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Bob Green Era (1986–2010)
During the era of head coachBob Green, Montana Tech had its most successful period ever in football. In his 24-year tenure, the Orediggers accomplished a record of 140 wins, 116 losses, and 1 tie.[3] During this period, the Orediggers either placed or tied for first or second in the Frontier Conference 16 times. Green led the Diggers to the NAIA National Playoffs 5 times, including the 1996 National Championship Game.[4] The Orediggers were the first ever Frontier Conference football team to play for the national title. Bob Green retired from coaching following the 2010 season.[5] In 2013, Montana Tech's stadium, Alumni Coliseum, replaced its grass field with a new artificial turf surface; the new field was named after Green.[6] Green was inducted into the school's athletic hall of fame the same year.[3]
Chuck Morrell Era (2011–2019)
Following Green's retirement, Chuck Morrell, who had previously been the defensive coordinator at South Dakota, was hired as the Orediggers' new head coach. Montana Tech posted a total record of 52 wins and 44 losses under Morrell and made the playoffs in 2012, 2015, and 2016, including winning the 2012Frontier Conference championship, the team's first since 2004.[7] During Morrell's tenure, he received the Frontier Conference coach of the year award in 2012, 2015, and 2016.[8] Morrell left the team following the 2019 season in order to take an assistant coaching job at NCAA Division IFresno State.[8]
Kyle Samson Era (2020–present)
Following Morrell's departure, the Orediggers named offensive coordinator Kyle Samson as the team's new head coach.[9] Before Montana Tech, Samson was the head coach at Flathead High School in Kalispell, Montana for five years, and became Tech's offensive coordinator for just one season before being promoted to head coach.[9]
In 2020, Samson's first season, Montana Tech did not play a football season due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Frontier Conference held a modified, conference-only season in the spring of 2021, but Montana Tech (as well as Montana Western and Southern Oregon) did not participate.[10]