📰 Full Story
Bobby Hauck, the winningest coach in Big Sky Conference history, announced his immediate retirement on Feb. 4-5, 2026, saying he no longer enjoyed the job amid sweeping changes in college football.
Hauck, 61, led the University of Montana Grizzlies across two stints totaling 14 seasons, compiling a 151-43 record at Montana and 166-92 in 19 seasons overall including UNLV. He guided the Grizzlies to eight Big Sky titles, 13 playoff appearances, four FCS national championship games and a 2025 run to the national semifinals after a 13-2 season.
Hauck cited the post-2021 landscape — unrestricted transfers, name, image and likeness deals and recent revenue-sharing — and the growing role of agents and outside influences on players as key reasons for stepping down.
Wide receivers coach Bobby Kennedy, who worked with Hauck at Washington in 2002 and has experience on staffs at Texas and other power-conference programs, will succeed him.
Hauck said he does not intend to be a head coach again and expressed a desire to enjoy the next phase of his life outside the pressures of modern Division I coaching.
🔗 Based On
🤝 Social Media Insights
Social Summary
Comments are largely opinion and policy preferences about transfers, NIL and unionization; they do not provide verifiable new facts or authoritative legal rulings beyond the news item. No reliable, new information suitable for reporting was identified.



















💬 Commentary