Plus, how Herriman's Alex Sedrick became a rugby hero
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By Asia Bown Monday Aug. 12, 2024

Good morning! Here are today’s temperatures:

 

🌤️⛈️ 60 – 89° in Logan  | 60% 💧

⛈️🌤️ 73 – 96° in Salt Lake | 70% 💧

🌤️⛈️ 78 – 100° in St. George | 30% 💧

 

In case you missed it, here are the top stories from last week: 

 

Study identifies 14 risk factors for dementia, including 2 new ones. Here's what you can do about them. (CBS News)

 

Here are 16 movies coming to theaters this fall

 

Where are Utah’s ‘blue zones’ — places people are living the longest?

 

Utah executes Taberon Honie by lethal injection

 

Some fun Olympic stories you might have missed

 

Natural arch collapses in Glen Canyon

 

‘Grateful, motivated and inspired’: After heroic finishes, Conner Mantz, Clayton Young already eyeing the future

He lost the use of his legs. Now he’s a 2-time national champion

 

 

Lee Benson writes: "Would he rewrite history if he could?
 
"That’s the question 20-year-old Max Togisala, paraplegic and champion golfer, is pondering during an interview at the Valley View Golf Course clubhouse. Max is in heavy media demand these days, due to the fact he’s won back-to-back U.S. Adaptive Opens, the first at Pinehurst, North Carolina, in 2023, and the second last month at Sand Creek Station in Kansas.
 
"Both years, Max put a Scottie Scheffler-type beating on the competition en route to his national championships, winning by multiple strokes. His scorecard from his second round at Pinehurst, a two-under-par 70, is framed and hanging on a wall in the USGA Golf Museum in New Jersey with this inscription: 'The lowest score in competition on a rated golf course by a player in a seated position.'"
 
"Max’s story is all the more compelling because of how quickly it’s unfolded. Just 2½ years ago, he was on his way to playing college golf at Western Wyoming College, the first step on a journey he hoped might wind up at the U.S. Open that doesn’t have 'Adaptive' in the title."

 

Read more about Max Togisala.

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From Herriman’s ‘silent assassin’ to Olympic bronze medalist — how Alex Sedrick became a rugby hero

Krysyan Edler writes: "Alex 'Spiff' Sedrick captured the attention of the world on July 30 when she scored the game-winning try to win the Olympic bronze medal for the U.S. in women’s rugby sevens.
 
"With only eight seconds left in the game, Sedrick caught a pass, broke a couple of tackles and took off down nearly the entire length of the field with nothing but green grass in front of her and tied the game against Australia.
 
"She then kicked the conversion to put the U.S. ahead, securing the win in the bronze-medal match.
 
"That play, and the team’s performance throughout the Olympics, propelled Sedrick and her teammates into the spotlight, along with the sport they love.
 
"While they didn’t win gold, the U.S. women made history by winning the nation’s first rugby sevens medal in the Olympics and first rugby Olympic medal since the men’s 15s team won in 1924 ...
 
"Here’s the story of how Sedrick went from Utah’s Herriman High to the U.S. Olympic record books."

 

Read more about Alex Sedrick's rise to stardom.

 

More in Olympics

  • That Olympic handover from France to U.S. as the Paris Games concluded? It’s going to happen again for Utah’s 2034 Winter Games (Deseret News)
  • Latter-day Saints in the Olympics: 3 medals in steeplechase, rugby sevens (Church News)
  • Derek Miller: 2034 Olympics are a catalyst for opportunity and unity (Deseret News)

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FROM OUR SPONSOR UTAH PUBLIC LANDS

Stand for Our Land

 

Recently, the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) has significantly restricted access to Utah public lands and continues to restrict access. We need you to get involved. Learn how your access is being affected and voice your concerns to the BLM. Your input will help shape the future of Utah.

Round out your day (v5)

Utah

  • How water moves through the Great Salt Lake drainage (Deseret News)

  • Malin Moench: We all pay a high price for refusing to modernize our power grid (Deseret News)

  • Utah Supreme Court Chief Justice Matthew Durrant elected to lead Conference of Chief Justices (KSL)

Politics

  • Bridger Kearns: Age and politics — Your vote amid disregarded facts (Deseret News)

  • TikTok: Is it times up for this social media darling? (Deseret News)

  • The US Navy’s warship production is in its worst state in 25 years. What’s behind it? (Associated Press)

The U.S.

  • What does the word ‘dinosaur’ mean to you? To me, it’s awe-inspiring (Deseret News)
  • Man claiming to be Uvalde shooter’s uncle begged authorities to let him talk him down during the shooting, 911 call reveals (CNN)

  • Sonya Massey's death: How race, police and mental health collided in America's heartland (USA Today)

Sports

  • Special teams should be a strength for BYU this season — and they will need to be (Deseret News)
  • Putting into context Jimmer Fredette’s talents — on the court and off (Deseret News)
  • How did Zach Wilson fare in his first Denver Broncos game? This preseason contest featured several BYU-Utah connections (Deseret News)
     

The World

  • Arthur Cyr: Russia’s relentless suppression of free expression (Deseret News) 

  • What Caused a Plane to Fall From the Sky in Brazil? (The New York Times)

Faith

  • The Bible verse that Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone used to celebrate her gold medal (Deseret News)

  • Richard Nixon’s spiritual struggle — and what it means for us today (Deseret News)

Check your inbox tomorrow morning for more news from the Beehive State and beyond!

 

And reply to this email or email newsletters@deseretnews.com to tell us what you think of Utah Today.

 

Thanks for reading!

 

— Asia

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