Utah
Anton Forsberg, Ottawa Senators Shutout Utah Hockey Club
SALT LAKE CITY – Despite dominating nearly every other the facet of the game on Tuesday night, the Utah Hockey Club experienced a disastrous eight-minute stretch during the first period that resulted in four Ottawa goals. While they continued to battle throughout the remaining two periods and even made a change in net, the puck refused to cross the line, and the Senators shutout Utah for their first loss on home ice.
Here are the key takeaways from Utah’s first home loss of their inaugural season.
Four on four situation led to the worst stretch of hockey Utah has played this season
Despite a hot start to the first period against Ottawa with pucks flying towards the net and constant pressure from the Utah Hockey Club, the game completely flipped on its head during a four-on-four situation. The end result? Four goals on eight shots and collectively the worst period of hockey the team has played this season.
3 goals on 6 shots…
Despite a hot start, this is probably the ugliest period of hockey the Utah Hockey Club has played this season.
— Cole Bagley (@BagleyKSLsports) October 23, 2024
As previously mentioned, the ice was titled completely in Utah’s direction to start the period. Each line was dominating puck possession, suffocating the Senators in their own zone and getting tons of shots on net. To begin the period, Utah outshot Ottawa 7-0 in shots on goal and 16-4 in shot attempts.
However, after Jack McBain and Noah Gregor were both sent to the box, Ottawa netted two quick goals and suddenly the ice tilted heavily in favor of the Senators.
Couldn’t have drawn it up any better 🤌#GoSensGo pic.twitter.com/qjcRfNcQvj
— Ottawa Senators (@Senators) October 23, 2024
Nasty chip. Well executed, especially after receiving the puck on his skate. Had to move fast. https://t.co/0F3baVmPjV
— Cole Bagley (@BagleyKSLsports) October 23, 2024
Following the quick goals, the energy dropped, Utah lost all momentum, mistakes stacked up and Utah trailed the Senators 4-0 after 20 minutes of hockey.
“That was a good drop off I think in our focus. I think we obviously came out strong, playing well, but we didn’t stay in the moment. We got carried away, a little bit soft, defensively, forced a play turnover, you know, and just we had them where we wanted. We played well. We just need to stay patient, stay humble, go one shift at a time, and we got ahead of ourselves, and we paid for it,” head coach André Tourigny said.
Sometimes the puck just doesn’t bounce your way
Aside from the four goals by Ottawa, Utah dominated just about every other facet of the game. They outshot the Senators 31-23, owned the faceoff contest by winning 59.3% and dominated puck possession.
But sometimes, the puck just doesn’t bounce your way and that was the case for Utah on Tuesday night.
Opportunities have been there for #UtahHC tonight. Some really good ones. Just cannot find the back of the net.
Currently outshooting the Senators 23-11…crazy this is a 4-0 game in favor of Ottawa.
— Cole Bagley (@BagleyKSLsports) October 23, 2024
It certainly wasn’t due to a lack of quality chances as the team found themselves in decent scoring opportunities throughout the night. There were plenty of situations with lots of traffic in front of the net, quality one-timers, a solid power play in the second period and even a breakaway. All of which simply came up empty.
My heavens…Josh Doan just beat Forsberg on a breakaway but then the puck sailed well over the crossbar.
It just doesn’t want to go in the net tonight.
— Cole Bagley (@BagleyKSLsports) October 23, 2024
It also didn’t help that Senators goaltender Anton Forsberg played completely out of character with 31 saves. In the three previous games, Forsberg posted a .863 save percentage and 4.16 goals against. But again, some nights that’s just how things go.
To add some perspective however, outcomes like this happen to good teams all the time. Tonight alone, the Minnesota Wild beat the reigning Stanley Cup Champion Florida Panthers 5-1, The New Jersey Devils lost to the Tampa Bay Lightning 8-5 and the Columbus Blue Jackets beat the Toronto Maple Leafs 6-2.
Clayton Keller: “We had a lot of really good chances, a couple crossbars, a breakaway, some good looks on the power play. It’s going to happen. It’s a long season. Can’t get frustrated. You’ve got to stay patient and get better every day.”#UtahHC
— Cole Bagley (@BagleyKSLsports) October 23, 2024
“We had a lot of really good chances, a couple crossbars, a breakaway, some good looks on the power play. It’s going to happen. It’s a long season. Can’t get frustrated. You’ve got to stay patient and get better every day,” Clayton Keller said.
Simply put, hockey is wild, and anything can happen.
A goalie change was needed, and Karel Vejmelka did well for Utah Hockey Club
Aside from the eight-minute disaster in the first period where Ottawa scored four times, Utah really dictated most of the game on Tuesday night. But those four goals were the difference and due to the short order in which they were scored, a goaltending change was needed.
Karel Vejmelka on stepping in for Ingram: “It’s all about mental things. Just be prepared mentally and focus on the right thing. Don’t think about it too much, what happened before. I just try to help us and give us chance to get some points.”#UtahHC
— Cole Bagley (@BagleyKSLsports) October 23, 2024
“It’s all about mental things. Just be prepared mentally and focus on the right thing. Don’t think about it too much, what happened before. I just try to help us and give us chance to get some points,” Karel Vejmelka said.
To start the second period, Karel Vejmelka took the place in net of Connor Ingram. After allowing four goals on just eight shots, it was indeed time for a change which is a common occurrence in the NHL. When one guy is having a rough night, give the other a shot between the pipes.
“No, no, it’s not any different than the other player. I don’t think you want that. I don’t think you’re looking for that. I don’t wish that on any of our players but it’s just everybody in life has bad days at the office sometimes. And I think when you’re a goldender, you’re exposed more than anybody else. So, I think you need to make the right decision for the team. It’s nothing personal,” Tourigny said.
For the night, Vejmelka was a perfect 14-14 at shutout the Senators after a brutal first period. After tonight there may be need for an adjustment to the number of games they plan to split between the two goaltenders.
Utah Hockey Schedule
The Utah Hockey Club will continue their homestand against the Colorado Avalanche on Thursday night. The game can be viewed on SEG+. Fans can also tune in on air on the KSL Sports APP or on 97.5 and 1280 The Zone. Click here for the full schedule.
Cole Bagley is the Utah Hockey Club insider for KSL Sports. Keep up with him on X here. You can hear Cole break down the team on KSL Sports Zone and KSL 5 TV.
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Utah
White scores 25 to help Utah women hand No. 8 TCU its 1st loss, 87-77 in overtime
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Lani White scored 25 points to lead Utah past No. 8 TCU 87-77 in overtime Saturday night.
Reese Ross added 15 points and Maty Wilke had 12 for the Utes. Evelina Otto finished with 10 points and eight rebounds. Utah (11-4, 2-1 Big 12) made 13 3-pointers and shot 56.5% from long distance.
Olivia Miles had 31 points, seven rebounds and seven assists to pace the Horned Frogs (14-1, 2-1). Marta Suarez added 23 points and 11 rebounds. TCU shot just 37% from the field, including 9 of 39 from 3-point range.
White forced overtime by making a 3-pointer that tied it 67-all with 12 seconds left in regulation. Utah never trailed in OT and went up 76-69 with 2:47 left after White capped a 9-2 run with her fourth outside basket.
TCU used a 7-0 spurt to erase a four-point deficit in the final minute of the fourth quarter. Back-to-back 3-pointers from Suarez and Donovyn Hunter put TCU up 66-64 with 49 seconds remaining.
Ross had a chance to tie it on two free throws with 33.3 seconds left, but missed both. Miles made one of two foul shots with 22 seconds to go before White tied it.
Utah took advantage of cold shooting by the Horned Frogs to pull ahead in the third quarter. Back-to-back baskets from Suarez were TCU’s only field goals over an eight-minute stretch. The Utes scored on three straight possessions, culminating in a layup from Wilke, to take a 52-48 lead.
Miles made back-to-back baskets to put the Horned Frogs back up 58-56. Utah used a 7-0 run, punctuated by a 3-pointer from Ross, to go ahead 63-58 with 4:32 left in regulation.
Up next
TCU hosts Oklahoma State on Wednesday.
Utah plays at Kansas on Wednesday.
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Utah
Judge files ruling allowing for appeal to Utah Supreme Court in redistricting case
SALT LAKE CITY (KUTV) — The judge in Utah’s redistricting case filed a ruling making it possible for the Legislature to appeal to the Utah Supreme Court, but not without a strong rebuke of their process.
On Friday, Judge Dianna Gibson ruled partially in favor of the Legislature’s most recent request in the redistricting case, certifying its August 25th ruling as final in order to allow them to appeal to the Utah Supreme Court.
However, she strongly denied their request to enter a final judgment and end the case, saying, “This case is far from over.”
MORE | Utah Redistricting:
File – Utah Congressional Redistricting Maps (Image: KUTV)
“Quite literally – this Court is between the proverbial rock and a hard spot. This entire case is not ‘final,’” Gibson wrote in the ruling. “But the Court agrees that the important legal issues decided by this Court and reflected in each of its rulings … should be reviewed by the Utah Supreme Court as quickly as possible.”
Gibson said it was the legislative defendant’s “duty to seek appellate review” regarding any of her interlocutory, or non-final orders, within 21 days of the rulings. She said they repeatedly claimed they would but never did.
Now, they are requesting she finalize the case, or at the very least one of her orders, to allow them to file an appeal.
Because Gibson does not want to delay appellate review, she agreed to certify the August 25, 2025 Ruling and Order as final.
“Every Utah voter, every Utah congressional candidate and arguably every Utah citizen is impacted by this case. Issuing a final ruling – on even a portion of this case – ultimately serves the public’s interest and will lead to a faster resolution of the entire case,” she wrote.
The redistricting case dates back to 2018, when voters passed a ballot initiative to create a commission to redraw the congressional district boundaries.
State legislators repealed the ballot initiative in 2020, and attempted to draw their own congressional map the following year.
This prompted a lawsuit, which has led to several rulings, including the one on August 25th, which declared that the Utah Legislature violated voters’ rights by approving congressional boundaries that split Salt Lake County.
“Until there is a final decision on these legal issues from our Supreme Court, there will be a cloud on Utah’s congressional elections and an open question regarding the power of the Legislature and the power of the people,” Gibson wrote in her most recent ruling.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
___
Utah
Utah man missing for 3 years presumed dead. What happened? – East Idaho News
SOUTH SALT LAKE (KSL) — Investigators believe a South Salt Lake man who disappeared in 2022 is likely dead, but they’re still trying to figure out what happened to him more than three years later.
“To my knowledge we don’t have one working theory as to whether it’s a homicide or a suicide or if he just completely went off the grid, essentially,” officer Shaun Ward said Monday.
But according to a recent search warrant affidavit filed in 3rd District Court, “There has been no financial or digital footprint indicating that (Cornelis ‘Casey’ Frederik Bokslag) is still alive. It is presumed he is deceased.”
Ward says the search warrant, filed in late November, is to look at Bokslag’s Google accounts, such as his email history, internet search history and location data. Investigators are hoping those records “might provide additional information about where Bokslag had been in the days and hours leading up to his disappearance as well as any correspondence, contacts, locations and a slew of other sources of information that could lead Investigators to the location of Bokslag’s body, which will allow us to determine if his disappearance was a result of suicide or foul play,” the warrant states.
As of Monday, the request for that information from Google was still pending.
Ward, 30, was last seen on June 6, 2022. Police have recovered surveillance video of Bokslag leaving his apartment complex that day in his car by himself. He then went to an ATM in South Salt Lake and withdrew $100. Bokslag, a four-year Marine veteran who had worked for a watershed company since 2016, did not go to work that day, which family members, his employer and police said was highly unusual.
“Investigators eventually learned that Bokslag had taken the day off work and told friends and family that he was traveling to Evanston, Wyoming, to participate in the gay pride parade festivities,” according to the recently unsealed search warrant.
Hours after Bokslag was reported missing on June 8, 2022, his 2012 Suzuki SX4 was found by a passerby in Summit County, near the Castle Rock exit off I-80, about 18 miles west of the Wyoming border.
“It was discovered that the vehicle’s license plates were removed from the car. Meticulously, the screws were put back into the license plate frame, and the vehicle was essentially clean in nature,” police said at the time.
The warrant further states that “there was a noticeable absence of fingerprints inside the vehicle. This was determined to be consistent with the interior having been wiped clean.
“Later, DNA swabs were taken and submitted for testing. They revealed two genetic profiles. One was matched to Bokslag by exemplar samples provided by the family. A second profile was identified. The profile was checked through the Combined DNA Index System, and no positive identification was made,” the warrant states.
Ward said Monday that investigators have done extensive searches around where Bokslag’s car was found in 2022, both on the ground and by drone. His residence was also searched, and a few items of potential evidence, such as Bokslag’s laptop, were seized.
A co-worker called Bokslag several times one night before he disappeared, according to cellphone records collected by investigators. Several witnesses told police that the co-worker and Bokslag “were up for the same promotion, but Bokslag was eventually selected for it, causing resentment. Those cellphone records also showed Bokslag’s phone being turned off at some point on June 6,” according to the warrant.
“A records check revealed that shortly after receiving numerous calls in one night from the hostile co-worker, and prior to being reported missing, Bokslag purchased a handgun in Salt Lake County along with two boxes of ammunition,” the warrant says.
Ward did not have any additional information Monday about the co-worker, including whether police had questioned him or if he had been ruled out as a possible suspect.
A $50,000 reward is still being offered for information that leads to Bokslag being found. According to a web page set up by his family, Bokslag is 6 feet 2 inches tall, weighs about 140 pounds, has blond hair and gray eyes. He also had a goatee at the time of his disappearance. A missing persons poster is hanging in the lobby of the South Salt Lake Police Department with Bokslag’s information.
Anyone who has information on what may have happened to Bokslag or anyone who may have seen him is asked to call police at 801-840-4000. Ward says all tips will be investigated.
“Really, anything at this point. If they think that they saw him or have seen him recently, or if they have any information into his personal life that our investigators may not know … any information is welcome,” he said. “We want to bring closure to the family. The family still wants answers.”
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