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This category is for head athletic directors at Montana State University. Pages in category "Montana State Bobcats athletic directors" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total.
The following is a list of Montana State Bobcats men's basketball head coaches. There have been 23 head coaches of the Bobcats in their 121-season history. [1] Montana State's current head coach is Matt Logie. He was hired as the Bobcats' head coach in April 2019, [2] replacing Danny Sprinkle,Utah State current head coach the 2023–24 season. [3]
Montana State Bobcats basketball history includes one of college basketball's legendary teams, the Golden Bobcats of the late 1920s. The school's basketball teams had acclaimed fame throughout the 1920s by playing "racehorse basketball" and becoming one of the first schools in the nation to employ what is known as the fast break.
Montana State: Administrative career (AD unless noted) 2003–2004: Lehigh (director of basketball operations) 2006–2007: Kent State (director of basketball operations) Head coaching record; Overall: 298–87 (.774) Tournaments: 0–1 2–3 6–7 : Accomplishments and honors; Championships; Big Sky tournament
Schubert Reilley Dyche (February 11, 1893 – October 19, 1982) [1] was an American college football and college basketball coach and athletics administrator, all at Montana State University, from the 1920s through 1940s. [2]
The Montana State–Northern Lights football team represents Montana State University–Northern in college football in the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA). The Lights are members of the Frontier Conference , fielding its team in the Frontier Conference since 1999.
The Bobcats represent the Montana State University in the NCAA's Big Sky Conference. Montana State began competing in intercollegiate basketball in 1907. [1] However, the school's record book does not generally list records from before the 1950s, as records from before this period are often incomplete and inconsistent.
This Montana State squad is considered one of the best college teams in the first half of the 20th century. [6] The 1928–29 season was a culmination of the entire decade in which the school revolutionized a fast break offense coupled with high-pressure defense, something that no other teams had ever done. [ 6 ]