Tag Archives: Routine General News

Katie Meyer, Stanford Women’s Soccer Player, Found Dead in Campus Residence

Stanford University soccer goalkeeper

Katie Meyer,

who helped lead the school to its third women’s soccer championship in 2019, was found dead in a campus residence, according to university officials. She was 22 years old. 

An investigation into the cause of death is pending, the Santa Clara County medical examiner’s office said Thursday morning. University officials said there is no ongoing safety threat on campus.

“Katie was extraordinarily committed to everything and everyone in her world,” Stanford said in a statement. “Her friends describe her as a larger-than-life team player in all her pursuits…Katie was a bright shining light for so many on the field and in our community.”

Ms. Meyer was a senior majoring in international relations and a team captain on Stanford’s soccer team. She gained national attention for making two critical saves in a penalty shootout during the 2019 women’s soccer championship game against the University of North Carolina.

“There are no words to express the emptiness that we feel at this moment,” Stanford said. “We will grieve this great loss together, and we will be here for each other.”

Stanford said it has made counseling staff available on campus and is offering support to grieving students. “We can all help by checking in on friends and loved ones. Be caring to yourselves and one another,” the university said.

An online fundraiser to provide financial support to the Meyer family generated more than $100,000 as of Thursday afternoon, according to the GoFundMe page. 

Ms. Meyer’s sister, Samantha, offered thanks to those who have offered support to her family, adding that funds raised on the GoFundMe page would go toward helping with memorial costs. 

“There are no words,” she wrote on her Instagram Stories. “Thank you for all the kindness extended to my family. I’m not ready to post anything big yet. We are broken-hearted and love Kat so much.”

Several sports organizations and athletes paid tribute to Ms. Meyer.

Star forward

Alex Morgan

said she is “incredibly saddened” over the loss of Ms. Meyer. “Thinking about all her family, friends, and teammates, right now and hoping they are getting all the love they need and deserve,” she wrote on Twitter.

The U.S. women’s national soccer team said on Twitter that the “thoughts and hearts of the entire U.S. Soccer Federation are with the family, friends, teammates and loved ones of Katie Meyer.”

“We join Stanford in mourning the loss of Katie Meyer,” the National Collegiate Athletic Association wrote on Twitter.

Write to Omar Abdel-Baqui at omar.abdel-baqui@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8



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A Uyghur Skier Became the Face of China’s Winter Olympics. The Next Day, She Vanished From the Spotlight.

By Saturday, the 20-year-old cross-country skier,

Dinigeer Yilamujiang,

had given the slip to an eager global press, her lackluster finish in her Olympic debut barely mentioned in the Chinese media.

The catapulting of Ms. Yilamujiang into the global spotlight, followed by a low-key retreat, marked a remarkable 24-hour whirlwind for the hitherto-unknown athlete.

On Friday night, as Chinese leader

Xi Jinping

and Russian President

Vladimir Putin

watched from the VIP booth at the Beijing National Stadium, Ms. Yilamujiang was the surprising—and immediately contentious—choice for what acclaimed Chinese film director and opening ceremony maestro Zhang Yimou had promised would be “a bold and unprecedented way of lighting the Olympic flame.”

In the end, it was less about how Ms. Yilamujiang carried the flame—hand in hand with Zhao Jiawen, a Chinese athlete in the Nordic combined—as it was about her identity.

Torch bearers Dinigeer Yilamujiang and Zhao Jiawen carried the Olympic flame during the opening ceremony.



Photo:

Cao Can/Zuma Press

Ms. Yilamujiang is a Uyghur, a member of the Turkic minority group native to China’s northwestern region of Xinjiang that has become the main focus of allegations in the U.S. and the West about Chinese human rights violations.

The decision to choose Ms. Yilamujiang, rather than a more accomplished or widely known athlete, and to pair her with a member of China’s Han majority, was interpreted as Mr. Xi’s act of defiance against the global pressure campaign and decried as “offensive” by overseas Uyghur human rights groups.

Ms. Yilamujiang’s selection for such a prestigious task was notable for another reason: She was set to make her Olympic sporting debut 18 hours after her star turn.

It didn’t go particularly well. By the first checkpoint of Saturday’s race, Ms. Yilamujiang had fallen behind more than half of the field of 65 competitors, eventually finishing 42 places behind the eventual gold medalist, Norway’s

Therese Johaug.

Afterward, Ms. Yilamujiang and the three other Chinese athletes competing in the event slipped away, leaving more than a dozen Chinese and foreign journalists waiting for more than an hour in frigid temperatures.

Dinigeer Yilamujiang competed in the cross-country skiathon, finishing 43rd.



Photo:

Aaron Favila/Associated Press

Ms. Yilamujiang’s escape, if that’s what it was, appeared to be in contravention of International Olympic Committee rules that require all athletes to pass through a “mixed zone” where they can—but aren’t obliged to—answer journalists’ questions.

The IOC confirmed in an emailed response to questions that mixed-zone rules remain in place despite the pandemic, but it declined to comment on Ms. Yilamujiang’s no-show. Ms. Yilamujiang couldn’t be reached for comment through China’s National Olympic Committee, which didn’t reply to requests for comment.

The 20-year-old from Xinjiang’s northern Altay prefecture is one of six athletes from the Chinese region competing in the Winter Games, and the only one of Uyghur heritage.

With the opening ceremony, Ms. Yilamujiang became an overnight celebrity in China, touted as a symbol of national unity.

“That moment will encourage me every day for the rest of my life,” Ms. Yilamujiang told China’s official news agency Xinhua on Sunday, it reported. “I was so excited when I found out we were going to place the torch. It’s a huge honor for me!”

Xinhua said she and her partner represented Chinese athletes born in the 2000s and symbolized an inheritance of sporting traditions and the Olympic spirit across generations. It made no mention of her ethnicity.

State-run media had earlier published videos on social media of Ms. Yilamujiang’s family back home in Xinjiang, beaming with pride.

“China has done everything it can for me, and what is left for me to do now is to train hard and bring glory to the country,” Ms. Yilamujiang was quoted as saying in an article published by the Communist Party-run Xinjiang Daily. The article also highlighted her personal story, as a teenage talent groomed by her father—himself a decorated skier and national cross-country ski coach.

In a separate video posted by the newspaper, Ms. Yilamujiang’s mother praised Beijing: “Thanks to the country for giving my daughter such an important mission.”

To human rights activists overseas, the choice of Ms. Yilamujiang for the opening ceremony was a pointed rebuttal by Mr. Xi.

The Chinese government has targeted the Xinjiang region’s mostly Muslim ethnic minorities with mass-detention internment camps and omnipresent surveillance as part of a yearslong campaign of forcible assimilation.

China has described its actions as necessary measures to fight terrorism and protect national security.

The Beijing Olympics are the first Winter Games to rely entirely on artificial snow. WSJ examines the logistics of snowmaking and what it may mean for future host cities. Photo: Lisi Niesner/Reuters

Concerns over China’s human rights record, and especially its ethnic-assimilation efforts in Xinjiang, have clouded the run-up to the Games, and overshadowed other aspects of the opening ceremony.

In a news briefing on Saturday, Beijing Olympic organizers declined questions about Ms. Yilamujiang’s selection, preferring to discuss instead the opening ceremony’s snowflake motif.

They told the Journal in separate emailed comments that there were stringent selection criteria for torchbearers, each of whom boasted outstanding achievements. The IOC declined to answer specific questions on her selection.

Though Ms. Yilamujiang wasn’t available to answer journalists’ questions after Saturday’s race, China’s state-run broadcaster did have an exclusive interview, in which she expressed incredulity at having been entrusted with the role of torchbearer.

“Since the country gave me such an important mission, I had to fulfill it,” Ms. Yilamujiang said in the interview, which was broadcast Sunday but which appeared to have been taped prior to her race.

Ms. Yilamujiang’s silence on her ethnic identity was a contrast with fellow athlete Adake Ahenaer, a speedskater from Xinjiang who was also making her Olympic debut.

“As an ethnic minority fighting in our home court, to represent my country and represent my ethnic group, gave me honor,” Ms. Adake told reporters after competing in the women’s 3,000-meter speedskating event on Saturday, where she came in 17th. “This honor is indescribable.”

The 22-year-old Ms. Adake, a member of China’s Kazakh minority, another of the country’s 56 officially recognized indigenous groups, said she got emotional seeing her close friend Ms. Yilamujiang appear on television as one of the surprise final torchbearers.

“She is representative of us young athletes in her spirit,” she said. Asked what she thought of Western media reports about Xinjiang, Ms. Adake sighed audibly.

What to Know About the Beijing Winter Olympics

Write to Liza Lin at Liza.Lin@wsj.com and Elaine Yu at elaine.yu@wsj.com

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4 of the best TVs, according to home theater designers and electronics reviewers


Getty Images

February is packed with sports action — like the Winter Olympics and the Super Bowl — and all that appointment viewing may also have us eyeing television upgrades.  Set makers such as Sony, Samsung and LG are running a race of their own: Who can build the biggest screen with the most dazzling, high-resolution picture and the thinnest frame?  With so many choices on the market today, we asked a home theater consultant and delved into professional reviews to find some of the best smart TVs you can buy now — at prices starting at $580.

Great for a very large room

Sony X95J 85″ TV: BRAVIA XR Full Array LED 4K Ultra HD Smart Google TV with Dolby Vision HDR and Alexa Compatibility

$1,798 for a 65″ – $3,798 for an 85″

Tim Duffy, who designs and outfits home theaters and other high-end home entertainment systems for clients in Southern California, has this 85” Sony in his living room, and praises Sony’s overall fit, finish and build. “The build quality is the best,” he says. “They seem to just have very, very few problems.”

The Bravia offers Dolby’s proprietary technologies for surround sound (Dolby Atmos) and picture enhancement (Dolby Vision HDR). It also works with the “big three” in voice control — Alexa, Siri and Google Assistant — for anyone wanting to give the remote a rest. For cord cutters, there is a NextGenTV tuner built in to capture high-definition digital video and audio.

If you want an OLED TV

LG OLED C1 Series 65″ Alexa Built-in 4k Smart TV

$1,796.99

Duffy praises the image quality of LG’s organic light emitting diode (OLED) televisions — “organic” because the eight million, individually self-lighting pixels that comprise the screen are made of carbon. And he’s not alone. Three of Consumer Reports’ top 5 TVs for 2021-2022 are LG OLEDs, and Wirecutter has named the C1 LG OLED C1 Series 65” Alexa Built-in 4k Smart TV ($1,796 from Amazon) the overall best OLED TV.

LG’s large screen OLED line leans into home TV viewing as a personal movie theater experience, with Dolby surround sound and image enhancing technology built in, and a “filmmaker mode” that (temporarily) switches off some picture-smoothing features that can make movies look less natural.

Budget pick

Hisense 55″ Class U7G Series Quantum 4K ULED Android TV

$599.99

This Google-friendly TV was Wirecutter’s pick for the best 4K LCD for the money, with the site lauding its “great image quality, superb gaming features, and the Android TV interface,” while noting it has “a narrower viewing angle and fewer screen sizes than some other TVs.”

Hisense’s U7G series TVs boast the highest available image refresh rate, at 120 Hz (meaning 120 individual images per second) to reduce blur and freezing — a feature usually reserved for more expensive televisions. The Google-made Android TV interface uses Google Assistant for voice commands but also supports Alexa, and can play content beamed from thousands of phone apps — Android or Apple — that have Google Cast or Chromecast enabled.

Best flat screen if you want beautiful home design

SAMSUNG 65-Inch Class Frame Series – 4K Quantum HDR Smart TV with Alexa Built-in

$1,497.99

The kitchen television in Duffy’s house is a 65-inch Samsung picture frame model that he loves for the same reason his clients do: It looks like part of the home’s design, and not like an occupying appliance. “Architectural” is how Duffy describes it. “I would put them anywhere in my house where they’re going on a bare wall,” he says, adding that of the 11 sets a new client of his is having installed throughout his house, eight will be Samsung picture frame sets.

A wall-mountable, customizable frame with differently colored and textured pieces is included to help match the television to its decor. And when it’s off, the Frame’s screen-saving “Art Mode” lets you display selected artworks, or photographs of your own on the TV’s vivid 4K canvas.

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Omicron’s Spread Prompts Canceled Holiday Events, Tightened Restrictions

More places in Europe and the U.S. were tightening restrictions, canceling holiday gatherings and bracing for a surge in new Covid-19 cases, as officials worked to boost testing and healthcare capacity amid the rising risk from the Omicron variant.

The coronavirus’s Omicron variant has been detected in 89 countries, and Covid-19 cases of the variant are doubling every 1.5 to 3 days in places with community transmission, the World Health Organization said Saturday. The variant is spreading rapidly even in countries with high levels of immunity in the population, the WHO said.

The Dutch government imposed lockdown measures, with all nonessential shops, bars and restaurants closed until mid-January.

Paris canceled its traditional New Year’s Eve festivities on the Champs-Élysées. London Mayor

Sadiq Khan

declared a “major incident” in the British capital following what he said was the largest daily rise in cases in the city since the pandemic began, with 26,000 new cases recorded in the latest 24 hours.

Tables in a London restaurant were empty Saturday after the mayor announced the largest daily rise in infections since the pandemic began.



Photo:

Peter Nicholls/Reuters

President Biden on Tuesday plans to deliver remarks on the status of the country’s fight against Covid-19, as the U.S. sees rising cases, White House press secretary

Jen Psaki

said in a tweet Saturday.

Mr. Biden will announce new steps the administration is taking to help communities and issue a stark warning of what the winter will look like for Americans that remain unvaccinated, she said. “We are prepared for the rising case levels,” she said in the tweet.

Harvard University will move to mostly remote learning and work for the first three weeks of January, “prompted by the rapid rise in Covid-19 cases locally and across the country, as well as the growing presence of the highly transmissible Omicron variant,” university administrators said Saturday in a letter to the Harvard community, writing, “Please know that we do not take this step lightly.”

Stanford University will start the winter quarter online and is requiring students to get a Covid-19 vaccine booster by the end of January.

CNN is closing its offices to nonessential employees, the network’s president,

Jeff Zucker,

told employees in a memo Saturday, as Covid-19 cases rose at the network and nationwide.

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul announced the launch of 40 new pop-up vaccination sites across the state. “The winter surge is in full force, but we are not defenseless,” she said, after announcing Friday that Covid-19 infections hit a daily record there. New York set another record in daily cases reported Saturday.

NBC’s “Saturday Night Live” said that it would have no live audience for its taping this week and that the show would go on with a limited cast and crew.

A demonstration in London against Covid-19 measures on Saturday.



Photo:

Andy Rain/Shutterstock

The National Hockey League on Saturday paused games for the Boston Bruins and Nashville Predators after also recently temporarily stopping play for the Calgary Flames, Colorado Avalanche and Florida Panthers.

In Canada, the government of Prince Edward Island said it was pausing indoor group sports and recreational activities starting Saturday.

Rhode Island will reinstate a partial indoor-mask mandate starting Monday. In Maryland,

Gov. Larry Hogan

said rising hospitalizations there were “triggering a new round of actions,” including reducing nonurgent medical surgeries.

Holiday cancellations ranged from an annual church dinner in Austin, Minn., to a popular living nativity event in Santa Fe, N.M. The United Christian Church in Lincolnville Center, Maine, sent an email to its congregation Saturday morning saying it has canceled its in-person Christmas Eve service and will move it to a remote event because of the surge of Covid cases there.

“It’s a very difficult decision to make,” the Rev. Elizabeth Barnum, the church’s pastor, said. “One of the most meaningful services of the year is our 200-year-old meeting house filled with church members and community members and people coming home for the holidays. But we are also called to keep our community healthy and to support our overwhelmed healthcare system.”

A drive-up Covid-19 testing site in San Juan, Puerto Rico, on Saturday.



Photo:

Ricardo Arduengo/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

The scramble for testing continued as many people rushed to get peace of mind before attending holiday get-togethers. Roxanna Garcia, who is 36 years old and plans to travel to Honduras next week to visit family, said she visited four New York City drugstores Friday night before finding a rapid Covid-19 test in stock. Seeking extra confirmation of her negative result, she went to Queens Hospital in New York to get a PCR test early Saturday morning and said the line was around the parking lot.

“It’s obviously good that people are taking precautions and getting tested,” said Ms. Garcia, who is a nurse. “But it did feel like, it’s two years into this and we still can’t seem to find a more streamlined way of getting tested?”

A federal appeals court Friday reinstated Biden administration rules that require many employers to ensure that workers are vaccinated or tested weekly for Covid-19. A divided panel of the Sixth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals dissolved a stay issued by another court that had blocked the rules. The majority, in a 2-to-1 ruling, said legal challenges to the administration’s vaccination-and-testing requirements were likely to fail.

Demonstrators in Paris protesting new vaccine mandates on Saturday as countries across Europe reimposed tough measures to stem a new surge in Covid-19 cases.



Photo:

Francois Mori/Associated Press

In New York, the Christmas Spectacular Starring the Radio City Rockettes canceled the remainder of its season Friday, citing increasing challenges from the pandemic. A number of Broadway shows canceled performances in recent days because of Covid-19 cases among cast members. Organizers of New Year’s Eve festivities at Times Square said they would go ahead with an outdoor celebration among fully vaccinated revelers.

Write to Jennifer Levitz at jennifer.levitz@wsj.com and Julie Wernau at Julie.Wernau@wsj.com

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Aaron Rodgers Doesn’t Just Have Any Toe Injury. He Has Covid Toe.

Since Aaron Rodgers returned to the field after testing positive for Covid-19, having sat out 10 days because he was unvaccinated, the star Green Bay Packers quarterback has been dealing with a mysterious and painful toe injury. 

After previously describing it in vague terms as a “Covid injury,” Rodgers confirmed what dermatologists had previously suspected. 

“No lingering effects, other than the Covid Toe,” Rodgers said Tuesday on the Pat McAfee show. 

Covid Toe is a casual name for something medically known as pernio or chilblains, which is a condition that causes symptoms such as discoloration and lesions. It can be extremely painful and turn the toes purple. 

The shred of good news, when it comes to Covid Toes, is that they’re a sign of the body’s strong immune response to the virus.  

Recent research, including an October study published in the British Journal of Dermatology, has found that Covid Toes typically occur in younger patients who experience mild symptoms. The problem is that, when the body produces too much of a type of interferon, it can create other problems—and produce Covid Toes. 

“The way I would think about it is it’s basically a side effect of how your own immune system is fighting the virus,” said Esther Freeman, a doctor and principal investigator for the Covid-19 Dermatology Registry. “It’s part of our body’s response to the response to the virus. It’s almost too much of a good thing.” 

Freeman, who’s also an associate professor of dermatology at Harvard Medical School, says the incidence rate of Covid Toes isn’t precisely known. She also noted that the condition tends to occur one to four weeks after infection. 

That timeline also neatly aligns with Rodgers’ symptom profile. News of Rodgers’ positive test first emerged on Nov. 3. After that sidelined him for 10 days, during which he missed a game, he returned to play the Packers’ game against the Seattle Seahawks on Nov. 14. The day before that game, Rodgers was added to the team’s injury report with a toe injury. 

Throughout the pandemic, professional sports leagues like the NFL and NBA have generated rich data that has helped scientists better understand Covid-19. Now, with football season in full swing as the Delta variant spreads, WSJ’s Shelby Holliday looks at what we’ve learned so far.

The injury was so problematic during the team’s game last Sunday, a loss to the Minnesota Vikings, that Rodgers headed to the locker room before halftime to tend to the ailment. His backup, Jordan Love, took the final kneel-down ahead of the break. Rodgers, afterward, described it as “very, very painful.” 

Rodgers elaborated on it more Tuesday, saying on the sports talk show that while he was in a great deal of pain, sitting out games isn’t an option. He also indicated that the issue is primarily with his fifth, or pinkie, toe. 

“I have an injury that’s not going away,” he said. 

The condition can be so painful that some patients report difficulty wearing shoes. But throwing on a pair of cleats isn’t the only impediment between Rodgers and comfortably playing quarterback. It’s also the time of year and the location of his NFL franchise. 

One of the most critical factors that can exacerbate Covid Toe is cold weather. Rodgers happens to play for a team in Green Bay, Wis., where temperatures are expected to dip below 20 degrees this week. He already had to play through snow with the toe injury during the game against the Seahawks. 

In most cases, Freeman says, the lesions will resolve on their own. While she couldn’t speak to Rodgers or his condition specifically, she generally recommends that patients keep their core and extremities warm to prevent flare-ups. Beyond that, she advises consulting board-certified dermatologists for treatment. 

“The best way to avoid Covid Toes is to get vaccinated,” Freeman said. 

Rodgers’s decision to not get vaccinated is what placed him at the center of a firestorm in the first place. Before the season, when he was asked if were vaccinated, he responded: “Yeah, I’m immunized.” He also appeared to be vaccinated because of his appearance at news conferences without a mask, as is required for unvaccinated players, according to the NFL’s health and safety protocols. 

Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers said sitting out games isn’t an option.



Photo:

Elizabeth Flores/Minneapolis Star Tribune/Zuma Press

But when Rodgers tested positive earlier in November, he was forced to sideline for 10 days—the protocols for players who hadn’t been fully vaccinated. That catalyzed a sharp backlash among critics who said he lied or misled the public about receiving one of the safe and effective vaccines approved in the U.S. 

Initially, he vigorously defended himself. In Rodgers’s first comments on the subject, he claimed he was immunized because of conversations for “healers” and dubbed himself a “critical thinker” while invoking civil-rights leader

Martin Luther King Jr.

He said he didn’t lie, assailed the “woke mob” for attacking him and criticized the NFL’s protocols as draconian. 

Later, he partially backtracked on that stance. 

​​“I made some comments that people might have felt were misleading,” Rodgers said Nov. 9, the same day the NFL fined both him and the Packers for protocol violations. “To anybody who felt misled by those comments, I take full responsibility for those comments.” 

Write to Andrew Beaton at andrew.beaton@wsj.com

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Endemic Covid-19 Has Arrived in Portugal. This Is What It Looks Like.

LISBON—In this soccer-crazed capital of a soccer-obsessed nation, the stadiums are full again. Portugal, a country ravaged earlier in the year by the Delta variant of the coronavirus, now has the highest Covid-19 vaccination rate in Europe and offers a glimpse of a country trying to come to grips with what is increasingly looking like an endemic virus.

Tens of thousands of screaming soccer fans crammed into the Estadio da Luz here Wednesday to watch hometown favorites Benfica take on Bayern Munich. They amassed on the subway to the stadium, at the entrance as officials patted them down and, after the game, at food trucks where they downed sandwiches and beer as they tried to forget the drubbing their team had just received.

The government recently lifted a 30% capacity limit at stadiums imposed to control Covid-19. But things haven’t returned to what they were: Fans need a certificate showing they are vaccinated, recently recovered from the disease or tested negative. Masks are obligatory throughout stadiums.

Close to 100% of people over the age of 50 have received at least one vaccine dose, according to the Portuguese government. For those between the ages of 25 and 49 it is 95% and from 12 to 17 it is 88%. Some 89% of Portugal’s entire population of 10 million has had at least one vaccine dose, not far behind the rate in the world-leading United Arab Emirates, compared with 65% in the U.S. and 73% in the U.K., according to Oxford University’s Our World in Data.

On Oct. 1, Portugal ditched most of its Covid-containment rules, but in many ways life in Lisbon is a throwback to the deepest days of the pandemic. Hand pumps dispensing disinfectant gel are ubiquitous and some churches still rope off seats to ensure social distancing even though it is no longer obligatory. The Covid-19 certificate is required at large events and masks are still mandatory on public transportation, in schools for students 10 and older, and for employees in shops, restaurants and bars.

Portugal dropped most of its coronavirus restrictions on Oct. 1.

Masks are still mandatory on Lisbon’s subway and other public transportation.

At the same time, subways are full. Lisbon’s fleet of rickshaw taxis, known by the Thai term tuk-tuk, whisk tourists along the narrow streets of the city’s old town. Nightlife pulsates in various parts of the city all week, tram lines popular with tourists skip stops because they are bursting with passengers and almost every day finds a new massive cruise ship docked at the harbor.

Portugal’s cautious return to normality, despite a vaccination rate that is the envy of public-health officials around the world, is being watched as a possible way forward for other countries as their vaccinations inch higher and they contemplate when to ditch their remaining restrictions. The Portuguese approach contrasts with the U.K.’s, where a combination of fewer vaccinated people and almost no restrictions has led to a surge in infections and a rising death rate.

“I need tourists, otherwise I have no business, but I look at the infection numbers every day and if it goes up even a little bit I get nervous,” said Paula Marques, who runs a souvenir shop in Lisbon. “I hope the pandemic is a thing of the past here in Portugal, but to be honest I still worry a little bit about what will happen as it gets colder.”

Portugal got through the first wave of the pandemic in early 2020 relatively unscathed. But a steep rise in cases in November last year and then a savage surge in January shattered the illusion some here had that this small country tucked away in the southwest corner of Europe could escape the worst of the pandemic.

Tourists last week thronged Lisbon’s Cais do Sodré neighborhood, a nightlife hotspot.

At the peak in January, an average of about 290 people were dying a day in Portugal from the virus. Adjusted for population, that equates to more than 9,500 in the U.S. The worst daily average over a week in the U.S. never topped 3,500 deaths.

Maria Mota, executive director of Lisbon’s Institute of Molecular Medicine, has one image indelibly imprinted in her memory from that period that still makes her jittery. Working late one evening at her lab, from her window she counted 52 ambulances lined up outside the emergency room of the country’s largest hospital waiting to drop off patients.

Portugal is now in a “transitional period” that likely will delineate the pandemic from the new reality of endemic Covid, said Dr. Mota. With memories of the trauma of January still fresh in the collective Portuguese memory and with question marks remaining over what will happen as the cold returns and more life resumes indoors, most people are likely to proceed cautiously, she said.

“Nobody will ever forget this past January, but now Covid is endemic and we need to learn to live with the virus,” said Dr. Mota. “Almost the whole population is vaccinated here and the virus still circulates, showing it won’t go away.”

As in other countries with a large proportion of the population vaccinated, a stubborn persistence of infections in Portugal hasn’t led to a significant increase in the rate of hospitalizations or deaths.

“Things are getting better, but it’s slow,” said Miguel Campos, who drives tourists around Lisbon in a tuk-tuk. “We are taking baby steps. We have a mix of optimism and hope that this return to normal will continue.”

’Things are getting better, but it’s slow,’ said rickshaw taxi driver Miguel Campos, of the Covid-19 situation in Portugal.

Paula Marques, who owns a souvenir shop in Lisbon, said her business relies on tourism and that she worries infections might rise when the weather gets colder.

Before the pandemic there were 800 rickshaw taxi drivers in Lisbon, but now only about 200 work during the week and 500 on weekends, said Valentim Gaspar, another rickshaw taxi driver. For now, the balance between drivers and tourists makes it possible to earn a decent living, he said.

The Portuguese almost universally attribute their vaccination success to Henrique Gouveia e Melo, an ex-submarine commander brought on to run the inoculation drive after a shaky start. He projected confidence and tapped into the population’s generally favorable attitudes to vaccinations, according to public-health experts. The vaccine rollout began in January just as the worst of the pandemic peaked in Portugal, providing a clear incentive for anybody who might have been unsure about getting vaccinated.

On a soccer-mad continent, Portugal stands out for its dedication to the sport, making the return to full capacity in stadiums all the more symbolic for many people. Spain, which also has one of the highest vaccination rates in Europe, recently returned to full capacity at its stadiums, but food still can’t be sold. Italy this month increased stadium capacity to 75% from 50%. In most of Germany, there are still limits on capacity.

“It’s time to open everything up because if somebody hasn’t gotten vaccinated at this point, then they aren’t going to get vaccinated,” said Hugo Vale, a 32-year-old engineer, as he drank beer with friends outside the stadium ahead of the Benfica-Bayern game.

Close to 100% of people over the age of 50 have received at least one vaccine dose, according to the Portuguese government.

Write to Eric Sylvers at eric.sylvers@wsj.com

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Tom Brady Speaks His Mind

This is no small thing. After all, there was a time, not long ago, when an interview with Tom Brady might fill a reporter with a wave of anxiety. The man is indisputably a brilliant quarterback, one of the great champions in sports history, and, of course, with his wife, Gisele Bündchen, one half of one of the galaxy’s starriest couples—but candidly unburdening his innermost thoughts to the media? 

Ehhhhh. Let’s just say that wasn’t Brady’s style. What he said in public and what he said in private were often two different things.

This is not a dig; Brady’s said this himself. “What I say versus what I think are two totally different things,” the quarterback said on an episode of the LeBron James–produced talk show, The Shop. “I would say 90 percent of what I say is probably not what I’m thinking.”

Lately, there’s been evidence of a shift. In March 2020, after two decades and six Super Bowl titles, Brady left the only professional team he’d ever played for, the New England Patriots, for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, leading them, stunningly, to a Super Bowl victory, Brady’s seventh. 

The Super Bowl champ and Tampa Bay quarterback on meeting Gisele, his social media habits (“That endless scroll”) and staying positive. Directed by Barbara Anastacio.

In the Florida sun, a noticeably more carefree version of Brady—Brady 2.0—has arisen. Playing for a team with a less formal, more let-it-all-hang-out vibe, under a veteran head coach known to utter stressless maxims like “Win or lose, we booze,” there appears to be a bit of a…loosening up. 

“Tom has accomplished so much in his career, and the world knows him for his love and devotion to the game of football. Now it’s great having others also get to know him a bit more, as I do.”


— Gisele Bündchen

“By the end of the Tampa season, as he’s holding the Super Bowl trophy, I think you could really see a different Tom Brady emerging,” says Tara Sullivan, a sports columnist at the Boston Globe, a job that requires a Ph.D. in Advanced Bradyology. 

Don’t read this wrong: Brady hasn’t suddenly morphed into a candid chatterer on par with Dorothy Parker or Draymond Green. But he’s started showing more of the Tom inside. His social media teems with self-deprecating dad humor, and he’s revealed his amusingly cocky side, ridiculing teams that passed him over in free agency and good-naturedly taunting rivals like Aaron Rodgers. At Tampa Bay’s rowdy waterborne championship parade, the famously disciplined Brady recklessly decided to hurl the Lombardi Trophy across the seawater from boat to boat, and in the aftermath, didn’t hide the fact that he might have imbibed a little too much. (“Noting to see her…just a litTle avoCado tequila,” Brady tweeted.) In early September, as the Bucs announced the team was 100 percent vaccinated against Covid-19, he confided to the Tampa Bay Times that he’d contracted and recovered from the virus early in the off-season.

Balenciaga hoodie, $1,390, Balenciaga, 620 Madison Avenue, New York, Under Armour shirt, $35, ua​.com, Tom Ford from Mr Porter pants, $1,140, mrporter​.com.

“You think people care what you think,” Brady says, “and then you care less what people think, and then you realize no one cared, anyway.” Balenciaga hoodie, $1,390, Balenciaga, 620 Madison Avenue, New York, Under Armour shirt, $35, ua​.com, Tom Ford from Mr Porter pants, $1,140, mrporter​.com.

Perhaps most surprisingly, Brady, who has historically been loath to utter anything political—he used to tiptoe around his old friendship with Donald Trump—showed up with the Bucs at the White House in July and actually dared the third rail of political humor, deadpanning a 2020 election zinger to President

Joe Biden.

“Not a lot of people, you know, think that we could have won,” Brady said to President Biden. “About 40 percent of the people still don’t think we won.

“You understand that, Mr. President?” Brady asked.

If you were accustomed to 20 years of meticulous Brady caution, you might be asking: Who is this guy? 

I’m right there with you. Let me tell you about this person I just met. His name is Tom Brady.

It’s a warm summer afternoon, and there he is, via Zoom from Tampa Bay, in a T-shirt and AirPods, TB12 himself, looking tanned and relaxed and, per usual, a solid 10 years younger than his actual age, which is now, amazingly, 44. 

I’m asking him about this perceived thawing, this idea of a “different” Tom Brady.

There is a change, he agrees.

“I feel like I’m just coming back to life in a certain way,” he says.

For a moment here, Brady veers back to his careful self, because there can be an exasperating binary whenever he talks about his new life in Florida—that anything positive he says about Tampa is somehow a slight of his former life in New England. I’m from New England and can appreciate this regional tension. Brady could compliment a mailbox in Tampa, and my mother up in Massachusetts would be like, “Hey, what’s Tom Brady got against mailboxes up here?”

This is not how it is, Brady insists. 

Brady with his wife, Gisele Bündchen, celebrating after the Tampa Bay Buccaneers won the Super Bowl in February.



Photo:

Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images

He is grateful for his time in New England. How could he not be? It was the most successful stretch of football anyone’s ever played—all those championships, Super Bowls, division titles, never a losing season since becoming the starter. He and Bündchen started their family there—the couple have two children, Vivian, 8, and Benjamin, 11, and Brady also has a 14-year-old son, Jack, with the actress Bridget Moynahan. 

The Brady-Bündchens built a house near Boston, made a life, dug deep roots. “I certainly wouldn’t change the 20 years that I had,” Brady says matter-of-factly.

Still, Florida’s a different vibe. Anyone can see that. New England, coached by the stone-faced legend Bill Belichick, prided itself on its hive mind, in which the institution always superseded the individual. No one embodied this discipline more than Brady, who loyally stayed on message, seldom offering any comment that could become a locker-room distraction. 

“I feel like I’m just coming back to life in a certain way,” Tom Brady says about the change in himself since his move to Tampa Bay. Givenchy hoodie, $1,275, givenchy​.com, vintage Raf Simons bomber from David Casavant Archive, price upon request, david-casavant​.com.

In the past, Brady has said, “What I say versus what I think are two totally different things.” Vintage Raf Simons bomber from David Casavant Archive, price upon request, david-casavant​.com.

“When you’re an employee of a company…you kind of take on the voice of what that company is,” Brady explains. 

I get it. Still, I tell Brady that what he said on The Shop—the line about “90 percent of what I say is probably not what I’m thinking”—made me a little sad.

“It is a little sad,” he says. “It’s a little sad because it’s…a challenging thing to do, you know? What you say and what you believe might be two different things.

“But part of it is: You’re in a team. When you’re in a team, it is not necessarily always what you think. It is kind of what ‘we’ think…. I’ve been a little bit trained to say, you know, this is what ‘we’ think.”

The transition to Tampa wasn’t easy, Brady says. At times, he felt like a kid who switched schools. Tampa Bay got off to a solid start, then struggled, losing three of four and dropping to 7-5, at risk of falling out of the playoffs. 

Bruce Arians, the Bucs’ head coach, says he saw Brady begin to open up as the season’s stakes were raised, and he grew more comfortable with his teammates. 

“He loves clothes way more than I do. He has great taste and understands and really cares about what people want.”


— Bündchen

“You could see the personality come out more and more,” Arians says. It had an effect on team confidence: “The rest of the locker room adapted to the personality of ‘Hey, he’s been here, he’s done it. He’s telling us we’re good enough. We believe it.’ ”

Bündchen saw the shift in her husband too. 

“Tom has accomplished so much in his career, and the world knows him for his love and devotion to the game of football,” she says. “Now it’s great having others also get to know him a bit more, as I do.”

Another factor is this: Brady is comfortably into his 40s. It’s the constitutional right of everyone older than 40 to give a little less of a damn about what the rest of the world thinks.

“When you’re going to be 44, you feel liberated to say, ‘All right…I feel differently,’ ” Brady says. 

Brady recalls reading some wisdom about aging, about how younger people spend a lot of time obsessing about what other people think, or believing that people are hanging on their every word, but by the time they hit their 50s and 60s, they discover that nobody was really paying much attention in the first place.

“I think that’s probably how it’s going,” he says. “You think people care what you think, and then you care less what people think, and then you realize no one cared, anyway.”

Givenchy hoodie, $1,275, givenchy​.com, vintage Raf Simons bomber from David Casavant Archive, price upon request, david-casavant​.com, A.P.C. jeans, $235, apc-us​.com.

Another motivation for Brady to let the world in a little more: Tom Brady, Inc. Believe it or not, Brady will stop playing football at some point, whereupon he intends to turn his attention to a portfolio of business interests ranging from his TB12 fitness brand to fashion and filmmaking and beyond.  

This is a crossroads an elite athlete usually hits in his or her 30s. Brady’s much older, and still on the job, so he’s trying to do both at once. “I feel like I’m living two lives,” he says. “My football life and then my post-football life.” Toggling between both, he admits, is tiring.

A clothing brand is a major new foray. A line of men’s training- and activewear, Brady, is coming in December—he’s wearing some of the threads in these pages. His co-founder and the CEO of the eponymous brand is

Jens Grede,

a force behind fashion behemoths like Kim Kardashian’s hypersuccessful Skims line. Grede imagines the Brady brand becoming one of the planet’s biggest namesake sportswear labels, like Jordan. 

“We’re just focused on creating the finest sports brand in the world,” Grede says. “That really is the ambition.”

It helps Brady to have an experienced fashion eye living in his house. “She’s pretty good,” Brady says of Bündchen. “She’s obviously got incredible taste.” Though Bündchen’s appeared on countless runways and magazine covers, her preference skews casual, he says. “In the end, I think she’s very much a hippie. She’d just prefer to wear, like, a simple little dress in 80-degree weather and, you know, just chill out.”

“He loves clothes way more than I do,” Bündchen says. “He has great taste and understands and really cares about what people want, what can help them feel good. That’s what fashion is about.”

Brady jacket, $175, available this fall at nordstrom​.com, Tom Ford T-shirt from Mr Porter, $455, mrporter​.com. Hair, Alix; makeup, Frank B.

Other budding Brady ventures include 199 Productions, a content company named after his spot in the 2000 NFL Draft, when an overlooked Brady was selected in the sixth round. (“Tom has got incredible storytelling instincts,” offers Avengers: Endgame co-director Anthony Russo, who has something in the works with 199 Productions.) Another project coming this fall is Man in the Arena, a multipart ESPN documentary from Tom vs Time director Gotham Chopra, told through Brady’s 10 Super Bowl appearances. 

Chopra thinks Brady will approach his post-football career with the same relentless style. “Everything in [Tom’s] life is about, ‘How do I do this thing? How do I get better?’” Chopra says. “The outside world is like, ‘No, you can’t get better. No one’s been better,’ and he’s always like, ‘No, I can, I can.’

“I say he’s like a mad scientist, or he’s a monk.”

Because it’s 2021, there’s also a Brady partnership with a cryptocurrency exchange (FTX) and—of course—Brady NFTs (nonfungible tokens via Autograph, an NFT platform he co-founded), the first wave of which sold out within seconds in August. Meanwhile, Brady’s first major business foray, the TB12 sports wellness brand, co-founded with his longtime body coach Alex Guerrero, is eight years old. 

Initially, the TB12 method got attention for its namesake’s rigorous lifestyle and diet—avoiding nightshades like tomatoes and strawberries, treating himself to avocado ice cream, etc. These days, Brady talks up the practical side of the technique, which he says offers something for everyone, from elite athletes to schoolteachers in pain from standing all day in class. “I want to be able to provide solutions for that,” Brady says. 

“I don’t think anything will match my football career. That’s kind of why I want to go until the end, because I want to make sure I don’t look back and go, ‘Man, I could still do it.’ ”


— Tom Brady

In today’s business climate, relatability is essential. I ask him if the Anti-Aging/Superhero/Never Touches Carbs image became something of an unhelpful caricature. He doesn’t disagree. Brady might have a different kind of life and a different sort of job, one that involves trying to successfully execute on live television before millions of people, but people of all kinds “are looking for wins professionally. They’re looking for wins personally,” he says. “They’re looking at how to parent in a challenging life, how to have a healthy marriage based on professional responsibilities…. I relate to everybody that way. To think that I don’t is ridiculous. 

“The reality is that I’m very human,” Brady says.

Of course, he’s still playing pro football. It’s crazy, really—Brady, in his 22nd season, is four years older than the second-oldest player in the NFL. It was surreal to see him in the audience this summer for rival Peyton Manning’s Hall of Fame speech—Manning has been retired for half a decade and is now a bronze bust in Canton, Ohio. Brady, meanwhile, is still at it, a reigning Super Bowl MVP, Benjamin Button in shoulder pads.  

Brady, typically reluctant to wade into politics, cracked an election joke while visiting the White House in July. “Not a lot of people, you know, think that we could have won,” he said to President Biden about Tampa Bay’s Super Bowl victory. “About 40 percent of the people still don’t think we won. You understand that, Mr. President?”



Photo:

Drew Angerer/Getty Images

It’s defiant to the point of being comical. Athletes aren’t supposed to be so good for so long—in any sport, much less a sport in which the opposition is trying to pummel you to the ground. 

A few years ago, there was a lot of chatter about When Brady Will Retire and Should Brady Retire? but these days, it feels like the public has conceded and surrendered.

He says he’ll know when it’s time. 

“I don’t want to be out there and suck,” Brady says. “You think I want to go out there and look like I’m 44 years old? I want to look like I’m in my prime.”

If anything, contemplating Life After Football makes Brady want to play even more.  

“I don’t think anything will match my football career,” he admits. “I think it’s too hard to replicate that level of energy and output and adrenaline. That’s kind of why I want to go until the end, because I want to make sure I don’t look back and go, ‘Man, I could still do it.’ “I don’t know where that’s going to be. I really don’t.” 

“I don’t want to go out there and suck,” Brady says on the topic of how soon he might retire. Under Armour shirt, $35, ua​.com, A.P.C. sweatpants, $225, apc-us​.com.

He has a contract for this year and next. “Beyond that, I don’t know. Maybe it’s another year after that; maybe it’s two. I’ll have to see where I’m at with my family. That’s probably the overriding factor—what I’m missing out on.”

His family is now a Florida Family, and Brady is now a Florida Man. Or at least, a Florida Man in training. Those heavy jackets and wool hats from New England winters aren’t needed anymore. Jack spent some time at Bucs training camp this summer. Brady’s gotten into boats, and not just any boats—he’s due to take delivery of a 77-foot Wajer, list price said to be $6 million. You can watch a Wajer video of Brady rhapsodizing about snorkeling and spending Christmas on the seas. 

“I literally said, ‘I’ll never own a boat in my life. Never. Who likes boats?’ ” Brady tells me. Now he sees a side benefit of nautical life: enforced family time. “No one can go anywhere,” he says conspiratorially. “They’re captive. I almost want to put my kids on the boat like, ‘You’re hanging with us—that’s how it’s going to go.’ ”

On October 3 the Buccaneers will travel to New England to play the Patriots, and the hype machine will be in overdrive. Brady, who habitually downplays future games, doesn’t deny it will be a big one. “That one will be really fun for me,” he says. “Just because I know everybody, you know? I’ve played more games in that stadium than anybody. I know that place like the back of my hand.” 

It’s tempting to portray such a battle between Brady’s past and present as some tantalizing climax, but it’s really not. Listen to how Tom Brady sounds these days. 

It’s another beginning.

Copyright ©2021 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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Washington Weekend Shootings Highlight Rising Gun Violence in Capital

Two high-profile weekend shootings in Washington—one killing a 6-year-old girl and another prompting the evacuation of the Washington Nationals ballpark—put a spotlight on rising gun crime in the nation’s capital and some U.S. cities.

In the District of Columbia, the number of assaults involving a gun has increased year over year since 2018 and is higher this year so far than at the same point in 2020, according to a Wall Street Journal analysis of data from Washington, D.C.’s Metropolitan Police Department public portal.

Through this weekend in the District of Columbia, 455 assaults involving guns had been reported, compared with 422 through mid-July 2020, police data show. The category of assaults includes any use of a gun in the incident and isn’t limited to shootings. Specific data on shootings wasn’t readily available Sunday.

The higher rates of gun crimes mirror trends in other cities such as New York, Philadelphia and Chicago, where shootings are up compared with this point last year and homicides are rising or are near high levels seen last July.

“This is a pretty national phenomenon,” said David Abrams, an economist and law professor at the University of Pennsylvania, who studies crime. He said the jump in shooting and homicides in many large cities started in mid-2020 during the Covid-19 pandemic but researchers are still sifting through the data to isolate specific causes.

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Gonzaga’s Unforgettable Shot: Bank Shot Buzzer-Beater Sinks UCLA, Saves Perfect Season

Now that is what it’s all about. That. Those final 3 seconds of Gonzaga-UCLA, or really, all of it, because it was an exquisite basketball game, back and forth, forth and back, much better than anyone expected, and now this shot—a 40-foot bank shot, not far from mid-court, Lordy! — elevated it into something even greater, an all-timer, a game you’ll remember as long as you breathe. 

Really. I know that sounds like the sort of overcooked hyperbole blowhards like to say after watching a phenomenal last-second, game-winning, championship-qualifying shot, but I’m afraid this blowharding might actually be true.

It was that good. Watch it now if you didn’t watch it before. I’ll wait right here. 

Did you yell in your TV room? Of course you yelled. The yell sounded different in Westwood. It sounded different up in Spokane. But it was a yell.



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Plenty have tried to create a new Silicon Valley, but this new NBA owner and tech founder may be succeeding

The Utah Jazz have been winning a lot this season, but not as much as their new owner.

Just look back at three days in late January. The Jazz — which Ryan Smith bought for $1.66 billion late last year — beat the Dallas Mavericks for their 10th win in a row on Jan. 27, the same evening that Qualtrics International Inc.
XM,
+2.83%,
the software company Smith co-founded with his father Scott and brother Jared in 2002, set the price for its $1.55 billion IPO. The next day, Qualtrics shares would soar 52% in their trading debut, giving the software company a market valuation of $27.3 billion; a day later, the Jazz would win their 11th straight, putting them solidly at the top of the NBA standings.

So it’s good to be Ryan Smith. At the NBA All-Star break, the Jazz have a league-best record of 27-9. At the same time, Qualtrics is a major mover in a market estimated to be worth $60 billion, and topped Wall Street estimates for earnings and sales in its first quarterly results as a publicly traded company Tuesday.

The combination of a successful basketball team and another large, publicly traded tech company are helping to secure an even loftier goal for Smith: Making the Utah region known for something more than majestic mountains and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

“His goals and objectives have never been anything but over the top,” Todd Pedersen, CEO of Vivint Smart Home Inc.
VVNT,
+0.40%,
told MarketWatch.

Qualtrics got its start in the Smith’s basement, which is near Pedersen’s home. And it’s not just Smith and Pedersen who are neighbors — their companies are right next to one another as well. And they can now watch the NBA team that Smith owns play at an arena that bears the name of Pedersen’s company, as they recently did for a nationally-televised Jazz game against the defending champion Los Angeles Lakers.

The Jazz won.

Handling double duties

Smith sits in a position occupied by few in the history of corporate America: head of a publicly traded company, and owner of an unrelated sports franchise. There is no such owner in the National Football League, Major League Baseball nor the National Hockey League, though Wayne Huizenga once owned franchises in all three while leading Blockbuster Video.

The NBA seems more willing to welcome public-company executives to its ranks, even while denying bids from Oracle Corp.’s
ORCL,
-0.10%
co-founder Larry Ellison. Another recent majority owner is Alibaba Group Holding Ltd.’s
BABA,
-1.34%
co-founder and Executive Vice Chairman Joseph Tsai, who snapped up the Brooklyn Nets for a record $2.35 billion in 2020. The reclusive Robert Pera, CEO of Ubiquiti Inc.
UI,
-0.68%,
is also owner of the Memphis Grizzlies.

Vivek Ranidive was still chief executive of Tibco Software Inc. when he led a group that bought the Sacramento Kings in 2013, and Miami Heat owner Micky Arison led Carnival Cruise Inc. for more than a decade while leading his franchise. In Pera’s first attempt to buy into the NBA, a bid for the Philadelphia 76ers, he was topped by a group that included AMC Entertainment Holdings Inc.
AMC,
+1.92%
CEO Adam Aron, who also served as CEO of the Sixers for the first two years the group owned the team.

Read more: 5 things to know as Qualtrics prepares for its IPO this week

Smith has adroitly navigated the corporate and professional sports worlds by delegating day-to-day operations at each organization.

“As executive chairman, my job during the day is running Qualtrics with [Chief Executive] Zig [Serafin]. My job with the Jazz is at night, and I leave it to the coaches, players, and executives in charge of the team,” Smith told MarketWatch. “The product is proof of their abilities.”

At Qualtrics, CEO Zig Serafin and Smith are self-described “co-builders” of a company that has grown in the four-and-a-half years since Serafin joined as chief operating officer. (Serafin, who was named CEO nine months ago, says he and Smith are “joined at the hip” in their vision.) During that time, Qualtrics has expanded employees (from 1,100 to 3,500), customers (3,000-4,000 to 13,500), and revenue (from less than $200 million annually to $763.5 million last year, the company reported Tuesday).

As the NBA’s newest owner, “One of Ryan’s leadership styles is to delegate. He lets people think big, but by doing so through smart decisions,” Jim Olson, president of the Utah Jazz, told MarketWatch.

To that end, the Jazz use Qualtrics’ data analytics technology to improve team performance on the court and off, down to traveling, sleep, and diet for players and coaching staff.

The rise of Silicon Slopes

Illustrated by Terrence Horan

Such partnerships have fueled not just the success of the Jazz and Qualtrics but the larger Salt Lake City-Provo-Orem area.

“The Jazz and Sundance [Film Festival] are the two most identifiable brands in this state, and Ryan is smartly leveraging the Jazz for global reach,” says Domo Inc.
DOMO,
+1.20%
CEO Josh James, who coined the term “Silicon Slopes” for the region and started the non-profit organization of the same name. “Ryan Smith used to be just another successful tech founder,” he said. “Now he is universally known as Ryan Smith, owner of the Jazz. This is a much larger megaphone and platform for the community.”

For example, the Jazz use Qualtrics software to collect and analyze fan data to improve their experience at home games on everything from concessions and apparel to parking and in-game entertainment. The two organizations have also teamed on 5 For The Fight, a nonprofit that invites everyone to give $5 for the fight against cancer. It is the Jazz’s official jersey patch, a rarity in the corporate-skewed NBA.

The winning ways of Smith and Qualtrics, amid a wave of freshly minted unicorns in the Salt Lake City region, underscores the rise of Silicon Slopes as one of a handful of regions in the U.S. to successfully mold itself after Silicon Valley. From the days of computer-networking pioneer Novell Inc. and word-processing maker WordPerfect Corp. in the 1980s, Utah has stood out as a tech outpost, albeit in the shadow of Silicon Valley and Seattle, but its recent string of triumphs has considerably raised its profile.

Indeed, the Provo-Orem area was deemed the best regional economy in America, according to rankings released in February by the Milken Institute.

Even COVID-19 hasn’t dampened the state’s can-do mindset.

Utah has among the most-open vaccination criteria in the nation. Starting in early March, anyone 50 and over is eligible for a jab—as well as those 16 and older with pre-existing conditions. By emphasizing “speed over perfection,” Nomi Health Inc. CEO Mark Newman says, the state has been able to send kids back to school since September, reduce the unemployment rate of 3% to a pre-pandemic level, and attain a budget surplus.

“The states that figure it out will have a long-tale of success over those states that don’t,” said Newman, whose direct healthcare company is partnering with the state of Utah and Qualtrics in bringing mass testing sites and vaccinations.

“Utah as a state has a get-it-done attitude,” says Newman, who moved to the state in 1993. “That goes back to Utah’s pioneer roots.”

James says Utah’s tech history can be divided into three phases: The first in the late 1980s and early ‘90s led by Novell and WordPerfect; a second in the late 1990s and 2000s, with internet plays Overstock Inc.
OSTK,
-2.18%,
Omniture (acquired by Adobe Systems Inc.
ADBE,
+0.69%
), Altris Corp. (bought by then-Symantec Corp.), Iomega (acquired by then-EMC Corp.), and dozens of companies that were sold for millions each; and the current one of big independent enterprise companies like Qualtrics and Domo, and consumer plays like Vivint.

“A giant crop of companies are coming behind us,” James said, mentioning such unicorns as MX Technologies Inc., Lucid Software Inc. and DivvyPay Inc. “This feels like Silicon Valley in the ‘90s. It’s a really exciting time.”

“Silicon Slopes is doing great, building off the great history of [tech pioneers] Novell and WordPerfect in the state,” Steve Case, the co-founder of AOL who now leads venture-capital firm Revolution, told MarketWatch. The latest iteration, he added, is the byproduct of the region’s focus on enterprise technology and “strong collaboration in building a community.”

Overstock CEO Jonathan Johnson credits Utah’s “rich entrepreneurial spirit” to a “business-friendly environment where constant innovation, great employment opportunities, and real technological advancement are present.”

“Utah is a mixing bowl of cultures,” says Serafin, whose previous stop was 17 years in Redmond, Wash., all of them at Microsoft Corp.
MSFT,
-0.10%.
“Utah is close to the coast, and San Francisco and Los Angeles. It’s not much different than Silicon Valley folks who moved to Nevada.”

An ‘interesting journey’

In a state increasingly bustling with unicorns, none arguably have been hotter than Qualtrics, which went public in late January.

The company’s XM tracker stands for experience management, a software category that Qualtrics coined. Qualtrics, whose software lets businesses gauge how customers use their products so those products can be improved, has about 13,000 customers from about 9,000 two years ago. The company’s sales jumped 30% in the first three quarters of 2020 to $550 million, from $413.4 million a year earlier.

Smith’s “rare and unique ability to spot markets before they exist” gave him an vision of the experience economy that has helped evolve the way enterprises think about culture, brand, products, and people,” says ServiceNow Inc.
NOW,
-1.32%
CEO Bill McDermott, who was previously CEO of SAP
SAP,
-0.10%
when it owned Qualtrics.

Read more: 5 things to know as Qualtrics prepares for its IPO this week

Smith co-founded Qualtrics with his father and brother in 2002. On the cusp of going public in 2018, Qualtrics was acquired by SAP for $8 billion, making it the largest private enterprise-software acquisition in tech history when the deal closed in early 2019.  

“It’s been an interesting journey,” Smith says. “For one-and-a-half to two years with SAP, they took our name everywhere while keeping our company independent and keeping the management team together, which is rare. It retained our culture, with an option to IPO.”

“To be in this spot as a public company, so many things had to go right,” Smith said. “It’s freakin’ incredible.”

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