Chattanooga Times Free Press

North Dakota State’s Klieman is hired to coach at Kansas State

- BY DAVE SKRETTA

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Kansas State hired Chris Klieman of North Dakota State to lead its football program Monday night, passing the reins from retired Hall of Fame coach Bill Snyder to someone with three Football Championsh­ip Subdivisio­n titles but little Big 12 experience.

Klieman was hired to lead the Bison by current Kansas State athletic director Gene Taylor and was seen as one of the front-runners for the Wildcats’ job ever since Snyder announced his retirement.

Klieman agreed to a six-year contract with a base salary of $2.3 million next season, increasing by $200,000 each subsequent season. The deal includes a number of other incentives.

Taylor initially targeted North Texas coach Seth Littrell, but he announced last week that he would remain with the Mean Green. Attention quickly shifted to Klieman, who has the Bison in the FCS semifinals against South Dakota State on Friday night as they seek a fourth title in five seasons.

Klieman will be allowed to coach the Bison in that game. Whether he would remain with the school for the championsh­ip game should North Dakota State advance is still under discussion.

Kansas State will introduce him at a news conference Wednesday.

Klieman is only the third coach to lead the Wildcats since 1988, when Snyder was hired off Hayden Fry’s staff at Iowa. Snyder turned one of the worst programs in the history of major college football into a perennial contender during his first stint in Manhattan, then returned after a three-year retirement — during which the program slid under Ron Prince — to lead the Wildcats back atop the Big 12.

Snyder has dealt with health problems in recent years, though, including a bout with throat cancer, and he announced after a 5-7 season that he was retiring again. He won 215 games in 27 seasons.

“I’m so happy and thrilled to follow a legend,” Klieman said in a released statement. “The opportunit­y to follow in an icon’s footsteps is something I don’t take for granted and don’t take lightly. I know I have huge shoes to fill, and I’m excited to carry on his legacy.”

The 51-year-old Klieman is certainly familiar with Snyder.

Klieman said he grew up going to Snyder’s football camps in Waterloo, Iowa, and he played against his Wildcats while at Northern Iowa. He also was the defensive coordinato­r at North Dakota State when the Bison, then led by Craig Bohl, upset the Wildcats in Manhattan to open the 2013 season.

“This is an absolute dream job,” said Klieman, who is 70-13 in six seasons as a head coach, and a gaudy 67-6 with the Bison. “I have prepared my entire life for this opportunit­y and had great experience­s at many institutio­ns, most notably North Dakota State, where we’ve had unmatched success.”

How that success translates to a Power Five conference remains to be seen.

Klieman spent one season as defensive backs coach at Kansas, but otherwise his experience has been at lower levels. He coached defensive backs at Northern Iowa, Western Illinois and Missouri State and was the head coach for a season at Loras before joining the Bison program.

Still, Taylor was impressed enough by Klieman in 2014 to hand him the program when Bohl, who built North Dakota State into a powerhouse, departed for the coaching job at Wyoming.

“He is a perfect fit for us, both from a personal standpoint and as a head coach,” Taylor said.

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