jueves, 28 de octubre de 2021

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Added: 28/10/2021

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Majuu Jouka Shoujo Utea Ep.2

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Author: pollenolle
Added: 27/10/2021

High school volleyball: Updated 4A/3A/2A/1A state tournament pairings

sociopat_empat - stock.adobe.com

Playoff match-ups are now set in four of the six classifications.

Class 4A

Note: Top 3 seeds receive first-round byes, No. 1 Ridgeline, No. 2 Desert Hills, No. 3 Crimson Cliffs.

UHSAA Bracket

First round (Oct. 27)

  • No. 8 Mountain Crest def. No. 9 Hurricane, 25-20, 25-23, 22-25, 25-17
  • No. 4 Sky View def. No. 13 Logan, 25-13, 25-12, 25-16
  • No. 5 Cedar City def. No. 12 Dixie, 25-11, 25-11, 25-17
  • No. 7 Green Canyon def. No. 10 Snow Canyon, 25-20, 18-25, 25-20, 25-27, 15-11
  • No. 6 Pine View def. No. 11 Bear River, 12-25, 25-19, 25-15, 19-25, 15-13

Quarterfinals (Oct. 27)

  • No. 1 Ridgeline def. No. 8 Mountain Crest, 25-19, 25-17, 33-35, 25-16
  • No. 4 Sky View def. No. 5 Cedar City, 25-18, 20-25, 23-25, 25-13, 15-5
  • No. 2 Desert Hills def. No. 7 Green Canyon, 25-16, 25-16, 25-18
  • No. 3 Crimson Cliffs def. No. 6 Pine View, 25-15, 25-14, 25-19

Friday’s semifinals

At UVU

  • No. 4 Sky View vs. No. 1 Ridgeline, 9:30 a.m.
  • No. 3 Crimson Cliffs vs. No. 2 Desert Hills, 11 a.m.

Class 3A

UHSAA Bracket

First round (Oct. 23)

  • No. 16 Canyon View def. No. 17 Providence Hall, 25-11, 25-12, 25-23
  • No. 13 Juan Diego def. No. 20 Ben Lomond, 25-7-, 25-12,25-10
  • No. 12 Judge Memorial def. No. 21 ALA, 25-16, 25-11, 25-19
  • No. 15 Grand def. No. 18 Summit Academy, 25-10, 25-13, 25-12
  • No. 14 Richfield def. No. 19 Grantsville, 25-27, 25-18, 25-13, 25-15

Second round (Oct. 27)

  • No. 1 Emery def. No. 16 Canyon View, 25-22, 25-15, 25-19
  • No. 8 Ogden def. No. 9 Juab, 23-25, 12-25, 25-23, 25-22, 17-15
  • No. 4 Union def. No. 13 Juan Diego, 25-23, 25-13, 25-19
  • No. 5 South Summit def. No. 12 Judge Memorial, 25-17, 25-11, 25-15
  • No. 2 Morgan def. No. 15 Grand, 25-11, 25-20, 25-18
  • No. 10 Delta def. No. 7 Layton Christian, 25-15, 22-25, 27-25, 22-25, 15-9
  • No. 14 Richfield def. No. 3 Carbon, 25-22, 26-28, 18-25, 25-20, 15-4
  • No. 6 North Sanpete def. No. 11 Manti, 27-25, 19-25, 25-18, 25-15

Quarterfinals (Oct. 27)

  • No. 1 Emery def. No. 8 Ogden, 25-4, 25-16, 25-12
  • No. 4 Union def. No. 5 South Summit, 27-25, 25-12, 25-21
  • No. 2 Morgan def. No. 10 Delta, 25-18, 25-14, 25-15
  • No. 14 Richfield def. No. 6 North Sanpete, 25-22, 25-23, 25-18

Thursday’s semifinals

At UVU

  • No. 4 Union vs. No. 1 Emery, 9:30 a.m.
  • No. 14 Richfield vs. No. 2 Morgan, 11 a.m.
  • Note: Championship at 4:30 p.m.

Class 2A

UHSAA Bracket

First round (Oct. 23)

  • No. 16 Draper APA def. No. 17 Rockwell, 23-25, 25-20, 26-24, 25-20
  • No. 9 Rowland Hall def. No. 24 Utah Military Hillfield, 25-12, 25-9, 25-9
  • No. 13 North Sevier def. No. 20 Merit Prep, 25-10, 25-7, 25-10
  • No. 12 Beaver def. No. 21 Wasatch Academy, 25-7, 25-3, 25-7
  • No. 15 Waterford def. No. 18 San Juan, 25-20, 25-22, 26-24
  • No. 10 Duchesne def. No. 23 Utah Military Camp Williams, 25-3, 25-0, 25-4
  • No. 19 Parowan def. No. 14 Freedom Prep, 25-14, 25-20, 25-17
  • No. 11 South Sevier def. No. 22 APA West Valley, 25-10, 25-10, 25-14

Friday’s second round

At UVU

  • No. 16 Draper APA vs. No. 1 Gunnison Valley, 9 a.m.
  • No. 9 Rowland Hall vs. No. 8 American Heritage, 9 a.m.
  • No. 13 North Sevier vs. No. 4 North Summit, 9 a.m.
  • No. 12 Beaver vs. No. 5 Millard, 9 a.m.
  • No. 15 Waterford vs. No. 2 Kanab, 10:30 a.m.
  • No. 10 Duchesne vs. No. 7 Maeser Prep, 10:30 a.m.
  • No. 19 Parowan vs. No. 3 St. Joseph, 10:30 a.m.
  • No. 11 South Sevier vs. No. 6 Enterprise, 10:30 a.m.

Class 1A

UHSAA Bracket

First round (Oct. 23)

  • No. 16 Manila def. No. 17 Bryce Valley, 25-27, 25-19, 25-19, 25-18
  • No. 13 Valley def. No. 20 Mount Vernon, 25-8, 25-7, 25-11
  • No. 12 Altamont def. No. 21 Pinnacle, 25-6, 25-8, 25-9
  • No. 18 Whitehorse def. No. 15 Tintic, 25-22, 14-25, 25-23, 25-22
  • No. 14 Wayne def. No. 19 Water Canyon, 25-17, 25-18, 25-17
  • No. 11 Monticello def. No. 22 Dugway, 25-14, 25-12, 25-4

Friday’s second round

At UVU

  • No. 16 Manila vs. No. 1 ICS, 4 p;.m.
  • No. 9 Green River vs. No. 8 Milford, 4 p.m.
  • No. 13 Valley vs. No. 4 Rich, 4 p.m.
  • No. 12 Altamont vs. No. 5 Escalante, 4 p.m.
  • No. 18 Whitehorse vs. No. 2 Panguitch, 5:30 p.m.
  • No. 10 Monument Valley vs. No. 7 Tabiona, 5:30 p.m.
  • No. 14 Wayne vs. No. 3 Piute, 5:30 p.m.
  • No. 11 Monticello vs. No. 6 Wendover, 5:30 p.m.


from Deseret News https://ift.tt/3pzGQoi

Do Utahns support removing the state’s death penalty? New poll finds opinion is shifting

A firing squad chair in the execution chamber at Utah State Prison as seen through the rifle port May 5, 2004.
A firing squad chair in the execution chamber at Utah State Prison is pictured, as seen through the rifle port, on May 5, 2004. | Jeremy Harmon, Deseret News

One of the state’s most conservative counties backs repealing, replacing state’s death penalty

As an effort to repeal and replace Utah’s death penalty continues to gain momentum, a new poll shows most Utahns support keeping the death penalty on Utah’s books — but now by a vastly smaller margin than past surveys have indicated.

A very slight majority of Utahns — 51% — oppose eliminating Utah’s death penalty as a sentencing option in future cases compared to 40% who support doing away with it, according to a new Deseret News/Hinckley Institute of Politics poll. About 8% said they didn’t know what to think.

The survey released Wednesday is the latest poll to gauge Utahns’ temperature on the death penalty as an effort to repeal and replace it is gaining steam, but is expected to draw heated debate on Utah’s Capitol Hill during the Utah Legislature’s 2022 general session slated for January.

Dan Jones & Associates conducted the poll of 746 registered Utah voters from Oct. 14-21. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.54 percentage points.

The poll shows Utahns nowadays have developed increasingly mixed views about capital punishment than they have in the past.

Consider the results of a Deseret News-KSL survey conducted by the same pollster, Dan Jones & Associates, back in 2010, which found 79% of Utahns either strongly or somewhat favored the death penalty, compared to only 16% that opposed executions.

That 2010 poll showed Utahn’s support of the death penalty had not waned at all from a previous survey in 2003, which asked Utahns the same question. The results were strikingly similar even though seven years separated the two. In the 2003 poll, 78% percent favored the death penalty and 17% opposed it.

The nearly 50% to 40% split comes after a 2018 study by the state’s Commission on Criminal and Juvenile Justice suggested support for capital punishment may be waning in the state of Utah.

The new poll figures also came the same day the Utah County Commission — the legislative body of one of Utah’s most conservative counties — voted 2-1 to support a resolution calling on Utah lawmakers to support a bill to repeal and replace the death penalty with a new sentencing option of 45 years to life in prison.

What does this mean for efforts to repeal and replace Utah’s death penalty?

Told of the poll results Wednesday, Connor Boyack, president of the Libertas Institute, a Utah-based libertarian think tank that’s helping drive the 2022 bill to repeal and replace Utah’s death penalty, said it’s “significant” that the latest poll shows Utahns over the years have become increasingly opposed to capital punishment.

“The decreasing public support for the death penalty shows what we’ve seen with elected officials in recent years, and that is this: The more people learn about the death penalty, the less they support it,” Boyack said.

For years, Boyack said his organization and others have been trying to “educate the public about the problems with capital punishment, and there are many.”

“As that education has happened, public support has waned, and predictably so,” Boyack said. “Because the death penalty is a law that creates many other problems. The public doesn’t want to tolerate the risks to innocent people, the increased cost to taxpayers, the re-traumatization of victims’ family members through constant appeals. So as people learn about this they increasingly drop their support. The same thing is happening with legislators.”

Boyack and other supporters have told the Deseret News they’re confident enough legislators will support next year’s bill to get it approved, even though past attempts have failed.

Boyack said if he was able to “speak directly to every Utah voter” for 15 minutes to outline the issues with the death penalty, “I’m convinced the poll numbers would be in our favor.”

“We’ve been out there talking to the public, and it’s incredible the number of people who would say, ‘Oh my gosh, I didn’t think about that before,’” Boyack said. “In the past decade, there’s clearly been a huge shift. Do we need to wait another decade to continue educating the public? I don’t think so. I think the trend is indicative of the fact that truth is on our side.”

Boyack thinks if the question were phrased differently, it’s likely even more Utahns would support the legislation set to be considered by lawmakers next year.

“I feel like the question doesn’t accurately represent what’s being done in this legislation,” Boyack said. “Rep. (Lowry) Snow is not simply doing away with the death penalty and leaving nothing in its place. His is an effort to replace it with something that will allow for aggravated murders to have a harsher penalty, give prosecutors another tool they can use to pressure defendants into a plea deal of some sort.”

If the poll’s question were phrased to indicate the death penalty would be replaced with a new sentence of 45 years to life — in addition to life in prison without parole, which is already on Utah’s books as a sentencing tool — Boyack said he thinks even more Utahns would be supportive.

“We’ve seen that with legislators themselves, legislators who were a little uncomfortable with a straight repeal bill,” he said. “I personally know of legislators I’ve had conversations with who when we explain that this is a repeal and replace bill, that there is a solution in the bill in addition to just taking the death penalty away, their support increases or they move from being a fence-sitter to supporting the bill.”

Why Utah County Commission supports abolishing Utah’s death penalty

The three-member elected commission that represents the heavily Republican-leaning Utah County voted on Wednesday to throw its support behind the effort to repeal and replace Utah’s death penalty.

“We call on the Utah Legislature to remove this option from state law, as nearly two dozen other states have, and replace it with alternative measures that can still help ensure justice is served,” the resolution approved by the Utah County Commission on Wednesday states.

Utah County Commissioner Amelia Powers Gardner said she brought the resolution forward for consideration for several reasons. One is because as a fiscal conservative, she’s struck by the fact that the average death penalty case costs $4 million.

Plus, Gardner pointed out throughout Utah County’s history, prosecutors have only successfully tried two murder cases to the point of death row. Out of those two cases, one of them was executed, and the other died of natural causes in prison.

“While I’m not necessarily opposed to having somebody brought to justice through the process of an execution, what I’m keenly aware of is that due to the restraints on the death penalty that are placed on us by the Supreme Court, it causes appeal after appeal after appeal,” she said. “And that creates a celebrity status for those on death row that costs the taxpayers millions of dollars, that re-victimizes families over and over again.”

Gardner said she’s not necessarily opposed to the death penalty, but “the fact that we’ve had almost 200 cases of people on death row exonerated in this country is very frightening to me.”

“It is very frightening to me that any government gets to decide who lives and who dies,” she said.

Gardner said there are two issues in politics that “I will not waver on.” One of those issues is “parental rights, and the other is I am pro life. Period.”

“And that includes even an egregious crime,” she said, “because I can guarantee you that the 18 so odd cases (nationally) that were exonerated on death row, it was an egregious crime and the people prosecuting it were sure that they had the right person. But apparently they didn’t. And that frightens me.”

Commissioner Bill Lee voted in favor of the resolution along with Gardner. Only Commissioner Tom Sakievich voted against.

Sakievich said he was concerned the resolution would send a “mixed signal that we’re completely opposed to all death penalties, thus taking away from the county attorney the option to prosecute for death penalty or not to prosecute for death penalty.”

Last month, Utah County Attorney David Leavitt announced he’ll no longer seek the death penalty, supporting the bill to repeal and replace.

“If we avoid the resolution, we allow him that latitude to continue to decide which way he wants to go with that while working with our state representatives,” Sakievich said.

The commissioner said neither the resolution nor the repeal and replace legislation address the “underlying issue” of decadeslong “back and forth, lifelong” appeals for every murder.

“You mentioned that you are pro life,” Sakievich said to Gardner. “I am definitely pro life. And that’s all the more reason why I say the punishment should always match the crime.”



from Deseret News https://ift.tt/3mmYWYq

Meet Bethany and Seth Mandel, the D.C. power couple out to popularize ‘Big Family’

Seth and Bethany Mandel celebrate the eighth birthday of their eldest daughter, far right, in Silver Spring, Md., on Sunday, Oct. 17, 2021. The power couple call themselves the parents of the Irishest Jewish kids on Earth.
Seth and Bethany Mandel celebrate the eighth birthday of their eldest daughter, far right, in Silver Spring, Md., on Sunday, Oct. 17, 2021. The power couple call themselves the parents of the Irishest Jewish kids on Earth. | Cheryl Diaz Meyer, for the Deseret News

With five kids and nearly 200K followers on Twitter, the couple uses social media to promote their brand of family values

SILVER SPRING, Md. — Utah may have the largest families in the nation, but on the East Coast, the beating heart of Big Family Inc. resides in the gloriously messy family room of Bethany and Seth Mandel.

It’s there, surrounded by toys, books and kids, that Bethany writes and tweets on a gray sectional couch, in between nursing her 3-month-old baby, shuttling two preschoolers to activities and homeschooling her two oldest children. Has she mentioned the dog? Truman is the springer spaniel-poodle mix always in search of a lap. But they’re usually taken.

Bethany’s husband, Seth, executive editor of the Washington Examiner Magazine, toggles between his Washington, D.C., office and their home, where he works on a laptop on the kitchen table, or wherever a space opens up. The couple have no home office; the bedrooms are all occupied by children. Their home is the domestic expression of chaos theory, the idea that astounding disorder can exist within an ordered structure of patterns and laws.

Married for 10 years, the Mandels are comfortable with mess. People who’ve delivered a baby in a car know that life can emerge and thrive in circumstances that aren’t sterile. The couple have more important things to worry about than whether the baby’s nasal aspirator is on the front steps, and whether there’s room to fit a drinking glass on the coffee table.

They have five children to raise, tens of thousands of Twitter followers to educate and entertain, and a nation to convince to have more children.

Bethany, a Deseret contributor, wrote about the pleasures of large families for Deseret Magazine earlier this year. “I look at my (then) four kids, and by golly, I like them. It makes me want more,” she wrote. After reading the piece, some people wrote her to say they’d decided to have another child.

Advocating for families — large families, in particular — has become a sort of mission for the couple, faithful Jews who traveled markedly different paths to arrive at this stage of life. “I joke that I see myself as PR for Big Family, like Big Tech or Big Oil,” Bethany said.

Bethany Mandel, center, nurses her 3-month-old son while visiting with friends during a birthday celebration for her eldest daughter in Silver Spring, Md., on Sunday, Oct. 17, 2021. Bethany and husband Seth call themselves the parents of the Irishest Jewish kids on Earth. Cheryl Diaz Meyer, for the Deseret News
Bethany Mandel, center, nurses her 3-month-old son while visiting with friends during a birthday celebration for her eldest daughter in Silver Spring, Md., on Sunday, Oct. 17, 2021. Bethany and husband Seth call themselves the parents of the Irishest Jewish kids on Earth.

‘I have white privilege?’

Bethany, 35, grew up in New York, the only child of parents who separated when she was 3. She was a latchkey kid who was often alone, and she lost her mother to complications of lupus at 16 and her father to suicide at age 19. “This,” she says, swirling her hands in the air as one child plays the piano and another runs through the room in a Halloween costume, “is very different from how I grew up.”

The couple’s current life is more familiar to Seth, 39, who grew up with two sisters in a middle-class neighborhood in New Jersey, the sort of place where children were sent outside early in the day with instructions to be home by dinner. At one point, both sets of grandparents and four sets of aunts and uncles also lived nearby. “I was surrounded by family,” he said. His parents are still together and just recently sold Seth’s childhood home.

Seth grew up reading Commentary magazine in a conservative-leaning family that helped to inform his views as an adult (despite voting for Democrat Al Gore for president when he was 18). Bethany, who had initially adopted her mother’s liberal views, found conservatism in college, where she said professors lectured her about her “white privilege.”

“I had a social-worker mom who became disabled when I was a teen. We lived in a single-wide trailer park. We had nothing. We were extremely poor, and then my mom died when I was 16, and I’m the one who removed her from life support because my dad wasn’t around anymore. And then I bounced around; I was on my own. Nobody in my family helped me. And I have white privilege?,” she recalled. “I would sit there seething.”

She worked full time throughout college — one year at City College in New York, the rest at Rutgers University in New Jersey. It was at Rutgers where she became friends with conservatives for the first time, and by the time she graduated with a history degree, she had come to realize that her beliefs were more in line with theirs than with liberal Democrats. She decided that she’d one day like to work in politics.

After leaving college, she worked for a year as a development assistant at a synagogue and then moved to Cambodia to teach fifth grade. In Cambodia, she became a denizen of Twitter, then just three years old. She used the social media platform both for entertainment and career advancement. “I followed everyone on Twitter that I thought I might want to work for.”

This included conservative think tanks like the Heritage Foundation, and the strategy paid off when she landed a job at Heritage that she saw mentioned on Twitter.

Mandel’s Twitter presence also led to her subsequent job, after Commentary editor John Podhoretz reached out and said, “I don’t know what I want you to do, but I want you to come work for me.”

A few months later, he offered jobs to both of them; Seth became an editor and Bethany handled the magazine’s social media. “Commentary is very cerebral and very intellectual, and that’s not who I am, but that’s what Seth is,” she said. “They came for me, but Seth was the better fit.”

That’s why Bethany was happy to step away when she got pregnant with her first child, a daughter, now 8. Though she hasn’t had a full-time salaried position since then, there’s been no shortage of work: freelance writing and editing (to include a children’s book series called “Heroes of Liberty” that features people such as former President Ronald Reagan and economist Thomas Sowell) and editing for the conservative website Ricochet. A podcast and a book are forthcoming.

Seth, too, left Commentary and went on to become op-ed editor for the New York Post before joining The Washington Examiner to edit its magazine. Like Bethany, he’s a graduate of Rutgers, although they weren’t there at the same time.

Seth and Bethany Mandel watch the preparations for their eldest daughter’s birthday in Silver Spring, Md., on Sunday, Oct. 17, 2021. The power couple call themselves the parents of the Irishest Jewish kids on Earth. Cheryl Diaz Meyer, for the Deseret News
Seth and Bethany Mandel watch the preparations for their eldest daughter’s birthday in Silver Spring, Md., on Sunday, Oct. 17, 2021.

Attack of the ‘Grandma killer’

On social media, Bethany is witty and blunt, and, in her words, snarky. She had no problem, for example, embracing the moniker “Grandma killer” when she trended on Twitter in May 2020 for arguing against lockdowns. Her tweet even made the news in Israel and the U.K. She has 86,000 followers on Twitter; her husband, nearly 100,000.

She’s also been upfront on social media about the challenges of married life, at one point writing a Twitter thread about a time when she was considering divorce. The couple got help from a counselor who helped them improve their communication and identify where the problem began. Eight years later, Bethany described the couple as “disgustingly in love.”

“Our marriage took work,” she said. “I’m glad we did it.”

Seth, like his wife, tweets a mixture of news, commentary, jokes and snippets of family life. Other than describing himself as the father of the “five Irishest Jewish kids on Earth” (Bethany’s mom was Irish), he doesn’t reveal much about his children in public. Because their work is sometimes controversial and brings out the haters, and because the internet is forever, the couple doesn’t identify their children publicly or allow their faces to be shown in photographs that are published. When the children are mentioned on social media; they have code names; for example, the son born in the car goes by “Altima,” the model of the car where he took his first breaths.

They are determined that their children have childhoods; no screens are allowed, except for special occasions.

“Because we are a homeschooling family, there is meaning in everything we do,” Seth says. “We realize that our days together are a chance for all sorts of learning opportunities.”

Dinner (a no-phone zone) is at 6 sharp each evening; bedtime at 7:30. The older children help with their younger siblings, even collecting the baby from his morning nap. “My kids are very well-behaved and that’s by training,” Bethany says. “It’s an expectation that we have.”

When they have dinner parties, which they do frequently, the children are present at the table. “People have told us, ‘Your house is very real. And everything in this town is very fake.’ We are not fake. We don’t try to be something that we’re not. Our house is a mess, welcome to it.”

True to form, many of their friendships have originated on Twitter. For example, the Mandels became friends through Twitter with Matt Whitlock, a communications professional who once worked for Utah GOP Sen. Orrin Hatch, and invited Whitlock and his wife for dinner before having met them in person. “They’re really good friends now,” Bethany said, despite being served challah that had been “decorated” with glitter by a child.

The couple, who were introduced by a friend, jokes that they only have children in off-election years. Does that mean another is forthcoming?

“Well, you do the math,” Bethany says. For all their interest in politics, neither Mandel plans to run for public office, believing that they can have the most influence through media.

For now, they are content with what they have, what they do and where they live, a leafy neighborhood close to what Bethany calls a “really cool city.” Not that Seth doesn’t occasionally think about how great it was in the Orthodox Jewish community where he grew up, where his family members lived for more than a century. “There are aspects of that life they are doing right and everybody else is getting wrong,” he said.

For her part, Bethany sees the shrinking American family as something many people are getting wrong. The CDC announced earlier this year that the U.S. hit a record low fertility rate — 1.64 babies per woman — which is under the so-called “replacement rate” of 2.1 births, the number necessary to maintain the current population. Family policy experts say that the declining fertility rate could cause economic problems for the country, both in terms of worker shortages and fewer people paying into Social Security. But there’s also a personal cost, not only in the potential for loneliness and poverty in old age but, according to Bethany, what children miss while they’re growing up.

“It’s heartbreaking that this has become so counterculture, this family that we have. I know the difference. It was just me and my mom until I was 16. And I see the difference in our upbringings, the difference between my kids’ upbringing and my own. I don’t want to demean my childhood; my mother did the best she could. But it wasn’t good. It wasn’t what a childhood should be,” she said.

“I feel very strongly, because I know the difference, that this is a better way to live.”



from Deseret News https://ift.tt/3vPCIRY

3 takeaways from Real Salt Lake’s crucial road victory over FC Dallas

Albert Rusnak scores the first goal for Real Salt Lake’s 2019 regular season road draw with the Houston Dynamo.
In this file photo, Albert Rusnak scores the first goal for Real Salt Lake’s 2019 regular season in a 1-1 road draw with the Houston Dynamo, Saturday, March 2, 2019, in Houston, Texas. Rusnak scored in the 90th minute Wednesday night against FC Dallas, lifting RSL to a 2-1 victory. | Real Salt Lake

As the MLS season begins to draw to a close, Real Salt Lake continued its fight to book a playoff spot in a Wednesday night showdown with an FC Dallas squad it had only beaten once on the road in the entire history of the club.

Thanks to a brilliant finish in the 90th minute from Albert Rusnák, the Claret and Cobalt picked up their second ever win in Frisco, Texas, with a 2-1 result and secured three points that will be exceptionally crucial as the Western Conference standings start to solidify. Trailing 1-0 at halftime after a goal from FC Dallas defender Matt Hedges, both RSL goals came in the game’s final 13 minutes.

Damir Kreilach notched the game’s other goal in the 80th minute, giving the Croatian 15 goals this season.

With the victory, RSL brought its point total to 45 for the season and moved just above the playoff line into seventh place thanks to a goal-differential advantage over Vancouver.

Not only did the win aid RSL’s positioning in the standings, but interim head coach Pablo Mastroeni said it also gave the team some much needed form-boosting momentum heading into their final three games.

“In this league it’s not just about how you get into the playoffs, but the form you have going into the playoffs,” Mastroeni said. “I think if we’re fortunate enough to find our way into the playoffs, whoever we play is going to come against a team that’s full of belief in themselves.”

RSL will take the pitch again this Saturday at 1:30 p.m. at Rio Tinto Stadium for a matinee contest with San Jose.

Meram subs on ready to play

After watching the first 74 minutes from the sidelines, Justin Meram came on for RSL and was a game-changer. In just under 20 minutes of play, the senior forward assisted on both the equalizing and game-winning goals and saw a shot nearly go in, but ultimately banged it off the crossbar.

Mastroeni said that the brilliant 20 minutes from Meram showed the kind of work he’s put in while also showing how he embraced his role in a game where he didn’t get the start.

“Subs make differences all around the world in every league, and (as a sub) you’ve got to be ready to make a difference,” Meram said. “I just tried to come in and be myself. I had a shot that hit the crossbar ... and that kind of fueled me and gave me a little bit of confidence and I just tried to put the ball in good places.”

Finally, a second-half comeback

Before Wednesday’s game, Real Salt Lake was 0-6 in games that it trailed at halftime, so it was understandably unnerving that the Claret and Cobalt went into the intermission down a goal to nil. But when the team needed it most this season, they pulled off the comeback to come away with the full three points.

Mastroeni said that the way RSL asserted itself and created more width in attack were some of the reasons it found success in the second half after it struggled to put forth quality attacking play in the opening 45 minutes.

“In the first half, what might look slow was the quality of our service into the box and then we gave up the soft goal towards the end of the half,” Mastroeni said. “But (trailing) allowed us to get out on top of them and really open them up with our attacking structure.”

The captain delivers

Much had been said about Rusnák’s form at the beginning of the season when the midfielder struggled to deliver the type of impactful performances that were expected from the RSL faithful.

But at a time when the club needed it the most, Rusnák delivered a world-class finish that gave RSL an additional two points at an extremely critical point of the season.

Many highlight-worthy goals have been delivered by RSL players this season, and though there’s still three games to play, it’s Rusnák’s goal Wednesday night that may go down as the most important of them all.



from Deseret News https://ift.tt/3Cna9hp

No need to wipe down Halloween candy this year, so how do trick-or-treaters stay safe from COVID-19?

Gustavo Guarneros, left, Dominic Guarneros and Martha Guarneros watch as Alex Aguiniga tries on a Beetlejuice mask while shopping for halloween costumes at Spirit Halloween in Millcreek on Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2021.
Gustavo Guarneros, left, Dominic Guarneros and Martha Guarneros watch as Alex Aguiniga tries on a Beetlejuice mask while shopping for Halloween costumes at Spirit Halloween in Millcreek on Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2021. | Kristin Murphy, Deseret News

Holiday can be safe and happy, say Utah public health officials

What should be at the top of the list for making sure your family has not just a happy Halloween, but a safe holiday as the COVID-19 pandemic continues?

Get vaccinated if you can against the deadly virus, according to both state and national public health agencies.

“Many of those ghosts and witches in your neighborhood aren’t old enough to get a vaccine and you don’t want to be the one to give out COVID-19 this year,” the Utah Department of Health advises in a new “COVID-19 Halloween Tips” posting.

Guidance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention offer similar advice for “safer ways” to celebrate all holidays, urging Americans: “Protect those not yet eligible for vaccination such as young children by getting yourself and other eligible people around them vaccinated.”

Although an advisory panel to the federal Food and Drug Administration recommended a pediatric dose of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine for children 5-11 years old on Tuesday, there are still more steps in the federal approval process and final approval isn’t likely until early November.

That means many trick-or-treaters still won’t have had a chance to get the coronavirus vaccine, currently available to everyone 12 and older. Two other brands, Moderna and the single-dose Johnson & Johnson, are also offered for those at least 18 years old, and booster shots are also now being offered for many Utahns.

A new Deseret News/Hinckley Institute of Politics poll suggests that Utah parents are being more cautious about getting the shots for their children and teenagers than they are for themselves. Although more than 67% of Utahns 12 and older are fully vaccinated against COVID-19, just 52.5% of those 12-18 years old can say the same.

Burklee Combs looks at halloween costumes at Spirit Halloween in Millcreek on Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2021. Kristin Murphy, Deseret News
Burklee Combs looks at Halloween costumes at Spirit Halloween in Millcreek on Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2021.

In addition to getting the shots, the state advises wearing a face covering. “Not only your grim reaper mask, but also your COVID-19 mask. If you’re headed somewhere indoors, like a haunted house or a wild witching party, put on a mask and don’t be the creature that spreads COVID,” the site says.

Other tips include washing hands, staying home if you’re sick and getting tested for the coronavirus, holding any Halloween parties outdoors and making sure trick-or-treaters avoid traffic when they’re making their neighborhood rounds with some likely to go out on Saturday night rather than Sunday.

The tone from Utah public health officials is much lighter than a year ago, when Halloween marked the start of the first holiday season plagued by COVID-19. Although there was trick-or-treating in 2020, virus cases were climbing and the worst of the pandemic to date was still to come.

Then, the state health department offered a longer list of recommendations for Halloween, including wiping down treat wrappers with disinfectant before allowing children to open them, limiting any parties to just immediate family members and considering lower-risk activities like carving pumpkins to celebrate the holiday.

The CDC in 2020 warned, “Traditional Halloween activities are fun, but some can increase the risk of getting or spreading COVID-19 or influenza. Plan alternate ways to participate in Halloween.” Trick-or-treaters were told to make cloth masks part of their costumes, use hand sanitizer while collecting candy and stay 6 feet apart.

Asked about how this year’s Halloween celebration should compare to last year’s, state health department spokesman Tom Hudachko said, “Halloween is a fun and important holiday for kids, and they should be able to enjoy themselves.”

Still, Hudachko reiterated some tips for avoiding the virus: “Outdoor activities, like trick-or-treating, tend to be safest. If your plans take you indoors, being vaccinated, wearing a mask and social distancing will all help keep you safe this Halloween.”

Trick-or-treating this Halloween also has the endorsement of top Biden administration officials.

“Enjoy it. I mean, this is a time that children love. It’s a very important part of the year for children,” Dr. Anthony Fauci, chief medical adviser to President Joe Biden, said recently on CNN’s ”State of the Union,” urging those not vaccinated to get the shots, available to anyone 12 and older, to make the holiday safer.

The director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Dr. Rochelle Walensky, also gave the go-ahead for trick-or-treating last month, on CBS News’ ”Face the Nation,” suggesting it should be safe as long as some precautions are taken.

“I certainly hope so,” Walensky said. “If you’re able to be outdoors, absolutely. Limit crowds. I wouldn’t necessarily go to a crowded Halloween party but I think that we should be able to let our kids go trick-or-treating in small groups, and I hope that we can do that this year.”

Alex Aguiniga, left, tries on a Minecraft mask as Gustavo Guarneros and Dominic Guarneros watch while shopping for halloween costumes at Spirit Halloween in Millcreek on Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2021. Kristin Murphy, Deseret News
Alex Aguiniga, left, tries on a Minecraft mask as Gustavo Guarneros and Dominic Guarneros watch while shopping for Halloween costumes at Spirit Halloween in Millcreek on Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2021.


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High school cross-country: Farmington boys, American Fork girls walk away with 6A titles

American Fork’s Avalon Mecham looks ahead as she runs in the 6A girls cross-country state championship.
American Fork’s Avalon Mecham looks ahead as she runs in the 6A girls cross-country state championship at the Regional Athletic Complex in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, Oct. 27, 2021. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

The Farmington High School boys cross-country team arrived at Wednesday’s state meet wearing T-shirts that read, “Fear the Phoenix.”

A bold statement for a team its first year as a 6A (Utah’s largest) school.

The Phoenix, however, lived up to their reputation by earning first place in the team standings at the Regional Athletic Complex in Rose Park. Led by sixth-place finisher Matthew Neuenschwander, who led four teammates in the top 10, Farmington had 49 points, holding off American Fork (64), Riverton (127), Corner Canyon (137) and Skyridge (167).

“We knew we would be a good team after what we saw last year,” said Farmington coach Christopher Brower. “We’re senior heavy, so we’ve been building to this.

“Obviously, we knew how good we could be. We wanted to come out and make a statement.”

American Fork’s Nathan Jaster took first place, finishing the flat, damp, course in 14 minutes, 55 seconds. Brower said he was hoping the Phoenix could land four runners in the top 10, and had to be concerned when Jaster was followed by Lone Peak’s Jaron Hartshorn, Jayden Fitzgarrald of American Fork, Skyridge’s Seth Wallgren and then Noah Jenkins of Herriman.

Then came Neuenschwander, who recorded his personal best and never considered himself to be among Farmington’s elite. Britton Austin was seventh, Ethan Peterson ninth and Isaac Halverson took 10th place.

“We’re a deep team,” said Brower. “The kids worked hard all season, preparing for this race, especially Matthew.”

Neuenschwander said he and his teammates were spread out at the start of the 5K (3.1-mile) race, but moved to the front near the end.

“I couldn’t tell where anyone was, but I heard my coach yelling, ‘You’ve got a kicker behind you,’ so I knew to speed up because I didn’t want to settle.”

With the win, Farmington added another keepsake to the 4-year-old school’s trophy cabinet, and hopes to earn more in a few weeks when it joins a few of Utah’s other elite teams at national meets in Tempe, Arizona, and Huntsville, Alabama.

“We know where we rank in Utah, but now it’s time to test ourselves against the best nationally,” Brower said.

The girls ranks set the tone for an exciting finish for the day as longtime running power American Fork regained its grasp on the top of the Utah ranks. The Cavemen took advantage of sophomore Avalon Meacham’s second-place finish to hold off two-time defending champion Lone Peak.

“A great meet for our girls,” said Cavemen coach Bruno Hunziker, “although Lone Peak was a challenge for us all year.”

Hunziker didn’t want to take any credit. Instead, he pointed to the team’s tradition, depth and the newcomer, Meacham, who pressed Herriman’s Addi Bruening all the way to the tape, finally finishing 1.7 seconds behind Bruening’s 17:28.3.

Hailey Lowe of Layton and Lone Peak’s Taylor Rohatinsky followed, but American Fork’s Abigail Barlow claimed fifth place and Avery Moore 10th as the Cavemen won with 70 points. Lone Peak was second with 89, followed by Corner Canyon (132), Westlake (135), Mountain Ridge (148) and Herriman (175).

Hunziker admitted, at his age, he can’t keep up with his torrid athletes, but noted that his assistant coach, Lindsey Dunkley, kept them in shape and inspired in their season-long battle against Region 4 opponents. Hunziker said the Cavemen have been one of the state’s top teams for the last decade and continue to push each other to keep the program moving forward.

The three-month high school season is just a small part of American Fork’s year-around running program, which also includes national meets against the country’s top team.

“The girls are proud to be part what we’ve done here,” he said. “We’ve built it into something special.”

The Cavemen were recently ranked 12th nationally and, after a brief break to celebrate this state crown, will start working toward another. Along the way, they’ll be a fixture running around American Fork’s narrow side streets.


Class 6A state championships

At Regional Athletic Complex

Girls team scores

  1. American Fork, 70
  2. Lone Peak, 89
  3. Corner Canyon, 132
  4. Westlake, 135
  5. Mountain Ridge, 148
  6. Herriman, 175
  7. Farmington, 202
  8. Riverton, 208.5

Girls Individual results

  1. Addi Bruening, Herriman, 17:28.3
  2. Avalon Mecham, American Fork, 17:30.0
  3. Hailey Low, Layton, 17:44.0
  4. Taylor Rohatinsky, Lone Peak, 17:47.7
  5. Abigail Barlow, American Fork, 17:56.1
  6. Shelby Jensen, Westlake, 18:01.5
  7. Boston Bybee, Lone Peak, 18:09.9
  8. Natalie Swain, Bingham, 18:12.9
  9. Taylor Jorgensen, Mountain Ridge, 18:14.4
  10. Avery Moore, American Fork, 18:17.1
  11. Kenedy Maudsley, Davis, 18:17.4
  12. Ellie Zaugg, Davis, 18:18.9
  13. Mya Curtis, Westlake, 18:33.8
  14. Eliza Mason, Lone Peak, 18:34.0
  15. Kylie Olsen, Skyridge, 18:34.3
  16. Chloe Christy, Farmington, 18:44.9
  17. Addison Dalton, Fremont, 18:45.4
  18. Sarah Dye, Weber, 18:45.8
  19. Makayla Pitcher, Westlake, 18:48.0
  20. Avery Garcia, Corner Canyon, 18:49.0
  21. Courtney Madsen, Corner Canyon, 18:51.2
  22. Maggie Featherstone, Herriman, 18:53.1
  23. Skye Siddoway, Farmington, 18:54.5
  24. Anna Nelson, Corner Canyon, 18:56.4
  25. Amelia Robinson, Westlake, 18:58.0
  26. Hazel Baird, American Fork, 18:59.3
  27. Natalie Jensen, American Fork, 18:59.8
  28. Cailey Bracken, Mountain Ridge, 18:59.9
  29. Elayna Loveridge, Mountain Ridge, 19:00.1
  30. Sydney Horner, Riverton, 19:00.8
  31. Shea Conroy, Lone Peak, 19:02.3
  32. Charly Murie, Corner Canyon, 19:03.7
  33. Mara Holmes, Lone Peak, 19:08.1
  34. Addison Gibson, Riverton, 19:11.6
  35. Lindsey Glod, Corner Canyon, 19:14.7
  36. Courtney Giebel, Weber, 19:14.9
  37. Whitney Bartlett, Mountain Ridge, 19:17.7
  38. Katie Bybee, Lone Peak, 19:18.3
  39. Taylor O’Farrell, Riverton, 19:18.3
  40. Tori Stratton, American Fork, 19:20.6
  41. Laureli Edmunds, Corner Canyon, 19:24.4
  42. Audrey Hales, Herriman, 19:25.4
  43. Emerald Kehr, Lone Peak, 19:25.6
  44. Lily Neff, Syracuse, 19:25.9
  45. Ellie Sorensen, Mountain Ridge, 19:26.9
  46. Natalia Boltz, American Fork, 19:28.2
  47. Taylor Miller, Farmington, 19:29.8
  48. Ryann Jones, Riverton, 19:29.9
  49. Addison Hoopes, Corner Canyon, 19:30.1
  50. Claire Stephenson, Herriman, 19:30.5
  51. Ayla Kazmar, Farmington, 19:33.5
  52. Whitley Kidd, Copper Hills, 19:38.4
  53. Lauren Thornley, Layton, 19:39.1
  54. Carli Nelson, Layton, 19:39.3
  55. Marryn Poll, Skyridge, 19:40.6
  56. Fiel Woods, Layton, 19:41.5
  57. Becca Ferre, Bingham, 19:41.6
  58. Mya Oyler, Riverton, 19:42.8
  59. Samantha Carver, Pleasant Grove, 19:48.0
  60. Alayna Wardle, Herriman, 19:48.6
  61. Eden Burton, Weber, 19:49.0
  62. Kenzy Thomson, West Jordan, 19:49.2
  63. Skylie Barker, Copper Hills, 19:49.7
  64. Maggie Lund, Riverton, 19:51.9
  65. Livia Olson, Farmington, 19:53.1
  66. Kathryn Reaveley, Farmington, 19:53.4
  67. Bella Jones, Mountain Ridge, 19:53.9
  68. Kali Woolf, Herriman, 19:54.3
  69. Merin Urban, Weber, 19:54.8
  70. Halle Mehr, Skyridge, 19:55.4
  71. Hope Stanley, Davis, 19:59.0
  72. Austyn Feller, Westlake, 20:00.4
  73. Andilusia Manwaring, Copper Hills, 20:01.2
  74. Emma Lund, Herriman, 20:01.9
  75. Angela Knobel, Riverton, 20:03.1
  76. Lucy Huler, Layton, 20:03.3
  77. Allyson Nelson, West Jordan, 20:08.0
  78. Gretchen Higley, Clearfield, 20:08.6
  79. Allie Allen, Davis, 20:10.5
  80. Kate Larsen, Davis, 20:11.9
  81. Eliza Sandberg, Skyridge, 20:13.8
  82. Savannah Davies, Copper Hills, 20:14.9
  83. Taylee Richards, Fremont, 20:17.6
  84. Emma Jensen, Layton, 20:26.8
  85. Avery Benson, Bingham, 20:28.2
  86. Lily Brown, Fremont, 20:29.7
  87. Emma Hooper, Bingham, 20:32.3
  88. Holly Taylor, Skyridge, 20:33.6
  89. Lauren Horsley, Mountain Ridge, 20:36.1
  90. Grace Frodsham, Davis, 20:37.3
  91. Aspen Gardner, Pleasant Grove, 20:37.5
  92. Lucy Lundberg, Copper Hills, 20:37.8
  93. Natalie May, Farmington, 20:38.8
  94. Ashley Watson, Weber, 20:40.3
  95. Katelyn Perry, Bingham, 20:40.6
  96. Breckyln Bugnet, Fremont, 20:42.3
  97. Emily Harrison, Pleasant Grove, 20:43.2
  98. Reagan Wright, Layton, 20:44.3
  99. Ally Welsh, Skyridge, 20:44.5
  100. Crisite Bastidas, West Jordan, 20:46.2
  101. Bailey Tolman, Weber, 20:46.7
  102. Brooklyn Bryant, Pleasant Grove, 20:47.9
  103. Lizzy Bastidas, West Jordan, 20:49.1
  104. Elise Hartsell, Skyridge, 20:52.7
  105. Tayleigh Ward, West Jordan, 20:53.5
  106. Natalya Callister, Hunter, 20:57.7
  107. Emma Griffin, Syracuse, 21:07.9
  108. Eliza Rains, Bingham, 21:08.4
  109. Bethany Esplin, Bingham, 21:14.7
  110. Kate Terry, Fremont, 21:18.9
  111. Anna Fotheringham, West Jordan, 21:19.8
  112. Naiya Coffman, Copper Hills, 21:20.1
  113. Ava McMurtrey, Pleasant Grove, 21:20.2
  114. Stephania Hernandez, Pleasant Grove, 21:21.1
  115. McCall Dalpais, Weber, 21:21.7
  116. Hannah Elliss, Cyprus, 21:22.1
  117. Indianna Lundell, Fremont, 21:22.7
  118. Brooklynn Oldroyd, Copper Hills, 21:30.7
  119. Ari James, Westlake, 21:32.7
  120. Anna Hatt, Syracuse, 21:35.1
  121. Annika Roth, Westlake, 21:37.0
  122. Lily Shawcroft, Cyprus, 21:39.8
  123. Jaycee Page, Syracuse, 21:46.3
  124. Claire Frodsham, Davis, 21:51.9
  125. Macee Tueller, Pleasant Grove, 21:54.4
  126. Cici Smith, Clearfield, 21:57.3
  127. Olivia Richards, West Jordan, 21:59.1
  128. Isabelle Rodriguez, Cyprus, 21:59.9
  129. Reagan Vanderlinden, Taylorsville, 22:04.9
  130. Natalie Roberts, West, 22:16.0
  131. Kathryn Erkelens, Fremont, 22:19.3
  132. Christine Qualls, Syracuse, 22:21.7
  133. Tally Humble, Roy, 22:26.0
  134. Greeley Johnson, West, 22:34.1
  135. Kenzie Chambers, Syracuse, 22:40.4
  136. Kennedi Lambert, Syracuse, 22:56.0
  137. Emily Rich, Roy, 23:18.7
  138. Karina Toro, Roy, 23:52.9

Boys team scores

  1. Farmington, 49
  2. American Fork, 68
  3. Riverton, 127
  4. Corner Canyon, 137
  5. Skyridge, 167
  6. Lone Peak, 172
  7. Weber, 215
  8. Davis, 216

Boys Individual results

  1. Nathan Jaster, American Fork, 14:55.5
  2. Jaron Hartshorn, Lone Peak, 15:06.6
  3. Jayden Fitzgarrald, American Fork, 15:08.6
  4. Seth Wallgren, Skyridge, 15:16.3
  5. Noah Jenkins, Herriman, 15:18.3
  6. Matthew Neuenschwander, Farmington, 15:24.6
  7. Britton Austin, Farmington, 15:26.6
  8. Tyler McDougal, Riverton, 15:27.3
  9. Ethan Peterson, Farmington, 15:27.4
  10. Isaac Halverson, Farmington, 15:28.7
  11. Jake Seegmiller, Riverton, 15:29.4
  12. Connor Whatcott, Corner Canyon, 15:29.9
  13. Alex Maxfield, West Jordan, 15:30.3
  14. William Horne, Herriman, 15:33.4
  15. Andrew Harris, Weber, 15:33.5
  16. Tyler Spencer, Davis, 15:33.7
  17. Ryan Bennett, Farmington, 15:36.0
  18. Jacob Jones, Davis, 15:36.7
  19. Jeffrey Shields, Lone Peak, 15:38.1
  20. Ben Bradshaw, American Fork, 15:41.1
  21. Jared Thomas, American Fork, 15:42.8
  22. Spencer Sharp, Riverton, 15:44.7
  23. Ben Jaster, American Fork, 15:44.9
  24. Chase Evans, American Fork, 15:46.1
  25. Kaden Dunn, Weber, 15:47.0
  26. Spencer Bradshaw, Farmington, 15:47.3
  27. Jeff Lewis, Corner Canyon, 15:48.1
  28. Erol Yellowhair, Skyridge, 15:51.9
  29. Anderson Perry, Davis, 15:54.0
  30. Seth Kjar, Skyridge, 15:54.1
  31. Eli Kimball, Corner Canyon, 15:57.3
  32. Jayden Loeser, Corner Canyon, 15:59.7
  33. Sam Sorensen, Bingham, 16:00.6
  34. Zach Hillhouse, Pleasant Grove, 16:00.8
  35. Grayson Milne, Corner Canyon, 16:01.5
  36. Simon Peterson, Fremont, 16:01.8
  37. Drew Hildreth, Farmington, 16:03.1
  38. Nathan Hillhouse, Pleasant Grove, 16:03.4
  39. Nick Soter, Riverton, 16:06.5
  40. Jayden Gibson, Skyridge, 16:07.9
  41. Tanner Orton, Bingham, 16:09.1
  42. Keatyn Perkins, Mountain Ridge, 16:09.5
  43. Jacob Perry, Mountain Ridge, 16:10.4
  44. Cooper Bybee, Lone Peak, 16:10.6
  45. Kason Palmer, Copper Hills, 16:11.5
  46. Michael Ballard, Copper Hills, 16:11.7
  47. Andrew Ludwig, Riverton, 16:12.6
  48. Landon Hart, Weber, 16:13.3
  49. Joshua Hernandez, American Fork, 16:14.4
  50. Eli Gibby, Westlake, 16:16.1
  51. Spencer Leininger, Lone Peak, 16:16.2
  52. Nathan Horsley, Mountain Ridge, 16:17.2
  53. Cole Jameson, Taylorsville, 16:18.2
  54. Tevan Albrecht, Riverton, 16:20.8
  55. Carter Cutting, Corner Canyon, 16:21.0
  56. Easton Wakefield, Lone Peak, 16:21.1
  57. Jake Atwater, Fremont, 16:21.7
  58. Zach Tew, Lone Peak, 16:22.6
  59. Luke Briggs, Herriman, 16:25.9
  60. Trevin Harbertson, Pleasant Grove, 16:26.2
  61. Spencer Havey, Weber, 16:26.8
  62. Tanner Partridge, Corner Canyon, 16:27.1
  63. Preston Gledhill, Taylorsville, 16:28.1
  64. Bentley LeBaron, Mountain Ridge, 16:28.2
  65. Jonah Denison, Skyridge, 16:28.4
  66. Jacob Stowers, Weber, 16:28.5
  67. Corbin Randall, Riverton, 16:29.0
  68. Isaac Jensen, Skyridge, 16:29.4
  69. Noah Horne, Syracuse, 16:29.7
  70. Davis Alcorn, Lone Peak, 16:29.9
  71. Bridger Kelley, Bingham, 16:31.0
  72. Asher Bowen, Fremont, 16:31.2
  73. Zealand Riser, Copper Hills, 16:31.6
  74. Chayse Vickers, Mountain Ridge, 16:33.4
  75. Steven Keogh, Westlake, 16:34.4
  76. Steven Carver, Pleasant Grove, 16:35.1
  77. Carter Green, Davis, 16:35.6
  78. Myles Rawlings, Davis, 16:36.5
  79. Dallen James, Clearfield, 16:37.4
  80. Dallyn Wright, Skyridge, 16:38.2
  81. Isaac Allen, Bingham, 16:38.9
  82. Conner Smedley, Fremont, 16:42.5
  83. Kaden Salle, Westlake, 16:43.3
  84. Matthew Curtis, West Jordan, 16:43.7
  85. Conner Pedersen, Mountain Ridge, 16:46.5
  86. Luke Stowers, Weber, 16:48.4
  87. Nathan Wardle, Herriman, 16:49.3
  88. Franklin Monson, Weber, 16:50.2
  89. Braden Smith, Copper Hills, 16:52.4
  90. Jacob Hudson, Westlake, 16:52.6
  91. Ezra Glissmeyer, Westlake, 16:53.8
  92. Cuauhtemoc Fitiao, Cyprus, 16:54.1
  93. Chase Durham, Westlake, 16:57.9
  94. Tayshaun Ogomo, Herriman, 17:00.5
  95. Aidan Horstmann, Fremont, 17:00.6
  96. Trevor Carlton, Fremont, 17:01.2
  97. Jaren Barnes, Mountain Ridge, 17:05.2
  98. Jake McArthur, Pleasant Grove, 17:10.0
  99. Roman Mendoza, Layton, 17:10.2
  100. Trevin Anderson, Westlake, 17:10.4
  101. Todd Handy, Clearfield, 17:13.9
  102. Noah Tucker, Taylorsville, 17:14.7
  103. Nathan Boren, Pleasant Grove, 17:15.0
  104. Davis Rydman, Layton, 17:16.9
  105. Cody Bancroft, Pleasant Grove, 17:17.8
  106. Chris Hercules, Cyprus, 17:18.1
  107. Broc Carrigan, Fremont, 17:18.9
  108. Collin Black, Layton, 17:20.3
  109. Dalin Holje, Layton, 17:21.3
  110. Elijah Tolton, Syracuse, 17:21.9
  111. Jaden Denison, Bingham, 17:24.4
  112. James Batt, Davis, 17:27.2
  113. Easton Higley, Clearfield, 17:28.0
  114. Tekehu Munanui, Copper Hills, 17:28.7
  115. Sebastian Nielson, Herriman, 17:30.1
  116. Corbin Riser, Copper Hills, 17:33.2
  117. Regan Gibby, Roy, 17:33.4
  118. Jason Hugh, Roy, 17:35.2
  119. Todd Koch, Layton, 17:35.3
  120. Tyson Bullock, Bingham, 17:35.5
  121. Schyler Denison, Bingham, 17:38.5
  122. Mason Otteson, Davis, 17:39.5
  123. Larkin Hancuff, Kearns, 17:47.9
  124. Nathan Morrison, West Jordan, 17:48.7
  125. Jeff Gerhart, Herriman, 17:50.5
  126. Carson Rasmussen, Copper Hills, 17:52.4
  127. Jordan Bruening, Clearfield, 18:10.5
  128. Glenn Reitzel, West Jordan, 18:10.7
  129. Jacob Wright, Taylorsville, 18:26.8
  130. Grant Minchey, Layton, 18:29.1
  131. Joseph White, Taylorsville, 18:33.2
  132. Elias Nalder, Layton, 18:35.7
  133. Jaydale Hansen, Taylorsville, 18:40.4
  134. Mariano Garnica OCampo, West Jordan, 18:40.9
  135. Jeff Qualls, Syracuse, 18:41.3
  136. Ethan Tucker, Taylorsville, 18:42.7
  137. Thomas Gudgell, West Jordan, 18:44.5
  138. Ian Reitzel, West Jordan, 18:46.8


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10 iconic Bronco Mendenhall moments from his time at BYU

BYU player’s celebrate Jonny Harline’s game-winning touchdown after their 33-31 defeat of the University of Utah at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake, Utah Saturday Nov. 25, 2006.
BYU player’s celebrate Jonny Harline’s game-winning touchdown after their 33-31 defeat of the University of Utah at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake, Utah Saturday Nov. 25, 2006. | August Miller, Deseret News

Virginia coach Bronco Mendenhall’s mark on BYU was significant, sometimes profound

Bronco Mendenhall’s return to Provo this Saturday is an intriguing event for myriad reasons as he brings his University of Virginia team to town riding a four-game winning streak.

Bronco has always been a fascinating figure to me, from the first time I met him to his last press conference. For the record, I admire Mendenhall. He’s tough, creative and dedicated to his craft. He was always a great interview and I always thought he had insightful angles to write about. Immediately upon becoming head coach at BYU, he rescued the program from three straight losing seasons and made a bowl game with a 6-6 record.

There are so many memories of Mendenhall and his time in Provo, his older brother Mat (BYU defensive end) and his parents. The family has been a staple in Utah County for decades. A surfer, a Harley-Davidson motorcycle rider, and a horseman, Bronco was his own man. Still is.

I remember how he worked behind the scenes to get Kyle Van Noy admitted to BYU. Van Noy went on to win Super Bowl rings with the New England Patriots.

His emphasis on community service, to focus on issues bigger than football, was a trademark, as was his Thursday’s Heroes program to elevate those in need. His players are fiercely loyal to him because they know he expected the most out of every one of them, not just every day, but every play.

Here are my top 10 Bronco Mendenhall moments at BYU, in no particular order.

Endless scrimmage

I remember when Gary Crowton hired Mendenhall from New Mexico and what happened during one of the first spring scrimmages of 2001. Normal scrimmages go about 70 to 80 plays but neither Crowton (offense) nor Mendenhall (defense) would call it quits. Crowton wanted to score and Mendenhall kept denying momentum. That scrimmage went more than 120 plays and it was one of the craziest nongame practice sessions I’ve ever covered.

Holly Mendenhall

Bronco and Holly Mendenhall ride a pair of mules with their sons Breaker, left, Raeder, and Cutter (behind his mom) June 8, 2005 in Alpine, Utah. Keith Johnson, Deseret News
Bronco and Holly Mendenhall ride a pair of mules with their sons Breaker, left, Raeder, and Cutter (behind his mom) June 8, 2005 in Alpine, Utah.

Only a Holly would wear red in December at the announcement of her husband as BYU’s head coach in 2005, but this Montana horse lover was a gem. Affable, outgoing, funny, the yin to Bronco’s yang, I found her fascinating, open, kind, genuine and not afraid to speak her mind. She opened up her home in Alpine to reporters and never put on a facade. Salt of the earth kind of woman.

Harline is still open

In his second season (2006), an 11-2 and MWC title season, the final regular-season game came down to one remarkable play with just seconds left against rival Utah in Rice-Eccles Stadium. John Beck took what seemed an eternity to run back and forth then throw across his body to a wide-open Jonny Harline in the end zone for an 11-yard TD and a 33-31 win with no time left on the clock. That play remains one of the most iconic plays and finishes in BYU history.

Fourth-and-18

The following year in Provo, a No. 23-ranked BYU had Max Hall looking at fourth-and-18 deep in Cougars territory. Hall’s favorite target, Austin Collie, made a double move, a stop and go down the sidelines on Utes cornerback Brice McCain. Hall stepped out of a disintegrating pocket and found Collie for the conversion at midfield. A few plays later Harvey Unga scored to give BYU a 15-10 lead. Hall found Collie for a two-point conversion and an ultimate 17-10 victory for back-to-back wins where Collie explained later, “Magic happens.”

Sooners takedown

Oklahoma QB Sam Bradford rolls over in pain after being hit and dropped by BYU’s Coleby Clawson as BYU and Oklahoma play at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington Texas. Saturday, Sept. 5, 2009. Scott G. Winterton, Deseret News
Oklahoma QB Sam Bradford rolls over in pain after being hit and dropped by BYU’s Coleby Clawson as BYU and Oklahoma play at Cowboys Stadium in Arlington Texas. Saturday, Sept. 5, 2009.

It was Sept. 5, 2009, the season opener in the brand new Cowboys Stadium in Arlington, Texas, when Max Hall ran off the field at halftime predicting a Cougars win. To the delight of Texas fans and Big 12 fans all over the country, No. 3 Oklahoma could not overcome Bronco’s bullyball that stymied the Sooners and took out QB Sam Bradford after a jarring blitz, a defense that featured Jan Jorgensen and Andrew Rich. BYU defeated Oklahoma 14-13 in one of the biggest wins in school history.

Tough decisions

In 2010 in Logan, the Aggies handed BYU its fourth-straight loss (Florida State, Air Force, Nevada, USU) and the next morning I got a text from defensive coordinator Jaime Hill, informing me that Bronco had fired him. It was a gutsy move. Mendenhall then took over duties as defensive coordinator, called the plays, and beat San Diego State on the road the next week, 24-21. That team ended up 7-6 but set records in a 52-24 win over UTEP in the New Mexico Bowl.

Hall’s curse

Max Hall, the winningest BYU QB of all time, let it fly on Nov. 28, 2009, in LaVell Edwards Stadium, his final home game. Again, it was the season finale against rival Utah. Hall found tight end Andrew George for a dramatic 25-yard touchdown pass in overtime to defeat Utah 26-23. Afterward, Hall expressed his hatred for Utah, something he apologized for, but to this day, there have been repercussions in the form of slogans, T-shirts, bumper stickers. If one believes in fate, it triggered a nine-game Utah win streak.

Taysom’s Texas takedowns

 Rick Bowmer, Associated Press
Texas safety Adrian Phillips attempts to tackle BYU quarterback Taysom Hill during game Saturday, Sept. 7, 2013, in Provo, Utah.

Taysom Hill left a storied mark on BYU football under Mendenhall with his performance in two back-to-back wins over Texas — one in Austin, Texas, the other in Provo. Hill had 259 yards rushing on the Texas defense in 2013 with touchdown runs of 68, 20 and 26 yards in Provo. The following year before a crowd of 93,363 in Memorial Stadium, he had 99 yards rushing and three touchdowns, the longest being 30 yards. BYU won those games 40-21 and 41-7. Mendenhall’s two Texas wins gives BYU a 3-2 historical advantage over the SEC-bound Longhorns.

Putting the hurt on the Ducks

In 2006, Oregon coach Mike Bellotti told the media in a press conference at the Las Vegas Bowl that 10-2 BYU was not good enough to compete in the Pac-10. Those were fighting words for Mendenhall’s Cougars who had a lot of weapons in John Beck, career rushing leader Curtis Brown and tight end Jonny Harline. Mendenhall’s team smoked the Ducks 38-8 that night. Beck passed for 375, Brown ran for 120 and two TDs and Harline earned MVP honors with nine catches for 181 yards. It may have been the biggest proof of the theory “Oregon is soft.”

Mangum’s Hail Mary

Brigham Young Cougars quarterback Tanner Magnum (12) throws the winning touchdown against Nebraska in Lincoln, Nebraska, Saturday, Sept. 5, 2015. BYU won 33-28. Jeffrey D. Allred, Deseret News
BYU quarterback Tanner Magnum throws the winning touchdown against Nebraska in Lincoln, Nebraska, Saturday, Sept. 5, 2015. BYU won 33-28.

The trip to Lincoln, Nebraska, was historic. So was the ending of the 2015 BYU-Nebraska game in Mendenhall’s final season as BYU’s coach. At the end of this game, with no time remaining on the clock, Tanner Mangum, in his first college game after returning from a church mission, sprinted out of the pocket to his right and fired a Hail Mary toward the end zone, where 6-foot-6 receiver Mitch Mathews caught the ball sandwiched between defenders and fell over the goal line for the winning touchdown — a 33-28 victory. A big-time win in Big Ten territory for Mendenhall.

The departure

At the end of his stint, he was fighting for additional money for his program to buoy up academic advisers and health and nutrition programs. Some of that positioning as a head coach ended in futility. He was also asked to tone down his advocacy in public for inclusion at a Power Five conference because he declared independence was not sustainable. When the Virginia job offer came, he more than tripled his salary and that of the assistant coaches he took with him.

Bronco Mendenhall gets emotional as athletic director Tom Holmoe talks about Mendenhall leaving BYU to take over for Mike London at Virginia after 11 years as BYU’s head football coach during a press conference at BYU in Provo on Friday, Dec. 4, 2015. Kristin Murphy, Deseret News
Bronco Mendenhall gets emotional as athletic director Tom Holmoe talks about Mendenhall leaving BYU to take over for Mike London at Virginia after 11 years as BYU’s head football coach during a press conference at BYU in Provo on Friday, Dec. 4, 2015.

Mendenhall coached BYU to 99 wins in 11 years with two MWC championships. He guided BYU into independence in 2010 and was an advocate for the university to make a bigger push for Power Five inclusion.

I was driving to St. George on Dec. 9, 2015, when BYU offensive coordinator Robert Anae called me. I had covered him since he and his brother Brad had come to BYU from Laie, Hawaii, in the early 1980s. Anae was an offensive lineman on Edwards’ 1984 national championship team. He had accepted coaching jobs at BYU twice under Mendenhall and told me he’d accepted a job to go to Virginia with Mendenhall and was taking O-line coach Garett Tujague, running backs coach Mark Atuaia and QBs coach Jason Beck.

Today, those guys have the No. 1 passing quarterback in the country in Brennan Armstrong and the Virginia offense ranks No. 4 nationally averaging 539 yards per game.

Mendenhall should be welcomed big time for his devotion and passionate work in turning BYU’s football program around and preparing it for Big 12 inclusion.

He never lost his focus on what he thought was his mission as head coach at BYU and the directive of the university and sponsoring church.

BYU was Mendenhall’s first head coaching job. Combined with his record at Virginia the past six seasons, he is 135-77.

There are a lot of folks in his profession who’d love that kind of mark.

BYU fans should welcome this former coach. Design that he loses to your Cougars, but the man has accomplished legendary things wherever he’s been.



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High school cross-country: Ogden boys and girls end title drought to lead the way in 3A

Ogden’s Jack Blodgett, begins his celebration as he nears the tape as runners compete in the cross country state championships at the Regional Athletic Complex in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, Oct. 27, 2021.
Ogden’s Jack Blodgett, begins his celebration as he nears the tape as runners compete in the cross country state championships at the Regional Athletic Complex in Salt Lake City on Wednesday, Oct. 27, 2021. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

Ogden’s boys and girls cross-country teams made it a complete sweep at the 3A state championships on Wednesday, both ended a near decadelong drought.

In the school’s first year in 3A after dropping down from 4A, Ogden’s girls won its first state title since 2013 despite only placing one runner in the top 10. The boys meanwhile won much more comfortably with two athletes in the top 10 and five in the top 15.

“That’s the best feeling because you’re kind of thinking we might go home with one really happy team and one team that’s disappointed, so to take both of them home state champions is the best,” said Ogden coach Merrilee Blackham.

The top placer for Ogden’s girls was Charlize Herrera, who finished 10th. Her pack of teammates wasn’t too far behind her as Kaitlyn Blackham finished 14th, Donna Gonzalez 15th, Isabella Gray 17th and Gem Garner 21st.

That strong contingent of five runners helped Ogden tally 72 points, with Carbon in second with 82 and Morgan in third with 85.

“We were banking on our pack. Those five girls have been so solid for us this year and if we’re going to win this it’s going to be with that pack of five and not with somebody out front,” said Blackham.

Out front, Juan Diego sophomore Ethan Stevens pulled away late to win the individual title, even when early in the race she didn’t really think it was realistic.

Morgan’s Kate Heywood went out very fast, and at one point early in the race Stevens estimated that she must’ve been about 30 seconds behind.

Stevens just tried to stay patient and stick with her approach.

“I started in the back and was trying to go for a race where I just pushed forward throughout it instead of starting to fast and fall behind,” said Stevens.

In the end she pulled away late to finish with a time of 19:28.9 to beat Carbon’s Beverly Lancaster who finished in 19:33.7.

While Ogden’s girls won with great depth, the boys won with power at the top and depth.

Ogden’s Jack Blodgett put two years of past frustration behind him with a strong performance to win the 3A title with a time of 15:50.7. Richfield’s Richard Crane was second in 15:58.1.

“I’ve wanted to win for the past three years and haven’t performed before, so this was big. I like being hyped, it’s what I find fun,” said Blodgett.

Blodgett’s victory coupled with five runners in the top 17 helped the Tigers win their first state title since 2012 as they finished with 44 team points. Richfield finished second with 74 points.

Ogden’s Jake Peterson made a late push to finish sixth, part of the great core for the Tigers.

“We have a really good pack from our four to our seven, and we’re all really good friends and so it’s really easy to keep each other motivated. Keeping each other accountable has really helped our team be successful,” said Peterson.


Class 3A State Championships

At Regional Athletic Complex

Girls team scores

  1. Ogden, 72
  2. Carbon, 82
  3. Morgan, 85
  4. Canyon View, 109
  5. Manti, 119
  6. Grand, 175
  7. North Sanpete, 195
  8. Juan Diego, 209

Girls Individual results

  1. Ethan Stevens, Juan Diego, 19:28.9
  2. Beverly Lancaster, Carbon, 19:33.7
  3. Sadie Nielsen, Manti, 19:44.1
  4. Lydia Forsyth, Canyon View, 19:52.9
  5. Jaylee Jenkins, Union, 19:53.0
  6. Cadence Kasprick, Grand, 19:55.6
  7. Kate Heywood, Morgan, 20:04.0
  8. Clara Compton, Morgan, 20:05.0
  9. Paige Curtis, Delta, 20:09.2
  10. Charlize Herrera, Ogden, 20:22.3
  11. Ambree Jones, Carbon, 20:22.6
  12. Ella Stevenson, Morgan, 20:23.0
  13. Isabelle McCullough, Summit Academy, 20:30.7
  14. Kaitlyn Blackham, Ogden, 20:32.2
  15. Donna Gonzalez, Ogden, 20:33.1
  16. Keltsy Fowles, Manti, 20:34.7
  17. Isabella Gray, Ogden, 20:36.6
  18. Isabell Daynes, Canyon View, 20:36.7
  19. Madisyn Moser, Summit Academy, 20:47.2
  20. Sophia Taylor, Carbon, 20:54.4
  21. Gem Garner, Ogden, 20:58.3
  22. Helen Grover, Manti, 21:03.6
  23. Rachael Jones, North Sanpete, 21:07.5
  24. Lindsie Fausett, Carbon, 21:08.8
  25. Ainsleigh Kasprick, Grand, 21:09.5
  26. Isabella Pickers, Juan Diego C, 21:10.5
  27. Melanie Bybee, Morgan, 21:11.1
  28. Lucy Eckley, Canyon View, 21:12.4
  29. Emerson Winn, RSL Academy, 21:22.0
  30. Mariah George, Carbon, 21:23.8
  31. Jane Brown, Canyon View, 21:25.4
  32. Aubry Cook, North Sanpete, 21:26.7
  33. Ellie Hanson, Carbon, 21:28.7
  34. Lara Sorensen, Canyon View, 21:32.1
  35. Alexis Weiers, Morgan, 21:34.8
  36. Mackenzie Mayer, Grand, 21:39.1
  37. Isabella Knudsen, Manti, 21:39.4
  38. Anna-Lece Macklyn, Judge Memorial, 21:39.6
  39. Brekyn Gossling, Morgan, 21:40.1
  40. Ada Bradford, Carbon, 21:40.4
  41. Ruth Larsen, Ogden, 21:41.8
  42. Sydney Peck, RSL Academy, 21:42.8
  43. Bethany Swallom, Grantsville, 21:44.9
  44. Madelyn Christensen, North Sanpete, 21:49.3
  45. Naomi Wells, Union, 21:51.0
  46. Bailey Beckstrom, Morgan, 21:51.1
  47. Adaley Lester, Emery, 21:53.7
  48. Tamra Ware, Canyon View, 22:03.5
  49. Aireal Mower, Manti, 22:05.1
  50. Ellie Lowery, Grantsville, 22:12.3
  51. Nataya Day, Juab, 22:18.0
  52. Malyn Eliason, Ogden, 22:18.5
  53. DaKota Hollingshead, Canyon View, 22:19.0
  54. Lundi Ferrier, Ben Lomond, 22:19.9
  55. Jocelyn Stewart, North Sanpete, 22:21.1
  56. Kaylee Gowans, Manti, 22:24.4
  57. Cami Merrill, Manti, 22:28.7
  58. Patience Garcia, Grantsville, 22:35.0
  59. Maddie Johansen, North Sanpete, 22:43.6
  60. Amelia McKay, Grand, 23:01.4
  61. Ella Still, Judge Memorial, 23:02.5
  62. Lila Knight, Summit Academy, 23:05.1
  63. Jayde Young, Grand, 23:09.5
  64. Allie Sloan, Juan Diego C, 23:24.3
  65. Mattie Richens, Union, 23:36.4
  66. Leslie Torres, Ben Lomond, 23:38.1
  67. Lola Barkema, Ben Lomond, 23:43.4
  68. Brynnleigh Goodwin, Delta, 23:44.9
  69. Keana Overman, Providence Hall, 23:49.3
  70. Myriam Cortez, Judge Memorial, 23:51.4
  71. Kallee Lake, Emery, 23:58.5
  72. Tylee Henrie, North Sanpete, 24:05.1
  73. Maude Poirier, Juan Diego, 24:14.7
  74. Olivia Young, Juan Diego, 24:15.0
  75. Valentina Gonzalez, Grantsville, 24:34.4
  76. Erin Petersen, Grantsville, 24:42.2
  77. Makiah Macey, Judge Memorial, 24:54.0
  78. Emily Keel, Union, 25:14.1
  79. Kalli Bo, Judge Memorial, 25:16.2
  80. Domiona Marine, Juan Diego, 25:25.3
  81. Aliyah Fuentes, Grantsville, 25:50.5
  82. Ashtyn Mudge, Judge Memorial, 26:20.1
  83. Nicole Merhi, Juan Diego, 26:24.4
  84. Isabella Carmona, Summit Academy, 26:40.9
  85. Shailie Lazenby, Union, 26:42.8
  86. Challis Anderson, Grantsville, 26:46.0
  87. Caroline Mackey, Judge Memorial, 26:55.7
  88. Emily Perkins, Union, 27:05.9
  89. Natasha Yost, Union, 27:20.8
  90. Viviana Diaz Sanchez, Summit Academy, 27:36.1
  91. Lorena Johnson, Grand, 27:47.8
  92. Bella Welch, Grand,, 27:53.1
  93. Vivian Fehrenbach, Summit Academy, 28:26.2
  94. Keilah van Hees, Summit Academy, 33:32.7

Boys team scores

  1. Ogden, 44
  2. Richfield, 74
  3. Union, 76
  4. Carbon, 103
  5. Emery, 132
  6. Manti, 176
  7. Morgan, 186
  8. Juan Diego, 212.5

Boys Individual results

  1. Jack Blodgett, Ogden, 15:50.7
  2. Richard Crane, Richfield, 15:58.1
  3. Jess Christiansen, Emery, 15:59.0
  4. Paul Squire, Union, 16:01.1
  5. Jett Davenport, Union, 16:09.9
  6. Jake Peterson, Ogden, 16:13.8
  7. Kobe Cruz, Carbon, 16:18.9
  8. Cannon Anderson, Richfield, 16:22.5
  9. Tyler Saunders, Richfield, 16:27.9
  10. Cameron Hollobaugh, Union, 16:29.7
  11. Coby Wight, Ogden, 16:43.9
  12. Carter Parsons, Ogden, 16:46.2
  13. Aidan Anderson, ALA, 16:47.1
  14. Stewart Woodward, Summit Academy, 16:51.2
  15. Arthur Hawks, Grand 16:51.7
  16. Camdon Larsen, Emery, 16:53.9
  17. Sean Feeny, Ogden, 17:02.9
  18. Aften Richens, Union, 17:06.1
  19. Bryce Montgomery, Ogden, 17:07.3
  20. Braxton Ware, Carbon, 17:07.8
  21. Tezra Fisk, North Sanpete, 17:09.0
  22. Patrick Reilly, Juan Diego, 17:09.7
  23. Josh Nicolaides, Morgan, 17:10.6
  24. Carson Utley, Richfield, 17:11.3
  25. Thomas Stark, Ogden, 17:11.8
  26. Merritt Meccariello, Emery, 17:12.2
  27. Garrett Black, Carbon, 17:12.6
  28. Tyler Taggart, Manti, 17:17.8
  29. Gage Smith, Delta, 17:20.6
  30. Ej Lee, Morgan, 17:24.8
  31. Easton Humes, Carbon, 17:27.8
  32. Nathan Engar, Carbon, 17:30.2
  33. Josiah Carter, Manti, 17:32.8
  34. Trevor Taggart, Manti, 17:33.6
  35. Atticus Richardson, Judge Memorial, 17:35.0
  36. Tyler Bissett, Judge Memorial, 17:35.5
  37. Pierce Bryner, Carbon, 17:37.4
  38. Mitchell Goold, Richfield, 17:38.0
  39. Isaac Nordgren, Grantsville, 17:38.5
  40. Gabe Woods, Juan Diego, 17:38.5
  41. Blake Bunderson, Grantsville, 17:40.0
  42. Preston Haycock, Canyon View, 17:42.3
  43. Shepherd Foy, Juan Diego C, 17:43.5
  44. Kyle Steinfeldt, Manti, 17:45.5
  45. Gage Jacobson, Providence Hall, 17:46.0
  46. Trevor Anderson, ALA, 17:46.1
  47. Dylan Gines, Morgan, 17:46.3
  48. Anthony Pedockie, Union, 17:49.2
  49. Keenan Janke, Richfield, 17:50.4
  50. Jack Christiansen, Emery, 17:51.1
  51. Samuel Edwards, Morgan, 17:51.9
  52. Talmage Day, Juab, 17:52.4
  53. Bradley Sweeney, Carbon, 17:55.6
  54. John Ussing, Grantsville, 17:56.1
  55. Connor Paxman, Grantsville, 17:59.0
  56. Byron Christiansen, Emery, 18:01.4
  57. Daniel Christensen, Delta, 18:04.1
  58. Ryland Cook, North Sanpete, 18:07.4
  59. Carter Killian, Grantsville, 18:08.4
  60. Dillan Larsen, Emery, 18:09.1
  61. Tyler Norris, Manti, 18:09.6
  62. Tyson Keller, Morgan, 18:13.9
  63. Aadi Garg, Providence Hall, 18:14.9
  64. Hobie Hodlmair, Juan Diego, 18:19.7
  65. Traven Miller, Union, 18:20.3
  66. James Costello, Union, 18:20.9
  67. Hayden Christiansen, Emery, 18:23.2
  68. Brooks Anderton, Morgan, 18:25.7
  69. Ty Jessen, Canyon View, 18:28.7
  70. Daxton Tait, Richfield, 18:29.7
  71. Samuel Hazel, Judge Memorial, 18:30.2
  72. Gavin Cox, Ben Lomond, 18:30.8
  73. Anthony Powell, South Summit, 18:31.2
  74. Wyatt Bailey, North Sanpete, 18:32.3
  75. Curran Madden, Juan Diego, 18:34.8
  76. Noah Tebben, Judge Memorial, 18:40.6
  77. Carter Hale, Morgan, 18:50.3
  78. Lowe Rasmussen, Manti, 18:53.6
  79. Emmy Martinez, Juan Diego, 18:54.2
  80. Ryan Peterson, Manti, 18:54.3
  81. Tysen Marshall, Ben Lomond, 18:58.7
  82. Noah Tsubaki, Providence Hall, 19:06.0
  83. Connor Orges, Juan Diego, 19:06.9
  84. Paul Florence, Judge Memorial, 19:08.1
  85. Gabe Hill, Grantsville, 19:11.8
  86. Ben Mantyla, Providence Hall, 19:12.3
  87. Joel Rose, Providence Hall, 19:27.7
  88. Jonathan Petrogeorge, Judge Memorial, 19:41.5
  89. Gavin Smith, Providence Hall, 19:43.0
  90. Talon Grantz, Judge Memorial, 19:44.9
  91. Jerry Jones, North Sanpete, 19:45.7
  92. Miles Ashby, Providence Hall, 19:55.2
  93. Bryson Bowers, Grantsville, 20:40.5
  94. Wayde Smith, North Sanpete, 21:08.3
  95. Josh Cox, North Sanpete, 21:15.0
  96. Thayne Smith, North Sanpete, 22:20.7



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