Based on his pedigree coming in to college, it was presumed by many that Brayden Burries would step on the court and just dominate. Kind of like how Koa Peat did in his first collegiate game and most since.
Arizona
Federal grant could ring death knell for coal for rural Arizona power co-ops
Western Arizona gas-fired power plant proposal ignites controversy
A proposed gas-fired “peaker” power plant near Mohave Valley has sparked controversy over its environmental impact and whether it is a better option than solar.
Rural Arizona communities could drastically reduce their emissions as the state’s largest member-owned power cooperative moves to eliminate coal by 2028.
Arizona Electric Power Cooperative, which provides the large majority of power for all but one of Arizona’s rural power co-ops, has said it will eliminate the last of its dwindling coal consumption and construct four large renewable energy projects using money from the Biden Administration.
AEPCO was awarded access to $845 million in “Empowering Rural America” funds from the U.S. Department of Agriculture this month.
The cooperative uses coal in one of the six turbine units at its Apache Generating Station south of Willcox in Cochise County. AEPCO plans to eliminate coal from that turbine entirely by the end of 2027, transition the unit to natural gas and eventually reduce its use altogether as newer, cleaner natural gas units and renewable energy projects come online.
The transition will end coal’s nearly decade-long decline at AEPCO generating facilities since 2014 when it made up roughly 90% of the utility’s overall power production.
In place of coal, AEPCO has relied increasingly on natural gas and renewable power sources. Using its newly awarded grant funding and other investments from partner organizations, AEPCO plans to add more renewable power facilities, which it expects will make up more than 60% of its overall production in 2031. AEPCO believes that development will mean a 70% reduction in its greenhouse gas emissions from 2022 levels.
”(The emissions reduction) is huge. This is huge for us,” AEPCO CEO Patrick Ledger said in an interview.
Mohave power: A solar ban, a gas power plant and the rural retirees firing back at dirty energy
How rural co-ops help expand renewable power
The overall boost in power will trickle down to rural cooperatives throughout Arizona and neighboring states that buy power from AEPCO, which produces and transmits power, while member cooperatives receive and distribute it directly to customers.
Eric Hawkins, chief operating officer at Marana-based Trico Electric Cooperative, said the grant funding and new renewable projects will boost Trico’s renewable power production and help cut its 2016-2018 emissions in half by around 2027, five years earlier than its goal.
Since 2010, Trico has cut its share of coal-sourced power from 75% of its power mix to roughly 20%. Meanwhile, renewables have grown from less than 1% to 35% of its power portfolio.
Power cooperatives are member-owned non-profit electricity providers located largely in rural or semi-rural parts of Arizona. Together, cooperatives provide only a fraction of Arizona’s power, with the bulk coming from for-profit providers like Arizona Public Service and Tucson Electric Power.
Nonetheless, federal officials say rural power cooperatives are a key building block in a national transition to renewable power. Experts commonly agree that rural communities face unique challenges in transitioning to cleaner energy, including tough access to workforce and financial capital.
Rural-serving cooperatives have struggled to keep up with other power providers in transitioning to renewable sources. In 2022, coal accounted for 30% of co-ops’ power generation compared to 20% nationally.
Using $9.7 billion appropriated through the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Empowering Rural America program (New ERA) grants are designed to overcome those difficulties and spur clean energy projects in non-urban areas. The USDA approves grant proposals based on their ability to cut carbon emissions.
Money will help overcome limits on rural power co-ops
U.S. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack and local officials gathered in Marana on Sept. 12 to highlight the awards and tout other USDA programs under the Biden Administration. The town hall event took place in a warehouse at Trico’s headquarters.
Vilsack spoke at a podium in front of a banner draped over the side of a Trico service truck that read: “Project funded by the Biden-Harris Administration’s Inflation Reduction Act — Investing in clean, affordable and reliable energy.”
“We wanted to make sure, in setting this up, that it was a strong, significant investment and message to rural America,” Vilsack said.
Ledger said the New ERA award will help AEPCO overcome some of the limitations inherent to rural power co-ops. In addition to grants, the award included a low-interest loan that AEPCO will use to refinance debt on its existing coal equipment. Outstanding debt is one of the largest barriers for rural cooperatives nationally when abandoning old coal infrastructure.
“By lowering the interest rate on that asset, you lower the cost to the membership, and presumably we can shift over some of what we are capable of collecting and moving that into the new resources like (a new solar project),” Ledger said.
Ledger said the award money has also motivated other local partners to fund future renewables projects. Altogether, AEPCO maintains that the New ERA grant has catalyzed $3 billion in investment toward these renewable energy projects.
AEPCO said it will use its New ERA money to build 800 megawatts of new renewable energy generation, which is equivalent to its entire existing generation capacity. The projects will include three large solar fields that will produce a combined 730 megawatts, as well as a 70 MW wind project.
One of the solar projects — Apache Solar II — is shovel-ready. AEPCO plans to build a second solar facility at an unfinalized location in Pinal County and a third at an unfinalized location within the state. Ledger said the location for the wind project is not yet final.
Grant funding will help fund the construction of solar battery projects with a combined storage capacity of over 2,910 megawatt hours.
Not all of AEPCO’s new projects will exclusively use renewable energy. The cooperative is also working on four new natural gas units meant to operate during cloudy days when the solar facilities can’t deliver enough power.
Two of those units, planned for construction in Mohave County, have triggered controversies among locals. Some residents believe the plants are poorly sited or altogether unnecessary.
As coal-sourced power has cratered throughout the country, many utilities filled the gap with more natural gas than renewables. While coal has dropped 57% since 2013, the country’s renewable power generation has risen by only 27%, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration. Meanwhile, natural gas-sourced power has grown 60% and now makes up a larger share of total U.S. power generation than renewables, which was not the case 10 years ago.
Power plant fight: In sunny Arizona, a relocated gas plant ignites questions over who profits and who pays
‘Vision of rural communities’
Burning natural gas emits about half the carbon dioxide as burning coal, but some climate experts worry that new natural gas production will lengthen the country’s reliance on fossil fuels and hamper progress toward a zero-emission energy economy. For some climate experts, it is better to keep coal plants running until utilities can replace them with renewables than to replace them sooner with natural gas facilities.
Although utilities are boosting their overall use of renewables, their power mixes could still change as they face new demands from strong economic growth and the urbanization of agricultural land throughout Arizona. Initially started by farmers and ranchers to provide electricity in overlooked areas, power cooperatives now count sprawling housing developments and energy-hungry industrial facilities among their customers.
“We still have some very rural areas that we serve. We also have some areas with a Ritz Carlton,” Hawkins said. “We’re also seeing a lot of interest from large commercial entities — potential data center sites and things like that — that could dramatically increase our amount to growth at any moment.”
At least for rural areas in Trico’s service area, renewables will be a strong competitor going forward. By building small solar projects and microgrids in rural communities, Hawkins explained, Trico will be able to keep those communities running if long-distance transmission lines go down in a storm.
Speaking in Marana on Sept. 12, Ledger argued that this kind of work, and the award money that could make it possible, has been the heart of rural cooperatives’ work since the beginning.
“It embodies a very democratic idea that with the right catalyst, with the right help, we can convert disadvantage — wide distances, smaller sizes, lower income — to advantage and that we can create lasting value in places that are remote,” Ledger said. “It represents an acknowledgment that our country values the vision of rural communities.”
Austin Corona covers environmental issues for The Arizona Republic and azcentral. Send tips or questions to austin.corona@arizonarepublic.com.
Environmental coverage on azcentral.com and in The Arizona Republic is supported by a grant from the Nina Mason Pulliam Charitable Trust.
Sign up for AZ Climate, our weekly environment newsletter, and follow The Republic environmental reporting team at environment.azcentral.com and @azcenvironment on Facebook, X and Instagram.
Arizona
Arizona baseball pitching coach John DeRouin taking position with Mets, per report
Pitching was a big reason why Arizona made it back to the College World Series last season. The return of many key arms for 2026 makes it likely the Wildcats will again have a stellar staff.
Who guides those pitchers, however, is uncertain.
Michael Lev of the Arizona Daily Star is reporting that pitching coach John DeRouin is leaving the program for a position within the New York Mets organization. DeRouin had been elevated to pitching coach over the summer after Kevin Vance was hired as head coach at San Diego State.
DeRouin, who was a pitching strategist under Vance the previous two seasons, was integral in developing Arizona’s arms, particularly starters Owen Kramkowski and Smith Bailey and reliever Tony Pluta. That trio are among several key pitchers returning from the CWS team, with DeRouin’s promotion factoring in their decisions to stay in Tucson.
“John is like the pitching whisperer,” head coach Chip Hale said last month.
Hale could promote from within again, elevating Owen Cuffe. Whoever he hires will technically be his fourth pitching coach in five seasons. Dave Lawn handled the role in 2022-23, retained from Jay Johnson’s staff, before Vance was hired in 2024.
DeRouin is the latest in a string of college baseball coaches leaving for pro jobs. The most notable is Tennessee head coach, hired last month as manager of the San Francisco Giants
Arizona begins preseason practice in January ahead of the 2026 opener Feb. 13 against former Pac-12 rival Stanford at a tournament in Surprise.
Arizona
Report: Michigan search includes Arizona State’s Kenny Dillingham, Missouri’s Eli Drinkwitz
ANN ARBOR, Mich. — The firm hired by Michigan to search for a football coach to replace Sherrone Moore has contacted representatives for Arizona State’s Kenny Dillingham and Missouri’s Eli Drinkwitz, according to a person familiar with the situation.
The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity Saturday because they were not authorized to share details of the search.
Moore was fired on Wednesday, when the school said an investigation uncovered his inappropriate relationship with a staffer. Two days later, Moore was charged with three crimes after prosecutors said he “barged his way” into the apartment of a woman he’d been having an affair with and threatened to kill himself.
College football’s winning program suddenly needs a coach.
After the 35-year-old Dillingham was linked to numerous open jobs last month, he said he was not leaving his alma mater.
Two weeks ago, Drinkwitz agreed to a six-year contract that increases his average compensation to $10.75 million annually.
Michigan is hoping to hire a coach this month, helping its chances of retaining recruits and keeping key players out of the transfer portal in January.
Dillingham, who is from Scottsdale, Arizona, graduated from Arizona State in 2013 and started his coaching career as an assistant for the Sun Devils. After coaching at Memphis, he was the offensive coordinator for Auburn, Florida State and Oregon before returning to Arizona State.
Dillingham orchestrated a quick turnaround, leading the Sun Devils to the Big 12 championship and the College Football Playoff for the first time last year.
Arizona State was 8-4 this season, improving Dillingham’s record to 22-16 over three seasons.
The 42-year-old Drinkwitz is 46-28 in six seasons at Missouri after going 12-1 in a year at Appalachian State. He has built the Tigers into a steady Southeastern Conference program, earning five straight bowl bids.
Arizona
Brayden Burries goes off in top-ranked Arizona’s win over No. 12 Alabama to remain unbeaten
Not everything happens instantaneously. And some things, like Burries’ breakthrough performance on Saturday night, are worth waiting for.
The freshman guard scored a career-high 28 points, fueling top-ranked Arizona to a 96-75 win over No. 12 Alabama in Birmingham. The Wildcats (9-0) earned their fifth win this season over a ranked opponent, matching the 1987-88 team that also went 5-0 in nonconference games against ranked foes.
Burries, who started heating up a few weeks ago and had averaged 17 points over the previous three games, was 11 of 19 from the field and drained five of Arizona’s 10 3-pointers. His performance was especially big because fellow freshman Koa Peat struggled with foul trouble, finishing with a career-low five points in 20 minutes, while Jaden Bradley also had to sit for an extended period in the second half becauise of fouls.
Bradley and Motiejus Krivas scored 14 apiece, with Krivas pulling down 14 rebounds, while Tobe Awaka had 15 boards as Arizona dominated Alabama 52-32 on the glass. The Wildcats had a 22-3 edge in offensive rebounds, leading to a 15-2 advantage in second chance points.
Alabama (7-3) got 24 points from Labaron Philon and 21 from Latrell Wrightstell Jr., with that duo going 15 of 28 including 6 of 12 from 3. But the Crimson Tide, who began 7 of 13 from 3, made only five more the rest of the way while the UA’s 38.5 percent shooting from outside was actually better.
Arizona was down 41-39 at the half, the first time it has trailed after 20 minutes this season. The Wildcats were back in front within two minutes and built a 49-43 lead thanks to a 10-0 run, but during that stretch Peat and Bradley each picked up their third foul.
Yet somehow, Arizona nearly tripled its lead with that duo on the bench.
The UA led 55-48 with 14:01 to go whenAwaka was called for a flagrant foul after Alabama coach Nate Oats appealed on a play that saw the Crimson Tide called for a foul. Both teams made 1 of 2 free throws from that, but then the Wildcats scored the next 11 with their defense fueling the charge.
Back-to-back steals by Ivan Kharchenkov and Burries led to transition baskets, with Burries lobbing to Awaka for a dunk and then scoring seven straight to put the UA up 67-49 with 11:22 remaining.
Kharchenkov had 10 points and five steals, most by an Arizona freshman since KJ Lewis had five two seasons ago.
Burries fourth 3 put the Wildcats up 20 and his fifth made it 75-54 with nine minutes left. Alabama hit back-to-back 3s for the first time since seven minutes left in the first half to get within 82-65 but got no closer.
Arizona built a 19-12 lead on a 3-point play by Burries but Alabama’s outside shooting got it right back into it. A 7-0 run put the Tide up 26-22 midway through the first half.
Alabama’s 7th made 3 put it up 37-30 but then went cold, allowing the UA to retake the lead. A 9-0 run with seven straight from Bradley and then capped by a Peat jumper put the Wildcats up 39-37 with 1:51 left in the half.
Two late baskets by the Crimson Tide put it back in front at the break.
Arizona returns home to take on Abilene Christian on Tuesday night before facing San Diego State in Phoenix next Saturday.
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