Montana
Sonny Holland, legend of Montana State football, dies at 84
BOZEMAN — Sonny Holland, who received nationwide championships in soccer at Montana State as each a participant and head coach and stays one of the crucial revered figures in MSU historical past, died Saturday in Bozeman. He was 84.
Montana State confirmed Holland’s loss of life to MTN Sports activities on Sunday previous to releasing an official announcement.
Referred to as “The Biggest Bobcat of Them All,” Holland was a Butte native who received a nationwide title with the Bobcats in 1956 as a middle and once more in 1976 as head coach. Holland led the MSU soccer program from 1971-77, profitable a pair of Huge Sky Convention championships in that span.
Holland’s jersey No. 52 is retired by the Bobcats. He was inducted into MSU’s athletic corridor of fame with its inaugural class in 1986, and can also be a member of the Montana Soccer Corridor of Fame and the Butte Sports activities Corridor of Fame.
Following the announcement of Holland’s loss of life, tributes poured in.
“What an unimaginable honor for me and my household to get to know Sonny Holland,” Bobcats athletic director Leon Costello posted to Twitter. “He was a daily in my suite on gamedays and I’m nonetheless in awe of how all Bobcat followers, younger and previous, revered and admired him. I’ll miss our conversations and hand shakes however will all the time keep in mind his sincerity. To the Biggest Bobcat of all-time, thanks. You set the usual and will probably be tremendously missed.
“An absolute legend in each approach,” present MSU coach Brent Vigen tweeted. “Coach Holland personified what our gamers & our coaches try to be. The Biggest Bobcat — his legacy will final eternally!”
“Relaxation in peace Sonny Holland,” tweeted Bobcats large receiver Willie Patterson. “Was a pleasure assembly you and your influence on bobcat soccer will FOREVER be remembered.”
Allyn “Sonny” Holland was born on March 22, 1938 in Butte and went on to graduate from Butte Excessive Faculty. He performed heart at Montana State from 1956-59, and helped the Bobcats go 9-0-1 and declare the NAIA soccer championship as a freshman in 1956 by tying Saint Joseph’s (Ind.) 0-0 in horrible subject circumstances on the Aluminum Bowl in Little Rock, Arkansas.
After his taking part in profession, Holland went on to be an assistant coach at Bozeman Excessive Faculty in 1961, then coached at MSU from 1962-64 beneath Herb Agocs, first as an assistant offensive line coach earlier than turning into the full-time line coach in 1963. He then was the primary head soccer coach at Charles M. Russell Excessive Faculty in Nice Falls, serving there from 1965-67.
Holland returned to the school ranks as an assistant beneath one other Bobcat, Jim Sweeney, at Washington State the next 12 months in 1968. That was earlier than taking the pinnacle teaching job at Western Montana School (now Montana Western) in Dillon for one season in 1969, the place he received Frontier Convention coach of the 12 months honors.
In 1970 Holland returned to the Bobcats as defensive position coach beneath Tom Parac prior taking on as head coach in 1971 as Parac’s hand-picked substitute (Parac ascended to the position of athletic director in 1971).
Holland presided over one of the crucial profitable eras of MSU soccer, because the group received league titles in 1972 and 1976.
In 1976, Holland coached MSU to a 12-1 document, a Huge Sky title and a 24-13 victory over Akron within the NCAA Division II championship recreation in Wichita Falls, Texas.
Holland’s head teaching document at Montana State was 47-24-1. He went 7-0 in his one season at Western, giving him a 54-24-1 profession document as a head coach, a profitable share of .684.
Holland, identified to his gamers as “Chief,” went 6-1 in opposition to rival Montana as head coach of the Bobcats. In keeping with MSU, from the day Holland arrived at Montana State as a freshman till the second of his retirement, the Bobcats received 17 of twenty-two video games in opposition to the Grizzlies.
Holland was a part of two of Montana State’s three nationwide championships. The Bobcats are the one school soccer program two win titles at three totally different ranges — NAIA in 1956, NCAA Division II in 1976 and NCAA Division I-AA (now Division I FCS) in 1984.
In 2011, the south finish zone of Bobcat Stadium was bowled in so as to add a number of thousand seats, an space christened because the “Sonny Holland Zone.” In 2016, a nine-foot bronze statue of Holland was unveiled outdoors Bobcat Stadium as a tribute.
In keeping with MSU’s press launch, Holland grew to become Montana State’s first three-time All-America soccer participant as a middle. The Bobcats completed with a cumulative 31-6-1 document throughout Holland’s time as a participant.
After stepping down as coach following the 1977 season, he later served as the college’s alumni director from 1978-92 and was additionally a particular advisor to the college president.
For years after his retirement, Holland was a daily at MSU athletic features, remaining a venerable member of the Bobcat household.
Holland was preceded in loss of life by Deanna, his spouse of fifty years. He’s survived by daughters Wendy (Gator) Rivers, Heidi (Eric) Vinje, and Jody (Tyler) Delaney, in addition to quite a few grandchildren and nice grandchildren.
Montana
Brawl of the Wild Replay: No. 9 Montana at No. 2 Montana State
BOZEMAN — Second-ranked Montana State was seeking regular-season perfection when it welcomed rival Montana to Bobcat Stadium on Saturday, Nov. 23, 2024.
The Bobcats entered the 123rd Brawl of the Wild with an 11-0 overall record with a chance to finish 12-0 for the first time in program history and also win the outright Big Sky Conference championship.
The ninth-ranked Grizzlies, meanwhile, were 8-3 and aiming to play spoiler for Montana State while also improving their own seeding for the FCS playoffs.
Watch a condensed replay of the game between No. 2 Montana State and No. 9 Montana in the video above.
Montana
‘Yellowstone’ highlights influence behind a changing Montana
The popular “Yellowstone” TV series, set and filmed in Montana, taps into a lesser-known chapter of the state’s history: its settlement by Confederates and ex-Confederates during and after the Civil War.
I come to this story with a unique perspective. I’m a fourth-generation Montanan. I’m also a scholar of U.S. Western literary and cultural studies and left the state in my 20s to pursue a career in academia.
Then, during the pandemic, I returned to Montana for a time to lead a statewide cultural organization that connects Montana’s history and literature to its modern-day residents.
That’s why, for me, the story of the show’s protagonist, John Dutton III, who heads a wealthy-but-embattled Montana ranching family, is not just a cultural phenomenon. Rather, “Yellowstone” offers insights into the dynamics that are currently influencing a changing Montana.
Montana’s little-known legacy
One of the series’ prequels, “1883,” provides the crucial backstory for the Dutton family’s journey to Montana.
James Dutton, portrayed by Tim McGraw, was a former Confederate captain; his wife, Maggie, was a nurse for the Confederate Army. In leaving behind their war-torn lives to seek new opportunities, they mirror the historical trend that saw Confederate settlers moving West during and after the Civil War.
According to Montana historian and scholar Ken Robison, Confederate prisoners of war languishing in Union prisons were paroled to western territories like Montana. By 1864, two such parolees had discovered gold in what is still called Confederate Gulch, at the time one of the largest settlements in Montana Territory. Other settlements, such as Dixie Town and Jeff Davis Gulch, dotted the landscape. Montana’s territorial capital was briefly called Varina, named after the Confederate president’s wife.
Although there is no way to know for certain, it’s possible that during the latter half of the war, half of Montana Territory’s residents — maybe 30,000 — were pro-secession. Some had been in Confederate service; the rest shared their sentiments.
After the war, many of those Confederates stayed. By the late 1800s, Montana was home to 13 United Confederate Veterans organizations totaling 176 members. In 1916, the Montana Chapter of the Daughters of the Confederacy erected a Confederate memorial in Helena, the state capital; it stood for a century. The 1920s saw the rise of about 40 Ku Klux Klan chapters across the state to promote xenophobic policies against immigrants and racist policies against nonwhites. Today, Montana remains one of the whitest states in the U.S. — about 85% of Montanans are white; less than 1% are Black.
Recasting the ‘Lost Cause’
Numerous historical echoes surface briefly in “Yellowstone.”
In Season 2, there’s a violent confrontation involving a militia group that displays Confederate and “Don’t Tread on Me” flags. This subplot speaks to Montana’s long history as a hub for populist and anti-government movements. The Southern Poverty Law Center reports that Montana has 17 hate and anti-government groups, which include three defined as white supremacist or neo-Nazi.
This depiction of militia groups in “Yellowstone” represents the broader history of populist resistance in the American West. From the Sagebrush Rebellion of the 1970s to the Montana Freemen’s standoff with federal agents in the 1990s, Westerners have often resisted federal control over land and resources — tensions that perhaps trace back to the Confederacy’s own secession, a resistance rooted in defiance of federal authority, particularly over slavery.
After the Confederacy’s defeat, the “Lost Cause” narrative, in an attempt to preserve Southern pride, recast the South’s secession as a fight for states’ rights, and not a defense of slavery.
Those Lost Cause connections reverberate through John Dutton III’s relentless battle to preserve his family’s ranch. Fighting overwhelming political and economic pressures, Dutton remains steadfast in his determination to hold onto the land, even when it goes against his best interests.
This tenacity reflects the Lost Cause mindset — a clinging to a nostalgia-tinged, yet unattainable, past. Dutton embodies the archetype of the “aggrieved white man,” a figure central to many populist movements, who feels displaced from his former position of power in politics, work and family life.
Populist contradictions
It’s hard to discern to what degree recent changes in Montana can be attributed to “Yellowstone.” What is certain: Today’s longtime Montana residents find themselves exposed to a fresh set of political, economic and cultural forces.
Tourism and the local economy are up, due in part to the “Yellowstone” effect. But so are concerns about the rising costs of most everything, particularly houses.
These trends have been spurred, in part, by outsiders moving to Montana — newcomers who romanticize the state’s hardscrabble past and what they perceive as its current rough-hewn lifestyle.
What’s more, Montana has morphed from a purple state known for its political independence into a reliably conservative stronghold.
The drastic shift from purple to red solidified in 2020 with the election of a Republican governor after 16 years of Democratic leadership. It was further underscored by the defeat of Democratic Sen. Jon Tester by Republican Tim Sheehy in the 2024 election.
In “Yellowstone,” as Dutton is sworn in as Montana’s new Republican governor, he tells his constituents that he is “the opposite of progress” in response to changes that outside influences are bringing to the state.
Yet the politics of “Yellowstone” are “hard to pin down,” and the Duttons themselves espouse various versions of left- and right-wing populism as they simultaneously battle and embody the political and economic elite.
By the same token, Montanans resent wealthy outsiders but have given them political power by voting them into office.
Montana’s current governor, Greg Gianforte, is a tech millionaire, originally from Pennsylvania; Sheehy, similarly, is a wealthy out-of-stater.
Neither one might approve of the fictional Gov. Dutton’s proposed policy of doubling property and sales taxes for out-of-state “transplants” — though many Montanans probably would. For some, the rapid changes of the past few years have been, like life for the Dutton family, a challenge.
Randi Lynn Tanglen served as professor of English at Austin College in Texas (2008-2020), executive director of Humanities Montana (2020-2022), and is currently vice provost for faculty affairs at the University of North Dakota (2023-present). She holds degrees from Rocky Mountain College, the University of Montana and the University of Arizona.
Montana
No. 2 Montana State whips No. 9 Montana 34-11, clinches 12-0 regular season
BOZEMAN — The only thing that could have made this football season any sweeter for Montana State was the one thing that remained on its list of regular-season expectations.
Against their arch nemesis on Saturday, the Bobcats didn’t blink.
Adam Jones rushed for 197 yards and two touchdowns, the defense rose up and No. 2-ranked MSU took care of ninth-ranked Montana 34-11 to win the 123rd Brawl of the Wild at Bobcat Stadium.
With the win, the Bobcats clinched a perfect regular season at 12-0, won the outright Big Sky Conference title with an 8-0 league mark and in all likelihood secured a top-two seed and home-field advantage for the upcoming FCS playoffs — if not the overall No. 1 seed.
Though their running back corps was diminished with both Scottre Humphrey and Julius Davis in street clothes on the sideline, the Bobcats still rushed for 326 yards with Jones, a redshirt freshman out of Missoula Sentinel, leading the way.
The home team has now won five in a row in the storied history of the Cat-Griz rivalry, and Montana State has still not lost a regular-season home game in the four-year tenure of coach Brent Vigen.
The Bobcats established their running game at the outset by marching 75 yards on 14 plays, 12 of which were runs. Mellott capped the drive with a 5-yard touchdown run on what appeared to be a broken play to put MSU ahead 7-0.
MSU converted two third downs on that drive and took nearly nine minutes off the clock.
A promising Griz drive was slowed by penalties in the second quarter, but Ty Morrison got Montana on the board by splitting the uprights on a 47-yard field goal to make the score 7-3.
But the Bobcats stretched their lead on the next possession when Mellott dropped a pretty pass over the top to tight end Rohan Jones for a 35-yard touchdown at the 10:16 mark of the second quarter.
Toward the end of the first half, the Bobcats got a 27-yard field goal from Myles Sansted to extend the lead to 17-3. With an even bigger kick, Sansted drilled a 49-yarder as time expired at halftime to extend it to 20-3.
Each team’s defense rose up in the second half as the offenses combined for five consecutive fruitless possessions. But with the Bobcats backed up on their own 5-yard line, Adam Jones exploded took a handoff and exploded through the line for an 88-yard gain.
Two plays later Jones punched it into the end zone from the 3 to put the Bobcats ahead 27-3 toward the end of the third quarter.
As the weather started to take a turn with strong wind and snow flurries, Montana scored its first touchdown early in the fourth on a 1-yard rush by Eli Gillman. Sawyer Racanelli then made a one-handed catch while being interfered with for a two-point conversion.
Jones, though, capped a 9-play, 71-yard drive with a 2-yard TD run with 4:49 remaining to ice the game.
The Grizzlies own the all-time series with a 74-43-5 record, but the Bobcats now have the edge with an 11-10 mark since 2002.
Turning point: The game had hit a defensive standstill in the third quarter until Jones’ 88-yard burst to the UM 7. Griz safety Jaxon Lee prevented a touchdown, but two plays later Jones was in the end zone and the Bobcats had a 27-3 lead with 1:55 remaining in the third.
Stat of the game: The Bobcats rushed for more than 300 yards again, but perhaps more important was the defense’s ability to get off the field on third down.
MSU’s defense held the Grizzlies to a 2 for 12 success rate on third down and forced seven punts. In the end, the Bobcats limited Montana’s offense to 234 total yards.
Game balls: MSU RB Adam Jones (Offense). Davis was injured in the first quarter and didn’t return and Humphrey had just one attempt, so Jones was called up on to take the brunt of the carries. He delivered with a standout performance.
MSU S Rylan Ortt (Defense). The Bobcats defense played a great game overall, and Ortt was one of the ringleaders with 11 tackles (eight solo), was in on a tackle for loss and had one quarterback hurry.
MSU PK Myles Sansted (Special teams). Sansted hit both of his field goal tries, and his 49-yarder as time expired in the first half allowed MSU to take a 17-point lead into the locker room.
What’s next: With a 12-0 record, Montana State is in line for a top-two seed in the FCS playoffs, which would mean a first-round bye and home-field advantage through the semifinal round. The Cats could get the No. 1 overall seed after South Dakota beat North Dakota State 29-28.
The Grizzlies, who are now 8-4 (and 5-3 in the Big Sky), are likely to receive an at-large bid into the tournament.
The 24-team bracket will be announced Sunday with the 2024 NCAA Division I Championship Selection Show on Sunday at 10:30 p.m. Mountain time on ESPNU. The show is also available for streaming on ESPN+.
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