Trial begins in Utah for a man accused of faking his death to avoid rape charges

A man accused of faking his death and fleeing to the United Kingdom to avoid rape charges faced an alleged victim in court Monday as a jury trial in Utah began.


Salt Lake City
AP
 — 

A man accused of faking his death and fleeing to the United Kingdom to avoid rape charges faced an alleged victim in court Monday as a jury trial in Utah began.

The man known in the US as Nicholas Rossi, whose legal name is Nicholas Alahverdian, is accused of sexually assaulting two women in Utah in 2008. He has pleaded not guilty to the charges. Prosecutors are trying the cases separately, with the first set in Salt Lake County.

Rossi, 38, was arrested in Scotland in 2021 — a year after he was reported dead — when he was recognized at a Glasgow hospital while receiving treatment for COVID-19. He lost an extradition appeal after claiming he was an Irish orphan named Arthur Knight who had never set foot on American soil and was being framed.

Prosecutors say they have identified at least a dozen aliases Rossi used over the years to evade capture.

Rossi appeared in court in a wheelchair, wearing a suit and tie and using an oxygen tank. The alleged victim identified him from the witness stand, saying he’s “a little bit heavier, a little bit older” but mostly looks the same.

District Judge Barry Lawrence helped clarify for the jury some of the twists and turns of the case, explaining that different people may refer to Rossi by different names. The defense and prosecution agreed it’s factual that Rossi was in Utah in 2008 and had a relationship that year with the woman who testified.

Prosecutors painted a picture of an intelligent man who used his charm to take advantage of a vulnerable young woman. He raped her when she pushed back against his attempts to control her, said Deputy Salt Lake County District Attorney Brandon Simmons.

The woman, who the judge asked not be identified publicly, described a whirlwind relationship with Rossi that began in November 2008 while she was recovering from a traumatic brain injury. The two began dating after she responded to a personal ad Rossi posted on Craigslist and were engaged within about two weeks.

The woman described being asked to pay for their dates, cover Rossi’s rent so he wouldn’t be evicted from his apartment and take on debt to buy their engagement rings.

“I was a little bit more of a timid person back then, and so it was harder for me to stand up for myself,” she said.

The relationship spiraled quickly after their engagement, with Rossi “becoming controlling and saying mean things to me,” she testified. The couple got into a fight in which Rossi pounded on her car and used his body to block her from pulling out of the parking garage. She finally let him inside and drove him home but said she had no plans of continuing a relationship.

She agreed to go into his house to talk, but he instead pushed her onto his bed, held her down and “forced me to have sex with him,” she testified. The woman described lying still, paralyzed with fear.

Dismissive comments from her parents convinced her not to go to the police at the time, she said. She did, however, try to bring Rossi to small claims court over the engagement rings but dropped the case.

Rossi’s lawyers sought to convince the jury that the alleged victim built up years of resentment after Rossi made her foot the bill for everything in their monthlong relationship, and accused him of rape to get back at him a decade later when she saw him in the news.

Rossi will also stand trial in September for another rape charge in Utah County.

Rossi grew up in foster homes in Rhode Island and had returned to the state before allegedly faking his death. An obituary published online claimed he died on Feb. 29, 2020, of late-stage non-Hodgkin lymphoma. State police, along with Rossi’s former lawyer and a former foster family, cast doubt on whether he was dead. A year later, hospital staff in Scotland recognized his tattoos from an Interpol notice and alerted authorities. He was extradited to Utah in January 2024.

“This case is like an old puzzle from the thrift store,” said MacKenzie Potter, one of Rossi’s attorneys. “It’s 13 years old, not all the pieces are there, some pieces are from a different puzzle. And when you start going through everything, you’re not going to get a complete picture.”

Prosecutors pushed back, saying that if any “puzzle pieces” are missing, it’s because Rossi’s attorneys fought to have some evidence dismissed.

Source: Utah News

2 Utah brothers try to outdo each other on ‘American Ninja Warrior’

As two of the speediest ninjas this season, Kai and Luke Beckstrand have been each other’s toughest competitors.

The “American Ninja Warrior” announcers never tire of saying it: Kai Beckstrand, a teenager from St. George, Utah, is one of the most formidable competitors on the show.

So far, throughout his Season 17 runs, the 19-year-old has been called “the ninja to beat” and “the fastest ninja on the planet.”

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He’s a favorite to win it all, and Monday night continued to make a strong case for that outcome.

Kai Beckstrand dominates in first round of ‘ANW’ finals

Sixty ninjas — including Kai and his younger brother, Luke — are competing in the Season 17 finals, which started Aug. 4 and continued Monday night.

In a new format, the show divided the 60 competitors into groups of four based on their runtimes. Ninjas in each group have to face off against each other in a series of one-on-one races. After everyone in a group has run against each other, the two competitors with the most wins advance to the next round.

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The new format plays to Kai Beckstrand’s advantage.

“Speed’s always been my favorite thing,” he previously told the Deseret News.

Source: Utah News

It’s primary Election Day in Utah: What you need to know

Tuesday is primary Election Day in Utah and here’s a look at what you need to know.

Tuesday is primary Election Day in Utah and here’s a look at what you need to know.

What races? There are a variety of municipal and school board elections taking place around the state this year. Not all of the elections taking place have a primary on Tuesday, due to either cities using ranked choice voting or there not being enough candidates to warrant a primary.

Multiple cities around Utah are having mayoral elections this year including Logan, Provo and St. George.

What’s new? It is too late for Utahns to send their ballots in by mail. According to HB300 passed by the state Legislature earlier this year, ballots have to be in possession of the county clerk by 8 p.m. on Election Day.

For those who haven’t mailed their ballots yet, they can still be submitted through their county’s drop boxes. There are drop box locations all around the state to find a location near you visit votesearch.utah.gov.

Voters can also cast their ballots in person at their county’s vote center. Polls will be open until 8 p.m.

For people who plan to vote in person they must provide a valid form of photo ID, such as a Utah driver license or a U.S. passport; tribal identification cards are also acceptable. If you don’t have one of those forms of identification you can also provide two other forms of identification that include your name and address.

For more information on how or where to vote, and what elections are taking place visit vote.utah.gov.

Source: Utah News

How a dog helped a Utah man survive an 11-hour night crawl through the Uintas

With two broken ankles, two broken ribs and a broken leg, Jake Schmitt wasn’t sure he could make it the five miles back to his truck after crashing his side-by-side in the high Uinta Mountains. His …

Ogden • Jake Schmitt looked up, droplets from the cool stream dribbling down his chin, and locked eyes with his best friend, Buddy. The 6-year-old German shorthaired pointer also had water dripping from his black snout.

Schmitt, 34, has been a hunter for most of his life and a hunting guide in Utah for almost a decade. He knew he shouldn’t be drinking from a stream, that his stomach could violently cramp from giardia once the water and parasites worked their way inside. But that was a tomorrow problem. He wasn’t even sure he would make it through the night — or if he would even notice the pain with so much of it already wracking his body.

It had been hours — four? eight? Schmitt wasn’t sure — since his Polaris Ranger had tumbled down a hillside deep in the Uinta Mountains. In the rollover, he shattered both ankles, two ribs and his leg. By the time they reached the river, he and Buddy had been crawling down a rutted logging road, both on all fours, for so long that while the reinforced patches on the knees of Schmitt’s hunting pants remained intact, the skin on his kneecaps was shredded and bleeding. He needed this respite. He could see Buddy needed it, too.

“We looked at each other, and I was like, ‘Dude, this water is so good.’ And he was like, ‘Yeah, can we just take a minute? This water is really good,’” Schmitt recalled. “And I was like, ’We can take five minutes, Buddy. I’m so sorry.’”

Schmitt had gotten them into this — what would end up being an 11-hour slog to his truck and another 40-minute drive to help. What got them out, he said, was Buddy.

‘I had everything you could imagine’

Before he moved to Ogden in 2022, Schmitt made an annual pilgrimage from his home in Buffalo, N.Y., out West to Montana or Canada or Utah every August to subcontract for four months as a hunting guide. And he always brought Buddy, who had been Schmitt’s sidekick since he was 8 weeks old.

With another hunting season around the corner, the pair took a Sunday drive toward Whitney Reservoir, deep into the Uinta Mountains, to scout for big game. It was July 20, and the trip was going well. Schmitt had rescued an elk fawn from a bear trap and also spotted a large buck. Trying to get a better look at the buck, Schmitt steered his Ranger onto a trail about four miles into the forest that he said he’s “been on a million times.”

(Christopher Cherrington | The Salt Lake Tribune)

Quickly, though, he realized the trail had become unsafe over the winter. He decided to backtrack and shifted the Ranger into reverse. Before he even put his foot on the accelerator, Schmitt felt the back end start to slip down the incline.

“I knew it was going to flip, and I tried to jump out,” Schmitt said. “And upon trying to jump out, it started to roll, and it took my body with it.”

Schmitt believes the machine rolled over him twice before it spit him out a quarter of the way down the steep hill. It rolled about 15 more times before coming to a rest in a heap in a dry creek bed. The frame was contorted. The roof had been ripped off. The tires were flung dozens of feet away.

Buddy had been inside a crate in the back of the Ranger. The crate was nowhere to be seen. But there Buddy was, standing in front of Schmitt, wagging his stubby tail, not a scratch on him.

Schmitt hadn’t been so fortunate.

Courtesy of Jake Schmitt

Jake Schmitt moved to Ogden, Utah three years ago to work as a hunting guide. He got his dog, a German shorthair pointer he named Buddy, as a puppy six years ago. The dog stuck by him throughout the 11 hours it took him to crawl from the high Uintas to his truck after he broke his leg and both ankles when his Polaris Ranger slid down a hill.

He didn’t know the extent of his injuries, but when he put weight on his right leg to stand, his ankle popped and he collapsed back to the ground. Then he looked at his left leg and couldn’t comprehend what he was seeing: His foot was folded back and his lower leg was skewed at a strange angle.

Even on healthy legs, it would have been difficult to stand on the incline. In his state, it would be impossible. So, Schmitt opted to roll down to the wreckage instead. Along the way, he hoped he would spot his satellite phone, or his radio or his cellphone, or at very least the gun he carried to scare away bears — anything he could use to signal for help.

“I had everything you could imagine,” he said. “But it doesn’t matter when it just gets flung off of you.”

The one usable thing he found? A small roll of duct tape. Through the tumult, it remained stuck inside the Ranger’s center console.

Schmitt sized up his situation: “I have no communication. I’m screwed. I’m going to have to drag myself out, as painful as that is.”

First, though, he had to set his broken leg.

The breaks

Schmitt wasn’t just some tourist lost in the woods. His years of guiding and backcountry exploration had left him uniquely qualified to deal with his perilous predicament.

He was so familiar with the old road that he knew he had to make six stream crossings before he would reach his truck. He knew to drink only from the most rapidly moving sections of those streams to mitigate the chances of contracting giardia. And, he had experience with self-administered wilderness first aid.

“If you don’t know how to literally drag yourself out at the end of the day, then probably don’t go out there,” Schmitt said, “because you’re going to die.”

Schmitt knew he needed to survive, even if only to make sure Buddy made it out alive. He found a straight piece of metal that had broken off the Ranger, scooted over to it and set his broken leg on top of it. Then, he pulled.

“I was way more scared to lose my leg than to rebreak that back,” Schmitt said of his rationalization for putting himself through that pain. “I was terrified.”

Courtesy of Jake Schmitt

Jake Schmitt’s pants are in tatters and wrapped in duct tape after he crawled for 11 hours from the high Uintas to his truck after he broke his leg and both ankles when his Polaris Ranger slid down a hill. He used the tape, a stick and his belt to splint his leg.

He created a splint with a mostly straight and sturdy stick and affixed it to the side of his leg with his belt and, of course, the duct tape.

By then, the sun had begun to set. So Schmitt called Buddy over and switched on the walnut-sized light on his collar. With just a crescent moon overhead, it would be their only light source for the next 10 hours as they lurched through the dark forest.

Crawling through the night

It didn’t take long for the adrenaline to wear off. Shock, fatigue and disorientation took its place.

Schmitt started the long journey to his truck by scooching backward, using his arms to drag his body down the road. Later, spooked by animal sounds he heard in the forest, he turned onto his belly and, with a rock in each hand for protection against the gravel and the wildlife, began to crawl. His ankle flopped helplessly behind him, and he could feel the bone shards grinding against one another. Ahead of him, Buddy zigzagged back and forth, picking up scents on the wind.

Their progress was glacial. At the second stream crossing, Schmitt convinced himself it was the fifth one. When a bend in the road jogged his memory, Schmitt broke down; they still had so far to travel.

They stopped often. Sometimes sleep would overtake Schmitt, but he would always be jolted back awake by the sensation of Buddy’s black nose nudging his head. When Schmitt felt like he just couldn’t go on, Buddy would lie down on the road 20 feet ahead of him. Compelled by the dog’s forlorn look, Schmitt would find the energy to scoot over to comfort his friend.

“I would pet him, and then he’d go 20 feet more,” Schmitt recalled. “And now I know he was just helping me, step by step.”

(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) Jacob Schmitt with his dog Buddy, at his home in Ogden, on Thursday, July 31, 2025.

When daylight broke the next morning, Schmitt called it the “worst sunrise I’ve ever seen in my entire life.” It meant he hadn’t been crawling for three or four hours, like he’d thought, but closer to 10. The adrenaline kicked in, though, when the sunlight illuminated his truck in the distance.

Thankfully, he’d left his keys inside it.

An unexpected visitor

Yenni Saiz was putting yard games out in front of the Oakley Diner, as the 19-year-old waitress usually does to prepare for the 8 a.m. breakfast crowd, when the mud-colored Toyota pulled up next to her. The man inside rolled down his window, and Saiz grew nervous.

“You can tell he was in pain,” said Saiz, a Weber State student and Oakley resident, “and he had scratches on his face. He had a dog in the back seat, too.”

(Christopher Cherrington | The Salt Lake Tribune)

Schmitt had driven his broken body and best friend more than half an hour to the diner, the nearest place he thought might be open so early. He asked Saiz to call 911 and relayed to her the details of his ordeal and his injuries. Four minutes later, paramedics were on the scene.

Schmitt was loaded into an ambulance bound for Park City Hospital. Buddy had to stay behind. But the Oakley Fire Station kept him until Schmitt’s mom flew in the next day from New York to collect him.

(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) Jacob Schmitt with his mother Mel and his dog Buddy, at his home in Ogden, on Thursday, July 31, 2025.

Schmitt spent a week in the hospital while doctors inserted a rod in his broken leg and gave his ribs time to heal. On his final day, the nurses gave Schmitt’s mom, Mel Lenz, who is also a nurse, the go-ahead to bring Buddy to the hospital. The dog could barely be restrained from climbing into bed with Schmitt.

“He cried. I cried,” Schmitt said. “It was pretty wild.”

Both are back at home in Ogden now. Schmitt, who is uninsured, is trying to distract himself from his mounting medical bills by managing his welding fabrication company and committing himself to his physical therapy. His ambitious goal is to be guiding again by early September.

As for Buddy, he has all the bones — and all the cool, clean water — a dog could want. And, Schmitt said, he always will.

“He’s the little man that got me out of there for sure,” Schmitt said. “If he wasn’t there, I probably wouldn’t have made it mentally, spiritually.”

A GoFundMe has been set up to help Schmitt pay for medical expenses and loss of equipment. As of Wednesday, the fund had received more than $20,000 in donations.

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

Source: Utah News

3 way-too-early Utah Jazz trade candidates in 2025-26 season

Utah Jazz’s rebuild could move early-season veterans like Nurkic, Anderson, Love, as trade assets to ramp up draft capital and development.

The post 3 way-too-early Utah Jazz trade candidates in 2025-26 season appeared first on ClutchPoints.

The Utah Jazz made their intentions loud and clear this offseason: the rebuild is in full swing. Gone are the veterans who once formed the foundation of the locker room: Jordan Clarkson bought out, Collin Sexton shipped to Charlotte, and John Collins moved in a three-team deal to the Clippers. These weren’t subtle, cosmetic changes. They were sweeping, identity-defining moves designed to create more opportunity for the franchise’s young core and maximize draft capital flexibility in the seasons to come.

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In return, Utah didn’t just take back picks or prospects; they acquired functional veterans like Jusuf Nurkić, Kevin Love, and Kyle Anderson. These players serve two purposes: stabilize a roster now dominated by first- and second-year players, and potentially become trade assets themselves down the line.

With the Jazz in asset-accumulation mode, no veteran outside of rookie-scale contracts should feel completely safe. That’s why it’s worth examining three early trade candidates for the 2025-26 season, players who could be shipped out for picks, prospects, or to facilitate bigger deals before the deadline.

Jusuf Nurkić: The reliable big with an expiring clock

When Utah landed Jusuf Nurkić in the Collin Sexton trade, the move was framed as a veteran stabilizer for a young locker room. The 30-year-old center still has plenty left in the tank: he’s a bruiser in the paint, a solid rebounder, and a capable passer out of the high post. But in the context of Utah’s rebuild, Nurkić is less a long-term fit and more a placeholder until a younger big emerges.

Source: Utah News

What Kyle Whittingham learned from Utah’s first scrimmage of fall camp

Utah coach provides updates on cornerback battle, QB2 job and running back as Utah Utes inch closer to UCLA opener.

Utah approached its first of two fall scrimmages with a bit of caution.

The majority of the scrimmage for the first-teamers was “thud work” and didn’t include live tackling, with “live work” for the second-teamers.

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While there’s certainly time for physicality, and it’s something that Utah has incorporated into practices, coaches felt the best approach for the opening scrimmage of fall camp was to ease up on the starters and reduce the risk of injuries.

“We just felt it was the best approach for the first scrimmage,” Utah coach Kyle Whittingham said. “Twos got all the live work … so got some good teaching tape and I think we’re in a good place right now, 10 practices in after today and 15 more to go and we’ll be ready to play.”

The first scrimmage of fall camp is an important time for coaches and players alike, and after seeing the team in a game-like setting, roster decisions can start to be made.

That includes the wide receiver group.

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Receivers

Whittingham said Monday that it feels like they’ve identified the top seven or eight receivers, the ones that will travel with the team to road games and the receivers that Utah will sink all of their practice reps into as the team moves forward in fall camp.

One of those players is Larry Simmons, the post-spring transfer from Southern Miss. Quarterback Devon Dampier mentioned that Simmons, who caught 27 balls for 421 yards and a score last season, had a “very big day” during Saturday’s scrimmage.

At another key position battle —starting outside cornerback — Blake Cotton is emerging.

“Blake Cotton, I’d say he’s got the edge right now,” Whittingham said.

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The 6-foot-2, 190-pound UC Davis transfer totaled 25 tackles and two pass breakups a season ago and has been locked in a very competitive battle between Don Saunders, Rock Caldwell and others.

Whoever gets the nod will start opposite Scooby Davis at outside corner. Smith Snowden will play nickel, but also play on the outside at times when Utah plays two cornerbacks.

Running backs

Another place where the depth chart has been whittled down is at running back, where Washington State transfer Wayshawn Parker and New Mexico transfer NaQuari Rogers have established themselves at the two top running backs.

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Both players share a similar build — Parker is 5-foot-10, 206 pounds; Rogers is 5-10, 205 — and the longtime Utes coach described both players as having similar styles.

“They both do an outstanding job of picking up blitzes, they’re not afraid, they stick their nose in there,” he said. “They’re north and south guys, so they run behind their pads well, get upfield. They both have good hands, so they’re very similar. NaQuari just has more experience; Wayshawn’s just a sophomore.”

Parker ran for 735 yards and four touchdowns on 137 carries in his freshman season, while Rogers totaled 382 yards and five touchdowns on 74 carries his junior season.

“They’re interchangeable as the one. We’re also having some good production from Daniel Bray, Raycine Guillory a couple of freshmen that they have a lot of promise and of course Devon is like a running back back there at times, so he’s adding to what we’re doing and then we’ve got guys running the speed sweeps, the wide receivers that are supplementary,” Whittingham said.

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Those receivers that could factor into the running game include Nate Johnson and Hunter Andrews.

QB2

As far as the backup quarterback competition goes, Utah still hasn’t made a decision, but one will come soon, possibly after Friday’s second and final scrimmage at Rice-Eccles Stadium.

The two contenders for the spot, sophomore Isaac Wilson and freshman Byrd Ficklin, both had their moments at Saturday’s scrimmage, but both also made mistakes, and the competition continues.

NCAA FB: Utah Football Fall Camp

Utah QBs get in some work during fall camp in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, Aug. 6, 2025, as the battle for QB2 duties heat up. | Anna Fuder, Utah Athletics

Wilson’s experience playing in nine games last season (1,510 yards, 10 TD, 11 INT, 56.4% completion) is working in his favor against Ficklin, who was impressive in high school but unproven at the collegiate level.

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“Obviously Isaac is the one that has the Division I experience, has helped him and will help him if he’s called upon this year. We’re not sure how Byrd will react in a game situation, just a true freshman, and so that works in Isaac’s favor as far as the experience factor,” Whittingham said.

Ficklin, meanwhile, has a game that more heavily incorporates the quarterback run and plays similarly to Dampier.

“Byrd is a guy that is very mature, doesn’t seem to flinch when his number’s called, when he gets his opportunities, and so whichever one emerges as the guy, we’ll have confidence in him,” Whittingham said.

At the defensive tackle position, where Utah will need some true freshmen to help out in the rotation, Whittingham highlighted Pupu Sepulona and Karson Kaufusi as standing out.

“They’re all doing things well and they’re all coming along and learning and getting better each day. We think that we’re going to have some real superstars emerge from that group,” Whittingham said.

Utah quarterback Devon Dampier throws a pass during the Utes' first day of fall camp in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, July 30, 2025. | Utah Athletics

Utah quarterback Devon Dampier throws a pass during the Utes’ first day of fall camp in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, July 30, 2025. | Utah Athletics

Source: Utah News

The Utah nonconference schedule is out. Here’s who the Utes play in Alex Jensen’s first season

Utah will host eight games, play a neutral-site matchup at the Delta Center and visit Pac-12 territory a couple times.

The first game of the Alex Jensen era of Utah basketball is one step closer to reality.

The school announced the nonconference schedule for the Runnin’ Utes in the 2025-26 season, and it includes a pair of exhibition games, eight home games, three neutral-site matchups and a pair of road contests.

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Who is Utah basketball playing in its nonconference schedule?

  • Oct. 17 — Nevada | exhibition

  • Oct. 24 — at Oregon | exhibition

  • Nov. 3 — San Jose State

  • Nov. 8 — Weber State

  • Nov. 10 — Holy Cross

  • Nov. 15 — Sam Houston State

  • Nov. 18 — Purdue Fort Wayne*

  • Nov. 20 — Cal Poly

  • Nov. 25 — vs. Grand Canyon&

  • Nov. 26 — vs. Iowa/Ole Miss&

  • Dec. 2 — at California

  • Dec. 6 — Cal-Baptist

  • Dec. 13 — vs. Mississippi State^

  • Dec. 20 — Eastern Washington

  • Dec. 29 — at Washington

Note: * at Huntsman Center as part of Acrisure Series; & at Acrisure Arena in Palm Desert, California, as part of Acrisure Series; ^ at Delta Center.

What stands out about Utah’s nonconference schedule?

  • The schedule features a pair of exhibition matchups, including a trip to former Pac-12 rival Oregon.

  • The Utes will begin regular-season action with six straight games at the Huntsman Center.

  • Utah hosts Weber State — the first time the in-state schools have played since 2019. It’s part of a three-game series with the Wildcats, as Standard-Examiner’s Brett Hein first reported in May. The other games will be played in 2026 and 2028, according to Hein.

  • This year’s multi-team event (MTE) for the Utes will take place in California at the Acrisure Series, where Utah will face Grand Canyon in its first year in the Mountain West Conference before taking on either Iowa or Ole Miss in its second matchup at the event.

  • The Utes’ two true road games will both take place against former Pac-12 opponents at California and Washington.

  • Utah will also face the SEC’s Mississippi State in a neutral-site matchup at the Delta Center. The two teams played a neutral-site game last year, when the Bulldogs beat the Utes at Landers Center in Southaven, Mississippi.

Who will Utah play during Big 12 play?

Here’s a look at who Utah will play this season during its Big 12 schedule. Game times and dates will be released closer to the start of the season.

  • Home and away: Arizona State, BYU, Colorado

  • Home only: Arizona, Houston, Iowa State, Oklahoma State, TCU, UCF

  • Away only: Baylor, Cincinnati, Kansas, Kansas State, Texas Tech, West Virginia

Source: Utah News

Utah State Depth Chart Preview: Quarterbacks and Running Backs

Utah State’s Fall camp is in full swing as the Aggies prepare for the 2025 season with their season opener against UTEP less than a month out. There are still some questions about the depth chart, …

Utah State’s Fall camp is in full swing as the Aggies prepare for the 2025 season with their season opener against UTEP less than a month out. There are still some questions about the depth chart, especially at receiver and at offensive line, but there are other position groups where the starters are clearer. So, who are the predicted starters and who are the backups that could make a difference and potentially see the field? Let’s get into it!

This article in the series will cover the quarterback and running back room.

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Quarterbacks

Starter: Bryson Barnes (Senior): Bryson Barnes is one of Utah State’s more experienced players. Last season as a junior, Barnes played in nine games and made three starts. He accounted for 1,386 total yards and passed for 856 yards (77-126; 61.1%) and 12 touchdowns to six interceptions. Barnes also rushed for 530 yards on 68 carries and scored five touchdowns on the ground. Before transferring to Utah State, Bryson Barnes played for Utah and played in 24 career games with 11 starts. At Utah, Barnes completed 181 of his 301 attempted passes (60.1%), and passed for 2,025 yards and 17 touchdowns to 13 interceptions. On the ground, Barnes rushed for 391 yards and three touchdowns on 111 carries. Bryson Barnes helped lead Utah to back-to-back Pac-12 titles and consecutive Rose Bowl appearances. His ability to throw the ball and run makes him an extremely important player to the success that Utah State’s offense can have.

Backup #1: Anthony Garcia (Sophomore): Anthony Garcia comes in from Arizona and also played at San Jose State in 2023. At Arizona, Garcia played in one game against Arizona State, where he rushed for one yard. Anthony Garcia had a very successful high school career and has shown the ability to fit into this new system and make plays. Anthony Garcia prepped at Capital Christian High School in California, and as a senior, Garcia threw for 2,689 yards and 34 touchdowns to four interceptions, completing 146 of his 250 pass attempts (58.4%). Garcia also rushed for 553 yards and scored eight rushing touchdowns as a senior. Anthony Garcia, a three-star recruit per 247Sports, fits the system well for the Aggies as a passer and a runner; he just needs to build on experience.

Backup #2: Jacob Conover (Graduate Student): Jacob Conover has played in 10 career games for BYU (2020-2022), Arizona State (2023), and Utah State (2024), and over his 10 games, Conover has completed 18 of his 52 passes (34.6%) for 197 yards and three interceptions. Conover was 2-4 for 24 yards passing least season and has yet to throw a touchdown pass in his career. Jacob Conover was a four-star recruit coming out of high school at Chandler (Arizona) High School. During his senior year, Conover threw for 3,306 yards and 38 touchdowns. In his time with Chandler (Arizona) High School, Jacob Conover threw for over 10,000 yards and 102 touchdowns as he worked towards becoming the 10th-best pro-style quarterback in the nation (247Sports).

Backup #3: CJ Tiller (Sophomore): CJ Tiller is in this position right now, but could very likely take over the second-string role because he does have experience at the college level. He did not appear in any games in 2024. Before coming to the Aggies, Tiller played for Boise State and appeared in two games. His first career start was in the LA Bowl against UCLA, and Tiller completed 12 of his 21 passes for 117 yards and an interception.

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Running Backs

Starter: Javen Jacobs (Junior): Javen Jacobs has now played for three schools in Arizona State, New Mexico, and Utah State. At New Mexico for the 2024 season, Jacobs appeared in seven games and rushed for 277 yards (40 carries) and three touchdowns. Jacobs also caught 17 passes for 130 yards and a touchdown during the 2024 season. At Arizona State (2022-2023), Javen Jacobs appeared in 15 games and gained eight yards on three carries, and returned nine punts and six kickoffs. Out of high school, Javen Jacobs was a three-star prospect and was ranked as the #1 athlete in Arizona and #24 overall prospect in Arizona (247Sports).

Backup #1: Miles Davis (Senior): Miles Davis spent five seasons at BYU from 2020-2024 and appeared in 27 games with one start. Over his career with the Cougars, Miles Davis rushed for 468 yards on 90 carries and two touchdowns, catching 16 passes for 131 yards and one touchdown. In high school, Davis was a three-star recruit out of Las Vegas High School and had 46 receptions for 1.041 yards and caught 11 touchdowns.

Backup #2: Derrick Jameson (Junior): During his sophomore year with the Aggies, Derrick Jameson appeared in four games, finishing 2024 with 15 carries for 140 yards and two touchdowns. Against Washington State, Jameson scored on a 72-yard touchdown on his first-ever carry. Before coming to Utah State, Derrick Jameson spent two seasons at Iowa Central Community College from 2022-2023.

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Backup #3: Tre Kofe (Redshirt freshman): Tre Kofe redshirted the 2024 season, coming out of Corner Canyon High School in Utah. During his senior year, he had 781 yards of total offense, which included 369 rushing yards and seven touchdowns on 75 carries, and 142 receiving yards and three touchdowns on 10 catches. After a productive high school career, Kofe went on a two-year LDS mission before arriving at Utah State.

Coming up next in the series: Receivers

Source: Utah News

Are BYU and/or Utah in the preseason Associated Press top-25 rankings?

In addition to BYU and Utah, other Big 12 teams that received votes but aren’t in the top 25 include Baylor (132), TCU (4) and Colorado (1). Texas starts the season at No. 1, followed by Penn State at …

In addition to BYU and Utah, other Big 12 teams that received votes but aren’t in the top 25 include Baylor (132), TCU (4) and Colorado (1). Texas starts the season at No. 1, followed by Penn State at …

Source: Utah News