Saratoga Springs, Utah, Karate Black Belt Holder William Hyland Passes Away at 17 following Injuries Sustained in a Motorcycle Accident; Community Launches GoFundMe to Cover Funeral Costs
A Tragic Loss!
January 14, 2026
This article was last updated by Alisha Shrestha on January 14, 2026
William Christopher Hyland, 17, of Saratoga Springs, died on January 10, 2026, after a long and valiant fight following a motorcycle and SUV crash on December 11, 2026.
Born March 29, 2008, to Christopher Neil Hyland and Ruth Louise Williams Hyland, William was a son, a brother, a boyfriend, a grandson, and a friend whose bright energy touched everyone who knew him.
He packed a lot into 17 years. William held a black belt in karate. He was a flight leader at the Utah Military Academy and a member of the National Honor Society.
He worked at Chubby’s and used his paychecks to fund video games, motorcycles, and airsoft gear. He loved military history. He loved cats.
He planned to join the Marines and hoped to become a pilot. He is survived by his parents and three siblings.
The crash on December 11 was devastating. Bystanders and first responders performed heroic work at the scene, and William was life-flighted to the hospital with multiple critical injuries.
He endured dozens of surgeries and was kept on life support for weeks. The family and the community held fast.
On December 27, his father wrote about that time, saying Christmas looked different but that faith and support had carried them through.
“It is a miracle William survived and will be a miracle if he ever wakes up,” his father wrote, thanking everyone for prayers, food, and the hands that helped the family.
Despite every effort, William passed away. His father confirmed the news publicly on January 13.
Community Asks for Prayers for the Hyland Family
The community has asked for support through to help cover mounting medical and funeral costs. They said any help is deeply appreciated.
People poured out messages the moment the news spread. Emily Rice Carter kept it simple and real.
“Thinking of you right now. We love you guys,” she wrote. A longtime friend of the family, Teri Lea, posted a note full of faith and comfort. “Much love to you, Ruthie,” she wrote.
“Words do not express the sympathies of losing a son, brother, uncle, cousin to all of you. My thoughts and prayers to you all. God, please lay your hand on the family and protect their hearts, as love and comfort is what is needed at this time.”
Students who knew William shared heartbreak in small, blunt ways. Dylan Smith wrote, “I’m going to miss William. I saw him today at the hospital, it was hard to know I won’t see my school friend again. Just till I make it back home.”
That line says what a lot of kids felt, a raw mix of grief and stunned disbelief.
Those messages show how many parts of his life mattered. Coworkers at Chubby’s remember him as steady and funny.
The Utah Military Academy remembers a flight leader who took his duties seriously.
Teammates and instructors remember a kid who earned his black belt and who trained with focus. The National Honor Society record shows he cared about school, too.
The funeral service will be on Saturday, January 17, 2026. Public viewing starts at 9:45 a.m. The service begins at 11:00 a.m.
Utah Military Academy will provide an honor guard detail. The Patriot Guard will escort William to his final resting place.
What remains in the days after is both small and huge. People bring food. They send messages.
They stand with the family. Those acts matter more than anything right now.
“It is practical help and it’s love,” one neighbor wrote. That is the shape of grief in a place like Saratoga Springs.
William wanted to serve. He wanted to fly. He wanted to live loud. He did those things in his own way, and he carried the people who loved him along with him.
Unfortunately, his life was too short. It was filled with plans, with work, with jokes, and with a stubborn, loud kind of affection.
If you knew William, you know the kid who would show up early for a shift, who would tease his siblings, who would laugh at ridiculous jokes, and then make a plan to fix something that was broken.
If you want to help the family, the GoFundMe is where they have asked donations be sent. If you want to show up, the viewing and the service details are above.
The grief is raw. The work of remembering and healing will be long.
But for now, the messages and the hands and the guard detail are how a small community carries a family. William’s plans and his laughter will live on in the people who loved him.
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Anish Koirala has loved sports since he was a kid. He grew up playing basketball and soccer, and that passion stayed with him over the years. Today, Anish works as a writer and editor, sharing his knowledge and love for the game through articles and stories. He uses his playing experience to make his writing clear, thoughtful, and fun to read.
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