Utah
How Jaren Kump used extra eligibility to earn a master’s degree that he hopes will help retiring college athletes
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Jaren Kump is a rarity in the modern age of college sports.
The former Utah offensive lineman spent six consecutive years with the Utes, playing every spot on the offensive line along the way.
Kump was a staple on the offensive line from the beginning, starting all five games during the COVID-19-shortened season in his freshman year. Over the years, he played wherever he was needed, and by the 2024 campaign, locked down the starting center job — a position he held through his senior season with the Utes.
Kump credited the positional versatility he experienced during his college career for helping him become a better lineman.
“It helped me a lot, especially playing center, having to be the quarterback of the offensive line, having to communicate every single play, having to read defenses and make adjustments based off what we see, based off game plan, based on whatever play we’re doing, situation,” Kump said.
“And then knowing exactly how my other guys, how their technique and what they’re seeing, knowing exactly what their game is also like, having done it myself, helped a ton.”
Kump, one of the oldest players on Utah’s roster, originally committed to the Utes back in 2017 out of Herriman High.
“I felt like it was the best place for me in terms of football and whatnot. When I told Utah I was going to come there and I signed my letter of intent there, it was important to me that I kept my word,” Kump said.
After serving a mission for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Brazil, Kump arrived back in Salt Lake City ahead of the 2020 season, which, due to the COVID-19 pandemic, would be a season like no other.
Over half of Utah’s games were canceled. Due to the circumstances, every player that was on the roster for that season received an extra year of eligibility.
Kump’s career would hit another bump in the road in 2021. After starting in every game in 2020 at right tackle, Kump started four of Utah’s first five games before suffering a season-ending injury.
Over his next four seasons, Kump was a key part of Utah’s success along the offensive line, and remained loyal to the Utes, even as offers from other schools came.
“Throughout my time at Utah for six years, of course, there was opportunity to go somewhere else and maybe make more money. And me and my wife, of course, we had conversations about that,” Kump said. “I think being responsible adults, there is room for conversation in that.”
In the end, Kump and his wife, Sydney, decided they’d only consider leaving Utah if Kump wasn’t getting enough playing time.
“Leaving for NIL purposes or stuff like that, we felt like that wasn’t the right thing to do. Plus, Utah did a good job at taking care of us anyway. We fell in love with Utah and we wanted to stay because we wanted to keep our word. That was the right thing to do,” Kump said.
Staying at Utah gave Kump the opportunity to be part of some of the highest peaks in Utah football history, including back-to-back Pac-12 championships in 2021 and 2022. Kump pointed to Utah’s 43-42 win over USC in 2022 as one of his favorite moments as a Ute, saying he had never heard Rice-Eccles Stadium as loud as it was when Cam Rising scored the game-winning two-point conversion.
Kump’s final game at Rice-Eccles, a 51-47 comeback win over Kansas State, is another memory he’ll cherish from his Utah career.
“That was another moment I heard Rice-Eccles Stadium erupt in the way that it’s known. Those are two moments I will never forget,” he said.
A high school coach gives Kump direction
As he began college, like a good chunk of university students, Kump didn’t know what he wanted to do post-football. He called his high school strength coach for advice, and in a lengthy conversation, he suggested that Kump could become a strength coach like him.
“Leaving for NIL purposes or stuff like that, we felt like that wasn’t the right thing to do. Plus, Utah did a good job at taking care of us anyway. We fell in love with Utah and we wanted to stay because we wanted to keep our word. That was the right thing to do.”
— Utah center Jaren Kump
“He explained to me, ‘You love training. Every time you come in, you’re passionate about what you do, you’re passionate about learning why you’re doing things, so why don’t you go and study for that?’ I’m like, ‘That’s a great idea,’ and so strength and conditioning is the kind of motivation to pursue kinesiology,” Kump said.
While some, including this reporter, might have thought that Kump’s extensive experience with strength and conditioning, injury management and personal training from college football would give him a leg up in the classroom, he said that it was actually the reverse.
“Being able to understand why we’re doing things really helps a lot when undergoing training and having to make adjustments based off of, say, injury or, say, tweaks here and there,” Kump said.
Though his first two years at Utah were anything but ideal on the field, he turned a negative situation to a positive one off the field, deciding to pursue a master’s degree with his two years of extra eligibility after graduating with his bachelor’s degree in kinesiology in 2023.
“I’m already here. I got a couple more years left. Might as well shoot for a master’s degree because if I don’t try to shoot for it, I know I’ll regret it for the rest of my life,” Kump said.
‘Be where your feet are’
In an era of college football where players are making big money and the sport is more and more professionalized with each passing year, it’s easy to forget that the players are full-time students as well.
Combining essentially a full-time job in college football with the intensive nature of a master’s program isn’t easy. According to Utah health and kinesiology associate professor Tanya Halliday, just 3% of Division I athletes pursue a graduate degree.
Kump segmented his two lives in his mind, which helped him manage his time well.
“Being where your feet are is something I learned while being a student-athlete as well. When I’m in school, when I’m doing my graduate studies, I’m working on my thesis, I’m not a football player. I’m 100% a student, I’m 100% a graduate student or whatever that entails,” Kump said.
“I’m not thinking about football, I’m not thinking about the mistakes I made in practice, I’m not thinking about how I can correct them, I’m 100% a student. And the same goes for football. You be where your feet are.”
With his background as a football player, Kump’s master’s degree thesis fittingly focused on the health and wellness challenges that Division I athletes face as they retire from sports.
“There’s a lot of data out there to suggest that student-athletes, as they retire, especially on the Division I level,” Kump said. “They’re experiencing a typhoon, a lot of negative health consequences and those include things such as lower rates of physical activity and even fitness compared to their nonathletic counterparts, a lower quality of nutrition and knowledge, an increased effect on their injuries, on their prolonging injuries as they continue into retirement and even increased rates of obesity.”
There’s also the mental health aspect, including a decreased sense of self-identity and mood.
Over the course of his master’s degree, Kump was able to survey hundreds of student-athletes to find out more about these health outcomes.
“A big piece that we saw is current student-athletes are anticipating the challenges of retirement very accurately based on the lived experiences of former student-athletes,” he said. “That would tell us that these student-athletes are kind of seeing these challenges coming. It’s not like they’re experiencing anything drastically different versus what they expected.”
Another big finding for Kump was the decline in self-efficacy of retired athletes.
“I would say the biggest challenge of what they saw was their self-efficacy in different areas, especially in self-efficacy and being able to manage their sport-related injuries. That was a huge piece that we saw as a challenge to them,” Kump said.
That showed up in other areas, like maintaining a physical health program and managing their mental health.
According to an article from University of Utah Health, this project is just beginning. Later, another student will build on Kump’s findings, using the data to “develop a deeper qualitative study and continue the work.”
Continuing his football dream in Chicago
Ahead of the NFL draft, Kump had a busy month. He trained for and participated in Utah’s pro day in front of NFL scouts, spoke with NFL teams and even got in some training sessions with Utah offensive line coach Jordan Gross and offensive lineman Isaiah Kema.
Just days before the NFL draft, Kump received his master’s degree in kinesiology — a major achievement.
“The thing that I found probably most rewarding was honestly getting it done, feeling relieved of getting it done, doing what I knew was going to be very, very difficult, but I knew that I could do it if I really put my mind to it,” Kump said.
Over the three days of the NFL draft, Kump experienced a roller coaster of emotions.
“Anywhere between excitement, anger, frustration, a little bit of sadness,” he said.
Though he was not selected in the seven-round draft, he was the first Ute to sign an NFL free-agent contact, inking a deal with the Chicago Bears.
“As soon as we made a deal with the Chicago Bears, it was just a sense of relief. It felt like a weight was lifted off my shoulders and just washed away down the river. I’m super relieved and I’m excited for the opportunity now that we have an exact pinpointed place that we’re going, I can kind of focus on that now,” Kump said.
The whirlwind is just beginning for Kump. He’s packing up and moving to Chicago, where the Bears will hold rookie mini-camp at the start of May. At the end of May, the Bears will have team OTAs, followed by team-wide mini-camp in June.

This time period is critical for Kump, who is trying to make the active roster.
“I’m very excited to go and just work my tail off and to be able to hopefully make a name for myself to get a roster spot,” he said.
Kump arrives in Chicago with a wealth of experience from his six seasons in college, and he feels like playing at Utah has set him up well for the NFL experience.
“I would say from what I understand, how the NFL structures practices and layout of everything and coaching styles and how decisions are made, a common theme I keep hearing from older guys that come back and talk to us is that it’s very similar to how Utah runs things and it helped prepare them in ways that they didn’t understand, they didn’t know at the time when they were in college,” Kump said.
Kump hopes he will have a lengthy NFL career, but when his time to retire from football comes, he plans to still be around the sport, putting his degree to use as a strength and conditioning coach or a position coach.
“After my football career, hopefully that lasts for some years, but whenever that is, either strength and conditioning or I’ve even thought about being a position coach. … I do know that having a master’s degree does help with that as well, having that on your résumé,” Kump said.

In case you missed it
Former Ute offensive tackle Spencer Fano was selected by the Cleveland Browns with the No. 9 pick in the 2026 NFL draft, while fellow offensive tackle Caleb Lomu was selected by the New England Patriots with the No. 28 pick.
From the archives
Extra points
Utah
Utah suicide rates twice national average, Summit County Health Department says
Summit County Health Director Phil Bondurant said the early 2026 survey found men are suffering with significant mental and behavioral health challenges between the ages of 10 and 44. In the U.S., Bondurant said, suicide is the second leading cause of death, behind unintentional injury.
“It’s the eighth leading cause of death nationally across all ages of men,” he said on KPCW’s “Local News Hour” June 8. “When we look at this in Utah, we are two times the national average in suicides, and when you look at men, three of the four suicides in the state of Utah are men.”
He said that’s disproportionate to women. Roughly 31 out of 100,000 suicide deaths in Utah are men while less than 9 deaths per 100,000 are women.
FULL INTERIVEW: Summit County Health Department Phil Bondurant
Bondurant said those statistics are related to men feeling isolated, experiencing depression and uncertainty about the future. But, he said the health department has worked to develop programs to break the stigma around men’s mental health and help people access care.
“It’s important that we remember that connection, conversation, help and support, just like our physical health, when we’re not feeling well or we break a bone, we go to the doctor, and they do what they do to help us get better and help our bodies mend,” he said. “Our mental health is the same way, we need to take care of it.”
He said uninsured residents that need help can call the health department and speak with the behavioral health team.
There is also a 24-hour 988 crisis hotline for people who need help or know someone who needs help. Utahns can also download the SafeUT app to speak with licensed counselors, submit safety tips and confidential help.
Utah
Adventure travel draws families to Moab, Utah, as Americans stay closer to home
Utah
A Latter-day Saint apostle and Utah’s governor tout the need for education and morality
- Leaders of many of the nation’s most prominent faith-based colleges gather in Washington, D.C.
- Latter-day Saint Apostle Elder Clark G. Gilbert champions the power of religious faith on U.S. college campuses.
- Utah Gov. Spencer Cox delivers keynote speech on “Learning to Disagree Better.”
Elder Clark G. Gilbert stood in front of a Washington, D.C., audience on Monday and issued an urgent plea: Proclaim and enhance the life-changing work happening on faith-based higher education campuses across America.
Monday’s audience — seated together at The Catholic University of America — was an atypical audience.
Counted among the participants at Monday’s 2026 Convening of the American Council on Education (ACE) Commission on Faith-Based College and Universities were the presidents of some of the nation’s most renowned religious universities — including Notre Dame, Baylor, Yeshiva University and Brigham Young University.
Also in attendance was Utah Gov. Spencer Cox, who delivered the keynote address on learning to disagree better.
A member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints’ Quorum of Twelve Apostles, Elder Gilbert said faith-based institutions remain forums of inquiry that not only bless their students — but are also blessing the entire country.
“It’s my plea that we will continue to elevate the work of faith-based colleges and universities in America,” said Elder Gilbert, who prior to being called to the Twelve served as the church’s Commissioner of Education and was previously the president of Brigham Young University-Idaho.
“It’s also my plea to my colleagues here, who are tremendous leaders of faith-based colleges and universities to form the kind of bridges we need to lift and be a light to others and to learn from others.
“And I think the spirit of this conference today should be a call for all of us to come out of the isolation in the woods; to have and articulate reasons for the hope that is in us,” he said.
Elder Gilbert: Spread the word on the good that’s happening at faith-based colleges
The theme of this year’s annual convening focused on “Learning to Disagree Better” — and what faith-based colleges such as Notre Dame, Baylor and BYU can do to ensure their voices are heard in the national dialogue.
Offering the event’s closing message, Elder Gilbert echoed a point emphasized by multiple participants Monday: It’s possible to “disagree better” without compromising one’s beliefs or convictions.
Followers of Christ, he said, are taught to live “peaceably and lovingly” with all — regardless of whether they share their values. But today, that lesson is proving challenging for many.
Elder Gilbert challenged those at Monday’s gathering to “come out,” “articulate,” and “engage” with the world. Let others know the good works happening at America’s faith-based colleges.
Not all will listen, he said, but it’s essential that the message be shared.
At a moment when many colleges and universities are feeling financial strain, faith-based schools in the United States are outpacing public universities, he added.
That’s a story that’s not being widely told — and faith-based colleges share the task of alerting the media and others to that fact.
“We’ve got to be willing to get out and tell it,” Elder Gilbert said.
Remedies to unhappiness & loneliness: Faith & religious affiliation
Many of today’s young people are adrift, observed Elder Gilbert. They are lonely. They want a different kind of education. And many students with a particular religious identity need a place where they feel supported.
“Faith-based schools are growing almost everywhere you look across the country,” said Elder Gilbert. “We have had record applicants at BYU and BYU-Idaho this year.”
Elder Gilbert recalled growing up in a non-Latter-day Saint community in Arizona. He sometimes felt the sting of discrimination.
But a faith-based school such as BYU offered him a welcoming home during his freshman year. “For the first time in my life, I felt like I belonged. It was an incredible feeling.
“And students of faith backgrounds feel this at faith-based universities across the country.”
Higher education across the nation is facing a crisis, Elder Gilbert said. Studies show that fewer than half of Americans still feel confidence in colleges and universities. And a sizable number of people report not feeling safe or welcome in most of today’s higher education institutions.
“Two-thirds of U.S. college students feel they’re facing a crisis of purpose,” said Elder Gilbert, adding that “their university doesn’t have any curriculum or leadership talking about purpose and meaning in life.
“We have failed these young people — and they’re wanting this.”
Elder Gilbert spoke about a sizable number of young Americans who self-identify their religion as “none.” Many in that category have been told that religious faith does not matter — or that religious faith is, in fact, harmful to one’s well-being.
But studies reveal that those in the “none” category are also the least likely to be happy, compared to others who identify with a faith.
“They’re not happy. They’re the most lonely generation ever. They’re the least happy generation ever,” he said.
There’s a prescription for such ailments, assured Elder Gilbert: faith and church affiliation and attendance.
But even if religious affiliation is a reliable predictive factor for happiness and purpose, it’s hard to have faith conversations at many college campuses.
“And,” he added, “most people with faith don’t feel safe on those campuses.”
It’s not essential that all students of religious faith attend faith-based universities, noted Elder Gilbert, pointing to secular and public schools across the country that are welcoming places for students of faith.
“Smart university presidents are creating safe places on their campuses — even when they don’t have a religious mission — to provide safe gathering and meaningful discussion for people of faith on their campuses,” he said.
Elder Gilbert added some in academia perpetuate the argument that university campuses offer a “face off” between reason versus faith — or truth versus virtue.
“This is a false dichotomy,” he said.
“For me, as a person of faith and as a scholar, those two things were never in conflict. They were always unified as part of a holistic process of growth, intellectual and spiritual development. They weren’t in conflict.
“That is one of the great contributions that people of faith and faith-based universities are making in America right now.”
Gov. Cox: ‘I lament greatly that we brought politics into our churches’
Cox’s keynote message focused on learning to disagree better — a concept he’s been identified with through his ongoing efforts to help others work together despite political, religious, cultural or social differences.
The governor noted that the nation’s 250th birthday is being celebrated this year. It’s the anniversary of a historic “experiment in self-government.”
America’s founders, Cox said, believed self-government would only work if a nation’s people were both educated and moral. “You needed smart people,” he said, “and you needed good people.”
The nation’s system of checks and balances requires building coalitions, compromise and learning to work together to get things done, he added. Such unity does not mean all people think alike. It means learning to act and work together, despite differences, for the common good.
Many of the organizations that have helped build the nation have been religious-based. Such associations allow people to serve, give back and strengthen their communities. Such affiliations also boost mental health, said Cox.
Now, in 2026, people are stepping away from such associations.
“People are leaving. People are lonely,” said Cox. “They don’t have that religious community to connect with. And they’re feeling a little lost and adrift. But we’re wired for connection — and so they’re finding it in unhealthy places.”
For many, he added, one’s politics have become their religion.
“And, of course, if politics is your religion, then people that disagree with you are heretics, and it can be a little dicey,” said Cox. “We start to treat people a little differently.”
It’s even more troubling when religion turns into politics.
“I lament greatly that we brought politics into our churches, because I think that that has brought the profane into where the sacred exists, and we don’t have any sacred spots left,” he said.
A pandemic, the slaying of George Floyd and contentious presidential elections were just a few of the divisive moments that prompted Cox to begin formulating his “Disagree Better” initiative that includes his new book entitled “Off Ramp: How to be a Peacemaker in an Age of Contempt.”
“The whole concept behind ‘disagree better’ was not that we should all agree — we chose ‘disagree’ very intentionally as the first word,” he said.
“Our nation only works if people are passionate about their beliefs. We’re not asking anyone to give up their long and maybe eternally held beliefs. What we’re asking people to do is to engage in healthy conflict.”
The murder of Charlie Kirk in a corner of Utah known as “Happy Valley” was a staggering reminder of the dangers of unchecked, unhealthy divisiveness, added Cox.
The governor again called for moving beyond “dangerous contempt” for others we might not agree with.
“We have to start building character again,” said Cox. “We need a moral people again.
“I don’t believe that religion has cornered the market on morality … But I believe for most of us — for me — it’s the place where I find that sense of morality.
“It’s why I treat my opponents with dignity and respect. Not because I agree with them and not because I don’t want to beat them in the next election, but because I believe they are a child of God.”
Insights from faith-based higher education leaders on working across differences
Monday’s convening also included a panel discussion with presidents representing Baptist, Catholic, Jewish and Latter-day Saint-sponsored universities to examine how they have worked across differences to find commonalities.
A few panel highlights:
From The Catholic University of America President Peter Kilpatrick: “I think what’s working on our campuses is our students willfully and enthusiastically engaging in the things of the Spirit.
“Spending time together in prayer; they’re worshipping together; they’re in small Christian communities; they’re discussing important topics with a Christian heart.
“I think this is making a big difference. They’re in adoration — so they’re doing the things of the Spirit, and that seems to be working.”
BYU President Shane Reese: “We do view each other as children of God … and that brings with it a healthy sense of respect and dignity for all who enter (our) doors, and for all who exist on this earth.
“That changes the nature of the conversation. It changes the commitments and covenants that we have with one another. And our students have this desire.”
Baylor University President Linda Livingstone: “Civil discourse is woven throughout our strategic plan.
“We believe that if those of us at faith-based universities do not help our students learn how to engage in respectful dialogue with others who are different from them and think differently than they are, that we will not have done our job to put them out to be the citizens of the world.”
Rabbi Ari Berman, president of Yeshiva University: “There’s one commonality, which is the godliness of every single person.
“And believing in that and showing our students that we believe in them is the first core principle for success in university.
“The second thing is that when we teach them about our values, it’s not because we’re looking for them to become Jewish. What we’re showing them are models where they can go deeper on their values.”
The Rev. Robert A. Dowd, president of the University of Notre Dame, spoke of meeting with Pope Leo XIV, who Dowd calls a humble “great listener.”
“For us at Notre Dame, it’s just incredibly important that we’re forming young people who are humble, who are great listeners, and who are also courageous.
“They’re willing to defend the most vulnerable among us. They’re willing to take their events, talents, and all the skills they develop out into the world in ways that serve society in a special way.
“That’s the special role of faith-based institutions.”
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