Utah
After Taylor Hendricks broke his leg, Utah Jazz live up to team motto: Show Love
SALT LAKE CITY — As a rookie last season, forward Taylor Hendricks didn’t pay much notice to the mantra repeated daily around the Utah Jazz.
Show Love.
The credo, preached by coach Will Hardy, is painted in white on the weight room walls at the team’s practice facility. It’s in block letters on a wall bordering the practice court. It blares colorfully in a cursive, neon sign in the entry to the facility. And when the team breaks its huddles after practices or in games, the players and coaches repeat in unison either “show love” or “together.”
Hendricks would say it, and he would see the signage, but as a wide-eyed 20-year-old, Show Love didn’t resonate that first year.
“I didn’t really think too much about it at first,” Hendricks said.
But after a gruesome, season-ending leg injury on Oct. 28 in Dallas, the No. 9 pick in the 2023 NBA Draft has a different outlook on the mantra.
Facing a long recovery after surgery to repair a dislocated ankle and broken fibula in his right leg, Hendricks experienced something unique in professional sports.
At a time when many athletes can feel detached from the team, and a time when questioning their identity and their future is common, Hendricks says he felt the opposite after his injury. Never before had he felt more connected to his Jazz teammates. And never before had his purpose been more clear.
All because in his lowest moments, the Jazz showed him love.
One teammate delivered a care package to his home. Another inquired about his surgery and recovery schedule to offer support and prayer. And when Hendricks first visited the team at practice after his surgery, Hardy had him diagram the first play for the next game. Throughout, players have been texting and calling Hendricks regularly, and when the team is on the road, Hardy calls back to Utah to check in with Hendricks on life topics outside of basketball.
“I see it now,” Hendricks said, referring to the mantra. “I understand it.”
Tied for the second-fewest wins in the NBA, Utah (5-18) is navigating the unforgiving rebuilding landscape in the wake of trading stars Donovan Mitchell and Rudy Gobert in separate offseason deals in 2022. If Hardy has anything to do with it, love will serve as Utah’s north star in their quest back to relevance.
Hardy, the NBA’s youngest coach at age 36, said he views his role in the rebuild as two-fold: develop better basketball players, and better people.
“It may seem corny at times to certain people, but I really believe in it,” Hardy said. “I think it can make an impact on people’s lives.”
He needs no better example, he said, than how the Jazz have responded to Hendricks’ injury.
“It reminds you that people are way more good than bad,” Hardy said. “And I think seeing how the guys have rallied around Taylor, it reminds you that there’s a lot more to this than dribbling and shooting.”
There are layers to why Hendricks’ injury cut so deep on this Jazz team.
For starters, the injury was so graphic, so difficult to look at that it left a scar on each person who witnessed it. Jazz guard Keyonte George shed tears. Hardy clinched his jaw and winced. Forward John Collins said his heart dropped. Two-way player Micah Potter, who was back home in Salt Lake City on assignment with Utah’s G League team, had to turn away from his television.
“I was watching it, so I had everything — the replays, the different angles … everything,” Potter said. “It was not fun to watch.”
It was the third quarter of the Jazz’s third game of the season and Hendricks was running back on defense. As he approached the key, his left leg slipped, and as he tried to catch his balance, his right foot stuck on the court while the momentum of his sprint carried him forward.
His ankle came out of the socket and his lower leg shattered. As he looked at his foot dangling at an awkward angle, Hendricks covered his eyes with his hands. Dallas guard Kyrie Irving took one look and immediately turned away and headed toward the sideline.
Hendricks said the pain wasn’t severe — “on a scale of 1-to-10, it was about a six,” he said — but the image was devastating.
“I was just like … so shocked,” Hendricks said. “In my mind, I was having flashbacks of (Boston’s) Gordon Hayward on the floor with his ankle (in 2017). I was like, ‘Bro, this is the same thing … .’ It’s one thing to see it, but for it to actually be you? It’s like, crazy.”
Taylor Hendricks was wheeled out on a gurney after being injured in the third quarter against the Mavericks on Oct. 28. (Richard Rodriguez / Getty Images)
Another layer to the injury was the abrupt halt to the marked progress Hendricks had made over the summer. A 6-foot-9 forward, his rookie season was a trying affair, one that started in the G League and ended with 40 NBA games and only 856 minutes, fourth-fewest among 2023 lottery picks.
Hardy said Hendricks showed glimpses of his defensive potential during his rookie season — at one time defending San Antonio Spurs phenom center Victor Wembanyama well — but Hendricks said he also learned that his 210-pound body was not ready to guard grown men.
“I remember a possession once when I was guarding (Nikola) Jokić, and I just felt helpless,” Hendricks said. “There was like literally nothing I could do to stop him. I just felt skinny, like my body had a lot of work to do.”
Over the summer, he stayed in Salt Lake City and worked on his body. Hardy said Hendricks gained 17 pounds, muscle which Hendricks said was mostly distributed in his arms, chest and calves.
When training camp opened, Hardy’s eyebrows raised.
“He was a physical force in training camp,” Hardy said. “He was making toughness plays and athletic plays that were based around the development of his body. He had done everything we had asked him to do.”
By opening night, he was no longer a candidate for the G League. He was no longer a project. He was a starter, and not only that, he was the focal point of the Jazz defense. In his first three games, he guarded Memphis point guard Ja Morant, Golden State forward Jonathan Kuminga and Dallas superstar Luka Dončić.
“I mean, he was going to guard everybody for us this season,” Hardy said.
But as he sat on the court in Dallas, with his head in his hands, all of his plans, all of his dreams were as shattered as his right leg.
When fellow second-year Utah forward Brice Sensabaugh heard about Hendrick’s season-ending prognosis, it sparked a memory deep inside him.
When Sensabaugh was in high school in Orlando, Fla., he had a knee injury that sidelined him for nine months. The swelling and pain in his knee turned out to be nothing compared to his mental anguish. He felt detached from the team and was overcome with anxiety about his playing future. On top of it all, he was bored.
“It was a dark time for me,” Sensabaugh said. “But I vividly remember this one day … it has stuck with me.”
As he lay in bed with his leg elevated, his teammates brought him a care basket, filled with his favorite snacks and various gift cards. It was so thoughtful and so welcomed that it has never left Sensabaugh.
So on Nov. 22, two weeks after Hendricks had surgery to repair his ankle and leg, Sensabaugh appeared at his front door with a gift basket.
Stuffed with Hendricks’ favorite snacks — Spicy Sweet Chili Doritos and Twix candy bars — and DoorDash gift cards, Sensabaugh delivered the basket to Hendricks. It was good timing, too: Nov. 22 was Hendricks’ 21st birthday.
“Just something to keep his spirits high,” Sensabaugh said. “It’s easy to kind of give up and lose yourself in those moments, and I know that little things like that can make a world of difference.”
The two talked about their faith, and how the injury could be part of God’s plan. And as they watched television of Hendricks’ alma mater — Central Florida — playing Wisconsin (Hendricks’ twin brother Tyler is a reserve for the Knights), Hendricks shifted the conversation.
It was his time to show love to Sensabaugh.
Hendricks could sense Sensabaugh was struggling with the November schedule. There was a stretch where Sensabaugh didn’t play for four consecutive games. However, the previous night in San Antonio, he played and scored 18 points.
“We just talked about where his mind was at, and how he felt … and he was in a good place,” Hendricks said.
The next night, Sensabaugh would not see action again, but he remembered his chat with Hendricks.
“He’s so positive, and he just has a good spirit,” Sensabaugh said.
His teammate’s positivity stuck with Sensabaugh, and his outlook remained optimistic that his fortunes would change. In the next three games, Sensabaugh scored 16, 13 and 13 points.
No one knows if the two teammates showing love played a role, but it certainly didn’t hurt.
“Being there … it was just a good moment, I think for both of us,” Sensabaugh said.
When Hardy started his first training camp in 2022, he knew the Jazz were embarking on a rebuilding process that would not only be trying but also expose players to criticism and ridicule for the inevitable losses ahead.
He wanted to create an environment where players felt valued and comfortable, and as a former assistant under Gregg Popovich and Ime Udoka, he felt connection would be a key component to the team succeeding.
“I think we live in a really negative world,” Hardy said. “Being in this business, with the nature of social media and the kind of feedback our players receive via Twitter, Instagram … it’s all negative. And people are nasty. So it was important for me to make ‘Show Love’ our mantra every day because I want our gym to be a place where our players want to be.”
He tells his players that the first thing they need to do is show love to themselves. Then show love to your teammates. Show love to your family. The fans. The community.
“Show love, yeah!” point guard Collin Sexton said with a smile. “Each and every day. Whether it’s to the janitor, the cooks, the training staff … a kind gesture goes a long way.”
Hendricks said Sexton has been one of the most frequent teammates to text or call him, and much like Sensabaugh, there is history behind Sexton’s actions.
In 2021, when Sexton was with the Cleveland Cavaliers, he tore his meniscus in his right knee in the season’s 11th game. He missed the rest of the season.
“Mentally, it was super, super tough for me,” Sexton said. “I didn’t get a lot of calls from guys, and I wasn’t able to be with them physically. It was just a really tough time for me. So I feel like it’s important for us to be there for (Hendricks). Because sometimes in this league, you can just float and go about your day … but sometimes you need a pat on the back, sometimes you need a hug, sometimes you need someone to be just be like, ‘Yo, I’m here with you.’ ”
After spending the season mostly away from the Cavs, Sexton was traded to Utah as part of the Mitchell deal. The detachment and the transactional feel of the experience have stayed with him and prompted him to be proactive in keeping Hendricks involved.
“As a team, we are just trying to keep him close, and keep good spirits around him,” Sexton said. “You gotta show love and make sure they know that.”
It’s why on Nov. 12, just six days after his surgery, Hendricks was greeted with a group hug and a special assignment.
When Hendricks arrived at the team’s practice facility, the players lost their minds.
“Everybody started screaming and chanting his name,” Sensabaugh. “Seeing his smile … it reminded us as a team how important it is to have all the guys around.”
As the team started its drills, Hardy didn’t mind that players couldn’t help themselves as they sporadically broke out of line to run toward Hendricks on the sideline and hug him.
“Heck, I even did the same,” Hardy said.
As Hendricks took a seat, an idea popped into Hardy’s head. He happened to sit next to Hardy’s whiteboard, which the coach uses to diagram plays. Hardy told Hendricks to grab the board and a pen.
“It wasn’t super well thought out,” Hardy said with a chuckle. “But I sent the first group over and told Taylor he was drawing up the first play that night.”
On Nov. 12, Hendricks (right) returned to practice for the first time since his surgery. Coach Will Hardy had him diagram the first play against Phoenix. (Courtesy of Gabby Stockard / Utah Jazz)
The Jazz were set to play Phoenix, and the first play would come from Hendricks.
As Hendricks scribbled and plotted, Hardy chuckled.
“It was unequivocally like … not a good play,” Hardy said.
It was a coach’s nightmare: an isolation play designed for John Collins, Hendricks’ seatmate on the team charters.
“It was one pass, not a lot of movement, and I think the guys got a kick out of it because they know that would be the exact opposite of what Coach would want,” Hardy said. “But it was so funny because the way Taylor described it, he was like, ‘You’re gonna get the ball to John and then John … just work it out.’ ”
Added Collins: “The part that was the cherry on top for me was Coach asked him, ‘Anything else?’ And he said, ‘Nah, John, just go to work.”
That night, the Hendricks play was called, and sure enough, Collins scored.
“John ran back and pointed at the bench, like, ‘Appreciate you, T!’ … it was funny,” Hardy said. “It was a good moment for the guys … but I don’t know if I will do it again.”
It wasn’t a textbook Hardy play, but it was exactly what Hardy envisioned when he adopted Show Love: A group bonding while thinking about others more than themselves.
“Showing love, that’s exactly what we were doing,” Collins said. “Showing love as a team, a group, and giving T-Henny that feeling we are still with him, still thinking about him. It’s a cold and lonely road out there when you are injured, but we are with him.”
Added Hendricks: “When I am with them, I still feel like I’m playing. It feels like I’m still right there with them. They don’t baby me in any way, or show pity … they just keep it 100 and treat me regular. I just feel comfortable.”
Now, Hardy said, the real work begins.
It’s time to make Hendricks into what Hardy calls “a sicko.”
The toughest days are not yet here for Hendricks. He still can’t walk and is months away from beginning any type of basketball activity. There are long stretches of monotony ahead.
The team has already said he won’t participate in summer league, and it has intentionally not placed any timeline on his recovery.
What Hardy hopes is that in the time Hendricks is unable to play, he becomes a student of the game.
“I want him to become a film junkie, become a sicko,” Hardy said. “Become the guy who knows all the top players in the league, and what their tendencies are. Let’s try to find a positive in this while we are getting his body healthy.”
Unbeknown to Hardy, Hendricks was already well ahead of him. Since his rookie season, he has been keeping a database on players he guards, complete with tendencies, strengths, weaknesses, favorite moves and their matchup history.
“Let’s see, I can pull it up … “ Hendricks said as he scrolled to the notes app on his phone. “I’ve got Luka, Paul George, Evan Mobley, Wembanyama, Jalen Green, Jonathan Kuminga, Ja Morant, Kyrie … a bunch … .”
His reports read much like those a team’s advance scout distributes to the team before each game, but these come from Hendricks’ thoughts. For example: his report on Kuminga, the Golden State forward:
“Strong right hand drive … not looking to shoot 3’s. He loves the post spin, so keep your hands on his hip. He is very active … he’s looking to score, but not looking to pass. And be aware, when he sets (a screen) off ball he is looking for the lob, and they just throw it.”
He spends every night watching NBA games and has found himself drawn to two young and elite defenders: Atlanta’s Dyson Daniels and Minnesota’s Jaden McDaniels.
“Dyson Daniels, he uses his hands a lot, like he traces the ball at all times and is ready to pick it. I wasn’t really doing that, but I feel that’s huge, because I’ve noticed the offensive guy at some point (shows) you the ball, and Dyson does a great job of taking advantage of that and reading that,” Hendricks said. “And I’ve been watching Jaden since last year because we have a similar body type.”
Hardy said the Jazz plan to introduce Hendricks to analytics, while also having him learn about situational basketball, and understanding the fine line between winning and losing in the NBA.
“We’re going to have to find the silver linings of all this,” Hardy said. “So let’s try to have a deeper understanding of the game as a whole. And it will be fun to see what interests him.”
Along the way, the Jazz players intend to keep Hendricks included in their social circle. Not only is Hendricks a key element in the group text chain — players say he is among the most goofy and humorous participants — he is vital to the fabric of what the Jazz are hoping to build: a team with good players and good people.
“The guys reaching out to him and keeping him involved is important, just from a human level,” Hardy said. “Like, screw the team … this is a human thing. He’s part of our messed up little family.”
(Top photo: Gabby Stockard / Utah Jazz)
Utah
22-year-old arrested in Utah in connection to Las Vegas double-homicide
LAS VEGAS (FOX5) — Officials have identified a 22-year-old man as the suspect in a Las Vegas homicide case that killed two people in a Southern Highlands neighborhood.
Detectives say 22-year-old Ziaire Ham was the suspect in the case. According to officials, Ham was located on Tuesday, March 3, by the Ogden City Police Department and the Utah Highway Patrol.
Ham was taken into custody and booked into the Weber County Jail. Las Vegas authorities said he will be charged with open murder with the use of a deadly weapon and will be extradited back to the valley.
MORE ON FOX5: LVMPD corrections officer arrested on multiple felony charges
The shooting occurred Monday night at the 11000 block of Victoria Medici Street, near Starr Ave and Dean Martin Drive.
According to police, officers were conducting a vehicle stop in the area when they heard gunfire. After searching nearby neighborhoods they found a car with bullet impacts with a woman and a toddler inside suffering from gunshot wounds.
The pair were transported to hospital where they later died. The Clark County Coroner’s Office identified them as Danaijha Robinson, 20, and 1-year-old Nhalani Hiner.
Copyright 2026 KVVU. All rights reserved.
Utah
Utah nonprofit creates events, experiences for disadvantaged children
SALT LAKE CITY (KUTV) — A simple moment watching a child laugh changed everything for Ivan Gonzalez.
Eight years ago, Gonzalez was working at the Ronald McDonald House when he had an idea to throw a birthday carnival for the kids staying there.
“Let’s do a carnival, birthday carnival for the kids,” he said.
MORE | Pay It Forward
What happened during that event stuck with him.
“There I was watching this kid play whack-a-mole, just having a blast, laughing,” Gonzalez said. “And then I see his mom kind of with happy tears because he’s enjoying himself.”
That moment led to something bigger.
Gonzalez realized the experience shouldn’t stop with just one event or just one group of kids.
“I said, wait, we can do this not just for kids in the hospital,” he said with excitement.
So he started a nonprofit called Best Seat in the House, which creates events and experiences for children who often face difficult circumstances.
“We provide events and experiences for disadvantaged kids,” Gonzalez said.
The organization serves children battling cancer and other medical conditions, refugee children, kids living in poverty, those in foster care and children with special needs.
“These kids grow up too fast,” Gonzalez said.
For Gonzalez, the mission is deeply personal.
“I grew up very poor,” he said.
He remembers the people who stepped in for his family when they needed it most.
“The local church, we weren’t even a part of it,” he described. “My parents couldn’t afford Christmas gifts and I still remember the gifts they gave me. They didn’t even know me.”
Today, he hopes to create that same feeling for other children through his nonprofit.
“Kids live in poverty and they don’t know where the next meal is coming from, let alone going to a play or to a game,” Gonzalez said.
But for Gonzalez, the reward isn’t the events themselves, it’s the joy they create.
“You can give me a billion dollars, all the money in the world,” he says as tears roll down his face. “I won’t trade these opportunitieskids just enjoying life.”
Because of his work giving back, KUTV and Mountain America Credit Union surprised Gonzalez with a Pay it Forward gift to help him continue creating those moments for kids across Utah.
For more information on supporting Best Seat in the House, click here.
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Utah
‘Don’t release him ever. Please.’ Family of slain Utah teen calls for justice at parole hearing
SALT LAKE CITY — Francisco Daniel Aguilar says he’s sorry for shooting and killing his girlfriend, 16-year-old Jacqueline “Jacky” Nunez-Millan, a Piute High School sophomore, in 2023.
But just as he did when he was sentenced, he didn’t have much of an explanation on Tuesday as to why he shot her not once, but twice.
“It just kinda happened. I was mad. And I stepped out (of my truck) and started shooting,” he said. “When I saw her fall, I just kind of panicked, I just went and shot her again.”
But Jacky’s friends and family members say even before she was killed, Aguilar already had a history of violence, and they now want justice to be served.
“You don’t accidentally take a gun, you don’t accidentally grab a knife … you don’t accidentally shoot someone, those are all choices,” a tearful Rosa Nunez, Jacky’s sister, said at Tuesday’s hearing. “Keep him where he needs to be.
“Don’t release him ever. Please.”
On Jan. 7, 2023, Aguilar, who was 17 at the time, got into a fight with his girlfriend, Jacky, shot her twice and left her body near a dirt road outside of Circleville, Piute County. He was convicted as an adult of aggravated murder and sentenced to a term of 25 years to up to life in prison.
Because of Aguilar’s age at the time of the offense, board member Greg Johnson explained Tuesday that the Utah Board of Pardons and Parole is required to hold a hearing much earlier than the 25-year mark, mainly to check on Aguilar and “see how things are going.” Aguilar, now 20, is currently being held in a juvenile secure care facility and will be transferred to the Utah State Prison when he turns 25 or earlier if he has discipline violations and is kicked out of the youth facility.
According to Aguilar’s sentencing guidelines, he will likely remain in custody until at least the year 2051.
During Tuesday’s hearing, Aguilar told the board that he was feeling “stressed out” during his senior year of high school. He said he and Jacky would often have little arguments. But their bigger fight happened when he failed to get her a “promise ring” around Christmastime, he said.
On the night of the killing, the two were arguing about the promise ring and other items, Aguilar recalled. At one point, he grabbed a knife and then a gun because, he said, he wanted to “irritate” and “scare” Jacky. According to evidence presented in the preliminary hearing, Aguilar and his girlfriend had been “trying to make each other angry” when Aguilar took ammunition and a 9mm gun from his father’s room and then drove to the Black Hill area in his truck with Jacky.
Jacky’s friend, McKall Taylor, went looking for her that night and found her. But after Aguilar shot Jacky in the leg, he began shooting at Taylor, who had no choice but to run to her car to get away. Her car was hit multiple times by bullets. Aguilar then shot Jacky a second time as she lay on the ground and Taylor drove away.
On Tuesday, Taylor’s mother, Lori Taylor, read a statement to the board on her daughter’s behalf.
“My innocence and freedom was taken from me,” she said.
McKall Taylor says the “horrifying events of that night will forever play in my head,” and the sounds of Jacky screaming and the gunshots as well as the sight of Jacky falling to the ground, will never go away.
“Francisco is a murderer who has zero remorse,” her letter states.
Likewise, Rosa Nunez told the board that for her and her family, “nothing in our world has felt safe since” that night as they all “continue to relive this horrific moment.”
After shooting Jacky and driving off, Aguilar says he called his father and “told him I was sorry for not being better, for not making good choices, I told him that I loved him. I was just planning on probably shooting myself, too.”
His father told him that although what he did wasn’t right, “he’d rather see me behind bars than in a casket,” and then told his son to “be a man about it. … This is where you have to change.”
Aguilar was arrested after his tires were spiked by police.
“An apology won’t fix what I did. I’ll never be able to fix what I did. But I want to say I’m sorry,” he said Tuesday. “I don’t even know how to fix what I did. I’m hoping I’m on the right track now.”
Johnson noted that Aguilar has done well during his short time being incarcerated. But that doesn’t change the fact “the crime was horrific,” he said.
The full five-member board will now take a vote. The board could decide to schedule another parole hearing for sometime in the future or could order that Aguilar serve his entire life sentence. But even if that were to happen, Johnson says Aguilar could petition every so often for a redetermination hearing.
The board’s decision is expected in several weeks.
The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.
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