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Montana State Bobcats

Collegiate athletics teams of Montana State University

Montana State Bobcats

Collegiate athletics teams of Montana State University

FieldValue
nameMontana State Bobcats
logoMontana State Bobcats logo.svg
logo_width200
universityMontana State University
associationNCAA
conferenceBig Sky Conference (primary)
Rocky Mountain Intercollegiate Ski Association (men's and women's skiing)
NIRA (rodeo)
divisionDivision I (FCS)
directorLeon Costello
locationBozeman, Montana
teams14
stadiumBobcat Stadium
basketballarenaWorthington Arena at Brick Breeden Fieldhouse
arena2Shroyer Gym (volleyball)
Bridger Bowl (skiing)
nicknameBobcats
mascotChamp
pageurlhttps://msubobcats.com/
altlogo250px

Rocky Mountain Intercollegiate Ski Association (men's and women's skiing) NIRA (rodeo) Bridger Bowl (skiing)

Big Sky Conference logo in Montana State's colors

The Montana State Bobcats are the varsity athletic teams representing Montana State University in Bozeman in intercollegiate athletics. The university sponsors thirteen teams including men and women's basketball, cross country, skiing, tennis, and track and field; women's-only golf and volleyball; and men's-only football. The Bobcats compete in NCAA Division I and are members of the Big Sky Conference with the exception of the men's and women's skiing teams which belong to the Rocky Mountain Intercollegiate Ski Association. Their main rivals are the Grizzlies of the University of Montana in Missoula. Both schools are charter members of the Big Sky Conference, which began competition in the fall of 1963.

Sports sponsored

Montana State Bobcatsborder=1color= white }}"Men's sportsMontana State Bobcatsborder=1color= white }}"Women's sports
BasketballBasketball
Cross CountryCross Country
FootballGolf
SkiingSkiing
TennisTennis
Track & FieldTrack & Field
Volleyball
Montana State Bobcatsborder=1color= white }}; text-align:center"Co-ed sports

Basketball

Main article: Montana State Bobcats men's basketball

Main article: Montana State Bobcats women's basketball

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 College coach Ott Romney, who graduated with a Masters from MSC prior to World War I, pioneered the style of play, and by 1926 had assembled a team perfectly suited to playing an up-tempo brand of ball. Cat Thompson, John "Brick" Breeden, Frank Ward, Val Glynn and Max Worthington were at the heart of the MSC team that won the Rocky Mountain Conference title three straight seasons, and bested Utah State, BYU, Colorado, and University of Denver. The 1928–29 team reached college basketball's zenith by defeating the AAU Champion Cook's Painters in a two-of-three series and steamrolling to the Rocky Mountain Conference title. The Bobcats were retroactively recognized as the pre-NCAA Tournament national champion for the 1928–29 season by the Premo-Porretta Power Poll and the Helms Athletic Foundation. The Helms Foundation also named Cat Thompson one of the five greatest players in the first half of the 20th century in college hoops.

Football

Main article: Montana State Bobcats football

In 1956 the Bobcats football team took a share of the NAIA championship in the Aluminum Bowl in Little Rock, Arkansas playing to a 0–0 tie on a muddy field with the Pumas of St. Joseph’s College from Rensselaer, Indiana. In 1976 the Bobcats of Montana State won a national football title in NCAA Division II at Wichita Falls, Texas beating the Zips of Akron, Ohio 24-13 in the title game. In 1984, the Bobcats returned to a national football title game played in Charleston, South Carolina, beating the Bulldogs of Louisiana Tech 19-6 for their third national football title. The MSU Bobcats football is the only college team with national titles in three different classifications. The team has won 19 conference titles and has made the NCAA FCS playoffs 9 times.

Rodeo

Montana State Bobcats rodeo team has a long proud history with the National Intercollegiate Rodeo Association. For almost 30 years MSU hosted the College National Finals Rodeo. Bobcat Rodeo teams have won 8 national team titles, 32 individual national championships and multiple Big Sky Regional crowns. The Bobcats Rodeo team operates under the MSU Department of Student Affairs and enjoys outstanding booster support form the C.A.T. Rodeo Scholarship Association.

Skiing

Montana State Bobcats Alpine and Nordic Ski team compete in the Rocky Mountain Intercollegiate Ski Association and the NCAA Western Region and has produced 13 national champions. The Bobcat Nordic and alpine ski program venues at Bridger Bowl and Bohart Ranch have hosted six NCAA National Championships. The Big Sky Conference dropped its sponsorship of skiing and four other sports after the 1974 season.

Spirit Squad

The Montana State Spirit Squad is broken down into the Cheer team and Dance team.

National championships

Montana State has won four national championships (one shared due to a tie), with three being in the NCAA.

2025Division I FCSFootballBrent VigenW 35–34 (OT)Illinois State Redbirds

Former sports

Baseball

Montana State dropped its baseball program , following the 1971 season, and rival Montana played just one additional year. The Big Sky dropped baseball after the 1974 season, along with four other sports.

Wrestling

The Bobcat wrestling program won the first three Big Sky titles (1964, 1965, 1966); the conference discontinued the sport , after the 1987 season.

References

References

  1. "Member Institutions".
  2. "Home".
  3. "G. Ott Romney Staff Bio {{!}} Athletic Director". Brigham Young University.
  4. (2009). "ESPN College Basketball Encyclopedia: The Complete History of the Men's Game". ESPN Books.
  5. "Bobcat Skiing A Commitment to Excellence". Montana State University.
  6. (May 15, 1974). "Big Sky drops fives". Ellensburg Daily record.
  7. (May 15, 1974). "Idaho off probation, loop titles dwindle". Lewiston Morning Tribune.
  8. "Past Skiing Champions". Big Sky Conference.
  9. (May 10, 1971). "Zags clinch 'ND' crown". Spokesman-Review.
  10. (May 1, 1972). "Decision likely". Spokane Daily Chronicle.
  11. (May 7, 1973). "Zags need win". Spokane Daily Chronicle.
  12. "Past Baseball Champions". Big Sky Conference.
  13. (February 27, 1967). "Idaho State wins first mat crown". Spokesman-Review.
  14. "Past Wrestling Champions". Big Sky Conference.
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