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Ute QB Jason Shelley tops 300 yards passing, but turnovers ‘cost us the game’

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(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
The University of Utah warms up before facing Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
The University of Utah prepares to face Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018. Utah Utes running back TJ Green (4) at center(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) celebrates a first quarter touchdown as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018. At right is Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15)(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) celebrates a first quarter touchdown as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes linebacker Francis Bernard (36) knocks the ball away from Northwestern Wildcats running back John Moten IV (20) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) runs the ball as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
The University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes tight end Jake Jackson (44) scores a touchdown as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes linebacker Cody Barton (30) and Utah Utes defensive back Javelin K. Guidry (28) sack Northwestern Wildcats quarterback Clayton Thorson (18) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes defensive tackle John Penisini (52) stops Northwestern Wildcats running back Isaiah Bowser (25) on a fourth down play as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes tight end Jake Jackson (44) scores a touchdown as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes defensive tackle John Penisini (52) stops Northwestern Wildcats running back Isaiah Bowser (25) on a fourth down play as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Northwestern Wildcats defensive back Alonzo Mayo (10) tackles Utah Utes running back TJ Green (4) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) looks to pass as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes place kicker Matt Gay (97) scores a field goal as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes defensive back Marquise Blair (13) intercepts a bobbled pass intended for Northwestern Wildcats wide receiver Berkeley Holman (16) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) stiff-arms Northwestern Wildcats defensive back JR Pace (13) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes linebacker Cody Barton (30) gets in on a sack of Northwestern Wildcats quarterback Clayton Thorson (18) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes defensive tackle Pita Tonga (49) pressures Northwestern Wildcats quarterback Clayton Thorson (18) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes head coach Kyle Whittingham as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) walks off the field after a turnover as Northwestern players celebrate in the background. The University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) on the sideline after a turnover as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) loses control of the ball as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Northwestern Wildcats wide receiver Cameron Green (84) loses the ball after a hit by Utah Utes defensive back Corrion Ballard (15) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Siaosi Mariner (8) on the sideline after a turnover as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) walks off the field after a turnover as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Bryan Thompson (19) pulls in a catch as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) on the sideline after a turnover as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes head coach Kyle Whittingham looks to the scoreboard late in the fourth quarter as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah players walk off the field as the University of Utah loses to Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Northwestern Wildcats defensive lineman Joe Gaziano (97) strips the ball from Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah fans stand in the rain late in the game as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes head coach Kyle Whittingham walks off the field, shaking his head, as the University of Utah loses to Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) on the sideline after a turnover as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) loses control of the ball, defended by Northwestern Wildcats defensive back Trae Williams (3) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.

San Diego • As of halftime Monday night, Utah quarterback Jason Shelley seemingly was going to be remembered for everything he did to give the Utes' season a satisfying ending.

Shelley's fill-in opportunity instead will be framed by what happened in the second half of a 31-20 loss to Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl at SDCCU Stadium.

Having produced only three points against Washington in the Pac-12 championship to conclude November, Shelley and the Ute offense were shut out in the second half vs. Northwestern. Shelley's two interceptions and two fumbles (one returned for an 86-yard touchdown) accounted for four of Utah's six turnovers; Texas high school teammate Jaylen Dixon fumbled twice after catching passes.

Dixon partly blamed the rainy conditions for his fumbles. Problems with pass protection and his own decision-making hurt Shelley, who said the turnovers “cost us the game.”

Shelley completed 27 of 45 passes for 302 yards and two touchdowns, impressive numbers considering how Utah's inability to run the ball demanded more of the passing game. Shelley was the Utes' most effective runner, netting 39 yards with sacks subtracted.

Utah once hoped that junior quarterback Tyler Huntley would be available for the Holiday Bowl, eight weeks after breaking his collarbone. But as the game approached, it became evident to the coaching staff that Huntley wouldn't be physically ready to play, even after practicing for three weeks, so Shelley would remain the starter.

In his last game before becoming Sacramento State's head coach, offensive coordinator Troy Taylor devised a scheme that worked in the first half, although the Utes wished they could have finished two drives that ended with field goals. Taylor found sufficient targets for Shelley, whose scrambling ability was a key factor in the half when he went 13 of 20 for 155 yards with no interceptions.

Dixon caught nine passes for 114 yards and one touchdown, emerging as a key receiver with No. 1 receiver Britain Covey sidelined by a knee injury. The problem was that two plays that would have given Utah first downs in Northwestern territory turned into takeaways for the Wildcats, altering the momentum.

Utah also got four receptions each from Siaosi Mariner and tight end Brant Kuithe and three each from Solomon Enis and tight end Jake Jackson. The use of Jackson in the passing game (including a touchdown catch) was a good example of Utah's self-scouting in bowl preparation, with Jackson having been used primarily as a blocker and catching only six passes in the first 13 games.

The problem was that Jackson’s 4-yard play in the first quarter stood as Utah’s last touchdown of the season.



Utah defense slumps while the offense stumbles in Holiday Bowl

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(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
The University of Utah warms up before facing Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
The University of Utah prepares to face Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018. Utah Utes running back TJ Green (4) at center(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) celebrates a first quarter touchdown as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018. At right is Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15)(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) celebrates a first quarter touchdown as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes linebacker Francis Bernard (36) knocks the ball away from Northwestern Wildcats running back John Moten IV (20) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) runs the ball as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
The University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes tight end Jake Jackson (44) scores a touchdown as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes linebacker Cody Barton (30) and Utah Utes defensive back Javelin K. Guidry (28) sack Northwestern Wildcats quarterback Clayton Thorson (18) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes defensive tackle John Penisini (52) stops Northwestern Wildcats running back Isaiah Bowser (25) on a fourth down play as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes tight end Jake Jackson (44) scores a touchdown as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes defensive tackle John Penisini (52) stops Northwestern Wildcats running back Isaiah Bowser (25) on a fourth down play as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Northwestern Wildcats defensive back Alonzo Mayo (10) tackles Utah Utes running back TJ Green (4) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) looks to pass as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes place kicker Matt Gay (97) scores a field goal as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes defensive back Marquise Blair (13) intercepts a bobbled pass intended for Northwestern Wildcats wide receiver Berkeley Holman (16) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) stiff-arms Northwestern Wildcats defensive back JR Pace (13) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes linebacker Cody Barton (30) gets in on a sack of Northwestern Wildcats quarterback Clayton Thorson (18) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes defensive tackle Pita Tonga (49) pressures Northwestern Wildcats quarterback Clayton Thorson (18) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes head coach Kyle Whittingham as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) walks off the field after a turnover as Northwestern players celebrate in the background. The University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) on the sideline after a turnover as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) loses control of the ball as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Northwestern Wildcats wide receiver Cameron Green (84) loses the ball after a hit by Utah Utes defensive back Corrion Ballard (15) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Siaosi Mariner (8) on the sideline after a turnover as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) walks off the field after a turnover as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Bryan Thompson (19) pulls in a catch as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) on the sideline after a turnover as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes head coach Kyle Whittingham looks to the scoreboard late in the fourth quarter as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah players walk off the field as the University of Utah loses to Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Northwestern Wildcats defensive lineman Joe Gaziano (97) strips the ball from Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah fans stand in the rain late in the game as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes head coach Kyle Whittingham walks off the field, shaking his head, as the University of Utah loses to Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) on the sideline after a turnover as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) loses control of the ball, defended by Northwestern Wildcats defensive back Trae Williams (3) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.

San Diego • In their latest bowl game, the Holiday here, the Utah Utes were on their way to doing what they usually do in the postseason — win and play tough, two-fisted defense.

It got to the point early on when there was a sense of sympathy for the Northwestern Wildcats, repeatedly unable to move the ball on a wall of Utes resistance. Even when Northwestern had some opportunity, such as a Utah fumble near midfield covered by them, the offense could do … absolutely nothing with the ball, except punt it.

The Utes mixed up their defensive approaches, but seemed convinced that Northwestern could not gain much yardage on the ground. It tried, and couldn’t. It tried again, and couldn’t. The Wildcats had a negative-6 yards via the rush in the first half. And then, they just kind of gave up, giving instead the green-light to quarterback Clayton Thorson to throw and thrash out whatever he could.

That didn’t work, either.

Next, down 17 points at the half, Northwestern gained the favor of the football gods, or was it Utah’s mistakes? Yes, the latter. The defense cracked under the force of the Utes’ problems on offense — key fumbles and interceptions, all told, six of them, some of which turned into huge plays for the Wildcats.

And while their attack crumbled, that defense slumped, and the Utes lost, 31-20.

Here was the disparity:

In the first half, the D surrendered a total of 126 yards, and no touchdowns.

In the second, the D gave up 196 yards, and three TDs. Northwestern got 28 points in the third quarter, including a Jason Shelley fumble returned 86 yards for a score.

It was a crazy shift of fortune.

The Utes, knowing full well the Wildcats had to go through the air, often targeted Thorson, effectively bringing pressure, sometimes on first down. An interception by safety Marquise Blair, after Utah held a 14-point lead, set up another Utes score — a Matt Gay field goal — just before the half.

But momentum and mojo both rolled over that proud Utah defense through those third and fourth quarters, as it was unable to plug the holes in a failing defensive dam.

“Overall, the defensive performance, not bad numbers,” Utah coach Kyle Whittingham said, “a little over 300 yards we gave up. Only had one takeaway, though. When you’re minus-five, which was the net result, you’re going to win almost never.”


Jennifer Rubin: Politicians and press need to shape up in 2019

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Like resolutions to go the gym more frequently, political resolutions won't survive beyond January unless you set achievable aims, enlist others to keep you on track and form new habits. We've got a batch of doable goals for the press, politicians and voters.

The mainstream media should aim to stifle the inclination to repeat President Donald Trump's ludicrous threats ("close the Southern Border"), outrageous accusations and falsehoods without context. "Trump tells troops he gave them a 10 percent raise" only helps Trump broadcast a blatant lie. "Trump lies again to troops about their raise" or "Trump repeats falsehood about troops' raise" are more honest and informative formulations. (We learn what he claimed, that it was false and that it's not the first time.)

Some of the mainstream press has begun to cease live coverage of the increasingly infrequent White House press conferences; the rest should follow suit unless they are equipped to rebut and debunk White House press secretary Sarah Sanders' serial untruths in real time. She's not news, and it's no service to give her a platform to repeat falsehoods. If there is anything newsworthy, portions of the news conference can be aired later. The White House's position on various matters can be obtained by individual outlets without the necessity of a live news conference.

Journalists will have their work cut out for them as a slew of Democrats announce their candidacies for president. They must resist the urge to declare who is a "serious" or "viable" candidate a year before any primary voting begins. Given the experience of 2016, it's essential to spend more time researching and reporting on the candidates' backgrounds and experience, and less on covering content-free rallies. The media would do well to ask candidates knowledge-based questions ("What does the trade deficit with China really mean?") as well as tough, substantive questions.

For example, for Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., they might ask, "Do you regret your stance on drug prosecutions, the death penalty and sentencing reform as California state attorney general?" They shouldn't shy away from character questions ("When and how did you make amends for a bad decision?" "When have you bucked your party to put the country first?"). Finally, they should reject invitations to conceal one candidate's attacks on others with weasel words ("Some Democrats say ..." instead of "Sen. Sanders' followers say ..."). The media should demand all announced candidates' medical and financial records.

Democratic politicians should decline the invitation to race so far to the left they leave voters with the impression they are not worthy of their trust. In Congress, that means the Democratic-majority House should aim not to pass the most extreme legislation for which Democrats can muster a majority but the most reasonable and broadly popular. That's how they put Senate Republicans in a box and demonstrate they, not Republicans, are capable of sound governance.

As for the presidential race, Republicans will be hoping the Democrats race to the left. Some supporters of Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., see the "ability to appeal across the breadth of the party" as a fatal flaw. If electability is now a disqualifier, they should resign themselves to four more years of Trump.

For Republicans in Congress, it’s time to return to reality-based politics. That means not accepting or repeating Trump’s lies, not smearing the special counsel, not fanning hysteria about the border and not reflexively defending Trump’s conduct no matter how ethically or legally objectionable. Republicans need to do their own job as the first branch of government — pass legislation with wide popular support — not get permission from Trump for bills they put on the floor. They are not his employees.

Republicans who might challenge Trump for the presidential nomination and donors, activists and voters who might support them need the courage to do more than critique Trump from the sidelines (or their Twitter feed or in the pages of a memoir). The Republican Party has eviscerated the tenets of modern conservatism, so it's up to a new crop of Republican contenders to lay out their updated vision for a center-right party. Whether successful or not in their primary challenges, they'll provide a road map for the party when and if it comes to its senses and abandons Trump.

Finally, voters need to take their responsibility as citizens seriously. If they support unethical, unvetted and unfit candidates, they'll get the government they deserve. If voters exclude information that contradicts their beliefs and choose to marinate in conspiracy theories and social media, they cannot complain when their utterances are correctly identified as loony or just wrong. If they want to be respected by fellow citizens, they have to earn respect by demonstrating they are knowledgeable, civil and decent participants in our democratic debate. And it wouldn't hurt to spend a lot less time on social media and more time reading books - and not the propaganda tracts put out by partisan warriors.

Voters should resist the entreaties to play the victim, look for scapegoats and insist that the solutions to what ails us are “easy.” That’s the talk of subjects in an autocracy, not free citizens in a republic.

Jennifer Rubin | The Washington Post
Jennifer Rubin | The Washington Post

Jennifer Rubin writes reported opinion for The Washington Post.@JRubinBlogger

We asked what headlines you want to see in 2019. Here’s what you said.

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A sampling of the Dream Headlines submitted by Salt Lake Tribune readers, news they would like to read in the coming year.





















































Letter: Half-flap ads are really annoying

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I can’t think of any better way to get my day started than to pour myself a cup of coffee and open the paper to see that I can get my cabinets refaced or face lasered. These half-flap ads are more annoying than a logo in an obituary.

C’mon Trib. You’re a Pulitzer-winning newspaper, not junk mail.

Scott Perry, Salt Lake City

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Letter: Blame for offensive commentary falls on The Tribune

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I have observed comments and editorializing regarding the Dec. 23 commentary by Johnny Townsend, which understandably offended many decent folks. But those are either missing the point or The Tribune is choosing to publish only point-missing contributors.

There will always be characters with minds mired in life’s “low places.” The blame should be squarely placed where it belongs: on The Tribune for printing such indecent drivel.

The Tribune advertises itself as the “independent” voice of Utah, but everyone knows that really means it is the “anti-Mormon” voice of Utah. That’s why the paper was founded over a century ago, that’s what it has always done, and that’s what it continues to do. The continual lowering of the bar in that quest never fails to disappoint.

Paul Sharp, Salt Lake City

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Kirby: Just like a century ago, a happy new year may be a long shot

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Although filled with hope and promise, New Year’s Day a hundred years ago more than suggests that the world is no better off today than it was in 1919.

Today we have unsettled politics, American troops fighting in faraway places, controversial drug laws, medical care issues, and immigration conflicts while — well, just like they did back then.

In 1919, on what is normally the cheeriest day of the year, the dust was barely settling from Armistice Day, a month and a half earlier. Soldiers from Utah were trickling home, scarred and broken from a global conflict that, according to some sources, claimed an estimated 16 million lives.

It was the worst war the world had ever known — to that point, anyway. Armistice Day set the stage for what would be the world’s worst war (again, to that point) 20 years later, killing about 85 million or roughly 3 percent of the earth’s population.

Health was also a major concern then — as it is now. Although winding down, the effects of the Spanish flu epidemic still raged in places. In 1919, nurses in Salt Lake City were in short supply and drawing unprecedented wages. The flu claimed 50 million to 100 million lives.

Speaking of hope for change, Salt Lake City’s first arrest of 1919 was made when police Capt. Henry Taggart and Patrolman Walter Griffin snatched up “on the hip man” J. Rust at the Hub Hotel.

Rust was in effect a walking bar, selling shots on the sly from a glass and two pints of whiskey concealed in an apparatus on his hip. It would be another 14 new years before Utah became the deciding vote to repeal Prohibition. Take note, Prop 2 opponents.

A hundred years ago, prisoners at the state penitentiary in Sugar House, including life termers, banged metal objects against the bars of their cells in celebration of another year in overcrowded confinement.

In 1919, as it does today, public idiocy contributed to the rising cost of public safety. On New Year’s Day 1919, the entire Salt Lake City Fire Department responded to its first call of the year, which turned out to be a false alarm triggered by a drunk who believed the light dancing on the outside of the glass windows of Longfellow School were actually flames inside the school.

Forgiveness was in equally short supply back then. The headline of the Salt Lake Telegram’s sports section on Jan. 1, 1919: “A Happy New Year to the Whole Bloomin’ World — Except the Huns.” Today, we have the benevolent nature of social media.

All I’m saying is that humanity has always celebrated another year in a horrible world. We can make some things better — usually by making other things worse — but we can’t change the nature of the world.

Today, we have a controversial president who some believe is controlled by outside influences (namely Russia). Lots of people hope 2019 will spell disaster for President Donald Trump.

In 1919, we had a somewhat similar situation. President Woodrow Wilson (on his second marriage) had gotten us into World War I. This and other decisions made him a lot of enemies who wished him ill. They got their wish. In October 1919, he had a stroke.

Many believe that Wilson’s second wife, who refused to allow outsiders to bother the stricken president with running the nation, took it upon herself to “relay” the president’s desires to his Cabinet. Historians believe that she was essentially the president until her husband’s term ended. How’s that for outside influence?

We’ll always inherit a messy, awful world. On New Year’s Day, the best we can hope for is to change ourselves and make our immediate surroundings better for those we love.

Single-digit temperatures in Salt Lake City? -18 in Park City? That’s how 2019 begins.

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The new year in Utah will begin like the old one ended — cold.

Temperatures are not expected to reach 30 degrees in Salt Lake City until Friday, according to the National Weather Service. Tonight is to be especially cold. The weather service predicts temperatures in the single digits in Salt Lake City.

That’s still better than Park City. New Year’s Day there could be as cold as 18 degrees below zero when accounting for windchill, the weather service says.

The next chance for snow on either side of the Wasatch Mountains is Saturday night, though the weather service says there’s only a 30 percent chance of that.

Even St. George is supposed to get down to 19 degrees on Tuesday night and Wednesday morning. Daytime temperatures will be in the 40s and 50s during the week. There’s also a chance of snow there Saturday.

For more information, go to https://www.sltrib.com/weather.


Letter: How about some real action on air quality?

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What a joy to see the headline that Gov. Gary Herbert is prioritizing clean air in his budget proposal.

For a brief moment I was excited that he was using the power of his office to address this issue. And the dollars allotted were not minor.

But after reading the article, I saw he was not serious in getting to the big core issue. Many of his proposals will help some to minimize poor air quality by promoting telecommuting, free bus days, helping people replace wood burning stoves, more electric car charging stations and updating snowblowers; all good, small steps.

But if this was a real priority Utah needs to move its dependence on dirty coal (which creates the energy to charge those cars) to a cleaner source. In one of the sunniest states, with accessible land, why isn’t he calling for solar development? It would be good for our air and for the economy.

Use some of the earmarked money to retrain those that make their living from coal. Let’s harness this energy and make a real difference.

Susan Corth, Salt Lake City

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Roger Federer’s team beats Serena Williams' in mixed doubles, the 1st match between the two tennis icons

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Perth, Australia • Roger Federer won the bragging rights over fellow tennis great Serena Williams as they faced each other on court for the first time on Tuesday, with Federer spearheading Switzerland’s 4-2, 4-3 (3) victory over the United States in a mixed doubles decider at the Hopman Cup.

"I was nervous returning. People talk about her serve so much and I see why it is such a wonderful serve because you just can't read it," Federer said. "It was great fun. You see how determined and focused she is, and I love that about her."

Federer and playing partner Belinda Bencic overcame Williams and Frances Tiafoe in the Fast4 format as Switzerland beat the U.S. 2-1 in front of a 14,000 capacity crowd.

Federer and Williams shared a good-natured interview afterward and then engaged in a selfie.

"It was so fun. This is super cool that we get to do it at such a pinnacle point of our careers," Williams said. "I was so excited, and literally it was the match of my career. Just playing someone so great, and someone you admire so much, and a match that actually means something."

Frances Tiafoe talks with his partner Serena Williams of the United States, during their mixed doubles match against Roger Federer and Belinda Bencic of Switzerland at the Hopman Cup in Perth, Australia, Tuesday, Jan. 1, 2019. (AP Photo/Trevor Collens)
Frances Tiafoe talks with his partner Serena Williams of the United States, during their mixed doubles match against Roger Federer and Belinda Bencic of Switzerland at the Hopman Cup in Perth, Australia, Tuesday, Jan. 1, 2019. (AP Photo/Trevor Collens) (Trevor Collens/)

Federer and Williams have won 43 Grand Slam singles titles between them.

Defending champion Switzerland will qualify for Saturday's final if it beats Greece on Thursday. The United States, which lost to Greece on Monday, can't now advance.

The much-hyped contest quickly lived up to its billing with Federer almost running down Williams' smash into the open court. Williams and Federer served strongly and were unable to return any of each other's serves in the first set.

Federer's sublime touch at the net proved decisive as he moved closer to a record third Hopman Cup title.

Williams grabbed at her right shoulder on several occasions late in the second set but played down any injury concern.

"It was such a quick turnaround, I didn't have enough time to reload the cannon. It's totally normal," she said.

Roger Federer of Switzerland returns the ball to Serena Williams of the United states during their mixed doubles match at the Hopman Cup in Perth, Australia, Tuesday, 1,  Jan. 2019. (AP Photo/Trevor Collens)
Roger Federer of Switzerland returns the ball to Serena Williams of the United states during their mixed doubles match at the Hopman Cup in Perth, Australia, Tuesday, 1, Jan. 2019. (AP Photo/Trevor Collens) (Trevor Collens/)

Earlier, Federer beat Tiafoe 6-4, 6-1 in the men’s singles before Williams leveled the tie with a comeback 4-6, 6-4, 6-3 victory over Bencic.

Speaking to University of Utah students, Joe Biden offers no clarity about whether he’ll pursue another presidential run

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(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Vice President Joe Biden speaks at Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project, a university presidential initiative meant to enrich undergraduate education across the U.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  A packed house fills Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus to hear Vice President Joe Biden speak on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project, a university presidential initiative meant to enrich undergraduate education across the U.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  A video plays a short history of Vice President Joe Biden before he takes to the stage to speak at Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project. (Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  A video plays a short history of Vice President Joe Biden before he takes to the stage to speak at Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project. (Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Vice President Joe Biden remarks "I am most proud of not one skinny hint of scandal in eight years," as he gestures while speaking at Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project, a university presidential initiative meant to enrich undergraduate education across the U.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Second year student Isabelle Schlegel joins a packed house at Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus to hear Vice President Joe Biden speak on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project, a university presidential initiative meant to enrich undergraduate education across the U.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Vice President Joe Biden praises Huntsman Cancer Institute Chief Executive Officer. Mary Beckerle at Kingsbury Hall after he was introduced by her on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project speaking engagement. (Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Vice President Joe Biden joins Prof. Mark Matheson onstage as he speaks at Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project, a university presidential initiative meant to enrich undergraduate education across the U.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Joanna Neal, originally from Delaware much like Vice President Joe Biden, brings her book for signing as she lines up with others outside Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018. The former vice president was speaking as part of MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project, a university presidential initiative meant to enrich undergraduate education across the U.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Vice President Joe Biden speaks at Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project, a university presidential initiative meant to enrich undergraduate education across the U.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Vice President Joe Biden joins Prof. Mark Matheson onstage as he speaks at Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project, a university presidential initiative meant to enrich undergraduate education across the U.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Vice President Joe Biden joins Prof. Mark Matheson onstage as he speaks at Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project, a university presidential initiative meant to enrich undergraduate education across the U.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Vice President Joe Biden joins Prof. Mark Matheson onstage as he speaks at Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project, a university presidential initiative meant to enrich undergraduate education across the U.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Vice President Joe Biden speaks at Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project, a university presidential initiative meant to enrich undergraduate education across the U.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  People line up outside Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, to hear Vice President Joe Biden speaks. (Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Vice President Joe Biden speaks at Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project, a university presidential initiative meant to enrich undergraduate education across the U.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Vice President Joe Biden speaks at Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project, a university presidential initiative meant to enrich undergraduate education across the U.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  University of Utah President Ruth Watkins welcomes those gathered for Vice President Joe Biden as he gets ready to speaks at Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project, a university presidential initiative meant to enrich undergraduate education across the U.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Vice President Joe Biden speaks at Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project, a university presidential initiative meant to enrich undergraduate education across the U.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Vice President Joe Biden joins Prof. Mark Matheson onstage as he speaks at Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project, a university presidential initiative meant to enrich undergraduate education across the U.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Vice President Joe Biden praises Huntsman Cancer Institute Chief Executive Officer. Mary Beckerle at Kingsbury Hall after he was introduced by her on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project speaking engagement. (Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Vice President Joe Biden joins Prof. Mark Matheson onstage as he speaks at Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project, a university presidential initiative meant to enrich undergraduate education across the U.(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Vice President Joe Biden joins Prof. Mark Matheson onstage as he speaks at Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project, a university presidential initiative meant to enrich undergraduate education across the U.

Former Vice President Joe Biden told a packed house at the University of Utah on Thursday that he’s “found his purpose” in life but didn’t reveal whether that includes another presidential run.

The roughly hourlong question-and-answer session will likely be Biden’s final public appearance of the year, and he used it to speak about his upbringing, his first years in politics and the 2015 death of his son, Beau.

During his illness, Beau Biden made his father promise not to let grief rob him of purpose in life. The vow — echoed in the title of Joe Biden’s new memoir, “Promise Me, Dad: A Year of Hope, Hardship, and Purpose” — was interpreted by some as an indication that the longtime U.S. senator from Delaware would launch a Democratic bid for the nation’s highest office.

But Biden said the promise was simply about staying “engaged in the things that animate your life.” Since his son died of brain cancer, Biden said he’s tried to live up to that goal.

"For the first year and a half, there wasn’t a day I woke up and I didn’t ask myself ... ‘Is he proud of me? Is he proud that I am staying engaged?’ " Biden said.

The moderator, professor Mark Matheson, said he opted not to question Biden about a 2020 presidential run because he wanted to focus on values and human issues rather than politics. The decision to sidestep the issue was made voluntarily, Matheson said, and Biden’s visit was not conditioned on it.

The former vice president has been on tour promoting his new book and has been dropping occasional comments about his political future along the way. At an event earlier this month in Montana, Biden labeled himself the most qualified person in the country to be president, the Associated Press reported.

The AP has also reported that Biden will convene with his family members over the holidays as he considers a possible presidential campaign. Biden, 76, has already run twice for the post and has said he won’t make a decision about a third bid until January.

Biden's appearance to a capacity crowd in the 1,800-seat Kingsbury Hall was part of the university's MUSE (My "U" Signature Experience) Project, which plans events for student enrichment.

The former vice president was warmly received by the Salt Lake City crowd, and he said he was delighted to be back in Utah, although he quipped that “I hate getting off at the airport without my skis.”

Mary Beckerle, CEO of the Huntsman Cancer Institute, introduced Biden and spoke glowingly of the former vice president's support of cancer research. Beckerle served on Biden's Cancer Moonshot Blue Ribbon Panel, a group that crafted recommendations for making rapid advancements in cancer diagnosis, prevention and treatment.

“Joe Biden is a person of hope in all-caps,” Beckerle said. “He sees where we are now, and he sees where we could be in the future.”

Biden called himself a "great admirer of the LDS" and said one of his greatest honors was spending an afternoon with 11 of the 12 apostles for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

He also expressed respect for former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman, who's now working as the U.S. ambassador to Russia.

Biden described Huntsman as “the ballast — and I mean ballast — in Russia right now, with that thug Putin.”

He also shared the story of his decision to become former President Barack Obama’s running mate, saying he initially leaned against joining the ticket but changed his tune after speaking with his family.

During the family meeting, Biden's elderly mother began by reminding him of times when he'd shown a commitment to racial justice and rooting out intolerance before delivering her punchline: "Honey, the first African American in American history that has a chance to be president of the United States says he needs you to win Pennsylvania, Ohio, Michigan, Colorado and Florida. And you told him no, honey?"

The crowd erupted in laughter.

“And that’s when I decided,” Biden continued. “It turned out to be the best decision my family ever made for me.”

During Thursday’s event, Matheson revealed that Biden had waived his speaking fee for the U. appearance, although he wouldn’t disclose what the honorarium would’ve been.

Editor’s note • Paul Huntsman, a brother of Ambassador Jon Huntsman, is the owner and publisher of The Salt Lake Tribune.

Utah could be the first state to pass a ‘digital privacy’ law

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A Utah state lawmaker has introduced legislation that would offer more protection for emails, instant messages and other online data.

Rep. Craig Hall, R-West Valley City, sponsored House Bill 57, which would make it so any “individual who transmits electronic information or data is the presumed owner of the electronic information or data,” and would require “issuance of a search warrant to obtain certain electronic information or data.”

The Libertas Institute, a libertarian think tank that endorsed the bill, says it appears to be the first of its kind in the nation.

Rep. Hall said his legislation ensures people don’t lose any ownership interest or reasonable expectation of privacy just because it goes through a third party, like Google, Facebook or Dropbox.

“We need to make sure that our digital and our electronic information is protected,” Hall told FOX 13 on Monday. “Just because it goes through wires, just because it goes in the cloud doesn’t mean we lose an expectation of privacy.”

Elizabeth Converse, the director of operations for the Utah Technology Council, told FOX 13 the council was looking into the bill.

“I think we support any time the legislature moves to update laws to make them more current to what people are using in today’s world,” she told FOX 13. “As we become more digital, we need to be cognizant of the fact that all of those laws might not be keeping up with the times.”

See more at FOX 13.

Editor’s note: The Salt Lake Tribune and FOX 13 are content-sharing partners.

The Pac-12 basketball struggles serve as consolation for the Utes’ inconsistency

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Utah coach Larry Krystkowiak seemed fairly upbeat last Saturday left the Huntsman Center after losing by 15 points to No. 6 Nevada. Maybe that’s because by the end of the night, Utah’s defeat would become by far the Pac-12′s most acceptable loss.

That's the Utes' rationalization of their entire nonconference showing, after a day when UCLA lost to Liberty, Arizona State fell to Princeton, Washington State was beaten by Santa Clara and California lost to Seattle.

This is the state of the Pac-12, entering conference basketball play this week: UCLA already fired coach Steve Alford and no team is ranked in the Top 25. Arizona State dropped out after losing to Princeton (following the Sun Devils' upset of then-No. 1 Kansas). No other team is even receiving votes, and the league lacks a ranked team for the first time since the 2011-12 season.

That's a mixed blessing for Utah and everybody else. The league is wide open; that's the positive perspective. But what does it say about that Utes that they're ranked 10th in this underperforming conference, according to the kenpom.com efficiency analysis?

Utah (6-6) opens Pac-12 play Thursday at Arizona State, hoping that losses to the likes of Minnesota, Kentucky and Nevada have helped the team's development, more than hurt it. In the context of his own team's season, Krystkowiak found consolation in the Pac-12's November-December effort.

“We've played as hard a schedule, I'd like to believe, as anybody has in our conference,” he said. “I don't think with the exception of Arizona State, anybody has just shot out of the gate and dazzled anybody and set the world on fire. I'd like to believe there's a bunch of coaches in our conference that feel like they've got a fighting chance to get some things done.”

Krystkowiak is targeting a top-four finish in the conference for a fifth straight season, even with his team picked to finish eighth and not performing at that level, based on the numbers. The Utes also have a mild scheduling disadvantage, playing Stanford and California only once each in the Pac-12′s rotation. Oregon, depleted by injuries, may be healthy by Jan. 31, when the Ducks come to town.

Utah hopes to extend a trend of Krystkowiak's teams improving as the season progresses. Of course, other teams expect similar growth.

“I think all the teams have work to do,” Washington State's Ernie Kent said during a Pac-12 coaches' teleconference last week. “Everybody's adjusting to newness or guys who sat out last year. It's just taken some time, but all of them are developing.”

Arizona State (9-3) is the only team that appears to have locked down an NCAA Tournament bid. The Sun Devils, though, are haunted by last season, when they went 12-0 in nonconference play (with a win over Kansas) and only 8-10 in the Pac-12, still making the NCAA field. Coach Bobby Hurley said his team is better equipped to follow up its nonconference success this year, although he expressed that belief before losing to Princeton.

Oregon (9-4) is the league’s next-strongest candidate, once front-court players Bol Bol and Kenny Wooten return to action. Any other team would require an extraordinary effort in the Pac-12 regular season or a conference tournament title to earn an NCAA bid.

Videos show staff dragging, shoving children at immigrant shelter

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Phoenix • Arizona authorities said Monday they sent prosecutors the results of an investigation into a now-shuttered shelter for immigrant children where videos showed staffers dragging and shoving kids.

The Maricopa County Sheriff's Office investigated incidents that took place on three days in September. Prosecutors will now decide whether to file charges.

The videos first obtained by The Arizona Republic are blurry but show staffers dragging children on the ground and shoving a boy against a door. In one video, a staffer is seen sitting at a conference room table, fidgeting with her hair, while another staffer drags a child into the room. The treatment continued even after the child falls to the ground.

The shelter, known as Hacienda del Sol, was operated by Southwest Key and located in the metro Phoenix area before it was closed in October. It held immigrant children who came to the U.S. without a parent or in some cases were separated from family.

Southwest Key has been under fire in Arizona after a series of investigations into abuse of children in its care.

The Texas-based organization is the largest provider of shelters for immigrant children in the country and agreed this year to give up licenses at two of its biggest Arizona facilities at a time when the U.S. government is holding more children in its care and for longer periods of time.

Before the investigations, Southwest Key had about 1,600 kids in 13 facilities in Arizona. That number was cut in about half by the end of the year.

Southwest Key was forced to shutter Hacienda del Sol in an agreement with the state health department after an investigation found the organization hadn't properly done background checks on all of its employees. It also was required to take other steps to ensure the safety of children in its care.

Southwest Key spokesman Jeff Eller said Monday that staff members who monitored video at Hacienda del Sol immediately notified police and the government agencies about the incidents seen on the videos.

He said the organization cooperated with the investigation and quickly suspended, and later fired, the two employees in the video.

"We wholeheartedly welcomed the Office of Refugee Resettlement's decision to suspend operations at Hacienda del Sol and are working to thoroughly retrain our staff," Eller said.

Southwest Key has also arranged an independent review of procedures, hiring and training at its Arizona shelters, he said.

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, which is in charge of caring for immigrant children, said its focus is on the safety and best interest of each child.

"These are vulnerable children in difficult circumstances," the agency said in a statement. "When any allegations of abuse or neglect are made they are taken seriously, investigated and swift action is taken."

Immigration facilities in Arizona have been targeted by numerous allegations of sexual abuse, including one by the government of El Salvador, which said it received reports of three children, 12 to 17, who were sexually abused at unnamed shelters.

In August, police arrested a 33-year-old man on suspicion of sexually abusing a 14-year-old girl at the same Southwest Key shelter where just weeks earlier first lady Melania Trump had taken a tour.

In September, a former youth care worker was convicted of sexually abusing seven teenage boys at a Phoenix-area shelter for immigrant children.

Louis C.K. mocks Parkland survivors and transgender people in stand-up set

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A year ago, stand-up comic Louis C.K. confirmed that sexual misconduct accusations made against him, which included incidents in which he masturbated in front of female colleagues, were “true.”

Then, he said he was going to disappear for a while.

“I have spent my long and lucky career talking and saying anything I want,” C.K. said in response to a New York Times investigation into the matter. “I will now step back and take a long time to listen.”

In a new, crude stand-up routine recorded at a Long Island comedy club in December, which leaked online over the weekend, C.K. explains what he did during that long listening window. He fled New York, which he now hates, and did some traveling in small U.S. towns, which he said made him uncomfortable. C.K. lost money, he said, a lot of money —$35 million in one day. Then he went to France “because I thought I should leave the nation,” he said.

The set, which continued for 45 minutes without directly mentioning the actions that derailed his career, included a sexually explicit joke about 9-year-old girls wearing Old Navy boyfriend-style jeans. The routine mocked young people who identify as gender neutral, featured a five-minute bit about what the comic believes is an absurd political correctness surrounding the word “retarded” and criticized the student survivors of mass school shootings for testifying before Congress.

“What are you doing? You’re young. You should be crazy, unhinged. Not in a suit, saying ‘I’m here to tell …,’” C.K. said in the audio clip. “You’re not interesting because you went to a high school where kids got shot. Why does that mean I have to listen to you? How does that make you interesting? You didn’t get shot. You pushed some fat kid in the way and then, now I gotta listen to you talking?”

The bit continued, referring to the February mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., that killed 17 students and staff.

“Everybody gets upset when there’s a shooting at a high school. I don’t really see why it’s any worse than anybody else dying. I don’t. Cuz a lot of people die, every day 7,500 people die in America, OK, so that day 17 kids got shot in a school. What about the other … 7,500 people? They didn’t die in their sleep. Some of them got electrocuted. By their parents. People get upset because they’re young. Because they died so young. That’s offensive to me.”

Those who survived the Parkland massacre, and parents of those who didn’t, quickly slammed C.K.’s routine. Fred Guttenberg, whose daughter Jaime was killed at Marjory Stoneman Douglas, criticized the comic in a tweet Monday morning.

“To anyone who knows Louis CK, please deliver this message for me,” Guttenberg wrote. “My son ran from the bullets. My wife and I deal with loss everyday. Why don’t you come to my house and try out your new pathetic jokes?”

Delaney Tarr, a co-founder of March for Our Lives who survived the Parkland shooting, wrote on Twitter that their group has “worked with plenty of comedians who have talked about us in a genuine, hilarious way.” But C.K.’s bit, she said, was different.

“This is just being a [jerk],” she said.

Shannon Watts, founder of Moms Demand Action, a group that advocates for gun legislation, summarized it like this: “Imagine thinking the best way to resurrect your career after admitting to sexual misconduct is to mock trans people and Parkland gun violence survivors,” she tweeted.

“Hey Louis CK,” tweeted Aalayah Eastmond, a Parkland survivor who testified before Congress that she hid beneath a dead classmate’s body during the shooting. “Since you like making fun of me and other Parkland survivors behind closed doors, I’m right here if you want to talk. Just try to keep it in your pants, ok?”

Cameron Kasky, who also co-founded March for Our Lives, said it was not his job “to police comedy just because I find it offensive.” He added, though, “Louis is an ass for the jokes he’s making, which sucks cause he used to be really funny and not just a professional jerk.” Kasky said he used to enjoy episodes of the FX TV drama “Louis,” which was a fictionalized version of C.K.’s life as a single dad and successful stand-up comic in New York City.

“Seems now like he’s becoming more of a Milo-style provocateur as opposed to just a non-PC comedian,” Kasky wrote on Twitter, referring to far-right writer Milo Yiannopoulos, who helped launch Breitbart News into the mainstream.

Long before the New York Times investigation published in fall 2017, in which five women accused C.K. of sexual misconduct, the comic’s jokes were perceived as crude. He rejected so-called political correctness and embraced his reputation as the guy who would say aloud the uncouth thoughts others didn’t.

The leaked audio recording shows a comic who, despite the past year (“I bet none of you had the kind of year I had”), has no plans to change his brand of funny. In one joke, he says he likes the way his Jewish doctor touches him. Then, the doctor says C.K. should stop eating ice cream, and the comic responds by using slurs to describe him.

He talked about his daughters and his issue with the way young people today conduct themselves. They should be doing Jell-O shots and having sex, he said. Instead he called them “boring.” He continued:

“‘You should address me. …’ They’re like royalty! They tell you what to call them. ‘You should address me as they/them, because I identify as gender neutral.’ Oh, OK.”

In the joke, C.K. said he would like to be called “there” because he identifies “as a location,” and the location is their mother’s genitals.

C.K. and his representatives did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

James Dolce owns three Governor’s Comedy Clubs on Long Island. Dolce said C.K. performed six times at his clubs in two weeks this month. The owner said he believes the leaked audio recording comes from one of those performances.

“Everyone in the audiences, and all the sold-out shows, they were there to see Louis,” Dolce said Monday afternoon. “Louis’s a genius when it comes to comedy. It’s why he has so many followers. It was nothing but applause, like he always gets when he’s onstage.”

Dolce, who has known C.K. for years, said he had not listened to the leaked recording of the show. He has strict rules at his club about recording devices because often comics are trying out new material.

“Nobody wants their material being heard before it’s totally 100 percent polished,” Dolce said. “That’s basically what he was doing.”

The performances at Dolce’s clubs weren’t C.K.’s first back onstage. In August, C.K. performed a 15-minute surprise set at the Comedy Cellar in New York, an institution he frequented before his downfall. He made other surprise appearances throughout the city, The New York Times reported, and protesters assembled outside the Comedy Cellar in October when the club advertised he would be performing back to back on a Monday night.

C.K.’s appearances raised a greater question about the comeback tours for male celebrities accused of sexual misconduct as part of the #MeToo movement and whether comedy club owners should be the gatekeepers who prevent powerful men who have hurt people from rising again.

Dolce said C.K. has performed at his club many times before and always treated his staff with kindness and respect. He added that it was not his job to comment on the content of a comic’s routine.

“You know who you’re coming to see,” Dolce said. “Comedy is a real opinionated profession. They say what they want to say. That’s comedy.”


Utah’s Brian Head resort cancels fireworks due to snow

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St. George • Southern Utah’s Brian Head Resort canceled its New Year’s Eve fireworks show because of snowy weather.

Brian Head spokesman Mark Wilder told The Spectrum of St. George that the resort's fireworks show and torchlight parade were canceled because of "blizzard" conditions. He says the snowy weather has been good for the ski resort but officials wanted to ensure the New Year's celebrations were safe.

The area's low temperature was -11 degrees Fahrenheit Monday and the Utah Department of Transportation reported icy conditions on State Road 143 leading to the resort.

Wilder says the resort plans to reschedule its fireworks show for President’s Day weekend.

NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft just visited the farthest object ever explored

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The nerdiest New Year's party in the solar system happened 4 billion miles from Earth, where a lone, intrepid spacecraft just flew past the farthest object humans have ever explored.

There was no champagne in this dim and distant region, where a halo of icy worlds called the Kuiper belt circles the outermost edge of the solar system. There were no renditions of "Auld Lang Syne" (in space, no one can hear you sing).

But there was a minivan-size spacecraft called New Horizons. And there was a puny, primitive object called Ultima Thule, a rocky relic of the solar system's origins, whose name means "beyond the borders of the known world."

At New Horizon's birthplace, the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland, scores of space scientists gathered Tuesday morning to wait for the signal confirming that New Horizons had survived its encounter with Ultima Thule.

The call came at 10:31 a.m. Eastern: The spacecraft's systems were working. Its cameras and recorder were pointed in the right direction.

“We have a healthy spacecraft,” mission operations manager Alice Bowman announced. “We have just completed the most distant flyby. We are ready for Ultima Thule science transmission — science to help us understand the origins of our solar system.”

At mission control, and in an APL auditorium where the rest of the science team was watching, people jumped from their seats and broke into cheers. The borders of the known world had just been pushed a little bit farther.

It had been 30 years since the mission to the outer reaches of the solar system was first conceived. Thirteen years since New Horizons launched from Kennedy Space Center, speeding away from Earth faster than any probe had traveled before. Three years since the spacecraft's famous and fateful encounter with Pluto, when it revealed the distant dwarf planet to be a complex and colorful world. And it had been 10 hours since 12:33 a.m., when the spacecraft was supposed to make the closest approach to its target.

"At this moment, while we're speaking, New Horizons is taking its riskiest observation," project scientist Alan Stern said in the early hours of Tuesday morning.

Most other Earthlings had already counted down til midnight and popped their champagne, but at APL, the assembled scientists, their family and friends were still waiting. Way out in the Kuiper belt, they knew, Ultima Thule was growing larger in New Horizon's field of view, glowing like a full moon.

"Thirty seconds to flyby," Stern said. "Are you ready? Are you psyched? Are you jazzed?"

Twenty seconds. Ten. And then Stern raised his hand in the air while confetti fell from the ceiling. The crowd cheered.

"New Horizons is at Ultima Thule," Stern proclaimed.

Or so he hoped. The spacecraft was still too busy conducting observations to send any information home. When it did beam out a status update, the immense distance from Ultima Thule meant it took more than six hours for the light to reach Earth.

The scientists did not know until Tuesday morning whether New Horizons had succeeded. It will take days to resolve the first sharp images, and months for all the data collected during the encounter to finally stream down.

But somewhere out in the dusky, dusty expanse of the Kuiper belt, New Horizons is already speeding further into the distance, Ultima Thule shrinking in the rear view.

This is the biggest and busiest moment for the New Horizons team since its spacecraft soared past Pluto three years ago, capturing detailed close-up photos of the distant dwarf planet.

Helene Winters, the mission's project manager, said spacecraft operators have been subsisting on chocolate and sleeping on air mattresses at the APL so they could make the most of every minute until New Horizons reached its target. Navigators kept a watchful eye out for potential hazards, which can be hard to spot in this faraway corner of the solar system.

Asked whether she thought she would be able to sleep Monday night, Winters laughed. "Ask me again tomorrow."

The following morning, New Horizons's operators sat in mission control, anxious. Data from the Deep Space Network, a chain of radio antennas NASA uses to communicate with distant spacecraft, was displayed on their screens.

Bowman sat with her hands folded, leaning toward her computer.

"In lock with telemetry," Bowman said.

In the APL auditorium, where the rest of the team and their families were watching, the crowd erupted in cheers.

Next came the status check: Planning — nominal. Power — green. Solid state recorders — pointed right where NASA wanted them. The spacecraft was healthy. New Horizons had done it.

Bowman grinned.

It was a fitting end to a celebration that began the night before. The scene at APL was somewhere between a New Year's party, a scientific conference, and a comic book convention. Researchers gave talks about the history of the early solar system. Scientists and their guests munched on crudités in a room lit with sparkling blue lights. Small children up long past their bedtimes scurried between chairs and sneaked cookies from the buffet.

"This is like a dream come true," said Chuck Fields, a podcast producer from Indianapolis who drove nine hours to attend Monday's event. He was dressed in a blindingly bright blazer and tie bearing images of planets, galaxies and the sun. His wife, Dawn, wore matching pants.

"You can find anything on Amazon," Dawn said with a laugh.

"Alan (Stern) said this was going to be a celebration," Chuck added. "So it was like, okay, let's celebrate!"

Benjamin Holder, 5, pored over an image of New Horizons and the distant rock it was due to encounter.

"I used to have a cat named Toolie," Benjamin said. "But the Thule rock that you're looking for is not named after my cat."

His uncle, Erik Lessac-Chenen, stifled a laugh. As a member of the spacecraft's optical-navigation team, he had devoted the better part of the past year and a half to tracking down that "Thule rock."

NASA nodded to the (entirely coincidental) timing of the encounter by counting down to 12 a.m. and distributing plastic cups of champagne. Then astrophysicist Brian May, better known as lead guitarist for the rock band Queen, debuted a song he wrote for the occasion.

"I'm not nervous," Stern said, with minutes to go until the encounter. "No, no, no. We'll find out how it all went in the morning."

New Horizons is the first NASA mission designed specifically to explore the outer solar system — a region that Stern calls "a scientific wonderland." Out in the Kuiper belt, where sunlight is 0.05 percent as strong as it is on Earth and temperatures hover close to absolute zero, the primitive building blocks of planets have persisted unchanged for 4.6 billion years.

"This is history-making, what we're doing, in more ways than one," Stern said. Every image sent back from New Horizons is the most distant photograph ever taken. Each maneuver is further than anything NASA has done before.

Ultima Thule is also among the most primitive objects ever explored. Unlike planets, which are transformed by geologic forces in their interiors, and asteroids, which are heated by the sun, Ultima Thule is thought to have existed in a "deep freeze" since it first formed.

"It is probably the best time capsule we've ever had for understanding the birth of our solar system and the planets in it," Stern said.

The encounter with Ultima Thule is among the more difficult feats NASA has attempted. The great distances from Earth and the sun mean that scientists must put up with a long communications lag, and instruments must operate with very little light. Ultima Thule was discovered four years ago, and its orbit and surroundings still aren't well known. And New Horizons is a 13-year-old vehicle; its power generator produces just a quarter as much wattage as a lightbulb, which means operators must carefully prioritize their use of remaining fuel.

The sheer speeds and distances involved boggle the mind. Ultima Thule is 1 percent the size of Pluto, and New Horizons must get four times closer to image it. At the moment of closest approach, the spacecraft was moving at a breathtaking 32,000 miles per hour. Its cameras had to swivel to track Ultima Thule as it passed by; otherwise, all it would see is a blur amid the black.

The New Horizons team had several experiments planned for the brief encounter. Particle and dust detectors were programmed to probe the environment around Ultima Thule. The spacecraft's three cameras took images in color and black and white in an effort to map the tiny world and determine its composition.

Deputy project scientist John Spencer said Monday that he is especially interested in those detailed color photos, which could illuminate a "particular mystery" about "cold classical" Kuiper belt objects such as Ultima Thule, which never underwent dramatic geologic change. Although these rocks should be primarily made of ice, they appear reddish when viewed through the Hubble Space Telescope. It may be that the ices contain impurities that change color when struck by cosmic rays, Spencer said — a possibility he hopes to pin down by looking into craters of more recently exposed material.

"Who knows?" he said. "Anything is possible when you're exploring a new class of world you've never seen before."

The moment also involved an unprecedented radio science experiment. Six hours before the moment of closest approach, the dishes of the Deep Space Network — which NASA uses to communicate with far-flung spacecraft — blasted a powerful radio signal in Ultima Thule's direction. The signal was timed to arrive at the rock at the same time New Horizons does on Jan. 1, allowing the spacecraft to study how those radio waves get reflected off its surface.

As APL staff began to set out plastic cups for champagne Monday night, those signals were racing toward their rendezvous with New Horizons and Ultima Thule — a message from an old year on this world, to the next year on a new one.

Utes in review: The disastrous third quarter of the Holiday Bowl will bother them as they look back at 2018

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(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
The University of Utah warms up before facing Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
The University of Utah prepares to face Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018. Utah Utes running back TJ Green (4) at center(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) celebrates a first quarter touchdown as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018. At right is Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15)(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) celebrates a first quarter touchdown as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes linebacker Francis Bernard (36) knocks the ball away from Northwestern Wildcats running back John Moten IV (20) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) runs the ball as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
The University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes tight end Jake Jackson (44) scores a touchdown as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes linebacker Cody Barton (30) and Utah Utes defensive back Javelin K. Guidry (28) sack Northwestern Wildcats quarterback Clayton Thorson (18) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes defensive tackle John Penisini (52) stops Northwestern Wildcats running back Isaiah Bowser (25) on a fourth down play as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes tight end Jake Jackson (44) scores a touchdown as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes defensive tackle John Penisini (52) stops Northwestern Wildcats running back Isaiah Bowser (25) on a fourth down play as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Northwestern Wildcats defensive back Alonzo Mayo (10) tackles Utah Utes running back TJ Green (4) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) looks to pass as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes place kicker Matt Gay (97) scores a field goal as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes defensive back Marquise Blair (13) intercepts a bobbled pass intended for Northwestern Wildcats wide receiver Berkeley Holman (16) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) stiff-arms Northwestern Wildcats defensive back JR Pace (13) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes linebacker Cody Barton (30) gets in on a sack of Northwestern Wildcats quarterback Clayton Thorson (18) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes defensive tackle Pita Tonga (49) pressures Northwestern Wildcats quarterback Clayton Thorson (18) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes head coach Kyle Whittingham as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) walks off the field after a turnover as Northwestern players celebrate in the background. The University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) on the sideline after a turnover as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) loses control of the ball as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Northwestern Wildcats wide receiver Cameron Green (84) loses the ball after a hit by Utah Utes defensive back Corrion Ballard (15) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Siaosi Mariner (8) on the sideline after a turnover as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) walks off the field after a turnover as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Bryan Thompson (19) pulls in a catch as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) on the sideline after a turnover as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes head coach Kyle Whittingham looks to the scoreboard late in the fourth quarter as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah players walk off the field as the University of Utah loses to Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Northwestern Wildcats defensive lineman Joe Gaziano (97) strips the ball from Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah fans stand in the rain late in the game as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes head coach Kyle Whittingham walks off the field, shaking his head, as the University of Utah loses to Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) on the sideline after a turnover as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) loses control of the ball, defended by Northwestern Wildcats defensive back Trae Williams (3) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.

San Diego • Kyle Whittingham’s 25th season as a member of Utah’s football staff ended Monday night, when he witnessed a turnaround unlike anything in his coaching career.

Four Utah turnovers. Four Northwestern touchdowns. Just like that, the story went from Utah’s history of thriving in bowl games to having everybody wonder what just happened in the 41st Holiday Bowl.

Northwestern went from trailing by 17 points at halftime to winning by 11 after three quarters of a 31-20 victory at SDCCU Stadium.

“I've been coaching a long time, and I don't think I've ever been part of a quarter like that third quarter,” Whittingham said.

The fourth quarter of Utah's 35-27 win over BYU in November comes close. The Utes staged their own 28-0 closing run that night, although that rally from 20 points behind started late in the third quarter and didn't include any takeaways.

In this episode, Utah’s turnovers resulted in one defensive touchdown for Northwestern and demoralized its own defense. “We kind of smile in the face of adversity,” Ute linebacker Cody Barton said, but the offense’s two interceptions and two fumbles in the third quarter caused too much emotional damage.

So the Utes (9-5) now have lost a bowl game in the program’s Pac-12 era, having made six trips in eight seasons. They’ll also live with two losses to end a year for the first time since 1996, thanks to Washington’s win in the Pac-12 championship game. Whittingham’s bowl record is 11-2.

Referencing the school's first Pac-12 South title, Whittingham said, “Without question, this was a big step forward for our program this year.”

That was difficult to remember, amid Monday’s madness.

Three takeaways

• Utah’s veteran offensive line will need three replacements in 2019, and will require some improvement in run blocking against top-tier opponents.

In losses to Washington and Northwestern, Utah averaged only 71 rushing yards. The Utes posted 91 yards Monday, thanks mostly to quarterback Jason Shelley. A stronger running game would have enabled Utah to finish drives and kept outgoing offensive coordinator Troy Taylor from calling a run-pass option from the 6-yard line on the play that resulted in Northwestern’s touchdown via Shelley’s fumble.

“I'm a firm believer you don't have to run for 300 yards a game, but you've got to run it efficiently,” Whittingham said.

The return of injured running back Zack Moss, a 2019 NFL draft prospect as a junior, certainly would help.

• In a weird way, Jason Shelley’s performance may have solved a dilemma. For all of the good things Shelley did in three November wins and in Monday’s first half, Tyler Huntley is Utah’s best quarterback.

Huntley couldn't play against Northwestern, eight weeks after breaking his collarbone, but he'll be healthy for spring practice in March and likely will be the starter as a senior.

Even so, Shelley is a proven player, having passed for 302 yards in a bowl game. His turn will come again as a junior in 2020.

• The Utes could have gone to the Rose Bowl. They also could have finished 8-6, with three straight losses. Utah’s strong finish against BYU became more important after the missed opportunities against Washington and Northwestern. Imagine what this offseason would be like otherwise.

Player of the game

Clayton Thorson. Northwestern's quarterback completed 21 of 30 passes for 241 yards and two touchdowns with one interception, becoming the school's career passing yards leader in his 53rd start.

Runner-up: Barton. Utah’s linebacker made eight tackles and moved ahead of teammate Chase Hansen for the season, with Hansen missing the game due to an undisclosed injury. Amid his disappointment, Barton said, “I’ve had a great senior season; nothing to hang my head about. No one on this team should hang their head.”

Play of the game

With the Utes seemingly about to restore their lead to 27-10 midway through the third quarter, Northwestern's Joe Gaziano stripped the ball from Shelley. Jared McGee picked it up and ran 86 yards to the end zone. Just like that, it was 20-17. The Utes still led, but it suddenly felt like they were behind.

Runner-up: Shelley’s 27-yard touchdown pass to Jaylen Dixon for Utah’s first score. That threaded pass was one of nine connections for the high school teammates, but they also were involved in all six of Utah turnovers.

Looking ahead

The Utah-BYU game in Provo is less than eight months away. It’s Rivalry Week, for 35 weeks. Other checkpoints exist, though.

Utah has two staff vacancies, needing an offensive coordinator and a defensive assistant. Whittingham had interest in former Arizona coach Rich Rodriguez, Yahoo Sports reported, before Rodriguez took a job at Mississippi. Whittingham is immersing himself in that process and would like to have a coach hired by early next week, but it may take longer.

Utah also needs to replace linebackers coach Justin Ena. Whittingham said the new coach may work with the safeties, apparently meaning defensive coordinator Morgan Scalley would take the linebackers.

The Utes' draft-eligible juniors must decide by mid-January whether they will stay in school. Moss and defensive linemen Bradlee Anae and Leki Fotu are candidates. Whittingham said it is possible they’ll all stay, but he’s prepared to lose one or two of them.

2020 Democratic brawl for presidency taking shape

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Cambridge, Mass. • The 2020 Democratic campaign to defeat President Donald Trump launched in earnest on New Year’s Eve, when Sen. Elizabeth Warren made her ambitions clear: She is running for president.

The Massachusetts Democrat's long-expected announcement that she had filed legal papers to open a campaign did not reshape the race so much as mark an official start to a presidential nominating contest expected to feature one of the largest and most diverse fields of candidates in the history of either major party.

There will be older women, younger women, women of color. There will be men of different shapes and ethnicities. The field will likely include billionaires, millionaires and candidates who still have college debt.

All will compete for attention not only with one another but with the ongoing hourly drama from the White House, from which Trump already chews through news cycles at an astounding pace. The Democrats also will be in races for money, for staff, for viral moments that garner widespread publicity and ultimately for votes in a radically altered political and media environment.

"This is a multilevel chess game with more candidates than anyone has seen," said Joe Trippi, a Democratic strategist. "I'm not sure anyone knows what the rules are, much less how to get through the marathon that started today."

This collection of candidates will be emerging as the Democratic Party is trying to determine how to define itself in the era of Trump. Questions abound: Should the party fight for the white working-class voters who flocked to Trump? Or should they look to younger, nonwhite voters whose numbers are growing faster than their voting habits? Should they tangle with Trump? Should they rise above him? Is a fresh face needed, or an experienced hand?

"This is an important time for Democrats to discuss what we're all about. Where do we stand as a party?" said Andrea Steele, the founder of Emerge America, an organization that encourages women to run for office. "We're in this defining moment. We have this president in there. And everything is at stake. Everything."

Political observers are used to thinking about presidential candidates as occupying defined lanes. But the 2020 race will include several candidates for some lanes, creating miniprimaries among the more crowded sections of the party. The challenge for candidates will be to win in their lanes while expanding beyond that niche to forge alliances with other groups.

Additional candidates are expected to make their intentions known in the next few weeks, turning the opening days of 2019 into a drumbeat of potential challengers to Trump.

Warren's opening salvo, broadcast via an emailed announcement video, defined her as an economic populist ready to stand up to Trump. Her slogan made her attitude clear: "Join the Fight."

“She is a very strong advocate — an edgy advocate — and is that what people are going to be looking for in the era of Trump? Do you fight edgy with edgy?” asked David Axelrod, the chief strategist for Barack Obama’s presidential campaigns.

"She has a very distinctive point of view that is very much born out of her life's work," he added. "And she was well known before she was in politics."

Warren also has a structural advantage over other candidates, Axelrod said. "She was the most rigorous about being in touch with and supporting primary candidates around the country (during the midterm campaigns). She's clearly been very methodical."

And though she tripped up with a poorly received release of a DNA test intended to prove that her family stories about Native American ancestry were accurate, Axelrod said the controversy has been overstated.

"Presidential campaigns are filled with high moments and low moments, and moments where people are second-guessing you," he said.

Trump revived his criticism of Warren's claimed ancestry in a New Year's Eve interview with Fox News, adding that "I hope she does well; I'd love to run against her."

Asked whether she could win, he replied: "Well, that I don't know, you'd have to ask her psychiatrist."

Warren’s announcement was expected, but the continuing tension over the lineup centers on three men whose decisions whether to run could influence other challengers — former Vice President Joe Biden, Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., and Beto O’Rourke, the Democratic congressman from El Paso, Texas, who left his seat to unsuccessfully challenge Republican incumbent Ted Cruz for a Senate seat.

(Francisco Kjolseth  |  The Salt Lake Tribune)  Vice President Joe Biden speaks at Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project, a university presidential initiative meant to enrich undergraduate education across the U.
(Francisco Kjolseth | The Salt Lake Tribune) Vice President Joe Biden speaks at Kingsbury Hall on the University of Utah campus on Thursday, Dec. 13, 2018, as part of the MUSE (My U Signature Experience) Project, a university presidential initiative meant to enrich undergraduate education across the U. (Francisco Kjolseth/)

Biden would have a historic advantage: In modern history, every former vice president who has sought his party's nomination has clinched it. The best-known candidate in the race, Biden has run and lost two previous campaigns for the Democrats' presidential nomination.

He said in November that he would not announce whether he would run until the new year. Asked whether that meant a January announcement, he said: "I wouldn't announce if I were going to run that early. It would be too early to start it."

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders gives the keynote address at The Sanders Institute Gathering in Burlington, Vt., Thursday, Nov. 29, 2018. Reasserting himself as a leading voice in Democratic politics, Sanders on Thursday called on the political party to work harder to convince people of all races, regions and income levels that liberal policies will help them. (April McCullum/The Burlington Free Press via AP)
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders gives the keynote address at The Sanders Institute Gathering in Burlington, Vt., Thursday, Nov. 29, 2018. Reasserting himself as a leading voice in Democratic politics, Sanders on Thursday called on the political party to work harder to convince people of all races, regions and income levels that liberal policies will help them. (April McCullum/The Burlington Free Press via AP) (April McCullum/)

Sanders, though unsuccessful in 2016, caught fire with his bold message and grumpy authenticity. He arguably has the most to lose from Warren’s entry into the race, as they offer similar economic populist messages and reside in the same region.

Sanders tweeted several hours after Warren's announcement, in what appeared to be a bid to stay in the conversation.

"We must have the courage to take on the greed and ideology of the billionaire class and to fight for a world of economic, social, racial and environmental justice," said Sanders. "Will this be an easy struggle? Certainly not."

FILE - In this Nov. 5, 2018, file photo, Rep. Beto O'Rourke, D-El Paso, the 2018 Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate in Texas, speaks during a campaign rally in El Paso, Texas. Southern politics was a one-party affair for a long time. But now it’s a mixed bag with battlegrounds emerging in states with growing metro areas where white voters are more willing to back Democrats. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File)
FILE - In this Nov. 5, 2018, file photo, Rep. Beto O'Rourke, D-El Paso, the 2018 Democratic candidate for U.S. Senate in Texas, speaks during a campaign rally in El Paso, Texas. Southern politics was a one-party affair for a long time. But now it’s a mixed bag with battlegrounds emerging in states with growing metro areas where white voters are more willing to back Democrats. (AP Photo/Eric Gay, File) (Eric Gay/)

O'Rourke gained national attention by raising more than $70 million, the largest Senate haul in history, in his bid to topple Cruz. A video O'Rourke tweeted Friday questioning the wisdom of building a border wall was viewed more than 5 million times in four days.

Other candidates occupy loose niches, often overlapping ones. The 2020 contest may also set a record for female and nonwhite candidates, their energy fueled by the party's successes in the midterm elections.

"The goal of 2020 will be about inspiring and turning out voters who have never participated," said Rashad Robinson, executive director of Color of Change, a racial justice organization. "This will not be about watering down a message. This cannot just be about defeating Trump."

FILE- In this Sept. 6, 2018, file photo Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., listens as President Donald Trump's Supreme Court nominee, Brett Kavanaugh, answers her question during the third day of Kavanaugh's Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington. Harris, whose memoir comes out Jan. 8, isn’t only writing for those of voting age. The picture book memoir “Superheroes Are Everywhere” will be released around the same time, Penguin Young Readers announced Monday, Nov. 19. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File)
FILE- In this Sept. 6, 2018, file photo Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., listens as President Donald Trump's Supreme Court nominee, Brett Kavanaugh, answers her question during the third day of Kavanaugh's Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington. Harris, whose memoir comes out Jan. 8, isn’t only writing for those of voting age. The picture book memoir “Superheroes Are Everywhere” will be released around the same time, Penguin Young Readers announced Monday, Nov. 19. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin, File) (Jacquelyn Martin/)FILE - In this Sept. 28, 2018, file photo, Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif. attends a Senate Judiciary Committee meeting on Capitol Hill in Washington. Their campaigns are not yet official, but some Democrats are beginning to frame the 2020 fight on their terms. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File)
FILE - In this Sept. 28, 2018, file photo, Sen. Kamala Harris, D-Calif. attends a Senate Judiciary Committee meeting on Capitol Hill in Washington. Their campaigns are not yet official, but some Democrats are beginning to frame the 2020 fight on their terms. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais, File) (Pablo Martinez Monsivais/)

Sens. Kamala Harris, D-Calif., and Cory Booker, D-N.J., both black, have proved themselves popular in early voting states, some of which are dominated by nonwhite voters.

Harris took to Twitter on Monday after Warren's announcement to offer a recap of her 2018 accomplishments.

She also reprised a tweet that she'd sent earlier in the year: "My advice to Black girls everywhere: whenever you find yourself in a room where there aren't a lot of people who look like you . . . remember that you have an entire community in that room with you, all of us cheering you on."

One of the two Democrats who have officially announced their candidacy, former San Antonio Mayor Julian Castro, also is expected to seek the party's young and minority voters. (The other official entrant is John Delaney, a Maryland congressman who is retiring from the House to pursue his bid.)

No candidate will get far without building an organization. That's were another division lies, between the Democrats who have already put together their teams and Democrats still thinking about whether to run. Booker, Harris, Sens. Kirsten Gillibrand of New York and Jeff Merkley of Oregon, and Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper are in the first camp.

All of them have signaled who would lead their campaigns, and in some cases, where their headquarters will be located; all have made overtures to potential staffers in early primary states and have begun making arguments about how they could win.

Other Democratic contenders are not so far along, thinking in public and in private about whether they can find a path. Sens. Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota and Sherrod Brown of Ohio acknowledge that they're looking at 2020, often by saying that the idea has been put to them by supporters who want a candidate who can win.

FILE - In this Nov. 6, 2018, file photo, Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, speaks to supporters after winning re-election during the Democratic election night party in Columbus, Ohio.  Brown plans an online town hall Sunday, Dec. 16 as he considers running for president in 2020.  (AP Photo/John Minchillo, File)
FILE - In this Nov. 6, 2018, file photo, Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, speaks to supporters after winning re-election during the Democratic election night party in Columbus, Ohio. Brown plans an online town hall Sunday, Dec. 16 as he considers running for president in 2020. (AP Photo/John Minchillo, File) (John Minchillo/)

The complicated aspect of the upcoming season is that many of these potential candidates have overlapping strengths.

Biden, Brown and Klobuchar are thought to have appeal in the Upper Midwest, the home of the many voters who abandoned the Democratic Party for Trump in 2016. Warren, Harris, Klobuchar and Gillibrand are all women.

The electorate might also have contradictory desires.

"Everyone likes a fresh face, but experience matters," said Randi Weingarten, the president of the 1.7 million-member American Federation of Teachers.

All of the candidates will soon be making visits to early states, if they haven't already.

Warren plans to visit Iowa this weekend, pending votes in the Senate. She hasn't been there since 2014, when she campaigned for Democratic U.S. Senate candidate Bruce Braley, who lost to Republican Joni Ernst.

On Monday, she called supporters and Democratic VIPs, including Tom Vilsack, the former Iowa governor and agriculture secretary under Obama.

He called Warren a "welcome addition" to the field.

But he also had a warning to all: "You really have to be 1,000 percent committed to this. It’s an incredible grind. And incredible set of pressure-packed days. You have to understand it’s going to be the most difficult thing you do in your life.

The Washington Post’s David Weigel contributed to this report.

Monson: Five important questions for Utah football during the offseason

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(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
The University of Utah warms up before facing Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
The University of Utah prepares to face Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018. Utah Utes running back TJ Green (4) at center(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) celebrates a first quarter touchdown as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018. At right is Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15)(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) celebrates a first quarter touchdown as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes linebacker Francis Bernard (36) knocks the ball away from Northwestern Wildcats running back John Moten IV (20) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) runs the ball as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
The University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes tight end Jake Jackson (44) scores a touchdown as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes linebacker Cody Barton (30) and Utah Utes defensive back Javelin K. Guidry (28) sack Northwestern Wildcats quarterback Clayton Thorson (18) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes defensive tackle John Penisini (52) stops Northwestern Wildcats running back Isaiah Bowser (25) on a fourth down play as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes tight end Jake Jackson (44) scores a touchdown as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes defensive tackle John Penisini (52) stops Northwestern Wildcats running back Isaiah Bowser (25) on a fourth down play as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Northwestern Wildcats defensive back Alonzo Mayo (10) tackles Utah Utes running back TJ Green (4) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) looks to pass as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes place kicker Matt Gay (97) scores a field goal as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes defensive back Marquise Blair (13) intercepts a bobbled pass intended for Northwestern Wildcats wide receiver Berkeley Holman (16) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) stiff-arms Northwestern Wildcats defensive back JR Pace (13) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes linebacker Cody Barton (30) gets in on a sack of Northwestern Wildcats quarterback Clayton Thorson (18) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes defensive tackle Pita Tonga (49) pressures Northwestern Wildcats quarterback Clayton Thorson (18) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes head coach Kyle Whittingham as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) walks off the field after a turnover as Northwestern players celebrate in the background. The University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) on the sideline after a turnover as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) loses control of the ball as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Northwestern Wildcats wide receiver Cameron Green (84) loses the ball after a hit by Utah Utes defensive back Corrion Ballard (15) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Siaosi Mariner (8) on the sideline after a turnover as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) walks off the field after a turnover as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Bryan Thompson (19) pulls in a catch as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) on the sideline after a turnover as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes head coach Kyle Whittingham looks to the scoreboard late in the fourth quarter as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah players walk off the field as the University of Utah loses to Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Northwestern Wildcats defensive lineman Joe Gaziano (97) strips the ball from Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes quarterback Jason Shelley (15) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah fans stand in the rain late in the game as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes head coach Kyle Whittingham walks off the field, shaking his head, as the University of Utah loses to Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) on the sideline after a turnover as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune)  
Utah Utes wide receiver Jaylen Dixon (25) loses control of the ball, defended by Northwestern Wildcats defensive back Trae Williams (3) as the University of Utah faces Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl, NCAA football in San Diego, Calif., on Monday Dec. 31, 2018.

Five questions to ponder regarding Utah football in the months leading up to next season:

1. Who is the Utes’ quarterback?

There’s senior-to-be Tyler Huntley and there’s sophomore-to-be Jason Shelley. Huntley acquiesced to Shelley only on account of injury, otherwise this question might not make the list at all. But he did get injured, Shelley did take over, impressing at first and then sagging over his last two starts, both disappointing losses in important games — the Pac-12 championship and the Holiday Bowl.

Shelley had his moments, some of them scintillating. But, as is to be expected from a freshman, he made mistakes, too. The Utes’ loss to Northwestern was a classic example of that. Shelley threw for more than 300 yards, he was by far the most impressive offensive player in Utah’s arsenal through the bowl game’s first 30 minutes, giving glimpses of what he might be in the seasons ahead.

At the half, he was Utah’s leading rusher — with 52 yards — and its leading passer — with 155 yards, and two touchdown throws that were picturesque, especially a 27-yard laser to Jaylen Dixon. Without his early contributions, the Utes would have been stuck on attack.

In the second half, he threw two interceptions, fumbled a ball in the shadow of Northwestern’s goalposts, after a first-and-goal at the Wildcats’ 6-yard line, a loose ball that was picked up and returned 86 yards for a Northwestern score. He struggled with his decision-making and composure.

Afterward, he said: “Yeah, that’s why you got to play 60 minutes. We had a good 30, first 30, then a very sloppy 30 in the second half. We just got to put two halves together. Once we do that, we’ll be hard to beat.”

Is Shelley the guy to take two halves of a sliced melon and slap them back together? Is he the guy to take two halves of a game, of a season and align them just so?

Before Huntley got injured in the Arizona State loss, he completed149 of 233 passes for 1,762 yards, 12 touchdowns, six picks. He also ran for 304 yards and four TDs.

Neither quarterback could do much to beat Washington, the team that kept the Utes out of the Rose Bowl. Huntley’s offense scored seven points against the Huskies. Shelley’s got three points.

Right now, the edge is Huntley’s, but Kyle Whittingham would be foolish to jump too quickly to a final decision on the matter, particularly since he still doesn’t know who his new offensive coordinator will be.

2. Can the Utes re-establish a dominant run game?

This is an area that once was an absolute given. Nobody could cram into their imagination the thought that Utah might not be able to effectively move the ball on the ground. It’s what Utah football does. It’s what it is. It smashes you in the mouth and runs over you, laughing at your pain.

Look at the running backs of the past, from Jamal Anderson to Mike Anderson, from John White IV to Devonte Booker, from Chris Fuamatu-Ma’afala to Joe Williams, from Darrell Mack to Brandon Warfield to Quinton Ganther to Zack Moss.

Trouble is, is Moss a running back of the past or of the present?

If he stays, Utah’s run game will flourish. If he leaves, then … who knows? Whittingham said the two main reasons his team lost to Northwestern in the Holiday Bowl were turnovers (the Utes had six) and no run game (they gained a mere 91 rushing yards, many of those coming from Shelley).

“No consistency,” he said. “No movement on their front.”

No matter who is coordinating the offense, Whittingham cannot abide that kind of meager production. Armand Shyne was not effective (33 yards), Devin Brumfield got 19, TJ Green ran for three. Who will step forward in 2019? Who will clear space for them?

“Something that we got to go to work on in the offseason,” Whittingham said.

3. Is it possible that Utah can build on its 2018 success, advancing farther in 2019?

The Utes have many skilled players returning, players who had key roles this season, players with the kind of talent that could blossom into something more. As mentioned, the offensive line has to run block better than it did at the end of 2018, a bevy of receivers can contribute in a more consistent manner than they did this season, and the defensive secondary must edge forward, as well.

If they do, if the Utes can replace guys like Chase Hansen and Cody Barton on defense and Moss, if he chooses to leave, on offense, they could win not only another Pac-12 South title, they could win even more. If …

4. Who will the new offensive coordinator be?

Troy Taylor is gone. He’s gone because he wanted out because Whittingham was a bit rough on him, making him uncomfortable, nudging him out the door. Truth is, Taylor was looking to escape from Utah after his first season, and he found that escape after his second. Unvarnished truth.

The new coordinator will be the 10th to run Utah’s offense under Whittingham, and whoever it is had best align his goals and philosophies with the head coach’s, otherwise 10 will move to 11 as quickly as it went from nine to 10. It’s just a fact of life.

Reports that Rich Rodriguez’s price at Mississippi was being pushed up by Utah’s late pursuit of him is evidence that Utah has grown tired of goofing around with its offense, wanting instead an established offensive mind who will help them win.

5. Can the Utes actually qualify for and win the Rose Bowl in the not-too-distant future?

It’s sort of the same as question No. 3, asked a different way, an important way.

In the aftermath of Monday night’s bowl loss, Whittingham was clinging onto the notion that he could judge the season on the whole, and not focus in too much on just the way it bumped and skidded over the last two games. Utah is deepening its talent pool, even if some recruiting services have doubts about that.

The key this offseason will be for players in the program to gather themselves, and move forward without getting their daubers down. They did win the South, a first for the program. They do have talent already in-house. They do have a foundation upon which to build.

They know that.

“”Without question, this was a big step forward for our program this season,” Whittingham said. “… When you look at the body of work, we took a step forward. We can line up and play with anybody in the Pac-12. Took us eight years to get to this point.”

Now, can they win the whole thing?

GORDON MONSON hosts “The Big Show” with Jake Scott weekdays from 3-7 p.m. on 97.5 FM and 1280 AM The Zone.

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