This is the first game in franchise history that Jack McBain hasn’t played.
The only guys that have yet to miss a game are Nick Schmaltz and Ian Cole.#TusksUp
— Brogan Houston (@houston_brogan) April 5, 2026
Utah
DNA testing confirms Ted Bundy killed Utah teen in 1974 cold case
The case of a Utah teenager murdered more than 50 years ago is finally closed after authorities said Wednesday that DNA evidence confirmed she was a victim of notorious serial killer Ted Bundy.
Laura Ann Aime, 17, was last seen at a Halloween party on Oct. 31, 1974. She left the party to do a convenience store run and never returned, according to the Utah County Sheriff’s Office.
Hikers found the woman’s body about a month later, down an embankment just off a mountain road. It appeared she had been strangled and severely beaten, the office said.
Before his execution in 1989, Bundy admitted to killing Aime, Sheriff Mike Smith said Wednesday. But authorities declined to accept the confession and determined the case “was unable to satisfactorily convict Bundy based upon the evidence in possession and with the available investigative sciences for the time,” the sheriff’s office said.
At the time, Bundy was studying law at the University of Utah.
The office said that it began efforts last year to resolve Aime’s cold case using new forensic techniques and DNA test comparisons. The process confirmed that the DNA evidence recovered from Aime’s body in 1974 belonged to Bundy.
“This case is officially closed,” Smith said during a news conference Wednesday.
Michelle Impala, Aime’s younger sister, remembered Aime as a fun, outgoing older sister.
“I was 12 when Laura died. She was 17. We were really close. We shared a room. We rode horses together. She was very passionate about animals,” Impala, who is now 64, said at the news conference. “She took me everywhere, as a 12-year-old that was pretty cool to hang out with my older sister.”
Utah County Sheriff’s Sgt. Mike Reynolds, who was involved in reviewing Aime’s cold case last year, described the late teen as “the quintessential daughter of Utah County.”
“We felt the pain the family feels when she was taken. We felt the pain that you felt this whole entire time, and we’ve had the desire to deliver to you some type of healing, we can’t really say closure,” Reynolds said during the news conference.
Smith said new forensic techniques “will make any future DNA test comparisons easier for those law enforcement agencies who still have open cases involving Bundy.”
Bundy kidnapped, tortured, raped, and murdered what is believed to be dozens of young women during the 1970s.
While it is unknown exactly how many people he killed, he confessed to murdering 30 women in seven states in the mid-1970s. Bundy was executed on Jan. 24, 1989.
Bundy was convicted of murdering two sorority sisters from Florida State University. The 1979 trial was the first to be nationally televised, sparking a twisted fascination among viewers at home who considered him charming and handsome.
In the decades since his execution, Bundy has been the subject of countless films, documentaries, books and biographies.
Utah
Video: Utah’s Morning News – April 6th, 2026 – KSLTV.com
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Utah
Alabama gymnastics, Utah in NCAA Tournament: Live second-round updates
Alabama gymnastics and Utah are getting ready to take on the NCAA Championships regional final.
The Crimson Tide and Utes both advanced out of the first session. No 4 UCLA and No. 13 Minnesota advanced out of the second session and now will meet on Sunday.
The meet will start at 7 p.m. CT and 6 p.m. MT. The event will stream on ESPN+.
Alabama gymnastics in NCAA Tournament: Live scoring updates
It’s anyone games with just .125 separating first and fourth after the first rotation.
- Minnesota – 49.450
- UCLA – 49.350
- Alabama 49.325 (-0.025)
- Utah – 49.325 (-0.025)
Alabama starts strong on beam
- Chloe LaCoursiere – 9.850
- Gabby Gladieux – 9.850
- Gabby Ladanyi – 9.850
- Kylee Kvamme – 9.900
- Azaraya Ra-Akbar – 9.875
- TOTAL – 49.325
Fuller scored a 9.825 after three straight 9.85 by Alabama to start the day on beam.
LaCoursiere gets Alabama started with a 9.85 on the beam. The Crimson Tide will go beam, floor, vault and finish on bars today.
What time is Alabama, Utah gymnastics NCAA regional semifinal?
- Date: Sunday, April 5
- Time: 7 p.m. CT/6 p.m. MT
What TV channel is Alabama gymnastics, Utah NCAA meet on?
- TV Channel: None
- Streaming: ESPN+
The Crimson Tide and Utes will face off with No. 4 UCLA and No. 13 Minnesota The meet will air on ESPN+.
Maxwell Donaldson covers high school sports, Jax State athletics, the outdoors in Alabama and more for the Gadsden Times and USA TODAY Network. Find him on Twitter/X @_Max_Donaldson and contact him at MDonaldson@usatodayco.com.
Utah
Mammoth’s Dylan Guenther makes Canucks regret trading his draft pick all over again
If the Vancouver Canucks could hit the “undo” button on one trade in the last decade or so, it would have to be the one that ultimately landed Dylan Guenther with the Utah Mammoth.
In a draft day trade in 2021, the then-Arizona Coyotes acquired the ninth overall pick from the Canucks, which the Coyotes used to select Guenther.
Five years later, “Gunner” has five goals and 11 points in 10 career games against the Canucks — including a goal and an assist in the Mammoth’s 7-4 win at Rogers Arena on Saturday.
He’s also two goals away from the 40 mark for the season. For context, Brock Boeser leads the Canucks in goals this season with 21.
The only things the Canucks have left from the deal are a pair of mediocre draft picks from flipping Conor Garland to the Columbus Blue Jackets and four more seasons of millions in dead cap space after buying Oliver Ekman-Larsson’s contract out two years later.
But Guenther’s two points on Saturday were only half of what the game’s leading scorer, Clayton Keller, contributed. Among his four points were three goals, lining up his third career hat trick and his first with the Utah franchise.
In true Keller fashion, he shrugged off his success without even cracking a smile.
“It feels good, for sure. Great plays by the guys on all of them, so, yeah, it’s good to score, for sure,” he said.
It was an all-hands-on-deck type of win for the Mammoth, with 13 different players recording points (including five of the six defensemen). Their third win in a row maintains their healthy lead in the wild card race, though they still haven’t officially clinched a playoff spot.
Through two seasons of existence, Utah remains perfect against Vancouver. The Philadelphia Flyers and the Buffalo Sabres are the only other teams that have yet to beat the league’s newest team, though each of them has only seen Utah four times, as opposed to Vancouver’s six.
How deep can you go?
Depth is a trait of virtually every Stanley Cup-winning team. The regular season is a grind and the playoffs are even more intense, so there are always injuries. The best teams find ways to overcome them.
With a few exceptions, the Mammoth have been largely fortunate this season on the injury front — unlike last year, when two of their top four defensemen missed more than half the season. But over the last week or so, guys have started to drop.
It began with Barrett Hayton, who collided with a teammate just seconds into the Mammoth’s March 24 game against the Edmonton Oilers and is now out on a week-to-week basis.
In Thursday’s game against the Seattle Kraken, Jack McBain took an Adam Larsson shot to the leg and is also out week to week. NHL Edge lists Larsson in the 92nd percentile in shot speed, so you can imagine how much that must have stung.
MacKenzie Weegar missed Saturday’s game, too, with what the Mammoth categorized as an “upper-body injury” expected to keep him out on a day-to-day basis.
It isn’t clear what caused Weegar’s injury, though he did take a fairly hard hit from Jacob Melanson with 9:58 on the clock in the third period on Thursday. That said, Weegar did finish that shift and played another three shifts afterwards.
But Utah’s depth guys are coming up big.
Liam O’Brien, who hadn’t played in precisely two months, scored what may have been the prettiest of his 13 career NHL goals Saturday, beating Nikita Tolopilo on a move to the backhand with speed.
“He’s such a great teammate, great guy, and he grinds every single day, so that’s, like, awesome to see,” Keller said of O’Brien.
Nick DeSimone filled Weegar’s spot on the back end, playing his first game since March 10. As always, he played as if he hadn’t missed a game all year.
He was on the ice for two goals against, but neither one was directly his fault — and he made up for it by being present for three Mammoth goals, registering an assist on one of them.
And with the likes of Dmitri Simashev, Kevin Rooney, Daniil But and a number of other capable role players on the outside looking in, the team is well-equipped to handle additional adversity that may come as it pushes for the playoffs.
“It’s not just having depth. It’s having guys you trust,” said Mammoth head coach André Tourigny after the game. “Both of those two guys (O’Brien and DeSimone), I trust them. They play the right way, they’re good pros, they stay ready. (No matter) how long they don’t play, they jump in.”
“We have a deep lineup and anyone that steps in is a great player and someone that knows our systems well and can contribute. O’Brien and DeSimone stepped in tonight and were great for us,” added Keller.
Goal of the game
Fans were treated to a number of beautiful goals on Saturday, but there’s one that stands out above the rest.
Kailer Yamamoto tipped a Logan Cooley shot-pass through his legs and into the net to tie the game early.
Keep in mind that Yamamoto is a guy who spent nearly all of last season in the minors and has watched a lot of games from the press box this year. It takes immense amounts of skill and confidence to pull off a move like that in an NHL game, and Yamamoto has plenty of both.
I said it on X and I’ll repeat it here: As long as players like Yamamoto are on the fringe of NHL rosters, I refuse the notion that expansion over-dilutes the game. More than ever before, the number of elite hockey players far exceeds the amount of NHL roster spots.
Yamamoto and plenty of others in similar positions deserve to be permanent, full-time NHLers with no fear of losing their jobs. Keep expanding.
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