Utah Mammoth Are No Longer a Cute Story — They’re a Real Threat

The Utah Mammoth are proving they belong among the NHL’s elite after outplaying Vegas again and seizing control of their first-round series.

For three games now, the Utah Mammoth have done more than survive against a heavyweight contender — they have gone stride for stride with one of the NHL’s most decorated rosters and, at times, looked like the better team.

Vegas arrived in this series carrying the aura of a championship-caliber franchise and a lineup packed with proven names. Jack Eichel centered Team USA’s top line in the Olympic final just two months ago. Mark Stone and Mitch Marner skated for Team Canada. Shea Theodore and Noah Hanifin logged major international minutes on the blue line. On paper, few teams looked more formidable entering the postseason.

Yet it has been Utah’s younger, less celebrated core that has dictated large stretches of this matchup.

The Mammoth seized control of the series Friday night with a convincing 4-2 win in front of a thunderous home crowd witnessing its first Stanley Cup Playoff game. With the victory, Utah moved ahead 2-1 in the series and delivered another statement against an opponent many expected to control the matchup.

It had been four years since MacKenzie Weegar played in a home playoff game, and he wasted little time making up for it. Early in the opening period, the veteran defenseman blasted a slapshot that ricocheted off Carter Hart’s mask and into the net, igniting the arena and handing Utah an immediate surge.

The atmosphere only intensified from there.

Dylan Guenther, still just 23, delivered the night’s most electric finish with another blistering strike. After scoring 40 goals in the regular season, the winger has seamlessly carried that scoring touch into the playoffs, producing dangerous chances and timely goals in consecutive games.

For a player making his postseason debut, Guenther has looked remarkably composed. He recorded Utah’s first multi-point playoff outing in Game 2, then followed it with the franchise’s first playoff power-play goal in Game 3.

Utah’s veteran leadership also answered the moment. Lawson Crouse scored twice, while captain Clayton Keller orchestrated the attack with two assists and constant pressure. For a franchise still building its identity, those were foundational performances from cornerstone players.

Utah stormed to a 4-0 lead with two goals in the first period and two more in the second, stunning a Vegas club accustomed to controlling games of this magnitude.

The Golden Knights pushed back over the final half of the contest, scoring twice and piling up shots in an effort to tilt momentum. Vegas finished with a 32-12 edge in shots on goal, but the numbers did not tell the full story. Utah was sharper, more opportunistic, and far more dangerous with the chances it created.

That distinction mattered.

The Mammoth defended with commitment, blocked lanes, won battles, and made their opportunities count. It was less about volume and more about execution.

There will be those who frame this as a temporary swing — a hot shooting night, an emotional crowd, a brief surge that will fade as the series continues.

But three games in, that explanation is getting harder to sell.

Utah’s top players are creating offense. Its veterans are steadying tense moments. Its young talent looks unfazed by the stage. And its belief appears to be growing by the shift.

Head coach André Tourigny pointed afterward to the international experience many of his young players already possess. Guenther has delivered on big stages before. Logan Cooley helped Team USA capture gold at the World Championships. Keller represented his country at the Olympics. The names may be young, but the moments are not new to them.

Friday night felt significant not simply because Utah won, but because of how it won.

This did not look like a franchise happy to be invited to the postseason. It looked like one prepared to stay.

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Source: Utah News

Utah town cuts outdoor watering as supply hits critical levels

A small Utah town is dealing with a water shortage that has forced families to make tough decisions about how they manage daily life.Residents in Emery said th …

A small Utah town is dealing with a water shortage that has forced families to make tough decisions about how they manage daily life.

Residents in Emery said they were given little warning before being told to shut off all outdoor watering.

“We can’t water outside at all — not using culinary water, not secondary water, not anything at all,” Laura Dixson said.

For Dixson, that announcement changed everything.

“I’ve been here 26 years, and it’s never happened. I cried. It’s our livelihood. It’s what we do. It’s how we feed our kids.”

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Dixson and her family rely on their land for food.

“We raise our own meat — pigs, goats, lambs, chickens, turkeys, ducks, rabbits. We grow our own food. We try to grow 80% of our food right here.”

But without water, that self-sufficient lifestyle is at risk. She has already had to make difficult choices, selling off animals she can no longer feed.

At a recent town meeting, officials said the water supply is in a “dire situation,” noting the town receives only about 3% of canal flow — far less than what’s needed to sustain both culinary and secondary systems. They said usage recently reached nearly 600 gallons per minute, a level they called unsustainable, prompting the decision to shut off secondary water entirely.

“A lot of people in town are angry. The farmers aren’t angry — they’re scared.”

With rising food costs, Dixson said losing her homegrown supply could hit even harder.

“I don’t know what I’m going to do for food. I guess I’ll have to buy from the store.”

She said what frustrates her most is how quickly everything changed.

“To just go from 100 to zero with no warning — I would have liked more time.”

Town officials said residents should expect water to remain tight this year and are urging conservation as they monitor supply levels.

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Source: Utah News

Ranking Utah football’s NFL Draft departures by impact for 2026

Three Utah football standouts took one step closer to having their dreams of playing professional football come to fruition over the weekend as the 2026 NFL Dra …

Three Utah football standouts took one step closer to having their dreams of playing professional football come to fruition over the weekend as the 2026 NFL Draft played out from Pittsburgh.

On Thursday, offensive linemen Spencer Fano and Caleb Lomu heard their names called by commissioner Roger Goodell, with the former going No. 9 overall to the Cleveland Browns and the latter getting picked up by the New England Patriots at No. 28 overall.

Nearly 48 hours after his teammates made history as the first Utes to be drafted in the same first round in program history, Dallen Bentley helped put a bow on the three-day event as the Denver Broncos selected him with the penultimate pick (No. 256 overall) on Saturday.

With their departures from Utah official, let’s take a look at the impact of each, starting from the least to most significant.

3. Dallen Bentley (TE)

Former Utah Utes tight end Dallen Bentley (88).

Former Utah Utes tight end Dallen Bentley (88). | Chris Jones-Imagn Images

Bentley was basically Utah’s No. 2 receiving option in 2025, as he hauled in 48 catches for 620 yards and six touchdowns. The 6-foot-4 Snow College product also played a role as an extra blocker in the Utes’ dominant run game, which finished No. 2 in the Football Bowl Subdivision with 266.3 rush yards per game and 41 rushing touchdowns in 13 games.

That being said, Utah has a potential star in the making in rising sophomore Hunter Andrews, who was on track for a big freshman year until an injury in September derailed his 2025 campaign. The former three-star recruit isn’t the same type of tight end as Bentley — he’s much more of an H-back than anything else — though his versatility and route running will make him an essential part of the Utes’ passing game in 2026.

Speaking of which, Utah shouldn’t be as limited at wide receiver as it was in 2025. The presence of Braden Pegan and Kyri Shoels should open things up for the Utes’ other pass catchers.

2. Caleb Lomu (LT)

Former Utah Utes offensive lineman Caleb Lomu (OL33).

Former Utah Utes offensive lineman Caleb Lomu (OL33). | Jacob Musselman-Imagn Images

Losing a starting left tackle who was an all-conference player as a redshirt sophomore is going to sting — even if his replacement ends up being a first-round pick in a few years.

The Utes hope blue chip 2026 recruit Kelvin Obot is the next pro-caliber offensive lineman to come through the program’s doors, though only time will tell if the Idaho native reaches his full potential. For now, he’s a freshman with plenty to learn and absorb from his more-experienced teammates.

Of course, there’s a possibility Obot is a really good right off the bat, which would help relieve some of the sting from Lomu’s departure. Either way, though, the Utes aren’t plugging in another bonafide first-round talent at left tackle.

1. Spencer Fano (RT)

Cleveland Browns first round draft pick and former Utah Utes offensive lineman Spencer Fano.

Cleveland Browns first round draft pick and former Utah Utes offensive lineman Spencer Fano. | Ken Blaze-Imagn Images

Surprise, surprise: The departure of a consensus All-American and Outland Trophy recipient (nation’s top offensive lineman award) shapes up to be Utah’s biggest offseason loss.

It’s not enough that Utah is losing someone who didn’t give up a sack in over 350 pass blocking opportunities last season; the Utes are saying goodbye to a program stalwart and someone who could’ve realistically played guard or center in Spencer Fano. That versatility is partly why the Cleveland Browns selected him with the No. 9 overall pick.

Utah has some experienced players who could step in and fill Fano’s vacancy; Zereoue Williams and Keith Olson stand out as potential candidates going into fall camp. But as is the case at left tackle, the Utes don’t have someone of Fano’s caliber to plug in and protect the right side of the O-line.

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Source: Utah News

Where Utah’s 2026 NFL draft class ranks in school history

A few Utah stars took one step closer to living out their dreams of playing professional football as the 2026 NFL Draft played out in Pittsburgh over the weeken …

A few Utah stars took one step closer to living out their dreams of playing professional football as the 2026 NFL Draft played out in Pittsburgh over the weekend.

Three Utes were phoned by NFL teams over the past three days, including two in the first round for the first time in school history.

Here’s what Utah’s 2026 draft class looked like following the seventh round on Saturday:

  • Spencer Fano (OL): Drafted No. 9 overall by the Cleveland Browns
  • Caleb Lomu (OL): Picked No. 28 overall by the New England Patriots
  • Dallen Bentley (TE): Selected No. 256 overall by the Denver Broncos

It was the fourth time since 2020 that multiple Utah players were selected in the same draft. Fano became the third-highest drafted player in program history, behind only Alex Smith (No. 1 overall in 2005) and Jordan Gross (No. 8 overall in 2003).

As historic as the 2026 draft was for the Utes, how does their latest draft class compare to some of the previous classes they’ve produced? Let’s take a look at some of Utah’s other notable draft classes and figure out how the next batch of pro Utes fits into the equation.

Utah’s Best NFL Draft Classes

2020

  • Jaylon Johnson (2nd round, No. 50 overall)
  • Julian Blackmon (3rd round, No. 85 overall)
  • Zack Moss (3rd round, No. 86 overall)
  • Terrell Burgess (3rd round, No. 104 overall)
  • Leki Fotu (4th round, No. 114 overall)
  • Bradlee Anae (5th round, No. 179 overall)
  • John Penisini (6th round, No. 197 overall)

Average career length: 4.6 years (four active in 2025)
Accolades: 1x Super Bowl champion (Burgess), 2x Pro Bowls (Johnson)

2017

  • Garett Bolles (1st round, No. 20 overall)
  • Marcus Williams (2nd round, No. 42 overall)
  • Joe Williams (4th round, No. 121 overall)
  • Isaac Asiata (5th round, No. 164 overall)
  • Brian Allen (5th round, No. 173 overall)
  • JJ Dielman (5th round, No. 176 overall)
  • Sam Tevi (6th round, No. 190 overall)
  • Pita Taumoepenu (6th round, No. 202 overall)

Average career length: 4 years (two active in 2025)
Accolades: 1x All-Pro, 1x Pro Bowl (Bolles)

2019

  • Marquise Blair (2nd round, No. 47 overall)
  • Cody Barton (3rd round, No. 88 overall)
  • Mitch Wishnowsky (4th round, No. 110 overall)
  • Matt Gay (5th round, No. 145 overall)
  • Jackson Barton (7th round, No. 240 overall)

Average career length: 6 years (three active in 2025)
Accolades: 1x Super Bowl champion, 1x Pro Bowl (Gay)

2010

  • Koa Misi (2nd round, No. 40 overall)
  • Zane Beadles (2nd round, No. 45 overall)
  • Robert Johnson (5th round, No. 148 overall)
  • David Reed (5th round, No. 156 overall)
  • Stevenson Sylvester (5th round, No. 166 overall)
  • RJ Stanford (7th round, No. 223 overall)

Average career length: 4.7 years
Accolades: 1x Super Bowl champion (Reed), 1x Pro Bowl (Beadles)

2005

  • Alex Smith (1st round, No. 1 overall)
  • Sione Pouha (3rd round, No. 88 overall)
  • Chris Kemoeatu (6th round, No. 204 overall)
  • Parris Warren (7th round, No. 225 overall)
  • Jonathan Fanene (7th round, No. 233 overall)

Average career length: 7 years
Accolades: 1x Super Bowl champion (Kemoeatu), 3x Pro Bowl, Comeback Player of the Year (Smith)

Where Utah’s 2026 Draft Class Stands

Obviously, only time will tell just how many combined years and accolades the Utes’ 2026 class racks up at the pro level. If Fano and Lomu each play 10-plus seasons and collect a Pro Bowl nod or two along the way, the 2026 class could rival the 2005 and 2010 classes.

Due to the volume of the 2017 and 2020 classes, respectively, it’s hard to compare the 2026 group to those classes — at least, right now it is. If either (or both) of Utah’s first-round tackles goes on to become one of the best at their position and Dallen Bentley develops into a bonafide starter who contributes on good teams, then we’d have to revisit the conversation.

For now, we’re not going to place that kind of pressure on the 2026 class.

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Source: Utah News

Utah Republicans release convention results in congressional races

The key race in the Utah Republican Party convention this weekend is between Congressman Blake Moore and state Representative Karianne Lisonbee, according to lo …

Utah Republicans released results Saturday from their state convention in four congressional races.

Utah Republican Party convention initial results:

CD1 Election Results:

  • Stone Fonua 7 (1.5%)
  • Dave Robinson 129 (27.3%)
  • Riley Owen 337 (71.2%)

CD2 Election Results:

  • Blake Moore 302 (33.7%)
  • Colton Hatch 43 (4.8%)
  • Karianne Lisonbee 552 (61.5%)

CD 3 Results:

  • Celest Maloy 515 (50%)
  • Tyler Murset 27 (2.6%)
  • Phil Lyman 486 (47.2%)
  • David Harris 2 (?%)

CD 4 Results:

  • Seth Stewart 50 (5.2%)
  • Isaiah Hardman 36 (3.8%)
  • Scott Hatfield 105 (11%)
  • Tyrone Jensen 13 (1.4%)
  • Mike Kennedy 753 (78.7%)

A second round of voting in the 3rd Congressional District narrowly separated the top two candidates, with the final results showing a tight margin.

CD 3 Final Results:

  • Celest Maloy 482 (50.95%)
  • Phil Lyman 464 (49.04%)

The key race in the Utah Republican Party convention this weekend was between Congressman Blake Moore and state Representative Karianne Lisonbee, according to long-time University of Utah Political Science Professor Matthew Burbank.

“I think that’s the most interesting of the ones coming up,” Burbank said. “Do they go with somebody who is an incumbent, who is young, who is in a leadership position, or do they go with somebody who has been a favorite among state legislators and who has run a number of bills that really sort of reflect…the cultural, conservative side?”

Moore critics accuse him of helping to create the new Democratic heavy 1st Congressional District—born of a statewide proposition, legislative tug-of-war, litigation, and ultimately a court order.

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Moore advocated for an independent redistricting commission as a leader of the group Better Boundaries, but has reportedly said the commission should be advisory—not replace the legislature in drawing political lines—a legislature dominated by Republicans.

Lisonbee’s campaign promotes her “A+ lifetime NRA rating, 100% pro-life record, and championing school choice.”

Moore, a leader in the U.S. House Republican Conference, collected enough signatures to qualify for the GOP primary in June. Lisonbee has not collected signatures, which could endear her to a sizable number of Republican delegates who maintain they—not signers in political districts—should choose Republican nominees.

The other congressional race that could go to a primary is between Congresswoman Celeste Maloy and former legislator and candidate for governor Phil Lyman, who has made election integrity the center of his political profile.

Maloy has also qualified for the primary with signatures. Lyman declared his intent to collect them, but as of Friday evening, was well below the 7,000 required for the primary ballot.

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Source: Utah News

Utah Wins First Home Playoff Game in Franchise History

The Mammoth’s 4-2 victory against the Golden Knights gave Utah a 2-1 series lead …

Goaltender Karel Vejmelka received plenty of cheers throughout the game as his strong performance held the Golden Knights to two goals on 32 shots. Early in the game, his play kept Vegas from taking an early lead. During each of Utah’s four penalties, he was a strong final line of defense. His performance, paired with a shutdown penalty kill, was a difference maker tonight.

“(Vejmelka) came up with a few timely saves for us and that’s what it takes,” Associate captain Lawson Crouse said. “He’s got to be our best (penalty killer), but everyone played their role tonight and did a great job.”

“It starts with your most important player on the PK, your goalie,” head coach André Tourigny said. “I think (Vejmelka) was rock solid. Made key saves at key moments. Our PK was tuned in. A few good block shots, and a few good clearings. I think they were solid. Our power play as well. Like I said before, a big goal. We had a great performance from our special teams.”

To round out its special teams effort, Utah’s power play scored its first man-advantage goal in the series when Dylan Guenther’s one-timer soared to the back of the net. The goal doubled Utah’s lead in the final three minutes of the first period. Guenther has earned two goals and three points over the last two games, after posting Utah’s first-ever playoff multi-point outing in Game 2 (per Mammoth PR).

That was only one of Utah’s first period tallies. The other was four minutes prior when Weegar brought the Delta Center to their feet with the Mammoth’s first home playoff goal in franchise history. As they were on the power play, the Mammoth were opportunistic throughout the game, as Utah scored on four of their 12 shots tonight. Another player who stepped up on the scoresheet was Crouse.

The associate captain converted on both of his shots and scored his first two goals in this playoff series. For his first of the night, Crouse deflected a pass from his linemate, Nick Schmaltz, past Hart four minutes into the middle frame. Five minutes later, Crouse’s shot from the high slot soared past Vegas’ netminder and increased Utah’s lead to 4-0. Crouse doubled Utah’s lead with two goals in a span of 5:42 and became the 12th player in NHL history to score multiple goals in a franchise’s first home playoff game (per Mammoth PR).

“What (Crouse) brings to the team, it goes above and beyond the goals,” Tourigny shared. “We can take as many (goals) as he wants, and that’s not a problem but (the) definition of his role and the impact he has on his teammates, and on the team is way above just the production. Obviously, two goal game, great game. We talked about our (penalty kill) earlier, he was a big part of it. He’s a big part of our PK. Played a solid game; he was physical … he played rock solid.”

Overall, the Mammoth had contributions from up and down the lineup to get the Game 3 win. Having multiple different players contributing is key in the playoffs. Through the first three games, Utah has 12 different players who have contributed at least a point. Four of those skaters have two goals already, while six players have contributed at least two points. Other players on the Mammoth are contributing in ways that don’t show up on the scoresheet. Regardless, Utah is happy with the depth they have and everyone showing up.

“There’s lots of depth here,” Weegar explained. “Obviously, some guys are eventually going to step up too. So that’s also a good sign. But I’ve talked about it a lot with this team. There are four lines that have identities, that can score, play both sides of the puck, and (six defensemen) the same way. I think me and (Mikhail Sergachev) were in the box, and the other four defenseman stepped up and had a big penalty kill. So, it’s just the intangibles that everybody brings, and everybody can play in all situations, which this time of year is what you need.”

“It’s huge,” Guenther said. “Everyone’s playing well, whether they’re scoring or not. Guys, they’re physical, they’re blocking shots, they’re winning battles. It’s just a collective team success.”

Both teams will have two days to rest and prepare for Game 4 on Monday night at the Delta Center.

Additional Notes from Tonight (per Mammoth PR)

  • Utah became the sixth franchise that debuted in the 1990s or later to win its first postseason game on home ice. The Mammoth are also one of seven NHL franchises all-time to win both their first home regular-season contest (Oct. 8, 2024, vs CHI) and first home playoff contest.
  • Including both the regular season and playoffs, Utah has now earned a 23-16-3 record at the Delta Center in 2025-26.
  • Guenther’s two goals in Utah’s inaugural season and goal in the Mammoth’s first home playoff game, makes him one of our players in the NHL’s expansion era to light the lamp in any franchise’s first home regular-season and home playoff game (NHL Stats).

Upcoming Schedule

  • Apr. 27: VGK vs UTA
  • Apr. 29: UTA vs VGK
  • May 1: VGK vs UTA – TBD
  • May 3: UTA vs VGK – TBD

Source: Utah News

Utah’s NHL playoff moment: Mammoth try to sever Vegas ties as a rivalry grows

The Vegas Golden Knights helped build a foundation for NHL hockey in Utah. How playoff hockey is shifting allegiances in Salt Lake City.

SALT LAKE CITY — Hours before the first NHL playoff game in the Delta Center, Utah Mammoth fans were lined up outside — holding Vegas Golden Knights jerseys.

Hundreds waited, then tossed their Vegas jerseys into a wheeled laundry bin in exchange for a brand new Mammoth sweater. It was the latest marketing move by Mammoth owner Ryan Smith, who offered former Vegas fans the chance to swap gold-and-grey for blue-and-white ahead of Game 3.

They quickly ran out of jerseys.

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The promotion offered a glimpse into a complex regional rivalry between two of the NHL’s three newest teams.

On the ice, this series has been emotional, physical and bloody. On Friday night, the Mammoth impressed in their first home playoff game, securing a convincing 4-2 victory and a 2-1 series lead. In the stands, competing fanbases have taken turns chanting taunts at each other.

Though these remain just the early signs of a burgeoning rivalry, the battle to win hockey fans across the state has been raging much longer. Of course, that’s why there were so many who had Golden Knights jerseys to trade on Friday. The Golden Knights were here first.

“My goal is to make our team the team of the Rockies,” Golden Knights owner Bill Foley said back in 2017.

The Golden Knights’ television broadcast map initially encompassed all of Utah, as well as Idaho, Wyoming and Montana. In their early years, the Golden Knights drove a motorcade through the Rocky Mountains before every season, making stops at Coeur d’Alene in Idaho, at Whitefish and Bozeman in Montana, and, notably, at Salt Lake City.

Players would hop off a logo-wrapped bus to play street hockey with kids. The team played preseason games against the Los Angeles Kings at the Delta Center in 2021 and 2022. Foley went as far as saying his team would be called the Vegas Golden Knights, but “we’re really going to be the Rocky Mountain Golden Knights.”

The team was relatively successful in its venture north. That is, until the Mammoth arrived.

“This was also kind of part of their market as they launched,” Smith said Friday. “That was part of the territory that we took. I mean, Vegas hockey was on TV here. I think you can see that with the jersey exchange today. As much as everyone thinks I’m just trolling them. It’s, you know, 50 percent (trolling), but it’s way more of a respect for how they’ve grown.”

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Smith is familiar with Las Vegas. His wife and team co-owner, Ashley Smith, grew up there. The cities are a scenic, six-hour drive apart.

“I think the national landscape doesn’t understand the proximity, in so many different ways, of Utah and Las Vegas,” Smith said. “Growing up, Las Vegas is where our kids went for youth sports, and it’s where we went on the weekends. We’re just close.”

Smith said the Golden Knights’ success gave him confidence that NHL hockey would work in Utah.

“I understand the soul that hockey has brought to Vegas, in a really creative way,” he said. “Watching it succeed there gave me a ton of confidence that it would work here, given my background and the landscape and the way I think culturally, we’re way more similar than different, and that’s the part that most people don’t understand.”

While Smith admires how the Golden Knights have built their franchise and a fanbase in Las Vegas, he hopes to convert remaining Vegas fans in Utah.

“That’s part of their responsibility, is kind of sliding over and letting the new group come in, in a weird way, similar to the way someone slid over for them to come in,” he said. “I have nothing but respect.”

Friday’s playoff debut at the Delta Center was a big step. The buzz in and around the building was palpable. In the hours between the jersey swap and puck drop, fans partied around the rink. Faces were painted, woolly mammoth trunks were swinging as fans danced around the Zammoth. Military helicopters flew overhead.

The event marked the second anniversary of the day the franchise first welcomed then-Arizona Coyotes players and coaches to the city. They were greeted by children at the airport hangar, shown the city, and then visited a packed Delta Center.

“I don’t want to let repetition spoil the prayer, but that was a pretty amazing moment,” Smith said, recalling the welcome. “It was the greatest moment I’ve been to in sports, because it was literally a bet. I don’t think we had (documents) signed at that point. It was literally, ‘Hey, let’s see if Utah can show up for hockey,’ and Utah hasn’t not shown up every night since then.”

“This is a happy night,” he continued. “Let’s go make it special.”

The fans and the Mammoth players did just that.

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The vibes from outside spilled into the arena. The sold-out crowd waved rally towels and roared as the players took the ice.

“Right when we came out, it was electric in the building,” Utah defenseman MacKenzie Weegar said. “It was loud, and I saw the towels going, introducing the starting lineups, and felt it after that. The first five minutes give you goosebumps. That’s sort of what it’s about. You know, feeling it with the fans and the players. Both sides appreciate each other so much. But we really felt that.”

“It was amazing,” added Utah captain Clayton Keller, who hadn’t played in a playoff game in six years. “We were so jacked up to play tonight. I think even just in warm-ups, it was an amazing feeling. You could tell that they were invested, and we’re super excited as well.”

The Mammoth may have been too excited in the first 10 minutes of the game. The Golden Knights jumped all over them, controlling the puck and firing a barrage of shots on net. Vegas held a commanding 10-1 edge in shots at one point, but Utah goalie Karel Vejmelka stood on his head to keep it scoreless.

Then Weegar opened the scoring with a slap shot that nearly blew the roof off the building.

“I was looking up in the stands after the first goal,” Lawson Crouse said. “Just seeing all of the rally towels going, and just feeling the energy and the passion from them …  the fans have been incredible ever since Day 1 when we showed up here, but it seemed like they took it to a whole new level tonight.”

Utah poured in three more consecutive goals, two by Crouse, and the building seemed to get louder each time. Players said they couldn’t hear Utah coach André Tourigny barking out the lines at certain points.

“That will be an adjustment,” Tourigny said, “Seriously, we had some confusion on the bench. The guys didn’t know what was up. For the people who know me, I can be pretty loud, but the crowd beat me.”

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The Mammoth held on for the win, becoming the sixth team since 1990 to win its first home playoff game. It was a roaring success on a monumental night, and one of many since moving to Salt Lake City.

“What Ryan and Ashley have done, in terms of building a fanbase, making adjustments to this building, having a training facility, getting involved in the community with the assistance of fans, and figuring out Tusky and the Zammoth — everything they’ve done has exceeded our highest expectations,” NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said Friday. “If you want to know how to write a textbook on how to start a franchise and a community from scratch, nobody is better than what Ryan and Ashley have been able to accomplish.”

The Mammoth are selling out the Delta Center on a nightly basis. They’ll be hosting the Colorado Avalanche for the 2026 Winter Classic at Rice Eccles Stadium on New Year’s Eve. They recently finished construction on their two-sheet Mammoth Ice Center, which will help grow the youth hockey scene.

“If you want to be inspired, just go at three o’clock on any day, and just sit outside our practice facility and watch parents come in with these kids,” Smith said. “(With) their hockey gear, and their hockey stick, and each one stops and almost has a moment with you, saying, ‘You do not understand what this has done for my family. Our kid being able to come in and say he’s found a tribe, or she’s found a tribe.’ It’s a real cool moment.”

In one sense, Utah is just continuing the Golden Knights’ push to prove the sport can thrive in non-traditional hockey markets. In another, there’s a clear rivalry developing.

“Part of the beauty of this series is that rivalries really get intense by playoff series,” Bettman said, “and so this worked out nicely.”

Source: Utah News

Mammoth vs. Golden Knights Game 3: Key takeaways as Utah pulls ahead in series

The Mammoth used their speed and skill to fly past the Vegas Golden Knights in their 4-2 win, taking a 2-1 series lead. Rob Gray / Imagn Images SALT LAKE CITY– There was quite a scene outside of the …

SALT LAKE CITY — There was quite a scene outside of the Delta Center prior to the first playoff hockey game in the building’s history on Friday. Military helicopters flew overhead and music blasted while Utah Mammoth fans danced and chanted, their faces painted blue and woolly mammoth hats draped over their heads.

Inside the building, the fans had an even better time.

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The Mammoth used their speed and skill to fly past the Las Vegas Golden Knights in their 4-2 win, taking a 2-1 series lead.

The Golden Knights stormed out of the gates, outshooting Utah 10-1 early in the game, but Utah netminder Karel Vejmelka stood on his head until his team found its rhythm.

Mammoth defender MacKenzie Weegar opened the scoring with a slap shot that rung off Carter Hart’s mask, flew between his legs and into the Vegas net, sending the sold-out Utah crowd to its feet.

Utah rode the momentum from that goal, pressuring in the Golden Knights’ zone for several minutes until Logan Cooley drew a high-sticking penalty on Vegas defenseman Brayden McNabb in front of the net. The Mammoth took advantage when Dylan Guenther lazered a one-timer past Hart for his second goal of the playoffs to make it 2-0.

“There are some guys in the league who have that kind of a shot, but it’s not every team that has the privilege to have a guy who can shoot the puck like that,” Utah coach André Tourigny said of Guenther. “What I like about Dylan’s game right now is that it is one element of his game. That’s not his game. It’s one element of his game.”

The second period was a similar story to the first, with Vegas controlling possession early on but generating little offense with it, then Utah striking quickly on the other end. Lawson Crouse scored twice in less than five minutes to extend Utah’s lead to four before Jack Eichel scored on a rebound in front of the Mammoth crease to cut the deficit to 4-1 entering the third period.

Nic Dowd scored his second goal of the series in the third period to make it 4-2, but it was too late to spark a comeback.

Utah impressed all season with its speed in transition, and after a rough start to the series, it has shone through over the last two games. The Golden Knights still control territory for the majority of games, but struggle to generate much from that time spent with the puck. Meanwhile, the Mammoth have needed very little opportunity to generate goals.

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“We used our speed a lot tonight,” Utah captain Clayton Keller said. “We stuck with it. They’re a great team and they make you work for everything.”

It will be interesting to see how coach John Tortorella, who is still relatively new behind the Vegas bench, tries to counteract what looks like a major speed disadvantage in the neutral zone for the Golden Knights.

Vegas allowed a franchise-low 12 shots on goal, and yet Utah still managed to score enough to win.

“Over the years, we’ve been a team that’s been able to generate in different ways, and sometimes we’re going to have more shots than other nights,” Keller said. “Quality over quantity, sometimes.”

Vejmelka weathered an early storm

You could feel the energy in the building for the Mammoth’s first playoff game. You could also see the nerves on the ice for the Mammoth players as the Golden Knights dominated the first 10 minutes of the game. Vegas lived in the Utah zone early on, outshooting the Mammoth and generating several grade-A scoring chances.

However, the Golden Knights came away with nothing to show for it thanks to Vejmelka’s heroics in net.

Mitch Marner found Brett Howden for a one-timer from right in front of the net on the second shift of the game, and Vejmelka slid across for a pad save. Minutes later, Vegas fourth-line center Dowd fired a low shot through a horde of bodies in front, and Vejmelka somehow tracked the puck through the traffic to get his left pad on it. Vejmelka stopped all 13 of Vegas’ shots in the opening period, and eventually the skaters in front of him found their game to give the Mammoth an early 2-0 lead.

Utah’s top line found something

The first two games of the series were not good for Utah’s top line of Nick Schmaltz, Keller and Crouse. The trio — which features two of the Mammoth’s top scorers during the regular season — didn’t score a goal in Las Vegas, and was on the ice for multiple goals against.

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That all changed in Game 3, with Crouse scoring two key goals in the second period to extend Utah’s lead.

“We talked about it as a line,” Keller said. “We just want to be better each game. It’s the playoffs. You have to work for every single inch, and just a little execution or details go a long way. We’ve had times throughout the regular season where we struggled a bit, and had to reset, and we were still confident and still had a lot of chemistry.”

Early in the middle frame, Crouse dished the puck to Schmaltz at the offensive blue line and crashed the net. Schmaltz passed it back to Crouse with speed, and he tipped it past Hart’s blocker to make it 3-0. Less than five minutes later, Keller won the puck on the forecheck and found Crouse at the top of the circles, and Crouse ripped a wrist shot past Hart’s blocker again to extend it to 4-0.

It could be that three of the Mammoth’s best players simply found their rhythm. It could also be that they’re getting a more preferable matchup now that coach Tourigny has the second change. Over the first two games, Schmaltz’s line saw a lot of Vegas’ fourth line of Dowd, Colton Sissons and Cole Smith. That bruising trio forechecked Utah’s top line successfully, grinded out shifts, and even scored twice in Game 1.

In Game 3, Schmaltz’s line scored both of its goals against Vegas’ top line of Jack Eichel, Mark Stone and Ivan Barbashev.

Vegas needs more from its stars

Last year, the Golden Knights’ season ended on a 127-minute scoreless drought against the Edmonton Oilers, and the biggest question entering the offseason was how to add more scoring to the top of the lineup. Vegas’ answer to that question was signing Toronto Maple Leafs star Marner to an eight-year, $96 million contract.

It hasn’t worked through the first three games of this series, as Marner has yet to record his first playoff goal, and the Golden Knights’ issues converting offensive zone time into goals have looked very similar to a year ago.

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It’s certainly not all on Marner. Eichel hasn’t been his usual, impactful self. He scored his first goal of the series on Friday by finding on a loose puck in front of the Utah net, but has not been the dynamic player carrying the puck up the ice that Vegas has grown used to over the last few years.

Pavel Dorofeyev, Vegas’ leading scorer in the regular season, has yet to record a point in the series and was demoted down the lineup by Tortorella on Friday. Tomas Hertl’s scoreless drought has now reached 23 games dating back to the regular season. His last goal came against the Detroit Red Wings on March 4.

This story will be updated.

Source: Utah News

Mammoth win the first NHL playoff game in Utah, beating Vegas 4-2 for 2-1 series lead

Lawson Crouse scored twice in a 5:42 span in the second period and the Utah Mammoth won the first NHL playoff game in the state, beating the Vegas Golden Knights 4-2 on Friday night for a 2-1 series …

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Lawson Crouse scored twice in a 5:42 span in the second period and the Utah Mammoth won the first NHL playoff game in the state, beating the Vegas Golden Knights 4-2 on Friday night for a 2-1 series lead.

Game 4 of the best-of-seven series is Monday night in Salt Lake City. Utah evened the series in Las Vegas on Tuesday after winning 3-2. Vegas won the series opener 4-2 on its home ice on Sunday.

The Mammoth are in their second season in Utah after leaving Arizona.

Crouse’s goals capped an early flurry that saw the Mammoth score four times over the first 30 minutes while being limited to only eight shots on goal during that stretch.

“Over the years, we’ve been a team that’s been able to generate in different ways,” Utah captain Clayton Keller said. “Sometimes we’re going to have more shots than other nights. Quality over quantity sometimes and just bearing down on the looks that you do get. I think that’s the most important thing.”

MacKenzie Weegar and Dylan Guenther scored for Utah in the first period, with Guenther striking on a power play. Crouse followed in the second. He tipped in the puck at the 4:06 mark and then struck on a long shot between the circles at 9:48 to make it 4-0.

Carter Hart stayed on the ice for the Golden Knights through all three periods despite giving up four goals by the midway point of the second.

“I have full faith in him. He wants to work through it,” Vegas coach John Tortorella said. “He has an attitude and a mental toughness about him at that position. He’ll be fine.”

Karel Vejmelka made 29 saves for the Mammoth, who had only 12 shots on goal against Hart. Keller had two assists for the first multi-point game of his playoff career.

Jack Eichel got Vegas on the board with 6:40 left in the second. Nic Dowd made it 4-2 with 3:08 left in the third.

Vegas went 0 of 4 on the power play while Utah converted its lone opportunity.

“I think (Vejmelka) was rock solid and made keys saves at key moments on the PK,” Mammoth coach Andre Tourigny said. “We had a great performance from our special teams.”

Weegar opened the scoring with 7:01 left in the first, tracking down a feed from Liam O’Brien and blasting the puck between the circles.

Guenther converted on a power play with 2:14 to go in the period on a slap shot from the top of the left circle.

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AP NHL playoffs: https://apnews.com/hub/stanley-cup and https://apnews.com/hub/nhl

Source: Utah News

Utah K-9 who helped remove hundreds of pounds of narcotics dies

A K-9 who served with the Utah Highway Patrol and helped find hundreds of pounds of illegal narcotics has died.In a Facebook post, the Grand County Sheriff’s Of …

A K-9 who served with the Utah Highway Patrol and helped find hundreds of pounds of illegal narcotics has died.

In a Facebook post, the Grand County Sheriff’s Office announced the death of K-9 Leo.

“Our hearts go out to his handler, Tyler West, during this difficult time,” the post read.

A K-9 who served with the Utah Highway Patrol and helped find hundreds of pounds of illegal narcotics has died. (Photo: Grand County Sheriff’s Office)

A K-9 who served with the Utah Highway Patrol and helped find hundreds of pounds of illegal narcotics has died. (Photo: Grand County Sheriff’s Office)

The sheriff’s office said that while Leo was not assigned to its office, he worked alongside its deputies and had a lasting impact on the community. Photos documented the hundreds of pounds of illegal narcotics the K-9 helped find in Grand County. He later transferred to Iron County, where he continued working to get dangerous drugs off the streets.

The sheriff’s office said Leo served with loyalty, dedication and courage, and his legacy would not be forgotten.

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Source: Utah News