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Scott D. Pierce: KSL lacks leverage in its battle with DirecTV — and there’s still no end in sight to the dispute

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Sunday marks two months since KSL-Channel 5 disappeared from DirecTV’s lineup … and there’s still no end in sight.

“There's been some movement,” said Tanya Vea, KSL's vice president and general manager. But that movement is “very slow, and [there] doesn't appear to be an end to this anytime soon.”

That's not what DirecTV subscribers in Utah were hoping to hear.

As is always the case in this kind of dispute, KSL insists that DirecTV is refusing to pay a fair price; DirecTV insists that KSL is demanding more than it's worth.

Since 1992, cable and satellite providers have been required to obtain the permission of broadcast stations to carry their signal — and “retransmission consent” generally comes after the cable/broadcast company agrees to pay for that signal.

As annoying as this battle is to people who just want to watch their local NBC affiliate, that's not unreasonable. Cable/satellite providers are charging their customers to watch stations, which have to pay to both produce and buy programming.

The problem here — the reason this has gone on for two months — is that KSL doesn't have much leverage. It is a single station in the nation's 30th-largest television market battling with AT&T-owned DirecTV.

KUTV-Channel 2, KMYU-Ch. 12 and KJZZ-Channel 14 all belong to the Sinclair Broadcast Group, which owns or operates 193 stations across the country; KTVX-Channel 4 and KUCW-Ch. 30 are part of Nexstar Media Group, which owns or operates 191 stations; and KSTU-Channel 13 is owned by Tribune Broadcasting, which has 41 stations.

(FOX 13 and The Salt Lake Tribune are content-sharing partners, but The Salt Lake Tribune is not affiliated with Chicago-based Tribune Broadcasting.)

If you own hundreds, even dozens of stations, it's easier to make a deal with DirecTV.

(Yes, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints owns both KSL, which is not on DirecTV, and KBYU-Channel 11/BYUtv, which is. But BYUtv does not charge satellite/cable operators to carry its signal.)

After failed efforts to forge a new deal, KSL tried to ramp up the pressure. It withdrew permission for DirecTV to carry its signal as negotiations continued, and encouraged viewers to complain when they couldn't watch “This Is Us,” “The Voice,” “NFL Sunday Night Football” and the rest of the NBC lineup.

It's reminiscent of the Pac-12 Conference encouraging fans to complain to DirecTV about its decision not to carry the Pac-12 Network.

Gee, how has that worked out? It's been more than six years since P12N launched, and there's still absolutely no indication it will ever be included on DirecTV's lineup.

Does this sound familiar? The Pac-12 insists DirecTV won't pay what the channel is worth; DirecTV insists that the Pac-12 is asking too much.

I don't really think it will take six-plus years for DirecTV and KSL to resolve their differences … but then I never would have thought this impasse would last for two months, either.

ROSEANNE SPOILER ALERT? • It’s not exactly a secret that when “The Conners” premieres on Tuesday (7 p.m., ABC/Ch. 4), the family will be mourning the death of the family matriarch, Roseanne. But they’re keeping quiet about how Roseanne dies.

I'm thinking … self-immolation by racist tweet.

Anyway, I still think the Roseanne-less “Conners” will work. Stay tuned …

MORE THAN ALRIGHT • The show that airs after “The Conners” — “The Kids Are Alright” (7:30 p.m. Tuesday, ABC/Ch. 4) — is definitely worth checking out. The pilot is a bit uneven, but this comedy about a couple (Mary McCormack and Michael Cudlitz) raising eight boys in 1972 shows promise.

NATHAN FILLION IS BACK • “The Rookie” (9 p.m. Tuesday, ABC/Ch. 4) isn’t groundbreaking or particularly original. It’s an ensemble cop show revolving around a 40-year-old guy who, in the midst of a midlife crisis, decides to be a cop.

But Nathan Fillion (“Firefly,” “Castle”) plays the title role. And his charm alone is enough to make this watchable TV.


In Your Own Words: Submit your caption for this week’s Bagley cartoon

Meet the 2018-19 edition of the Utah Jazz

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Here are the 16 members of the 2018-19 Utah Jazz, with a little analysis thrown in for good measure. Tyler Cavanaugh and Naz Mitrou-Long are two-way players this season, which means they’ll split time between the Jazz and their G-League affiliate, the Salt Lake City Stars.

GRAYSON ALLEN

Position: Shooting guard

Ht./Wgt.: 6-5, 205

College: Duke

Experience: 1st season

Allen has the sweet shooting form and plenty of athleticism to make him an intriguing prospect for the future. But his defense will determine whether or not he can get on the floor this year.

Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utah Jazz guard Grayson Allen (24) had 14 points and 3 rebounds in the first half as the Utah Jazz host the Perth Wildcats, Sept. 29, 2018 at Vinvint Smart Home Arena.
Leah Hogsten | The Salt Lake Tribune Utah Jazz guard Grayson Allen (24) had 14 points and 3 rebounds in the first half as the Utah Jazz host the Perth Wildcats, Sept. 29, 2018 at Vinvint Smart Home Arena. (Leah Hogsten/)

TONY BRADLEY

Position: Center

Ht./Wgt.: 6-11, 240

College: North Carolina

Experience: 2nd season

He’s three years younger than Allen, so it’s forgivable that he has a limited NBA skill-set right now. But he’s great at keeping the ball high on offensive rebounds or roll catches and finishing for easy points.

(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)      The crowd reacts as Utah Jazz center Tony Bradley (13) brings the Jazz back within 4 points, in Utah Jazz summer league action between Utah Jazz and Memphis Grizzlies in Salt Lake City, Tuesday, July 3, 2018.
(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) The crowd reacts as Utah Jazz center Tony Bradley (13) brings the Jazz back within 4 points, in Utah Jazz summer league action between Utah Jazz and Memphis Grizzlies in Salt Lake City, Tuesday, July 3, 2018. (Rick Egan/)

ALEC BURKS

Position: Shooting guard

Ht./Wgt.: 6-6, 214

College: Colorado

Experience: 8th season

He can score, but can he do more? The good news: his playmaking has improved in recent years, but his tendency to go rogue outside of the Jazz’s system hurts his playing time.

(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Utah Jazz guard Alec Burks (10) makes his way to the basket against the Spurs during the first quarter of an NBA basketball game in Salt Lake City, Thursday, Dec. 21, 2017.
(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Jazz guard Alec Burks (10) makes his way to the basket against the Spurs during the first quarter of an NBA basketball game in Salt Lake City, Thursday, Dec. 21, 2017. (Francisco Kjolseth/)

TYLER CAVANAUGH

Position: Power forward

Ht./Wgt.: 6-9, 239

College: George Washington

Experience: 2nd season

Found playing time at PF and C for an short-handed Atlanta team last year, but the Hawks chose to waive him at the end of the year. Good shooter and decision maker on offense, iffy finisher and defender.

Atlanta Hawks' Tyler Cavanaugh (34) drives between Cleveland Cavaliers' JR Smith (5) and Cleveland Cavaliers' Jose Calderon (81), from Spain, in the first half of an NBA basketball game, Tuesday, Dec. 12, 2017, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/Tony Dejak)
Atlanta Hawks' Tyler Cavanaugh (34) drives between Cleveland Cavaliers' JR Smith (5) and Cleveland Cavaliers' Jose Calderon (81), from Spain, in the first half of an NBA basketball game, Tuesday, Dec. 12, 2017, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/Tony Dejak) (Tony Dejak/)

JAE CROWDER

Position: Small forward

Ht./Wgt.: 6-6, 235

College: Marquette

Experience: 7th season

Lineups featuring him as small-ball 4 worked superbly for the Jazz, but Crowder shot just 38 percent last year with the Jazz. Will more time to learn Snyder’s system improve his efficiency?

(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)     Utah Jazz forward Jae Crowder (99) reacts to a call by the official, in playoff action in game 6, between Utah Jazz and Oklahoma City Thunder in Salt Lake City, Friday, April 27, 2018.
(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Jazz forward Jae Crowder (99) reacts to a call by the official, in playoff action in game 6, between Utah Jazz and Oklahoma City Thunder in Salt Lake City, Friday, April 27, 2018. (Rick Egan/)

DANTE EXUM

Position: Point guard

Ht./Wgt.: 6-6, 190

Home country: Australia

Experience: 4th season

After receiving a $30 million extension, it’s now time for Exum to show that he can be an impact player on both ends of the floor. Already shows the defensive skills and transition ability, now needs half-court game.

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  Utah Jazz guard Dante Exum (11) drives on Maccabi Haifa's Roi Huber as the Utah Jazz host Maccabi Haifa, preseason NBA basketball at Vivint Smart Home Arena in Salt Lake City Wednesday October 4, 2017.
(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Jazz guard Dante Exum (11) drives on Maccabi Haifa's Roi Huber as the Utah Jazz host Maccabi Haifa, preseason NBA basketball at Vivint Smart Home Arena in Salt Lake City Wednesday October 4, 2017. (Trent Nelson/)

DERRICK FAVORS

Position: Power forward

Ht./Wgt.: 6-10, 265

College: Georgia Tech

Experience: 9th season

The longest-tenured Jazzman returns as the team’s starting power forward, but last year played a majority of his minutes at the center position. He can play both roles well if his outside shooting improves.

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  Utah Jazz forward Derrick Favors (15) reaches for the ball as the Utah Jazz host the Milwaukee Bucks, NBA basketball in Salt Lake City Saturday November 25, 2017.
(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Jazz forward Derrick Favors (15) reaches for the ball as the Utah Jazz host the Milwaukee Bucks, NBA basketball in Salt Lake City Saturday November 25, 2017. (Trent Nelson/)

RUDY GOBERT

Position: Center

Ht./Wgt.: 7-1, 245

Home country: France

Experience: 6th season

The most feared player on the Jazz roster; opposing offenses change everything when Gobert’s on the court to avoid him in the paint. He’s the reason the Jazz had the best defense in the NBA last season.

(Scott Sommerdorf | The Salt Lake Tribune)
Utah Jazz center Rudy Gobert (27) spins to the basket past Oklahoma City Thunder forward Corey Brewer (3) during first quarter play. 
The Thunder led the Jazz 22-18 at the end of the 1st quarter during Game 6 of the first round playoff game, Friday, April 27, 2018.
(Scott Sommerdorf | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Jazz center Rudy Gobert (27) spins to the basket past Oklahoma City Thunder forward Corey Brewer (3) during first quarter play. The Thunder led the Jazz 22-18 at the end of the 1st quarter during Game 6 of the first round playoff game, Friday, April 27, 2018. (Scott Sommerdorf/)

JOE INGLES

Position: Small forward

Ht./Wgt.: 6-6, 226

Home country: Australia

Experience: 5th season

Mild-mannered looks betray “Jingles’” personality as a brash trash-talking instigator on the court. But he has become one of the league’s best role players thanks to his sweet 3-point shot, playmaking skills, and solid defense.

(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)     Utah Jazz forward Joe Ingles (2) reacts after tying the game 39-39 with a 3-point-shot in the second quarter, in NBA game 6 playoff action between Utah Jazz and Oklahoma City Thunder in Salt Lake City, Friday, April 27, 2018.
(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Jazz forward Joe Ingles (2) reacts after tying the game 39-39 with a 3-point-shot in the second quarter, in NBA game 6 playoff action between Utah Jazz and Oklahoma City Thunder in Salt Lake City, Friday, April 27, 2018. (Rick Egan/)

DONOVAN MITCHELL

Position: Shooting guard

Ht./Wgt.: 6-3, 211

College: Louisville

Experience: 2nd season

His rookie season turned everything around for the Jazz right when they needed it most. Now, the franchise will go as high as he does. Can he become more efficient in Year 2 with defenses keying on him?

(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Utah Jazz guard Donovan Mitchell (45) jokes around with the team as they warm up for their game against the Houston Rockets in Game 4 of the NBA playoffs at the Vivint Smart Home Arena Sunday, May 6, 2018 in Salt Lake City.
(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Jazz guard Donovan Mitchell (45) jokes around with the team as they warm up for their game against the Houston Rockets in Game 4 of the NBA playoffs at the Vivint Smart Home Arena Sunday, May 6, 2018 in Salt Lake City. (Francisco Kjolseth/)

NAZ MITROU-LONG

Position: Shooting guard

Ht./Wgt.: 6-4, 209

College: Iowa State

Experience: 2nd season

A talented shooter, but with a questionable NBA frame. He’s a natural leader, though, and a strong locker room fit. His biggest role in a crowded guard rotation will be to lead the Salt Lake City Stars.

(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)      Utah Jazz guard Naz Mitrou-Long (30), takes the ball to the hoop, in Utah Jazz summer league action between Utah Jazz and Memphis Grizzlies in Salt Lake City, Tuesday, July 3, 2018.
(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Jazz guard Naz Mitrou-Long (30), takes the ball to the hoop, in Utah Jazz summer league action between Utah Jazz and Memphis Grizzlies in Salt Lake City, Tuesday, July 3, 2018. (Rick Egan/)

RAUL NETO

Position: Point guard

Ht./Wgt.: 6-1, 179

Home country: Brazil

Experience: 4th season

Starting the season off with a hamstring injury must be frustrating after an injury filled 2017-18 season, but when he did play, it was his best season yet. Defensively solid, good shooter, vertically challenged.

(Steve Griffin  |  The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Jazz guard Raul Neto (25) looks to pass during the Utah Jazz versus Denver Nuggets NBA basketball game at Vivint Smart Home Arena  in Salt Lake City Tuesday November 28, 2017.
(Steve Griffin | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Jazz guard Raul Neto (25) looks to pass during the Utah Jazz versus Denver Nuggets NBA basketball game at Vivint Smart Home Arena in Salt Lake City Tuesday November 28, 2017.

GEORGES NIANG

Position: Power forward

Ht./Wgt.: 6-8, 230

College: Iowa State

Experience: 3rd season

One of the most skilled players on the team, without the athleticism to match, Niang has a role to play on this Jazz team. Think of a better-shooting version of Boris Diaw’s final NBA season in Utah, but without the coffee.

(Rick Egan  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)      Memphis Grizzlies Markel Crawford. knocks the ball out of the hands of Utah Jazz forward Georges Niang (31), in Utah Jazz summer league action between Utah Jazz and Memphis Grizzlies in Salt Lake City, Tuesday, July 3, 2018.
(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) Memphis Grizzlies Markel Crawford. knocks the ball out of the hands of Utah Jazz forward Georges Niang (31), in Utah Jazz summer league action between Utah Jazz and Memphis Grizzlies in Salt Lake City, Tuesday, July 3, 2018. (Rick Egan/)

ROYCE O’NEALE

Position: Shooting guard

Ht./Wgt.: 6-6, 215

College: Baylor

Experience: 2nd season

One of the smartest perimeter defenders in the league, things get a bit tougher for O’Neale on the offensive end. But a developing shot and ballhandling skills could round out his already-strong playmaking.

(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Utah Jazz forward Royce O'Neale (23) with the bucket.  The Utah Jazz lead the Golden State Warriors 62-33 during their game, Tuesday, April 10, 2018 at the Vivant Smart Home Arena.
(Leah Hogsten | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Jazz forward Royce O'Neale (23) with the bucket. The Utah Jazz lead the Golden State Warriors 62-33 during their game, Tuesday, April 10, 2018 at the Vivant Smart Home Arena. (Leah Hogsten/)

RICKY RUBIO

Position: Point guard

Ht./Wgt.: 6-4, 194

Home country: Spain

Experience: 8th season

A prodigy of a point guard who adapted to Snyder’s system in the second half of 2017-18, Rubio is more comfortable entering an NBA season than ever before. If his shot matches his confidence, he’ll have his best season.

(Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Utah Jazz guard Ricky Rubio (3) fires up the crowd as the Utah Jazz host the Los Angeles Lakers at Vivint Smart Home Arena Tuesday, April 3, 2018
(Leah Hogsten | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Jazz guard Ricky Rubio (3) fires up the crowd as the Utah Jazz host the Los Angeles Lakers at Vivint Smart Home Arena Tuesday, April 3, 2018 (Leah Hogsten/)

THABO SEFOLOSHA

Position: Small forward

Ht./Wgt.: 6-7, 220

Home country: Switzerland

Experience: 13th season

Returning from knee surgery, Sefolosha isn’t quite the All-NBA defender he was in his prime. But he does add offensive know-how and is one of the most popular figures in the locker room.

(Chris Detrick  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Utah Jazz forward Thabo Sefolosha (22) celebrates after scoring during the game at Vivint Smart Home Arena Friday, December 1, 2017.  Utah Jazz defeated New Orleans Pelicans 114-108.
(Chris Detrick | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Jazz forward Thabo Sefolosha (22) celebrates after scoring during the game at Vivint Smart Home Arena Friday, December 1, 2017. Utah Jazz defeated New Orleans Pelicans 114-108. (Chris Detrick/)

EKPE UDOH

Position: Center

Ht./Wgt.: 6-10, 240

College: Baylor

Experience: 7th season

Besides being the only NBA player with a community book club, Udoh’s also one of the league’s most talented rim protectors. He’s also a good passer, but a mechanical, at best, finisher around the rim.

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  Utah Jazz forward Ekpe Udoh (33) celebrates a fourth quarter comeback as the Utah Jazz host the Denver Nuggets, NBA basketball in Salt Lake City, Wednesday October 18, 2017.
(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Utah Jazz forward Ekpe Udoh (33) celebrates a fourth quarter comeback as the Utah Jazz host the Denver Nuggets, NBA basketball in Salt Lake City, Wednesday October 18, 2017. (Trent Nelson/)


5-year-old Utah boy abused and malnourished, might not survive, police and documents say

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A Salt Lake County boy “may be incompatible with life" after what police and jail records describe as child abuse that might have gone on for days or weeks.

The 5-year-old is identified in a Salt Lake County jail booking document only by the initials T.S. He was unconscious and unresponsive when his mother and her fiancé took him to Primary Children’s Hospital on Thursday, according to the Unified Police Department.

A booking document filed with the jail says the boy’s injuries were not consistent with what the adults told hospital staff had happened. The mother, Jordan Kay Wills, 26, and her fiancé, John M. Manning, 31, both of Millcreek, dropped off T.S. and then returned to the hospital about 12 hours later, after which they were arrested.

“The child’s injuries, according to a child abuse specialist, appear to have occurred over a period of time indicating more than one event,” according to the jail document. “There is also concerns of malnourishment. At this time the child is not responsive and ‘may be incompatible with life.’”

A jail document says T.S. was on life support as of Thursday night. No update on his condition was provided Saturday.

Wills and Manning on Saturday were in the Salt Lake County jail on suspicion of child abuse. Bail has been set at $50,000 apiece.


Tim Branham becomes the Utah Grizzlies' all-time winningest coach

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West Valley City • Grizzlies coach Tim Branham becomes the Utah Grizzlies all-time wins leader after beating the Rapid City Rush 4-2 at Maverik Center on Friday night in their ECHL season opener.

“It’s a great honor, that’s for sure. The coaches and players that have come through our organization, it’s pretty neat. I owe a lot to our players and the staff and organization for sticking with me and giving me the opportunity. It’s nice, I’m glad we got it out of the way and move forward and getting as many wins as we can,” Branham said in a statement.

Branham came into the season tied with Butch Goring with wins in Utah at 178. Tim is entering his sixth season in Utah.

“I thought the boys played really well tonight, we have some things to clean up but I’m good with getting the win tonight,” Branham said.

In each of his first four seasons with Utah, Branham gotten at least 36 wins. He is the second-longest tenured Head Coach in the ECHL and the longest tenured coach in team history.

The Grizzlies finish up the two-game series with Rapid City on Saturday at Maverik Center (7 p.m.)

Monson: Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott wants to change the world. He should start by fixing his own business.

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There are a couple of ways of looking at the replay-review controversy that swirled around the Pac-12 this past week, when it was discovered that a “third party” was involved in judging — and changing — a targeting play/call in the Washington State-USC game a few weeks ago.

One is that it was a simple screw-up by the league, with a policy that was too ambiguous to appear above reproach as it was examined further. A mistake that could happen to any process in any league. A mistake that would be corrected and improved upon in the weeks ahead.

No big deal.

The other is that the mistake was one more brick in a load of problems in the Pac- 12 through a period of time overseen by commissioner Larry Scott that has witnessed:

• The conference falling behind in the race for dollars with other leagues, with member institutions collecting far less money than schools in other power leagues.

• Television distribution problems, with the league unable to get a deal done between its own network and DirectTV, limiting the number of households the Pac-12 Networks are seen in.

• The league failing competitively relative to other conferences in getting Pac-12 teams into the national playoff.

• A number of conference basketball programs — including Utah, indirectly — associated with or being investigated for illegal payouts to players.

When Scott addressed the media on Friday night at Rice-Eccles Stadium, answering questions about the latest mess that called into question not just the conference’s procedures, but also its integrity, he, not surprisingly, favored the first option. The replay incident occurred when Woodie Dixon, the league’s general counsel and senior vice president of business affairs, offered an opinion on and influenced the play/call involving a hit put on USC quarterback JT Daniels by Washington State linebacker Logan Tago.

“You never like to see controversy,” Scott said. “… It goes with the territory. There are going to be issues that arise with all the sports that we deal with, all the issues we deal with. It’s how you deal with it. If you deal with it in a forthright manner. Make adjustments where we need to, in the case of officiating this week, we clearly made mistakes in our procedures. You have to acknowledge that those things will happen from time to time.”

He continued: “I’m a big believer if you see something wrong, you address it right away, make a commitment to the principles that are most important to you. In this case, the principles that are of most importance to the Pac-12 are the highest level of integrity, especially when it comes to something like officiating, and student-athlete welfare. When there’s controversy, those are the true north, the things you look to and, in this case, those are what guided me as to how we dealt with it, immediately correcting what we saw was wrong. Admitting, if we did something wrong, which I think we did in this case.”

Throughout all of that, Scott threw in a bunch of stuff about the excellence of the Pac-12, excellence in competition and academics, and in “doing things the right way.” He even talked about the conference “changing the world for a positive effect.”

He said that when the replay-review command center was set up, it was with the thought that having “more eyeballs” on a play would insure “maximum consistency [to get] calls right.”

He said the error in that procedure was that having more conference eyeballs on any given play could create a conflict of interest, or the appearance thereof.

He added that the league’s replay supervisor — Bill Richardson — at the league’s command center in San Francisco ultimately should be in charge of replays: “Bill, for me, is where the buck stops.”

In the future, he said, “The only people that are going to be involved in replay review are replay officials.”

Opinions from the league’s general counsel about any judgment call never should have been a part of the process, never should have been allowed, never should have been uttered or heard. It’s not that complicated. It takes no strong leadership to have recognized that.

But Scott and the entire Pac-12 initially whiffed on it.

There have been other controversies about league officiating in the past, including more than a few on targeting calls.

Scott said the negative perception around the country about the conference because of this mistake was fixable, implying that the Pac-12 would go on changing the world.

Not sure how the world can be so positively affected by a league that struggles to keep its own business in order.

If the league, from a leadership standpoint, messes over what it’s messed over in recent years, this latest trouble being one more example, you have to wonder whether the world and the league, changes or no, are going to hell in a hand basket.

None of it inspires any kind of confidence in the people, the person, leading the charge.

GORDON MONSON hosts “The Big Show” with Jake Scott weekdays from 3-7 p.m. on 97.5 FM and 1280 AM The Zone.

The Jazz are talented, deep and experienced, and expectations have gone up accordingly. Just how high can this team climb?

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There were no external expectations of the Utah Jazz a year ago.

That’ll happen when your All-Star forward leaves for greener pastures, or at least greener jerseys; when your defensive anchor misses 26 games early with a pair of knee injuries; when your new starting point guard has his worldview scrambled by an offensive scheme that frequently deploys him off the ball; when, because of all that, you start the season a woeful 19-28.

Of course, when you follow that up by your star center returning and making your team the most stingy defensive unit in the league; when your rookie guard unexpectedly shoulders the scoring burden with dynamic athleticism and aggression; when you go 29-6 down the stretch to finish with 48 wins; and when you win a first-round playoff series against an opponent helmed by the NBA’s reigning Most Valuable Player …

Well, if there weren’t expectations before, there sure are now.

So then, the question becomes:

[Pregnant pause …]

What do we expect now that we’re expecting?

At the conclusion of last season, general manager Dennis Lindsey acknowledged the obvious challenge ahead: “The dilemma is Golden State and Houston are clearly in front of us, and to be the last team standing, you have to go through the best teams.”

So now, because this offseason saw the Jazz eschew bringing in outside talent in favor of returning every key player from the roster save for Jonas Jerebko (who was replaced with draft pick Grayson Allen and G-League standout Georges Niang), and saw an already-stacked Western Conference get more so by importing LeBron James, what does that mean for the Jazz’s chances?

What, exactly, is this group’s ceiling?

An NBA survey of the league’s general managers saw 90 percent of them pick the Golden State Warriors — who’ve won two straight Finals and three of the past four — to win the West. The other 10 percent selected the Houston Rockets. The Russell Westbrook-led Thunder were predicted to finish third, while the Jazz came in fourth.

No one with the Jazz wants to make an outright prediction. But no one is downplaying the possibilities, either.

“We can go as far as we want to go,” said Donovan Mitchell. “We control our own destiny.”

“As a team, we’re gonna be the best we’ve ever been as a group,” concurred Rudy Gobert.

Jazz coach Quin Snyder wants to shift the narrative a bit. In his mind, how Utah stacks up against the competition is a premature argument anyway.

“I don’t want us to look at other teams. When we play them, obviously, pragmatically let’s look at them. But I don’t want us to be comparing ourselves to anybody at the beginning of the season,” he said. "I want us to be as good as we can be and work on that. If our focus is there, just maximizing who we are, I like that, I like where that leads us.”

Starting point guard Ricky Rubio agreed.

“We have to focus on ourselves first” he said. “We know that the Western Conference is getting tougher, but at the end of the day, it’s about us getting better.”

Speaking of which, Snyder wants to disabuse people of the notion that returning 13 players from last year’s team inherently limits what this year’s is capable of.

“I told the team I think there’s a lot of room for improvement. Sometimes we associate continuity with, I don’t want to say complacency, but that you’re a finished product, so to speak, that you have what you want with continuity,” he said. “That doesn’t necessarily hold true in my mind. We can have continuity as a foundation and still look for an upside and improvement.”

Everyone involved, apparently, takes that to heart. Because when asked what the key was to Utah taking the next step, there were a whole lot of different answers.

“Guys gotta be willing to share the ball, gotta be willing to move without the ball, and you gotta be willing to sacrifice sometimes,” said veteran big man Derrick Favors.

“Obviously, defense has to be improved. … I just think our guards can do a better job of holding the top scorers when they come into town, holding those guys in check,” said Jae Crowder. “… In the playoffs, I think we did a bad job of having lulls on the offensive end. … We have to always have our offense where it needs to be, whether it’s attacking the basket or making [outside] shots.”

“It’ll be important for us to start fast, limiting our turnovers, just continue to get better every day throughout the season,” suggested backup big man Ekpe Udoh.

“One of the things that’s gonna be important for us is to play both inside and out,” said Thabo Sefolosha. “Teams now have a tendency to switch and play a little smaller. We gotta take advantage of Derrick and Rudy and Ekpe rolling to the basket, feeding them. That’s gonna create some space.”

“Is our defense gonna be pretty good? … Are we gonna be a top-10 defense? A top-five defense? Can we be No. 1? Can we be No. 1 by a great margin? Or will the league catch up to us with the defense and will regression set in?” Lindsey asked. “… Jae Crowder performing at the level he did with the Boston Celtics is a big factor. Ricky Rubio understanding the way that the Jazz play five-man basketball, and that he’s not going to be as ball-dominant in this system as much, but maybe score a little bit more.”

“It’s incremental gains throughout different areas. If we offensive rebound a little better, turn it over a little less, finish a little better. … Can we shoot the ball from the 3-point line better? And can we shoot more of them?” added Snyder. “… And more than anything, it’s a question of being better at something we’re already pretty good at in defense. We can be elite defensively, not just good, not just great, but elite. … And if we can do that, we have a chance to win some games.”

So despite the similarities of the rosters, it’s clear no one is taking the attitude that anything is set in stone. Lindsey pointed out that, tough as the West is, there’s as much possibility to finish on the outside looking in as there is to place in the top four.

Favors made it clear he’s going to do what he can to avoid regression.

“I was here for the lowest of the lows, I was here when we won 25 games, and it definitely feels a whole lot better to win 50 and be in the playoffs,” he said. “And hopefully we come into this year and kind of repeat that, and get even further.”

That’s the goal. Just don’t call it an expectation — Snyder has no use for those, anyway.

“If you think that expectations are gonna help you win games, they’re not; and if people don’t expect you to do something, that doesn’t mean you can’t do it,” Snyder said.

“I don’t wanna pick up where we left off. That implies that it’s the same group beginning to do something,” he added. “This is a new journey. We can take with us the experience, we can take with us the chemistry, the things that we’ve learned, but this is a new team, and we can’t take February with us, we can’t take the playoffs with us. It’s a new year, and the sooner that realization occurs at a very fundamental level, the better the opportunity to improve.”

Utah couple arrested in Washington in death of toddler

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Seattle • Officials say a Utah couple who fled the state after the man was accused of killing the woman’s toddler was arrested at a home in Washington state.

The Seattle Times reports Gavin Haar and Brittany Hall were arrested Thursday in Gold Bar.

Haar was wanted on a warrant for murder and child abuse. Hall had warrants for child abuse and obstructing justice.

The Deseret News reports the couple was charged this week in 5th District Court in Iron County, Utah.

Haar lived in Cedar City with Hall and her 2-year-old son. On June 12, Hall received a text message from Haar, who wrote that the boy wasn't breathing.

The boy was pronounced dead at a hospital.

Police say they found text messages on Haar’s phone saying he was upset and that her son was going to get a beating.


Native American women candidates seek historic wins in November

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Albuquerque, N.M. • Deb Haaland has known a lot of firsts in her rise through New Mexico’s Democratic Party ranks. In 2014, she was the first Native American woman from a major party to run for statewide office here when she sought to be lieutenant governor. After that bid failed, she became the first Native American woman in the country to lead a state political party. On Nov. 6, barring a shocking upset, the 57-year-old member of the Laguna Pueblo tribe, could become the first Native American woman elected to the U.S. Congress.

It's a destination that just a few years ago, Haaland would never have imagined reaching. And even now, sitting in her campaign office in the city's Nob Hill neighborhood, the Sandia Mountain range looming in the distance, she is struck by the unlikely path she took to get here.

"Yeah, that seems like kind of a big deal," Haaland said, with a disarming laugh. "It's kind of hard for me sometimes to wrap my head around the fact that it's me that we're all talking about and not someone else."

Haaland’s bid for Congress, in the strongly Democratic 1st District, has soaked up most of the attention, but 2018 has been a breakout political year for Native American women across the country with "far more than ever running,' according to Mark Trahant, editor of Indian Country Today, who has been tracking races. Another Native American woman, Kansas Democrat Sharice Davids, is also running for a House seat. More than a hundred women elsewhere have taken part in races at local and state levels, an unprecedented level of participation that has produced hashtags — #SheRepresents, #NativeVote18 — and a wide range of candidates that include Democrats and Republicans, but also Green Party, Independent and Libertarian candidates.

Though the emergence of so many Native American women running for office has seemed to come out of the blue, it is in many ways the result of seeds planted over the past decade at the community and regional level.

"The narrative had been that Native Americans were gone, that we're invisible, that we're part of history," said Jodi Gillette, a member of the Standing Rock Tribe who served as special adviser for Native American issues to President Obama. "Well, we've been here all along trying to be seen and trying to be relevant and trying to find ways to address our issues. I rejoice in the fact that we've got the visibility and are positioned to help lead and not just be seen, but to represent."

Though Haaland has been active in New Mexico politics for more than a decade, she never saw herself as someone born to the political stage. A single mother, she began college at 28, started her own salsa-making business so she could stay at home with her daughter, went on to earn a law degree at 45, is still paying back student loans and is 30 years sober. She was happy to work on campaigns, make calls, organize events and help get out the vote, but running for office was something others did.

Until it wasn't.

The race for lieutenant governor was a first step. Quiet and reserved by nature, Haaland became more comfortable telling her story. She campaigned across the state. She reached out to donors. She knocked on so many doors her knuckles were bruised.

"There aren't any doorbells in Indian Country," she said, laughing again.

Haaland lost the race, but discovered her voice. If she wasn’t always at ease speaking up, it was important for her to represent those who hadn’t had a say, especially the members of Native American tribes across the state who make up just over 10 percent of New Mexico’s population. Now she’s on the precipice of taking that voice — and their voice — to Washington.

Across the country, many other Native American women are fully immersed in the homestretch of their own campaigns.

In Kansas, congressional candidate Davids, 38 and a member of the Ho-Chunk Nation of Wisconsin, is challenging incumbent Republican Kevin Yoder in a suburban Kansas City district Hillary Clinton narrowly won in 2016. Republicans have recently pulled money out of the race, a signal of their pessimism about Yoder's chances. Davids, a Cornell Law School graduate and mixed martial arts practitioner would also be the first gay Native American woman elected.

Davids' candidacy came under attack this week when a Kansas Republican official posted a message on Facebook directed to the president of a Democratic women's organization: "Your radical socialist kick boxing lesbian Indian will be sent back packing to the reservation." The message was followed by dozens of exclamation points.

Davids told the Kansas City Star that the message "doesn't represent Kansas values, and it doesn't represent the values of the Republicans we know, many who support this campaign." Republican leaders in Kansas condemned their colleague's remarks about Davids and the official resigned his position Wednesday.

In Minnesota, both of the leading choices for lieutenant governor are Native American. Peggy Flanagan, the Democratic Farm Labor candidate, is a White Earth Ojibwe while her opponent, Donna Bergstrom, is Red Lake Ojibwe. No matter who wins, it will be the first time a Native American woman has been elected to a statewide position in Minnesota.

In the Idaho governor’s race, Democrat Paulette Jordan, 38, is challenging Republican Lt. Gov. Brad Little. Jordan, a member of the Coeur d’Alene Tribe, would be the state’s first Native American governor and its first woman governor. And she would be the country’s first Native American governor — although her candidacy remains a long shot in red Idaho.

For Jordan, the emergence of so many Native American women candidates this year makes perfect sense.

"Many of our cultures are matriarchal. My grandmothers were chiefs and leaders of the people, so it feels natural for me to step up and lead," Jordan said in an interview. "When you have women across the country and even internationally rising up together, it's empowering. And to me, I see it as now or never."

That sense of urgency is widespread among Native American women and their historic level of political involvement has been fomented by a number of factors, said Gillette, the former Obama adviser. She cited the election of Donald Trump in 2016 as a motivating element, but not the only one. There's widespread frustration that poverty and ongoing problems with substandard education remain unaddressed by state and national leaders. And there is also a growing anger over infringement on land rights and environmental degradation.

Many of those causes coalesced two years ago when representatives of hundreds of tribes traveled to the Standing Rock Reservation to take part in protests against a private oil company pipeline that crossed sacred burial grounds and went under a dam on the Missouri River that supplied the tribe's drinking water.

The Standing Rock protest is cited by many of the Native American women as part of their inspiration for becoming more involved in politics and running for office.

"It added to this 'Why not me?' moment," Gillette said. "'Why shouldn't I also run? Why shouldn't I try to be our voice at the table?'"

Haaland remembers watching the news about Standing Rock and reading posts on Facebook from friends and others who were there. In September 2016 she decided she needed to be there too.

"I felt like it was history that was happening before our eyes. And I really wanted to be a part of it," Haaland said. "It felt like it could change the trajectory about the environment and the land and I needed to be there to see what was happening firsthand."

It was also an opportunity to bond with other Native American women who were leaders in their communities and took on many of the organizing roles at the protest. For Haaland, sharing in the historic Native American moment was something her life had been building toward.

Both of Haaland's parents were in the military, so she moved often as a child, attending 13 schools in 12 years. But no matter where they went, Haaland said, her Native American mother and grandparents worked to keep tribal traditions alive for her and her three siblings.

Her grandfather would record traditional songs on to a reel-to-reel tape and the family would gather around and listen to them. She spent summers in the tiny town of Mesita on the Laguna Pueblo, about 45 miles west of Albuquerque, climbing the mesas and swimming in the lake. Haaland's father, a Marine who was the grandson of Norwegian immigrants and earned a Silver Star in Vietnam, encouraged the history lessons and his children's embrace of their Native American heritage.

Speaking at a powwow in a downtown city park last month, Haaland told the crowd she can trace her family's local roots to the 12th century and referred to herself as a 35th generation New Mexican. And then she reminded them that Native Americans weren't allowed to vote in New Mexico until 1948.

"I'm ready to fight at a moment's notice," she said. "Native Americans are the most underrepresented folks in our system. If we have a vote, we have a voice."

Soon after addressing the crowd, a young woman approached Haaland tentatively. They talked for a moment, smiled and embraced.

“I was nervous because she’s an inspiration to me,” recounted Michele Curtis, 30, who was at the event with her husband and their daughter. “I told her I was from Navajo Nation and that what she is doing makes me want to help my tribe. And I told her that I was very proud of her for what she is accomplishing.”

10 key games for the Jazz during the 2018-19 season

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Jazz vs. Warriors Oct. 19

Yes, the regular season technically begins on Oct. 17, but the real challenges of the season begin Oct. 19, when the NBA champions come to town for an 8:30 contest televised on ESPN. While new acquisition DeMarcus Cousins won’t be available, as he is still recovering from Achilles surgery, the rest of the star-studded Warriors will be looking to avenge last season’s two losses by a combined 70 points in SLC. Besides Steph Curry, Klay Thompson, and Kevin Durant in Utah, the game will also mark a return for former Jazzman Jonas Jerebko.

Jazz vs. Celtics Nov. 9

Gordon Hayward’s long anticipated return to Salt Lake City. While the emergence of Donovan Mitchell lessened the sting of Hayward’s departure, Jazz fans still figure to boo Hayward vociferously upon his arrival, thanks to an ill-handled departure that angered people both within and outside the organization. But Hayward isn’t the only draw: Kyrie Irving stars for the Celtics, and Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown, and Al Horford are all very talented players in their own right. Whatever happens, a rematch won’t be far off: the Jazz play the Celtics in Boston on Nov. 17.

Boston Celtics' Gordon Hayward waves as he steps off the basketball court after speaking with members of the media and taking part in a photo shoot, Thursday, Sept. 13, 2018, at the team's practice facility, in Boston. Hayward is working his way back from a broken leg. (AP Photo/Steven Senne)
Boston Celtics' Gordon Hayward waves as he steps off the basketball court after speaking with members of the media and taking part in a photo shoot, Thursday, Sept. 13, 2018, at the team's practice facility, in Boston. Hayward is working his way back from a broken leg. (AP Photo/Steven Senne) (Steven Senne/)

Jazz at Lakers Nov. 23

Utah’s first matchup with the LeBron James Lakers comes in Los Angeles, with a very different tenor than Jazz/Lakers games have had for the last five seasons. LeBron leads a strange supporting cast, with flawed-but-improving youth competing for playing time with flawed-and-declining veterans. Will Rajon Rondo earn more minutes than Lonzo Ball? Will Lance Stephenson and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope play more than Josh Hart? Will Michael Beasley steal time from Kyle Kuzma and Svi Mykhailiuk? We can’t wait to find out.

Jazz vs. Rockets Dec. 6

A rematch of last year’s second round series is one of three games on TNT scheduled this season (along with Dec. 27 against Philadelphia and Feb. 12 against Golden State). But things have changed in Houston: Trevor Ariza, who primarily guarded Jazz star Donovan Mitchell in the series, is now in Phoenix. Luc Mbah a Moute has also moved on after leading the Rockets to a big win in Salt Lake last spring. In their place, Houston signed Carmelo Anthony, who the Jazz exploited frequently in the first round. But James Harden and Chris Paul still figure to lead one of the best teams in the NBA.

Jazz vs. Magic at Mexico City Dec. 15

It has been 28 years since the Jazz last played a regular season game in a country other than the United States or Canada. In 1990, they played a doubleheader against the Phoenix Suns. On Dec. 15, they’ll play the Orlando Magic in Mexico City, a contest which counts as a road game for Utah. For the Jazz, you can actually argue the trip down south is a travel break: after all, Mexico City is closer to SLC than Orlando. But so long as they’re not distracted by the flight, they should be just fine: Orlando figures to be one of the NBA’s worst teams this season, saved only from an entertainment point of view by Aaron Gordon and rookie Mo Bamba.

Orlando Magic's Aaron Gordon (00) goes to the basket against Dallas Mavericks' Doug McDermott, left, during the second half of an NBA basketball game Wednesday, April 4, 2018, in Orlando, Fla. (AP Photo/John Raoux)
Orlando Magic's Aaron Gordon (00) goes to the basket against Dallas Mavericks' Doug McDermott, left, during the second half of an NBA basketball game Wednesday, April 4, 2018, in Orlando, Fla. (AP Photo/John Raoux) (John Raoux/)

Jazz vs. Blazers Dec. 25

Another long wait will end in December, as the Jazz will play their first Christmas Day game since 1997, when they defeated the Houston Rockets 107-103. ESPN will air this contest, the last of the NBA’s five-game slate, beginning at 8:30 p.m, and will surely hope to hear from a raucous Utah crowd. But the contest itself should be intriguing, too: the game will bring Portland’s Damian Lillard to one of his homes for the holidays, alongside fellow explosive guard scorer C.J. McCollum. Overall, the Blazers will be looking to get into national good graces after losing in an ugly sweep to the Pelicans last April.

Jazz vs. 76ers Dec. 27

And just two days later, one of the NBA’s most interesting personal rivalries will be on display in SLC. The race for Rookie of the Year last season between Ben Simmons and Donovan Mitchell led to some spicy self-promotion and even spicier Internet memes. Philadelphia got the better of both contests (and the ROY award itself) last year, but both games happened during the Jazz’s dark days in November. Meanwhile, Joel Embiid figures to have his first action in Vivint Arena on this night — he’s missed all four Philly games in Utah due to injury. You can be sure Rudy Gobert will be interested in making Embiid’s SLC debut a night he’d rather forget.

Philadelphia 76ers coach Brett Brown, right, talks with guard Ben Simmons before Game 5 of the team's NBA basketball playoff series against the Boston Celtics in Boston, Wednesday, May 9, 2018. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)
Philadelphia 76ers coach Brett Brown, right, talks with guard Ben Simmons before Game 5 of the team's NBA basketball playoff series against the Boston Celtics in Boston, Wednesday, May 9, 2018. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa) (Charles Krupa/)

Jazz vs. Spurs Feb. 9

A 3:00 p.m. game is a rarity for the Jazz, certainly at home in the regular season. But despite what your first guess might be, the game isn’t early in order to appeal to national TV demands. Instead, the earlier start time is designed to appeal to international fans of the Jazz and the Spurs, who might be able to catch a Saturday night game in France or Spain. The matchup itself will require flexibility from the Jazz: their defense is usually designed to allow entice midrange jumpers from their opponents, but no team will take more of them than the DeMar DeRozan and LeMarcus Aldridge-led Spurs.

Jazz vs. Pelicans Mar. 4/6

When looking for games that might drastically change the playoff picture for the Jazz, look no further than two consecutive matchups against the New Orleans Pelicans on March 4 and March 6. Just as they did last season, the Pelicans figure to be one of Utah’s competitors for home-court advantage in the playoffs. Though they lost DeMarcus Cousins and Rajon Rondo, the Pelicans had significant success last year playing their spread offense with Jrue Holiday cooking and Nikola Mirotic as a starting four. Meanwhile, Anthony Davis puts up the most consistently ridiculous stat lines in the NBA. As has been the case for the last couple of seasons, the question is whether or not the Pelicans’ wing players will allow them to keep up with their opponents: it’s a big advantage in favor of the Jazz at those positions.

Jazz vs. Nuggets Apr. 9

Utah’s ending slate to the season is surprisingly easy: After the All-Star break, the Jazz don’t play a team that won 50 games last season. In April, they don’t play any of last year’s playoff teams. That being said, they face two teams that should be in next year’s postseason: the Denver Nuggets and the aforementioned Lakers. So long as the Nuggets are healthier than last year, they could be a real problem: Nikola Jokic and Paul Millsap are a solid frontcourt, and Jamal Murray, Gary Harris, Will Barton and Isaiah Thomas will provide a ton of firepower for their offense.

Denver Nuggets forward Paul Millsap shoots against the Los Angeles Clippers during the first half of an NBA basketball game Saturday, April 7, 2018, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Michael Owen Baker)
Denver Nuggets forward Paul Millsap shoots against the Los Angeles Clippers during the first half of an NBA basketball game Saturday, April 7, 2018, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Michael Owen Baker) (Michael Owen Baker/)


Utes in review: October is becoming a breakthrough month for Utah, and here comes USC

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Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utes linebacker Chase Hansen (22) and Utes defensive back Marquise Blair (13) looks to tackle Arizona Wildcats quarterback Jamarye Joiner (10)as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utes wide receiver Samson Nacua (45) with the touchdown as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018. Utah leads 28-0.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utes defensive end Maxs Tupai (92) tackles Arizona Wildcats running back Gary Brightwell as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018. Utah leads 28-0.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utes wide receiver Demari Simpkins (7) pulls down the touchdown pass as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018. Utah leads 28-0.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utes wide receiver Samson Nacua (45) celebrates his touchdown with Utes defensive end Caleb Repp (47) as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018. Utah leads 28-0.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utes wide receiver Samson Nacua (45) celebrates his touchdown with Utes tight end Brant Kuithe (80) and Utes offensive lineman Orlando Umana (50) as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018. Utah leads 28-0.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utes running back Zack Moss (2) with the touchdown as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018. Utah leads 28-0.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utes wide receiver Demari Simpkins (7) pulls down the touchdown pass as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018. Utah leads 28-0.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Arizona Wildcats quarterback Jamarye Joiner (10) fumbles and recovers the ball as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utes defensive end Maxs Tupai (92) and Utes linebacker Cody Barton (30) bring down Arizona Wildcats running back J.J. Taylor (21)as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utes quarterback Tyler Huntley (1) with the touchdown as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018. Utah leads 28-0.tLeah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Arizona Wildcats quarterback Jamarye Joiner (10) is sacked by Utes defensive end Bradlee Anae (6) as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utes wide receiver Demari Simpkins (7) pulls down the touchdown pass as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018. Utah leads 28-0.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utes offensive lineman Jackson Barton (70) celebrates Utes running back Zack Moss' (2) touchdown as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utes defensive tackle John Penisini (52) celebrates with Utes defensive end Bradlee Anae (6) as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utes quarterback Tyler Huntley (1) celebrates his touchdown with Utes offensive lineman Jackson Barton (70) as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018. Utah leads 28-0.tLeah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utes defensive back Josh Nurse (14) and Utes linebacker Cody Barton (30) bring down Arizona Wildcats wide receiver Shun Brown (6) as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018. Utah leads 28-0.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utes defensive end Maxs Tupai (92) brings down Arizona Wildcats running back J.J. Taylor (21) as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utes running back Zack Moss (2) with the touchdown as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018. Utah leads 28-0.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Fans celebrate Utes wide receiver Demari Simpkins (7) touchdown catch as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018. Utah leads 28-0.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  A pass intended for Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) is broken up by Arizona Wildcats cornerback Lorenzo Burns (2) as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018. Utah defeated Arizona 42-10.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Arizona Wildcats head coach Kevin Sumlin talks with players during a timeout in the 4th quarter as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018. Utah defeated Arizona 42-10.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) laughs after he was caught in the pocket by Arizona Wildcats cornerback Lorenzo Burns (2) and linebacker Anthony Pandy (26) as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018. Utah defeated Arizona 42-10.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utes running back Zack Moss (2) is brought down by Arizona Wildcats linebacker Colin Schooler (7) as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018. Utah defeated Arizona 42-10.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utes defensive back Julian Blackmon (23) is pulled down by Arizona Wildcats (16) as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018. Utah defeated Arizona 42-10.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utes head coach Kyle Whittingham talks with Arizona Wildcats quarterback Rhett Rodriguez (4) after the game as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018. Utah defeated Arizona 42-10.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Arizona Wildcats wide receiver Cedric Peterson (18) slips past Utes defensive back Josh Nurse (14) on his touchdown run as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018. Utah defeated Arizona 42-10.Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune  Utah defeated Arizona 42-10, at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018. Leah Hogsten  |  The Salt Lake Tribune   Utes running back Armand Shyne (6) slips past Arizona defense on his 53yard run into the end zone as the University of Utah hosts the Arizona Wildcats at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City, Friday Oct. 12, 2018. Utah defeated Arizona 42-10.

In the first Ute Proud observance in November 2014, Arizona’s running game shredded Utah’s defense, Native American dancers performed in driving rain during halftime and Ute coach Kyle Whittingham walked onto the field in the closing seconds, preventing his offense from running one last play.

The entire day was well-intended, but ended under the worst circumstances: Arizona 42, Utah 10.

Four years later, the landscape looked entirely different. Utah's offense produced five touchdowns in the first 36 minutes, members of the Ute tribe celebrated their ties to the school on a crisp evening and Whittingham was involved in his 200th victory as a Utah staff member.

Friday night hardly could have gone better: Utah 42, Arizona 10.

So the Utes have won consecutive Pac-12 games for the first time since October 2016, when they started a three-game run by beating Arizona, and now their season gets even more interesting. USC will visit Rice-Eccles Stadium this coming Saturday.

After the Utes sang the school song with the student body and walked toward the locker room, the stadium public-address system for some reason played Earth, Wind & Fire's “September.” That month is mostly a bad memory. Utah (4-2, 2-2 Pac-12) has figured out something in October, producing 40-plus points and 400-plus yards against Stanford and Arizona. “We knew what we were capable of, all along,” receiver Britain Covey said. He cited “a lot of confidence and a lot of relief” among the offensive players, stemming from actually having done it.

Going into Saturday’s games elsewhere in the Pac-12, including USC vs. Colorado in a late contest, ESPN’s Football Power Index projected 8.6 wins for Utah. The FPI favors the Utes in all six remaining games, while allowing for the effect of probability.

Three takeaways

• With the disclaimers of Washington State’s disdain of running, Stanford’s Bryce Love being injured and Arizona’s having to pass after falling way behind, Utah’s run defense is becoming nationally elite. The Utes are allowing 75 rushing yards per game, while rotating seven or eight linemen who occupy blockers and make plays themselves. Behind them, linebackers Chase Hansen and Cody Barton are very productive.

The pass rush improved Friday. With five sacks accounting for 25 yards, Arizona netted 72 rushing yards. Defensive end Maxs Tupai was involved in nine tackles, a big number for a lineman.

• Utah’s offense is making big plays. The Utes' success begins with Zack Moss' running, but he can’t carry the entire operation. Utah needs plays such as Tyler Huntley’s passes of 39 yards to Jaylen Dixon and 68 yards to Demari Simpkins, with Huntley’s 58-yard catch of Covey’s pass as a bonus.

• The Utes' highly regarded secondary remains off its game. Some percentage of No. 3 quarterback Rhett Rodriguez’s 226 yards passing was attributable to backup defenders. More disturbing is eight holding or pass-interference penalties against front-line players — mainly, cornerbacks Julian Blackmon and Jaylon Johnson — in two games. The secondary will have to be sharper against USC quarterback JT Daniels and his receivers.

Player of the game

Huntley. Utah’s QB performed wonderfully, other than a poor decision of throwing back across the field and being intercepted. Playing three quarters, he totaled 323 yards of passing, running and receiving, accounting for four touchdowns. Runner-up: Hansen. He made eight tackles (including a sack) in the first half and personally took away Arizona’s hope of doing much offensively.

Play of the game

Ultimately, it may not have mattered in a game the Utes won convincingly. Yet Covey’s 9-yard catch on third and 8, via a tunnel-screen pass that required some weaving and breaking of tackles, sustained Utah’s first drive that ended with a touchdown instead of a field goal. Runner-up: Covey’s TD pass to Huntley for a 35-0 lead in the third quarter was more memorable, but less vital at the time.

Looking ahead

Whittingham was wishing USC and Colorado both could lose Saturday night. Regardless, the Utes pretty much have to beat USC to stay in the Pac-12 South race, whether that’s for the sake of owning the tiebreaker with the Trojans or remaining close to Colorado. That creates a meaningful homecoming game in a series that has produced dramatic finishes in three of the past four meetings.


Rookie Grayson Allen remains a work in progress for the Jazz, but the early signs are encouraging

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In the months after Grayson Allen’s Duke team went down in the Elite Eight to No. 1 seed Kansas, Grayson Allen’s NBA stock went up.

ESPN’s mock draft tells the story. In April, he was slated to be selected No. 33, by Memphis. In May, he was predicted as the 30th pick, to Atlanta. In the first week of June, he’d moved up to No. 28, Golden State’s pick. By June 19, a couple of days before the draft, he was going to be the 25th pick (the Lakers’ selection). And on the day of the draft he’d found a home, in the mock drafts and the real one, in Utah’s 21st pick.

How did he do it?

By all accounts, he dominated at least two workouts. Utah’s infatuation with Allen really bloomed when he came to Salt Lake City for a workout with three other first-round guard prospects (UCLA’s Aaron Holiday, Villanova’s Jalen Brunson, and Creighton’s Khyri Thomas). Allen owned the workout on both ends of the floor, by all accounts.

Maybe the most important one from a draft stock point of view was his performance at CAA’s Pro Day, in which Allen put on a show in front of scouts from all 30 NBA teams, including Jazz assistant GM David Morway.

It wasn’t just Morway who was there for the Jazz. Donovan Mitchell, a CAA client, was too. There, he texted Morway, “Grayson at 21?"

After that, the Jazz weren’t the only team at the end of the first round interested in Allen. On draft day, both the Warriors and the Celtics sent the Jazz trade offers for the No. 21 pick to acquire Allen, per multiple sources. The Jazz turned them down and kept their man.

So far, he seems to be repaying the Jazz’s faith. Allen is in the top 10 in rookie scoring during the preseason with a 12.6 scoring average, up there with lottery names like Trae Young, Miles Bridges, and Marvin Bagley Jr. His quick and accurate trigger early has been impressive, to the tune of 51 percent shooting overall and 52 percent from 3. He’s had the chance to show off his vertical athleticism a few times, too. Preseason isn’t everything, but it’s a promising start.

More important to the Jazz, though, is how Allen’s been working to improve his game. He’s been training extensively with assistant coach Johnnie Bryant, who found significant success training Paul Millsap, Gordon Hayward, and then Donovan Mitchell to stardom. Bryant often pairs Allen and Mitchell together in drills.

Since training camp, Jae Crowder typically joins in as Allen’s “vet,” and despite appearances, it’s a natural fit: Crowder can teach Allen how to channel his competitive spirit for the good of his team, not to the detriment of it.

But despite good play so far, there are still legitimate questions as to what Allen’s role will be on the team this year. The biggest factor is whether or not Allen’s defense can catch up to the rest of the roster in time for him to play minutes in Snyder’s rotation. Snyder is notoriously a defense-first coach, and Allen is a part of a crowded guard rotation.

“I know Coach Snyder wants the team to be a really good defensive team, like elite,” Allen said. “So if I’m out there, I need to add to that. Defense is the first thing that will get me into the rotation or minutes on the floor, whatever it is.”

While Snyder’s coaching roots are from Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski, they ask for different things on the defensive end of the floor. So Allen has to learn new habits and adapt to the speed of the NBA game simultaneously.

“I’ve been given different habits for four years, and I need to break some of them,” Allen said. “And there’s more space on the floor, too, so if I’m standing straight up and down, I’m not going to be quick enough to the help spot then recover back out to my man. You always have to be in a stance.”

Allen is confident that through hours and hours of “shell drills” and other defensive practice, he’ll be able to be an asset on that end.

Regardless of whether it comes immediately or not for Allen, the Jazz think he can become an impact player in the playoffs, when it really matters.

“We wanted to get tougher. We wanted to get more competitive,” Jazz general manager Dennis Lindsey said. “You guys saw what the playoffs are like. Your skills don’t come out unless you can stand your ground."

Cows help battle invasive grass at Great Salt Lake wetlands

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Hooper, Utah • A yearslong battle against an invasive grass has improved hundreds of acres of wetland habitat near the Great Salt Lake, even as lake levels decline.

Water-sucking phragmites moved into Utah wetlands decades ago and firmly took root. The non-native plant is notoriously hard to knock back, choking out native plants and wildlife.

But just in time for duck hunting season, managers at Ogden Bay Waterfowl Management Area are gaining ground, fighting back phragmites with an unlikely weapon — cows.

"Welcome to Ogden Bay Cattle Ranch," joked Rich Hansen, manager of the WMA. "It's a great tool. Chemicals work, but I hate putting chemicals on year after year after year. If we can use a natural bio control and still have a good end product, providing good habitat, why not?"

When Hansen started at Ogden Bay WMA three years ago, he described driving down the management area dikes, completely socked in by a sea of monotypic green.

"This stuff will grow up to 16 feet in a growing season when it's not grazed or sprayed," he said.

Phragmites spread with a tenacious root system and with the thousands of seeds produced by its plume-like flower.

"Once it gets into a wetland, it spreads so rapidly and gets so tall and dense that no wildlife, no human, no duck-hunting dog can move through it," said Karin Kettenring, associate professor of Wetland Ecology at Utah State University. "It's like a dense bamboo forest, it's impenetrable."

Phragmites are also notorious for depleting vast amounts of water.

Researchers with the Utah Division of Water Quality recently calculated phragmites suck 71,000 acre-feet from the Great Salt Lake each season — the equivalent of all water flowing from the Jordan River's for nine months.

The tall, thirsty plant came to North America from Eurasia.

"We think the seed heads were used as packing material, back in the day before Styrofoam existed, in early shipping routes across the Atlantic," Kettenring said.

Phragmites didn't invade Great Salt Lake wetlands until around the 1980s, when the lake began to recede after reaching record-high levels.

"What happened is we basically primed wetland habitats for this species, since it's a high-nutrient specialist," Kettenring said.

Nutrient-rich runoff from agricultural fields and suburban lawns filled Great Salt Lake wetlands. The phragmites thrived, choking out important bird habitat.

"In 2015, my number one priority was to kill the phrag off so we could see what we actually have off the dike," Hansen said.

The Utah Legislature appropriated $500,000 to control phragmites stands in 2017. The Great Salt Lake Advisory Council noted a similar funding would be needed in 2018. It takes years of intensive work to make any progress with the plants.

Hansen manages around 35,000 acres at the Ogden Bay WMA. Like other wetland managers around the Great Salt Lake, he uses a combination of herbicide spraying, rolling, crushing and burning to control phragmites.

Cattle grazing, however, has quickly become Hansen's tool of choice. He contracts with local ranchers to graze around 2,000 cow-calf pairs at Ogden Bay.

"I'm a farm boy and I worked here while I was going to college 20 years ago. I made the observation that where there were cows adjacent to us ... there was no phrag," Hansen said. "I like to think outside the box."

Grazing is less expensive than other methods of phragmites control. Ranchers "pay" for the grazing rights with in-kind work at the bay.

The optics are also better than burning, particularly in the Wasatch Front's notoriously polluted airshed.

After cows munched down acres and acres of wetlands and opened up the habitat, Hansen realized 84 of his water control structures — around a third of all the structures in the management area — had completely failed. He's now working to get the repaired and replaced.

"Every dike out here was like driving through a tunnel. You couldn't see what was going on anywhere," he said. "You can see how they've opened it up in three years just grazing."

Hansen fenced areas within his grazing treatment areas to act as controls. Those confined stands look odd surrounded by fields and bogs where birds now forage.

The grazing is beneficial to the ranchers as well, especially during parched years like this past season.

"It was an extremely dry year out here, especially on our home range. There's basically no grass," said Seth Jones, a rancher based in Box Elder County's Park Valley.

Jones has around 350 head of cattle. This was his first time contracting with Ogden Bay WMA, which ended up saving his operation when his other allotments in the mountains became too dry, he said.

"It was perfect timing," he said. "Without the (Ogden Bay WMA), we wouldn't have been able to keep as many cows as we did."

In exchange, Jones built fences around the WMA and helped plant food plots for pheasants and quail.

"It was a lot of hours, but it's work we're used to," he said. "It's great to be able to have that option so it's not as expensive to us."

While there are loads of benefits to using cattle to knock back phragmites, it's not a perfect solution.

"With grazing, there were a lot of concerns about impacts to water quality," Kettenring said.

Cows can potentially add to the nutrient loading that caused phragmites to grow so rampant in the first place.

One of Kettenring's graduate students, Brittany Duncan, studied grazing impacts to Great Salt Lake wetlands. The study hasn't been made public yet, but Kettenring summarized the findings.

"Basically, if you use cattle for a short period of time, like a month or month and a half, for two years in a row, it's not going to have a large negative impact," she said. "But we're not suggesting you can go out and graze for 10 years in a row."

Grazing can also be effective if used carefully, she added, but it needs to be coupled with herbicide treatment to kill phragmites roots — which can grow 10 feet deep.

Hansen said he's well-aware of cow's impacts. They've trampled and "annihilated" one of his food plots for birds. But at this point, he mostly sees the benefits.

"I would love it if we got to the point where we didn't have to have cows, but I don't see that happening," he said.

As a flock of ducks took flight over a munching herd, Hansen surveyed what used to be a daunting expanse of green weeds.

“I’m getting just a fraction of the complaints about cows compared to what I got on phragmites,” he said. “Now you have thousands of acres to hunt.”

Polygamists and other fundamentalists are happy to embrace and own the term ‘Mormon’

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When Benjamin Shaffer left The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints to join a fundamentalist group, his old friends made jokes about how he wasn’t a real Mormon anymore.

“I get to say all those jokes back to them now,” Shaffer said Tuesday, “and watch them squirm.”

Latter-day Saint President Russell M. Nelson has told followers to stop using the word “Mormon” to refer to themselves and the church. Shaffer is glad “Brother Nelson” is trying to accentuate Jesus Christ in the church’s name, but Shaffer doesn’t plan to stop describing himself as Mormon.

“I love the fact that I get to be the genuine Mormon in the room,” he added, “and all of them are ex-Mormons.”

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
President Russell M. Nelson waves at the General Conference of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Salt Lake City, Saturday Oct. 6, 2018. At left is Nelson's wife, Wendy Watson Nelson.
(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) President Russell M. Nelson waves at the General Conference of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Salt Lake City, Saturday Oct. 6, 2018. At left is Nelson's wife, Wendy Watson Nelson. (Trent Nelson/)

People from Great Britain to Utah who have long been called fundamentalist Mormons say they are comfortable with the M-word, though some have a dire warning based on their own history with changes announced by their religious leaders.

“I’m perfectly fine with being considered Mormon,” said Guy Timpson of Colorado City, Ariz., where multiple polygamous groups have been located. “It basically says I’m not Catholic and I’m not Protestant, and we’ve moved past all those and there’s a better way. It’s not a slight to our savior or anything like that.”

Even if Latter-day Saints haven’t always liked the term “Mormon,” there also was unease about fundamentalists using it. Then-LDS Church President Gordon B. Hinckley in 1998 said, "There is no such thing as a 'Mormon fundamentalist.' It is a contradiction to use the two words together."

Sheila Riley, who lives in Nottingham, England, and left the LDS Church in 1997 to join a fundamentalist group, believes the name campaign is part of a long effort to distance the mainstream Salt Lake City-based faith from those who believe in polygamy and other fundamentalist principles. She remembers previous efforts by her former church to emphasize its belief in Jesus Christ.

She’s skeptical Nelson’s effort to erase use of “Mormon” will succeed among the public, especially when the word is in the name of the denomination’s own signature scripture.

“He’s still using the Book of Mormon,” Riley said. “When the missionaries knock on the door, the first thing people are going to see is the Book of Mormon.”

(Rick Bowmer | The Associated Press) In this Friday, Oct. 27, 2017 photo, the word "Zion" is written at the entry way to a home in Hildale, Utah, in a community on the Utah-Arizona border that has been home for more than a century to a polygamous Mormon sect, the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. The community is undergoing a series of changes as the sect's control of the town slips away amid government evictions and crackdowns.
(Rick Bowmer | The Associated Press) In this Friday, Oct. 27, 2017 photo, the word "Zion" is written at the entry way to a home in Hildale, Utah, in a community on the Utah-Arizona border that has been home for more than a century to a polygamous Mormon sect, the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. The community is undergoing a series of changes as the sect's control of the town slips away amid government evictions and crackdowns. (Rick Bowmer/)

David Patrick, mission president for Christ’s Church, also known as The Branch and has temples in Utah and Nevada, sees the name in historical context.

The LDS Church created divisions, Patrick said, among those calling themselves Mormons when it issued two manifestos abandoning polygamy and disavowed what’s called the “Adam-God theory” — a belief still held by Mormon fundamentalists saying the Adam of Garden of Eden fame is also God and the Heavenly Father of the human race.

“I would like to think that we consider ourselves orthodox Mormons,” Patrick said, “and we’re staying with the original tenets of the faith, and that hasn’t changed and it’s not likely to change, where The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints would like to evolve to a different way of being than the foundation that was laid by Joseph Smith Jr.”

The nickname push is more insidious for some former followers of Warren Jeffs, the president of the polygamous Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. He is serving a sentence of life plus 20 years in Texas for crimes related to two girls he married as plural wives and sexually assaulted.

Trent Nelson  |  The Salt Lake Tribune
George Jessop, a former member of the FLDS church, is responsible for restarting the community's large gatherings in Hildale, UT and Colorado City, AZ. Monday July 4, 2016.
Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune George Jessop, a former member of the FLDS church, is responsible for restarting the community's large gatherings in Hildale, UT and Colorado City, AZ. Monday July 4, 2016. (Trent Nelson/)

On Facebook, former FLDS member George Jessop warned that his church had leaders who ordered sudden change in practices, too.

“This is a complete manipulation through religion,” Jessop wrote of Nelson, “no different than what went on in our religion.”

Timpson, who also used to worship in the FLDS, said Nelson’s move away from a long-held term “sounds a little bit Warren Jeffs-y.” He worries such big changes will create divisions among his friends in the mainstream church.

“They’re really on a path of conflict,” Timpson said, “whether they know it or not.”

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  Lex Herbert, Bishop of the Second Ward, which has separated from other members of the polygamous Apostolic United Brethren, shakes a youth's hand before the start of  Sacrament Meeting for the Pinesdale Second Ward, in Pinesdale, Mont., in this October 2017 photo.
(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Lex Herbert, Bishop of the Second Ward, which has separated from other members of the polygamous Apostolic United Brethren, shakes a youth's hand before the start of Sacrament Meeting for the Pinesdale Second Ward, in Pinesdale, Mont., in this October 2017 photo. (Trent Nelson/)

Lex Herbert, who lives with his two wives and their children in Pinesdale, Mont., points out that names change over time, whether it’s what to call a race or a religious group. Being called Mormon, LDS or fundamentalist is just semantics.

“There seems to be enough unprincipled people in every church," Herbert said, "so we might be better off spending more time living the Christian principles than worrying about the name of the organization preaching them.

"Let’s see how you live.”

115 arches were left out of the reduced Bears Ears and Grand Staircase national monuments. A University of Utah team is creating a digital archive to ‘preserve’ them.

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(Photo courtesy of University of Utah Geohazards Research) Pictured is a map of the 115 arches documented to be cut out of the former monument designations at Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante.(Photo courtesy of University of Utah Geohazards Research) Pictured is Sunset Arch in what is formerly Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument.(Photo courtesy of University of Utah Geohazards Research) Pictured is Moonrise Arch in what was formerly Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument.(Photo courtesy of University of Utah Geohazards Research) Pictured is Causeway Arch in what was formerly Bears Ears National Monument.(Photo courtesy of University of Utah Geohazards Research) Pictured is Big Arrowhead Arch in what was formerly Bears Ears National Monument.(Photo courtesy of University of Utah Geohazards Research) Pictured is Arch of the Sun in what was formerly Bears Ears National Monument.

When President Donald Trump carved nearly 2 million acres from the desert designations of two southern Utah national monuments last year, conservationists were quick to inventory which popular sites were stripped of federal protections.

Cedar Mesa in what was formerly Bears Ears. Much of the Hole in the Rock trail from the previous boundaries of Grand Staircase-Escalante. Tens of thousands of archaeological spots between the two. And many digs where paleontologists have uncovered new dinosaur fossils.

Now, after months of study and cataloging, a team of University of Utah geology researchers would like to add something to the list. Well, actually 115 things.

They have mapped at least 115 natural rock arches — 37 in Grand Staircase and 78 in Bears Ears — that were left outside the monuments when they were drastically reduced in December 2017. The group started a digital archive to “preserve a sort of portrait” of them all, said Jeff Moore, associate professor of geology and geophysics at the U.

“That’s a resource of Utah worth preserving,” he said. “Sometimes people have a view that rock is strong and these features have been there for thousands of years and they’ll weather changes. But I think that people don’t always realize how fragile these arches are and how special they are.”

Trump’s authority to shrink the designations is currently under review in federal court. But Moore believes that during the interim and without more immediate protections, some of those redrock arches could be gone before anything is decided on the land’s future management.

His team has begun to take pictures and measure the arches as they stand. Their project is called “Deserted Arches.”

“I doubt that many people know that there are this many arches out there,” said Ammon Hatch, a graduate student who has worked on the project.

The team has started by highlighting arches that now fall under the Bureau of Land Management’s jurisdiction. The idea, Hatch said, is to focus on the structures that could be threatened if the federal agency accepts potential mineral or extraction claims on the land.

While mining is one of the research group’s biggest fears, people traipsing without restriction over the arches could also cause irreparable damage. Many of the features are remote, but trails lead directly to some of the most sensitive ones.

That includes Big Arrowhead Arch in what was formerly Bears Ears National Monument.

Moore’s team documented the arch with pictures, video and 3D models to be sort of “an enriched archive.” It also created a GIF that shows how it shifts up and down throughout the day (the movement is exaggerated because the actual bouncing is imperceptibly slow).

(Illustration courtesy of University of Utah Geohazards Research) This GIF illustrates the movement of Big Arrowhead Arch in what was formerly Bears Ears National Monument.
(Illustration courtesy of University of Utah Geohazards Research) This GIF illustrates the movement of Big Arrowhead Arch in what was formerly Bears Ears National Monument.

All arches move, and researchers can track the changes to see if a structure is healthy or on the verge of collapse. They can also check the data in the future to get a sense of any rapid deterioration.

“Every second of every day, they’re vibrating, they’re constantly quivering,” said Moore, who has studied these movements for the past few years, including most notably at Rainbow Bridge.

The sound of the movement is recorded, too, and it reverberates sort of like a guitar string. As part of its archive, the U.’s team captured audio clips for several arches and sped them up so they would be audible. The one for Big Arrowhead Arch was captured in July and is a twangy six-minute clip of low resonating tones.

“Arches have been doing this throughout their evolution,” Moore added. “This is a kind of voice. It’s humming out its state of health.”

The archive, hosted at geohazards.earth.utah.edu/bear, is a documentation of the arches as much as a digital experience of them. Visitors can see, hear and explore the structures.

Utah has the world’s highest concentration of natural arches and bridges. Arches National Park alone is home to more than 2,000. Hatch said because of those high numbers, it can be hard to understand that the features are actually quite rare and fragile. Moore calls them “chance occurrences.”

“They’re very fleeting, if you think in geologic terms,” Hatch added. “It’s good to preserve these in some digital format.”

Sunset Arch, for instance, in what used to be part of Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, is particularly vulnerable to damage — by people who can easily access it and by natural decay that occurs over time. Hatch believes it’s important to create a record that these arches exist and raise awareness that they’re no longer federally protected.

The team will continue to expand its archive with more images and measurements. Wendy Wischer, an assistant professor in the U.’s Department of Art & Art History, will also create an art exhibit using the environmental data to go along with the project.

“The installation,” she said, “will allow people to experience these in multiple ways, translate that in poetic ways.”

Moore, too, believes that over time his team will find even more arches “evicted” from the monuments to add to the archive.


AP fact check: Romney oversimplifies Western water shortage

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Mitt Romney took up the question of water shortage this week in Utah, one of the driest states in the country, during a debate as he runs for a U.S. Senate seat in his adopted home state against Democrat Jenny Wilson. But federal water managers say he oversimplified a complex issue when he said Utah’s unused water allotment goes to California.

Water use is a perennial issue in the arid West, especially along the overtaxed Colorado River, which supplies about 40 million people in seven Southwestern states as well as Mexico.

Asked whether Utah needs to regulate water use or bring in more supply, Wilson focused primarily on the need to conserve. Domestic water use per capita in Utah was the second-highest in the country in 2015, according to a report from the Utah Geological Survey.

Romney, meanwhile, said he supports conservation as well as a plan to build a billion-dollar pipeline to take water from the Lake Powell reservoir to southern Utah.

Here's what Romney said:

Romney: “One of the things that we benefit from is the arrangement we have with other states. We came together some years ago and decided how we would divide up the water in the Colorado River. We’re not taking as much as we have the right to take, and if we don’t take our full share from the Colorado River it ends up going to California and they take our share.”

The facts: It’s true that Utah doesn’t use its full share of water it’s allotted from the Colorado River, but it’s not quite right to say California gets Utah’s extra water, said Marlon Duke, a spokesman for the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, the federal agency that manages water in the West.

The information Romney referenced comes from Utah water managers who support the pipeline, and they maintain they are being shortchanged in favor of states further downriver, including California.

Three states: California, Arizona and Nevada, known collectively as the Lower Basin, are guaranteed a certain amount of water from the river, according to the 1922 Colorado River Compact.

A group of less-populous states known as the Upper Basin, including Utah, divide up the rest. Utah, for example, was allotted 23 percent of the remainder, while Colorado gets about 52 percent, according to another compact signed in 1948. The rest is divided between New Mexico and Wyoming.

None of Upper Basin states uses their full share of water from Colorado River, Duke said.

The extra water is stored in the reservoir at Lake Powell, and from there it goes on to the Lower Basin states as well as Mexico.

In recent years, more water has been leaving the reservoir than the amount allocated to the Lower Basin states due to natural loss from evaporation or seepage.

Water managers in southern Utah say that gives Lower Basin states, California chief among them, an unfair advantage. The fast-growing St. George, Utah, area is going to need more water, and can't long afford to allow other states the benefit of the doubt, said Ron Thompson with the Washington County Water Conservancy District.

Be that as it may, it’s inaccurate to suggest that California is taking more than their share of water, Duke said. The state’s usage is within its legal share.

Man who allegedly abandoned 64-year-old woman while camping in Juab County accused of murder

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Family members looking for a 64-year-old woman who was reportedly abandoned while camping last week in rural Juab County discovered a woman’s body while searching near the Silver City-area on Saturday.

Undersheriff Brent Pulver said it’s too early to confirm if the body found is Jan Pearson-Jenkins, but circumstances indicate it likely is her. Pearson-Jenkins' family believes it is her, according to a post on her brother Jace Pearson’s Facebook page.

The man she was camping with, 42-year-old Cody Young, was taken into custody Saturday at Yuba State Park, about 26 miles south of Nephi. He was later booked into jail on suspicion of murder. Police had been searching for him since Pearson-Jenkins was abandoned.

Pulver said one of Pearson-Jenkins family member’s found the body about 11:45 a.m. near the two’s campsite. He wouldn’t comment on the condition of the body or speculate on how the person died, except for saying it wasn’t found in one of the numerous open mines in the area. Two teenagers — Riley Powell and Brelynne “Breezy” Otteson — were killed and their bodies hidden in a mine shaft in that area in late December 2017.

Pearson wrote on Facebook, “Not quite the results we had hoped for, but at least we have knowledge and ‘closure’ of what Jan experienced in her final hours.” He didn’t elaborate on what he believed caused the woman’s death. A call and text message from The Salt Lake Tribune were not returned.

Pearson-Jenkins was last seen Oct. 4, when she left Sandy to go camping with Young near Eureka. Police said Young messaged family members the next day saying he’d gotten into an argument with Pearson-Jenkins and had left her in the wilderness.

She didn’t have her cellphone and wasn’t dressed for cold weather.

Pearson said one of his longtime friends found the body about a mile to the east of where Young told family he’d left Pearson-Jenkins and within a mile of the pair’s campsite.

“Our family was literally surrounded and consoled by friends at the scene the moment we learned of the sad news,” Pearson wrote.

In a vast tent complex, about 1,500 undocumented minors await sponsors

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Tornillo, Texas • Workers compared it to a giant slumber party.

Flowers made of plastic bottles, chains of colorful construction paper and pictures of Disney princesses stripped from coloring books adorned dozens of bunk beds inside a cavernous white tent where hundreds of Central American teenagers have spent the past several weeks.

On the other side of what looked like a military base, in smaller beige tents that housed up to 20 young men apiece, faux spider webs were strung across the bed frames for Halloween. Clusters of Spanish-speaking teens placed strips of blue tape across their chests to indicate their team affiliation as a spirited soccer match took place on a makeshift pitch of dirt and synthetic grass.

The 123-tent complex 30 miles from El Paso is a holding facility for undocumented youths who crossed the U.S.-Mexico border and are waiting to be reunited with parents and relatives. About 1,500 minors are housed there.

Officials at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, which contracts with a nonprofit organization to run the facility, took reporters on a tour Friday, providing a glimpse at one facet of the nation's evolving migrant crisis.

The temporary overflow center opened in June, when a network of about 100 HHS-contracted shelters across the country was approaching capacity because of a steady flow of minors across the border and a growing wait for relatives and other potential sponsors to get through background checks.

At the time, the estimated 12,000 minors in HHS custody included more than 2,500 children separated from their parents or other adults at the border as a result of President Donald Trump's crackdown. Most of those separated children have since been reunited with parents or released to a sponsor, according to the latest filings in a lawsuit challenging the separations.

But the amount of time it takes to vet potential sponsors for unaccompanied minors continues to grow. As a result, the government has more than tripled the number of beds at Tornillo to potentially accommodate up to 3,800 young migrants.

About 3,200 minors have passed through Tornillo so far, staying 29 days on average. The highest number of occupants at any one time was 1,630 adolescents ages 13 to 17, most of them boys, officials said. All had previously spent time in other shelters and were close to being released.

"This is their last stop," HHS spokesman Mark Weber said.

The department estimates that nearly 51,000 children will cross the border this year unaccompanied — the third-highest one-year total in history, officials said. As of August, they spent an average of 59 days in HHS custody.

BCFS, the San Antonio-based nonprofit organization that operates Tornillo, specializes in erecting emergency housing after natural disasters. Some of the tents at Tornillo were used to shelter people displaced by last year's Hurricane Harvey. HHS said in a notice in the Federal Register last month that it will pay up to $367.9 million between mid-September and December to operate the shelter.

Department officials said they want to release children to sponsors as quickly and as safely as possible, but they are also wary of past mistakes in which minors were mistakenly handed off to human traffickers.

BCFS does not allow migrant children to keep cellphones at the camp because of fears they will be contacted by traffickers who helped bring some of them into the country. The youths can call relatives who are on an approved list on phones provided by the federal government. They have no access to the Internet.

Camp residents wear lanyards around their neck that hold photo ID cards listing their date of birth and date of arrival at Tornillo.

As part of its screening efforts, the Trump administration is asking potential sponsors and members of their households to provide fingerprints and undergo background screening before children can be released to them.

A new information-sharing agreement between HHS and the Department of Homeland Security has increased concerns that some potential sponsors, many of whom are in the country illegally, will be scared to come forward, knowing their information could be accessible to immigration enforcement agents.

But officials said that risk has not stopped thousands of parents and other relatives from applying as sponsors.

The tent facility’s incident commander, who spoke to reporters on the condition that his name be withheld, said more than half of the youngsters at the tent camp — 826 — can be released as soon as FBI background checks are completed.

When asked why there were still in Tornillo, several children said, “Huellas!” — Spanish for “fingerprints.”

Advocates say they are worried about the level of oversight at Tornillo, even more than at other shelters, because of the large number of children and teens housed there and the relatively austere nature of the facility.

"Anyone who keeps children has to be licensed by the state of Texas, except the federal government," said Patricia Macias, a retired Texas family court judge. "Who is keeping the government accountable?"

But the incident commander said his program exceeds Texas's child-care standards regulating such things as the adult-to-child ratio (8 to 1), safety features (24-hour fire and EMS service) and access to lawyers and mental-health and social workers. Not one child has tried to escape or has been seriously ill, he said.

BCFS started offering classes in basic social studies, math, science and English in recent weeks, supplying the young migrants with workbooks and hiring retired teachers to help lead sessions.

"They are receiving education, but this is not school," he said.

Each night, before bed at 10 p.m., residents are encouraged to write down their thoughts in composition books. Some keep these journals tucked underneath Bibles that could be seen resting on their pillows.

Barbara M. Bannon, theater critic for Tribune, dies at 79

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Barbara M. Bannon, an arts patron and critic who reviewed theatrical productions in Utah for four decades, died Thursday at the Huntsman Cancer Institute. She was 79.

Her brother, Michael Bannon, said Bannon died from pancreatic cancer.

Bannon was a theater critic for a number of Utah publications over the decades and began writing reviews for The Salt Lake Tribune in 2004. She also was a film aficionado and edited the Sundance Film Festival’s program guide for 26 years.

Bannon’s last review for The Tribune was in February when she gave compliments to a comedy at Salt Lake Acting Company titled “HIR.” Over the decades she gave her opinion on everything from elegant productions at the Utah Shakespeare Festival to modern classics performed by acting companies in Salt Lake City to community theater musicals.

Barbara Bannon is the person who gave me the confidence to trust myself as an artist when I moved to SLC in 1994. Rest...

Posted by Jerry Rapier on Friday, October 12, 2018

Her reviews often focused not so much on whether the actors delivered their lines well or hit the right notes as on the emotions their performances evoked. And she had a deep vocabulary to describe such talent.

In a 2011 review of “Richard III” at the Utah Shakespeare Festival, Bannon judged the actor playing the title character by his capacity to portray evil.

“Not surprisingly, Elijah Alexander's performance drives this production,” Bannon wrote. “His Richard is a whirling dervish of diabolical intensity, obsessed and maniacal. Like the proverbial dog with the bone, he fastens onto each murder and betrayal, and that energy propels him to the next one.”

For all her deep knowledge of the theater, Bannon, who had a master’s degree in speech and drama from Catholic University, championed local talent. One of the characters she promoted was Sister Dottie, played by actor Charles Lynn Frost in multiple productions in Salt Lake City, the Mormon mother of a gay son who unwittingly pokes fun at The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and Utah while defending both her faith and her son.

In a 2009 review of "The Passion of Sister Dottie S. Dixon,” Bannon explained how Frost was able to pull off the character in a state with a Latter-day Saint majority population.

“What sells the material — a strange fusion of tongue-in-cheek jabs at the Mormon church, a focus on the serious issue of ostracism faced by gay LDS children and their families, and the call for Mormon women to be leaders — is the force of Dottie's personality as portrayed by Frost. He has the audience's complete attention from the opening moments when he offers cushions and snacks to make sure everyone is comfortable.”

Ellen Weist a former Tribune reporter and editor, said Bannon was a precise writer who would write her reviews in longhand before editing them on a computer. In her last year, Weist said, Bannon planned her cancer treatments around her theater-watching schedule.

“She had a remarkable institutional knowledge and authority about theater and film — and through the years, was incredibly dedicated to arts coverage in the Tribune,” Weist said in an email. “More than that, though, she’s made her mark in the sheer number of acting and writing careers she boosted through her encouragement. I’ve read scores of tributes to her generosity and curiosity on social media today.”

Bannon was born Jan. 3, 1939, in Stamford, Conn. After she earned her master’s degree in 1963, she taught English at Regina High School in Hyattsville, Md.

One of her students there was Mercedes Ruehl, who in 1992 won an Academy Award for best supporting actress. In an interview that year with The Washington Post, Ruehl described her high school acting days and mentioned Bannon.

“She would bring us to see the theater groups and have them come over to our auditorium,” Ruehl told the newspaper.

Michael Bannon said his sister arrived in Utah in 1968 to work for the ski resort at Alta. She held jobs there as well as for the town of Alta. In 1977, she went to work for Utah Holiday Magazine. She wrote about theater and later became managing editor of the magazine, which ceased publication in 1993.

Bannon spent a number of years as a freelance theater critic before writing regularly for The Tribune. She also served in various posts with the American Theatre Critics Association based in San Francisco.

Bannon is survived by her brother.

A prayer service will be 6 p.m. Friday at St. Catherine of Siena Newman Center, 170 S. University St. (about 1400 East) in Salt Lake City. Mass will follow at 6:30 p.m. followed by what Michael Bannon called a celebration of his sister’s life.

McSally, Romney urge crowd to get out the vote in Arizona

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Gilbert, Ariz. • Republican Senate candidate Martha McSally had a boost from GOP stalwart Mitt Romney as the two urged energized supporters at an Arizona rally Friday to help her win a “dead heat” race.

"This is such a consequential election for us up and down the ballot," McSally said to a cheering crowd in the Phoenix suburb of Gilbert. "This Senate race is literally the firewall to make sure we keep and grow the Senate majority."

Branding her opponent as an anti-military liberal, the congresswoman is facing Democrat Kyrsten Sinema for the seat being vacated by Republican Sen. Jeff Flake. Both women left their seats in the U.S. House to seek the Senate post.

A victory will only happen if her supporters spread the word to either vote early or at the polls, McSally said.

"It's so important that you're engaged but we got to get out there," she said. "We got to get out there to our friends and family, on social media, people in our neighborhoods, people in our workplace. This has come down to get-out-the-vote, right?"

Romney, a heavy favorite in Utah's Senate race, introduced McSally. The Gilbert area is heavily Mormon, and Romney is arguably the nation's best-known member of the Salt Lake City-based faith.

The former GOP presidential nominee highlighted McSally's reputation as the first U.S. female fighter pilot and her various combat missions.

"This is the kind of person Arizona deserves and the country needs," Romney said. "I'm hoping when I get elected to the Senate...we are able to work together to take on some big challenges."

Several hundred people stood inside an auditorium for the 20-minute rally. Many wore red or blue T-shirts with either pro-McSally or pro-Donald Trump messages while waving miniature U.S. flags. Veterans in the crowd were applauding McSally's military background.

Some in attendance said they support her because she would work with President Trump and help keep the Republicans' hold on the Senate majority.

"She doesn't flip-flop like the other candidate," said Sadiq Ahmed, a registered independent who voted for both Barack Obama and Trump. "At this time, it's better for America to support Republicans."

Both McSally and Romney have mostly supported Trump. But neither invoked his name during the gathering.

McSally did mention Sinema several times, drawing resounding boos from the crowd. McSally focused on Sinema's past anti-war protests.

"Not only was she protesting our troops in a pink tutu...she certainly has a right to do that but is that who we want to be our next senator?"

The rally comes just days after early voting began in Arizona for the Nov. 6 election.

Sinema, who was raised Mormon, is a moderate, three-term congresswoman representing parts of metro Phoenix. She began her political career as a Green Party activist and now casts herself as an independent.

She has built a moderate record in Congress, often supporting Republican bills.

McSally is a one-time moderate who is now in her second term representing parts of southern Arizona.

The GOP has worked hard to cast Sinema as a liberal who is too far left for Arizona. McSally also says Sinema, a former rape crisis counselor, was soft on punishment for child molesters.

Sinema’s campaign said the attacks are a sign of an increasingly desperate McSally camp.

AP writer Bob Christie in Phoenix contributed to this story.

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