Thanks, Tom. It’s 464 miles from Pokey to St. George. Less and less snow all the way.TomCat88 wrote: ↑Sun Jul 06, 2025 6:56 amNice write up. I'm an I-15 fan, so adding two more teams to the route is great. I count Bozeman as I-15 because I take about 30 miles of it to go to Bozeman usually. But Pocatello, Odgen, Cedar City and St. George is a great core for the league. I think that's about a 400-mile stretch. It's very cool for those teams being so close together. It really helps Weber St.Bobcat4Ever wrote: ↑Sun Jul 06, 2025 12:20 amI’m happy to see the Big Sky return to Cedar City and add St. George because they are just 38 and 94 miles respectively from my home. Roads to St. George are snow-free and only intermittently snowy for a few days to Cedar City.
Here are some comparisons.
Elevation: Utah Tech 2,760. Southern Utah 5,846.
City populations: St. George 110,270. Cedar City 41,400.
County populations: Washington 202,452. Iron 66,044.
Time zones: Both in Mountain (MST, MDT).
Elevation advantage goes to Southern Utah as they will be second-highest to N. Arizona (officially 6,909), and the only school in the 5,000s. Weber, Montana State, Idaho State and No. Colorado occupy the 4,000s.
The St. George populations (city and metro) are both about triple that of Cedar City. Both areas are growing tremendously quickly with the outmigration from California (ref: Rick Rund). For Montana city comparisons, think Billings and Helena, although the metro population of St. George is more compact.
Both cities are along I-15. St. George owns the air with their relatively new airport just southeast of town. It has multiple, daily, non-stop flights to Salt Lake City via Delta and Denver via United, serviced by 70-passenger regional jets. It’s been great for us, as a closer, easier, less-crowded alternative to Las Vegas. Team charters may still use Las Vegas, but for fans, it’s an easy trip now to St. George. If you want to do a basketball or volleyball double-header, fly into SGU and rent a car — but check the driving conditions to Cedar City first.
I attended the MSU @ UTech football game last August 31. The game had an 8 p.m. start since it was still summer. Temperature at kickoff was 96° and 85° at the end. Limited humidity, no bugs, light breeze. It was the most comfortable I’ve ever been at a football game, just right for shorts and a Bobcat T-shirt. The stadium is that of a large high school quality and size, very well-maintained, nice video board. It was only half full with sideline tickets outside the 25s for $5.00. They are really, really going to have to ramp up ticket sales and prices to keep up. If Big Sky football catches on there they have the city size and infrastructure to be a real contributor to the conference.
I’ve only attended an MSU Bobcats women’s basketball game at Southern Utah. Very nice facility, parking was a bit limited. I will say that the fans there were the nicest we’ve ever encountered on the road anywhere. We had a great time watching our Oliana Squires / Fallyn Freije led team down the T-Birds by 16 points. Nice trip. Then came Covid, then they left the league. A pretty small city but they did pretty well before.
Give UTech a few years to get up and running. Neither of these teams will be another N. Colorado. Already nicer facilities, campuses, places to attend a game. Family-oriented atmospheres. Welcome 2026.
When we moved, we were happy with the idea of watching Bobcat teams at SUU, and then that fell apart. Having football, basketball, and volleyball especially vs. the UTech Trailblazers at St. George is something I didn’t really consider — very exciting prospect! For anyone who hasn’t been to St. George lately, prepare to be surprised. It’s one of the very few places, or maybe the only one, whose growth explosion has exceeded Bozeman’s. Happy they are joining the Big Sky.
Hope we can get some ‘Blazer fans to join Bobcat Nation.