College Football Power Rankings: Georgia jumps to No. 2, Alabama drops 12 spots
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adminWeek 8 has wrapped up as we officially reach the midseason point of the regular season. Five of the 17 games including Top 25 teams were won by no more than one score, including the matchup between then-No. 7 Alabama and No. 11 Tennessee.
The outcome of the Crimson Tide’s trip to Neyland Stadium this past weekend wasn’t what they had hoped for. Tennessee’s defense shined while Alabama’s offense suffered, as the Tide lost two conference games before November for the first time since 2006. With this loss, what does Alabama need to do to get back into the playoff conversation?
Meanwhile, No. 5 Georgia upset No. 1 Texas on the road, as the Bulldogs’ defense shut down the Longhorns’ passing attack. As conference play continues, what does Texas’ offense need to improve on going forward?
Following Week 8, both Army and Navy remain in our top 25 list as they gained big wins Saturday. As playoff conversations heighten as we head into the second half of the regular season, could we see one of these teams in the College Football Playoff?
Here’s the latest top 25 from our college football experts, who provide their insight on each team’s Week 8 performance.
Previous ranking: 2
After quickly coming off the high of beating Ohio State at home, the Ducks had to travel to Purdue for a Friday night game that could have been a trap. Instead, what transpired was a clean 35-0 drubbing of the Boilermakers. There’s a lot to wax poetic about when it comes to Oregon, but perhaps the biggest surprise is that it has been able to get off to this start without running the ball that well.
Last year, the Ducks ranked 30th in the nation in rushing yards per game; this year, they’re 70th and averaging 30 yards per game fewer than they did last season. Junior Jordan James does have over 700 rushing yards and eight touchdowns, so the production has been satisfactory. Maybe we’re nitpicking a bit, but for Oregon to continue this undefeated season and continue to excel against tougher opponents (especially if it makes the playoff), there’s certainly room for improvement. — Paolo Uggetti
Previous ranking: 6
For a program that has been absolutely dominant over the past three seasons, this year’s theme has been a frustrating lack of such dominance, something Kirby Smart might have foreshadowed in August when he said the Dawgs might have the least depth since he arrived. There was a 13-12 grind of a win over Kentucky. A 41-31 scuffle with 1-6 Mississippi State. The Bulldogs’ 41-34 loss to Alabama snapped a school-record 42-game regular-season winning streak (including 28 straight in SEC play) and encapsulated Georgia’s season.
The Bulldogs were down 28-0 early in the second quarter, then stormed back and didn’t allow a Bama touchdown again until there was 2:18 left in the fourth quarter — a 75-yard highlight-reel catch for Ryan Williams — only to drive with a chance to score again until Carson Beck threw an interception in the end zone.
The Dawgs put together a stellar showing in Austin on Saturday night, allowing just 29 rushing yards on 27 carries and racking up seven sacks in a 30-15 upset of the No. 1 team on the road. But Beck threw for 175 yards with three interceptions, leaving the possibility that Georgia’s most complete game might still be in front of them. That’s a scary thought for the rest of the SEC. — Dave Wilson
Previous ranking: 3
The Buckeyes’ second bye week arrived at a good time, giving Ryan Day and his squad plenty of time to regroup from their 32-31 road loss at Oregon and get ready for the tests ahead. Nebraska (5-2) is coming to Columbus this week but is currently reeling from a 56-7 loss at Indiana that exposed its weaknesses. After struggling to slow down Dillon Gabriel and the Ducks, Jim Knowles’ defense will be looking to send a message against a true freshman QB. The week off also provided plenty of time to work ahead on studying No. 3 Penn State and all the challenges it’ll present on both sides of the ball. We’re now a week away from a battle at Beaver Stadium that will define the rest of the Big Ten race. — Max Olson
Previous ranking: 4
It’s impossible to suggest Miami is a well-oiled machine right now. The pass defense struggled in three straight games, including allowing 342 yards and four touchdowns to Louisville‘s Tyler Shough. The special teams was a disaster against Louisville, too, allowing a 100-yard kick return and failing to cover a fake punt. But the offense — well, that’s special, and it has been enough to escape even the most challenging of circumstances, including in Saturday’s 52-45 shootout in Louisville. Cam Ward remains the most electric QB in the country, adding 319 yards and four touchdowns in the win over the Cardinals. — David Hale
Previous ranking: 5
The improvement of Penn State’s offense under new offensive coordinator Andy Kotelnicki has been remarkable. Not only are the Nittany Lions one of the top 10 units in the country (471 yards per game, 7.21 yards per play) but the way they’ve done it has been impressive. Utilizing players like quarterback Drew Allar, running backs Kaytron Allen and Nick Singleton and a versatile tight end like Tyler Warren, Kotelnicki has injected the offense with some much-needed creativity and energy that has catapulted them to new heights.
Between using Warren as a runner, receiver, thrower and even snapper in the plethora of formations he throws at opposing defenses, Penn State has become must-watch TV on that side of the ball. It helps, too, that Kotelnicki’s work has resulted in six wins, including four by more than two scores. Penn State was on a bye this week, but as it turns toward the season’s most important stretch, its new-look offense will continue to have even bigger stages to showcase its abilities. — Uggetti
Previous ranking: 1
A year ago, Steve Sarkisian made it a point to say the Longhorns were committed to improving their passing attack, and they did, rolling through their final season in the Big 12 and earning a College Football Playoff berth behind the efficient arm of Quinn Ewers, who threw for 3,479 yards and 22 TDs to six interceptions. The Longhorns lost receivers Xavier Worthy, Adonai Mitchell and Jordan Whittington and tight end Ja’Tavion Sanders to the NFL draft, and with that went 76% of their receptions and 80% of their receiving yardage. Ewers has always been a distributor, trying to get the ball to his playmakers, but the field has shortened for him considerably this year.
The Longhorns are still stacked with star power at receiver with Isaiah Bond, Ryan Wingo, DeAndre Moore and Silas Bolden and at tight end with Gunnar Helm, but Ewers is averaging 2.6 air yards per completion this season, down from 5.1 a season ago. He ranks 128th nationally in air yards per attempt (5.65), down from 7.49 a year ago, and 115th in percentage of throws 20 or more yards downfield (9.3%). The lack of explosiveness in a Texas passing attack, despite the experience of Ewers and the creativity of Sarkisian’s calls, has been the most surprising challenge facing the Longhorns this year. — Wilson
Previous ranking: 8
Considering the way the Clemson offense performed in a 34-3 season-opening loss to Georgia, the biggest surprise to date has been the way Cade Klubnik and his teammates have responded. Following a 48-31 win over Virginia, Clemson now has five 500-yard games in the first seven games of a season for the first time in school history. They also have five 40-point games, marking the third time in school history they’ve reached that mark over the first seven games (five in both 2019 and 2020).
Klubnik, meanwhile, has shown growth and an ability to limit his mistakes — something that had plagued him leading into the season. Klubnik has thrown for 1,836 yards with 20 touchdowns and just three interceptions. He already has more passing touchdowns than last season (19) and has a career-high three 300-yard games. Bigger tests await after the open date, but it’s safe to say the Clemson offense is one of the most improved units in the country. — Andrea Adelson
Previous ranking: 13
The doubts should be significantly diminished, if not gone completely, about Curt Cignetti’s first Hoosiers team. Indiana is for real, and Cignetti has done a masterful job flipping both a roster and a mindset in Bloomington. The only surprise is how dominant and consistent IU continues to be, as the offense diced up a veteran Nebraska defense for 56 points, 24 first downs and 495 yards (including 343 in the first half) on Saturday.
IU eclipsed 50 points in a Big Ten game for the first time since 2016, and its team-record streak of six games with 40 or more points tied the second-longest mark for a Big Ten team in the AP poll era. Quarterback Kurtis Rourke showed why he’ll be an NFL draft pick, completing 17 of 21 passes before leaving the game with an injury to his right thumb. Rourke’s status will be worth watching for the stretch run, but Indiana’s dominance goes beyond him. The Hoosiers forced five turnovers and held Nebraska scoreless for the final 37:40, as linebacker Jailin Walker and others shined. — Adam Rittenberg
Previous ranking: 10
The Cougars are still unbeaten after Jake Retzlaff’s 35-yard, go-ahead touchdown strike to Darius Lassiter with 10 seconds remaining that vaulted BYU past Oklahoma State on Friday night. Lassiter reached a career-best 129 yards on six receptions, and LJ Martin found the end zone twice while rushing for a career-high 120 yards in a 38-35 win that improved the Cougars to 7-0. BYU has created more turnovers (16) than all but three defenses nationally this fall, and that playmaking defensive unit had the Cougars on the right side of the turnover battle in three of their first six games.
That flipped in Week 8 on three BYU interceptions — two by Retzlaff, another from Hinckley Ropati — and it nearly resulted in the Cougars’ first defeat of 2024. A Week 9 trip to turnover-prone UCF should provide BYU a chance to get back to maintaining its elite edge on turnover margin. — Eli Lederman
Previous ranking: 9
The Cyclones narrowly avoided a major home upset Saturday, storming from behind to beat UCF on Rocco Becht‘s 1-yard touchdown run with 30 seconds remaining. With the 38-35 escape, Matt Campbell and Iowa State are 7-0 for only the second time in program history (first set in 1938). Becht accounted for all three second-half touchdowns and Jaylin Noel caught eight passes for 153 yards in the win, but this was another perplexing performance from Jon Heacock’s defense.
The Cyclones lead the Big 12 in total defense (304.0 YPG), passing defense (133.7 YPG) and scoring defense (14.4 PPG). However, Oklahoma State is the only Big 12 defense giving up more rushing yards per game than Iowa State (170.3), and UCF gashed the Cyclones for 354 on Saturday, the second-most Campbell’s defense has allowed since 2016. Iowa State remains the Big 12’s playoff favorite, but the Cyclones’ run defense is a concerning Achilles’ heel with matchups in November against two of the conference’s top three rushing offenses: Kansas State and Kansas. — Lederman
Previous ranking: 14
There’s no getting around Tennessee’s struggles on offense, especially in the first half, but the Vols’ defense is playing at a championship level. That was never more apparent than Saturday night, when Tennessee’s defense stood tall despite a third straight scoreless first half by the offense and steered the Vols to a 24-17 victory over Alabama at Neyland Stadium. It was Tennessee’s second win over Alabama in the past three seasons — after losing 16 straight to the Crimson Tide.
The Vols (6-1, 3-1) generated some big plays in the passing game in the second half, something that had been sorely missing. Nico Iamaleava‘s 16-yard touchdown pass to Chris Brazzell II in the back of the end zone put Tennessee ahead for good in the fourth quarter. Coach Josh Heupel called his defense “elite” but said finding more consistency on offense and avoiding poor starts will be critical, especially if the Vols are going to stay in the thick of the SEC race. Tennessee gets a bye week this Saturday and then games at home against Kentucky and Mississippi State before visiting Georgia on Nov. 16. — Chris Low
Previous ranking: 12
The Irish walloped Georgia Tech 31-13 in Week 8, a third straight win over an ACC team in which Notre Dame eclipsed 30 points. Given the lingering offensive worries following a slow start to the season, that’s cause for ample optimism. Given the chaos around the top of the rankings, too, Notre Dame’s case for a playoff bid remains strong. On the other hand, all three of those ACC opponents rank 66th or worse in ESPN’s defensive efficiency. This week, the Irish get undefeated Navy, and while the talent differential should heavily favor Notre Dame, the Midshipmen may well be the biggest challenge the Irish have faced yet this season. — Hale
Previous ranking: 11
LSU might have been a bit of an afterthought in the playoff conversation after a season-opening loss to USC. But not anymore. The Tigers (6-1, 3-0) have won six in a row and took care of Arkansas 34-10 on the road Saturday. LSU controlled the second half after leading 16-7 at the break. The Tigers had the football 17 minutes more than the Razorbacks and finished with 393 total yards.
One of the big questions about this LSU team was how much better it would be on defense. The Tigers are clearly better on that side of the ball and forced three turnovers Saturday. Their game at Texas A&M on Saturday looms large for their quest for a playoff spot. The Tigers still have Alabama at home and Florida on the road in November after getting a bye following the Texas A&M game. — Low
Previous ranking: 15
Last season, the Aggies averaged 3.9 yards per carry and 136.2 yards per game behind a much-maligned offensive line. A season later under offensive coordinator Collin Klein, the Aggies are averaging 218.6 yards per game on the ground and 5.4 yards per carry despite a passing game that is still developing. Despite losing potential starter Rueben Owens before the season with a foot injury, junior Le’Veon Moss has scored multiple TDs in three games this season, including 138 yards and three TDs against then-No. 9 Missouri. Amari Daniels has also scored twice in two games. No Aggies running back did that once last season.
Moss, the Aggies’ second-leading rusher last season, has already eclipsed his 2023 season totals in yardage and TDs and added a new career long with a 75-yarder against Missouri. A stingy defense and a running game that can keep offenses off the field has been a winning formula for the 6-1 Aggies (4-0 SEC). — Wilson
Previous ranking: 16
The Broncos’ bye week arrived at a great time as they have won every game except for one — against the No. 1 team in the country — and are preparing for what could be their toughest regular-season matchup remaining against UNLV this coming week. What Ashton Jeanty has done has been nothing short of heroic as he has carried this offense while being on pace to break Barry Sanders’ single-season rushing record. But beyond Jeanty, the lopsided Boise State defense has been a key figure in how its games have gone.
The Broncos have been fantastic at stopping the run (23rd in the country) while also being abysmal at stopping the pass (124th). Their passing defense has often kept teams in games against them and made them closer than they should be. Against Mountain West opponents, that might not come back to hurt them. Against potential future playoff matchups, that could be a problem. — Uggetti
Previous ranking: 17
Pitt is coming off its second bye week and gets ready for a challenging stretch run of six consecutive games, including showdowns with No. 9 Clemson and No. 22 SMU. But first up is a Thursday night battle with Syracuse (5-1). Syracuse and Pitt were picked to finish 12th and 13th, respectively, in the ACC’s preseason media poll and have far exceeded expectations. Quarterback Eli Holstein had a rough outing against California (133 passing yards, two INTs), but Pitt coach Pat Narduzzi is confident his redshirt freshman playmaker will bounce back nicely. “There’s no lost trust in Eli,” Narduzzi told reporters. “I think he’s spectacular.” — Olson
Previous ranking: 18
It’s still probably hard for the Wildcats to accept that they got blown out by BYU a few weeks ago despite outgaining the Cougars 367-241. Alas, they don’t allow mulligans in this sport. But the expanded playoff does make it easy to bounce back from a loss given there is still everything to play for. K-State turned in a resounding 45-18 win against West Virginia on Saturday, as quarterback Avery Johnson completed 19 of 29 passes for 298 yards and three touchdowns. Perhaps more noteworthy is that Johnson didn’t register a single rush attempt, despite coming into the game with 306 yards rushing on the season. If K-State can win big without needing to tap into that part of Johnson’s game, it bodes well for the rest of the year. — Kyle Bonagura
Previous ranking: 19
New week, same results. The SMU offense is rolling, and Stanford provided little resistance in a 40-10 rout. Kevin Jennings continued to shine, throwing for 322 yards and three touchdowns. The Mustangs are averaging 3.3 points per drive since installing Jennings as QB1 in Week 4, the 13th-best rate in the country over that span. Their road to the ACC championship game could hinge on these next two weeks, however, as they hit the road to face 6-1 Duke before hosting undefeated Pitt. — Hale
Previous ranking: 7
Kalen DeBoer knew nothing about replacing Nick Saban would be easy, and it hasn’t been for the Crimson Tide (5-2, 2-2). Their 24-17 loss to Tennessee on Saturday marked the first time they’ve lost two SEC games before November since 2006, which was the year before Saban arrived in Tuscaloosa. It was Alabama’s defense that was shredded in the 40-35 loss to Vanderbilt two weeks ago, but the offense was the chief culprit in their loss to the Vols — along with penalties and mistakes. The Tide committed a season-high 15 penalties.
Quarterback Jalen Milroe was intercepted twice and was held to 11 yards on 14 carries. One of his interceptions was in the end zone in the first quarter on second-and-goal from the 3. There’s no dismissing the win over Georgia last month, but the Tide will likely need to go unbeaten the rest of the way if they’re going to get in the playoff. The next two weeks won’t be easy against ranked foes. They face Missouri at home on Saturday and then travel to LSU on Nov. 9. — Low
Previous ranking: 21
The hype is growing in West Point, and Army is welcoming the attention. The Black Knights dominated East Carolina to move to 7-0 on Saturday, rolling to a 31-0 third-quarter lead before allowing garbage-time points in a 45-28 win. Quarterback Bryson Daily was again devastating, rushing 31 times for 171 yards and five touchdowns while completing 7 of 10 passes for 147 yards and another score. With 102 rushing yards, Kanye Udoh contributed his third 100-yard game of the season, too. Army is now 7-0 overall and 6-0 in conference play in its first year in the AAC.
It’s going to be hard to keep the Black Knights out of the AAC championship, and their Week 13 game against Notre Dame at Yankee Stadium could have legitimate playoff stakes. What a turnaround it has been for an Army offense that had to deal with rule changes outlawing cut blocks — a staple of the option game — and unsuccessfully converted to more of a shotgun spread attack last year. It has gone back to basics this year, and it has worked shockingly well. — Bill Connelly
Previous ranking: 24
The 6-0 Midshipmen looked unstoppable yet again on Saturday in a 51-17 rout of Charlotte. Navy never gave Charlotte a chance, scoring on its first five drives and running out to a 38-0 lead early in the second quarter. Defense won the day with five takeaways, led by cornerback Dashaun Peele scoring on 61- and 84-yard interception returns for touchdowns. The Midshipmen are bowl eligible for the first time since 2019. Now, they’ll try to beat No. 12 Notre Dame for the first time since 2016. This year’s neutral-site game at MetLife Stadium presents a perfectly timed opportunity to prove they’re a real CFP contender. — Olson
Previous ranking: 23
The surprise wasn’t that Illinois beat Michigan — the Illini have performed better than the Wolverines throughout the season — but how coach Bret Bielema’s team delivered a win. Illinois leaned on its run game, which entered Saturday ranked 87th nationally (139.5 YPG), for 187 yards on 38 carries against a sturdy Michigan defensive front led by Mason Graham and Kenneth Grant. The Illini were outstanding on special teams with a perfectly executed fake punt in the third quarter, two field goals and a blocked Michigan field goal attempt.
Illinois also got a big lift from its defensive front seven, particularly outside linebacker Gabe Jacas and lineman TeRah Edwards, who combined for 4.5 sacks and two forced fumbles. The performance more closely resembled those of Bielema’s Wisconsin teams, which won the Big Ten in his final three seasons there. Illinois is very much alive in the league title race as it prepares for a difficult trip to Oregon. — Rittenberg
Previous ranking: 20
Lane Kiffin’s Rebels had a bye week to figure out how the rest of the season is going to be defined. They suffered their second loss of the season, 29-26 to LSU, a week ago, and they might need to win out to feel good about the CFP chances they thought they had heading into the season.
Considering they’ll get a visit from Georgia in a few weeks, with trips to wild cards Arkansas and Florida sandwiching that big game, winning out seems like a long shot. But they’ll have a chance to build confidence next week against a spiraling Oklahoma team. We’ll see what happens from there. We’ll also see whether the bye week brings the offense back. The Rebels have averaged a surprisingly low 23.3 points over their past three games (including two losses). — Connelly
Previous ranking: 22
It took a trip to the hospital for Brady Cook to play his best ball of the season. The Mizzou senior quarterback suffered an ankle injury on the first drive of the day against Auburn and left for an MRI, but he surprised fans by reentering the game late with Mizzou down 17-6 late in the third quarter and led a pair of touchdown drives, the last finishing with under a minute left to win the game.
Auburn had gone up 17-3 on a Cam Coleman touchdown and a score off a muffed punt, but while Mizzou’s offense was stagnant with Cook out, the defense made enough stops to buy time. It was rewarded with Cook’s late heroics. Missouri hasn’t looked like the borderline playoff team it was supposed to be this year, but the Tigers are still 6-1, and fans will talk about the Brady Cook Game for quite a while. — Connelly
Previous ranking: NR
After the offense surprisingly struggled in its past two games, Wazzu got back on track with a resounding 41-10 win against Hawai’i to reach bowl eligibility. Without a conference title to play for, the Cougars still came into the year hoping to chase a playoff spot.
Those chances took a major blow with a loss to Boise State, but until the Cougars suffer a second defeat, there’s some hope they can sneak in. Quarterback John Mateer turned in his best passing performance of the season against Hawai’i, going 23-of-27 for 295 yards with three touchdowns and no picks. He also added a pair of rushing touchdowns. — Bonagura
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‘Holy cow. What’s going on in Utah?’ Inside the Hockey Club’s plan for long-term success
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5 hours agoon
November 6, 2024By
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Ryan S. Clark, NHL reporterNov 6, 2024, 07:00 AM ET
Close- Ryan S. Clark is an NHL reporter for ESPN.
SALT LAKE CITY — There are two versions of Ryan Smith. There’s the public-facing 40-something billionaire tech mogul who answers questions in a way that can be direct, earnest and open to admitting he might not have the right answer … or an answer at all.
That’s the version most people see. But there’s also another version of Smith that’s unapologetically Utahn. That version comes out in the way he talks about Salt Lake City, the state of Utah and the preconceived beliefs many people have about a place that they’ve likely never visited.
While the first version of Smith is the reason the Utah Hockey Club exists, it’s the second version that is hell-bent on ensuring that the franchise is going to thrive in the most Utah way possible.
“I put everything in Utah. They said we couldn’t build tech here, and we’d have to move to the Bay Area,” Smith said. “We couldn’t get venture funding here. We couldn’t IPO a company from here. We couldn’t sell. We proved every single person wrong.
“Then I think that people started believing, ‘Holy cow. What’s going on in Utah?’ That’s incredibly gratifying when you’re fighting for a bigger cause.”
This is the mission facing the Utah Hockey Club when it comes to achieving success long term. While the UHC is a new venture, the team relocated from Arizona where they were the Coyotes. Before that, they were the original Winnipeg Jets, relocating to the desert in 1996.
The club is trying to prove that Salt Lake City and Utah as a whole can support the NHL. It’s trying to prove that it can make hockey a staple, just like the Utah Jazz have been doing in the NBA for several decades.
Perhaps the most important point the Utah Hockey Club could make is that as Salt Lake City keeps growing, so could the city’s professional sports landscape.
“Utahns especially want to show they are more than a flyover state,” said Josh Furlong, a broadcaster and the sports director for KSL. “They recognize they are not going to be Los Angeles, Seattle or New York. They want to showcase what Utah has to offer. You have a rabid fan base that will support your team. I think you have a bunch of people who want to showcase that. I don’t know if it is some type of FOMO situation where they feel like they’re not being included. But they want to be in that mix among the best places.
“You want people to feel what you see. You have this beautiful landscape, friendly people and a great atmosphere for sports culture.”
Clayton Keller: Today was a great day for Utah Hockey Club
Utah Hockey Club’s captain Clayton Keller joins “SportsCenter” to discuss what the team’s NHL debut felt like following a 5-2 win over the Blackhawks.
“Utah! Getting bigger and better. Utah! Always leading the way. New technology is here. Growing faster each year. This is the place!”
Those are lyrics from “Utah … This Is The Place.” Written in 1996, it later became the state song in 2003. At the time of the song’s creation, Utah was on the verge of announcing itself to more of the world, using sports and entertainment as a mechanism.
The Jazz reached three straight Western Conference finals from 1996 through 1998, with two NBA Finals appearances. Salt Lake City received international exposure during the 2002 Winter Olympic Games. In 2005, the University of Utah was the first school to have the No. 1 picks in both the NBA and NFL drafts in the same year, with Andrew Bogut and Alex Smith. The state’s fortune was also extended to film in 2004 when a few graduates of BYU’s film school made the coming of age cult classic “Napoleon Dynamite.”
Decades later, it appears Utah could once again be following a similar path, but with more to gain.
Utah Hockey Club president of hockey operations Chris Armstrong didn’t quote the lyrics from the state song when asked about the future. But his words resemble a similar sentiment when he mentions Utah having the nation’s No. 3 economy and the youngest state based on median age (30.7 years old).
“It’s a unique moment in time where we’re building something new from the ground up and we get to do it with everybody here,” Armstrong said. “So that is why we see a successful and thriving future. It’s only continuing to grow that outpaces most cities in North America, and we think that’s a great opportunity for a new sports franchise.”
The history of sports fandom in Utah began with major college programs BYU and the University of Utah establishing athletic programs. Smaller schools such as Southern Utah, Utah State, Utah Valley and Weber State have also built followings in various sports.
Professional sports came on the scene in 1979 when the Jazz relocated from New Orleans and eventually became one of the NBA’s most successful franchises throughout the 1980s, 1990s and early 2000s.
MLS came to the area in 2004 with Real Salt Lake, which averages 20,291 fans per game, and extends to the Utah Royals of the NWSL, a team that was revived in 2024. The Royals’ first game drew 20,370 fans which set a state record for the most fans at a women’s sporting event.
Both RSL and the Royals are owned by Smith, a BYU graduate, along with Philadelphia 76ers and New Jersey Devils managing partner David Blitzer.
In 2034, Salt Lake City will join Athens, Beijing, London, Los Angeles and Paris as one of the few cities to host multiple Olympics when the Winter Games return.
“Utah is crazy for sports,” said Eric Schulz, a senior lecturer in marketing and strategy at Utah State. “I think it will probably be the same pattern that Denver had. Denver just had the Nuggets and the Broncos for a long time. Then the Rockies came to town and then the Avalanche came to town. There’s been a lot of growth in Utah over the last 20 years with people who have come from other parts of the country. Look at Las Vegas. Who thought a hockey team in Las Vegas would do so well?”
Armstrong said the Utah Hockey Club received more than 30,000 season-ticket deposits. It’s a similar figure to that of the Seattle Kraken when they garnered more than 32,000 deposits ahead of their first season.
Armstrong also said that the franchise “feels very confident” in that it could finish this season as both a top-20 revenue team and a top-20 ticketing team in the NHL despite playing in at a basketball-first venue that has around 5,000 obstructed view seats.
“I don’t know too much about what the perception is, but I can tell you that on the ground that all you see is growth around you,” Armstrong said. “I think the culture of hockey lends itself to the community of Greater Salt Lake and of Utah. Hard-working, honest, passion, camaraderie, pride in team, pride in state. … I think that speaks to the response that we’ve received with season-ticket deposits.”
THERE WILL BE challenges along the way.
Those Jazz teams with Karl Malone and John Stockton created a generational fandom that has played a role in why the Jazz still continue to be such a massive draw.
Harnessing that fandom became an instant priority for the Utah Hockey Club. Exactly a week after the Coyotes’ last regular season game, the team was flown to Salt Lake City, where they were greeted by 12,000 fans at the Delta Center.
In the offseason, the club organized an online poll encouraging fans to vote on its future team name. In June, the SEG announced 520,000 fans had participated, before narrowing it down to six potential options.
Chris Barney, the Smith Entertainment Group’s president of revenue and commercial strategy, said the club will market to everyone. But they’re concentrating on attracting young people so that they can grow those generational fans.
Part of that plan is creating a youth hockey program. Many of the NHL’s teams playing in nontraditional markets — especially Western Conference teams — have used these programs over the past 30 years. The short-term goal is to drive new, young fans to the sport. The long-term goal is to make the youth of today the season-ticket holders of tomorrow.
What makes the Utah Hockey Club’s plan different is their connection to the Jazz. The Junior Jazz is the NBA’s largest youth basketball program, with more than 60,000 members spread across Utah, Arizona, Idaho, Montana, Nevada and Idaho.
Barney, who grew up playing in the Junior Jazz, said that the Jazz designate 1,800 tickets every home game for program participants.
“Our goal is to develop a youth hockey program in which there’s an Auston Matthews playing somewhere in the NHL [in the future] that’s a product of Salt Lake City with the infrastructure that we have built,” Barney said. “That might be one of the most important things. It’s not right in front of our face, but we have a five-year strategic plan. Developing and building it out is darn near the top.”
Barney explained that there are county recreation departments that are incubators for youth who end up playing sports in the community. With SEG already having those relationships in place through the Junior Jazz, they hope to do the same with the Utah Hockey Club when it comes time to introduce ice hockey and street hockey throughout the community.
The most recent USA Hockey membership numbers show that Utah had a combined 4,869 players between males and females. Of those 4,869 registered players, there were 3,168 who were younger than 18, while 2,073 were under 14. In 2016-17 — the final period before the Golden Knights arrived — the state of Nevada had 1,699 combined registered players. In 2023-24, there were a combined 5,560 male and female players, with 2,861 of them being 18 and younger.
“We’re all in,” Barney said. “We’re not going to dip our toe in. We’re all in.”
ANOTHER CHALLENGE IN building a fan base is that while Salt Lake City and Utah as a whole are growing, growth does not come cheap, which sets up a dichotomy that exists for many franchises in 2024.
“Utah has a ton of rising costs. Especially in real estate,” Furlong said. “There is a real pain point here with things being overpriced, and the housing market being really tough. Utahns love to get things for free or for cheap. The cheaper you make it, the better it is going to be. That said, you have someone like Ryan Smith who is trying to appeal to other people in the tech world who have limitless amounts of cash.
“The general fan wants it to be as cheap as possible because there are other factors, but tech people want to showcase this as a premier destination.”
Chris Hartweg is the publisher and CEO of the Team Marketing Report, which produces the Fan Cost Index, a model that calculates what the cost would be for a family of four to attend a sporting event.
Hartweg said recent history shows that new teams — whether they be expansion or relocation — were more expensive than the league average when they debuted. He said that the Nashville Predators (1998-99), Columbus Blue Jackets (2000-01) and Minnesota Wild (2000-01) were all within 3% above the league average ticket prices in their first season. Those are the outliers in recent NHL history.
The Atlanta Thrashers (1999-2000) were 34% above league average. The Vegas Golden Knights (2017-18) were 30% higher, while the Seattle Kraken (2021-22) were 58% higher.
“With dynamic pricing, (teams) know where all the price points are,” Hartweg said. “They know they want to move this many more season tickets if they go to this level. They know going in what’s the most that they could get before diminishing returns. That’s business. It happened in Seattle.”
Hartweg pointed out that the Kraken lowered their prices for the second season, but were able to charge a hefty premium for two main reasons that could also apply to the Utah Hockey Club: a new team, and a new venue.
Hartweg said it’s possible that UHC’s fans could be in store for a pricey first season, with the possibility of an uptick in prices once the Delta Center renovation project is completed in 2027.
Then there’s the role of the secondary market. Hartweg said the average family looking to go to a game might purchase tickets on the secondary market, and they might not know where to find the strongest deals.
Utah’s upcoming three-game home stand against the Carolina Hurricanes, the Vegas Golden Knights and the Washington Capitals offers a wide range of price points for the cheapest available ticket.
A cursory glance across numerous secondary ticketing sites shows that the composite least expensive ticket at Delta Center for the Nov. 13 game versus the Hurricanes is $37, while the least expensive ticket for the Nov. 18 game against the Capitals is $58, should fans want to watch Alexander Ovechkin continue to chase Wayne Gretzky’s all-time goals record.
It’s a contrast compared to the demand ahead of the Nov. 15 game against the Golden Knights, a perennial Stanley Cup contender that could become one of the UHC’s chief geographic rivals. Those sites list the least expensive ticket for the game on Nov. 15 against Vegas as $119.67. The composite cheapest lower-bowl tickets with an unobstructed view is $248.
“When a new team comes in, it’s Christmas Day,” Schulz said. “They can come in and buy the best seats and put in orders for blocks of a hundred and resell them on the secondary market. If they can get their hands on them, they only have to resell a quarter of the season and they already have their money back. If a team goes to the playoffs, it’s like 12 Christmases having those tickets.”
Barney said the franchise has a “multiyear strategy” when it comes to how ticketing will work for fans from various economic backgrounds.
He said that adding 6,000 unobstructed seats once the Delta Center renovation is completed will help with making the UHC more accessible. Another step is to work with community partners to ensure they’re getting UHC tickets in the hands of fans from underrepresented groups so they can also have access.
They’ll also continue to sell those obstructed view seats that Barney also called the “partial ice” seats or “single-ice seats” — in reference to the steep angles behind each goal — that will start at $19 per game.
“We want to make sure we’re being strategic about how the tickets are being distributed,” said Barney, who grew up in nearby Kaysville. “I think the move to make sure that concessions are also more affordable for people was also really important.”
Hartweg said it’s common for teams to provide more cost-effective food and drink offerings to help offset the price of a game ticket. He said there are places that offer $5 beers, but it might come with the caveat that it’s in the 700 section of the arena.
Delta Center has what’s called a “Mountain Menu” which is a fan-friendly pricing option in which a bottle of water is $2 while hot dogs, ice cream, nachos and popcorn are $3. There were also other options such as Chick-fil-A, with 30 nuggets for $30, while a chicken sandwich and waffle fries cost $16.
“It’s worth the price,” said Christian Priskos, who grew up in Salt Lake City. “We have a Tier 1 NHL team that’s in downtown Salt Lake City. It’s not only boosting the local economy with local business, local bars and local restaurants and everything you want to do. But it’s also boosting the social scene as well. People want to say ‘Salt Lake is a sleepy town.’ But, we’re not. We’re a Tier 1 city and the Utah Hockey Club is another step toward showing that.”
WHILE THE FOOD and drink prices might be new to Utah Hockey Club fans, those are the prices that Jazz fans have grown accustomed to paying over the years. And the SEG can take components of its playbook from running the Jazz to serve Utah hockey fans.
On the ice, they are boosted by a strong collection of young talent — and the ninth-best prospect pipeline. A playoff appearance in Year 1 is a real possibility.
From a fan engagement perspective, both Armstrong and Barney shared how going to the Delta Center for a Utah Hockey Club game could be a first for a number of people in the area. At present, the Jazz are in a rebuild yet have sold out for 296 consecutive games. Delta Center, which holds 18,306 fans for basketball, had more than 14,000 fans attend a preseason basketball game less than 24 hours before the first game in UHC history.
Armstrong said that element of demand coupled with how historically engaged fans across Salt Lake City and the state of Utah have been could also play a role in the Utah Hockey Club having long-term success.
“There’s a lot of Utahns who haven’t been able to experience a live sporting event in the building because the Jazz have sold out so many consecutive games,” Armstrong said. “It gives people another opportunity to be part of this world-class venue in Salt Lake they have not been able to access with the Jazz. … Now we’ve given them that new product that gives them that chance.”
Sports
College Football Playoff Anger Index: B1G love, BYU disrespect and more outrage
Published
14 hours agoon
November 6, 2024By
admin-
David Hale, ESPN Staff WriterNov 5, 2024, 07:43 PM ET
Close- College football reporter.
- Joined ESPN in 2012.
- Graduate of the University of Delaware.
It’s a new era for the College Football Playoff, with the field growing from four to 12 this season. That means three times as many programs will gain entry, but, beginning with Tuesday’s initial playoff rankings, there’s three times as much room for outrage, too.
Under the old rules, there was a simple line of demarcation that separated the elated from the angry: Who’s in?
Now, there are so many more reasons for nitpicking the committee’s decisions, from first-round byes to hosting a home game to whether your supposedly meaningful conference has been eclipsed by teams from the Group of 5.
And if the first rankings are any indication, it’s going to be a fun year for fury. There’s little logic to be taken from the initial top 25 beyond the committee’s clear love for the Big Ten. Penn State and Indiana make the top eight despite having only one win combined over an ESPN FPI top-40 team (Penn State over Iowa). That Ohio State checks in at No. 2 ahead of Georgia is the most inexplicable decision involving Georgia since Charlie Daniels suggested the devil lost that fiddle contest. Oregon is a reasonable No. 1, but the Ducks still came within a breath of losing to Boise State. Indeed, the Big Ten’s nonconference record against the Power 4 this season is 6-8, just a tick better than the ACC and well behind the SEC’s mark of 10-6.
But this is the fun of early November rankings. The committee is still finding its footing, figuring out what to prioritize and what to ignore, what’s signal and what’s noise. And that’s where the outrage really helps. It’s certainly not signal, but it can be a really loud noise.
This week’s Anger Index:
There are only two possible explanations for BYU’s treatment in this initial ranking. The first is that the committee members are too sleepy to watch games beyond the Central time zone. The second, and frankly, less rational one, is they simply didn’t do much homework.
It’s certainly possible the committee members are so enthralled with metrics such as the FPI (where BYU ranks 28th) or SP+ (22nd) that they’ve determined the Cougars’ actual record isn’t as important. This is incredibly foolish. The FPI and SP+ certainly have their value, but they’re probabilistic metrics, designed to gauge the likelihood of future success. They’re in no way a ranking of actual results. (That’s why USC is still No. 17 in the FPI, despite Lincoln Riley spending his days wistfully scrolling through old pictures of Baker Mayfield and Kyler Murray and wondering if Oklahoma might want to get back together.)
To look at actual results paints a clear picture.
BYU (No. 4) has a better strength of record than Ohio State (No. 5), has played roughly the same quality schedule as Texas and has two wins against other teams ranked in the committee’s top 25 — as many as Ohio State, Texas, Penn State, Tennessee and Indiana (all ranked ahead of the Cougars) combined.
Indiana’s rags-to-riches story is wonderful, of course, but how can the committee compare what BYU has done (wins over SMU and Kansas State) against Indiana’s 103rd-ranked strength of schedule?
And this particular snub has significant effects. The difference between No. 8 and No. 9 is a home game in the first round, of course, though as a potential conference champion, that’s a moot point. But what if BYU loses a game — perhaps the Big 12 title game? That could not only doom the Cougars from getting a first-round bye, but it could quite likely set up a scenario in which the Big 12 is shuffled outside the top four conferences entirely, passed by upstart Boise State.
What’s clear from this first round of rankings is the committee absolutely loves the Big Ten — with four teams ranked ahead of a subjectively more accomplished BYU team — and the Big 12 is going to face some serious headwinds.
There’s a great, though little watched, TV show from the 2010s called “Rectify,” about a man who escapes death row after new evidence is found, only to be constantly harassed by the same system that fraudulently locked him away for 20 years. This is basically the story of SMU.
Let’s do a quick blind résumé here.
Team A: 8-1 record, No. 13 strength of record, two wins vs. ranked opponents, loss to SP+ No. 22, .578 opponent win percentage
Team B: 7-1 record, No. 15 strength of record, two wins vs. ranked opponents, loss to SP+ No. 91, .567 opponent win percentage
OK, you probably guessed Team A is SMU. The Mustangs have wins against Louisville and Pitt — both relatively emphatic — and their lone loss came to No. 9 BYU, which came before a quarterback change and included five red zone drives that amounted to only six total points.
Team B? That’s Notre Dame. The Irish have the worst loss by far (to Northern Illinois) of any team in the top 25, beat a common opponent by the same score (though, while SMU outgained Louisville by 20 yards, the Cardinals actually outgained Notre Dame by 115) and have played one fewer game.
The difference? SMU has the stigma — of the death penalty, of the upstart program new to the Power 4, of being unworthy. Notre Dame is the big brand, and that results in being ranked three spots higher and, if the playoff were held today, getting in, while the Mustangs are left out.
There are three two-loss SEC teams ranked ahead of Ole Miss, which seems to be a perfectly reasonable consensus if you look at the AP poll, too. But are we sure that’s so reasonable?
Two stats we like to look at to measure a team’s quality are success rate (how often does a team make a play that improves its odds of winning) and explosiveness. Measure the differentials in each between offense and defense, then plot those out, and you’ll get a pretty clear look of who’s truly dominant in college football this season.
Explosive Play differential vs. Successful Play differential
Auburn & Ark make no sense
Iowa & Iowa St are twinsies!
Is Ole Miss undervalued? pic.twitter.com/h87SKCdOtr— 💫🅰️♈️🆔 (@ADavidHaleJoint) November 3, 2024
That outer band that features Penn State, Texas, Miami, Ohio State and Indiana (and notably, not Oregon, Alabama, LSU or Texas A&M)? That’s where Ole Miss lives.
The Rebels have two losses this season, each by three points, both in games they outgained the winning team. They lost to LSU on the road and, yes, somehow lost to a dismal Kentucky team. But hey, LSU lost to USC, too. It has been a weird season.
SP+ loves Ole Miss. The Rebels check in at No. 4 there, behind only Ohio State, Texas and Georgia.
The FPI agrees, ranking the Rebels fifth.
In ESPN’s game control metric, no team is better. Ole Miss has the third-best average in-game win percentage. That suggests a lot of strange twists, and bad luck was involved with its losses. These are things the committee should be evaluating when comparing like teams.
But how about this comparison?
Team A: 7-2, 23 points per game scoring margin vs. FBS, 1 loss to unranked, three wins vs. SP+ top 40
Team B: 7-2, 19 points per game scoring margin vs. FBS, 1 loss to unranked, three wins vs. SP+ top 40
Pretty similar, eh?
Of course, one of them is Ole Miss. That’s Team A this time around.
Team B is Alabama, ranked five spots higher.
Sure, this situation can be resolved quite easily this weekend with a win over Georgia, but Ole Miss starting at the back of the pack of SEC contenders seems like a miss by the committee, even if the math will change substantially before the next rankings are revealed.
Oh, thanks so much for the No. 25 nod, committee. All Army has done is win every game without trailing the entire season. Last season, when Liberty waltzed through its weakest-in-the-nation schedule, the committee had no objections to giving the Flames enough love to make a New Year’s Six bowl. But Army? At No. 25? Thirteen spots behind Boise State, the Knights’ competition for the Group of 5’s bid? Something tells us some spies from Air Force have infiltrated the committee’s room in some sort of Manchurian Candidate scenario.
Sure, the Seminoles are terrible now, and yes, the committee this season has plenty of new faces, but that doesn’t mean folks in Tallahassee have forgiven or forgotten what happened a year ago. Before the committee’s playoff snub, FSU had won 19 straight games and averaged 39 points. Since the snub, the Noles are 1-9 and haven’t scored 21 points in any game. Who’s to blame for this? Mike Norvell? The coaching staff? DJ Uiagalelei and the other struggling QBs? Well, sure. But it’s much easier to just blame the committee. Those folks killed Florida State’s playoff hopes and ended their run of success. The least they could do this year is rank them No. 25 just for fun.
Also angry: South Carolina (5-3, unranked), Vanderbilt (6-3, unranked), Georgia (7-1, No. 3), Louisville (6-3, No. 22), everyone who is not in the Big Ten.
Sports
Alabama A&M LB Burnett remains hospitalized
Published
15 hours agoon
November 6, 2024By
admin-
Associated Press
Nov 5, 2024, 01:04 PM ET
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. — Alabama A&M linebacker Medrick Burnett Jr. remains hospitalized after sustaining a head injury during a game.
Burnett was still in the hospital Tuesday, according to an Alabama A&M spokesperson. The school hasn’t disclosed details of the injury Burnett suffered during a collision against Alabama State on Oct. 26.
A fundraising request on gofundme.com had raised more than $17,000 of a $100,000 goal as of Tuesday, and the school also set up an emergency relief fund. The gofundme goal included money to help the family pay for housing so they could be with him.
“He had several brain bleeds and swelling of the brain,” Burnett’s sister, Dominece, wrote in a post on the page. “He had to have a tube to drain to relieve the pressure, and after 2 days of severe pressure, we had to opt for a craniotomy, which was the last resort to help try to save his life.”
An update on Saturday said Burnett had had complications, but didn’t elaborate.
Burnett is a second-year freshman from Lakewood, California. He transferred from Grambling State during the offseason.
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