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The championship was the first for the Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference and the 1956 Montana State football team is a member of the RMAC Hall of Fame. The 1956 Bobcats of head coach Tony Storti were the fourth, and last, Montana State football team to go undefeated. The game is the only blemish on the record of the team as it finished at 9 ...
Montana State University: Operator: Montana State University: Capacity: 20,767: Record attendance: 22,057 (November 23, 2024) Surface: FieldTurf (2008–present) Natural grass (1973–2007) Construction; Broke ground: 1972: Opened: 1973 – Reno H. Sales 52 years ago: Renovated: 1998 – Bobcat Stadium: Expanded: 2011: Construction cost ...
The Brick Breeden Fieldhouse is a multi-purpose indoor arena in the western United States, located on the campus of Montana State University in Bozeman, Montana. [2] It is the home of the Montana State Bobcats of the Big Sky Conference; the primary venue for men's and women's basketball and indoor track and field.
No. 10 Sacramento State $^ 8 – 0 9 – 3 No. 2 Montana State ^ 7 – 1 11 – 3 No. 7 Eastern Washington ^ 6 – 2 10 – 3 No. 6 Montana ^ 6 – 2 10 – 3 No. 17 UC Davis ^ 5 – 3 8 – 4 Weber State 5 – 3 6 – 5 Northern Arizona 4 – 4 5 – 6 Portland State 4 – 4 5 – 6 Idaho 3 – 5 4 – 7 Northern Colorado 2 – 6 3 – 8 Cal ...
In the semifinals at Fargo, MSU defeated North Dakota State for a second time in 1976, by a much closer 10–3 score in the Grantland Rice Bowl. [7] [8] In the Pioneer Bowl for the Division II title in Wichita Falls, Texas, the Bobcats defeated Akron 24–13 and became the first Big Sky team to win a national title in football.
The Jackrabbits will play for their second consecutive FCS national championship on Sunday. 3 keys to the FCS championship game between South Dakota State football and Montana Skip to main content
With a potential playoff spot hanging in the balance, No. 10 Boise State (No. 11 in the College Football Playoff rankings) will take on No. 19 UNLV in the Mountain West Championship Game.
The 1980 Montana State Bobcats football team represented the Montana State University as a member of the Big Sky Conference during the 1980 NCAA Division I-AA football season. Led by third-year head coach Sonny Lubick , the Bobcats compiled an overall record of 4–6 and a mark of 3–4 in conference play, tying for sixth place in the Big Sky.