Staff. Who do we bring in?
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- AFCAT
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Re: Staff. Who do we bring in?
BOZEMAN, Montana – Montana State football coach Brent Vigen announced the restructuring of his offensive football staff on Friday, adding two experienced assistant coaches with one internal move.
Pete Sterbick joins the Bobcats as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach after six seasons at Colorado School of Mines, the most recent two as head coach. Fifth-year MSU assistant coach Sam Mix's assignment changes from running backs to receivers, and Justin Mesa takes over Montana State running backs after four years at Washington State.
"I'm excited to add Pete and Justin to our coaching staff," Vigen said. "They're experienced coaches who check all the boxes to help move our football program forward. Moving Sam to receivers coach is a natural move for him and we look for him to have an expanded role within our program. Additionally, we will have our final open position (offensive line) filled shortly."
The moves come after the departures of assistant coaches Tyler Walker (offensive coordinator/quarterbacks) and Al Johnson (offensive line) to Temple, and Justin Udy (wide receivers) to Boise State. Vigen enters his fifth year as Montana State's head coach in 2025 with a 47-10 record, two Big Sky titles, and playoff appearances in all four seasons.
A closer look at the coaches involved:
Pete Sterbick, Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks
A highly decorated offensive coach, Pete Sterbick joins the Montana State staff as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. The appointment brings the 2022 Football Scoop NCAA Division II Offensive Coordinator of the Year and 2023 AFCA Regional Head Coach of the Year to the MSU staff after leading the Orediggers to a 22-4 record as head coach during the past two seasons. CSM finished the 2023 season as D-II runner-up and Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference championship season with a 14-1 record. Colorado Mines compiled a 37-6 record with a conference title in all three seasons (2019-22, although the team did not play during the 2020-21 Covid year) of Sterbick's tenure as offensive coordinator. A receiver and punter at Augustana (South Dakota) from 1998-2002, earning his degree in physical education in 2003, he began his coaching career as receivers coach at Missouri Western in 2003, then coached tight ends at North Dakota in 2004. Sterbick became an offensive graduate assistant at Washington State in 2005-07, then took over as offensive coordinator and receivers coach at D-II Grand View (Des Moines, Iowa) from 2008-11. In two seasons as head coach at NAIA McPherson (Kansas) his teams compiled a 9-11 record, and he worked as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Montana Tech from 2014-18. He moved to Colorado Mines in 2019.
Vigen on Sterbick: "Pete brings a wealth of experience to our staff – specifically as a play caller and quarterbacks coach. He has led many explosive offenses and has demonstrated the ability to adapt to his personnel very well. His ties to the state of Montana from his time spent coaching at Montana Tech are very beneficial as well. I'm very excited to continue moving our offense forward under his direction."
Justin Mesa, Running Backs
Justin Mesa comes to Montana State after four seasons at Washington State, where he was Director of Transfer Recruiting in 2021, Offensive Quality Control in 2022-23, and Assistant Special Teams/Assistant Tight Ends Coach in 2024. Mesa's coaching career began during his time as a USC undergraduate, when the Los Angeles native served as a student manager (2004-05) and following his graduation (bachelor's degree in kinesiology, 2006) as a recruiting and operations assistant (2006-08). He transitioned to on-field coaching as a graduate assistant at USC (wide receivers in 2009, offensive administrative assistant in 2010, and tight ends in 2011-12). Mesa worked as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Loyola High School in Los Angeles (2013-15), then coached wide receivers at Dixie State in 2016. He joined Craig Bohl's Wyoming staff as Director of Player Personnel in 2017-18, where he worked with Vigen, then became head coach at San Marino (California) High School in 2019-20. He joined the Washington State staff in the summer of 2021. During his time at USC the Trojans played in three Rose Bowls, an Emerald Bowl, and a Sun Bowl. While at Washington State, the Cougars played in the Sun Bowl, the LA Bowl, and the Holiday Bowl.
Vigen on Mesa: "Justin and I worked together for two years at Wyoming and he was a key member of our staff. He has continued to gain experience in all aspects of the game and I'm very excited for what he will bring to our staff as an offensive coach, a special teams contributor and as a recruiter."
Sam Mix, Wide Receivers
Entering his fifth season on the Bobcat staff, Sam Mix helped craft one of dominant rushing offenses in the FCS during his time as running backs coach (2023-24). Jared White earned Freshman All-America honors during Mix's first season mentoring Bobcat backs, while in 2024 Scottre Humphrey earned All-America honors and Adam Jones became a Freshman All-America. A 2019 graduate of MSU Northern (BA, business), the Seattle area native was a recruiting and operations assistant and offensive analyst at MSU in 2021-22. A former Lights wide receiver (2015-18), Mix worked as receivers coach and special teams coordinator at his alma mater in 2019-20. MSU led the Big Sky in rushing during each of Mix's seasons as running backs coach.
Vigen on Mix: "Sam has done an excellent job both on the field and in recruiting during his time with us at Montana State. He's led a very productive group of running backs the last two seasons. I look forward to his continued growth within our offense as he returns to the position where he played and began his coaching career."
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Re: Staff. Who do we bring in?
Sam Mix going through the coaching initiation of "coaching every position before you can be a coordinator" I see.AFCAT wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 2:02 pm
BOZEMAN, Montana – Montana State football coach Brent Vigen announced the restructuring of his offensive football staff on Friday, adding two experienced assistant coaches with one internal move.
Pete Sterbick joins the Bobcats as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach after six seasons at Colorado School of Mines, the most recent two as head coach. Fifth-year MSU assistant coach Sam Mix's assignment changes from running backs to receivers, and Justin Mesa takes over Montana State running backs after four years at Washington State.
"I'm excited to add Pete and Justin to our coaching staff," Vigen said. "They're experienced coaches who check all the boxes to help move our football program forward. Moving Sam to receivers coach is a natural move for him and we look for him to have an expanded role within our program. Additionally, we will have our final open position (offensive line) filled shortly."
The moves come after the departures of assistant coaches Tyler Walker (offensive coordinator/quarterbacks) and Al Johnson (offensive line) to Temple, and Justin Udy (wide receivers) to Boise State. Vigen enters his fifth year as Montana State's head coach in 2025 with a 47-10 record, two Big Sky titles, and playoff appearances in all four seasons.
A closer look at the coaches involved:
Pete Sterbick, Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks
A highly decorated offensive coach, Pete Sterbick joins the Montana State staff as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. The appointment brings the 2022 Football Scoop NCAA Division II Offensive Coordinator of the Year and 2023 AFCA Regional Head Coach of the Year to the MSU staff after leading the Orediggers to a 22-4 record as head coach during the past two seasons. CSM finished the 2023 season as D-II runner-up and Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference championship season with a 14-1 record. Colorado Mines compiled a 37-6 record with a conference title in all three seasons (2019-22, although the team did not play during the 2020-21 Covid year) of Sterbick's tenure as offensive coordinator. A receiver and punter at Augustana (South Dakota) from 1998-2002, earning his degree in physical education in 2003, he began his coaching career as receivers coach at Missouri Western in 2003, then coached tight ends at North Dakota in 2004. Sterbick became an offensive graduate assistant at Washington State in 2005-07, then took over as offensive coordinator and receivers coach at D-II Grand View (Des Moines, Iowa) from 2008-11. In two seasons as head coach at NAIA McPherson (Kansas) his teams compiled a 9-11 record, and he worked as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Montana Tech from 2014-18. He moved to Colorado Mines in 2019.
Vigen on Sterbick: "Pete brings a wealth of experience to our staff – specifically as a play caller and quarterbacks coach. He has led many explosive offenses and has demonstrated the ability to adapt to his personnel very well. His ties to the state of Montana from his time spent coaching at Montana Tech are very beneficial as well. I'm very excited to continue moving our offense forward under his direction."
Justin Mesa, Running Backs
Justin Mesa comes to Montana State after four seasons at Washington State, where he was Director of Transfer Recruiting in 2021, Offensive Quality Control in 2022-23, and Assistant Special Teams/Assistant Tight Ends Coach in 2024. Mesa's coaching career began during his time as a USC undergraduate, when the Los Angeles native served as a student manager (2004-05) and following his graduation (bachelor's degree in kinesiology, 2006) as a recruiting and operations assistant (2006-08). He transitioned to on-field coaching as a graduate assistant at USC (wide receivers in 2009, offensive administrative assistant in 2010, and tight ends in 2011-12). Mesa worked as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Loyola High School in Los Angeles (2013-15), then coached wide receivers at Dixie State in 2016. He joined Craig Bohl's Wyoming staff as Director of Player Personnel in 2017-18, where he worked with Vigen, then became head coach at San Marino (California) High School in 2019-20. He joined the Washington State staff in the summer of 2021. During his time at USC the Trojans played in three Rose Bowls, an Emerald Bowl, and a Sun Bowl. While at Washington State, the Cougars played in the Sun Bowl, the LA Bowl, and the Holiday Bowl.
Vigen on Mesa: "Justin and I worked together for two years at Wyoming and he was a key member of our staff. He has continued to gain experience in all aspects of the game and I'm very excited for what he will bring to our staff as an offensive coach, a special teams contributor and as a recruiter."
Sam Mix, Wide Receivers
Entering his fifth season on the Bobcat staff, Sam Mix helped craft one of dominant rushing offenses in the FCS during his time as running backs coach (2023-24). Jared White earned Freshman All-America honors during Mix's first season mentoring Bobcat backs, while in 2024 Scottre Humphrey earned All-America honors and Adam Jones became a Freshman All-America. A 2019 graduate of MSU Northern (BA, business), the Seattle area native was a recruiting and operations assistant and offensive analyst at MSU in 2021-22. A former Lights wide receiver (2015-18), Mix worked as receivers coach and special teams coordinator at his alma mater in 2019-20. MSU led the Big Sky in rushing during each of Mix's seasons as running backs coach.
Vigen on Mix: "Sam has done an excellent job both on the field and in recruiting during his time with us at Montana State. He's led a very productive group of running backs the last two seasons. I look forward to his continued growth within our offense as he returns to the position where he played and began his coaching career."
"There's two times of year for me: Football season, and waiting for football season."
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Re: Staff. Who do we bring in?
Justin Mesa has definitely taken an interesting career path, looks like he did not play college football himself but was able to get into coaching through working with USC as an undergrad. Overall, these look like a couple of very solid hires as usual under Coach Vigen - I'm sure the OL coach will be someone good as well.
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Re: Staff. Who do we bring in?
Maybe JP Flynn wants to quit actually making money at his engineering gig and coaching at Gallatin by becoming the next OL coach?MSU01 wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 3:41 pmJustin Mesa has definitely taken an interesting career path, looks like he did not play college football himself but was able to get into coaching through working with USC as an undergrad. Overall, these look like a couple of very solid hires as usual under Coach Vigen - I'm sure the OL coach will be someone good as well.
"There's two times of year for me: Football season, and waiting for football season."
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Re: Staff. Who do we bring in?
Why do you suppose he moved Mix to WR rather than leaving him with RB where he's had so much success? Just for what Vim said above, the experience of coaching all positions? It doesn't seem that Mesa has experience coaching RBs, so I'm just curious about that placement. Still, seems like things are definitely shaping up very well.VimSince03 wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 2:34 pmSam Mix going through the coaching initiation of "coaching every position before you can be a coordinator" I see.AFCAT wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 2:02 pm
BOZEMAN, Montana – Montana State football coach Brent Vigen announced the restructuring of his offensive football staff on Friday, adding two experienced assistant coaches with one internal move.
Pete Sterbick joins the Bobcats as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach after six seasons at Colorado School of Mines, the most recent two as head coach. Fifth-year MSU assistant coach Sam Mix's assignment changes from running backs to receivers, and Justin Mesa takes over Montana State running backs after four years at Washington State.
"I'm excited to add Pete and Justin to our coaching staff," Vigen said. "They're experienced coaches who check all the boxes to help move our football program forward. Moving Sam to receivers coach is a natural move for him and we look for him to have an expanded role within our program. Additionally, we will have our final open position (offensive line) filled shortly."
The moves come after the departures of assistant coaches Tyler Walker (offensive coordinator/quarterbacks) and Al Johnson (offensive line) to Temple, and Justin Udy (wide receivers) to Boise State. Vigen enters his fifth year as Montana State's head coach in 2025 with a 47-10 record, two Big Sky titles, and playoff appearances in all four seasons.
A closer look at the coaches involved:
Pete Sterbick, Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks
A highly decorated offensive coach, Pete Sterbick joins the Montana State staff as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. The appointment brings the 2022 Football Scoop NCAA Division II Offensive Coordinator of the Year and 2023 AFCA Regional Head Coach of the Year to the MSU staff after leading the Orediggers to a 22-4 record as head coach during the past two seasons. CSM finished the 2023 season as D-II runner-up and Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference championship season with a 14-1 record. Colorado Mines compiled a 37-6 record with a conference title in all three seasons (2019-22, although the team did not play during the 2020-21 Covid year) of Sterbick's tenure as offensive coordinator. A receiver and punter at Augustana (South Dakota) from 1998-2002, earning his degree in physical education in 2003, he began his coaching career as receivers coach at Missouri Western in 2003, then coached tight ends at North Dakota in 2004. Sterbick became an offensive graduate assistant at Washington State in 2005-07, then took over as offensive coordinator and receivers coach at D-II Grand View (Des Moines, Iowa) from 2008-11. In two seasons as head coach at NAIA McPherson (Kansas) his teams compiled a 9-11 record, and he worked as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Montana Tech from 2014-18. He moved to Colorado Mines in 2019.
Vigen on Sterbick: "Pete brings a wealth of experience to our staff – specifically as a play caller and quarterbacks coach. He has led many explosive offenses and has demonstrated the ability to adapt to his personnel very well. His ties to the state of Montana from his time spent coaching at Montana Tech are very beneficial as well. I'm very excited to continue moving our offense forward under his direction."
Justin Mesa, Running Backs
Justin Mesa comes to Montana State after four seasons at Washington State, where he was Director of Transfer Recruiting in 2021, Offensive Quality Control in 2022-23, and Assistant Special Teams/Assistant Tight Ends Coach in 2024. Mesa's coaching career began during his time as a USC undergraduate, when the Los Angeles native served as a student manager (2004-05) and following his graduation (bachelor's degree in kinesiology, 2006) as a recruiting and operations assistant (2006-08). He transitioned to on-field coaching as a graduate assistant at USC (wide receivers in 2009, offensive administrative assistant in 2010, and tight ends in 2011-12). Mesa worked as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Loyola High School in Los Angeles (2013-15), then coached wide receivers at Dixie State in 2016. He joined Craig Bohl's Wyoming staff as Director of Player Personnel in 2017-18, where he worked with Vigen, then became head coach at San Marino (California) High School in 2019-20. He joined the Washington State staff in the summer of 2021. During his time at USC the Trojans played in three Rose Bowls, an Emerald Bowl, and a Sun Bowl. While at Washington State, the Cougars played in the Sun Bowl, the LA Bowl, and the Holiday Bowl.
Vigen on Mesa: "Justin and I worked together for two years at Wyoming and he was a key member of our staff. He has continued to gain experience in all aspects of the game and I'm very excited for what he will bring to our staff as an offensive coach, a special teams contributor and as a recruiter."
Sam Mix, Wide Receivers
Entering his fifth season on the Bobcat staff, Sam Mix helped craft one of dominant rushing offenses in the FCS during his time as running backs coach (2023-24). Jared White earned Freshman All-America honors during Mix's first season mentoring Bobcat backs, while in 2024 Scottre Humphrey earned All-America honors and Adam Jones became a Freshman All-America. A 2019 graduate of MSU Northern (BA, business), the Seattle area native was a recruiting and operations assistant and offensive analyst at MSU in 2021-22. A former Lights wide receiver (2015-18), Mix worked as receivers coach and special teams coordinator at his alma mater in 2019-20. MSU led the Big Sky in rushing during each of Mix's seasons as running backs coach.
Vigen on Mix: "Sam has done an excellent job both on the field and in recruiting during his time with us at Montana State. He's led a very productive group of running backs the last two seasons. I look forward to his continued growth within our offense as he returns to the position where he played and began his coaching career."
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Re: Staff. Who do we bring in?
RB is generally considered the easiest position to coach, and it’s where you put your recruiting coach. Mesa is supposed to be a good recruiter and will be helping with ST’s, so it makes sense.nanacat wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 4:47 pmWhy do you suppose he moved Mix to WR rather than leaving him with RB where he's had so much success? Just for what Vim said above, the experience of coaching all positions? It doesn't seem that Mesa has experience coaching RBs, so I'm just curious about that placement. Still, seems like things are definitely shaping up very well.VimSince03 wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 2:34 pmSam Mix going through the coaching initiation of "coaching every position before you can be a coordinator" I see.AFCAT wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 2:02 pm
BOZEMAN, Montana – Montana State football coach Brent Vigen announced the restructuring of his offensive football staff on Friday, adding two experienced assistant coaches with one internal move.
Pete Sterbick joins the Bobcats as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach after six seasons at Colorado School of Mines, the most recent two as head coach. Fifth-year MSU assistant coach Sam Mix's assignment changes from running backs to receivers, and Justin Mesa takes over Montana State running backs after four years at Washington State.
"I'm excited to add Pete and Justin to our coaching staff," Vigen said. "They're experienced coaches who check all the boxes to help move our football program forward. Moving Sam to receivers coach is a natural move for him and we look for him to have an expanded role within our program. Additionally, we will have our final open position (offensive line) filled shortly."
The moves come after the departures of assistant coaches Tyler Walker (offensive coordinator/quarterbacks) and Al Johnson (offensive line) to Temple, and Justin Udy (wide receivers) to Boise State. Vigen enters his fifth year as Montana State's head coach in 2025 with a 47-10 record, two Big Sky titles, and playoff appearances in all four seasons.
A closer look at the coaches involved:
Pete Sterbick, Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks
A highly decorated offensive coach, Pete Sterbick joins the Montana State staff as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. The appointment brings the 2022 Football Scoop NCAA Division II Offensive Coordinator of the Year and 2023 AFCA Regional Head Coach of the Year to the MSU staff after leading the Orediggers to a 22-4 record as head coach during the past two seasons. CSM finished the 2023 season as D-II runner-up and Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference championship season with a 14-1 record. Colorado Mines compiled a 37-6 record with a conference title in all three seasons (2019-22, although the team did not play during the 2020-21 Covid year) of Sterbick's tenure as offensive coordinator. A receiver and punter at Augustana (South Dakota) from 1998-2002, earning his degree in physical education in 2003, he began his coaching career as receivers coach at Missouri Western in 2003, then coached tight ends at North Dakota in 2004. Sterbick became an offensive graduate assistant at Washington State in 2005-07, then took over as offensive coordinator and receivers coach at D-II Grand View (Des Moines, Iowa) from 2008-11. In two seasons as head coach at NAIA McPherson (Kansas) his teams compiled a 9-11 record, and he worked as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Montana Tech from 2014-18. He moved to Colorado Mines in 2019.
Vigen on Sterbick: "Pete brings a wealth of experience to our staff – specifically as a play caller and quarterbacks coach. He has led many explosive offenses and has demonstrated the ability to adapt to his personnel very well. His ties to the state of Montana from his time spent coaching at Montana Tech are very beneficial as well. I'm very excited to continue moving our offense forward under his direction."
Justin Mesa, Running Backs
Justin Mesa comes to Montana State after four seasons at Washington State, where he was Director of Transfer Recruiting in 2021, Offensive Quality Control in 2022-23, and Assistant Special Teams/Assistant Tight Ends Coach in 2024. Mesa's coaching career began during his time as a USC undergraduate, when the Los Angeles native served as a student manager (2004-05) and following his graduation (bachelor's degree in kinesiology, 2006) as a recruiting and operations assistant (2006-08). He transitioned to on-field coaching as a graduate assistant at USC (wide receivers in 2009, offensive administrative assistant in 2010, and tight ends in 2011-12). Mesa worked as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Loyola High School in Los Angeles (2013-15), then coached wide receivers at Dixie State in 2016. He joined Craig Bohl's Wyoming staff as Director of Player Personnel in 2017-18, where he worked with Vigen, then became head coach at San Marino (California) High School in 2019-20. He joined the Washington State staff in the summer of 2021. During his time at USC the Trojans played in three Rose Bowls, an Emerald Bowl, and a Sun Bowl. While at Washington State, the Cougars played in the Sun Bowl, the LA Bowl, and the Holiday Bowl.
Vigen on Mesa: "Justin and I worked together for two years at Wyoming and he was a key member of our staff. He has continued to gain experience in all aspects of the game and I'm very excited for what he will bring to our staff as an offensive coach, a special teams contributor and as a recruiter."
Sam Mix, Wide Receivers
Entering his fifth season on the Bobcat staff, Sam Mix helped craft one of dominant rushing offenses in the FCS during his time as running backs coach (2023-24). Jared White earned Freshman All-America honors during Mix's first season mentoring Bobcat backs, while in 2024 Scottre Humphrey earned All-America honors and Adam Jones became a Freshman All-America. A 2019 graduate of MSU Northern (BA, business), the Seattle area native was a recruiting and operations assistant and offensive analyst at MSU in 2021-22. A former Lights wide receiver (2015-18), Mix worked as receivers coach and special teams coordinator at his alma mater in 2019-20. MSU led the Big Sky in rushing during each of Mix's seasons as running backs coach.
Vigen on Mix: "Sam has done an excellent job both on the field and in recruiting during his time with us at Montana State. He's led a very productive group of running backs the last two seasons. I look forward to his continued growth within our offense as he returns to the position where he played and began his coaching career."
Mix is both a good coach and recruiter, WR is the position he played and initially coached at Northern, so it’s both a return to home and helps his future advancement hopes.
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Re: Staff. Who do we bring in?
Fair enough, thanks!BelligerentBobcat wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 5:45 pmRB is generally considered the easiest position to coach, and it’s where you put your recruiting coach. Mesa is supposed to be a good recruiter and will be helping with ST’s, so it makes sense.nanacat wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 4:47 pmWhy do you suppose he moved Mix to WR rather than leaving him with RB where he's had so much success? Just for what Vim said above, the experience of coaching all positions? It doesn't seem that Mesa has experience coaching RBs, so I'm just curious about that placement. Still, seems like things are definitely shaping up very well.VimSince03 wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 2:34 pmSam Mix going through the coaching initiation of "coaching every position before you can be a coordinator" I see.AFCAT wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 2:02 pm
BOZEMAN, Montana – Montana State football coach Brent Vigen announced the restructuring of his offensive football staff on Friday, adding two experienced assistant coaches with one internal move.
Pete Sterbick joins the Bobcats as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach after six seasons at Colorado School of Mines, the most recent two as head coach. Fifth-year MSU assistant coach Sam Mix's assignment changes from running backs to receivers, and Justin Mesa takes over Montana State running backs after four years at Washington State.
"I'm excited to add Pete and Justin to our coaching staff," Vigen said. "They're experienced coaches who check all the boxes to help move our football program forward. Moving Sam to receivers coach is a natural move for him and we look for him to have an expanded role within our program. Additionally, we will have our final open position (offensive line) filled shortly."
The moves come after the departures of assistant coaches Tyler Walker (offensive coordinator/quarterbacks) and Al Johnson (offensive line) to Temple, and Justin Udy (wide receivers) to Boise State. Vigen enters his fifth year as Montana State's head coach in 2025 with a 47-10 record, two Big Sky titles, and playoff appearances in all four seasons.
A closer look at the coaches involved:
Pete Sterbick, Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks
A highly decorated offensive coach, Pete Sterbick joins the Montana State staff as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. The appointment brings the 2022 Football Scoop NCAA Division II Offensive Coordinator of the Year and 2023 AFCA Regional Head Coach of the Year to the MSU staff after leading the Orediggers to a 22-4 record as head coach during the past two seasons. CSM finished the 2023 season as D-II runner-up and Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference championship season with a 14-1 record. Colorado Mines compiled a 37-6 record with a conference title in all three seasons (2019-22, although the team did not play during the 2020-21 Covid year) of Sterbick's tenure as offensive coordinator. A receiver and punter at Augustana (South Dakota) from 1998-2002, earning his degree in physical education in 2003, he began his coaching career as receivers coach at Missouri Western in 2003, then coached tight ends at North Dakota in 2004. Sterbick became an offensive graduate assistant at Washington State in 2005-07, then took over as offensive coordinator and receivers coach at D-II Grand View (Des Moines, Iowa) from 2008-11. In two seasons as head coach at NAIA McPherson (Kansas) his teams compiled a 9-11 record, and he worked as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Montana Tech from 2014-18. He moved to Colorado Mines in 2019.
Vigen on Sterbick: "Pete brings a wealth of experience to our staff – specifically as a play caller and quarterbacks coach. He has led many explosive offenses and has demonstrated the ability to adapt to his personnel very well. His ties to the state of Montana from his time spent coaching at Montana Tech are very beneficial as well. I'm very excited to continue moving our offense forward under his direction."
Justin Mesa, Running Backs
Justin Mesa comes to Montana State after four seasons at Washington State, where he was Director of Transfer Recruiting in 2021, Offensive Quality Control in 2022-23, and Assistant Special Teams/Assistant Tight Ends Coach in 2024. Mesa's coaching career began during his time as a USC undergraduate, when the Los Angeles native served as a student manager (2004-05) and following his graduation (bachelor's degree in kinesiology, 2006) as a recruiting and operations assistant (2006-08). He transitioned to on-field coaching as a graduate assistant at USC (wide receivers in 2009, offensive administrative assistant in 2010, and tight ends in 2011-12). Mesa worked as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Loyola High School in Los Angeles (2013-15), then coached wide receivers at Dixie State in 2016. He joined Craig Bohl's Wyoming staff as Director of Player Personnel in 2017-18, where he worked with Vigen, then became head coach at San Marino (California) High School in 2019-20. He joined the Washington State staff in the summer of 2021. During his time at USC the Trojans played in three Rose Bowls, an Emerald Bowl, and a Sun Bowl. While at Washington State, the Cougars played in the Sun Bowl, the LA Bowl, and the Holiday Bowl.
Vigen on Mesa: "Justin and I worked together for two years at Wyoming and he was a key member of our staff. He has continued to gain experience in all aspects of the game and I'm very excited for what he will bring to our staff as an offensive coach, a special teams contributor and as a recruiter."
Sam Mix, Wide Receivers
Entering his fifth season on the Bobcat staff, Sam Mix helped craft one of dominant rushing offenses in the FCS during his time as running backs coach (2023-24). Jared White earned Freshman All-America honors during Mix's first season mentoring Bobcat backs, while in 2024 Scottre Humphrey earned All-America honors and Adam Jones became a Freshman All-America. A 2019 graduate of MSU Northern (BA, business), the Seattle area native was a recruiting and operations assistant and offensive analyst at MSU in 2021-22. A former Lights wide receiver (2015-18), Mix worked as receivers coach and special teams coordinator at his alma mater in 2019-20. MSU led the Big Sky in rushing during each of Mix's seasons as running backs coach.
Vigen on Mix: "Sam has done an excellent job both on the field and in recruiting during his time with us at Montana State. He's led a very productive group of running backs the last two seasons. I look forward to his continued growth within our offense as he returns to the position where he played and began his coaching career."
Mix is both a good coach and recruiter, WR is the position he played and initially coached at Northern, so it’s both a return to home and helps his future advancement hopes.
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Re: Staff. Who do we bring in?
Coaching rbs is easy. Get the ball run that way. If it's pass block this way or run to the flat. It's where you put your best recruiter because there isn't much to teach throughout the week, again get the ball run that way don't get tackled, lol. Mix played wr but based on what we do right now it also isn't hard... block block block block...fake block run a fade. Neither position in our system is hard to coach up. So vigen has put his two best recruiters at the two easiest positions on the team. This allows them copious amounts of time to look at film, find the best guys that fit here and make contacts. It's smart. They have to invest in recruiting and this is how vigen is doing it. Throwing coach Baptiste in there also as a great recruiter we have 3 really great recruiters in positions that gives them plenty of time to actually evaluate and recruit. VERY smart by vigen.nanacat wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 4:47 pmWhy do you suppose he moved Mix to WR rather than leaving him with RB where he's had so much success? Just for what Vim said above, the experience of coaching all positions? It doesn't seem that Mesa has experience coaching RBs, so I'm just curious about that placement. Still, seems like things are definitely shaping up very well.VimSince03 wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 2:34 pmSam Mix going through the coaching initiation of "coaching every position before you can be a coordinator" I see.AFCAT wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 2:02 pm
BOZEMAN, Montana – Montana State football coach Brent Vigen announced the restructuring of his offensive football staff on Friday, adding two experienced assistant coaches with one internal move.
Pete Sterbick joins the Bobcats as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach after six seasons at Colorado School of Mines, the most recent two as head coach. Fifth-year MSU assistant coach Sam Mix's assignment changes from running backs to receivers, and Justin Mesa takes over Montana State running backs after four years at Washington State.
"I'm excited to add Pete and Justin to our coaching staff," Vigen said. "They're experienced coaches who check all the boxes to help move our football program forward. Moving Sam to receivers coach is a natural move for him and we look for him to have an expanded role within our program. Additionally, we will have our final open position (offensive line) filled shortly."
The moves come after the departures of assistant coaches Tyler Walker (offensive coordinator/quarterbacks) and Al Johnson (offensive line) to Temple, and Justin Udy (wide receivers) to Boise State. Vigen enters his fifth year as Montana State's head coach in 2025 with a 47-10 record, two Big Sky titles, and playoff appearances in all four seasons.
A closer look at the coaches involved:
Pete Sterbick, Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks
A highly decorated offensive coach, Pete Sterbick joins the Montana State staff as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. The appointment brings the 2022 Football Scoop NCAA Division II Offensive Coordinator of the Year and 2023 AFCA Regional Head Coach of the Year to the MSU staff after leading the Orediggers to a 22-4 record as head coach during the past two seasons. CSM finished the 2023 season as D-II runner-up and Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference championship season with a 14-1 record. Colorado Mines compiled a 37-6 record with a conference title in all three seasons (2019-22, although the team did not play during the 2020-21 Covid year) of Sterbick's tenure as offensive coordinator. A receiver and punter at Augustana (South Dakota) from 1998-2002, earning his degree in physical education in 2003, he began his coaching career as receivers coach at Missouri Western in 2003, then coached tight ends at North Dakota in 2004. Sterbick became an offensive graduate assistant at Washington State in 2005-07, then took over as offensive coordinator and receivers coach at D-II Grand View (Des Moines, Iowa) from 2008-11. In two seasons as head coach at NAIA McPherson (Kansas) his teams compiled a 9-11 record, and he worked as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Montana Tech from 2014-18. He moved to Colorado Mines in 2019.
Vigen on Sterbick: "Pete brings a wealth of experience to our staff – specifically as a play caller and quarterbacks coach. He has led many explosive offenses and has demonstrated the ability to adapt to his personnel very well. His ties to the state of Montana from his time spent coaching at Montana Tech are very beneficial as well. I'm very excited to continue moving our offense forward under his direction."
Justin Mesa, Running Backs
Justin Mesa comes to Montana State after four seasons at Washington State, where he was Director of Transfer Recruiting in 2021, Offensive Quality Control in 2022-23, and Assistant Special Teams/Assistant Tight Ends Coach in 2024. Mesa's coaching career began during his time as a USC undergraduate, when the Los Angeles native served as a student manager (2004-05) and following his graduation (bachelor's degree in kinesiology, 2006) as a recruiting and operations assistant (2006-08). He transitioned to on-field coaching as a graduate assistant at USC (wide receivers in 2009, offensive administrative assistant in 2010, and tight ends in 2011-12). Mesa worked as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Loyola High School in Los Angeles (2013-15), then coached wide receivers at Dixie State in 2016. He joined Craig Bohl's Wyoming staff as Director of Player Personnel in 2017-18, where he worked with Vigen, then became head coach at San Marino (California) High School in 2019-20. He joined the Washington State staff in the summer of 2021. During his time at USC the Trojans played in three Rose Bowls, an Emerald Bowl, and a Sun Bowl. While at Washington State, the Cougars played in the Sun Bowl, the LA Bowl, and the Holiday Bowl.
Vigen on Mesa: "Justin and I worked together for two years at Wyoming and he was a key member of our staff. He has continued to gain experience in all aspects of the game and I'm very excited for what he will bring to our staff as an offensive coach, a special teams contributor and as a recruiter."
Sam Mix, Wide Receivers
Entering his fifth season on the Bobcat staff, Sam Mix helped craft one of dominant rushing offenses in the FCS during his time as running backs coach (2023-24). Jared White earned Freshman All-America honors during Mix's first season mentoring Bobcat backs, while in 2024 Scottre Humphrey earned All-America honors and Adam Jones became a Freshman All-America. A 2019 graduate of MSU Northern (BA, business), the Seattle area native was a recruiting and operations assistant and offensive analyst at MSU in 2021-22. A former Lights wide receiver (2015-18), Mix worked as receivers coach and special teams coordinator at his alma mater in 2019-20. MSU led the Big Sky in rushing during each of Mix's seasons as running backs coach.
Vigen on Mix: "Sam has done an excellent job both on the field and in recruiting during his time with us at Montana State. He's led a very productive group of running backs the last two seasons. I look forward to his continued growth within our offense as he returns to the position where he played and began his coaching career."
Last edited by BobcatBuiltTexan on Sat Jan 25, 2025 1:56 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Staff. Who do we bring in?
I never would’ve known that about recruiting and easy positions to coach.BobcatBuiltTexan wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 8:53 pmCoaching rbs is easy. Get the ball run that way. If it's pass block this way or run to the flat. It's where you put your best recruiter because there isn't much to teach throughout the week, again get the ball run that way don't get tackled, lol. Mix play wr but based or what we do right now it also isn't hard... block block block block...fake block run a fade. Neither position in or system is hard to coach up. So vigen had put his two best recruiters at the two easiest positions on the team. This allows them copious amounts of tiger to look at film, find the best guys that fit here and make contacts. It's smart. They have to invest in recruiting and this is how vigen is doing it. Throwing coach Baptiste in there also as a great recruiter we have 3 really great recruiters in positions that gives them plenty of time to actually evaluate and recruit. VERY smart by vigen.nanacat wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 4:47 pmWhy do you suppose he moved Mix to WR rather than leaving him with RB where he's had so much success? Just for what Vim said above, the experience of coaching all positions? It doesn't seem that Mesa has experience coaching RBs, so I'm just curious about that placement. Still, seems like things are definitely shaping up very well.VimSince03 wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 2:34 pmSam Mix going through the coaching initiation of "coaching every position before you can be a coordinator" I see.AFCAT wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 2:02 pm
BOZEMAN, Montana – Montana State football coach Brent Vigen announced the restructuring of his offensive football staff on Friday, adding two experienced assistant coaches with one internal move.
Pete Sterbick joins the Bobcats as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach after six seasons at Colorado School of Mines, the most recent two as head coach. Fifth-year MSU assistant coach Sam Mix's assignment changes from running backs to receivers, and Justin Mesa takes over Montana State running backs after four years at Washington State.
"I'm excited to add Pete and Justin to our coaching staff," Vigen said. "They're experienced coaches who check all the boxes to help move our football program forward. Moving Sam to receivers coach is a natural move for him and we look for him to have an expanded role within our program. Additionally, we will have our final open position (offensive line) filled shortly."
The moves come after the departures of assistant coaches Tyler Walker (offensive coordinator/quarterbacks) and Al Johnson (offensive line) to Temple, and Justin Udy (wide receivers) to Boise State. Vigen enters his fifth year as Montana State's head coach in 2025 with a 47-10 record, two Big Sky titles, and playoff appearances in all four seasons.
A closer look at the coaches involved:
Pete Sterbick, Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks
A highly decorated offensive coach, Pete Sterbick joins the Montana State staff as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. The appointment brings the 2022 Football Scoop NCAA Division II Offensive Coordinator of the Year and 2023 AFCA Regional Head Coach of the Year to the MSU staff after leading the Orediggers to a 22-4 record as head coach during the past two seasons. CSM finished the 2023 season as D-II runner-up and Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference championship season with a 14-1 record. Colorado Mines compiled a 37-6 record with a conference title in all three seasons (2019-22, although the team did not play during the 2020-21 Covid year) of Sterbick's tenure as offensive coordinator. A receiver and punter at Augustana (South Dakota) from 1998-2002, earning his degree in physical education in 2003, he began his coaching career as receivers coach at Missouri Western in 2003, then coached tight ends at North Dakota in 2004. Sterbick became an offensive graduate assistant at Washington State in 2005-07, then took over as offensive coordinator and receivers coach at D-II Grand View (Des Moines, Iowa) from 2008-11. In two seasons as head coach at NAIA McPherson (Kansas) his teams compiled a 9-11 record, and he worked as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Montana Tech from 2014-18. He moved to Colorado Mines in 2019.
Vigen on Sterbick: "Pete brings a wealth of experience to our staff – specifically as a play caller and quarterbacks coach. He has led many explosive offenses and has demonstrated the ability to adapt to his personnel very well. His ties to the state of Montana from his time spent coaching at Montana Tech are very beneficial as well. I'm very excited to continue moving our offense forward under his direction."
Justin Mesa, Running Backs
Justin Mesa comes to Montana State after four seasons at Washington State, where he was Director of Transfer Recruiting in 2021, Offensive Quality Control in 2022-23, and Assistant Special Teams/Assistant Tight Ends Coach in 2024. Mesa's coaching career began during his time as a USC undergraduate, when the Los Angeles native served as a student manager (2004-05) and following his graduation (bachelor's degree in kinesiology, 2006) as a recruiting and operations assistant (2006-08). He transitioned to on-field coaching as a graduate assistant at USC (wide receivers in 2009, offensive administrative assistant in 2010, and tight ends in 2011-12). Mesa worked as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Loyola High School in Los Angeles (2013-15), then coached wide receivers at Dixie State in 2016. He joined Craig Bohl's Wyoming staff as Director of Player Personnel in 2017-18, where he worked with Vigen, then became head coach at San Marino (California) High School in 2019-20. He joined the Washington State staff in the summer of 2021. During his time at USC the Trojans played in three Rose Bowls, an Emerald Bowl, and a Sun Bowl. While at Washington State, the Cougars played in the Sun Bowl, the LA Bowl, and the Holiday Bowl.
Vigen on Mesa: "Justin and I worked together for two years at Wyoming and he was a key member of our staff. He has continued to gain experience in all aspects of the game and I'm very excited for what he will bring to our staff as an offensive coach, a special teams contributor and as a recruiter."
Sam Mix, Wide Receivers
Entering his fifth season on the Bobcat staff, Sam Mix helped craft one of dominant rushing offenses in the FCS during his time as running backs coach (2023-24). Jared White earned Freshman All-America honors during Mix's first season mentoring Bobcat backs, while in 2024 Scottre Humphrey earned All-America honors and Adam Jones became a Freshman All-America. A 2019 graduate of MSU Northern (BA, business), the Seattle area native was a recruiting and operations assistant and offensive analyst at MSU in 2021-22. A former Lights wide receiver (2015-18), Mix worked as receivers coach and special teams coordinator at his alma mater in 2019-20. MSU led the Big Sky in rushing during each of Mix's seasons as running backs coach.
Vigen on Mix: "Sam has done an excellent job both on the field and in recruiting during his time with us at Montana State. He's led a very productive group of running backs the last two seasons. I look forward to his continued growth within our offense as he returns to the position where he played and began his coaching career."
MSU - 16 team National Champions (most recent 2024); 57 individual National Champions (most recent 2023).
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Re: Staff. Who do we bring in?
To piggy back off this. If you think about it running backs generally only have one player on the field at a time. While other position groups have multiples. Receivers there are different things they look for on slot and outside receivers. Running back it’s pass protection and where your aim point is on running plays.TomCat88 wrote: ↑Sat Jan 25, 2025 8:31 amI never would’ve known that about recruiting and easy positions to coach.BobcatBuiltTexan wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 8:53 pmCoaching rbs is easy. Get the ball run that way. If it's pass block this way or run to the flat. It's where you put your best recruiter because there isn't much to teach throughout the week, again get the ball run that way don't get tackled, lol. Mix play wr but based or what we do right now it also isn't hard... block block block block...fake block run a fade. Neither position in or system is hard to coach up. So vigen had put his two best recruiters at the two easiest positions on the team. This allows them copious amounts of tiger to look at film, find the best guys that fit here and make contacts. It's smart. They have to invest in recruiting and this is how vigen is doing it. Throwing coach Baptiste in there also as a great recruiter we have 3 really great recruiters in positions that gives them plenty of time to actually evaluate and recruit. VERY smart by vigen.nanacat wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 4:47 pmWhy do you suppose he moved Mix to WR rather than leaving him with RB where he's had so much success? Just for what Vim said above, the experience of coaching all positions? It doesn't seem that Mesa has experience coaching RBs, so I'm just curious about that placement. Still, seems like things are definitely shaping up very well.VimSince03 wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 2:34 pmSam Mix going through the coaching initiation of "coaching every position before you can be a coordinator" I see.AFCAT wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 2:02 pm
BOZEMAN, Montana – Montana State football coach Brent Vigen announced the restructuring of his offensive football staff on Friday, adding two experienced assistant coaches with one internal move.
Pete Sterbick joins the Bobcats as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach after six seasons at Colorado School of Mines, the most recent two as head coach. Fifth-year MSU assistant coach Sam Mix's assignment changes from running backs to receivers, and Justin Mesa takes over Montana State running backs after four years at Washington State.
"I'm excited to add Pete and Justin to our coaching staff," Vigen said. "They're experienced coaches who check all the boxes to help move our football program forward. Moving Sam to receivers coach is a natural move for him and we look for him to have an expanded role within our program. Additionally, we will have our final open position (offensive line) filled shortly."
The moves come after the departures of assistant coaches Tyler Walker (offensive coordinator/quarterbacks) and Al Johnson (offensive line) to Temple, and Justin Udy (wide receivers) to Boise State. Vigen enters his fifth year as Montana State's head coach in 2025 with a 47-10 record, two Big Sky titles, and playoff appearances in all four seasons.
A closer look at the coaches involved:
Pete Sterbick, Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks
A highly decorated offensive coach, Pete Sterbick joins the Montana State staff as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. The appointment brings the 2022 Football Scoop NCAA Division II Offensive Coordinator of the Year and 2023 AFCA Regional Head Coach of the Year to the MSU staff after leading the Orediggers to a 22-4 record as head coach during the past two seasons. CSM finished the 2023 season as D-II runner-up and Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference championship season with a 14-1 record. Colorado Mines compiled a 37-6 record with a conference title in all three seasons (2019-22, although the team did not play during the 2020-21 Covid year) of Sterbick's tenure as offensive coordinator. A receiver and punter at Augustana (South Dakota) from 1998-2002, earning his degree in physical education in 2003, he began his coaching career as receivers coach at Missouri Western in 2003, then coached tight ends at North Dakota in 2004. Sterbick became an offensive graduate assistant at Washington State in 2005-07, then took over as offensive coordinator and receivers coach at D-II Grand View (Des Moines, Iowa) from 2008-11. In two seasons as head coach at NAIA McPherson (Kansas) his teams compiled a 9-11 record, and he worked as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Montana Tech from 2014-18. He moved to Colorado Mines in 2019.
Vigen on Sterbick: "Pete brings a wealth of experience to our staff – specifically as a play caller and quarterbacks coach. He has led many explosive offenses and has demonstrated the ability to adapt to his personnel very well. His ties to the state of Montana from his time spent coaching at Montana Tech are very beneficial as well. I'm very excited to continue moving our offense forward under his direction."
Justin Mesa, Running Backs
Justin Mesa comes to Montana State after four seasons at Washington State, where he was Director of Transfer Recruiting in 2021, Offensive Quality Control in 2022-23, and Assistant Special Teams/Assistant Tight Ends Coach in 2024. Mesa's coaching career began during his time as a USC undergraduate, when the Los Angeles native served as a student manager (2004-05) and following his graduation (bachelor's degree in kinesiology, 2006) as a recruiting and operations assistant (2006-08). He transitioned to on-field coaching as a graduate assistant at USC (wide receivers in 2009, offensive administrative assistant in 2010, and tight ends in 2011-12). Mesa worked as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Loyola High School in Los Angeles (2013-15), then coached wide receivers at Dixie State in 2016. He joined Craig Bohl's Wyoming staff as Director of Player Personnel in 2017-18, where he worked with Vigen, then became head coach at San Marino (California) High School in 2019-20. He joined the Washington State staff in the summer of 2021. During his time at USC the Trojans played in three Rose Bowls, an Emerald Bowl, and a Sun Bowl. While at Washington State, the Cougars played in the Sun Bowl, the LA Bowl, and the Holiday Bowl.
Vigen on Mesa: "Justin and I worked together for two years at Wyoming and he was a key member of our staff. He has continued to gain experience in all aspects of the game and I'm very excited for what he will bring to our staff as an offensive coach, a special teams contributor and as a recruiter."
Sam Mix, Wide Receivers
Entering his fifth season on the Bobcat staff, Sam Mix helped craft one of dominant rushing offenses in the FCS during his time as running backs coach (2023-24). Jared White earned Freshman All-America honors during Mix's first season mentoring Bobcat backs, while in 2024 Scottre Humphrey earned All-America honors and Adam Jones became a Freshman All-America. A 2019 graduate of MSU Northern (BA, business), the Seattle area native was a recruiting and operations assistant and offensive analyst at MSU in 2021-22. A former Lights wide receiver (2015-18), Mix worked as receivers coach and special teams coordinator at his alma mater in 2019-20. MSU led the Big Sky in rushing during each of Mix's seasons as running backs coach.
Vigen on Mix: "Sam has done an excellent job both on the field and in recruiting during his time with us at Montana State. He's led a very productive group of running backs the last two seasons. I look forward to his continued growth within our offense as he returns to the position where he played and began his coaching career."
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Re: Staff. Who do we bring in?
Along with the occasional pass route.BlueNGoldTilIDie wrote: ↑Sat Jan 25, 2025 8:49 amTo piggy back off this. If you think about it running backs generally only have one player on the field at a time. While other position groups have multiples. Receivers there are different things they look for on slot and outside receivers. Running back it’s pass protection and where your aim point is on running plays.TomCat88 wrote: ↑Sat Jan 25, 2025 8:31 amI never would’ve known that about recruiting and easy positions to coach.BobcatBuiltTexan wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 8:53 pmCoaching rbs is easy. Get the ball run that way. If it's pass block this way or run to the flat. It's where you put your best recruiter because there isn't much to teach throughout the week, again get the ball run that way don't get tackled, lol. Mix play wr but based or what we do right now it also isn't hard... block block block block...fake block run a fade. Neither position in or system is hard to coach up. So vigen had put his two best recruiters at the two easiest positions on the team. This allows them copious amounts of tiger to look at film, find the best guys that fit here and make contacts. It's smart. They have to invest in recruiting and this is how vigen is doing it. Throwing coach Baptiste in there also as a great recruiter we have 3 really great recruiters in positions that gives them plenty of time to actually evaluate and recruit. VERY smart by vigen.nanacat wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 4:47 pmWhy do you suppose he moved Mix to WR rather than leaving him with RB where he's had so much success? Just for what Vim said above, the experience of coaching all positions? It doesn't seem that Mesa has experience coaching RBs, so I'm just curious about that placement. Still, seems like things are definitely shaping up very well.VimSince03 wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 2:34 pmSam Mix going through the coaching initiation of "coaching every position before you can be a coordinator" I see.AFCAT wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 2:02 pm
BOZEMAN, Montana – Montana State football coach Brent Vigen announced the restructuring of his offensive football staff on Friday, adding two experienced assistant coaches with one internal move.
Pete Sterbick joins the Bobcats as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach after six seasons at Colorado School of Mines, the most recent two as head coach. Fifth-year MSU assistant coach Sam Mix's assignment changes from running backs to receivers, and Justin Mesa takes over Montana State running backs after four years at Washington State.
"I'm excited to add Pete and Justin to our coaching staff," Vigen said. "They're experienced coaches who check all the boxes to help move our football program forward. Moving Sam to receivers coach is a natural move for him and we look for him to have an expanded role within our program. Additionally, we will have our final open position (offensive line) filled shortly."
The moves come after the departures of assistant coaches Tyler Walker (offensive coordinator/quarterbacks) and Al Johnson (offensive line) to Temple, and Justin Udy (wide receivers) to Boise State. Vigen enters his fifth year as Montana State's head coach in 2025 with a 47-10 record, two Big Sky titles, and playoff appearances in all four seasons.
A closer look at the coaches involved:
Pete Sterbick, Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks
A highly decorated offensive coach, Pete Sterbick joins the Montana State staff as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. The appointment brings the 2022 Football Scoop NCAA Division II Offensive Coordinator of the Year and 2023 AFCA Regional Head Coach of the Year to the MSU staff after leading the Orediggers to a 22-4 record as head coach during the past two seasons. CSM finished the 2023 season as D-II runner-up and Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference championship season with a 14-1 record. Colorado Mines compiled a 37-6 record with a conference title in all three seasons (2019-22, although the team did not play during the 2020-21 Covid year) of Sterbick's tenure as offensive coordinator. A receiver and punter at Augustana (South Dakota) from 1998-2002, earning his degree in physical education in 2003, he began his coaching career as receivers coach at Missouri Western in 2003, then coached tight ends at North Dakota in 2004. Sterbick became an offensive graduate assistant at Washington State in 2005-07, then took over as offensive coordinator and receivers coach at D-II Grand View (Des Moines, Iowa) from 2008-11. In two seasons as head coach at NAIA McPherson (Kansas) his teams compiled a 9-11 record, and he worked as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Montana Tech from 2014-18. He moved to Colorado Mines in 2019.
Vigen on Sterbick: "Pete brings a wealth of experience to our staff – specifically as a play caller and quarterbacks coach. He has led many explosive offenses and has demonstrated the ability to adapt to his personnel very well. His ties to the state of Montana from his time spent coaching at Montana Tech are very beneficial as well. I'm very excited to continue moving our offense forward under his direction."
Justin Mesa, Running Backs
Justin Mesa comes to Montana State after four seasons at Washington State, where he was Director of Transfer Recruiting in 2021, Offensive Quality Control in 2022-23, and Assistant Special Teams/Assistant Tight Ends Coach in 2024. Mesa's coaching career began during his time as a USC undergraduate, when the Los Angeles native served as a student manager (2004-05) and following his graduation (bachelor's degree in kinesiology, 2006) as a recruiting and operations assistant (2006-08). He transitioned to on-field coaching as a graduate assistant at USC (wide receivers in 2009, offensive administrative assistant in 2010, and tight ends in 2011-12). Mesa worked as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Loyola High School in Los Angeles (2013-15), then coached wide receivers at Dixie State in 2016. He joined Craig Bohl's Wyoming staff as Director of Player Personnel in 2017-18, where he worked with Vigen, then became head coach at San Marino (California) High School in 2019-20. He joined the Washington State staff in the summer of 2021. During his time at USC the Trojans played in three Rose Bowls, an Emerald Bowl, and a Sun Bowl. While at Washington State, the Cougars played in the Sun Bowl, the LA Bowl, and the Holiday Bowl.
Vigen on Mesa: "Justin and I worked together for two years at Wyoming and he was a key member of our staff. He has continued to gain experience in all aspects of the game and I'm very excited for what he will bring to our staff as an offensive coach, a special teams contributor and as a recruiter."
Sam Mix, Wide Receivers
Entering his fifth season on the Bobcat staff, Sam Mix helped craft one of dominant rushing offenses in the FCS during his time as running backs coach (2023-24). Jared White earned Freshman All-America honors during Mix's first season mentoring Bobcat backs, while in 2024 Scottre Humphrey earned All-America honors and Adam Jones became a Freshman All-America. A 2019 graduate of MSU Northern (BA, business), the Seattle area native was a recruiting and operations assistant and offensive analyst at MSU in 2021-22. A former Lights wide receiver (2015-18), Mix worked as receivers coach and special teams coordinator at his alma mater in 2019-20. MSU led the Big Sky in rushing during each of Mix's seasons as running backs coach.
Vigen on Mix: "Sam has done an excellent job both on the field and in recruiting during his time with us at Montana State. He's led a very productive group of running backs the last two seasons. I look forward to his continued growth within our offense as he returns to the position where he played and began his coaching career."
MSU - 16 team National Champions (most recent 2024); 57 individual National Champions (most recent 2023).
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Re: Staff. Who do we bring in?
Depending on your system certain positions aren't hard to coach because you don't ask much of them. Wrs in more sophisticated sustenance can be incredibly hard to coach.... teaching how to read a defense, proper route running, etc. In our system we don't ask that of our wrs. Just depends on the system your deploying. On the fbs level you have unlimited coaches and personnel, so they hire as need to get the job done. Fcs wise much reduced staff so you have to be smart as to who you hire and at what positions.TomCat88 wrote: ↑Sat Jan 25, 2025 8:31 amI never would’ve known that about recruiting and easy positions to coach.BobcatBuiltTexan wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 8:53 pmCoaching rbs is easy. Get the ball run that way. If it's pass block this way or run to the flat. It's where you put your best recruiter because there isn't much to teach throughout the week, again get the ball run that way don't get tackled, lol. Mix play wr but based or what we do right now it also isn't hard... block block block block...fake block run a fade. Neither position in or system is hard to coach up. So vigen had put his two best recruiters at the two easiest positions on the team. This allows them copious amounts of tiger to look at film, find the best guys that fit here and make contacts. It's smart. They have to invest in recruiting and this is how vigen is doing it. Throwing coach Baptiste in there also as a great recruiter we have 3 really great recruiters in positions that gives them plenty of time to actually evaluate and recruit. VERY smart by vigen.nanacat wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 4:47 pmWhy do you suppose he moved Mix to WR rather than leaving him with RB where he's had so much success? Just for what Vim said above, the experience of coaching all positions? It doesn't seem that Mesa has experience coaching RBs, so I'm just curious about that placement. Still, seems like things are definitely shaping up very well.VimSince03 wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 2:34 pmSam Mix going through the coaching initiation of "coaching every position before you can be a coordinator" I see.AFCAT wrote: ↑Fri Jan 24, 2025 2:02 pm
BOZEMAN, Montana – Montana State football coach Brent Vigen announced the restructuring of his offensive football staff on Friday, adding two experienced assistant coaches with one internal move.
Pete Sterbick joins the Bobcats as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach after six seasons at Colorado School of Mines, the most recent two as head coach. Fifth-year MSU assistant coach Sam Mix's assignment changes from running backs to receivers, and Justin Mesa takes over Montana State running backs after four years at Washington State.
"I'm excited to add Pete and Justin to our coaching staff," Vigen said. "They're experienced coaches who check all the boxes to help move our football program forward. Moving Sam to receivers coach is a natural move for him and we look for him to have an expanded role within our program. Additionally, we will have our final open position (offensive line) filled shortly."
The moves come after the departures of assistant coaches Tyler Walker (offensive coordinator/quarterbacks) and Al Johnson (offensive line) to Temple, and Justin Udy (wide receivers) to Boise State. Vigen enters his fifth year as Montana State's head coach in 2025 with a 47-10 record, two Big Sky titles, and playoff appearances in all four seasons.
A closer look at the coaches involved:
Pete Sterbick, Offensive Coordinator/Quarterbacks
A highly decorated offensive coach, Pete Sterbick joins the Montana State staff as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach. The appointment brings the 2022 Football Scoop NCAA Division II Offensive Coordinator of the Year and 2023 AFCA Regional Head Coach of the Year to the MSU staff after leading the Orediggers to a 22-4 record as head coach during the past two seasons. CSM finished the 2023 season as D-II runner-up and Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference championship season with a 14-1 record. Colorado Mines compiled a 37-6 record with a conference title in all three seasons (2019-22, although the team did not play during the 2020-21 Covid year) of Sterbick's tenure as offensive coordinator. A receiver and punter at Augustana (South Dakota) from 1998-2002, earning his degree in physical education in 2003, he began his coaching career as receivers coach at Missouri Western in 2003, then coached tight ends at North Dakota in 2004. Sterbick became an offensive graduate assistant at Washington State in 2005-07, then took over as offensive coordinator and receivers coach at D-II Grand View (Des Moines, Iowa) from 2008-11. In two seasons as head coach at NAIA McPherson (Kansas) his teams compiled a 9-11 record, and he worked as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Montana Tech from 2014-18. He moved to Colorado Mines in 2019.
Vigen on Sterbick: "Pete brings a wealth of experience to our staff – specifically as a play caller and quarterbacks coach. He has led many explosive offenses and has demonstrated the ability to adapt to his personnel very well. His ties to the state of Montana from his time spent coaching at Montana Tech are very beneficial as well. I'm very excited to continue moving our offense forward under his direction."
Justin Mesa, Running Backs
Justin Mesa comes to Montana State after four seasons at Washington State, where he was Director of Transfer Recruiting in 2021, Offensive Quality Control in 2022-23, and Assistant Special Teams/Assistant Tight Ends Coach in 2024. Mesa's coaching career began during his time as a USC undergraduate, when the Los Angeles native served as a student manager (2004-05) and following his graduation (bachelor's degree in kinesiology, 2006) as a recruiting and operations assistant (2006-08). He transitioned to on-field coaching as a graduate assistant at USC (wide receivers in 2009, offensive administrative assistant in 2010, and tight ends in 2011-12). Mesa worked as offensive coordinator and quarterbacks coach at Loyola High School in Los Angeles (2013-15), then coached wide receivers at Dixie State in 2016. He joined Craig Bohl's Wyoming staff as Director of Player Personnel in 2017-18, where he worked with Vigen, then became head coach at San Marino (California) High School in 2019-20. He joined the Washington State staff in the summer of 2021. During his time at USC the Trojans played in three Rose Bowls, an Emerald Bowl, and a Sun Bowl. While at Washington State, the Cougars played in the Sun Bowl, the LA Bowl, and the Holiday Bowl.
Vigen on Mesa: "Justin and I worked together for two years at Wyoming and he was a key member of our staff. He has continued to gain experience in all aspects of the game and I'm very excited for what he will bring to our staff as an offensive coach, a special teams contributor and as a recruiter."
Sam Mix, Wide Receivers
Entering his fifth season on the Bobcat staff, Sam Mix helped craft one of dominant rushing offenses in the FCS during his time as running backs coach (2023-24). Jared White earned Freshman All-America honors during Mix's first season mentoring Bobcat backs, while in 2024 Scottre Humphrey earned All-America honors and Adam Jones became a Freshman All-America. A 2019 graduate of MSU Northern (BA, business), the Seattle area native was a recruiting and operations assistant and offensive analyst at MSU in 2021-22. A former Lights wide receiver (2015-18), Mix worked as receivers coach and special teams coordinator at his alma mater in 2019-20. MSU led the Big Sky in rushing during each of Mix's seasons as running backs coach.
Vigen on Mix: "Sam has done an excellent job both on the field and in recruiting during his time with us at Montana State. He's led a very productive group of running backs the last two seasons. I look forward to his continued growth within our offense as he returns to the position where he played and began his coaching career."
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Re: Staff. Who do we bring in?
Regarding Mix moving to WR coach from RB coach... Question as to 'Why move Mix when he has had success with RB's?'
Coaching the WR room involves many more players and likely MSU will need comparatively more instruction for its passing game with a new OC. Vigen trusts Mix. It's a bigger job involving more players.There are 5 RBs on current roster, all of whom have good amounts of experience vs 9 WR's, with only Dowler, Trimble and Ryan King with extensive playing time.
Coaching the WR room involves many more players and likely MSU will need comparatively more instruction for its passing game with a new OC. Vigen trusts Mix. It's a bigger job involving more players.There are 5 RBs on current roster, all of whom have good amounts of experience vs 9 WR's, with only Dowler, Trimble and Ryan King with extensive playing time.
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Re: Staff. Who do we bring in?
His Twitter bio says he's the assistant QB coach for MSU. I'm not sure if this is different from what he had on his bio last year, but his official title was offensive analyst as opposed to a position coach.
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Re: Staff. Who do we bring in?
I noticed Fresno State assistant coach, Matthew Smith, has been following and is being followed by some of the current o-linemen, new o-line recruits, and by Sterbick, but not Vigen. Smith was the o-line coach at Fresno last season and was retained by Entz, but he was downgraded to a quality control job. I guess he's a name we should keep an eye out on for a position coach position.
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Re: Staff. Who do we bring in?
I just read his Bio. Seems to be a very intelligent young man. Several academic accolades. Made his way to a starting role on the OL as a walk on, being nominated for the Remington AwardAFCAT wrote: ↑Wed Jan 29, 2025 10:55 amI noticed Fresno State assistant coach, Matthew Smith, has been following and is being followed by some of the current o-linemen, new o-line recruits, and by Sterbick, but not Vigen. Smith was the o-line coach at Fresno last season and was retained by Entz, but he was downgraded to a quality control job. I guess he's a name we should keep an eye out on for a position coach position.
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Re: Staff. Who do we bring in?
I feel this OL coach to be a most important hire. We have had a string of excellent OL coaches over the past decade. He seems like a great candidate. Does anyone know if he worked under Armstrong?94VegasCat wrote: ↑Wed Jan 29, 2025 11:41 amI just read his Bio. Seems to be a very intelligent young man. Several academic accolades. Made his way to a starting role on the OL as a walk on, being nominated for the Remington AwardAFCAT wrote: ↑Wed Jan 29, 2025 10:55 amI noticed Fresno State assistant coach, Matthew Smith, has been following and is being followed by some of the current o-linemen, new o-line recruits, and by Sterbick, but not Vigen. Smith was the o-line coach at Fresno last season and was retained by Entz, but he was downgraded to a quality control job. I guess he's a name we should keep an eye out on for a position coach position.
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Re: Staff. Who do we bring in?
Well, they overlapped for a year, so, yes.bobcatbob wrote: ↑Wed Jan 29, 2025 1:01 pmI feel this OL coach to be a most important hire. We have had a string of excellent OL coaches over the past decade. He seems like a great candidate. Does anyone know if he worked under Armstrong?94VegasCat wrote: ↑Wed Jan 29, 2025 11:41 amI just read his Bio. Seems to be a very intelligent young man. Several academic accolades. Made his way to a starting role on the OL as a walk on, being nominated for the Remington AwardAFCAT wrote: ↑Wed Jan 29, 2025 10:55 amI noticed Fresno State assistant coach, Matthew Smith, has been following and is being followed by some of the current o-linemen, new o-line recruits, and by Sterbick, but not Vigen. Smith was the o-line coach at Fresno last season and was retained by Entz, but he was downgraded to a quality control job. I guess he's a name we should keep an eye out on for a position coach position.
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