Montana
Montana Grizzlies add Oregon State, Lehigh to future football schedules
MISSOULA — The Montana Grizzlies have added a pair of one-off football games to the 2026 and 2027 football schedules, featuring matchups against an old conference foe from the FBS ranks and a first-time opponent that advanced to the FCS playoffs last season.
Montana will travel to Corvallis, Oregon, on Sept. 19, 2026, to face Oregon State of the re-established Pac-12 at Reser Stadium. The Griz will then open the 2027 schedule at home with a matchup against Lehigh University of the Patriot League on Sept. 4 in Missoula.
Montana and Oregon State were co-members of the Pacific Coast Conference from 1924-1950 until the Grizzlies departed for the old Skyline Conference in 1951. The Griz and Beavers have faced each other 16 times over the years, dating back to the first meeting in 1925. While Montana has a 2-12-2 all-time record against Oregon State, the Grizzlies have won the previous two meetings.
UM last beat OSU 35-14 in the 1996 season opener en route to a 14-1 record and a trip to the Division I-AA national championship game at Marshall under head coach Mick Dennehy. The Griz also beat the Beavers 22-15 in the 1990 season opener in Corvallis with Grady Bennett at quarterback under coach Don Read.
Lehigh comes to Missoula to kick off the 2027 season in a first-time matchup between the schools, historically a pair of the most successful in FCS history. The Griz and Mountain Hawks are two of less than 30 teams currently in the subdivision that boast more than 600 wins in program history. Lehigh played its first year of college football in 1884, while Montana would not start a program for more than a decade in 1897.
Based in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, roughly an hour and a half northwest of Philadelphia, Lehigh is coming off a Patriot League championship season in 2024, going 9-4 overall and 5-1 in conference play to share the title with Holy Cross and receive the league’s automatic bid to the FCS Playoffs.
Lehigh defeated No. 9 Richmond on the road 20-16 in the first round before traveling to Moscow to face Idaho in the second, falling to the Vandals 24-13.
The Grizzlies now have one remaining open date in both 2026 and 2027 before the schedules are complete. Montana also has future non-conference games scheduled for 2028 against Monmouth and a home-and-home series against Incarnate Word in 2028 and 2029.
In 2025, Montana will play an FCS-record eight home games starting with Central Washington in the season opener on Sept. 6 at Washington-Grizzly Stadium in Missoula. Highlights on the schedule also include home games against North Dakota, Idaho, Eastern Washington and Montana State, with Homecoming set for Oct. 11 against Cal Poly.
Future Griz Football Schedules
2025 Schedule
| 9.6 | Central Washington |
| 9.13 | North Dakota |
| 9.20 | Indiana State |
| 9.27 | Idaho |
| 10.4 | @ Idaho State |
| 10.11 | Cal Poly |
| 10.18 | Sacred Heart |
| 10.25 | @ Sacramento State |
| 11.1 | @ Weber State |
| 11.8 | Eastern Washington |
| 11.15 | @ Portland State |
| 11.22 | Montana State |
2026 Schedule
| 9.5 | Open |
| 9.12 | Utah Tech |
| 9.19 | @ Oregon State |
| 9.26 | Portland State |
| 10.3 | @ UC Davis |
| 10.10 | Sacramento State |
| 10.17 | Open |
| 10.24 | @ Idaho |
| 10.31 | Idaho State |
| 11.7 | @ Northern Arizona |
| 11.14 | Northern Colorado |
| 11.21 | @ Montana State |
2027 Schedule
| 9.4 | Lehigh |
| 9.11 | Open |
| 9.18 | Utah Tech |
| 9.25 | @ Cal Poly |
| 10.2 | Weber State |
| 10.9 | @ Northern Colorado |
| 10.16 | @ Portland State |
| 10.23 | Open |
| 10.30 | UC Davis |
| 11.6 | Northern Arizona |
| 11.13 | @ Eastern Washington |
| 11.20 | Montana State |
2028 Schedule
| 9.1 | Monmouth |
| 9.9 | @ Incarnate Word |
2029 Schedule
Montana
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Montana
Frigid Friday – several inches of snow in parts of the area
A band of moderate snow has formed from the Cut Bank area, extending southeast across Chouteau, Fergus, and Judith Basin Counties. Be alert for low visibility and slick road conditions. Icy conditions continue in Lewis & Clark and Broadwater counties, where snow fell on top of ice after some freezing rain overnight. Up to a 1/4″ of ice has been reported on cars and sidewalks. Freezing rain may mix in again this morning as milder air begins to move back in.
Today’s Forecast:
Frigid Friday, several inches of snowfall in parts of the area-Friday, December 12
It will be a frigid today, with high temperatures in the 0s and lower 10s across central and eastern Montana, and mid to upper 30s in Helena.
The snow band will continue throughout the day, bringing several inches of snow to areas east of I-15. The band of snow will gradually push east tonight, impacting Blaine, Phillips, and Valley counties overnight. Snow showers taper off by Saturday morning.
MTN News
MTN News
Expect difficult driving conditions through Saturday morning, especially east of I-15 and into the mountains.
Arctic air slowly retreats north on Saturday. Temperatures start off in the -10s to near 0 on the Hi-Line and in the 0s for central Montana, then climb to the 0s and 10s for the Hi-Line and 10s to 20s in central Montana by Saturday evening.
Meanwhile, it will be a pleasant weekend in Helena with temperatures in the low 40s. A gusty breeze develops on Sunday, as temperatures warm nicely into the low to mid 40s in central Montana and into the 30s in northeast Montana.
Looking ahead to next week, mild and windy conditions kick off the workweek, followed by active weather returning midweek.
MTN News MTN News
MTN News
Montana
Atmospheric river drives flooding in northwest Montana
Warm temperatures and an “atmospheric river” of precipitation that flowed into northwestern Montana this week have generated a state of emergency in Montana’s northwesternmost county, Lincoln, as local waterways run unseasonably high.
Around 12 p.m. Wednesday, the National Weather Service started issuing flooding watches as area snowpack sites reported 24-hour precipitation totals that were approaching record levels. NWS meteorologist Dan Borsum told Montana Free Press Thursday that the “rain-on-snow” nature of the recent precipitation has led to widespread flooding.
Borsum called the weather pattern “unusual” for mid-December, instead likening it to a warm April.
Zach Sherbo, the public health manager for the Lincoln County Health Department, said in a Thursday afternoon phone call that additional precipitation is expected through Thursday evening, so rivers could continue rising into Friday.
The Lincoln County communities of Libby and Troy have been hit the hardest by the deluge, which prompted emergency services personnel to issue a state of emergency Thursday afternoon. Residents are cautioned against unnecessary travel and those served by the Libby city water supply are under a boil-water order as a precaution in the event of water supply contamination. School has also been canceled for students in Libby and Troy, Sherbo said.
The Lincoln County Sheriff’s Department has identified a handful of bridges that have been compromised or are washed out as a result of flooding. It suggests residents looking for information on road closures and bridge conditions review an interactive map that is available online and linked in a press release posted to the Lincoln County Health Department’s Facebook page.
“It’s going to take a long time to recoup from this, just structurally, just with the bridges we’ve lost already and the condition that they’re in and going toward,” Sherbo said. “It’s a pretty big combined local effort right now.”
Justun Juelfs, the Kalispell-area maintenance chief with the Montana Department of Transportation said three stretches of state-managed roadways were closed or under monitoring status as of 4 p.m. Thursday.
An approximately 80-foot section of the Farm to Market Road south of Libby has washed out as Libby Creek carved a new channel. MDT is also monitoring erosion that is occurring along a U.S. Highway 2 bridge southeast of Libby and along a section of Highway 56 near Bull Lake. Juelfs encouraged motorists to review MDT’s road conditions report for up-to-date information on impacts to state highways.
The Army Corps of Engineers is assisting with sandbag-filling and distributing efforts and the Red Cross has set up a shelter for those in need at the Assembly of God Church in Libby, according to Sherbo.
The Montana Disaster and Emergency Services agency is also lending a hand with the flood response. In an email to MTFP, Anette Ordahl with DES wrote that a district field officer and a recovery coordinator are on the ground in Libby to offer assistance.
In a Thursday afternoon press release, Gov. Greg Gianforte noted that Sanders and Flathead counties have also recognized the flooding by issuing emergency or disaster declarations. Up to four inches of additional rainfall are expected across western and south-central Montana, according to a disaster declaration Gianforte’s office included in a 3 p.m. press release.
The National Weather Service reported Thursday morning that the Bear Mountain snowpack monitoring site, located just across the border in Idaho, received 6.5 inches of precipitation as of this morning, making it the third-wettest 24-hour period for the site in its 44-year monitoring history. The six-day precipitation total for Dec. 6-11 is 13 inches.
Borsum, with the National Weather Service, said the recent, unseasonable warm spell in western Montana combined with the “super strong” atmospheric river to melt early season snowpack and drive flooding. A similar rain-on-snow event in early June of 2022 led to widespread flooding in parts of south-central Montana that required extensive repairs to roadways and bridges.
Thursday, the Yaak River near Troy surpassed its official flood stage, running at more than 7,500 cubic feet per second. Its usual volume for this time of the year is about 200 cfs.
The Fisher River near Libby was also nearing flood stage. As of Thursday afternoon, it was running at nearly 4,000 cfs, more than 20 times its usual volume for mid-December.
Zeke Lloyd and Jacob Olness contributed to this reporting.
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