Utah Stories

Frisby championship Salt Lake City: West Division Showdown

Salt Lake Shred is hosting the West Division Ultimate Frisbee Association playoffs in Herriman on August 10.

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The Salt Lake Shred will host the Seattle Cascades in the West Division Championship of the 2024 Ultimate Frisbee Association (UFA) playoffs at Zions Bank Stadium in Herriman, Utah, on Saturday, August 10, at 7:00 p.m. MT. The Shred (10-2) won their lone matchup 18-16 versus the rival Cascades (10-3) in the regular season but this will be the first time in league history in which these two teams will compete for the division title and a spot at UFA Championship Weekend.

Tickets are now on sale for the game: $21 for adults, $15 for students ages 13-18, $12 for children ages 8-12, and free for kids ages 7 and under. The event will also feature family activities, live entertainment, and delicious food and beverage.

The winner of the game will advance to the 2024 UFA Championship Weekend at Zions Bank Stadium on August 23-24–the league’s final four including two semifinal games on Friday and the title game on Saturday. The Shred will look to earn two consecutive trips to ultimate’s biggest weekend after a breathtaking overtime win in the second 2023 semifinal versus the Minnesota Wind Chill. Salt Lake then lost in the title game to the New York Empire 19-12. Seattle beat the Oakland Spiders 23-19 in the first round of this year’s playoffs, the team’s first appearance in the postseason since 2016.

All 2024 playoff games can be watched live on watchUFA.tv for $11.99, and fans can follow all the latest news on the UFA app and watchUFA.com. Tickets are also still available for the 2024 UFA Championship Weekend at Zions Bank Stadium in Salt Lake City, starting at only $15.

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    Before Alta was known for powder days and lift lines, it was a silver mining town clinging to the side of a narrow canyon. In the late 1800s, men lived at 8,000 feet, went underground each day, and endured winters that regularly buried buildings in snow. This past summer, that mining town resurfaced — literally — during construction at the Alta Ski Area.

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    Artifacts began surfacing almost immediately. Enough that the Forest Service contacted the Utah State Historic Preservation Office for help. Lexi Little, who coordinates the Utah Cultural Site Stewardship Program, helped mobilize nearly 30 volunteers to assist with what quickly became a focused two-week excavation.

    Winter deadlines were approaching. The pipes for the reservoirs had to go in the ground. There wasn’t time for a slow, extended dig.

    “It was two weeks of digging in the dirt and helping figure out exactly what we were looking at,” Little said.

    Most of the people screening soil weren’t professional archaeologists. They were trained stewards from around Utah — part of a statewide volunteer network that now approaches 500 people. They poured dirt through shaker screens, scanning for fragments that could piece together a town long buried.

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    Alta had left plenty behind.

    https://youtu.be/hzIHzx3OGoo?si=dKcl2CEz-t6FZzYw

    Victorian-style ceramics appeared first — the kind typically used in hotels. Medicine bottles followed. Ink bottles. Hand-blown glass. A porcelain doll’s foot surfaced from the soil, a small detail that shifted the mental image of the town. Families were here. Children were here. This wasn’t only a camp of miners.

    The bottles helped establish time. Manufacturing details — whether glass was hand-blown or mold-made, whether a maker’s mark appeared on the base — allowed archaeologists to date many of the artifacts to the 1870s through the 1890s, when Alta was booming as a silver mining town.

    “That gives you that range of dates for when Alta was really booming,” Little said.

    One reusable soda bottle clearly stamped “Salt Lake City” connected the canyon to the valley economy below.

    Then something unusual rolled out of a dirt pile.

    A corked bottle. Intact. Liquid still inside.

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