UTAH TECH UNIVERSITY'S STUDENT NEWS SOURCE | March 07, 2026

Trailblazers down UT Arlington in double-overtime thriller

Utah Tech men’s basketball players celebrate an 87–84 overtime win against UT Arlington during a Western Athletic Conference game Feb. 5. The victory followed a tightly contested game that extended beyond regulation. Lukas Hassell | Sun News Daily

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Beginning a three-game homestand, the Utah Tech University men’s basketball team outlasted University of Texas at Arlington in a double-overtime battle Feb. 5, 87-84.

The opening half was back-and-forth throughout, with the Trailblazers jumping out to an 8-4 lead after three quick Ethan Potter points under four minutes into the game.

Neither team would lead by more than four over the remainder of the first half, as a Chance Trujillo layup put UT in front 26-25 with 6:08 left, the final lead of the frame for the home team.

UT Arlington would use a 5-0 run to get in front 30-26, but Utah Tech battled back to make it a one-point game at the break, 34-33. 

Second half

The Mavericks continued to hold a slim lead in the opening minutes of the second half, leading 40-38 with under 17 minutes remaining.

The Trailblazers answered by ripping off a 10-0 run, as five points each from Potter and Trujillo put UT ahead 48-40 five minutes into the period.

Utah Tech would push its advantage to 10, 52-42, before UTA battled back to cut the deficit to three, 53-50, at the under-12 timeout.

Following a Potter injury where he took an elbow to the head, the Trailblazers stayed in front, making it an eight-point game off a Dario Domingos tip-in with under 11 minutes to play, 58-50.

The Mavericks had an answer, however, using a 15-4 spurt to take a 65-62 lead with 4:38 left.

Potter’s return sparked UT, as six straight points put them back in front, 68-65. A UT Arlington triple tied the score just moments later, and the game remained tied with under a minute left.

With the Mavericks in front 72-71, Potter stepped to the free throw line with five seconds to go. He missed the first attempt but sank the second, sending the game to overtime tied at 72.

Overtimes

The two teams traded blows in the first extra period, but UTA held a 78-76 lead with 1:34 left.

With 10 seconds on the clock, Jusaun Holt knocked down a step-back mid-range jumper to tie it at 78 and send the game to a second overtime.

The Trailblazers would take an 84-80 lead in the second extra session, but the Mavericks battled back to tie the score with 15 seconds to go.

With the game on the line, Trujillo knocked down a 3-pointer with 1.3 seconds to play to win it for Utah Tech, 87-84.

“Most importantly, we got the dub,” Trujillo, a senior management major from Kaysville, said postgame. “That was a team win, double overtime, it was a gritty win.”

The Snow College transfer dropped 22 points, a new career-high, off the bench in the win.

“I think it’s been a common theme our entire season, just trying to thrive in adversity. Each and every day, every game that we play, I think we’re getting a little bit better, just a next-play mentality,” Trujillo added.

Utah Tech has now won four straight games, in large due to a strong game from Dario Domingos off the bench.

During Potter’s injury absence, Domingos, a sixth-year player from Midland, Texas, suiting up at his fifth school, saw extended minutes.

In 10 minutes of playing time, Domingos finished with 12 points and six rebounds, shooting a perfect 5-5 from the field.

What made the win even sweeter for Domingos was that UT Arlington was one of the schools he once attended.

“I’ll be honest, I think it was really one of my best games of the season,” Domingos said. “We’ve got some guys hurt, and I just started to get on the court and do my best. And it was really personal for me with it being against UTA.”

The win also moves Utah Tech into a three-way tie for first in the win column in the WAC standings, at 7-4 in conference play and 14-11 overall.

“I was proud of them; they battled hard,” UT head coach Jon Judkins said. “We had chances to pull away, but we just couldn’t keep increasing the lead. We also had chances where we could have just stopped and quit, and our guys didn’t.”

“What a gutty effort, they’re [UTA] a good team. It was a battle, no question. We always say, ‘The toughest teams win, so let’s go out and be tough,'” he added.

Up next

The Trailblazers will be in back in action at the Burns Arena, hosting first-place Utah Valley University in the Old Hammer Rivalry Feb. 12.

Tip-off is set for 7 p.m.