Idaho
Defensive struggles catch up to Utah State in blowout loss to Georgia State in Famous Idaho Potato Bowl
BOISE, Idaho — At Friday’s pregame press conference for the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl, Utah State football coach Blake Anderson said, “You always remember the last game you play.”
That may be more of an unfortunate truth for the Aggies after Saturday afternoon, as they turned in arguably their worst performance of the season in a 45-22 blowout loss to 6-6 Georgia State.
The performance came in front of a mostly Aggie blue crowd of over 12,000 on the blue turf of Albertson’s Stadium at Boise State.
Anderson’s Aggies finished 6-7 for the second straight season while losing their second consecutive bowl game by more than 21 points, and it was yet another postseason in which Utah State looked thoroughly outclassed in all aspects of the game despite playing a fellow 6-6 team.
Whether from the transfer portal or early declarations to the NFL draft, Georgia State entered the game down several starters on both sides of the ball and was a three-point underdog to the Aggies.
Utah State’s defense instead had absolutely no answer for a Panthers offense that had averaged just 25.7 points per game and had scored just 14 points in three of its last five contests.
“We’re very disappointed in how we played. We’re a better football team than what you saw today,” Anderson said. “That’s the hard part. We did a lot of work to get here, overcame a lot of adversity to get here, but then just did not play in any phase the way we’re capable of.”
Thanks to all-time performances by Panthers three-year starting quarterback Darren Grainger and third-string running back Freddie Brock, the Aggie defense was scorched to the tune of 643 total yards.
Georgia State racked up rushing yards that would have made a military school proud, totaling 387 yards on the ground with three touchdowns, averaging 7.9 yards per carry.
The Panthers had 11 rushing plays of 10-plus yards, including five over 30 yards. Brock alone carried the ball 24 times for a mind-boggling 276 yards.
While Utah State consistently lost the battle up front defensively, Grainger humiliated the Aggie secondary with blistering efficiency, completing 19 of 22 passes for 257 yards and three touchdowns with zero turnovers.
“We’re frustrated with how we played in all three phases,” Anderson said. “Gotta give (Georgia State) credit. They manhandled us from beginning to end and had a better plan. We got outcoached and outplayed. That’s not how you want to finish a season.”
USU junior wideout Jalen Royals and freshman defensive end Paul Fitzgerald, who were both available to the media, were two of the few bright spots the Aggies could find.
Royals caught his 15th touchdown pass of the season in in the first quarter, breaking the school’s single-season receiving touchdown record. Fitzgerald, meanwhile, set a new postseason record for Utah State in sacks with three as the Aggies got to Grainger five times in the game.
“It felt good, but at the end of the day, we still lost,” Fitzgerald said of his record. “Kinda takes away the enjoyment of it, but it still feels good to be able to produce and make some plays.”
Various points of the season showed that both teams were more than capable of catching fire offensively, and the first quarter suggested that both of them were going to.
Georgia State got on the board first and stayed ahead in an initial shootout with a 21-14 first quarter lead.
Both of Utah State’s touchdowns, arguably the only two great plays the Aggies had in the first three quarters, came on big plays: A 35-yard bomb to Royals and a 65-yard breakaway TD run by junior running back Davon Booth.
All told, the Aggies racked up an admirable 161 total yards in the first quarter, though they ceded 218 to the Panthers.
After that, however, their ability to move the ball fell flat as they managed no more than 65 yards in any of the final three quarters while converting just 27% of third downs.
Utah State quarterback Levi Williams, who famously chose to forgo his remaining eligible year to train to become a U.S. Navy SEAL, faded quickly in his final collegiate game, completing 12 of 21 passes for just 131 yards with a touchdown and an interception (which he threw inside USU’s 40-yard line).
When things truly got out of hand in the third quarter with Georgia State scoring its fifth touchdown for a 38-14 lead, Anderson ultimately cut Williams last appearance short to send in true freshman Mcae Hillstead to finish off the contest.
Hillstead fared slightly better in garbage time, completing 7 of 11 passes for 57 yards with a touchdown.
“We mismanaged a couple opportunities, I think, lost one-on-one battles up front,” Anderson said. “I felt like as the game kinda went on, they were able to stretch it out and play a little differently.
“We’re not really built right now with Levi at quarterback to play catch-up a whole lot. We’re much better when we stay balanced. They started dropping eight playing a bit differently. They handled us, when we needed to make big plays, we struggled to protect. They did a good job keeping us off balance at times.”
Fans of the Aggies would remember well that the team went through a litany of departures through the transfer portal last offseason, and many of those were defensive starters.
Anderson made reference to that fact, however removed from it they might have been now in the postseason, that the thinness of skill on defense made impact on the game, saying his defensive coordinator, Joe Cauthen, is “about as frustrated as anybody is.”
“This season was about managing what we had, not really worried about what we didn’t have,” Anderson said. “There are eight starters that should be out there helping us on defense that are playing on other people’s rosters across the country.”
Idaho
How Zoo Idaho prepares for the winter – Local News 8
POCATELLO, Idaho (KIFI)– Unlike other zoos, Zoo Idaho’s native species need little preparation for the harsh cold of Idaho’s winters.
Zoo staff prepare most animals to spend the season outdoors–they will put a de-icing agent in the animals’ water supplies and straw bedding on concrete flooring in buildings.
“For the most part, they’re made for this type of weather,” said Peter Pruitt, superintendent of Zoo Idaho. “We’re not dealing with exotic animals from other locales.”
Some migratory birds will be kept indoors during the coldest days, but animals like bears, bison, and elk will brave the elements outside.
Zoo Idaho is closed for the season, but they will be holding some winter holiday events. To learn more you can visit Zoo Idaho’s website.
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Idaho
Bryan Kohberger’s request in Idaho murder case sparks criticism from judge
The judge presiding over Bryan Kohberger’s murder trial chastised the defense on Friday for asking the court to push back a deadline in the case.
Kohberger, 29, is charged with four counts of first-degree murder and one count of felony burglary. He is accused of fatally stabbing University of Idaho students Madison Mogen, Kaylee Goncalves, Xana Kernodle and Ethan Chapin in an off-campus residence in 2022.
Anne Taylor, Kohberger’s attorney, asked District Judge Steven Hippler to extend the deadline for filing motions related to discovery. The deadline was Thursday, and the defense filed a “Motion for Leave” on Wednesday.
“Defendant asserts his counsel and investigators are still reviewing ‘the vast amount of discovery in this case’ and, therefore, he needs additional time to file motions related to discovery. Motions to enlarge deadline filed on the eve of the deadline are not well taken,” Hippler wrote in an order on Friday.
Hippler denied the motion. He also pointed out that the prosecution’s discovery deadline was September 6.
“Defendant could have ascertained far sooner whether the discovery motions deadline would pose difficulty and brought it to the Court’s attention,” Hippler said. “Further, and importantly, Defendant has not demonstrated with his filing good cause to enlarge the deadline. He has not set forth what efforts have been made to review the discovery, what portion of discovery has not yet been reviewed, why it has not been reviewed or how long it will take to complete such review.”
The defense asked for a hearing on the motion so they could present oral arguments, evidence and testimony to support their request.
Hippler has yet to make a ruling on a series of motions the defense has filed objecting to the state’s intent to seek the death penalty.
The prosecution and defense presented arguments on the matter to Hippler on November 7. After listening to both sides, Hippler said he would take the matter under advisement and issue a ruling at a later date.
In the state of Idaho, defendants convicted of first-degree murder are eligible for the death penalty if the crime meets any of 11 aggravating factors.
Prosecutors have identified four aggravating factors in Kohberger’s case, which are “at the time the murder was committed, the defendant also committed another murder;” “the murder was especially heinous, atrocious or cruel, manifesting exceptional depravity;” “by the murder, or circumstances surrounding its commission, the defendant exhibited utter disregard for human life;” and “the defendant, by his conduct, whether such conduct was before, during or after the commission of the murder at hand, has exhibited a propensity to commit murder which will probably constitute a continuing threat to society.”
The trial is scheduled to start on August 11, 2025, with jury selection beginning on July 31.
Do you have a story Newsweek should be covering? Do you have any questions about this story? Contact LiveNews@newsweek.com
Idaho
Bryan Kohberger's defense reveals alleged details from night of arrest at parent's Pennsylvania home
There are new developments in the Idaho college murders case as defense attorneys are challenging key evidence that they say was improperly obtained by police, including search warrants and DNA.
New court filings from Bryan Kohberger’s defense team depict a chaotic night when the former PhD student was arrested at his parent’s home in the Pennsylvania Poconos.
His lawyers claim that during the raid, law enforcement broke the front door of the home, shattered the sliding glass door of the basement and held the entire family at gunpoint. They also allege that while Kohberger was “zip tied at his hands and surrounded by police at gun point,” he “made statements to his arresting officers,” despite “not having his rights read to him.”
The many pre-trial hearings in Idaho quadruple murder case against Bryan Kohberger
Now, they want those statements thrown out, along with other key pieces of evidence lead defense attorney Anne Taylor argues were “illegally gathered by law enforcement using his genetic information.”
Authorities linking Kohberger to the crime after they say they found DNA that was a “statistical match” on the button snap of a knife sheath at the crime scene where Xana Kernolde, Kaylee Goncalves, Madison Mogen and Ethan Chapin were found stabbed to death.
“When law enforcement uses that positive match and then says, well, we need to go and get a search warrant because we have a positive match for Bryan Kohberger, that the DNA evidence is tainted and anything comes from it is fruit from a poisonous tree,” said ABC News contributor Brian Buckmire.
The defense, who says Kohberger is innocent, claiming without that genetic information, there could have been no request for his phone records which prosecutors also say implicate him.
Taylor is also challenging the way authorities gathered search warrants, especially pertaining to the search of Kohberger’s car, a white Hyundai Elantra, as well as his Apple and Amazon accounts.
Taylor says the warrants lacked probable cause.
The trial is set for August and we are still awaiting the judge’s decision on the defense’s request to have the death penalty taken off the table.
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