Here’s an up-to-date list of all NFL Players from Hillcrest High School, Midvale, Utah.
The list includes only those players who have played in an NFL game.
See where it ranks among other schools in the state here.
By beating Houston on its home court, something only one other Big 12 school had done in three seasons, Arizona is firmly in control of the race for the conference regular season title. The Wildcats are a game up in the standings with four to go and hold the tiebreaker over the Cougars.
“We’ve put ourselves in position to be in position, now you’ve got to take advantage of that,” UA coach Tommy Lloyd said after his team picked up its third win over a Top 3 opponent, the first school to do so in a regular season since Kansas in 2011-12. “I’m sure this win doesn’t look bad on our resume when it comes down to seeding and you’re hoping for matchups in the tournament. But by no means does this win guarantee anything.”
Advertisement
Our game recap can be found here. Below is what Lloyd and freshman wing Ivan Kharchenkov said afterwards:
On winning at Houston: “For us to come out on top means a lot, but we still got a longer road ahead, so we’ve gotta make sure we’re locked in and prepared to move forward. And we will be. But just a great day for our program.”
On facing Kelvin Sampson: “I usually don’t talk about myself. I don’t know how my coaching career is going to end up at, but I know one thing: I’m going to have become a better coach having coached against Kelvin Sampson. A hundred percent. You look at coaches that kind of set the benchmark in certain areas, and for me he’s one of them. What he’s done with this program down here, it’s been amazing. The kind of run you guys are on down here, it reminds me of where I came from. I was at this little old school called Gonzaga, no one really believed, but they had a hell of coach just like you have. The head coach at Gonzaga and the head coach at Houston have willed these programs to be elite, and that’s really inspiring to me.”
On having a better gameplan against Houston than in previous meetings: “You always learn when you play against people, the more you play against them, but teams are different year after year. Their program has an identity and our program has an identity, and you have to figure out if those identities clash do you have to make some adjustments. I thought we made some adjustments today, kind of how we moved and spaced the ball a bit, I thought that alleviated some of the pressure and gave us some space maybe we haven’t had before. Good job by our coaching staff for adjusting. But on the same hand you want to say Houston gets credit, because if you can make a program like Arizona adjust that’s the ultimate sign of respect, and we respect them.”
Advertisement
On his message to the team after losing 2 in a row last week: “The message was simple: winning things. Get back to the winning things and the things that drive winning. Don’t be result-oriented, lock into a process. We just wanted to get back into our habits and what drives winning. We just had to change how we play a little bit the last couple games. We have a couple really good players not playing right now, so these guys that aren’t playing have made great adjustments and finding a way to win.”
On staying focused: “You lose that tough game at Kansas, you lose a tough game at home against Texas Tech and then your reward is you have BYU and Houston the next week. It can get out of control really quick in this conference. That we were able to right the ship says a lot about this team.”
On stopping Houston’s guards: “I’m not crazy into analytics, but us analytically, us and Houston are literally like neck and neck in everything. We’re a good defensive team, too. Our coaches put together a good plan, and we have good players, and the players went out there and executed it with conviction. There were a couple of stretches in the game where you’re on the road and they take a shot or two and it kind of rattles out and you’re like, phew. That’s kind of life on the road sometimes. We got a couple breaks in those, and that happen. When we played at home against Texas Tech we had a few where we were like, man, we usually make those. That happens sometimes, you’ve just got to keep moving.”
On how this win helps Arizona: “There’s a lot of ways a game like this gives you a boost. Number one is just confidence and believe and will to find a way. It keeps you in the hunt for a conference championship, which is obviously important. And I’m sure this win doesn’t look bad on our resume when it comes down to seeding and you’re hoping for matchups in the tournament. By no means does this win guarantee anything.”
Advertisement
On Anthony Dell’Orso: “Delly, he’s a spitfire. I don’t know how many of you guys know Aussies, but he’s got some you know what to them. He has a little bit of that, and it wasn’t going his way for a good stretch there, and he hung with it. And our guys hung with him and our staff hung with him and I just told Delly, just hang in there, it’s coming. If there’s little adjustments we have to make we’ll see if we can figure them out, but we trust you and we believe in you and I don’t see any scenario where you don’t get opportunities. Our media was getting a little worried back home and I just kept telling them, guys, Delly is going to be at his best when we need him at his best. And I think you’ve seen that the last two games.”
On the game-winning 12-0 run: “I didn’t realize we’d made a 12-0 run. I was just trying to manage the game possession by possession, I guess I have a memory like a goldfish. We did have a few things that we had success with offensively that we went back to them back to back, and I’m not always doing that but today we did. It was a good way to control the game down the stretch.”
On the free throw shooting: “Our guys missed some free throws early that were probably regretful but we made most of them late, which allowed us to kind of keep them at arms length.”
On his tradition of cracking open a Coke (or Coke Zero) before doing his postgame presser: “I worked for a guy for a long time, Mark Few, and he used to call it the cool of the evening. We love these afternoon games, because you put a lot into them, and it’s really cool the rest of the night. Whether you’re on the road or at home and you get to hang out with your family. You’re all fans, or the media, I’m sure you’ve got a little fan into you that’s why you guys do that. But us as coaches put everything they have into this game, so when you can enjoy great moments it’s really special. But I’ll also say this, a lot of us coaches have a bit of a sickness. You lose a couple games and you’re actually probably doing okay because you get to figure things out, and there’s nothing cooler than accepting a challenge when things get tough and trying to help your group figure it out. Really it’s probably the most enjoyable coaching even though it comes with a little bit of pain.”
Advertisement
On the Big 12 gauntlet: “We got a tough schedule. We’ve got at Baylor and then I don’t know what order it is, Kansas and Iowa State at home, on a Saturday/Monday, and then we got to go on the road to Colorado. I told our guys, obviously we want to win the Big 12, but what’s really cool about being in the Big 12 is you can take second or third in the conference and still win the national championship. The conference is that strong. We’ve put ourselves in position to be in position, now you’ve got to take advantage of that. We’ll start on our Baylor prep tonight, that’s the task at hand now is moving on from this one and getting ready for Baylor and trying to mend our wounded bodies and trying to find a way to get a tough road win in a tough environment.”
Kharchenkov on bouncing back from the 2 losses: “Winning a game is pretty good any way, especially in the Big 12 Conference. We knew Houston is a tough matchup for us, especially with us banged up a little bit. And the two losses didn’t taste right in the mouth, so we just figured it out, fought, figured it out and came up on top.”
On winning on the road: “I love playing in tough environments, at home or on the road. And especially on the road it’s nice because after the game all the fans just leave and the gym gets real quiet and you know you did your job right. No more talking after that. Of course there’s a satisfaction to that, coming home or going to the next game you want to do that.”
Match of the Day pundit Micah Richards explains why Nico O’Reilly should be one of the first names on the Manchester City team sheet, thanks to his ability to play as a left-back and also in the number 10 role.
WATCH: O’Reilly scores twice as Man City beat Newcastle
READ: Man City beat Newcastle to increase pressure on Arsenal
Available to UK users only.
Match of the Day pundit Wayne Rooney believes Tammy Abraham’s arrival at Aston Villa could be key to Ollie Watkins rediscovering his form, as the pressure of competition for his place in the starting line-up is something “he has to respond to”.
WATCH: Late Abraham goal rescues point for Villa against Leeds
READ: Abraham equaliser earns draw for Villa against Leeds
Available to UK users only.
Here’s an up-to-date list of all NFL Players from Hillcrest High School, Midvale, Utah.
The list includes only those players who have played in an NFL game.
See where it ranks among other schools in the state here.
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
The No. 18 Saint Louis Billikens men’s basketball team avoided what would have been its third loss of the season Friday.
However, the Billikens’ 88-75 Atlantic 10 Conference win over Virginia Commonwealth University was marred by a late-game brawl.
With the outcome decided and Saint Louis dribbling out the final seconds as home fans stood and cheered, VCU’s Nyk Lewis swiped the ball from Billikens guard Quentin Jones and launched a half-court shot at the buzzer.
Saint Louis guard Robbie Avila appeared to shove Lewis during the shot attempt. Moments later, both teams’ benches emptied, and a brawl ensued.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

Saint Louis center Robbie Avila (21) drives to the basket during an Atlantic 10 Conference game against the Virginia Commonwealth Rams Feb. 20, 2026, at Chaifetz Arena in St. Louis. (Keith Gillett/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Coaches from both teams were seen pushing and shoving near midcourt before officials quickly intervened to try and restore order. After a break in the action, both teams returned to the court.
Lewis went to the free throw line and made three shows before the game officially ended.
St. Louis coach Josh Schertz downplayed the incident, describing it as a routine flare-up that can happen in intense basketball games.
“There were no punches thrown,” Schertz told reporters after the game. “It was a typical basketball fight, a lot of pushing and shoving and nobody did anything.”
Officials disqualified players who left the bench area during the scuffle, including Jones and VCU’s Barry Evans.

Saint Louis guard Isaac Holmes (12) drives to the basket as VCU Rams forward Barry Evans (5) defends during an Atlantic 10 Conference basketball game Feb. 20, 2026 at Chaifetz Arena in St. Louis. (Keith Gillett/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
VCU coach Phil Martelli Jr. suggested that heightened emotions were inevitable in a matchup between two physical teams.
DUKE STAFFERS ‘GOT PUNCHED IN THE FACE’ AS UNC FANS STORMED COURT AFTER UPSET WIN, COACH SAYS
“I think there’s certainly a healthy intensity as there should be at the top of the league, right? We’ve got a lot of respect for them. I think they have some respect for us, I assume,” he said.
“It’s two tough teams, two very competitive teams, two physical teams. Stuff like that, you wish it didn’t happen, but, yeah, it’s an intense game. It’s an emotional game.”

VCU Rams forward Lazar Djokovic (17) holds the ball as Saint Louis forward Paul Otieno (25) defends during an Atlantic 10 Conference basketball game Feb. 20, 2026 at Chaifetz Arena in St. Louis. (Keith Gillett/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Games between Saint Louis and VCU have gotten chippy in the past, with a wild fight breaking out in the stands when the two schools met last season.
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
VCU returns to Richmond next Saturday for a matchup with Fordham. Saint Louis travels to Ohio for a meeting with Dayton Feb. 24.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.
Brawl between No. 18 Saint Louis and VCU leaves Rams with only 4 players on court
For the most part, the NFL’s free agency period will get pretty wild starting on Monday, March 9th. That’s the day when teams are allowed to begin chatting with other teams’ players, arriving at verbal commitments along the way.
Nothing at the present moment, though, stops teams from negotiating with the pending FA talent who are already under contract. Consider the word that emerged from Dianna Russini of The Athletic: “The Cowboys have agreed to a three-year, $24 million deal with Javonte Williams, per source, keeping the pending free agent off the market.”
At no point has the ground game been good enough under Kevin O’Connell.
Sure, there are offseason promises, proving that Minnesota is willing to talk the talk. When it comes to walking the walk? Eh, that has been tougher to sustain.
Goodness, the team has even put meaty money into the issue. Signing RG1 Will Fries was about getting nastier in the trenches. So was trading for and then extending Jordan Mason, a burly runner who bowls over defenders. Continuing to employ Josh Oliver and C.J. Ham (now retired) should have led to handing the ball off.
By the end of the 2025 regular season, the 9-8 Vikings had settled in at 23rd in the NFL with 1,841 rushing yards. The 4.5 yards-per-carry average was actually in a tie for 10th in the NFL, so Minnesota was pretty efficient. Hindering the ground game was the reality of just 410 carries all year, coming in at 27th in the NFL.
Put simply, the Vikings needed far more from the ground game but just didn’t hand the ball off very much. Most befuddling was that the young passer was either hurt or struggling for most of the year, further enhancing the need for a potent rushing attack.
Would signing Javonte Williams have made a difference for 2026 and beyond?
The 25-year-old running back is coming off his fifth NFL season. Running for the Cowboys was a nice fit, leading to him turning his 252 carries into 1,201 yards and 11 touchdowns. Very healthy all around. Note that he’s 5’10” and 220 pounds, so Williams has a sturdy build.
Consider how Alec Lewis, Vikings beat writer for The Athletic, discussed the matter, “This is a pretty informative deal here for an intriguing FA running back market. Javonte is really good. Was going to be one of the best of the available bunch. Still multiple interesting names (Travis Etienne, Breece Hall, Rico Dowdle, etc).”
Lewis rightly notes a pair of things: there are several good players remaining while noting that Williams is himself a very good player. Fair enough.
What’s perhaps of more interest is the in-house talent. More specifically, does Aaron Jones get shown the door?
The veteran is coming off an inefficient season where he missed quite a bit of time due to injury. At his best, Jones is a fantastic leader who exemplifies what a Vikings player should be all about: versatile, tough, competitive, and so on.
His debut season in Minnesota was great, leading to a two-year extension for $20 million. The encore season wasn’t nearly so promising. Jones had just 132 carries, 548 yards, and 2 touchdowns. Worse, he’s 31 and has a history of spending too much time in the infirmary. Williams, 25, is coming off a better season and is making an average of $8 million per season instead of the $10 million that Jones demands.
Cutting Jones would mean recouping $7,750,000, per OTC. Anything other than a cut would qualify as a surprise given the financial crunch in Minnesota.
No matter what takes place in the offseason, one thing that’s clear is that improving the ground game needs to be a priority. Minnesota’s entire team is better when the offense has some balance.
Mason appears ready to move into 2026 as a top option, but look for RB help from both of free agency alongside the draft.
The AEW World Title will be on the line next month on an All Elite Wrestling pay-per-view. Defending champion MJF has now explained how the stipulation for this match will shake out, and why a top babyface will no longer be able to challenge for the belt if he stays true to his word.
Over a week ago at Grand Slam Australia, Maxwell Jacob Friedman bounced back from his prior loss to Brody King by defeating the former Hounds of Hell member and retaining his AEW Men’s World Title. Earlier on the same TV special, Adam Page defeated Andrade El Idolo to earn a shot at the strap, set for Revolution 2026. On the following episode of Dynamite, The Cowboy demanded that MJF defend the World Championship against him in a Texas Death Match, going so far as to promise that he will never challenge for the belt again if he loses.
The Devil was cautious in his response, however, stating that he would take a week to consider Page’s proposal, and possible stipulations for their upcoming pay-per-view showdown. The implications of this angle, especially pertaining to the Hangman’s presence in the AEW World Title scene in the near future, has given birth to speculations and even some confusion on social media. However, MJF himself has now taken to X/Twitter to clear things up for fans, in characteristic fashion.
The Wolf of Wrestling explained that both he and Adam Page had to agree on the stipulation for their Revolution 2026 match, something that they will decide on next week on AEW Dynamite. Friedman also confirmed that Hangman had given his word to not contend for the World Title again if he loses next month.
“We both pitch a stipulation. We both have to agree to the stipulation. Hangman’s given his word if we do, he will never challenge for the world title again. On Wednesday we decide on the stipulation for our match. It’s not complicated. You’re just dumb.” – posted MJF.
It remains to be seen if MJF will meet Hangman Page in Texas Death at Revolution, or whether they will agree on a different stipulation.
In his latest defense of the “Triple B” on the independent circuit, Maxwell Jacob Friedman retained the All Elite Wrestling Men’s World Championship against Zilla Fatu this past Friday at HOG No Turning Back. The Main One put on a valiant effort against The Salt of The Earth, and nearly had the title won at one point courtesy of outside interference from Andrade El Idolo. Eventually, however, Friedman managed to submit Fatu with his signature armbar.
The latest episode of AEW Collision showed MJF confronting Andrade afterwards, and the Don Callis Family member making it clear he still had his eyes on the World Title.
Read all the hottest WWE news from Sportskeeda by choosing us as your preferred source. Click HERE.
Edited by Anurag Mukherjee
The PGA Tour’s 2026 Genesis Invitational concludes on Sunday, February 22, with the final round at Riviera Country Club. You can find full Genesis Invitational tee times for Sunday’s final round at the bottom of this post.
A week ago, Jacob Bridgeman went viral for icing Collin Morikawa on the final hole of the AT&T Pebble Beach Pro-Am. Six days later, the Clemson product will enter the final round of the 2026 Genesis Invitational with a six-shot lead over Rory McIlroy at Riviera Country Club.
Bridgeman, who started the day tied with Marco Penge, put together a sterling 7-under 64 on Saturday to pull away from McIlroy, Aldrich Potgeiter and Xander Schauffele. Bridgeman gained 6.013 (!) strokes on approach in the third round, which was highlighted by the 7-wood that he hit to eight inches from 258 yards on the par-5 11th for a tap-in eagle.
“It was, fun and easy,” Bridgeman said. “Kind of the best that the golf world ever gets. My swing felt nice and it was fun out there, everyone was cheering, so yeah, it was a good day.”
Bridgeman will enter Sunday with a big lead, but he knows he can’t take his foot off the gas at all with McIlroy looking to go low to add Riviera to the list of cathedrals he has conquered.
“I think maybe the only thing would be I know he’s going to play well tomorrow. I know that I can’t back up at all,” Bridgeman said.
Bridgeman and McIlroy will go off at 2:20 p.m. ET.
You can watch the final round of the 2026 Genesis Invitational from 1-3 p.m. ET on Golf Channel and 3-6:30 p.m. on CBS. PGA Tour Live on ESPN+ will provide exclusive early streaming coverage beginning at 9:45 a.m. ET on Sunday, in addition to featured group and featured hole coverage.
Check out the complete Round 4 tee times and groupings for the Genesis Invitational below.
Hoping to wager on the Genesis Invitational? Sign up for Fanatics Sportsbook with code “SUBPAR” to receive a special welcome offer.
With an ESPN+ subscription, you gain access to PGA Tour Live, where you can stream the best PGA Tour events live from wherever you want.Get ESPN+
Tee No. 1
10:05 a.m. — Sepp Straka
10:10 a.m. — Brian Harman, Matt Schmid
10:20 a.m. — Ryo Hisatsuna, Andrew Novak
10:30 a.m. — Taylor Pendrith, Denny McCarthy
10:40 a.m. — Sami Valimaki, Rickie Fowler
10:50 a.m. — Viktor Hovland, Ben Griffin
11:00 a.m. — Harris English, Jhonattan Vegas
11:10 a.m. — Corey Conners, Ryan Gerard
11:20 a.m. — Si Woo Kim, Nick Taylor
11:30 a.m. — Shane Lowry, Patrick Rodgers
11:45 a.m. — Max Homa, Hideki Matsuyama
11:55 a.m. — Tony Finau, Ludvig Aberg
12:05 p.m. — Sam Stevens, Sahith Theegala
12:15 p.m. — Matt McCarty, Min Woo Lee
12:25 p.m. — Robert MacIntyre, Tom Kim
12:35 p.m. — Matt Fitzpatrick, Scottie Scheffler
12:45 p.m. — Jordan Spieth, Wyndham Clark
12:55 p.m. — Collin Morikawa, Pierceson Coody
1:05 p.m. — Patrick Cantlay, Alex Noren
1:15 p.m. — Cameron Young, Akshay Bhatia
1:30 p.m. — Tommy Fleetwood, Adam Scott
1:40 p.m. — Jake Knapp, Ryan Fox
1:50 p.m. — Marco Penge, Max Greyserman
2:00 p.m. — Xander Schauffele, Kurt Kitayama
2:10 p.m. — Aldrich Potgeiter, Aaron Rai
2:20 p.m. — Jacob Bridgeman, Rory McIlroy
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
Saturday’s two-woman bobsled final at the Milan Cortina Olympics added another medal to Team USA’s tally.
After medaling in the women’s monobob earlier this week, Kaillie Armbruster Humphries teamed up with Jasmine Jones to earn another medal. The duo finished in third in 3:49.21, securing bronze. Humphries and Jones also set a track record in Heat 1.
Six Americans competed in the event, and Humphries and Jones secured a podium finish. Humphries entered the Winter Games as a three-time Olympic gold medalist.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

Pilot Kaillie Armbruster Humphries and Jasmine Jones of the United States compete in the two-woman bobsleigh at Cortina Sliding Centre during the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games Feb. 21, 2026 in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy. (Al Bello/Getty Images)
Germany took the gold and silver medals Saturday.
AMERICAN JAKE CANTER TAKES HOME BRONZE MEDAL IN OLYMPIC MEN’S SNOWBOARD SLOPESTYLE
Two-time Olympian Kaysha Love and first-time Olympian Azaria Hill were among the Americans in the field, finishing fifth with a time of 3:49.71. Fellow Americans Jadin O’Brien and Elana Meyers Taylor landed in seventh place.

Bronze medalists Kaillie Armbruster Humphries and Jasmine Jones of the United States celebrate on the podium during the medal ceremony for the two-woman bobsleigh at Cortina Sliding Centre during the 2026 Milan Cortina Winter Olympics Feb. 21, 2026, in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy. (Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)
Meyers Taylor and O’Brien stumbled in their second heat, sliding at the top of the track and dropping to 12th entering the final.
Despite the miscue in her latest Olympic event, Meyers Taylor remains the most decorated Black athlete in Winter Olympics history. Meyers Taylor and Bonnie Blair are tied for the most medals an American woman has won at the Winter Games.

Pilot Kaillie Armbruster Humphries and Jasmine Jones of the United States celebrate after competing in the two-woman bobsleigh at Cortina Sliding Centre during the 2026 Milan Cortina Olympics Feb. 21, 2026, in Cortina d’Ampezzo, Italy. (Carmen Mandato/Getty Images)
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
A fixture of nearly every Winter Olympics, bobsled features two-woman, two-man and four-man events at Milan Cortina. The women’s monobob, added in 2022, returned this year. Sleds can reach speeds of 93 mph, according to the sport’s governing body.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.
Who is Jacob Bridgeman? He turned heads in a viral icing incident at Pebble Beach — but now he’s on the brink of a massive win all his own.
The post At Pebble, he iced the winner. At Riviera? He’s flipping the script appeared first on Golf.
Bitcoin: We’re Entering The Most Dangerous Phase
Can XRP Price Successfully Register a 33% Breakout Past $2?
Weekend Open Thread: Boden – Corporette.com
GB's semi-final hopes hang by thread after loss to Switzerland
XRP News: XRP Just Entered a New Phase (Almost Nobody Noticed)
The Music Industry Enters Its Less-Is-More Era
Infosys Limited (INFY) Discusses Tech Transitions and the Unique Aspects of the AI Era Transcript
Kunal Nayyar’s Secret Acts Of Kindness Sparks Online Discussion
Financial Statement Analysis | Complete Chapter Revision in 10 Minutes | Class 12 Board exam 2026
Retro Rover: LT6502 Laptop Packs 8-Bit Power On The Go
Clearing the boundary, crossing into history: J&K end 67-year wait, enter maiden Ranji Trophy final | Cricket News
Dolores Catania Blasts Rob Rausch For Turning On ‘Housewives’ On ‘Traitors’
Tesla avoids California suspension after ending ‘autopilot’ marketing
The strange Cambridgeshire cemetery that forbade church rectors from entering
Eurovision Announces UK Act For 2026 Song Contest
WLFI Crypto Surges Toward $0.12 as Whale Buys $2.75M Before Trump-Linked Forum
Man dies after entering floodwater during police pursuit
83% of Altcoins Enter Bear Trend as Liquidity Crunch Tightens Grip on Crypto Market
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor latest: Police search of Royal Lodge enters second day after Andrew released from custody
School's 'cost of living cupboard' helps families