• Thu. Nov 7th, 2024

Crew Wakley’s Wife, a Former Utah Cheerleader, Shows Support for BYU in Upcoming Clash”

 

BYU safety Crew Wakley’s wife still has her University of Utah cheerleading outfits in the closet, but on Saturday she will be cheering for the Cougars

BYU safety Crew Wakley celebrates his game-winning interception against Baylor on Sept. 28, 2024 in Waco, Texas. BYU Photo

Kimber Wakley is no longer a University of Utah cheerleader, unfortunately.

If she still was, the story of how she is married to a BYU football player would be even juicier this week, as the No. 9 Cougars and struggling Utes renew the state’s best college football rivalry on Saturday at Rice-Eccles Stadium in Salt Lake City (8:15 p.m. MST, ESPN).

“Yeah, that would be kinda crazy (if Kimber was cheering for the Utes on Saturday),” said her husband, BYU starting safety Crew Wakley. “That would be wild.”

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The couple got married in August 2020 when Crew, a former all-state quarterback at Jordan High, was playing for the Utah State University Aggies. Kimber was a Utes cheerleader in 2018 and 2019 when Crew was serving a mission in Fort Worth, Texas, for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

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“People always ask her who she is cheering for this week,” Crew said Tuesday, chuckling, as the Cougars continued preparations in Provo for the rivalry game. “She is a BYU fan now. So she has converted.”

Crew says it really didn’t take that much convincing, although somewhere in their house is a bag full of Kimber’s old Utah cheerleading outfits and pom-poms. Truth be told, Kimber had previously made the jump from red to blue — Navy blue — when Crew played for the Aggies in 2020 and 2021 before giving up football for a time and selling solar panels in Fresno, California.

Utah cheerleader Kimber Wakley cheers on the Utes at Rice-Eccles Stadium.

Utah cheerleader Kimber Wakley cheers on the Utes at Rice-Eccles Stadium. Wakley was a cheerleaders at Utah in 2018 and 2019, but now cheers on her husband, BYU safety Crew Wakley. The Utes and Cougars meet Saturday at Rice-Eccles. | Utah Athletics

“It was good. She had a lot of fun up there at Utah. She loved her time up there, but now that we are down in Provo, she has switched over to the royal blue,” Crew said.

He credited his wife’s support for keeping him in college football, and persuading him to not give up on his dream when things didn’t work out for him in Logan. As a walk-on at BYU, he’s also grateful for her being the breadwinner in the family.

“She works full time to support us now,” Crew said. “Someone has gotta pay the bills. I am not on scholarship, so she is paying the bills. She actually has a really good job (as finance director at BMW of Murray). So it is a good gig.”

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Crew and Kimber were classmates their freshmen and sophomore years at Jordan, but Kimber’s family moved to the Bingham High boundaries before her junior year and she graduated from that South Valley school while Crew threw for nearly 3,000 yards and 22 touchdowns his senior year at Jordan.

Jordan High quarterback Crew Wakley prepares to throw during game against Viewmont at Jordan High on Friday, Oct. 27, 2017. | Adam Fondren,

He also rushed 195 times for 1,420 yards and 22 TDs. He signed with Utah State in 2018 before heading off on his mission. After playing safety and even some linebacker in Logan his freshman year, he was moved to quarterback when new coach Blake Anderson took over, and then back to safety, cornerback, and linebacker again.

Fed up and frustrated, and feeling that USU coaches weren’t being honest with him about his future, he entered the transfer portal.

As has been thoroughly documented, he landed at BYU as a walk-on and moved his way up the depth chart to a starting spot early in the 2023 season. Then he had to earn his starting spot all over again in 2024, having been behind some returning guys coming off injuries.

His game-sealing interception against Baylor solidified him as one of the top playmakers on the BYU defense, a defense that isn’t certain which quarterback the Utes will start — Isaac Wilson or Brandon Rose.

“It would be nice to know, but with the situation at hand, it is what it is,” Wakley said. “We are going to go in and play ball and whether they have Wilson or whoever their quarterback is, our game plan is the same.”

Cougars on the air

No. 9 BYU (8-0, 5-0) at Utah (4-4, 1-4)

Nov. 9, 8:15 p.m. MST

At Rice-Eccles Stadium

TV: ESPN

Radio: 102.7 FM/1160 AM

As for the rivalry game, Crew said he remembers watching it on Sept. 10, 2021, when he was an Aggie and never really thinking that one day he would play in it. The Cougars won 26-17 that night at LaVell Edwards Stadium.

“It is one of those games that growing up in the state, you grow up watching, wanting to play in. All the crazy battles, close games, right? So I am excited. The boys are excited. The energy is high,” he said. “No one really needs extra motivation right now. When we show up on a Tuesday practice ready to rock, it is a good sign. There was a lot of juice. Pads were popping. Good practice. Everybody is ready to go.”

Including a certain former Utes cheerleader, who will be decked out in blue when she returns to Rice-Eccles Stadium.

BYU safety Crew Wakley (7) and linebacker Isaiah Glasker make a tackle during game against Oklahoma State in Provo at LaVell Edwards Stadium on Friday Oct. 18, 2024. | Scott G Winterton, Deseret News

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