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The Blitz: Montana high school football highlights (Aug. 30)

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The Blitz: Montana high school football highlights (Aug. 30)


Editor’s note: The Blitz is updated as soon as we receive game results.

Class AA

Bozeman Gallatin 35, Helena Capital 28: Montana State commit Grant Vigen threw for two touchdowns and ran for a third. Reese Dahlke ran for a 57-yard score and Carter Dahlke provided a 7-yard TD reception as the Raptors scored all 35 points in the middle two quarters in edging the Bruins.Merek Mihelish threw for two scores and ran for another for Capital. Bobby Gutzman scored the decisive TD on a 25-yard reception from Vigen on the final play of the third quarter.

Bozeman 30, Helena 17: Kash Embry threw two touchdown passes and ran for a third as the defending state champion Hawks rallied past the Bengals. Embry had a 15-yard toss to Evan Hughen and a 13-yarder to Logan Humphrey. His 3-yard scamper capped the TD scoring. A 33-yard strike from Jaxan Lieberg to Mac Lundstrom gave Helena a 17-13 lead with 5:13 to play in the third quarter. The Bengals’ other TD came on a 3-yard run by Trygve Braun.

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Billings West 28, Butte 27: The Bulldogs broke a 14-14 tie in the third quarter when Colton Shea unloaded a 66-yard bomb to speedster Tocher Lee, but the Golden Bears erupted for 14 points in the fourth quarter. Both teams scored in the final minute, but it was Billings West’s goal-line stand to prevent Butte’s two-point conversion with seven seconds remaining that sealed the victory. Lee got things going for the Bulldogs in the first quarter when he fielded a punt, cut back against coverage and raced 50 yards for the touchdown. The Bears scored on a touchdown run from Matt Ludwig, and took a 14-7 lead in the second quarter when CJ Johnson connected with Elias Bonner on a 25-yard strike. Butte tied the game before halftime on a TD pass from Shea to Hudson Luedtke.

• Missoula Big Sky 40, Belgrade 7: Avery Omlid tossed a pair of touchdown passes, hitting Eli Kasberg (6 yards) and Brady Williams (33 yards), and the Eagles dismantled the Panthers, going up 13-0 in the first quarter and 33-0 at halftime. Tanner Davis ran for two scores, including a 16-yard dash, Keller Hiedrick rushed for a score, and Williams added a three-yard scoring run.  

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• Missoula Sentinel 27, Billings Skyview 21: Jace Kashotka rushed for 148 yards and a pair of touchdowns, and threw a 22-yard scoring strike to Jaxson Allery as the Spartans got past the Falcons for a season-opening win. Camble Bjornstad hauled in a 25-yard scoring pass from Paxton Fitch for the Falcons, and had a second score on an eight-yard run. Zakai Owens caught a 14-yard touchdown from Fitch, and Ryan Haidle hit paydirt for Missoula on a seven-yard run. Sentinel rolled up 235 yards rushing and 172 yards through the air.

• Great Falls CMR 28, Kalispell Flathead 14: Caleb Taylor fired three touchdown passes – two to Drew Etcheberry – and Keegan Fuller added a first-quarter running score from 15 yards out as the Rustlers fended off the Braves to give first-year coach AJ Wilson his inaugural win. Taylor connected with Etcheberry from 77 and 26 yards out for a 21-6 lead early in the fourth quarter, then found Kade Somerfeld for an 80-yard launch to clinch it. Taylor was 12-for-20 passing for 308 yards. Brett Pesola scored on a 14-yard quarterback keeper and Nolan Campbell added a 9-yard scoring jaunt for Flathead.

Kalispell Glacier 28, Great Falls 3: Kobe Dorcheus ran for 106 yards and two touchdowns and Jackson Presley ran for a third and passed for another as the defending state runner-up Wolfpack jumped to a fast start and held off Great Falls. Presley romped into the end zone from 15 yards out with 10:05 showing in the first quarter and hit Carson Baker from 38 yards out for a 14-0 lead eight minutes later. Great Falls got on the board with a 29-yard field goal by Caleb Litzinger with 0:00.2 showing on the clock before halftime.

• Billings Senior 21, Missoula Hellgate 12: Ryder Murdock ran for one score and threw for another — a 66-yarder to Davyn Lehfeldt — for the Broncs, who rang up 257 yards rushing and handed the Knights their 13th consecutive defeat. Rylan Jennings also scored for Senior, which led by two points until Murdock’s 15-yard run with 6:43 to play. Vince Paffhausen threw for a score to Finn Kelly and ran for another for Hellgate, which had allowed at least 41 points in all of its games in 2023.

Class A

• Frenchtown 42, Columbia Falls 12: Brody Hardy threw for two touchdowns and ran for another two, and Billy Corette added a pair of scores on his own as the Broncs romped past the Wildcats. Hardy opened the scoring with a 24-yard run and also had a 1-yard plunge, added a 25-yard scoring toss to Corette – who had a 35-yard fumble return for a score – and also found Bailey Corette for a 3-yarder. Banyon Johnston scored both of Columbia Falls’ TDs on 1-yard runs in the first half.

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Class B

• Jefferson 21, Florence-Carlton 14: Tyler Zody’s keeper with 9.9 seconds remaining broke a 14-14 tie and lifted the Panthers to a huge season-opening road win over the defending B champs. Jefferson went up 7-0 in the first quarter on a touchdown run by Luke Oxarart. The Falcons tied it up when Mason Arlington hit paydirt. Oxarart put Jefferson back on top with a 31-yard scoring run, and the Falcons answered again when Arlington found Isaac Bates for a nine-yard scoring strike.

• Red Lodge 46, Whitehall 8: Chase Cook ran for nearly 200 yards – including a 47-yard run on the game’s first play and a 97-yarder late – as the defending state semifinalist Rams clobbered the Trojans.

• Glasgow 51, Shepherd 8: In a battle of two playoff teams from a year ago, the Scotties started fast with 26 points in the first quarter and 19 in the second en route to a 51-8 victory over Shepherd, under the direction of new first-year coach Josh Casares.Warren Gamas threw for three touchdowns and Wyatt Suggs ran for two for the Scotties, who blitzed to a 45-0 halftime lead on the way to crushing the Mustangs. Alec Boland had a punt return for a score, Rex Monson added a pick-6 and Minot State commit Wyatt Babb caught one of Gamas’ TD passes for Glasgow.

8-Man

 Fairview 63, Poplar 26: Tyler Loan threw three touchdown passes, ran for a fourth and caught a fifth for the defending state champion Warriors, who rolled to a 54-0 halftime lead on the way to drubbing the Indians. Wyatt McPherson ran for two scores and tossed a scoring strike to Loan. Ryan Lustig also scored three TDs for Fairview: On a 20-yard interception return, a 70-yard catch from Loan and a kick return to start the third quarter and cap his team’s scoring. Poplar scored two TDs and had a safety.

Editor’s Note: To have games included here, submit scores and scoring details to 406mtsports.myteamscoop.com.

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Contact Jeff at jeff.welsch@406mtsports.com or on Twitter @406sportswelsch



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Newly released documents shed light on Montana PSC dispute

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Newly released documents shed light on Montana PSC dispute


MISSOULA — Four out of five members of Montana’s Public Service Commission were in a federal courtroom in Missoula Thursday morning, as the PSC’s former president challenges the disciplinary action taken against him earlier this year. Now, newly released documents are shedding more light on to what led up to this point.

(Watch the video for a closer look at the case.)

New documents shed light Montana PSC dispute

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Commissioner Brad Molnar has sued President Jeff Welborn, Vice President Jennifer Fielder and Commissioner Annie Bukacek – the three PSC members who voted in May to require him to work remotely, after an investigation into complaints about his workplace conduct. Molnar has claimed he is being unfairly punished for constitutionally protected speech, and he asked Senior U.S District Judge Donald Molloy to allow him to return to the PSC offices.

Matthew Monforton, Molnar’s attorney, told the judge that barring Molnar from the building was limiting his ability to do his job.

“He has not been officially kicked out of office, but his voice has clearly been diminished,” said Monforton.

But Natasha Jones, an attorney representing the other three commissioners, said the findings were about behavior, not just speech, and that the PSC’s action was a reasonable response.

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“These are serious concerns about a pattern of conduct that has made employees quit,” she said.

Jonathon Ambarian

Montana Public Service Commissioner Brad Molnar (right) speaks with his attorney Matthew Monforton (left) outside the Russell Smith Federal Courthouse in Missoula, June 18, 2026.

On Tuesday, Molloy ordered the release of redacted versions of two full investigative reports into Molnar’s conduct – more than 100 pages of documents. Monforton had moved for the full reports to be made public, and Molloy ruled attorneys for the other PSC members hadn’t shown a compelling reason to keep the documents under seal as long as the names of people involved in the investigation were obscured.

While the names remained redacted in the investigation reports, the attorneys for Welborn, Fielder and Bukacek also filed additional documents – including a public declaration from Bukacek and from former PSC executive director Alana Lake, providing information about their allegations against Molnar.

The two reports, from an outside investigator, cover Molnar’s alleged actions over two periods: the first from February to August 2025, and the second from August to October 2025. The investigation began after the first formal complaint, filed by Bukacek in May 2025 – though the reports say employees had been bringing up concerns about Molnar’s behavior informally for several months prior.

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Bukacek’s complaint claimed Molnar had repeatedly made what she called “sexualized and demeaning comments.” The examples she cited included saying the PSC should replace “Taco Tuesdays” with “Topless Tuesdays,” reminiscing about watching girls in bikinis as a teenager, and commenting about the beauty of women in areas of China who didn’t get “old and wrinkly.”

In her declaration, Bukacek also claimed Molnar had “maliciously disseminated false information” about her and “engaged in behavior that was dismissive, derisive and otherwise abusive.”

“My primary concern now is not for my safety nor my feelings, but for the rest of the staff who may not have the temperament to speak up or may feel too intimidated to speak up given concerns over job security,” Bukacek said in her declaration.

Molnar Docs

MTN News

On June 16, 2026, a federal judge ordered that two full investigative reports into Montana Public Service Commissioner Brad Molnar be unsealed, as long as the names of people involved in the case remain redacted.

The investigators determined Molnar had violated the PSC’s code of conduct by making comments of a sexual nature, and that it appeared his behavior had continued for some time after he was warned about it. They also found he had behaved unprofessionally and in a belittling manner toward Bukacek, though they said Bukacek herself had at times used “language that could be considered inappropriate” in emails to staff or other commissioners. Bukacek told MTN she “readily self corrected” any behaviors that were brought to her attention.

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The investigation also found a violation in connection with a complaint from a PSC staff member, who said he “felt bullied” by Molnar when the commissioner sent an email complaining about his team not being “people with competence.”

However, much of the first report and the entire second report was focused on conduct after the initial complaints, when Molnar was accused of retaliating against people who participated in the investigation. Lake said in her declaration that she saw “an immediate and significant change in his behavior toward staff involved in the process.” She claimed he said he would use an attorney and private investigator to go after people who filed complaints, and she accused him of publicly criticizing her in interviews and removing her job responsibilities because of her handling of the investigation.

Lake said Molnar’s actions led to “declining morale within the agency,” undermined staff members’ ability to do their jobs and damaged her reputation. She said that led her to resign as executive director.

“I believe no employee should be forced to choose between reporting misconduct and protecting their career, reputation, or personal well-being,” she said in her declaration.

Lake has since become Helena city manager.

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Missoula Federal Courthouse

Jonathon Ambarian

Four out of five members of the Montana Public Service Commission were at the Russell Smith Federal Courthouse in Missoula June 18, 2026, for a hearing on Commissioner Brad Molnar’s lawsuit challenging disciplinary action taken against him.

The report said there was evidence to show Molnar had retaliated, including by “making disparaging statements about investigation participants” including Lake, by sending an email warning he could file complaints of his own against people involved, and by taking other actions investigators said could dissuade employees from reporting behavior in the future.

Monforton said during Thursday’s hearing that the initial comments Bukacek complained about were jokes Molnar had admitted were inappropriate, that he regretted saying them, and that he hasn’t made any similar comments in about a year. But he argued the vast majority of the findings against Molnar were about retaliation – and that those were primarily based on speech that the other commissioners don’t have the right to interfere with.

Monforton said it’s unreasonable to punish Molnar for what he said in the July news conference where he announced he was under investigation, in interviews with the media or in commission meetings. He said Molnar’s conduct doesn’t rise to the level of actual retaliation.

“This is an elected official, engaging in speech in his forum,” Monforton said.

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He said Molnar may have made harsh comments toward staff, but that he had the right to raise objections about the way the agency does business.

Montana Public Service Commission

Jonathon Ambarian

Monforton also argued the retaliation claims no longer justify keeping Molnar out of the office, since Welborn, Fielder and Bukacek voted to remove him as president in October and he no longer has the authority he’s accused of misusing. He said there haven’t been further complaints about his behavior since that time.

“We’re not asking for the moon and stars, we’re asking for the status quo as it existed for the last seven months,” he said.

Jones said there is enough evidence to show Molnar would have been punished regardless of whether any protected speech was excluded.

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“This is not about a couple of jokes,” she said.

Jones said Molnar made maliciously false statements about people like Lake, and that type of statement isn’t covered by free speech protections.

She also said Molnar’s exclusion from the PSC offices is temporary, and that the PSC will reconsider whether to let him return if he apologizes for his actions, accepts the agency’s code of conduct and undergoes training.

Molloy indicated he saw indications that there was “acrimony” on both sides of the situation, and said he was skeptical it would be resolved easily.

“It would be nice if instead of juvenile behavior, there was professional behavior,” he said.

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However, the judge said there was an avenue for Molnar to pursue if he wanted to reach a resolution.

Molloy took no immediate action Thursday. He told the parties he would rule as quickly as he could.





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Cancer Support Community Montana names new executive director to lead statewide expansion

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Cancer Support Community Montana names new executive director to lead statewide expansion


Carrie Gilbertson has been executive director of Cancer Support Community Montana for just under two months, stepping into the role in April with more than 15 years of nonprofit experience and a lifetime of Montana roots.

The organization provides psychosocial and mental health support to anyone affected by cancer — not just those with a diagnosis, but also family members and others walking alongside them.

WATCH: Meet the new leader of Cancer Support Community Montana 🎗️

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Cancer Support Community Montana names new executive director

“This mission of providing psycho-social supports and mental health supports for anyone impacted by cancer, not just that person who has the diagnosis, but also family members, anyone who is walking alongside someone as they experience that often scary diagnosis, that’s just something that’s important to me,” Gilbertson said.

Gilbertson’s role extends beyond the Bozeman office. Cancer Support Community Montana’s Missoula location is already up and running, and a Helena location is expected to be operating soon. Each presents its own set of challenges.

“Each hospital is different. They might have different resources. Their social workers might be connecting to things in a different way. So understanding what those hospitals need, what different participants need in each community, is going to be different just because the communities are different, resources are different,” Gilbertson said.

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The Bozeman office has been operating for more than 20 years, providing a foundation that supports the organization’s broader statewide efforts.

“I think this is a crew that looks at what does this community need what do our participants need what are some of the changing landscapes in cancer care what things are the gaps that we see that we can maybe just jump right in and you know let’s see if we can provide that for people so that’s something I really love about this crew that I work with and just this mission that there is some flexibility in being able to adjust and adapt as we learn more,” Gilbertson said.

Those adaptations show up in unexpected ways. The organization converts its parking lot into a pickleball court every Friday morning.

“I didn’t know there was a pickleball court. I pulled in actually with my daughter pulled in and she was is that pickleball court and I was like oh, it kind of looks like it is so yeah that’s fun, every Friday morning we clear out the parking lot and put up the net and I haven’t played yet I’ve been watching just to kind of see how that game works but they take it pretty seriously,” Gilbertson said.

This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.

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Montana Lottery Powerball, Lotto America results for June 17, 2026

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The Montana Lottery offers multiple draw games for those aiming to win big.

Here’s a look at June 17, 2026, results for each game:

Winning Powerball numbers from June 17 drawing

03-26-49-53-61, Powerball: 12, Power Play: 2

Check Powerball payouts and previous drawings here.

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Winning Lotto America numbers from June 17 drawing

11-16-18-33-51, Star Ball: 09, ASB: 05

Check Lotto America payouts and previous drawings here.

Winning Big Sky Bonus numbers from June 17 drawing

01-16-17-27, Bonus: 01

Check Big Sky Bonus payouts and previous drawings here.

Winning Montana Cash numbers from June 17 drawing

13-22-35-36-39

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Check Montana Cash payouts and previous drawings here.

Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results

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.
  • Millionaire for Life: 9:15 p.m. MT daily.

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

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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