Grady Bennett went 12-0 and won Montana’s Class AA title in November. Six months later, the state’s governing body suspended him, and he won’t be on the sideline when his champions open the 2026 season against the same team they just beat for the trophy.
The Montana High School Association hit Glacier with a two game suspension of Bennett and a $100 fine for a recruiting violation, the first time the association has ever suspended a head coach under its recruiting bylaw. Bennett misses the August 28 rematch at home against Billings West and the September 4 road trip to Bozeman, the two most psychologically loaded games on the schedule.
Bigfork High School, a smaller program in the Flathead Valley, filed the formal protest that triggered everything. The allegation was that Glacier’s football staff made direct contact with a potential transfer student, violating MHSA Bylaw 17.1. That bylaw prohibits any school employee from inducing a student to transfer for athletic reasons. The MHSA convened a hearing in Helena on April 20, 2026. Administrators from both schools attended. Bennett sat in the room. The stakes were already enormous before anyone cast a vote.
The MHSA’s Executive Board voted unanimously that Glacier violated the recruiting prohibition. Not a single dissent on guilt. But the penalty vote cracked wide open, with a 6-2 majority backing the two game suspension of Bennett and the $100 fine against the school. A quarter of the board thought the punishment went too far. That split matters. It reveals an organization uncertain about its own enforcement teeth, applying a penalty structure most coaches across 182 member schools may not have known existed.
This is the first known recruiting penalty in Montana since Missoula Sentinel paid a $100 fine in 2019. No coach suspension back then. Just a check and a reprimand. After that case, the MHSA strengthened its penalty structure by adding a minimum two game suspension to the bylaw. Now a head coach can be suspended even if he wasn’t personally involved in the recruiting contact, under a lack of program control standard. Seven years of silence. Then sudden enforcement under new rules. Bennett built a championship during the quiet years. He got caught in the loud one.
MHSA Executive Director Brian Michelotti explained the boundary by saying administrators can share information about academic programs with prospective students, “but coaches are not involved in that process”. Glacier’s official statement said the school “respects the MHSA and their governing body fully, but still disagrees with the ruling and outcome of this hearing”. Student initiated inquiry or staff driven recruitment. Open enrollment makes the distinction almost invisible. That gray area is exactly where enforcement lands hardest.
The school fine is $100. That’s lunch money for a program that just ran the table at 12-0 and captured the Class AA crown. The real cost is Bennett’s absence during the championship rematch against Billings West on August 28 and the road game at Bozeman on September 4. An interim coach inherits a roster built for a title defense and must navigate the two most psychologically loaded games on the schedule without the architect in the building. Two games represent roughly 12 percent of a standard season.
The precedent ripples across all 182 MHSA member schools. Any head coach can now be suspended for a recruiting violation committed by staff, even without personal involvement, under the lack of program control framework. That standard transforms every assistant’s conversation with a transfer family into a potential career hazard. Schools that assumed the 2019 playbook still applied just discovered the penalties had been quietly strengthened. Programs with aggressive player development cultures face the sharpest exposure.
Glacier isn’t an outlier. It’s the first test case of a regime that was built after the 2019 Sentinel case and deployed with little public fanfare. The MHSA strengthened penalties specifically by adding the minimum two game suspension, making enforcement incident driven rather than systematically communicated. Once you see that pattern, the whole story shifts. Bennett didn’t break new rules on purpose. He operated under old assumptions in a new enforcement era. Michelotti himself emphasized that the association is now focused on education, consistency, and how schools handle transfers under open enrollment.
Bennett’s tenure at Glacier spans roughly two decades and includes the program’s only two state championships, in 2014 and 2025. A program identity built entirely under one man’s vision. His pre-season words from 2025 read like tragic foreshadowing now, when he told anyone who would listen that his Wolfpack were hungry for redemption and ready to finish the job. They finished it. Then the job finished him, at least temporarily. If Glacier drops either opening game, the narrative flips from administrative inconvenience to season altering damage, and Bennett absorbs that blame from a parking lot.
Bigfork filed the protest. The MHSA enforced the rule. Bennett serves the suspension. The deeper story is about a system that changed its penalties and only publicized the new muscle once an incident forced the issue. Schools across Montana will now funnel every transfer conversation through athletics directors and counselors, creating distance between coaches and families. Which, honestly, might just make violations easier to hide. Bennett spent two decades building a champion. Montana gave him two games to think about it.
Fair call or overreach. Tell us where you land in the comments.
Sources:
Flathead Beacon, “Kalispell Glacier Football Program Penalized for Recruiting,” May 8, 2026
Daily Inter Lake, “Glacier’s Grady Bennett suspended,” May 8, 2026
Montana Sports (MTN/montanasports.com), “MHSA hammers home recruiting rules after Kalispell Glacier coach’s suspension,” May 7, 2026
Montana High School Association, Article II, Section 17.1 and Section 17.3 (recruiting bylaw and penalty provisions)
Brian Michelotti, MHSA executive director, interview with MTN Sports, May 8, 2026
Glacier High School, official statement on the MHSA ruling, May 2026
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