
BOBCATS BY THE NUMBERS: Many Years Ago, Foy McClung Came to MSU from Oklahoma and Helped Lead the Cats to a Championship
8/15/2018 8:51:00 AM | Football
For the second time, in his third role, Cole Moore is doing great things for Bobcat Football
August 14: Bobcats by the Numbers takes a look at current and past Bobcats whose jersey numbers correspond to the number of days remaining before Montana State opens the 2018 football season against Western Illinois in Bobcat Stadium's annual Gold Rush game on August 30.
#16
Luke May, S: A multi-sport star growing up in Whitefish, Luke May began his college career as a javelin thrower at Minnesota. Soon, though, he returned to his native Montana and followed his grandfather's footsteps to the Bobcat football team. Bucky May was an excellent halfback for the Cats in the 1960s, and Luke contributed as a reserve safety a season ago.
Spotlight – Foy McClung: Sometimes a photo catches your eye, and never really exits your mind. There is a shot of quarterback Foy McClung throwing a jump pass – his feet way off the ground, his arm cocked, guard Jerry Ross and fullback Dave Miller protecting him, in a sharp-looking gold-white-gold helmet-and-uniform combo glimmering on a bright autumn dayt, a large crowd looking on as the Cats thump the Grizzlies in Missoula. McClung's story was as compelling as that photo. He transferred to Montana State from Northeastern Oklahoma A&M junior college before the 1963 season, and contributed "booming punts in the clutch" as a part-time punter. He entered his senior season as the third-string quarterback, a player whose ability "coaches feel they've underrated," per his media guide bio. He was a part-time punter as a junior, and after entering his senior season third on the depth chart rose to the starting role late in the season. He led the Bobcats to a thrashing of Montana in Missoula off the bench, splitting time with starter Ray Foley, and helped the Cats wrap up the Big Sky title with an easy road win at Weber State. McClung was named Back of the Game in the Camellia Bowl, when Montana State won the western regional small college championship by beating Sacramento State on its home turf. In addition to finally wrangling quarterback honors, McClung was the team's punter and place kicker. He made the most of his short time on the MSU campus. The commerce major was a Phi Beta Lambda member and belonged to the Phi Beta Kappa academic honorary. A member of the Bobcat baseball team, he was also Vice President of the French Club. McClung played semi-pro football for the Tulsa Thunderbirds after graduating from MSU.

Chronology: Gay Kravik (1931), Bob Mattmiller (1934), Nicholas Yovetich (1937), Jess Hodson (1940), Shril Williamson (1941), George Hoffman (1946), John Geary (1947-48), Herman Bliss (1949-50), Paul Christopherson (1953), Ron Harcharik (1954-55), Dave Alt (1956-61), Chuck Springer (1963), Foy McClung (1962-64), Wayne Pitzer (1965-67), Jim Bilsky (1968), Steve Endres (1971-73), Mike Anderson (1974-77), Barry Sullivan (1978), Mike Carle (1979-80), Carman Campagna (1982), Mark Page (1983), Jeff Michael (1984-85), Kurt Ostermiller (1986-87), Sam Johnson (1988-89), Todd Pafhausen (1990-91), Scott Matthews (1992-96), Dusty Broderick (1997-99), Jon Knokey (2000-02), Rick Coppack (2003-05), Derek Erickson (2006-07), Mark Iddins (2008-09), Danny Trittler (2010), Te'Shon Burton (2011), Cole Moore (2012-15), Zach Hutchins (2015), Kamden Brown (2016-17), Luke May (2017-)
Other #16 Notes: Cole Moore followed quite a path to get to Montana State, born in England but growing up in New Jersey then prepping for a year in suburban Chicago. He played quarterback in high school but arrived at MSU as a walk-on linebacker. He was among MSU's special teams leaders in tackles in spite of playing only nine games, then started for the remainder of his career. He was Honorable Mention All-Big Sky as a junior and Third Team as a senior, when he also served as a team captain. After graduating he earned his master's degree at Washington, where he worked as Jeff Choate's intern. When Choate became Montana State's head coach, Moore returned to his alma mater and has been an invaluable member of the Bobcat staff. In his administrative role he is crucial to the recruiting effort that has drawn national praise. Mostly, Moore remains the humble, quiet, productive person he was as a Bobcat player, is tremendously efficient and effective in his role as Operations Director, and it is great to have him back in the Fieldhouse.
#16
Luke May, S: A multi-sport star growing up in Whitefish, Luke May began his college career as a javelin thrower at Minnesota. Soon, though, he returned to his native Montana and followed his grandfather's footsteps to the Bobcat football team. Bucky May was an excellent halfback for the Cats in the 1960s, and Luke contributed as a reserve safety a season ago.
Spotlight – Foy McClung: Sometimes a photo catches your eye, and never really exits your mind. There is a shot of quarterback Foy McClung throwing a jump pass – his feet way off the ground, his arm cocked, guard Jerry Ross and fullback Dave Miller protecting him, in a sharp-looking gold-white-gold helmet-and-uniform combo glimmering on a bright autumn dayt, a large crowd looking on as the Cats thump the Grizzlies in Missoula. McClung's story was as compelling as that photo. He transferred to Montana State from Northeastern Oklahoma A&M junior college before the 1963 season, and contributed "booming punts in the clutch" as a part-time punter. He entered his senior season as the third-string quarterback, a player whose ability "coaches feel they've underrated," per his media guide bio. He was a part-time punter as a junior, and after entering his senior season third on the depth chart rose to the starting role late in the season. He led the Bobcats to a thrashing of Montana in Missoula off the bench, splitting time with starter Ray Foley, and helped the Cats wrap up the Big Sky title with an easy road win at Weber State. McClung was named Back of the Game in the Camellia Bowl, when Montana State won the western regional small college championship by beating Sacramento State on its home turf. In addition to finally wrangling quarterback honors, McClung was the team's punter and place kicker. He made the most of his short time on the MSU campus. The commerce major was a Phi Beta Lambda member and belonged to the Phi Beta Kappa academic honorary. A member of the Bobcat baseball team, he was also Vice President of the French Club. McClung played semi-pro football for the Tulsa Thunderbirds after graduating from MSU.
Chronology: Gay Kravik (1931), Bob Mattmiller (1934), Nicholas Yovetich (1937), Jess Hodson (1940), Shril Williamson (1941), George Hoffman (1946), John Geary (1947-48), Herman Bliss (1949-50), Paul Christopherson (1953), Ron Harcharik (1954-55), Dave Alt (1956-61), Chuck Springer (1963), Foy McClung (1962-64), Wayne Pitzer (1965-67), Jim Bilsky (1968), Steve Endres (1971-73), Mike Anderson (1974-77), Barry Sullivan (1978), Mike Carle (1979-80), Carman Campagna (1982), Mark Page (1983), Jeff Michael (1984-85), Kurt Ostermiller (1986-87), Sam Johnson (1988-89), Todd Pafhausen (1990-91), Scott Matthews (1992-96), Dusty Broderick (1997-99), Jon Knokey (2000-02), Rick Coppack (2003-05), Derek Erickson (2006-07), Mark Iddins (2008-09), Danny Trittler (2010), Te'Shon Burton (2011), Cole Moore (2012-15), Zach Hutchins (2015), Kamden Brown (2016-17), Luke May (2017-)
Other #16 Notes: Cole Moore followed quite a path to get to Montana State, born in England but growing up in New Jersey then prepping for a year in suburban Chicago. He played quarterback in high school but arrived at MSU as a walk-on linebacker. He was among MSU's special teams leaders in tackles in spite of playing only nine games, then started for the remainder of his career. He was Honorable Mention All-Big Sky as a junior and Third Team as a senior, when he also served as a team captain. After graduating he earned his master's degree at Washington, where he worked as Jeff Choate's intern. When Choate became Montana State's head coach, Moore returned to his alma mater and has been an invaluable member of the Bobcat staff. In his administrative role he is crucial to the recruiting effort that has drawn national praise. Mostly, Moore remains the humble, quiet, productive person he was as a Bobcat player, is tremendously efficient and effective in his role as Operations Director, and it is great to have him back in the Fieldhouse.
Players Mentioned
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Wednesday, May 03


















