Beloved Oredigger football coach Bob Green will receive Montana Technological University's highest honor, the Chancellor's Award of Distinction, during homecoming weekend, September 15-16, 2023. Coach Green will be honored at a reception Friday night, along with festivities before and during the football game vs. Eastern Oregon.

Established in 2021, the award recognizes individuals who have achieved the most distinguished personal and professional accomplishments while also serving and bringing distinction to Montana Tech.

Coach Bob Green- photo courtesy of Montana Tech
Coach Bob Green- photo courtesy of Montana Tech
loading...

Over his 24-year coaching career at the university, from 1987 to 2010, Coach Green was the winningest football coach in the university’s history, posting a 140-116-1 record that includes five trips to the NAIA National Playoffs and the 1996 NAIA championship game.

“It’s a huge honor,” Green said, adding that he credits his teams’ successes to his assistant coaches and players. “The head coach is just one member of the band. It’s not the coaches that win. It’s the players. The players win the games and deserve all the credit in the world.”

Green is a Marine Corps veteran who served in the Vietnam War. After completing service Green earned a football scholarship by walking on as a freshman at Kearney State University (now University of Nebraska State University at Kearney). Green was a self-professed “gym rat” and one day after his senior season wrapped up, his coaches called him in and asked if he would be an assistant coach in exchange for a scholarship to allow him to finish classes.

Green’s coaching journey saw stops at high schools in Minatare and Broken Bow, Nebraska, and the University of Northern Colorado and Northwest Missouri State. He became famous on Montana television stations during his tenure as coach for his catchy similes, metaphors, and quips about the team and life.

Once the internet and social media proliferated, Green became a world-famous internet celebrity.

“The internet came along, and those things get on there,” Green notes. “I’m kind of like Halley’s Comet. I come around every five or six months.”

Videos on YouTube, TikTok, and Facebook have millions of views, though Green’s personal social media participation is limited to a post a week on Twitter and Facebook, facilitated by current Oredigger Golf Coach Sean Ryan. It is a tool Green used as a development officer for the Montana Tech Foundation from 2010 to 2018.

Green says he’s enjoyed every job he’s ever had, “but Montana Tech was the best.”

Join us in celebrating Coach Green’s tremendous contributions to the university on Saturday, September 16 at Alumni Coliseum for pregame recognition and events.

92.5 KAAR Country logo
Get our free mobile app

Oredigger All Conference

Montana Tech Football All-Conference list

Know Your Butte History: Standing Mine Headframes

Dozens of mine headframes used to dot the Butte hill but most have since been torn down or swallowed by the Pit. Here are the ones that still tower proudly over our town.

Butte's Ghost Signs Part 1

Uptown Butte was once one of the largest urban centers in the Northwest and the bustling heart of a thriving Mining City. Here is the first in a series of some of the ghost signs you can see Uptown that have survived through the decades.