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Tommy's time: Montana State QB Mellott can end fabled career with ultimate triumph

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Tommy's time: Montana State QB Mellott can end fabled career with ultimate triumph


FRISCO, Texas — He burst on the scene four years ago like a supernova, a boy wonder from Butte with raw yet inimitable talent.

His first game as Montana State’s quarterback felt like an apparition — 180 rushing yards and two touchdowns in a 26-7 playoff victory over UT Martin at Bobcat Stadium. It was the first step on what was a remarkable postseason journey.

It proved to be an advent toward greatness.

Now Tommy Mellott, no longer an untried kid, has a chance to finish his career with the ultimate prize: a national championship.

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RELATED: MONTANA STATE QB TOMMY MELLOTT WINS 2024 WALTER PAYTON AWARD

Mellott and the Bobcats, with a 15-0 record, look to reach the summit with a victory over North Dakota State (13-2) in the FCS title game Monday night at Toyota Stadium and end a 40-year championship drought.

If MSU finishes the job, Mellott will surely have played a major role. Just as he has throughout his time in Bozeman.

“Tommy’s been phenomenal,” Bobcats coach Brent Vigen said, “and he needs to be phenomenal one more time.”

Mellott has been making plays at MSU for the duration of his career, but this is the season in which he became a true quarterback.

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In years prior Mellott’s throwing ability was, for all intents and purposes, untapped and unrealized. He did most of his damage as a running QB, tearing through defenses with speed and shiftiness, earning him the nickname “Touchdown Tommy” for his penchant to find the end zone.

That’s not to say he didn’t make plays with his arm, but even Mellott admits it was a rudimentary style of quarterbacking — a bit of organized chaos that led the Cats to what can be considered an unexpected appearance in the title game in 2021.

“Freshman year was a whirlwind,” Mellott said. “There’s a lot of things I didn’t know about football at that point. It was just going out there making plays, and ultimately I think we made enough to make it to that game.”

However, he injured his ankle early in the title contest and the overmatched Bobcats lost to North Dakota State 38-10. They left Texas with their championship dreams dashed.

“As I sat on the sideline, you know, just kind of hobbled, and I had to sit out and watch our seniors who had sacrificed so much and blood, sweat and tears in this program to build it up to what it was at that moment, and just see obviously the end of their careers come at the hands of North Dakota State, knowing I couldn’t do anything was an awful feeling,” Mellott said.

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The years since have been a time for growth for Mellott, as both a quarterback and a leader.

In his sophomore and junior seasons Mellott split time at QB with Wyoming transfer Sean Chambers, and that Big Cat/Little Cat combo worked well as the Cats won 20 games combined in 2022 and 2023 with a trip to the semifinal round mixed in.

Even so, last year wasn’t exactly smooth for Mellott. Not only was he sharing time in a two-man rotation, but he also missed games due to injury and MSU didn’t make it out of the second round of the playoffs with another loss to the Bison.

The 2024 Bobcats are unequivocally Mellott’s team, and he’s become a prized dual threat behind center. The Bobcats’ offense, coordinated by Tyler Walker, made a point this year to limit hits on Mellott and he has flourished like never before.

In 15 games, Mellott has completed 68.8% of his passes for 2,564 yards with 29 touchdown and just two interceptions. He also has 915 rushing yards and 14 more scores on the ground while averaging 8.4 yards per carry.

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Mellott leads an offense that has scored 30 or more points in every game, eclipsed 40 eight times and topped 50 three more times.

“The artistic piece to playing quarterback was essentially all that I really had my freshman year,” Mellott admitted. “And so really since then it’s kind of been a battle to obviously make it more of a science with numbers and stuff like that.

“And so I’ve really learned a great amount from the coordinators that I’ve had, coach Walker this year, coach (Taylor) Housewright before, and coach Vigen as well has played a huge role in understanding numbers, really, in the run game and in the pass game, you know, protections, all that sort of thing.

“It’s been great to try to find that happy medium between it being a science and an art. So I think that it’s certainly slowed down. But I’ve just enjoyed it a lot. I’ve just been enjoying the process of it all.”

On Saturday night, Mellot was named the recipient of the 2024 Walter Payton Award as the top offensive player in the FCS. Mellott is the first player from MSU to ever win the honor.

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He has also been named a first-team All-American by various media outlets, and won the both the Walter Camp FCS player of the year award and offensive player of the year by the FCS Athletic Directors Association.

“I think back to 2021, me and Tommy are running down on kickoffs next to each other and covering punts and everything, so kind of growing up all the way from that to, you know, him really starting his first game against UT Martin and those playoffs and taking off from there,” safety Rylan Ortt said. “It’s been awesome to watch.

“Tommy’s one of those dudes that just does everything right, and he’s not going to ask anybody to do anything that he’s not going to do himself.”

It’s been about mental development as much as it has physical.

Said Vigen: “Tommy’s growth, in a lot of ways, has been in his willingness Monday through Thursday, let’s say, to sit down with coach Walker, even sit down with me and express his thoughts of the game plan of the opponent, what he likes, what he doesn’t like.

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“I think that’s a huge transition for a quarterback, and he’s taken that piece to the level that he needed to this year when you talk about his control of the offense.”

Vigen’s reputation as a “quarterback whisperer” has proved useful for Mellott. As a QB coach and offensive coordinator at both NDSU and Wyoming, Vigen helped turn the likes of Carson Wentz and Josh Allen into first-round NFL draft picks. Allen, the star quarterback for the Buffalo Bills, could very well be NFL MVP this year.

Mellott’s skill set is different, but the focus and drive are equal.

“I think he’s continued to reach these heights because there’s that same common thread of not being satisfied in anything,” Vigen said. “When we lost that game last year to end our season, that was the best he had played quarterback. And we had to really point that out.

“He still had aspirations to how far could this go, and really he’s so humble at the same time. So they all have a lot of similarities in just who they are inside, how they’ve been raised. You know, the hardest working guys on the team. I think those are the common threads.”

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Mellott’s career has been an advent toward greatness.

No longer an untried kid from Butte, he has a chance to rectify what happened here three years ago and finish it off with the ultimate prize: a national championship.

“When I walked out onto the field (in 2021) it was just a feeling of, are we ever going to be able to get back here in the next four years? Is this taken for granted at this moment?” Mellott said. “Ever since that, it’s really just been motivation to earn the right to go back and play in the national championship game.

“Growing up in Montana I wanted to always go to Montana State. I wanted to be part of the Cats, wanted to wear the blue and gold. It’s just a privilege and a blessing to play here with the seniors and the guys that have left before me and are obviously going to continue on after me. It’s just been an honor and a privilege to play with those guys.”





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Our Favorite Photography of 2025 – Flathead Beacon

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Our Favorite Photography of 2025 – Flathead Beacon


The Beacon’s 2025 photographic landscape stretched from the stark expanses of the Blackfeet Nation, to the marbled halls of the state Capitol, across the vast waters of Flathead Lake, to the tops of Glacier’s highest peaks, and onto protester-filled streets. The year delivered its share of turbulence in both politics and nature. Montana’s dynamic range reinforces photography is as much an art of capturing moments as it is an exercise in distillation. Of 50,000+ presses of the shutter this year, only about 5,000 of the resultant images made the cut for toning, captioning and filing into the archives. Those 5,000 frames were further culled to less than 50 for the end-of-year gallery.

The rotunda ceiling of the Capitol in Helena on Jan. 16, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Sen. Mike Cuffe enjoys a burger in the Senate Chambers in the Capitol in Helena on Jan. 16, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Rep. Tom Millett speaks to the House Judiciary Committee with his copy of the Montana and U.S. Constitutions on the podium at The Capitol in Helena on Jan. 16, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Deputy Sergeant-at-Arms Craig Fraley at his post outside the Senate Chambers in the Capitol in Helena on March 25, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
The wheels of a timber harvester in the Round Star Project area west of Whitefish on Jan. 22, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Bison caretakers Joe LaPlant and Adrian Costel prepare to load a harvested bison from the Blackfeet Bison Program herd onto a truck on the prairie east of Browning on Feb. 6, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Eli Neill holds the heart of a bison during a Blackfeet Bison Program harvest at AMS Ranch east of Browning on Feb. 6, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Super 1 Foods grocery store reflected in a puddle of snowmelt in Kalispell on Feb. 24, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Natalie Idleman models in a natural cold plunge pool in Lakeside for the Style section of the spring 2025 edition of Flathead Living on Feb. 25, 2025.
A chair is framed by a hole in the wall of one of the upstairs rooms of the 19th century Scandinavian Methodist church in Kalispell on March 11, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Liam Benson of the Bigfork Vikings pitches at the inaugural game at Flathead Beacon Field in Bigfork on April 17, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Lena Camero and about 40 others gathered to protest the detention of Beker Rengifo del Castillo at the U.S. Customs and Border Patrol Station in Whitefish on April 24, 2025. Rengifo del Castillo is a Venezuelan asylum seeker who had taken up residence in the Flathead Valley. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Paddlers with Montana Silver Lining and the Montana Canoe Club paddle a double hulled canoe on Flathead Lake in Big Arm on May 25, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Avalanche lily on Blacktail Mountain on May 17, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
A rotary snow blower parked on Logan Pass in Glacier National Park on May 19, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
A young archer collects fired arrows from around beaded targets in a field at Iinnii Days in Browning on June 5, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
A man is arrested by police at the “No Kings Protest” at Depot Park in Kalispell on June 14, 2025. Similar protests against President Trump and his administration took place on around the nation. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
A cat and birds perched on a fenceline off of Four Mile Drive in Kalispell on June 25, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Sunrise reflects on the glassy waters of Logging Lake in Glacier National Park on June 28, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Bowman Lake, Mount Carter and Rainbow Glacier as viewed from the summit of Rainbow Peak in Glacier National Park on July 8, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Underwater view of an old tree in Bowman Lake in Glacier National Park on July 9, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Indian Relay team member Devyn Campbell of the Blackfeet Nation stretches against a horse trailer ahead of the races at North American Indian Days in Browning on July 11, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
An Indian Relay racer leaps from his horse at the end of a lap at North American Indian Days in Browning on July 11, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
The Brothers Comatose perform at Under the Big Sky music festival in Whitefish on July 18, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Leigh Lake, Snowshoe Peak, “A” Peak, and Granite Lake in the Cabinet Mountain Wilderness on July 20, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Low water levels in Chain Lake on ranch land in the Heart Butte area of the Blackfeet Reservation on July 28, 2025. The region suffered from drought until unseasonably heavy late summer rains provided relief. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Boats take their positions at the Montana Cup sailing tournament at dawn on Flathead Lake on Aug. 3, 2025. The annual competition attracts dozens of sailing crews from around Montana and Idaho. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Contract school bus driver Gerard Byrd at the wheel of one of his buses at his home in Martin City on Aug. 28, 2025. Gerard ferried students throughout the Canyon for 42 years, driving a total of some 1.2 million miles on some the worst roads in Montana. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Heavy rain on a Kalispell city street on Sept. 13, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Racers speed away from the starting line at the Keller Ranch Snowmobile Grass Drags in Kalispell on Sept. 20, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
A man approaches a herd of horses grazing in view of Chief Mountain near Babb on Sept. 29, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Fallen maple leaves in morning light in Woodland Park in Kalispell on Oct. 9, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Sound engineer Toby Scott pictured in his recording studio in downtown Whitefish on Oct. 17, 2025. Scott recorded and mastered much of rock legend Bruce Springsteen’s music over the course of his career. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
A “No Kings” protest along the Kalispell Bypass on Oct. 18, 2025. Similar protests against President Trump and his administration took place on around the nation. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Donna Roberts, age 99, is pictured with her baseball memorabilia at her daughter’s home in Frenchtown on Nov. 1, 2025. Roberts, then Stageman, played in the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League, which existed from 1943 to 1954. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Afton Hatch (15) of the Polson Pirates celebrates his team’s 4-0 victory with fans at the Class A State Championship against the Whitefish Bulldogs at Polson High School on Nov. 1, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Glacier Wolfpack celebrates their AA State Championship win, besting the Billings West Golden Bears 16-3 at Legends Stadium in Kalispell on Nov. 21, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
An inversion over the Flathead Valley as viewed from near the summit of Big Mountain at Whitefish Mountain Resort on Nov. 30, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
A washed-out bridge on Farm to Market Road over Libby Creek in Libby on Dec. 12, 2025. Persistent rains and snowmelt caused historic flooding in Lincoln County and around Northwest Montana. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
Evermay Mitchell sits with a wooden urn containing the ashes of her son Riley McConnell in her Kalispell home on Dec. 15, 2025. McConnell, age 20, died from a fentanyl overdose on June 14, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
A powerful windstorm with gusts up to 70 mph produces massive waves on Flathead Lake at Wayfarers State Park in Bigfork on Dec. 17, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon
A tree toppled by a windstorm crushed the roof of the Conrad Mansion’s gazebo in Kalispell on Dec. 17, 2025. Hunter D’Antuono | Flathead Beacon





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Montana Lottery Powerball, Lucky For Life results for Dec. 24, 2025

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The Montana Lottery offers multiple draw games for those aiming to win big. Here’s a look at Dec. 24, 2025, results for each game:

Winning Powerball numbers from Dec. 24 drawing

04-25-31-52-59, Powerball: 19, Power Play: 2

Check Powerball payouts and previous drawings here.

Winning Lucky For Life numbers from Dec. 24 drawing

03-05-07-17-34, Lucky Ball: 09

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Check Lucky For Life payouts and previous drawings here.

Winning Lotto America numbers from Dec. 24 drawing

01-18-27-41-49, Star Ball: 09, ASB: 02

Check Lotto America payouts and previous drawings here.

Winning Big Sky Bonus numbers from Dec. 24 drawing

05-25-26-31, Bonus: 12

Check Big Sky Bonus payouts and previous drawings here.

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Winning Powerball Double Play numbers from Dec. 24 drawing

03-15-19-29-35, Powerball: 21

Check Powerball Double Play payouts and previous drawings here.

Winning Montana Cash numbers from Dec. 24 drawing

07-09-14-15-16

Check Montana Cash payouts and previous drawings here.

Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results

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When are the Montana Lottery drawings held?

  • Powerball: 8:59 p.m. MT on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
  • Mega Millions: 9 p.m. MT on Tuesday and Friday.
  • Lucky For Life: 8:38 p.m. MT daily.
  • Lotto America: 9 p.m. MT on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday.
  • Big Sky Bonus: 7:30 p.m. MT daily.
  • Powerball Double Play: 8:59 p.m. MT on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
  • Montana Cash: 8 p.m. MT on Wednesday and Saturday.

Missed a draw? Peek at the past week’s winning numbers.

Winning lottery numbers are sponsored by Jackpocket, the official digital lottery courier of the USA TODAY Network.

Where can you buy lottery tickets?

Tickets can be purchased in person at gas stations, convenience stores and grocery stores. Some airport terminals may also sell lottery tickets.

You can also order tickets online through Jackpocket, the official digital lottery courier of the USA TODAY Network, in these U.S. states and territories: Arizona, Arkansas, Colorado, Idaho, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Oregon, Puerto Rico, Washington D.C., and West Virginia. The Jackpocket app allows you to pick your lottery game and numbers, place your order, see your ticket and collect your winnings all using your phone or home computer.

Jackpocket is the official digital lottery courier of the USA TODAY Network. Gannett may earn revenue for audience referrals to Jackpocket services. GAMBLING PROBLEM? CALL 1-800-GAMBLER, Call 877-8-HOPENY/text HOPENY (467369) (NY). 18+ (19+ in NE, 21+ in AZ). Physically present where Jackpocket operates. Jackpocket is not affiliated with any State Lottery. Eligibility Restrictions apply. Void where prohibited. Terms: jackpocket.com/tos.

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This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a Great Falls Tribune editor. You can send feedback using this form.



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ABC’s Montana/Montana State Semifinal Game Draws Record TV Viewership

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ABC’s Montana/Montana State Semifinal Game Draws Record TV Viewership


The Montana at Montana State FCS semifinal game on ABC was the most-watched FCS playoff game on record, averaging 2.8 million viewers.

ESPN2’s Illinois State at Villanova game averaged about 400,000 viewers. The average of 1.6M viewers is the most-watched semifinals since 2009.

For comparison, last year’s FCS semifinals had two games on ABC, which draws more eyeballs than ESPN2. SDSU at NDSU on ABC averaged 1.58M viewers. South Dakota at Montana State on ABC averaged 1.37M. Last season’s title game of NDSU vs. Montana State on ESPN drew 2.41M.

This comes a week after the quarterfinal round drew its highest average audience since 2011.

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Viewership for the six FCS playoff games so far on national TV is up 13% from the comparable six games on networks prior to the title game last year.

The ‘Super Brawl’ Delivers In Intensity

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