The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Cactus Bowl could be finale for Kansas State coach Snyder

- By John Marshall The Associated Press

PHOENIX » Bill Snyder has coached Kansas State for 26 seasons, returning once from retirement to coach at the stadium that bears his name.

The Cactus Bowl on Dec. 26 against UCLA could be his grand finale.

Snyder has a contract that automatica­lly rolls over every season, but the 78-year-old coach hasn’t decided if he wants to work a 27th season or retire.

“I’ve had some dialogue and I need to have some more dialogue with my family, and more dialogue with our administra­tion,” Snyder said. “Just needing to be more thorough with it. Because you know for me it’s a big decision.”

Snyder helped turn Kansas State’s struggling team into a nationally prominent program when he took over in 1989. He retired in 2005, the program went into decline and Snyder returned to coaching in 2008.

Snyder has led Kansas State to eight straight bowl appearance­s and 19 overall, including three trips to the Fiesta Bowl in Arizona.

The Wildcats (7-5) got their 2017 season off to a slow start, losing three of their first four Big 12 games. Kansas State closed strongly, its only loss in the final five games to No. 23 west Virginia by five.

UCLA (6-6) had a shaky start as well, costing coach Jim Mora his job one game before the season ended. The Bruins closed the regular season with a 30-27 victory over Cal under interim coach Jedd Fisch to become bowl eligible after missing the postseason a year ago.

UCLA hired former Oregon and Philadelph­ia Eagles coach Chip Kelly last month, but Fisch will lead the Bruins against Kansas State.

“I’ve known Chip for a while and he just said, you take this team until the bowl game is over,” Fisch said. “And then at that point in time I’ll resume or I’ll assume the duties of being the head coach. So that’s kind of how we’ve made this thing work.”

Rosen finale?

A big question heading into the game is whether UCLA star quarterbac­k Josh Rosen will play. He has lingering concussion issues and injured his shoulder in the final game against Cal, missing the second half. Rosen has said he wants to play, though there have been reports he won’t. Whether he plays or not, it could be the end of the prolific quarterbac­k’s college career. He’s expected to leave for the NFL after his junior season and could be the No. 1 pick in the draft.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States