MISSOULA — Montana quarterback Keali'i Ah Yat took the snap from the 20-yard line, dropped back and fired a pass to a wide receiver in the end zone for a touchdown during the third practice of fall camp Tuesday.
On the next snap, he hit a different wideout on a different route for a score. He did that again on the next play as he found a third receiver in what was arguably the most electric offensive sequence of camp up to that point.
The wide receiver group is largely an unproven commodity, whether it's younger players who haven't played much or veteran transfers who are learning a new system. But for a stretch of 30 to 45 minutes to close practice Tuesday, the passing game put its playmaking ability on full display.
"It's been going good for the past few days, been rolling," senior re