Utah
Utes avenge loss against rival Cougars
“That was fun!”
That simple exclamation by University of Utah volleyball coach Beth Launiere pretty succinctly summed up Friday night’s rivalry match between the No. 23-ranked Utah Utes and the No. 21-ranked BYU Cougars.
At least for the host Utes.
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In the second meeting this season between the in-state rivals, in front of a record 5,000-plus crowd in the Huntsman Center, Utah was far and away the better team.
Utah won 3 sets to 0 in what was its first win at home against BYU since 2010. The victory also snapped a five-game losing streak against the Cougars.
When all was said and done, it wasn’t a particularly competitive match, with Utah winning 25-16, 25-15, 25-16.
The Utes were better, set-to-set, at nearly everything. Better at kills, assists, service aces, blocks, hitting percentage, point scoring percentage and sideout percentage.
You name it, and the Utes probably did it better than the Cougars on Friday.
It was something of a dominant showing really, only a few weeks — four matches — removed from a BYU win against Utah (in five sets) in Provo.
What changed over the last couple of weeks?
“We are at the point in the season where we are trying to work on the things that get us in trouble,” Launiere said. “A lot of big things have been working for us, so we are just trying to get a little bit better at some of the smaller things.”
Two of those “smaller things” were particularly instrumental in the Utes’ victory. Net play was one. Lack of errors the other.
From the outset, Utah controlled the net, which was something of a surprise given BYU entered the match leading the Big 12 in total blocks this season, with the Cougars also second in the league in blocks per set.
BYU was without its top outside hitter in Claire Little, who missed the match with illness. Her absence necessitated big minutes from freshman Elli Mortensen, who had her good and bad moments.
But even when things went well for Mortensen and the Cougars, it was the Utes who were consistently thriving at the net.
“I thought we controlled the net well,” Launiere said. “We’ve been working really hard on our middles, especially, going up and contesting.”
And when Utah wasn’t affecting BYU at the net, the Utes were registering kill after kill after kill, led by Kamryn Gibadlo.
The sophomore was electric throughout the competition and finished with a game-high 15 kills, made all the more impressive by a hitting percentage of .517. When she got the chance, more often than not Gibadlo made good on it.
She credited some of that to the rivalry itself.
“When we played them and we lost, it was such a tough feeling losing to a rival like that, so we were all just so pumped up for this game and I honestly knew coming into it that we were going to get it done. I was so confident,” Gibadlo said.
It helps that Gibadlo has worked especially hard this season to become a more versatile attacker.
“The biggest thing we’ve been working on is mixing up shots,” she said. “… I’ve been focusing on that.”
It paid off against the Cougars.
“It has really been quite extraordinary watching Gibby’s progression as an attacker,” Launiere said. “Last year and early in the season she was just a cross court hitter.
“She just continues to add different shots, and she is getting tough to stop. When you take something away she has something else, and that is what great hitters do.”
Arguably as important to the Utes’ victory though was the lack of errors.
Where BYU finished with a combined 25 service or service reception errors, Utah was remarkably clean overall, with just 12 errors combined.
Call it composure, home court advantage, whatever really. Utah was the more poised team throughout.
“We played as clean of volleyball as we have all season,” Launiere said. “We made very few errors. That is what we were trying to strive for, to put together a match where we were efficient and keep the errors down, and that was our best serving match of the season. From an attacking standpoint, low error. We just played really good volleyball.”
Making that all the better was the record-setting crowd, for which Launiere went out of her way to thank university administration for getting out to the match.
“I’m so appreciative of that,” she said, “and this team deserved it because they are putting together a great season.”
BYU, meanwhile, was well aware of its need to play better. Against the Utes sure, but also going forward for the remainder of the season.
“We needed to serve and pass better and get more kills,” BYU coach Heather Olmstead said. “We just have to keep getting better at volleyball and building our skills.”
For Utah, the win teased some of its long term potential, both in the upcoming postseason and in future seasons. At 19-5 overall and 9-4 in Big 12 play right now, the Utes are in the upper tier in the league, but they want more.
“It is such a good team win,” Olsen said. “It kind of makes me hungry for more. We really came together and played true Utah volleyball that we have been striving for, which makes me hungry for more in the upcoming games.”
Utah
Utahns first or eroding the Utah way? House OKs measure cracking down on illegal immigration
SALT LAKE CITY — A controversial Utah proposal to crack down on the presence of immigrants in the country illegally that had seemed stalled gained new life Friday, passing muster in new form in a relatively narrow vote.
In a 39-33 vote, the Utah House approved HB386 — amended with portions of HB88, which stalled in the House on Monday — and the revamped measure now goes to the Utah Senate for consideration.
The reworked version of HB386, originally meant just to repeal outdated immigration legislation, now also contains provisions prohibiting immigrants in the country illegally from being able to tap into in-state university tuition, certain home loan programs and certain professional licensing.
The new HB386 isn’t as far-reaching as HB88, which also would have prohibited immigrants in the country illegally from being able to access certain public benefits like food at food pantries, immunizations for communicable diseases and emergency housing.
Moreover, Rep. Trevor Lee, R-Layton and the HB88 sponsor, stressed that the new provisions in HB386 wouldn’t impact immigrants in the country legally. He touted HB88 as a means of making sure taxpayer money isn’t funneled to programming that immigrants in the country illegally can tap.
Rep. Lisa Shepherd, R-Provo, the HB386 sponsor, sounded a similar message, referencing, with chagrin, the provision allowing certain students in the country illegally to access lower in-state tuition rates at Utah’s public universities. Because of such provisions “we’re taking care of other countries’ children first, and I want to take care of Utahns first. In my campaign I ran and said Utahns first and this bill will put Utahns first,” she said.
If we stop young folks who have lived here much of their life from going to school and getting an education, it is really clear to me that we have hurt that person. It’s not clear to me at all that we have benefitted the rest of us.
–Rep. Ray Ward, R-Bountiful
The relatively narrow 39-33 vote, atypical in the GOP-dominated Utah Legislature, followed several other narrow, hotly contested procedural votes to formally amend HB386. Foes, including both Democrats and Republicans, took particular umbrage with provisions prohibiting immigrants in the country illegally from being able to pay in-state tuition and access certain scholarships.
As is, students in the country illegally who have attended high school for at least three years in Utah and meet other guidelines may pay lower in-state tuition, but if they have to pay out-of-state tuition instead, they could no longer afford to go to college.
“If we stop young folks who have lived here much of their life from going to school and getting an education, it is really clear to me that we have hurt that person. It’s not clear to me at all that we have benefitted the rest of us,” said Rep. Ray Ward, R-Bountiful.
Rep. Hoang Nguyen, D-Salt Lake City, noted her own hardscrabble upbringing as an immigrant from Vietnam and said the changes outlined in the reworked version of HB386 run counter to what she believes Utah stands for.
“I fear that what we’re doing here in Utah is we are eroding what truly makes Utah special, the Utah way. We are starting to adopt policies that are regressive and don’t take care of people. Utahns are one thing. Citizens are one thing. People is the first thing,” she said.
Rep. John Arthur, D-Cottonwood Heights, said the measure sends a negative message to the immigrant students impacted.
“If we pass this bill today, colleagues, we will be telling these young people — again, who have graduated from our high schools, these kids who have gone to at least three years of school here — that you’re no longer a Utahn,” he said.
If we are compassionate to those who come the legal way and we are compassionate to those who already live here, that does not mean that we lack compassion for others in other ways.
–Rep. Kristen Chevrier, R-Highland
Rep. Kristen Chevrier, R-Highland, said the debate underscores a “fallacy” about compassion. She backed the reworked version of HB386, saying Utah resources should be first spend on those in the country legally.
“If we are compassionate to those who come the legal way and we are compassionate to those who already live here, that does not mean that we lack compassion for others in other ways,” she said.
The original version of HB386 calls for repeal of immigration laws on the books that are outdated because other triggering requirements have not been met or they run counter to federal law.
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.
Utah
Utah man dies of injuries sustained in avalanche in Big Cottonwood Canyon
SALT LAKE CITY (KUTV) — A man died after he was caught in an avalanche in Big Cottonwood Canyon over the weekend.
A spokesperson for the Salt Lake County Sheriff’s Office confirmed on Thursday that Kevin Williams, 57, had died.
He, along with one other person, was hospitalized in critical condition after Saturday’s avalanche in the backcountry.
MORE | Big Cottonwood Canyon Avalanche
In an interview with 2News earlier this week, one of Williams’ close friends, Nate Burbidge, described him as a loving family man.
“Kevin’s an amazing guy. He’s always serving, looking for ways that he can connect with others,” Burbidge said.
A GoFundMe was set up to help support Williams’ family.
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Utah
911 recordings detail hours leading up to discovery of Utah girl, mother dead in Las Vegas
CONTENT WARNING: This report discusses suicide and includes descriptions of audio from 911 calls that some viewers may find disturbing.
LAS VEGAS — Exclusively obtained 911 recordings detail the hours leading up to the discovery of an 11-year-old Utah girl and her mother dead inside a Las Vegas hotel room in an apparent murder-suicide.
Addi Smith and her mother, Tawnia McGeehan, lived in West Jordan and had traveled to Nevada for the JAMZ cheerleading competition.
The calls show a growing sense of urgency from family members and coaches, and several hours passing before relatives learned what happened.
MORE | Murder-Suicide
Below is a timeline of the key moments, according to dispatch records. All times are Pacific Time.
10:33 a.m. — Call 1
After Addi and her mother failed to appear at the cheerleading competition, Addi’s father and stepmother called dispatch for a welfare check.
Addi and her mother were staying at the Rio hotel. The father told dispatch that hotel security had already attempted contact.
“Security went up and knocked on the door. There’s no answer or response it doesn’t look like they checked out or anything…”
11:18 a.m. and 11:27 a.m. — Calls 2 and 3
As concern grew, Addi’s coach contacted the police two times within minutes.
“We think the child possibly is in imminent danger…”
11:26 a.m. — Call 4
Addi’s stepmother placed another call to dispatch, expressing escalating concern.
“We are extremely concerned we believe that something might have seriously happened.”
She said that Tawnia’s car was still at the hotel.
Police indicated officers were on the way.
2:26 p.m. — Call 5
Nearly three hours after the initial welfare check request, fire personnel were en route to the scene. It appeared they had been in contact with hotel security.
Fire told police that they were responding to a possible suicide.
“They found a note on the door.”
2:35 p.m. — Call 6
Emergency medical personnel at the scene told police they had located two victims.
“It’s going to be gunshot wound to the head for both patients with notes”
A dispatcher responded:
“Oh my goodness that’s not okay.”
2:36 p.m. — Call 7
Moments later, fire personnel relayed their assessment to law enforcement:
“It’s going to be a murder suicide, a juvenile and a mother.”
2:39 p.m. — Call 8
Unaware of what had been discovered, Addi’s father called dispatch again.
“I’m trying to file a missing persons report for my daughter.”
He repeats the details he knows for the second time.
3:13 p.m. — Call 9
Father and stepmother call again seeking information and continue to press for answers.
“We just need some information. There was a room check done around 3:00 we really don’t know where to start with all of this Can we have them call us back immediately?”
Dispatch responded:
“As soon as there’s a free officer, we’ll have them reach out to you.”
4:05 p.m. — Call 10
More than an hour later, Addi’s father was put in contact with the police on the scene. He pleaded for immediate action.
“I need someone there I need someone there looking in that room”
The officer confirmed that they had officers currently in the room.
Addi’s father asks again what they found, if Addi and her mother are there, and if their things were missing.
The officer, who was not on scene, said he had received limited information.
5:23 p.m. — Call 11
Nearly seven hours after the first welfare check request, Addi’s grandmother contacted police, describing conflicting information circulating within the family.
“Some people are telling us that they were able to get in, and they were not in the hotel room, and other people saying they were not able to get in the hotel room, and we need to know”
She repeated the details of the case. Dispatch said officers will call her back once they have more information.
Around 8:00 p.m. — Press Conference
Later that evening, Las Vegas Metropolitan Police held a news conference confirming that Addi and her mother, Tawnia McGeehan, were found dead inside the hotel room.
The investigation remains ongoing.
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