In the movie Point Break, there is a character named Johnny Utah played by Keanu Reeves, and at one point Gary Busey's character, Pappas, says, "Utah! Get me two." It's a classic line from a classic movie. With Johnny Fisher potentially interested in using a minor league facility as the Oakland A's temporary home, Utah has given him seven...billboards.
While this is interesting on its own, there was a previous version of the tweet that had been sent out which read, "With A's to Vegas on the ropes, team execs visited Salt Lake City last week. Today, seven billboards were posted courtesy of Big League Utah, who hope to demonstrate the market is ready for MLB."
Those are two fairly different tweets, but the original speaks to the public perception we talked about earlier this week when we said that Johnny Fisher is losing the messaging battle.
It also doesn't help that a room filled with people in the Las Vegas Chamber of Commerce reacted with pure silence when asked how they felt about the "Las Vegas A's" on Wednesday. There has also been online speculation that the A's need a new site in Vegas, which would negate the $380 million in public funding they are set to receive that is tied to the Tropicana site.
So things aren't going great in Vegas, which is why John Fisher could take a real hard look at becoming Johnny Utah. The Deseret News has also posted an opinion piece on why Utah needs the A's. They tout Utah's rapid population growth among a number of other facets, saying that there could be 5.5 million people in the state by the year 2060. There are an estimated 7.55 million in the Bay Area alone.
Deseret is a little over two hours south of Daybreak, where the A's would be playing minor league games if they did choose to move the franchise there for the interim period.
If it comes down to either Utah or Sacramento as the A's interim home, the Beehive State has a lot to offer, and by the look of it, they're also willing to roll out the red carpet to welcome any Major League Baseball team. They could also be trying to land the A's for the 2025-27 seasons because if Las Vegas falls through, then the team would already be in Utah, and "all" they would have to do is approve some public money and get a ballpark built in order to land their big-league team.
It's a smart play. At the very worst, they would have a chance to prove that they're a viable market for a future expansion franchise. If the A's are in Vegas, then Salt Lake City may offer the best western option (that MLB would consider) to offset Nashville in the east. They would have also helped MLB out of a pretty tough spot with the entire A's relocation, so they'd have some political goodwill with the league, too.
It may just look like seven billboards on the side of the road, but this feels more like a concerted effort to land a baseball team, whether it's the A's, or one that's Beehive Born.
Big League Utah did not respond to a request for comment.
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The 2025 Baseball Hall of Fame class had its day in Cooperstown on Sunday. This year's class included Ichiro Suzuki, CC Sabathia and Billy Wagner, who were elected by the eligible voters from the Baseball Writer's Association of America, and Dave Parker and Dick Allen, who were elected by the Classic Baseball Era Committee. Here are some of the top highlights from Sunday's induction speeches. Dave Parker's son reads poem written by Hall of Fame father Parker's induction into the Hall of Fame was long overdue, and he sadly did not have the opportunity to enjoy the moment of seeing his name in the Hall of Fame as he died June 28. That left his speech in the hands of his son, Dave Parker II, who read a poem written by his dad. Parker spent the majority of his career with the Pittsburgh Pirates where he was an MVP winner, two-time batting champion and World Series champion with the 1979 "We Are Family" team. Dick Allen's wife remembers his kindness Allen was the other veterans committee inductee, and his widow, Willa Allen, spent the majority of her speech remember the kindness of Allen off the field as much as his ability on the field. Allen is going into the Hall of Fame as a Phillie but won the 1972 American League MVP with the Chicago White Sox. He led the league in OPS four times and was the 1964 National League Rookie of the Year. A reminder that Billy Wagner wasn't naturally left-handed Being left-handed is a huge advantage (and money-maker) for pitchers, and Wagner was one of the most dominant left-handed relief pitchers to ever step onto a mound in the big leagues. But he wasn't always left-handed. Wagner was a natural-born right-handed person but taught himself how to throw left-handed after fracturing his right arm twice as a kid. It led to quite a career. Wagner made a name for himself with the Houston Astros but also spent years with the Philadelphia Phillies, New York Mets, Atlanta Braves and Boston Red Sox. CC Sabathia takes playful dig at Ichiro Sabathia accomplished a ton in his 19-year big league career. He won 251 games, won the 2007 American League Cy Young Award, was the 2009 ALCS MVP and a World Series champion. He still has apparently not gotten over the one individual award he did not win — the 2001 American League Rookie of the Year Award, which went to fellow 2025 inductee Ichiro. Sabathia made sure to make a playful dig at that. Sabathia was the only American League rookie outside of Ichiro — who also won the American League MVP that year — to get a first-place vote. He received one. The others all went to Ichiro. Ichiro stole the show Ichiro stole 509 bases in his Hall of Fame career, and on Sunday, he added one more steal to his list of accomplishments by absolutely stealing the show at Cooperstown. He delivered two of the best lines of the day, first by calling out the one lone writer who did not vote for him, keeping him from being just the second unanimous Hall of Fame inductee ever (after Mariano Rivera). His best line of the day, however, might have been when he referenced his brief time as a member of the Miami Marlins toward the end of his career. Ichiro played 14 of his 19 seasons with the Seattle Mariners while also spending time with the Marlins and Yankees.
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