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The Art of Will: The maxims of Utah Jazz head coach Will Hardy’s successful philosophy

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The Art of Will: The maxims of Utah Jazz head coach Will Hardy’s successful philosophy


There’s a lightweight and free ambiance across the Zions Financial institution Basketball Campus today.

The Utah Jazz have wildly exceeded expectations this season, eschewing their anticipated place among the many league’s worst groups for a battle for the playoffs as an alternative — even whereas buying and selling away a number of starters on the deadline. In sharp distinction to final season’s capitulation amid tight vibes, this yr’s workforce fights for each level on the courtroom, and has loads of enjoyable off-court whereas doing so.

The captain of this effort is new head coach Will Hardy, whose strategy to his work has earned him avid supporters amongst his workforce and entrance workplace. His underlying philosophy drives the temper in Utah’s observe facility, on the workforce aircraft, and in all 82 video games.

In expressing this philosophy, he tends to make use of loads of brief maxims (some staffers across the workforce have referred to as them Will-isms) to get his level throughout. Spend any size of time round Hardy and the Jazz and also you’ll seemingly hear no less than a couple of of those greater than as soon as; collectively, they virtually type an inventory of aphorisms or proverbs, identical to the philosophers of historic occasions.

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This week, I sat down with Hardy to ask him about a few of these go-to phrases I’d heard most frequently, and ask him why they’ve earned a spot in his teaching philosophy — what I’ve come to name “The Artwork of Will.”

“Enjoyable is underrated within the NBA”

Used most frequently when: The Jazz’s gamers are having a surprisingly good time.

Will’s take: “We get caught up on this world of: you’re nice otherwise you suck. You win otherwise you lose. We stay in a world that has a really adverse tint at occasions. It’s simple for individuals to level out the issues that aren’t good.

“And I’ve simply seen loads of NBA gamers over the course of my time the place it weighs on them closely and so they’re not likely having fun with it — which is loopy. Like, for 13-year-old you, the dream was to make it to the NBA. You’re in the course of the dream! You’re allowed to get pleasure from it! You could be critical, aggressive, skilled, caring, all these issues, and revel in it. You are able to do each. You’ll be able to nonetheless smile, you’ll be able to nonetheless chortle at your self. That doesn’t imply you don’t need to win. Oh, ‘as a result of we laughed at shootaround, like these guys don’t care about profitable? That’s bulls—. You are able to do each.

“And, in some unspecified time in the future, it’s going to be over for them. It ended for me after faculty. I miss being on a workforce. I miss being with my teammates. I miss that half. At some point they’ll miss it, too. And I don’t need them to look again and go like ‘Oh my god, I used to be a multimillionaire professional basketball participant in the course of my dream and I didn’t have any enjoyable.’ You are able to do each. And I don’t need the strain, the suggestions they’re getting on social media to bleed into them having a adverse expertise. For those who’re not enjoying nicely, you’re not enjoying nicely.

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“I feel the NBA turns loads of these dudes into little previous males. Like they’re so nervous about doing the whole lot excellent that we’ve bought 22-year-olds consuming f—ing salmon and quinoa for each lunch. It’s f—ing embarrassing. It’s like bro, what the f— are you doing? Like, you’re 22! I’m not saying you must eat a complete pizza earlier than the sport. However, you must eat salmon and quinoa once you’re me and your metabolism shuts off and also you don’t need to get fats. You’re twenty-f—ing-two. You’ll burn that off.

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Will Hardy because the Utah Jazz host the San Antonio Spurs, NBA basketball in Salt Lake Metropolis on Tuesday, Feb. 28, 2023.

“You’ll be able to have a cheeseburger each every now and then. You’ll be able to get pleasure from it. I’m not saying I’m recommending that you just exit and drink each evening — you’ll be able to have a beer. It’s not the top of the world. You’re in the course of the dream. And it simply bothers me that some guys really feel this strain from the skin world, or this or that, or the workforce. They’re making an attempt to be so excellent that they’re turning into bots.

“I attempt to create an environment the place — I’m critical, I’m aggressive, I need to win, I care in regards to the particulars. I may chortle at myself. I’ll make jokes about myself. I’ll crack a joke in movie right here and there. We’ll play music at observe. We’re going to have workforce dinners, and we’re not going to all sit there and speak in regards to the recreation. You attempt to create an setting the place they’re not solely speaking about tactical basketball issues. You ask them about their household, you ask them about their buddies, you make jokes with them. It’s about the way it feels day-after-day. However I simply am a believer that you are able to do each, you’ll be able to care so much about it and be skilled and have some enjoyable.

“I don’t need the gymnasium to be a spot they dread coming to day-after-day. That’s an terrible feeling. The gymnasium, for any of us that ever performed basketball, nonetheless play basketball, or performed sports activities as a child: the gymnasium is a protected haven. It’s a enjoyable, ‘oh my God I get to go to the gymnasium, that is nice.’ I don’t need us to lose that simply because the stakes are excessive.”

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“Toughness, sacrifice, and fervour”

Used most frequently when: Hardy is requested in regards to the rules he desires his workforce to show on the courtroom.

Will’s take: “These three issues, I feel, are key to creating the setting that we would like. That’s bodily toughness, that’s psychological toughness, that’s the flexibility to push by when issues aren’t going nicely. And we all know and perceive and assume that over the course of an NBA season, whether or not that’s individually or collectively as a workforce, issues are usually not at all times gonna go the way in which you need them to.

“Sacrifice: it’s not nearly you. It’s in regards to the workforce. You understand, ‘Staff 49′ has been crucial. We’re at all times making an attempt to know that the objective of the group is to win, and we’re making an attempt to win the sport and we’re making an attempt to compete for a championship. That implies that alongside the way in which, all people, coaches included, are going to need to make some sacrifices. You’re not at all times going to get what you need. It’s not at all times going to be like, ‘let me arrange the menu for me’. lt’s in regards to the group and understanding how you slot in the group: understanding your strengths, the strengths of your teammates. You’re gonna need to make some sacrifices at occasions. You might not get all of the photographs you need. You might not get all of the performs that you really want. You might not get all of the minutes you need. However that’s simply part of being part of a gaggle, a workforce, in a world the place we’re actually all consistently rewarded by particular person issues.

“Then, ardour is simply the emotion, the juice that you just give it day-after-day. I would like our workforce to play with a chip on their shoulder, I would like them to play a model of basketball that we’re pleased with, that our followers are pleased with, and that’s flying round and sort of laying it on the road on a regular basis. I’ll be fiery within the moments that I must be fiery. I like that the workforce performs with that emotion at occasions. It’s simply your capability to go for it and pour your self into what we’re doing day-after-day, whether or not that’s observe or a session within the weight room or the video games.

“Sports activities!”

Used most frequently when: One thing occurs out of the atypical.

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Will’s take: “It was Carrot High.”

“They get to him on the finish [of an old SportsCenter commercial] and he simply goes ‘Sports activities!’ It at all times made me chortle.”

“Like, hey, the sport will probably be delayed tonight as a result of the fireworks compartment behind the basket has caught on hearth, so now we have to make use of the fireplace extinguisher. ‘Sports activities!’

“Or, Jazz Bear in denims. ‘Sports activities!’

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“Or, like, we win a loopy recreation on the finish. We steal the ball in opposition to Golden State someway twice within the final 4 seconds and get a dunk on the finish. You come again and also you sit within the locker room all people seems at you and also you’re identical to: ‘Sports activities!’

“No maintaining rating”

Used most frequently when: Battle is about to erupt.

Will’s take: ”Yeah, we’re all gonna make errors. There’s this concept that ‘all people’s equal, and all issues needs to be equal. ‘You yelled at me final Tuesday about this factor on protection and at the moment he did it within the movie and also you didn’t yell at him.’ In any relationship, maintaining rating, I feel, is tremendous damaging. It’s not at all times going to be truthful. It’s not at all times going to be completely evened out, the place all people will get the identical quantity. You will have to have the ability to give one another some grace and attempt to perceive the larger message and the the reason why. Like, I’m not going to take a seat there and nitpick each move the workforce makes, as a result of I don’t need them to take a seat there and nitpick each play I draw. We simply get into this setting the place we’re simply choosing on one another on a regular basis.

“I feel that’s been productive for me in private relationships, whether or not that’s buddies or marriage or no matter. I feel it’s a vital factor. And I felt like groups I’ve been on which were actually profitable, we don’t get into … that. In any other case, it simply wastes loads of time and emotional vitality. And it creates a tradition of complaining.

“In order that’s been one thing we’ve talked about from day one with the workforce, and we nonetheless speak about it. I feel you can get actually distracted, and also you’re nervous about all of the mistaken issues, in the event you’re nervous about ensuring that everyone’s getting criticized the identical quantity or corrected the identical quantity or getting the identical quantity of performs. I simply hate all that s—. The world’s not truthful.”

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“By no means decide a participant too early”

Used most frequently when: One, or many, of Hardy’s gamers are surpassing expectations.

Will’s take: Who had been you once you had been 22? You weren’t a completed product. There have been good elements about you then, however after I look again at me at 22, I’m not tremendous pleased with the whole lot that I used to be then. It’s a must to develop up and mature and alter some issues and that’s nice.

(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Will Hardy because the Utah Jazz host the New York Knicks, NBA basketball in Salt Lake Metropolis on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2022.

“One a part of that’s simply the non-public piece. Lauri (Markkanen) is an instance. He comes over to Arizona after which he’s a one-and-done and there’s strain. He’s not in his house nation and he’s 21 years previous, he’s younger and married after which they’ve children and then you definitely get traded. However then abruptly, he’s 25 and he feels comfy in your individual pores and skin as an individual. His house life is just a little bit settled and his physique matures just a little bit. After which there’s that narrative that he’s tender. ‘It’s like f– you, I’m not tender. I’m a beast.’ And I simply suppose that folks change and evolve and so it’s important to give them the chance to do this.

“Then in basketball, the best half about it’s you can at all times get higher. I’ve watched 37-year-olds tweak little issues of their recreation to attempt to enhance. The gorgeous factor in regards to the sport is that it’s not over at a sure age. I do know now we have exhausting selections to make as groups, as entrance workplaces, I’m not saying you must by no means reduce anyone or you must by no means commerce anyone, like it’s important to. That’s a part of it.

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“However we put these labels on gamers. Lauri, clearly, is the one which hits all of us within the face probably the most as a result of he’s our man and we love him. We’re seeing him very a lot dwelling out a actuality that’s the other of what he was labeled as. However you realize, with Talen (Horton-Tucker), it’s ‘Oh, he’s wild and he’s this.’ He’s 22! He was in LA, it was a distinct scenario, let’s attempt to put just a little construction round him and let’s attempt to assist him enhance, let’s attempt to coach him. Is Talen the place we would like him to be? Not but. However is he higher than the primary day? I feel so. Like he’s gotten means higher.

“It stems from the human half, like not judging individuals too early. And then you definitely gotta give some individuals the good thing about the doubt. Like, possibly he can get higher. However we stay on this world now of scorching takes: ‘He stinks.’ He stinks? I don’t know if he stinks. He’s not enjoying nicely proper now, however that doesn’t imply that he can’t get higher.

“Like, Walker’s physique three years from now is not going to look the way in which it seems proper now. And Walker’s an amazing participant so we’re not speaking about him in a adverse gentle. But when this season if the entire narrative had been, ‘Walker Kessler, he’s simply not bodily robust sufficient,’ nicely possibly give him an opportunity to love, get larger and stronger and develop some.

“I feel loads of it simply comes from making an attempt to offer individuals the chance to develop just a little bit. Narratives about individuals can change. That doesn’t imply you can’t and shouldn’t have an opinion of somebody now — like, you must say that this participant is X at the moment. Nice, however we are able to’t stamp them and go ‘nicely that’s the top of that story.’”

“No free minutes”

Used most frequently when: Hardy makes a shocking change in enjoying time.

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Will’s take: “Yeah, we’re making an attempt to win. This isn’t a laboratory.

“That being stated, such as you’re allowed to make errors. I’m not a tyrant, like each mistake you make you’re popping out … however it’s important to earn the fitting to play within the video games. It’s an honor to be within the NBA. It’s an honor to be on an NBA roster. It’s an honor to step on the courtroom in an NBA recreation. And I need to create an setting the place individuals work for it and it’s not simply handed to you.

“Like, ‘oh, you’re a excessive draft decide and so that you simply get to have the ball the entire time and also you simply get to play and also you get to simply throw the ball into the stands 18 occasions and we simply don’t care.’ There’s moments that you just’re gonna need to take a step again, you bought to take a seat down, you’re gonna play much less and also you’re not going to shut this recreation.

“Sure individuals have earned the fitting over the course of their careers to have just a little little bit of an extended leash. That’s simply the way in which the league works — you’ve established a status and so that you get a couple of extra bites on the apple, you get just a little little bit of an extended leash in that sense.

“However I by no means wished to simply have like a preconceived feeling for anyone that like, ‘Oh, I simply get to play.’ Particularly with the youthful gamers. If you wish to be an actual NBA participant, you need to be a contributing NBA participant, it takes loads of work. It takes loads of effort. It takes loads of consideration to element. It takes the flexibility to be coached. You’re gonna fail some, in fact, and that’s to be anticipated. However you don’t get to simply undergo the motions and simply get what you need. It doesn’t imply it’s important to at all times be tremendous profitable in the whole lot that you just do. However are you doing it with the fitting intent? Are you doing it with the fitting angle, vitality, competitiveness, all these issues? That’s incomes the fitting to play.

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“An enormous factor for me from a growth standpoint is, and it’s by no means actually talked about: you’re not simply serving to them develop expertise. I can dribble, I can move, I can shoot, I could make that move to the nook. That’s a part of it, however you’re additionally serving to them develop self-awareness. Like, ‘I don’t actually have it going tonight. Perhaps I gotta get him concerned, he’s having a very good evening.’ You’re nonetheless part of the workforce and it’s important to have some self consciousness of the way you’re becoming into the group that evening. It might’t simply be, ‘Oh, nicely, for my growth, I’m simply gonna run 19 extra decide and rolls and simply shoot it each time as a result of that’s what I’m engaged on.’ Like, dude, it’s not working for you proper now.

“Once you give individuals free minutes, the place there’s no repercussions for something, loads of dangerous habits type and loads of lack of self-awareness varieties. And that’s harmful, as a result of as soon as that occurs, it’s exhausting to undo that.”

“Get your s— collectively, Kessler”

Used most frequently when: Jazz middle Walker Kessler resides his life. (Kessler informed me to ask Hardy about this one.)

Will’s take: “I’d say it’s 98% simply busting his balls. I say it to him 98% of the time not on the basketball courtroom. He may very well be consuming breakfast and I’ll stroll by him and say ‘Get your s— collectively, Kessler.’

“He’s such a conscientious child. He’s such an over-analyzer at occasions. He’s very a lot a perfectionist. He’s at all times nervous that he’s not doing the fitting factor. And so it’s simply sort of turn into like a sarcastic means of me busting his balls. And he is aware of in that second that like he’s not doing something mistaken in any respect. However for no matter cause, it will get a smile or amusing out of him most occasions that I say it, and I feel in all probability it’s as a result of most of time it’s not at observe. It’s actually when he’s doing anything.

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“There’s simply moments of banter and sarcasm, to make it possible for they know that — I’m going to be on them. I need to win. I’m aggressive all of these issues — however I additionally know this isn’t life and demise. I additionally know that typically you simply need to chortle just a little bit. Take the sting off some.”



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Utah

Avian flu affecting Utah turkey facilities, UDAF confirms

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Avian flu affecting Utah turkey facilities, UDAF confirms


TAYLORSVILLE — Four new cases of avian flu outbreaks have been reported in Utah, affecting three Piute County turkey facilities, the Utah Department of Agriculture and Food said in a press release.

“Between November 10 to 19, 2024, three turkey farms in Piute County totaling 107,800 turkeys and one backyard flock of 253 birds in Salt Lake County were confirmed positive for HPAI,” the department said. “Though the overall risk to public health remains low, HPAI is a serious disease, requiring rapid response, including depopulation of affected flocks as it is highly contagious and fatal to poultry.”

There are currently five poultry farms in Utah under quarantine, according to the department.

In the backyard flock because it’s so deadly, all but 33 birds died. All the turkeys are being depopulated because it’s highly contagious,” said Caroline Hargraves with the Utah Department of Agriculture and Food.

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Officials said affected birds were depopulated within 24 hours of the reported outbreaks, and that impacts on food supply are expected to be limited.

“State and federal personnel are on-site to ensure all requirements for disinfection and proper disposal are followed,” the department said.

Officials said that poultry owners should “practice strong biosecurity and monitor flocks for signs of illness.”

The Utah Department of Agriculture and Food asked poultry owners to report sick birds to the State Veterinarian’s Office at statevet@utah.gov. They also said that people interacting with sick birds should take special precautions including using personal protective equipment.

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Voices: Utah’s LGBTQ+ community has faced adversity before. We can do it again.

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Voices: Utah’s LGBTQ+ community has faced adversity before. We can do it again.


Displayed at the Utah Pride Center is a quilt panel honoring Michael Spence, also known as the drag queen Tracy Ross. This display helped me connect the recent news of Donald Trump’s reelection with a reminder of a past defined by marginalization and a future where hard-won rights are again at risk.

During his first term, the Trump administration worked to undermine LGBTQ+ protections. I fear a second Trump administration will roll back rights for LGBTQ+ citizens, particularly for transgender individuals.

But we have been here before. By the 1980s, few states recognized hate crimes against LGBTQ+ individuals. Homosexuality — or sodomy — was criminalized, and many states enacted policies to block lesbian and gay educators from public schools or discussing their private lives at work. Protections in housing and employment in Utah were only won in 2015.

Today, we face a similar fight, though we now have the historical context and resources to help us resist.

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Reflecting on Michael Spence’s life and legacy led me back to Utah’s response during the AIDS crisis. Utah did not begin recording cases of HIV/AIDS until 1983 with Robert Michael Painter and one other person. After about six years of deflecting the problem, President Ronald Reagan helped Congress pass its first substantive federal funding with the AIDS Service Demonstration Grants — of which Utah received $6.4 million for research — and then with the CARE Act, named after Ryan White in 1990. While much of the nation exhorted condemnations and cautionary tales about AIDS, I have found no comments on the epidemic from Governors Scott Matheson or Norman Bangerter. Meanwhile, Utah Bureau of Epidemiology Director Craig Nichols refused to connect advocacy groups considered to be too centered on gay and lesbian rights with federal grant funds. Utahns with AIDS were left on their own and could only rely on the state to count them as a statistic to report.

The lack of government support galvanized Utah’s lesbian and gay community to step up to meet the crisis. In 1985, Dr. Patty Reagan founded the Salt Lake AIDS Foundation (now the Utah AIDS Foundation). Other groups, like the People With AIDS Coalition; AIDS Project Utah; Gay and Lesbian Community Center and Clinic; and ACT-UP (AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power) worked to support and educate the public. Tensions often rose between leaders and volunteers, with overlapping missions and limited resources, thus creating friction. Yet, the efforts of activists like Dave Sharpton and Sheldon Spears, mobilized a community determined to survive. Sharpton, along with others, founded Horizon House, a sanctuary for those with HIV/AIDS who had nowhere else to go.

Utah’s first public memorial event was a 1989 candlelight vigil that began at Saint Mark’s Episcopal Cathedral and passed Temple Square before ending at the Salt Palace, where an enormous section of the National AIDS Memorial Quilt was displayed. Religious and civic leaders joined this event, marking a significant moment of public solidarity and inspiring the first Pride march two years later. Another vigil, in 1990, took place in Memory Grove, where hundreds gathered to honor lives lost. These memorials provided a rare, public space for grieving and solidarity amid the ongoing crisis and the humanization of public health statistics. Now annual fundraisers, marathons and walk-a-thons are held across the state.

In my research, I have so far found names for only 366 Utahns who died from AIDS — many who were born and raised in Utah, but were far from home in their last days. Today, the AIDS Memorial Quilt remains a testament to lives cut short and our chosen community’s resilience, standing as both a memorial and a reminder of how far we’ve come.

In the face of a familiar future, I recall the strength that Utah’s lesbian and gay community displayed during the AIDS crisis. While we have come a long way, the familiar challenges ahead require a unified response. Utah’s LGBTQ+ community now has more tools than ever: social media, massive fundraising resources and effective grassroots organizing. The COVID-19 pandemic also strengthened our sense of community and readiness.

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As an historian of LGBTQ+ Utah, I am inspired by the strength, unity and resilience that our community has shown throughout history. We have confronted adversity before, from organizing during the AIDS crisis to advocating for marriage equality and nondiscrimination protections — and we can do it again.

Randell Hoffman (he/they) is a historian, preservationist and quilter committed to making history accessible and relevant to diverse communities.

Randell Hoffman (he/they) is a historian, preservationist and quilter committed to making history accessible and relevant to diverse communities. As an independent researcher of Utah’s LGBTQ+ history, Randy focuses on amplifying overlooked narratives and fostering spaces where historical preservation intersects with community empowerment.

The Salt Lake Tribune is committed to creating a space where Utahns can share ideas, perspectives and solutions that move our state forward. We rely on your insight to do this. Find out how to share your opinion here, and email us at voices@sltrib.com.



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5th shutout against Utah HC prompts internal reflection

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5th shutout against Utah HC prompts internal reflection


For the third time this month and fifth time this season, the Utah Hockey Club failed to score a single goal in a game. This time they fell 1-0 to the Boston Bruins on Thursday night.

The band 4 Non Blondes said it best: What’s going on?

“In the first period we had good momentum, we created good offense and then we started to get in the box way too much,” said head coach André Tourigny after the game. “That cost us momentum.”

The third period was full of chances for Utah HC, but they just couldn’t capitalize.

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At one point, a give-and-go created a perfect opportunity for Maveric Lamoureux at the top of the crease, but his shot went off the underside of the crossbar and out.

On another occasion, a power play bid from Nick Schmaltz hit a body in front of the net and bounced just wide. UHC just couldn’t buy a goal.

The Bruins are glad to get a win in their first game under interim head coach Joe Sacco. Additionally, Elias Lindholm scored the game’s lone goal, breaking a 17-game personal goal drought.

It was a big step in the right direction for the Bruins.

How this works

This is a three-part article geared toward three different audiences.

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  • First, we’ll have “Utah hockey for dummies” for all you new hockey fans. Welcome, by the way — we’re glad you’ve taken an interest in the greatest sport in the world.
  • Next, we’ll have a section titled “Utah hockey for casual fans,” aimed at those who have a basic understanding of the sport.
  • Finally, we’ll have “Utah hockey for nerds.” That will be for those of you who, like me, think about nothing but hockey all day, every day.

Feedback is welcome, so let me know what you think in the comments of this article or the comments section on “X.”

Utah hockey for dummies

Before we get into the nitty gritty details of the game, let’s take a moment to appreciate Robert Bortuzzo and Mark Kastelic. You’d think a game with only one goal would be relatively boring, but these two ensured that was not the case.

Bortuzzo and Kastelic fought each other twice. They had been engaged in some confrontation in the previous game between the two teams on Oct. 19 and they got their opportunity to finish their business a month later.

On the first bout, Bortuzzo left the bench for the purpose of fighting. As Conor Geekie learned in the preseason, that’s not allowed. Geekie got a one-game suspension and I’d expect the same for Bortuzzo.

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Utah hockey for casual fans

Karel Vejmelka was Utah HC’s best player Thursday, and it wasn’t even close. That’s a major positive point for Utah as Connor Ingram did not accompany the team on this road trip due to an upper-body injury.

Vejmelka will guard the net for the immediate future with Jaxson Stauber backing him up. Tourigny is not worried about giving Vejmelka the net.

“He’s played 50 games twice in his career, so it’s not like he’s a rookie goalie,” Tourigny said before the game. “He did it in the past and he’s capable of doing it again.”

It’s clear that Vejmelka thrives on high shot volume. He stopped all 15 shots he faced in the first period on Thursday, and then stopped 15 of the 16 that came in the ensuing periods.

Thursday’s performance comes after he made headlines against the Carolina Hurricanes last week when he stopped 49 of 50 shots.

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Ingram’s injury is considered day-to-day. He should be back soon, but the net may belong to Vejmelka anyway. Vejmelka has been the much better goalie over the last handful of games.

Utah hockey for nerds

On their last 25 power plays, Utah HC has scored just one goal, and with the amount of penalties they’ve been taking, they’re not putting themselves in a position to succeed.

Let’s break this down, piece by piece, starting with the power play.

Utah HC seems to have no problem setting up in the zone on the power play. They move the puck well and they even get lots of high-quality shots. Why isn’t the puck going in?

Tourigny believes it’s a question of urgency.

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“The guys have to realize (that) if we want to score goals, we have to get in the dirty areas,” he said. “We need to get there with passion. Not just get there — get there with burning desire to score goals.”

As far as the penalties go, they need to be more disciplined. Sure, there are necessary penalties and yes, accidents happen, but taking eight minor penalties in one game is a recipe for disaster.

“I don’t know,” Schmaltz said after the game when asked about accountability for how many penalties the guys were taking. “I feel like we’re beating a dead horse a little bit on that topic.”

The Bruins only had one power play goal, but keep in mind that spending almost an entire period shorthanded significantly limits the amount of scoring chances you get.

Schmaltz also pointed out that when the other team gets so many looks on the power play, their top players are extremely involved in the game while your top players sit on the bench.

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What’s next?

Utah HC gets a day to regroup before visiting Sidney Crosby and the Pittsburgh Penguins on Saturday.

As good as Crosby is, he hasn’t been enough to drag the Penguins into the fight. They’ve struggled in a number of areas on the ice, prompting all sorts of trade rumors — even some involving Crosby, who has been a Penguin since 2005.

Utah HC’s job going into Pittsburgh is to get back on track. They need to find ways to score (especially on the power play) and they need to be disciplined away from the puck. If they do this and continue to get solid goaltending, they could receive a much-needed confidence boost.

The game starts at 5 p.m. MDT and will be streamed on Utah HC+ and Utah 16.





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