 magnitude earthquake shook a portion of Utah early Thursday morning, according to the United States Geological Survey.

Source: Utah News

How Utah HC Can Turn Its Recent YouTube Leak Into A Win

The odds that Utah Mammoth will be the official name of Utah Hockey Club certainly seems to be as close to official as it can get.

Oct 30, 2024; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Utah Hockey Club center Clayton Keller (9) scores a goal against the Calgary Flames during the third period at Delta Center. Mandatory Credit: Rob Gray-Imagn Images

Oct 30, 2024; Salt Lake City, Utah, USA; Utah Hockey Club center Clayton Keller (9) scores a goal against the Calgary Flames during the third period at Delta Center. Mandatory Credit: Rob Gray-Imagn Images

The odds that Utah Mammoth will be the official name of Utah Hockey Club certainly seems to be as close to official as it can get.

The speculation of Utah’s name change certainly has blown up after Utah Hockey Club’s official youtube channel underwent some… interesting changes to say the least.

Source: Utah News

Utah owners announce 1st phase of renovations for Delta Center

Will turn basketball arena into dual-sport facility over next 3 years; progressing on permanent brand identity …

The NHL will look different in Utah next season.

Smith Entertainment Group announced Wednesday it has begun the first phase of renovations of Delta Center in Salt Lake City, pushing technology further than ever before to turn an arena built for basketball into a dual-sport facility. It is also progressing on the permanent brand identity for the Utah Hockey Club.

When the puck drops for 2025-26, each seat in the lower bowl will have a great view for hockey, and a new logo will be at center ice.

“Just in Year 1, we’re going to see a great improvement in the lower-bowl capacity for hockey,” said Jim Olson, president of the NBA’s Utah Jazz, who is leading facilities projects for SEG.

Delta Center was built in 1991 as the home of the Jazz and underwent a significant renovation in 2017. The NHL established a new franchise in Utah on April 18, 2024. SEG sprinted to ready the arena for hockey for 2024-25, doing what it could in about six months, including adding NHL locker rooms.

But the main problem remained. Only 11,131 seats had a full view of the ice. About 5,000 seats had a view of one goal, most of them in the upper bowl.

“I think it’s the best basketball venue in the NBA,” Olson said. “It was built for basketball with sightlines that created just an incredible fan experience for basketball. And when you come and plop the size of an ice sheet in that venue with those sightlines, the geometry just doesn’t work.”

SEG set out to retain the experience for basketball while creating one for hockey. The renovation work must be done in the offseason for the NHL and NBA. Olson said SEG is hopeful and optimistic the full renovation will be completed over the next three summers.

“We’ve got all the plans and everything ready to go for the work this summer, and we’re still working on the plans, the design and everything, for the next two summers,” Olson said. “If the scope changes, that could change the timeline a little bit. A few other factors could come into play that could change the timeline.”

This offseason, SEG will raise the floor two feet, lengthen the arena bowl by about 12 feet at each end and install a revolutionary retractable seating system that will accommodate a nearly 12-foot variance in elevation between the rink and court endlines. The lower bowl will have 1,000 new seats for hockey, and 400 limited-view seats will become full-view.

“We are replacing the retractable seating in both the end zones and sidelines,” Larry Lippold of SCI Architects said. “We’re really maintaining the basketball sightlines, maintaining the basketball bowl, so you’re really not going to feel a change in the basketball experience. But we will have a premium experience for hockey as well, so [it’s] really packing in the fans close to the action.”

This is the key:

“We are going with a much steeper rake for hockey in the end zones behind the net,” Lippold said. “It’s similar technology that’s been used in other buildings, but what they’re using now is a triple scissor lift, so the change in rake is greater than any other building to switch over between basketball and hockey, so [it’s] using existing technology but really, really pushing it.”

Source: Utah News

Did Utah Hockey Club leak the new team name?

The Utah Hockey Club seems to have leaked its new team name. As first pointed out publicly by @dusty_bxnes on X, the team’s official YouTube channel has changed its handle to “ @UtahMammoth ” — though …

The Utah Hockey Club seems to have leaked its new team name.

As first pointed out publicly by @dusty_bxnes on X, the team’s official YouTube channel has changed its handle to “@UtahMammoth” — though the official name of the channel remains “Utah Hockey Club.”

Source: Utah News

Is Utah’s Connor Ingram Next for a Contract Extension?

The offseason signing period for Utah Hockey Club has already kicked off, with goalie Jaxson Stauber signing a two-way contract.

The offseason signing period for Utah Hockey Club has already kicked off, with goalie Jaxson Stauber signing a two-way contract.

Source: Utah News

NHL’s Utah Hockey Club Appears To Leak New Team Name

Ryan Smith—already well-known to Utah fans as the owner of the NBA’s Utah Jazz—wanted the community to help choose a permanent team name. So, he and the organization let fans vote on the original …

Utah Hockey Club wrapped up its inaugural NHL season by finishing sixth in the Central Division with a 38-21-13 record and 89 points. Despite missing the Stanley Cup Playoffs, excitement over hockey in Salt Lake City has been through the roof, especially late Tuesday night, local time.

When owners Ryan and Ashley Smith brought the Arizona Coyotes’ roster, coaching staff, and front office to Utah in April 2024, Ryan Smith made it clear he wouldn’t rush the process of choosing a team nickname.

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“It will 100 percent be ‘Utah,’ and then it will be ‘Utah Something,’ obviously,” he said. “I don’t think given this timeline that we’re going to have time — or nor should we rush with everything else that’s going on — to go force what that is in the next three months.”

Ryan Smith—already well-known to Utah fans as the owner of the NBA’s Utah Jazz—wanted the community to help choose a permanent team name. So, he and the organization let fans vote on the original options and then the finalists, which included Utah Mammoth, Utah Hockey Club, and Utah Outlaws.

The name was expected to be announced this summer before the 2025–26 NHL season, but those plans may now be changing.

Utah Hockey Club celebrates after a goal.© Rob Gray-Imagn Images

Utah Hockey Club celebrates after a goal.© Rob Gray-Imagn Images

Just after midnight Eastern Time on Wednesday morning, a fan scrolling through the official team YouTube account noticed the handle read “UtahMammoth” instead of “Utah Hockey Club.”

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The news then began to spread like a wildfire on social media.

Source: Utah News

University of Utah is eliminating its beach volleyball program. Here’s why

The landscape of the sport and its limited growth potential at the NCAA level was a primary reason for the decision, Utah athletic director Mark Harlan said.

The University of Utah is discontinuing its beach volleyball program at the end of the academic year, the school announced Tuesday.

The Utes have fielded a beach volleyball team since 2017 and were coming off the program’s best season to date.

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With the elimination of beach volleyball, the university will sponsor 19 intercollegiate programs moving forward.

“This was an extremely difficult decision, and we did not arrive at this conclusion without a significant and appropriate amount of thought, consideration and consultation,” Utah athletic director Mark Harlan said in a statement.

He further explained the reasoning behind the move — it was about the landscape of the sport and its limited growth potential.

“We looked at the landscape of intercollegiate beach volleyball and the future opportunities of our student-athletes,” Harlan said. “Currently, there are only 12 beach volleyball programs among power conference institutions, with little evidence of the sport expanding at this time.”

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“With the sport’s growth stunted, and without the home facilities with amenities that allow us to host championship-level events, we are not providing the world-class experience that we seek to provide to our student-athletes.”

When Utah added beach volleyball in 2017, it was the ninth member of the Pac-12 that sponsored the sport.

In the Big 12, which the school joined this academic year, there are only four Big 12 schools that sponsor the sport, and the conference does not have an automatic qualifier to the NCAA tournament.

TCU, Arizona and Arizona State also sponsor beach volleyball. The Horned Frogs, as an at-large bid, earned the No. 2 seed in the upcoming NCAA championships.

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Utah’s season ended last week at the Big 12 championships following the Utes’ most successful record in its nine-year run. Utah finished the year with a school-best 21 wins, to 14 losses.

At one point, Utah was ranked in the top 25 for the first time in program history.

On the same day of the Utes’ final match of the year, the school announced that Brenda Whicker, who served as the Utes’ head coach the past eight seasons, was retiring.

“The University of Utah is like a second home to me,” Whicker, a Utah Athletics Hall of Famer in volleyball, said in a statement at the time.

“My time at Utah began as a player and I have been so grateful for the opportunity I’ve had to come back here and coach. It’s been so fun to be a part of this program from the beginning and to see the growth of beach volleyball in college athletics. I have been very blessed to coach some amazing young women and I will forever cherish the relationships and experiences we’ve had together.”

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Harlan said Utah will work with its student-athletes impacted by this decision to help them through this transition and aid them in finding another school if they choose to continue playing collegiate beach volleyball.

The school will also honor student-athletes’ scholarships through the remainder of their undergraduate work if they choose to remain at the university, and all scholarships for incoming student-athletes will be honored as well, Harlan said.

“We are mindful of the impact this decision has on the current students in our beach volleyball program, as well as on the incoming student-athletes who committed to Utah,” Harlan explained. “We will work closely with each of our impacted student-athletes to provide them with all of the support they need.

“Should any member of the team decide to remain at the university, their scholarship will be honored through the receipt of their undergraduate degree, and the incoming student-athletes also will have their scholarship offers honored.”

“Should a current or incoming student-athlete elect to pursue their sport at another school, Utah will do all that it can to facilitate the process,” he continued. “Scholarship funds previously dedicated to the beach volleyball program will be redirected to our other women’s sports programs.”

Source: Utah News