Arizona
Auburn lands commitment from former Arizona safety
Auburn’s safety room is already relatively deep, but the Tigers added another player with Power Four experience to that group on Sunday.
Arizona transfer Jack Luttrell is the latest transfer to commit Auburn, a source confirmed to AL.com. He joins USF transfer Fred Gaskin as Auburn’s second transfer safety and becomes the 32nd overall transfer the program has added since the portal opened.
Luttrell spent two seasons in Tucson and was a major contributor during the 2024 season. Playing in 12 games that year, Luttrell tallied 39 tackles, four pass deflections, three interceptions and a forced fumble.
He only played in three games this past season, but finished with three tackles and an interception. He’ll have two years of eligibility remaining when he arrives in Auburn.
The transfer portal closed for players to enter on Friday, but players already in the portal can still sign with schools after that. Keep up with all of Auburn’s incoming and outgoing players here.
Arizona
This Arizona ZIP code is among most popular places to move right now
What to know about Surprise, Arizona, and its unexpected history
The city of Surprise started as a small settlement near Phoenix and is now one of Arizona’s many rapidly growing communities.
The Republic
As 2026 gets underway, one Arizona ZIP code is standing out nationwide, ranking among the most popular destinations for movers across the U.S.
A recent report by MovingPlace, a website that compares mover services nationwide, named a ZIP code in the West Valley among the areas in the U.S. that is attracting the most people as 2026 kicks off.
The report analyzed U.S. migration flows from December 2025 to determine what American families are prioritizing when looking for an area to relocate. Study data showed families are looking to move to specific neighborhoods rather than just choosing a particular state or region.
Analysts evaluated and compared ZIP codes across the country based on nearly 700,000 recent moves. The ZIP codes were ranked according to the number of moves per capita, total move volume and the biggest month-over-month increases, including both local and inbound relocations.
Here’s what the data showed about the neighborhoods people are moving to, and which Arizona neighborhood is attracting the most movers.
Top 10 most popular ZIP codes to move to in 2026
These are the 10 ZIP codes that are attracting the most new residents per capita, according to MovingPlace.
- 34987 – Port Saint Lucie, Florida
- 75114 – Crandall, Texas
- 87001 – Algodones, New Mexico
- 80019 – Aurora, Colorado
- 37228 – Nashville, Tennessee
- 85387 – Surprise, Arizona
- 78701 – Austin, Texas
- 28445 – Holly Ridge, North Carolina
- 33576 – San Antonio, Florida
- 75251 – Dallas, Texas
Why is Surprise an attractive area for people moving?
The 85387 ZIP code in the tranquil city of Surprise took the sixth spot nationwide, attracting 11 newcomers per 1,000 residents in December. This was Surprise’s second consecutive month in MovingPlace’s top 10, but its position lowered from No. 5 to No. 6 this month.
The median house price in the area is approximately $440,300, while the median household income is around $95,500, according to the report’s data.
According to the report’s findings, people are increasingly heading toward the commutable edges of major metro areas, where new construction and affordability offer relief from the high costs of urban centers. As part of the rapidly expanding Phoenix area, this Surprise ZIP code is favored for its new residential communities and desert landscapes, according to MovingPlace.
Another Arizona zip code was also highlighted in the study for attracting some of the highest numbers for total moves in December.
How the study was done
MovingPlace based the rankings on proprietary data from millions of residential moves across the U.S. each year. The data for the January report was taken in December 2025.
Analysts looked at origin and destination ZIP codes to calculate which areas are attracting the most new residents, both nationwide and within each state. The dataset for the monthly reports is consistently updated to obtain insights to understand migration trends, highlight patterns in population growth, suburban expansion, and regional hotspots.
Arizona
Arizona’s ESA program surpasses 100,000 students as enrollment continues rapid growth
PHOENIX — Arizona’s Empowerment Scholarship Account program has reached a significant milestone, with more than 100,000 students now enrolled in the controversial school choice initiative.
The ESA program allows parents to use tax money that would have been allocated for their child’s public school education to pay for private schooling or homeschooling expenses instead.
Since the program’s universal expansion in 2022, more than 6,000 students join each quarter on average, and the state’s ESA website shows 100,208 ESA students are currently enrolled as of January 20.
Shift in student demographics
Early data showed most ESA students represented additional expenses – children already homeschooled or attending private schools. However, recent trends show a significant shift.
Now, four in 10 new ESA students weren’t previously funded by public education dollars, down from eight in 10 when the program began.
Geographic concentration in suburban areas
ESA enrollment is most popular in the Valley’s suburban communities, particularly in the southeast region. Four of the five ZIP codes adding the most ESA students are located in Queen Creek and San Tan Valley.
The one outlier is ZIP code 85365, which covers the Yuma Proving Grounds area and serves mostly military families.
Public schools losing students to ESA
The school districts experiencing the highest percentage of students leaving for ESA include Kingman Unified, Alhambra Elementary, Dysart Unified, Amphitheatre Unified in Tucson, and Queen Creek Unified.
Among charter schools, online institutions are seeing the most departures. These include ASU Preparatory Digital, Arizona Connections Academy, American Virtual Academy, American Leadership Academy, and charter schools run by Eduprize Schools.
How ESA funds are being spent
Nearly six in 10 ESA dollars spent last quarter went toward private school tuition or textbooks, totaling almost $104 million.
About $70 million was spent on homeschooling or supplemental materials – a category that has drawn scrutiny for some questionable expenses.
Spending drops significantly for other categories, including online learning, disability services for non-universal students, technology, and classes at postsecondary institutions like Mesa Community College.
This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.
Arizona
Arizona Cardinals HC history suggests 4 coaches to be next head coach
If we look at the Cardinals’ history with hiring head coaches, four guys stand out this time around.
The Arizona Cardinals have had a bit of a pattern in the way they hire new head coaches. Since they moved to Arizona, they have alternated between hiring coaches with significant head-coaching experience and guys doing the job for the first time, with one exception.
It is uncanny.
Cardinals history hiring head coaches since coming to Arizona
Their first head-coaching hiring in Arizona was in 1990, They fired Gene Stallings in 1989. He previously had been a head coach in the college ranks at Texas A&M.
Joe Bugel replaced him with no experience. It has gone back and forth since then with one exception.
- 1990 – Joe Bugel, no head-coaching experience
- 1994 – Buddy Ryan, previous NFL head coach
- 1996 – Vince Tobin, no head-coaching experience
- 2001 – Davie McGinnis, no head-coaching experience
- 2004 – Dennis Green, previous NFL head coach
- 2007 – Ken Whisenhunt, no head-coaching experience
- 2013 – Bruce Arians, was interim head coach in 2012 for 12 games
- 2018 – Steve Wilks, was a head coach at a D-II school, never in FBS or NFL
- 2019 – Kliff Kingsbury, head-coaching experience in college (FBS)
- 2023 – Jonathan Gannon, no head-coaching experience
That pattern would suggest the Cardinals’ next hire will have been a head coach before.
What does that mean?
Which candidates have head-coaching experience?
The two finalists the Cardinals wanted to interview a second time who were hired elsewhere were previous head coaches.
New Tennessee Titans head coach Robert Saleh was the head coach for the New York Jets previously. New Miami Dolphins head coach Jeff Hafley was Boston College’s head coach.
Of the candidates the Cardinals have considered, these are the previous head coaches:
- Vance Joseph
- Raheem Morris
- Arthur Smith
- Matt Nagy
Does this mean the Cardinals will hire one of these guys? History says so.
Get more Cardinals and NFL coverage from Cards Wire’s Jess Root and others by listening to the latest on the Rise Up, See Red podcast. Subscribe on Spotify, YouTube or Apple podcasts.
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