
Jeff Choate
Photo by: R. Dean Hendrickson
BOBCAT CALENDAR: Jeff Choate became Montana State's head football coach five years ago today
12/4/2020 3:19:00 PM | Football
The Bobcats played North Dakota State twice in NCAA Playoff games on December 4
A day-by-day look at Bobcat football history...
December 4
SPOTLIGHT: Five years ago today, Jeff Choate became Montana State's 32nd head football coach. Choate's four seasons at Montana State have been nothing less than remarkable.
A long-time FBS assistant, Choate immediately infused the Bobcat program with a dose of energy augmented by a sense of stability. His first words to his new team was, "It's going to be alright."
And it was, eventually. Choate assembled a top-shelf coaching staff, reached out to Bobcat fans across Montana and throughout the Northwest, and assembled a recruiting class that included a dozen eventual starters, five eventual all-conference selections, and a CoSIDA Academic All-America.
Choate's initial season leading the Bobcats did not pass without squalls. The team survived a six-game losing streak, but righted the ship with consecutive season-closing wins. The 2017 Bobcats also experienced ups and downs, but the five FCS losses came by a combined 27 points, none by more than 12, and all came more or less as gut punches. Through it all, Choate commitment to his core principles - running the football, an aggressive defensive mindset centered on stopping the run and affecting the quarterback, and a player-centered program built on collective discipline but also emphasizing individual growth.
The 2018 season arrived with equal parts optimism and curious anticipation, with star running back Troy Andersen taking over at quarterback. The move worked brilliantly, as the Cats rode an unconventional offensive approach and a talent-laden defense to an FCS Playoff appearance. Andersen operated MSU's multiple option attack to near-perfection, but also formed a tangible foundation for Choate's program - the unshakeable belief that a quarterback's most important characteristic is the ability to command the huddle, lead his team, and build universal accountability.
It turned out that the player many assumed was MSU's most irreplaceable would miss much of 2019, and it also turned out that the culture and belief system that Andersen had so embodied was more than strong enough to withstand that loss. The Cats followed the blip of a two-game mid-season losing streak with six straight wins - including a 48-14 win over the Grizzlies - that landed the team in the FCS Semifinals. Even a second straight season-ending playoff loss at North Dakota State couldn't dim the shine of an outstanding season.
Whenever the 2020-21 season begins, the Bobcats have built a reliable formula during Choate's four seasons. The Cats rely on a veteran, talented offensive line, a ground-oriented offense that produces big plays, and a physical, stifling defense. Quarterback Tucker Rovig and running back Isaiah Ifanse lead the offense, while outside linebacker Amandre Williams and cornerback Tyrel Thomas pace the defense.
Choate's time at Montana State has featured improvement each season, from four wins to five to eight to 11. He Mike Kramer as the only Montana State coaches to move past two sub-.500 campaigns at the beginning of his MSU career to post successive winning campaigns. He's already tied for ninth with Ott Romney in Bobcat history with 28 wins, and his .560 win percentage also exactly matches Romney's career total as the fifth-best mark. He and Kramer are MSU's only coaches with wins in more than multiple post-seasons, and the first Bobcat head coach since Cliff Hysell without head coaching experience when taking the MSU job.
And, or course, there are the four wins against the Grizzlies. Choate joins Jim Sweeney - who finished 5-0 vs. UM - as MSU's only coaches to win their first four contests against the Griz.
BOBCAT FOOTBALL ON TODAY'S DATE IN HISTORY
2015 - Jeff Choate hired as MSU's 32nd head coach
2012 - Linebacker Jody Owens and quarterback DeNarius McGhee land All-America honors; Rob Ash named Regional AFCA Co-Coach of Year with SHSU's Willie Fritz; Ash Named Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year Semifinalist, an award he eventually won
2010 - #25 North Dakota State 42, at MSU 17
1991 - Montana State named four finalists for its vacant head football coaching position - Bob Cortese of Fort Hays State, Carroll College coach Bob Petrino, Chuck Shelton, most recently of Utah State, and Fresno State assistant Cliff Hysell
1976 - MSU 10, at North Dakota State 3
1898 - Butte High 18, MSU 6
FINIS: (The retrospective below originally appeared on msubobcats.com today in 2010.)
It was cold.
Ask anyone involved in Montana State's 10-3 playoff win over North Dakota State 34 years ago to the day before this Saturday's playoff game between the Bobcats and Bison, and the topic of the frigid conditions comes up early in the conversation.
"It was so cold," laughs Arnie Sgalio, MSU's Sports Information Director in 1976 and currently an executive with ESPN Regional, who spent the week in Fargo advancing the ABC National Game of the Week. "Really cold. And snowy."
"It was a miserable windy day," recalls long-time MSU Athletic Trainer Chuck Karnop. "It started blowing hard (before the game) and blew the same way for three hours."
But the game played in blustery conditions on hard Astroturf – "It was carpet, just like what we're standing on now," says one of that day's standouts Tom Kostrba, now a middle school teacher in Bozeman – resonates with many of its participants as more than a football game. It stands as a symbol of how football used to be.
"It was the element of kids just beating the person in front of them," Kostrba recalls over a third-of-a-century later. MSU scored 10 second half points, all by freshmen, to claim a 10-3 win which advanced the team to the 1976 NCAA Division II National Championship game. Seven days later MSU claimed its second national crown.
Karnop, who witnessed many of the 33 meetings between NDSU and the Bobcats, said by the time those teams met for the 28th time that December day in 1976 the game had become legendary for many involved in the series. "I think it kind of got so it symbolized that it was going to be football, almost (old-time) Butte type of football. Our guys would start getting ready three weeks ahead of time just to go in there whacking."
Kostrba was in on many of that day's big plays, rushing for 106 yards and setting up both Bobcat scores. With the Bobcats trailing 3-0 at halftime, Kostrba gained 34 yards on seven carries on the first drive of the second half to move deep into Bison territory. On third-and-four from the NDSU five yard-line, sophomore quarterback Paul Dennehy found freshman tight end Butch Damberger in the end zone on a play Damberger said he will never forget.
"When the play was called I knew it was coming to my side, and my heart started pumping," said the tight end from Cut Bank. "I released off the line and ran my route to the corner of the end zone – to this day I'm not sure I ran the right route – and Paul floated one in there over my shoulder and I caught it over the top in the corner of the end zone. I didn't know if I was close to being out of bounds, so I just kind of slid down. I've had people tell me they could see the grin on my face when I was running back to the bench, and I'll never forget that feeling. It was pretty exciting."
On the eighth play of the fourth quarter, with the Bobcats tightening their grip on the game, freshman Jeff Muri from Miles City drilled a 34-yard field goal to give MSU a seven-point lead. The Bison gained only three first downs in the fourth quarter, one on a halfback pass, and when Butte's Jim Janhunen ended NDSU's only serious late-game threat with an interception in the final five minutes the win was all but sealed.
Kostrba said the frigid conditions – 21 degrees at kickoff, but windy throughout the game, according to reports – played to his strength. "It was a great battle, (in) the wind and the snow and the outdoor stadium. It was a hard surface, and it was pretty challenging. You had to be a north-south runner, and that's what I was, so I had an advantage right off the bat."
Kostrba said he knew from a conversation with All-America offensive lineman Jon Borchardt that the Bobcats had plenty of life in spite of being shut out for the first two quarters. "At halftime I asked Jon, 'How are you doing out there,' and he goes, 'I have been blocking my man, and I will continue blocking my man for the rest of the game.' That's how it was… we just had to overcome what they gave us."
How meaningful was the MSU-NDSU rivalry in the 1970s? Montana State foreshadowed the 1976 playoff win by whipping the Bison 34-7 in that season's second game. Two games into the 1977 season, the Bobcats won a 24-17 heart-stopper in Fargo. In the 1976 and '77 seasons, NDSU compiled an 18-5-1 record. Three of those five losses were to the Bobcats.
The series lapsed after a 21-19 Bobcat win in 1980 when MSU moved to Division I with the rest of the Big Sky Conference, while NDSU stayed in Division II. But with the Bison transitioning to Division I football in 2005, the old rivals got together again. It was like the '70s all over again, without the wide-collared leisure suits, as the Bobcats earned a hard-fought 20-17 victory.
Still, 34 years after that classic old-school playoff game, many of those who witnessed it from the Bobcat sideline don't recall the stats, or even the final score, correctly. But they remember the nature of the game, and the nature of the series. "That game was a hard-hitting son of a (gun)," Karnop said with reverence. "The thing I remember about them is that the harder you popped them, the bigger their smiles got. And it was the same the other way. Like two teams that really just wanted to play football, and didn't know any better."
December 4
SPOTLIGHT: Five years ago today, Jeff Choate became Montana State's 32nd head football coach. Choate's four seasons at Montana State have been nothing less than remarkable.
A long-time FBS assistant, Choate immediately infused the Bobcat program with a dose of energy augmented by a sense of stability. His first words to his new team was, "It's going to be alright."
And it was, eventually. Choate assembled a top-shelf coaching staff, reached out to Bobcat fans across Montana and throughout the Northwest, and assembled a recruiting class that included a dozen eventual starters, five eventual all-conference selections, and a CoSIDA Academic All-America.
Choate's initial season leading the Bobcats did not pass without squalls. The team survived a six-game losing streak, but righted the ship with consecutive season-closing wins. The 2017 Bobcats also experienced ups and downs, but the five FCS losses came by a combined 27 points, none by more than 12, and all came more or less as gut punches. Through it all, Choate commitment to his core principles - running the football, an aggressive defensive mindset centered on stopping the run and affecting the quarterback, and a player-centered program built on collective discipline but also emphasizing individual growth.
The 2018 season arrived with equal parts optimism and curious anticipation, with star running back Troy Andersen taking over at quarterback. The move worked brilliantly, as the Cats rode an unconventional offensive approach and a talent-laden defense to an FCS Playoff appearance. Andersen operated MSU's multiple option attack to near-perfection, but also formed a tangible foundation for Choate's program - the unshakeable belief that a quarterback's most important characteristic is the ability to command the huddle, lead his team, and build universal accountability.
It turned out that the player many assumed was MSU's most irreplaceable would miss much of 2019, and it also turned out that the culture and belief system that Andersen had so embodied was more than strong enough to withstand that loss. The Cats followed the blip of a two-game mid-season losing streak with six straight wins - including a 48-14 win over the Grizzlies - that landed the team in the FCS Semifinals. Even a second straight season-ending playoff loss at North Dakota State couldn't dim the shine of an outstanding season.
Whenever the 2020-21 season begins, the Bobcats have built a reliable formula during Choate's four seasons. The Cats rely on a veteran, talented offensive line, a ground-oriented offense that produces big plays, and a physical, stifling defense. Quarterback Tucker Rovig and running back Isaiah Ifanse lead the offense, while outside linebacker Amandre Williams and cornerback Tyrel Thomas pace the defense.
Choate's time at Montana State has featured improvement each season, from four wins to five to eight to 11. He Mike Kramer as the only Montana State coaches to move past two sub-.500 campaigns at the beginning of his MSU career to post successive winning campaigns. He's already tied for ninth with Ott Romney in Bobcat history with 28 wins, and his .560 win percentage also exactly matches Romney's career total as the fifth-best mark. He and Kramer are MSU's only coaches with wins in more than multiple post-seasons, and the first Bobcat head coach since Cliff Hysell without head coaching experience when taking the MSU job.
And, or course, there are the four wins against the Grizzlies. Choate joins Jim Sweeney - who finished 5-0 vs. UM - as MSU's only coaches to win their first four contests against the Griz.
BOBCAT FOOTBALL ON TODAY'S DATE IN HISTORY
2015 - Jeff Choate hired as MSU's 32nd head coach
2012 - Linebacker Jody Owens and quarterback DeNarius McGhee land All-America honors; Rob Ash named Regional AFCA Co-Coach of Year with SHSU's Willie Fritz; Ash Named Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year Semifinalist, an award he eventually won
2010 - #25 North Dakota State 42, at MSU 17
1991 - Montana State named four finalists for its vacant head football coaching position - Bob Cortese of Fort Hays State, Carroll College coach Bob Petrino, Chuck Shelton, most recently of Utah State, and Fresno State assistant Cliff Hysell
1976 - MSU 10, at North Dakota State 3
1898 - Butte High 18, MSU 6
FINIS: (The retrospective below originally appeared on msubobcats.com today in 2010.)
It was cold.
Ask anyone involved in Montana State's 10-3 playoff win over North Dakota State 34 years ago to the day before this Saturday's playoff game between the Bobcats and Bison, and the topic of the frigid conditions comes up early in the conversation.
"It was so cold," laughs Arnie Sgalio, MSU's Sports Information Director in 1976 and currently an executive with ESPN Regional, who spent the week in Fargo advancing the ABC National Game of the Week. "Really cold. And snowy."
"It was a miserable windy day," recalls long-time MSU Athletic Trainer Chuck Karnop. "It started blowing hard (before the game) and blew the same way for three hours."
But the game played in blustery conditions on hard Astroturf – "It was carpet, just like what we're standing on now," says one of that day's standouts Tom Kostrba, now a middle school teacher in Bozeman – resonates with many of its participants as more than a football game. It stands as a symbol of how football used to be.
"It was the element of kids just beating the person in front of them," Kostrba recalls over a third-of-a-century later. MSU scored 10 second half points, all by freshmen, to claim a 10-3 win which advanced the team to the 1976 NCAA Division II National Championship game. Seven days later MSU claimed its second national crown.
Karnop, who witnessed many of the 33 meetings between NDSU and the Bobcats, said by the time those teams met for the 28th time that December day in 1976 the game had become legendary for many involved in the series. "I think it kind of got so it symbolized that it was going to be football, almost (old-time) Butte type of football. Our guys would start getting ready three weeks ahead of time just to go in there whacking."
Kostrba was in on many of that day's big plays, rushing for 106 yards and setting up both Bobcat scores. With the Bobcats trailing 3-0 at halftime, Kostrba gained 34 yards on seven carries on the first drive of the second half to move deep into Bison territory. On third-and-four from the NDSU five yard-line, sophomore quarterback Paul Dennehy found freshman tight end Butch Damberger in the end zone on a play Damberger said he will never forget.
"When the play was called I knew it was coming to my side, and my heart started pumping," said the tight end from Cut Bank. "I released off the line and ran my route to the corner of the end zone – to this day I'm not sure I ran the right route – and Paul floated one in there over my shoulder and I caught it over the top in the corner of the end zone. I didn't know if I was close to being out of bounds, so I just kind of slid down. I've had people tell me they could see the grin on my face when I was running back to the bench, and I'll never forget that feeling. It was pretty exciting."
On the eighth play of the fourth quarter, with the Bobcats tightening their grip on the game, freshman Jeff Muri from Miles City drilled a 34-yard field goal to give MSU a seven-point lead. The Bison gained only three first downs in the fourth quarter, one on a halfback pass, and when Butte's Jim Janhunen ended NDSU's only serious late-game threat with an interception in the final five minutes the win was all but sealed.
Kostrba said the frigid conditions – 21 degrees at kickoff, but windy throughout the game, according to reports – played to his strength. "It was a great battle, (in) the wind and the snow and the outdoor stadium. It was a hard surface, and it was pretty challenging. You had to be a north-south runner, and that's what I was, so I had an advantage right off the bat."
Kostrba said he knew from a conversation with All-America offensive lineman Jon Borchardt that the Bobcats had plenty of life in spite of being shut out for the first two quarters. "At halftime I asked Jon, 'How are you doing out there,' and he goes, 'I have been blocking my man, and I will continue blocking my man for the rest of the game.' That's how it was… we just had to overcome what they gave us."
How meaningful was the MSU-NDSU rivalry in the 1970s? Montana State foreshadowed the 1976 playoff win by whipping the Bison 34-7 in that season's second game. Two games into the 1977 season, the Bobcats won a 24-17 heart-stopper in Fargo. In the 1976 and '77 seasons, NDSU compiled an 18-5-1 record. Three of those five losses were to the Bobcats.
The series lapsed after a 21-19 Bobcat win in 1980 when MSU moved to Division I with the rest of the Big Sky Conference, while NDSU stayed in Division II. But with the Bison transitioning to Division I football in 2005, the old rivals got together again. It was like the '70s all over again, without the wide-collared leisure suits, as the Bobcats earned a hard-fought 20-17 victory.
Still, 34 years after that classic old-school playoff game, many of those who witnessed it from the Bobcat sideline don't recall the stats, or even the final score, correctly. But they remember the nature of the game, and the nature of the series. "That game was a hard-hitting son of a (gun)," Karnop said with reverence. "The thing I remember about them is that the harder you popped them, the bigger their smiles got. And it was the same the other way. Like two teams that really just wanted to play football, and didn't know any better."
Players Mentioned
Leon Costello Press Conference: Kennedy-Stark Athletic Center
Thursday, July 31
A Conversation with President Dr. Waded Cruzado | Montana State Athletics
Monday, May 19
Big Cats, Little Trucks - Willie Patterson
Wednesday, May 03
Matt Houk Introductory Press Conference
Wednesday, May 03























