Federal court clears way for Utah’s new congressional map to take effect

Republicans had sought to block the court-ordered map, which puts in Democrats in position to gain a House seat, from going into place before the midterm elections.

A three-judge panel declined to block Utah’s new congressional map on Monday, ruling that Republicans’ challenge to the court-ordered district lines was unlikely to succeed and that it was too close to the election to change the map.

The map puts most of Salt Lake City into one district, making it likely Democrats will pick up a House seat.

The Republican plaintiffs had argued that the state judge violated the U.S. Constitution in implementing the current map. They had sought a preliminary injunction, which would have blocked the map from being used before this year’s midterm elections, when control of the House is at stake. But the federal court concluded the case was not likely to succeed on its merits as the judges believed that the state court had not erred in removing the map and implementing another.

The state court implemented the map after ruling that the GOP-controlled Legislature had improperly ignored redistricting guidelines in the state’s Constitution with their map. Republican lawmakers fought to split the state’s blue-leaning urban area into multiple districts, which would have preserved the state’s all-GOP congressional delegation.

Though the ruling could be appealed, the state’s top election official, Republican Lt. Gov. Deidre Henderson, has said the final map for the 2026 election must be in place by Monday. Congressional candidates in Utah must file to run for office between March 9 and March 13.

The Utah Supreme Court rejected a separate challenge from Republicans to the map on Friday, concluding they did not have jurisdiction.

The legal battle in Utah comes amid a broader redistricting arms race taking place across the country, initially sparked by President Donald Trump urging GOP-led states to redraw their maps. Utah is one of six states that enacted new congressional boundaries last year, while there are efforts underway in Virginia and Florida to get new maps on the books for this year’s elections.

Source: Utah News

Utah judge to decide whether to disqualify prosecutors of suspect in Charlie Kirk killing

A Utah judge is expected to rule on Tuesday on whether to disqualify prosecutors from the trial of the man accused of assassinating conservative activist Charlie Kirk because a daughter of a senior …

A Utah judge is expected to rule on Tuesday on whether to disqualify prosecutors from the trial of the man accused of assassinating conservative activist Charlie Kirk because a daughter of a senior …

Source: Utah News

Utah judge is set to rule on disqualifying prosecutors in the Charlie Kirk case

Tyler Robinson’s attorneys argue that Chad Grunander, a deputy county attorney working on the case, has a conflict of interest because his adult daughter was in the audience when Charlie Kirk was …

By HANNAH SCHOENBAUM

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — A Utah judge is expected to decide Tuesday whether to keep prosecutors on the murder case against Tyler Robinson, the man accused of killing conservative activist Charlie Kirk on a Utah college campus.

Prosecutors plan to seek the death penalty against Robinson, 22, who is charged with aggravated murder in the Sept. 10 shooting on the Utah Valley University campus in Orem. Robinson has not yet entered a plea.

State District Judge Tony Graf has been weighing whether to disqualify the Utah County Attorney’s Office from continuing to prosecute the case.

Robinson’s attorneys argue that Chad Grunander, a deputy county attorney working on the case, has a conflict of interest because his adult daughter was in the audience when Kirk was shot.

An estimated 3,000 people were at the outdoor rally to hear Kirk when he was struck while taking questions. A co-founder of Turning Point USA, Kirk helped mobilize young people to vote for President Donald Trump.

Grunander’s daughter, whose identity has not been disclosed to news media covering the case, testified in court that she did not record video of the shooting or the aftermath. She was looking at the crowd and did not learn until after she ran to safety that it was Kirk who had been shot, she told the court earlier this month.

Robinson’s attorneys also argue in court documents that prosecutors were quick to announce their intent to seek the death penalty, which they say is evidence of “strong emotional reactions” that merit disqualification of the entire team.

Utah County Attorney Jeffrey Gray testified this month that he thought about seeking the death penalty before an arrest had been made in the case, and his colleague’s daughter in no way influenced the decision.

Graf could decide to keep prosecutors on the case, dismiss them all or dismiss only Grunander.

If Utah County prosecutors are disqualified, the case would likely shift to prosecutors in a county with enough resources to handle a big case, such as Salt Lake County, or possibly the state attorney general’s office, Utah Prosecution Council Director Robert Church has said.

The judge has been weighing other issues of fairness for Robinson, should he go to trial.

Full video recordings of Kirk’s shooting have not been shown in court after defense attorneys objected out of concern that the footage would undermine Robinson’s right to a fair trial.

Defense attorneys also seek to keep TV cameras and photographers out of the courtroom, arguing that “highly biased” news outlets risk tainting the case. Prosecutors, attorneys for news organizations and Kirk’s widow have urged Graf to keep the proceedings open.

___

Associated Press writer Mead Gruver contributed from Fort Collins, Colorado.

Source: Utah News

Utah counts down the days to 2034 Winter Games

“The Olympics are the most complicated undertaking in the world… when you think about most businesses, they’ll have seven or eight functional areas, marketing, manufacturing, the Olympics have 48,” …

“The Olympics are the most complicated undertaking in the world… when you think about most businesses, they’ll have seven or eight functional areas, marketing, manufacturing, the Olympics have 48,” said Fraser Bullock, executive chair and president of Utah 2034.

Source: Utah News

Kouri Richins’ sister-in-law testifies she was ‘dumbfounded’ by Utah mom’s behavior after husband’s death

Kouri Richins has pleaded not guilty to counts of aggravated murder, attempted aggravated murder, insurance fraud and forgery. If convicted of the most serious charge, she could face up to life in …

Kouri Richins’ in-laws gave emotional testimony Monday in her murder trial, describing her behavior in the aftermath of her husband’s sudden death – which prosecutors allege occurred because of a fatal poisoning orchestrated by the Utah mother of three.

Richins, 35, is accused of killing her husband Eric Richins with a lethal dose of fentanyl in March 2022. Prosecutors allege she killed him for financial gain and to start a new life with the man with whom she was having an affair.

“I knew right then my brother was gone, and I fell to the floor,” Katie Richins-Benson said, struggling to speak through tears as she described arriving at her brother’s home in Kamas, outside Salt Lake City, the day of his death. She testified Kouri Richins “wasn’t crying like I was, she wasn’t hysterical. Just stood there and shook her head ‘no’ at me.”

Katie Richins-Benson becomes emotional as she testifies Monday in the murder trial of her late brother's wife, Kouri Richins. - Spenser Heaps/Pool/AP

Katie Richins-Benson becomes emotional as she testifies Monday in the murder trial of her late brother’s wife, Kouri Richins. – Spenser Heaps/Pool/AP

Eugene Richins, the father of Eric Richins, testified he didn’t remember speaking to Kouri Richins the morning of his son’s death, after he went to the couple’s home.

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“I don’t recall her saying much of anything to me,” Eugene Richins said. “When I came in and my daughter Katie told me that Eric was gone, they helped me on the couch. And I don’t ever recall even talking to Kouri to be quite honest with you.”

The emotional testimony followed opening statements in Kouri Richins’ trial, where she is facing counts of aggravated murder, attempted aggravated murder, insurance fraud and forgery. She has pleaded not guilty to all the charges. If convicted of the most serious charge, she could face up to life in prison.

“The evidence will prove that Kouri Richins murdered Eric for his money and to get a fresh start at life,” Brad Bloodworth, chief prosecutor in the Summit County Attorney’s Office, said in his opening statement Monday. “More than anything, she wanted his money to perpetuate her facade of privileged affluence and success.”

In her own opening statement, Richins’ defense attorney Kathy Nester acknowledged her client is a “flawed person,” but said jurors would see by the end of the case that she is innocent.

‘I could not wrap my head around it’

The jury watched about half an hour of police body camera footage recorded after Eric Richins, 39, was found dead in the early morning hours of March 4, 2022. The footage showed Kouri Richins crying while speaking with first responders as more family members, including Richins-Benson, arrived at the couple’s home.

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An autopsy would later reveal Eric Richins died from a fentanyl overdose, with about five times the lethal dose in his blood, according to charging documents.

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“That extraordinary amount of fentanyl was intentional, not accidental,” Bloodworth said.

Around 9 p.m., Kouri Richins and her husband had a drink together before she went to sleep in the bedroom of one of their sons, she told an officer, according to the bodycam footage. When she returned to the master bedroom around 3 a.m., Richins said, she found her husband lying in their bed, not breathing.

“I just came into bed, in our bed, and I turned over and he’s just cold, he’s just cold,” Richins said when she called emergency services early that morning, according to a recording of the call played during the defense’s opening statement. She told the 911 operator she didn’t know what happened.

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Nester said throughout the case, Richins has repeatedly “told her truth.”

“It’s exactly what she told that 911 operator that you just heard, and you’re going to hear over and over again: ‘I don’t know what happened,’” Nester told the jury. “You’re going to hear that Eric Richins’ family simply could not accept that.”

Eric Richins took marijuana gummies to help his back pain, some of which he got from dispensaries and others from unknown sources, Nester said. Kouri Richins told investigators after her husband’s death that she believed they could have contained fentanyl, according to court documents.

An empty bottle for pain pills was found in Eric Richins’ nightstand after his death, Nester said. The bottle’s label said the pills were prescribed to Eric Richins and had expired in 2016, she said.

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During cross-examination, Richins-Benson testified her brother was prescribed hydrocodone for a medical procedure he underwent years ago. Eric Richins didn’t like to take the pills but would take them when his back pain was “extreme,” she said.

Eric Richins’ family “needed someone or something to blame for losing someone they loved that wasn’t Eric himself, and that’s totally understandable,” the defense attorney said.

Eric Richins’ sister said she was “dumbfounded” when, the morning of Eric’s death, Kouri Richins spoke with someone about an upcoming closing for her real estate business while consoling one of her sons.

“’You can’t tell me you’re going to close on that Midway mansion when my brother just died,’” Richins-Benson recalled telling her sister-in-law. “And she looked at me matter of fact and said, ‘Yeah, absolutely. He has nothing to do with it. The money’s already gone through. It’s all my business. I’m going to.’”

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The same day, Kouri Richins also said she had decided to sell their family home, Richins-Benson testified.

“I had just lost one of the most important people in my entire life, and she was planning on selling the house that he had just been wheeled out of, (and) closing on a multi-million-dollar mansion,” she said. “I could not wrap my head around it.”

Eugene Richins, the father of Eric Richins, testifies on Monday. He was the first witness called by Utah prosecutors in Kouri Richins' murder trial. - Spenser Heaps/Pool/AP

Eugene Richins, the father of Eric Richins, testifies on Monday. He was the first witness called by Utah prosecutors in Kouri Richins’ murder trial. – Spenser Heaps/Pool/AP

Eugene Richins testified that, later in 2022, Kouri Richins told him the medical examiner determined Eric Richins died from a combination of Covid-19 and a lung fungus, which had also killed Eugene Richins’ wife. However, when the family contacted the medical examiners’ office, they were told the results had not yet been released and they had never received a call from Kouri Richins, Eugene Richins said.

Kouri Richins was ‘chronically unhappy’ in marriage, prosecutor says

Prosecutors allege Kouri Richins killed her husband to profit off his lucrative business and life insurance policies – funds she could then use to support her struggling real estate business.

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On the day of Eric Richins’ death, his estate was worth roughly $4 million, and his wife owed more than $4.5 million to over 20 different lenders, Bloodworth said. Eric Richins’ life was insured for more than $2 million through several life insurance policies, one of which prosecutors allege his wife fraudulently applied for weeks before he died.

Kouri Richins was also “chronically unhappy” in her marriage and wanted to start a new life with another man she was seeing, Bloodworth said.

Nester acknowledged the couple had an “imperfect marriage” and had previously contemplated divorce, but said the couple decided to stay together after going through marriage counseling. One of Eric Richins’ friends said the couple was the happiest he’d ever seen them in the weeks before his death, the defense attorney said.

However, prosecutors allege that Kouri Richins attempted to poison her husband on Valentine’s Day in 2022, weeks before his death.

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A woman who cleaned Kouri Richins’ houses told investigators that Richins asked for fentanyl in early 2022, charging documents said. The woman said she bought more than 15 pills she believed contained fentanyl on February 11, 2022, and then gave them to Richins.

On Valentine’s Day, a few days later, Richins left her husband a sandwich and a note before leaving to meet up with her “paramour,” prosecutors said in charging documents.

Later that day, Eric Richins told two friends he felt like he was going to die after eating the sandwich, according to the charging documents. “I think my wife is trying to poison me,” he said to one. He told the other friend he broke out in hives, then injected himself with an EpiPen and drank a bottle of Benadryl.

In her opening statement, Nester said Eric Richins had an allergic reaction to the sandwich, which “wasn’t even a blip to Eric.”

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In late February 2022, Richins allegedly asked the woman for more fentanyl, saying the previous drugs were not strong enough. Prosecutors said the woman bought more drugs on February 26, 2022, and her phone records show contact with Richins around the time she met with the drug dealer.

Within a week, Eric Richins was dead.

Kouri Richins, left, and her late husband Eric Richins are seen in an undated photo Richins shared on social media. - From Kouri Richins

Kouri Richins, left, and her late husband Eric Richins are seen in an undated photo Richins shared on social media. – From Kouri Richins

After first responders left Kouri Richins’ home the morning of her husband’s death, Bloodworth said three GIFs – a type of animated image – were accessed on Richins’ phone: One was captioned “Idiots. Idiots everywhere.” Another showed a woman wiping away her tears with dollar bills, and a third included the caption, “I’m really rich.”

Kouri Richins deleted cell phone messages and data from the months surrounding her husband’s death, Bloodworth said, showing she had a “guilty conscience.”

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After Kouri Richins was informed of her husband’s cause of death, her phone’s internet history allegedly included visits to websites about women’s prisons in Utah, life insurance payments, and how police recover deleted cell phone data.

A defense attorney who no longer represents Richins previously said the searches were merely a response to the investigation at the time and not indicative of guilt.

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Source: Utah News

How Utah evolved into a sports boomtown — and MLB expansion frontrunner

The population of the Salt Lake City-Provo-Orem corridor, now nearly 3 million, has roughly doubled since MLB last expanded in 1998.

SALT LAKE CITY — The mayor is standing on a chair. 

A mention of the massive map on a wall outside Erin Mendenhall’s office in the City-County building has turned into an impromptu city tour, with the stately, upholstered seat used for extra reach. The mayor points out the State Capitol and the Salt Lake Temple, suggests spots for craft beer and cocktails, and describes the areas of the map lined with colored tape: orange for priority city projects, green for a Green Loop, yellow for the multibillion-dollar development of a downtown sports-and-entertainment district.

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Then the mayor’s attention lands on a cluster of barren industrial lots on the city’s west side. It doesn’t look like much on a map, but it could be the future home of a Major League Baseball expansion franchise.

An MLB team would be a seismic addition for Utah’s already exploding sports scene. “It has grown almost exponentially,” Mendenhall says, “but it doesn’t feel like a reach, because Salt Lake City has been evolving right alongside the sports market.”

A market once monopolized by the NBA’s Utah Jazz has emerged as America’s next sports boomtown, with the arrival of an NHL franchise, frontrunner status in MLB expansion, and the return of the Winter Olympics in 2034. Salt Lake City’s transformation into a Mountain West sports hub seems sudden. But those involved describe it as a “crescendo” of two decades of methodical planning since the 2002 Winter Olympics to situate Utah as a year-round sporting destination. That crescendo has swelled into a cacophony of construction sounds throughout the Salt Lake Valley.

There’s a light snow falling one January morning as a soaring, clanging drill rig bores holes to fortify the foundation of a 10-story office building — the first structure going up at the Power District. The Larry H. Miller Company’s $3.5 billion project is turning west-side industrial lots into mixed-use development and, perhaps, a ballpark district.

“When the pioneers came into the valley, they said, ‘This is the place,’” says Steve Starks, the company’s CEO. “What we’ve said, as it relates to Major League Baseball, is this is the place — and we’re ready.”

Readiness has put Utah at an advantage. While other cities announced their entries into MLB expansion consideration with renderings and merch, Salt Lake City arrived with a 100-acre site, a coalition of prominent Utahns, broad bipartisan support, a plan for public funding and a reputable anchor investor. Gail Miller took over the LHM Company after her husband, Larry, the auto dealer who saved the Jazz from relocating, died in 2009. Now, after selling the Jazz and the family’s fleet of car dealerships, Gail and her children are leading efforts to land an MLB franchise. Commissioner Rob Manfred wants the league’s next expansion cities settled before he retires in 2029. Utah’s Power District presents a turnkey option.

City and state officials are not subtle about their aspirations. They want Salt Lake City to be a larger dot on the map. Part of their plan is to continue building a robust sports scene. “We need baseball to kind of round it out,” says Stuart Adams, Utah’s Senate President. “Then we’ll go after something else later — that other sport.” (The NFL.)

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The market is already bigger than you’d think, yet not nearly as big as it could become. The population of the Salt Lake City-Provo-Orem corridor, now nearly 3 million, has roughly doubled since MLB last expanded in 1998. That surge is one of the forces driving the evolution of Utah sports, as are the state’s economic forecast and its pro-business, sports-friendly legislature. But the “secret sauce,” says Jeff Robbins of the Utah Sports Commission, is how the state’s public and private stakeholders work in unison to prepare for new opportunities.

“We don’t mess around in Utah,” Adams says. “We’re ready, willing and able.”

Scott Sandall, a Republican member of the Utah State Senate, compares it to being invited to a black-tie event. As others scurry to get ready, he says, “We have our tuxedo on. And we’re there a half hour early.”

Ahead of the Winter Olympics opening ceremony earlier this month, an 82-year-old Utahn woman with white hair and a warm smile carried the Olympic torch through a shopping center in downtown Milan, Italy. Crowds pressed close. She waved. They cheered. It was Gail Miller’s second Olympic torch relay. The first, 24 years ago, was in her hometown of Salt Lake City.

A large contingent traveled from Salt Lake City to Milan to look ahead to the 2034 Winter Olympics. If anything, Olympic officials said, Utah is overprepared. Venues are ready. Organizers have raised more than $250 million from private and corporate donors, plus a pledge from The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, which is headquartered in Salt Lake City, for financial support, volunteers and use of its land.

When the 2002 Winter Olympics came to town, Utah governor Spencer Cox says, “There was a little bit of an inferiority complex. Like, can we pull this off?” Afterward, the state began to dream bigger. Only four years later, Robbins traveled to Turin, Italy, to ask Peter Ueberroth, the then-president of the United States Olympic Committee, how soon Utah could host again.

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The Olympics will return in 2034 to a radically different Utah. Since 2002, the state has added NHL, MLS, NWSL, pro lacrosse and softball franchises. It has hosted UFC fight nights, X Games and an NBA All-Star Game. An NHL Winter Classic is next. The University of Utah and Brigham Young University athletic programs are flush with financing. There are gleaming athletic facilities all over the region — new ballparks for the Utes and the Salt Lake Bees (the Miller-owned Triple-A affiliate of the Los Angeles Angels), state-of-the-art practice facilities for the Jazz and the NHL’s Utah Mammoth, an under-renovation Delta Center and more.

“Most people are surprised that there’s so much in the middle of nowhere,” says Derek Miller, president of the Salt Lake Chamber.

Ryan Smith, the billionaire owner of the Jazz and Mammoth, believes there’s another reason for Utah’s momentum: a better narrative being told. “We’re doing a much better job as a state saying, ‘Actually, this is who we are,’” he says.

The story told about Utah and its capital city hasn’t always been marketable. Insular. Boring. A Latter-day Saints bubble. 

Sport has a way of softening differences. After arriving from New Orleans in 1979, the Jazz served as a “cultural bridge” between Utah and the rest of the United States, says professor Matthew Bowman, the Mormon Studies chair at Claremont Graduate University. Yet their existence wasn’t entirely secular. Before buying his first stake in the Jazz in 1984, Larry Miller sought counsel from Gordon B. Hinckley, president of the LDS Church. Hinckley spoke of the “potential for good in the millions of tiny impressions” made every time people heard the Jazz mentioned, Miller wrote in his autobiography: “He knew that keeping the team in the state would be beneficial for Utah and, by extension, for the image of the Church in Utah.”

Construction is already underway at the site of the Power District, a downtown sports-and-entertainment hub. (Courtesy of the Larry H. Miller Company)

At times, NBA players have delivered some of the state’s most scathing critiques. Derek Harper nixed a trade to the Jazz in 1997, saying, “You go live in Utah.” In 2021, Jazz guard Deron Williams said he gave up trying to recruit players there. Visiting players mocked the lack of nightlife and rated it as the city where they least liked to play. After five years with the team — a stretch during which multiple Jazz fans were issued bans for racist remarks toward visiting players and their families — star Donovan Mitchell said upon departing, it was “draining” to be a Black man advocating for racial equality in Utah.

Increasingly, Utah has sought to refresh its image. Politicians describe it as a place of natural splendor and big spenders. They cite research rating Utah as the youngest and healthiest U.S. state, and among the top states in population growth, family size, economic outlook and upward mobility. They are working to avoid environmental disaster and restore the Great Salt Lake. Though the church still holds outsized influence in state politics and owns large swaths of property in downtown Salt Lake City, the surrounding county is now minority Latter-day Saints. The capital city is increasingly diverse. It’s not hard to find a drink. (But could we interest you in a dirty soda?) Utah is having a moment in pop culture, too, with social media influencers and reality shows suggesting to a global audience that the housewives there are as real as those in Beverly Hills. In time, Bowman says, “I suspect the sense that Utah is an inhospitable place will begin to fade.”

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The story Smith tells about Utah is one of limitless growth. In 2002, the year the Winter Olympics first came to Utah, Smith co-founded the market analytics company Qualtrics in his family’s Provo basement. The company sold in 2018 for $8 billion. The “Silicon Slopes,” a vibrant tech ecosystem, are teeming with young talent and ready to do business, Smith says. “If I learned anything in tech,” he adds, “you always bet on youth, and the future of where it’s going to be.”


Nothing lends credence to the viability of another Big Four franchise in Salt Lake City like three nail-biting periods at the Delta Center. It’s a midseason game on a school night after the holidays, yet there’s a capacity crowd ready to explode at every shot and skirmish. Fans wear sweaters and beanies branded with a “Mountain Mammoth” logo unveiled nine months ago, losing their minds over a team that didn’t exist two years ago. They flash “Tusks Up” with their hands. And to think that all this newness sprouted from the husk of the financially floundering Arizona Coyotes.

During an intermission, father and son Breck and Jaxson Fullmer follow the fans spilling into the concourse for a bite to eat. Jaxson wears a Boston Red Sox cap; like many Utahns, he has inherited a cluster of random allegiances. Breck grew up in Provo. In his youth, he almost never went to Salt Lake City. Now he and Jaxson are there often, drawn downtown by the hum of activity.

“There’s energy. There’s a vibe. There’s a lot more to do,” Breck says.

Earlier that afternoon, Smith pulled up a chair beside his wife, Ashley, and NHL commissioner Gary Bettman for a news conference at Rice-Eccles Stadium, where the Utes play, to announce it as the site of the 2027 Winter Classic. Bettman began: “If I would have suggested such an announcement three years ago, people would have thought we were making it up.”

In the front row, Mendenhall, the Democrat mayor, sat beside Cox, the Republican governor. Growing up in rural Utah, Cox said, the only thing that brought Utahns together was the Jazz — a bond strong enough to overcome religious differences, party lines or college rivalries. He hears echoes of that in the way fans have embraced the Mammoth.

Robbins, who has run the Utah Sports Commission since it was founded in 2000, has worked with five gubernatorial administrations on his organization’s efforts to rebrand Utah as “the state of sport.” Had Cox, like some of his predecessors, not shared Robbins’ view of sports franchises as strategic state assets, the story told about Salt Lake City’s sports scene ahead of the Olympics’ return might read more like a cautionary tale.

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In early 2024, when Smith was deep in discussions to buy the Coyotes’ hockey assets, he was considering relocating both the Jazz and the potential NHL expansion franchise south along the Wasatch Front, where Smith Entertainment Group would build a new, custom-fit arena closer to the state’s population center in Utah County. Almost all sports owners want a sports-and-entertainment district — a veritable cash cow — around their venue; and, as with The Battery in the Atlanta suburbs, space is more plentiful and less costly outside the city. In Utah, officials faced the prospect of having several franchises in the southern suburbs — Smith’s NHL and NBA teams in Draper, the Millers’ MLS and NWSL clubs in Sandy and the Triple-A Bees in South Jordan — and none left in Salt Lake City itself.

“This is what gave me sleepless nights,” Derek Miller says.

The future of the Utah sports scene was sealed in one legislative session in 2024. Lawmakers, with the backing of the church, passed a bill granting Smith Entertainment Group up to $900 million to create a sports-and-entertainment district around the Delta Center. Another $900 million bill to fund stadium construction at the Power District will be triggered if Utah gets an MLB team. As part of the agreements struck then, the Jazz and Mammoth will stay in Salt Lake City for at least 50 years.

Pushing across nearly $2 billion in public funding for the sports projects induced sticker shock for some. David Berri, a sports economist and professor at Southern Utah University, told Crain Currency that the deal keeping the Jazz downtown was unlikely to generate economic growth: “Salt Lake City would desperately like to be thought of as a major city, so they need a basketball team,” he said. “It’s unfair because we’re shuffling taxpayer money to someone who’s fabulously wealthy.” Lawmakers argued the state would be far worse off without sporting events boosting the capital city’s economy.

“I have concerns like every citizen out there about public participation in financing projects for very wealthy people,” Cox says. “I have no interest in just helping with a stadium upgrade or building something like that. What I do have an interest in is revitalizing the downtown of our capital city, which is incredible. And I have a huge interest in the west side of Salt Lake that has been underinvested in for generations.”

Luz Escamilla, the Democrat state senator representing the district encompassing Salt Lake City’s west-side neighborhoods — a diverse, working-class area in which the main attractions for decades have been the Utah State Fairpark and the famed Mexican restaurant Red Iguana — hears progress in whirring construction machinery. The Power District development is moving forward even if MLB expands elsewhere, or not at all, so billions of dollars are being poured into the district as the city’s downtown footprint expands westward.

“I’ve been begging the state for years: We need to help the west side,” Escamilla says. “This community has been told so many times, ‘We’re going to invest.’ It never happens. It’s happening now.”

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The windows of the governor’s office in the State Capitol building look west toward the steam stacks of the Power District. Cox often finds himself thinking about watching MLB games there one day.

“I like our chances,” he says. “I really do.”


When Dale Murphy retired from baseball in 1994, after two MVPs with the Atlanta Braves and 18 seasons in the majors, he and his wife, Nancy, settled their family in Alpine, Utah. Murphy is from Portland, Oregon, born and raised, but because he converted to the Latter-day Saints and clean living while in the minor leagues, he became a fan favorite in Utah.

After moving there, Murphy was regularly asked whether an MLB club could survive in Salt Lake City. “I was always like, well, there’s not a lot of people that live here,” Murphy says.

This past decade, as other U.S. cities launched early MLB expansion efforts, Murphy signed on as an ambassador of Portland’s MLB project. Starks, the LHM Company CEO, texted in the spring of 2023 asking Murphy to support Salt Lake City’s plan instead. Starks took Murphy to the Power District. They walked the proposed ballpark site and talked through the Miller family’s vision. An MLB team in Utah? Murphy can see it now. “I used to say, ‘I don’t know,’” he says. “Now it’s like, ‘Absolutely.’”

It no longer requires squinting to see Salt Lake City as a big-league market. It now ranks as the 27th-largest U.S. media market, up seven spots in the past decade and ahead of current MLB markets Pittsburgh, Baltimore, San Diego, Kansas City, Cincinnati and Milwaukee. A club in Utah would fill a gap in MLB’s geographic footprint — a Mountain West partner to sit between Las Vegas and Denver — without cannibalizing an existing market. Salt Lake City has been a minor-league town since 1901. It had a rookie-ball club that set the longest win streak in American pro baseball history. But what cemented the city in baseball lore is a dusty field a few minutes’ drive from the Power District: the sandlot from “The Sandlot.”

It’s also not difficult to see how the Power District would work as a ballpark district. The site is easily accessible, bordered by three interstates and a light-rail line, and situated between the city’s central business district and the airport, a five-minute drive from each. That proximity would be rare in any major-league metropolis; finding 100 acres of developable land so close to downtown, almost unheard of. “It’s an unparalleled opportunity,” Starks says. “Like The Battery, but five minutes from downtown.”

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There’s a chainlink fence encircling the proposed stadium site. That spot was previously occupied by industrial tanks that stored tar and pitch for a power plant, the one still standing there, with its three steam stacks looming like towering baseball bats. The storage tanks are gone. Long grass grows there instead. There are plans to turn the dilapidated, paved-over Jordan River into a crown feature of the stadium site, complete with a riverwalk, close enough for home-run balls to splash down.

Directly across the river from the proposed stadium site, there’s a gravel parking lot that used to be a softball field. Gail Miller brought the couple’s first child there at two days old to watch her husband, Larry, play softball.

Larry Miller had an active mind, and whenever he really got going on an idea, he’d talk about “tape transfers” — sharing what he was seeing in his head.

“I wish you could see it, too,” he’d say.

His son Steve, chairman of the board of directors for the LHM Company, is having that feeling. He’s imagining Utah’s first Opening Day. He sees a packed stadium, crowds on the riverwalk, kayaks in the water. The sun is starting to descend, casting a golden hue across the white-capped peaks of the Wasatch Mountains beyond the outfield wall.

“It’s all there,” he says. “It just needs to be created.”

Back inside the City-County building, Mendenhall steps off the chair and away from the map. She surveys a changing city. There’s no question MLB will thrive in Utah, the mayor says. Only when. “When the rest of the sports world looks at us,” she says, “I hope they know that this is where anything is possible. We’re just the right size. We have just the right momentum.”

Source: Utah News

Utah’s UHSAA high school boys basketball playoff brackets, results and schedules

Utah’s UHSAA boys basketball playoffs are under way, and the Provo Bulldogs and Morgan Trojans claimed the first two state championship trophies during Saturday’s action.

Utah’s UHSAA high school boys basketball playoff brackets, results and schedules originally appeared on The Sporting News. Add The Sporting News as a Preferred Source by clicking here.

Utah’s UHSAA boys basketball state championships are under way with the Class 4A and Class 3A state championships already in the books.

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The Provo [UT] Bulldogs claimed the Class 4A title in a 62-42 rout of the Hurricane [UT] Tigers on Saturday while the Morgan [UT] Trojans took the Class 3A trophy home after defeating the American Heritage [American Fork, UT] Patriots, 64-51, that same evening. Utah’s state championships are played at various locations with the 4A title game taking place at Weber State University in Ogden while the 3A championship game was played at Southern Utah University.

Next up is the Class 2A title tilt scheduled for 7 p.m. Wednesday, February 25, at Utah Valley University in Orem which will also hold the quarterfinals and semifinals to be staged on Monday and Tuesday. Simultaneously, the Class 5A and 6A state tournaments will tip off at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City on Monday with the semifinals scheduled for Thursday, February 26. The state championship games will then be played the following day on Friday evening.

The Class 1A state tournament, meanwhile, will get under way with the quarterfinals at Salt Lake City Community College on Thursday, February 26, continuing through Saturday, February 28, to bring a close to Utah’s UHSAA boys basketball state championships.

STREAM: Watch Utah’s UHSAA boys basketball playoffs on KSL Sports

UHSAA Class 6A bracket, schedule and results

2026 • UHSAA Boys Basketball State Championships 6A Boys Basketball Championship

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UHSAA Class 5A bracket, schedule and results

2026 • UHSAA Boys Basketball State Championships 5A Boys Basketball Championship

UHSAA Class 4A bracket, schedule and results

2026 • UHSAA Boys Basketball State Championships 4A Boys Basketball Championship

UHSAA Class 3A bracket, schedule and results

2026 • UHSAA Boys Basketball State Championships 3A Boys Basketball Championship

UHSAA Class 2A bracket, schedule and results

2026 • UHSAA Boys Basketball State Championships 2A Boys Basketball Championship

UHSAA Class 1A bracket, schedule and results

2026 • UHSAA Boys Basketball State Championships 1A Boys Basketball Championship

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Source: Utah News

Utah State’s win streak ends at Nevada, 80-77

Utah State’s second eight-game winning streak came to an end Saturday night in Reno with an 80-77 loss to Nevada. The Aggies connected on 15 3-pointers in the contest, its second-most of the season, …

RENO, Nev. (ABC4 Sports) – Utah State’s second eight-game winning streak came to an end Saturday night in Reno with an 80-77 loss to Nevada.

The Aggies connected on 15 3-pointers in the contest, its second-most of the season, but fell flat in the final moments as it scored just six points in the final five minutes while the Wolf Pack closed the night on a 15-6 run.

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Leading the Aggies in this one was Drake Allen, who connected on a career-high five 3-pointers while scoring a season-high 17 points, to go along with two boards, four assists and five steals without any turnovers.

USU blasts Boise State to extend win streak to 8

Neither side led by more than two possessions in a back-and-forth first half, as the sides were nearly even after 20 minutes of action, Utah State leading 40-38 at the break. It was a 3-point barrage for both teams early as both shot over 50 percent from range in the first half, the Aggies making 9-of-17, the Wolf Pack making 7-of-12.

While Utah State’s shooting numbers dropped following the break, Nevada’s climbed. USU led for the first 17 minutes of the second half, though the Wolf Pack kept it at arms length, never allowing the advantage to climb to more than eight points.

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An 11-3 Nevada run turned USU’s largest lead of the night into a tie game in a four-minute stretch leading up to the three-minute mark. Utah State created many opportunities late, but connected on just three of its final 15 shots from the field while Nevada went 6-of-8 during that same span. Despite that, the Aggies remained alive.

With 17 seconds remaining, a baseline inbound found Mason Falslev in the corner, who connected to make it a 78-77 game. Following two free throws for the Wolf Pack, the Aggies had a chance to even things up but two 3-pointers in the final six seconds missed the mark to seal the result.

USU crushes Memphis for 7th straight win, 99-75

Along with Allen’s strong performance, Kolby King finished the night with 16 points, six rebounds, an assist and a steal. Falslev went for 10 points, four rebounds, a team-high six assists and two steals.

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The Aggies struggled to keep up on the glass, being outrebounded 40-30, but limited the Wolf Pack to just nine second-chance points. King’s six boards led Utah State’s rebounding efforts.

In total, Utah State shot 40.3 percent (25-of-62) from the floor, 44.1 percent (15-of-34) from 3-point range and 63.2 percent (12-of-19) at the charity stripe. Nevada shot 51.0 percent (25-of-49) from the field, 52.6 percent (10-of-19) from behind the arc and 74.1 percent (20-of-27) at the free throw line.

Utah State will now remain on the road as it travels to San Diego, California, to face San Diego State on Wednesday, Feb. 25 at 9:00 p.m. MT.

Copyright 2026 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

For the latest news, weather, sports, and streaming video, head to ABC4 Utah.

Source: Utah News

How to watch Utah Jazz vs. Houston Rockets: TV, live stream info for Monday’s game

Check local listings each week. Both games will stream live nationwide on Peacock. NBC Sports will launch Sunday Night Basketball across NBC and Peacock on Feb. 1, 2026. For a full schedule of the NBA …

In the nightcap Monday of an NBA doubleheader on Peacock, the Houston Rockets will play host to the Utah Jazz in a Western Conference matchup.

Houston (34-21) squandered an 18-point lead in a 108-106 road loss Saturday to the New York Knicks and is battling the Los Angeles Lakers for a top-four spot in the West.

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Utah (18-39) has lost 10 of its last 13 games and recently drew a $500,000 league fine for “overt” tanking that “prioritizes draft position over winning.”

This will mark the third of four regular-season meetings between the teams, which split the first two games.

See below for additional information on how to watch the Jazz-Rockets matchup and a breakdown of the game. Also check out the schedule for the NBA on NBC and Peacock. Peacock will feature 100 regular-season games throughout the 2025-2026 season.

Click here to sign up for Peacock!

How to watch Utah Jazz vs. Houston Rockets:

  • When: Monday, Feb. 23

  • Where: Toyota Center in Houston, Texas

  • Time: 9:30 p.m. ET

  • YouTubeTV: NBCSN

Utah Jazz vs. Houston Rockets preview:

For Houston, it all starts with 37-year-old superstar Kevin Durant, who is averaging a team-leading 25.8 points per game in his 18th NBA season. Durant is ranked sixth on the all-time scoring list after passing Wilt Chamberlain (31,419 points) and Dirk Nowitzki (31,560) last month. He trails Michael Jordan (32,292) by 415 pts.

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The 16-time All-Star is supported by a youthful nucleus that includes Alperen Sengun (20.7 points per game and a team-leading 9.4 rebounds per game and 6.3 assists per game), Amen Thompson (career-high 17.6 ppg), Reed Sheppard, Jabari Smith Jr. and Tari Eason — all of whom are 24 or younger.

Utah also has some promising young players. Keyonte George is on pace for career highs in scoring (23.8 points per game), rebounding and steals in his third season. Rookie forward Ace Bailey, the fifth overall pick in the 2025 draft, has improved his scoring average to 14.4 ppg over the past 18 games.

The Jazz were fined for holding three starters — Lauri Markkanen, Jaren Jackson Jr. and Jusuf Nurkić — out of the fourth quarter of two February games before the All-Star break. The Jazz held a seven-point lead entering the fourth quarter of a 120-117 loss to Orlando on Feb. 7 and still defeated Miami 115-11 on Feb. 9. Jazz head coach Will Hardy said he sat Markkanen because of a minutes restriction by the medical team.

What other NBA games are on Peacock and NBCSN on Monday?

  • San Antonio Spurs vs. Detroit Pistons, 7 p.m.

How to watch the NBA on NBC and Peacock:

Peacock NBA Monday will stream up to three Monday night games each week throughout the regular season. Coast 2 Coast Tuesday presents doubleheaders on Tuesday nights throughout the regular season on NBC and Peacock. On most Tuesdays, an 8 p.m. ET game will be on NBC stations in the Eastern and Central time zones, and an 8 p.m. PT game on NBC stations in the Pacific and often Mountain time zones.

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Check local listings each week. Both games will stream live nationwide on Peacock. NBC Sports will launch Sunday Night Basketball across NBC and Peacock on Feb. 1, 2026. For a full schedule of the NBA on NBC and Peacock, click here.

How to sign up for Peacock:

Sign up here to watch all of our LIVE sports, sports shows, documentaries, classic matches, and more. You’ll also get tons of hit movies and TV shows, Originals, news, 24/7 channels, and current NBC and Bravo hits for whatever suits your mood

NBA on NBC 2025-26 schedule:

Click here to see the full list of NBA games that will air on NBC and Peacock this season.

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What devices does Peacock support?

You can enjoy Peacock on a variety of devices. View the full list of supported devices here.

Source: Utah News