
Addressing the Catbackers for the First Time as Head Coach
May 12, 2026 | Football, Sports Extra
By: D. Scott Fritchen
He saunters through the west parking lot doors of the West Ridge Mall in Topeka, Kansas, wearing his black Kansas State Ring of Honor polo shirt, gray slacks, and bearing smiles and hearty handshakes for the first dozen or so awaiting purple-clad greeters near the glass doors. He arrives at 5:54 p.m. for the 6:00 p.m. Topeka Catbackers event. For 17 years, Cat Time has been a part of his mantra.
Although Collin Klein had attended these Catbackers events first as a player and then as an assistant coach, driving across roads with beautiful landscapes to destination after destination across the state of Kansas to speak inside filled ballrooms, local Elks Clubs and golf course clubhouses, this 45-minute jaunt from the Vanier Family Football Complex to the state capital is different.
Klein is about to address a Catbackers club for the first time as K-State head football coach.
Near the end of the event, Klein, sitting on a white chair on a black stage, holding a microphone, is asked by a K-State fan if he would serve as K-State head coach long enough to recruit any of his children to the team. Collin and Shalin have three sons, Beric, Rhett and Trek, and one daughter, Briar.
Klein drops the biggest smile of the night, and the crowd of several hundred clap, chuckle, and probably a few at least wait with bated breath, wondering if such an event could one day happen.
"A couple boys might have a chance," Klein says, smiling, "but they'll have to earn it, and trust me when I say this, I'm not going to be the one that's hardest on them, I can promise you that. Shalin definitely runs a tight ship. It'll be fun to watch them grow."
Right now, as we stand here inside the West Ridge Mall, five months and two days have passed since Klein was announced as the 36th head coach in the history of K-State football. In two months, Klein will climb up steps onto a large, brightly-lit stage, and he will wear a suit and tie, and he sit at a long table surrounded by the large video boards showing K-State football highlights as "Wildcat Victory" blares across the Big 12 Football Media Day event at the Ford Center in Frisco, Texas.
This will be another introduction in a line of introductions that Klein no doubt will experience along the way in his first season as head coach, and the stop in Frisco will be televised across the nation and hundreds of reporters will inside the Ford Center will listen, videotape and type his every word.
That will come, all right.
At this moment, moments after Klein enters the West Ridge Mall, Wyatt Thompson, Voice of the Wildcats, takes a microphone and rattles off Klein's accolades as senior quarterback in 2012 — "Heisman Finalist…Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award Winner… Maxwell Finalist…Davey O'Brien Finalist…Walter Camp Player of the Year Finalist…Manning Award Finalist…" — and the 36-year-old Klein, a small lifetime removed from using his arm, skinned-up elbows and bruised knees to help the Wildcats to 10- and 11-win seasons, stands and politely nods after Thompson reads off 13 national recognitions as the hoots and hollers and cheers and applause steadily reach a crescendo from the crowd of several hundred K-State supporters sitting in white wood folding chairs 20 across and lined in 15 rows.
When Klein opens his mouth for the first time at a Catbackers event as K-State head coach, he begins, "In the world of college athletics in general, things move at hypersonic speeds…"
Klein goes back to the beginning — his hiring at K-State and reflected on the many twists and turns along the journey to this spot.
"You don't know what's going to happen next and everyone thinks all of us coaches say it's one day at a time because that's what coaches say, but the reality of our world is that's what it is, and if you don't do that, you're going to be in big trouble," Klein says. "That's what Coach Klieman had done until he had a minute to think after the season, I was down at the playoff for Texas A&M and all of us were just one day at a time.
"So, all of this happened literally in hours, and it was about a 72-hour time window with a lot of pieces moving around at that time, and you don't know how it's all going to shake out. I said it right from the jump that the Lord had a plan and everything worked out how it's supposed to. I'm so grateful to be home, and I don't take that for granted. I've said this over the years and everybody who's asked me that there's not a program that I care about more than Kansas State. There's not. Kansas State is special on so many levels, and it starts with the people in this room and every person who's worn that Powercat on and off the field for years and years and years.
"Our brand is special and our university is special and until you're in it, live it and feel it, you can't get your arms around it. I'm truly honored and blessed at how this entire thing has come together. That first 10 days was an absolute whirlwind."
Immediately upon his hiring on December 4, Klein had to act fast and hire his first coaching staff. He named former K-State quarterback Trey Scott general manager. Klein and Scott were teammates at K-State, and Klein said that "there wasn't a lot of prep work" on bringing Scott on board given his 11 years of NFL roster back-office experience and modern-day agency experience.
"We were able to pull the trigger on that position in 24 hours, and once this first domino fell, you had a couple others based on their bowl schedule," Klein says. "You look at Stanton Weber, and we were graduate assistants together and then he went to South Carolina and then ran his own show for three years and did an absolute tremendous job at Toledo. That's the timing and how everything came together so well. Those are the perfect fits we were able to get done right away."
Klein calls his coaching staff "K-State guys who are extremely competitive, extremely high character, men with high integrity, and family guys."
"We're all very young and very eager," Klein says. "We have 82 kids under the age of 12 on our staff right now, and again, this is the K-State way. My wife, Shalin, and I look at this as we're doing this thing together. K-State and Coach Snyder and Coach Klieman have used this program as a platform to impact peoples' lives top to bottom. Our staff is included in that. Shalin stuffed 1,000 Easter eggs for our family Easter egg hunt in the indoor practice facility after practice for all our staff's families.
"Those are the things that we're trying to create and make this the place to be that takes care of people at a level that most people don't understand — the K-State way. Oh, and by the way, we have some of the sharpest defensive minds and some of the sharpest offensive minds, and sharpest special teams minds, who are hungry to do something that hasn't been done. That's a really good combination."
Next, long before the K-State coaching staff and family Easter egg hunt, Klein and his coaching staff delve into late, late nights, attempting to identify the eggs they could potentially put into their proverbial baskets for the 2026 football season.
"First and foremost, a lot of credit needs to be given to Coach Klieman and Taylor Braet for holding and still signing 19 high school guys in a coaching transition year," Klein says. "That doesn't happen anywhere. Because those young guys believe in Kansas State and felt special about this place and stayed with this place and held a little bit of a nucleus of the recruiting class together in that transition time, that's huge. That gave us a little bit of a jumpstart."
In the end, Klein and his coaching staff is tasked with acquiring 56 newcomers for the 110-man roster. Klein called his first staff meeting on December 31.
"To ring in the new year, we evaluated 2,500 high school kids," he says. "That's what we did and we dove right in, and we had over 70 guys on the board. Because of that hypersonic speed and how everything goes so fast, you have to be so aggressive in this world. In the recruiting world, it's cut-throat to a level that it's never been. We were only going to sign 25 or so transfer players. We had over 70 on visits in 15 days. The first day of school was January 20. But that's how you have to do it to get the right guys and to pick the ones that you want and that are the right fits.
"We were interviewing these three defensive tackles, and we were interviewing these four wideouts, we were interviewing these guys, and we were bringing them on campus, looking into their eyes, getting them on the board, and making sure they're the right fit for what we're trying to do, and attract them to what we're going to do and what we're about, and that's how you find and try to build that roster how we want and need it to be."
Once the players were on campus, Jeremy Jacobs, who Klein hired as his director of strength and conditioning, brought them into the weight room. Jacobs had served stints at three Power 4 schools over the last 10 seasons, most recently at Texas A&M, and this part of his resume in particular likely raised a few eyebrows: He manned combat rotations to Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom. A U.S. Army veteran, Jacobs served multiple combat rotations to Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom.
"Jeremy Jacobs, our head strength coach, has done a great job," Klein says. "He's awesome. He's done a great job with our entire roster. And those guys that have elite traits and skillsets, seeing them improve as well is a testament to that."
In a span of seven weeks of winter training, five players set all-time position records in the squat, and players' added size didn't hamper their performance in spring practice. They seemingly grew faster as the days wore on.
"Effort and hard work is a habit, and that's something that we have to train and demand as a staff," Klein says. "My opinion of why I was a great fit here is because at K-State we've always been counter-cultural. In a world of the softening of college football and being afraid to step on people's toes and trying to hold onto them and player retention — and some of those are legitimate issues — I feel like we have to attack it the other way and say, 'Listen, we're going to make it really hard to wear that Powercat. We're going to make it a badge of honor. And we're going to work them and demand a level of investment and sacrifice and effort in everything that we do.'
"That started in the winter. We videotaped every single rep of every single guy the entire winter and graded every single one so we could physically show our players, 'Hey, you're finishing through this line, but that's not good enough. This is not finishing through the line. You think you are, but you are not,' and then we tried to get their engine and RPMs up to where they needed to be. Our players responded to that, and they've done an absolutely amazing job buying in and jumping in headfirst, and you could see that translate to the film on tape even in early on in practice because that's a habit and it's something you and we have to train every single day."
Klein points to K-State senior quarterback Avery Johnson as an example of taking care of business every single day.
"He's put on 16 pounds of muscle," Klein says.
The 6-foot-3 Johnson, a native of Wichita who is currently listed at 196 pounds, enters his senior season tied for the K-State all-time record with 48 touchdown passes, ranks sixth all-time with 5,576 passing yards, fourth among all K-State quarterbacks with 1,378 rushing yards, third all-time in being responsible for 70 touchdowns, and fifth all-time with 6,954 total offensive yards. Johnson has already passed a few of Klein's quarterback marks and with a solid final season could rank No. 1 all-time at K-State in many major statistical categories.
"I'll say this from 10,000 feet in talking about the quarterback position: You get way too much credit when things go well and way too much blame when things don't go well," Klein says. "The truth is always somewhere in the middle. Whether he had a good game or a bad game, the truth is probably somewhere in the middle, and there are so many factors that go into a quarterback being able to be successful and being able to lead the team.
"For me, I've just told him that being back with him is awesome. Obviously, I recruited him for three years before he even got here, so our relationship is special and has been special, and I'm really excited to finish his journey here together, but, really I want him to attack. He's so steady, and that's one of his strengths and how he's handled things really well, but I want him to let his passion loose and enjoy and cut his passion loose to play this game and have all the fun and be decisive and aggressive and really cut it loose, but be prepared to cut it loose.
"If you say, 'Cut it loose and play free,' you can be in real trouble at quarterback unless you have the foundation right before you do that. That's what I want for him. He and I, our relationship working together and having played that position, that's one of my strengths as a play-caller and offensive coordinator is understanding everything that they're going through before snap, after snap and obviously post snap and postgame in being able to help him, and he and I work together and help our offense be the best it can be."
And when Johnson takes the field and looks at the sideline, it will be Klein calling the plays.
"I hired an offensive coordinator and a really, really good offensive staff because sometimes the play-caller gets way too much credit and way too much blame when things go well or when things don't go well, because there's so much that goes into it, and it doesn't matter what play that you call," Klein says. "If that play call sheet and that gameplan is not vetted correctly and built well Monday through Thursday, you could print that play sheet on gold and it's not going to do any good for you standing out there. I'll be the one calling the plays, and I have a really, really good team around me. Some coaches have been with me for a very, very long time, and some are new and will provide new perspectives on things and how to continue to develop and advance what we do. I'll be the ones making those decisions."
A K-State fan asked Klein, "So what kind of offense are we going to look forward to? What's going to happen?"
"That's something that'll continue to take shape in fall camp," Klein says. "One of the main points of emphasis from the spring was trying to raise our football acumen, how we play the game fundamentally sound, and all the individual components to putting this offense together. I think we're very, very blessed. Our offense was pretty beat up from last season and a lot of injuries from last season this spring. I do think we're going to have some options of the packages that we put together. We have three elite tight ends and three really, really good tailbacks, and obviously have a really, really good quarterback.
"I'm excited about our offensive line. We'll have four new starters there, but we bring in some experience from the portal and have some young players who are really developing at a nice clip. I don't know exactly how those five will look, but I'm excited about how that is trending. At wideout, we had to rebuild that room out of the portal, and we did a nice job of having the experience coming back with Jaron Tibbs and his leadership, and then three transfers with Josh Manning and Izaiah Williams and Brandon White to mix in and see how all of this goes.
He pauses.
"I'm excited about all of it," he says, "and I'm not lying."
One K-State fan shouts a final question from the back of the room.
"CAN WE SEE MAYBE A DIFFERENT LOOK OF UNIFORMS THIS YEAR?"
Klein grinned.
"I can't confirm or deny anything," he says. "I know nothing. I just work here."
He saunters through the west parking lot doors of the West Ridge Mall in Topeka, Kansas, wearing his black Kansas State Ring of Honor polo shirt, gray slacks, and bearing smiles and hearty handshakes for the first dozen or so awaiting purple-clad greeters near the glass doors. He arrives at 5:54 p.m. for the 6:00 p.m. Topeka Catbackers event. For 17 years, Cat Time has been a part of his mantra.
Although Collin Klein had attended these Catbackers events first as a player and then as an assistant coach, driving across roads with beautiful landscapes to destination after destination across the state of Kansas to speak inside filled ballrooms, local Elks Clubs and golf course clubhouses, this 45-minute jaunt from the Vanier Family Football Complex to the state capital is different.
Klein is about to address a Catbackers club for the first time as K-State head football coach.
Near the end of the event, Klein, sitting on a white chair on a black stage, holding a microphone, is asked by a K-State fan if he would serve as K-State head coach long enough to recruit any of his children to the team. Collin and Shalin have three sons, Beric, Rhett and Trek, and one daughter, Briar.
Klein drops the biggest smile of the night, and the crowd of several hundred clap, chuckle, and probably a few at least wait with bated breath, wondering if such an event could one day happen.
"A couple boys might have a chance," Klein says, smiling, "but they'll have to earn it, and trust me when I say this, I'm not going to be the one that's hardest on them, I can promise you that. Shalin definitely runs a tight ship. It'll be fun to watch them grow."

Right now, as we stand here inside the West Ridge Mall, five months and two days have passed since Klein was announced as the 36th head coach in the history of K-State football. In two months, Klein will climb up steps onto a large, brightly-lit stage, and he will wear a suit and tie, and he sit at a long table surrounded by the large video boards showing K-State football highlights as "Wildcat Victory" blares across the Big 12 Football Media Day event at the Ford Center in Frisco, Texas.
This will be another introduction in a line of introductions that Klein no doubt will experience along the way in his first season as head coach, and the stop in Frisco will be televised across the nation and hundreds of reporters will inside the Ford Center will listen, videotape and type his every word.
That will come, all right.
At this moment, moments after Klein enters the West Ridge Mall, Wyatt Thompson, Voice of the Wildcats, takes a microphone and rattles off Klein's accolades as senior quarterback in 2012 — "Heisman Finalist…Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award Winner… Maxwell Finalist…Davey O'Brien Finalist…Walter Camp Player of the Year Finalist…Manning Award Finalist…" — and the 36-year-old Klein, a small lifetime removed from using his arm, skinned-up elbows and bruised knees to help the Wildcats to 10- and 11-win seasons, stands and politely nods after Thompson reads off 13 national recognitions as the hoots and hollers and cheers and applause steadily reach a crescendo from the crowd of several hundred K-State supporters sitting in white wood folding chairs 20 across and lined in 15 rows.
When Klein opens his mouth for the first time at a Catbackers event as K-State head coach, he begins, "In the world of college athletics in general, things move at hypersonic speeds…"
Klein goes back to the beginning — his hiring at K-State and reflected on the many twists and turns along the journey to this spot.
"You don't know what's going to happen next and everyone thinks all of us coaches say it's one day at a time because that's what coaches say, but the reality of our world is that's what it is, and if you don't do that, you're going to be in big trouble," Klein says. "That's what Coach Klieman had done until he had a minute to think after the season, I was down at the playoff for Texas A&M and all of us were just one day at a time.
"So, all of this happened literally in hours, and it was about a 72-hour time window with a lot of pieces moving around at that time, and you don't know how it's all going to shake out. I said it right from the jump that the Lord had a plan and everything worked out how it's supposed to. I'm so grateful to be home, and I don't take that for granted. I've said this over the years and everybody who's asked me that there's not a program that I care about more than Kansas State. There's not. Kansas State is special on so many levels, and it starts with the people in this room and every person who's worn that Powercat on and off the field for years and years and years.
"Our brand is special and our university is special and until you're in it, live it and feel it, you can't get your arms around it. I'm truly honored and blessed at how this entire thing has come together. That first 10 days was an absolute whirlwind."

Immediately upon his hiring on December 4, Klein had to act fast and hire his first coaching staff. He named former K-State quarterback Trey Scott general manager. Klein and Scott were teammates at K-State, and Klein said that "there wasn't a lot of prep work" on bringing Scott on board given his 11 years of NFL roster back-office experience and modern-day agency experience.
"We were able to pull the trigger on that position in 24 hours, and once this first domino fell, you had a couple others based on their bowl schedule," Klein says. "You look at Stanton Weber, and we were graduate assistants together and then he went to South Carolina and then ran his own show for three years and did an absolute tremendous job at Toledo. That's the timing and how everything came together so well. Those are the perfect fits we were able to get done right away."
Klein calls his coaching staff "K-State guys who are extremely competitive, extremely high character, men with high integrity, and family guys."
"We're all very young and very eager," Klein says. "We have 82 kids under the age of 12 on our staff right now, and again, this is the K-State way. My wife, Shalin, and I look at this as we're doing this thing together. K-State and Coach Snyder and Coach Klieman have used this program as a platform to impact peoples' lives top to bottom. Our staff is included in that. Shalin stuffed 1,000 Easter eggs for our family Easter egg hunt in the indoor practice facility after practice for all our staff's families.
"Those are the things that we're trying to create and make this the place to be that takes care of people at a level that most people don't understand — the K-State way. Oh, and by the way, we have some of the sharpest defensive minds and some of the sharpest offensive minds, and sharpest special teams minds, who are hungry to do something that hasn't been done. That's a really good combination."
Next, long before the K-State coaching staff and family Easter egg hunt, Klein and his coaching staff delve into late, late nights, attempting to identify the eggs they could potentially put into their proverbial baskets for the 2026 football season.
"First and foremost, a lot of credit needs to be given to Coach Klieman and Taylor Braet for holding and still signing 19 high school guys in a coaching transition year," Klein says. "That doesn't happen anywhere. Because those young guys believe in Kansas State and felt special about this place and stayed with this place and held a little bit of a nucleus of the recruiting class together in that transition time, that's huge. That gave us a little bit of a jumpstart."
In the end, Klein and his coaching staff is tasked with acquiring 56 newcomers for the 110-man roster. Klein called his first staff meeting on December 31.
"To ring in the new year, we evaluated 2,500 high school kids," he says. "That's what we did and we dove right in, and we had over 70 guys on the board. Because of that hypersonic speed and how everything goes so fast, you have to be so aggressive in this world. In the recruiting world, it's cut-throat to a level that it's never been. We were only going to sign 25 or so transfer players. We had over 70 on visits in 15 days. The first day of school was January 20. But that's how you have to do it to get the right guys and to pick the ones that you want and that are the right fits.
"We were interviewing these three defensive tackles, and we were interviewing these four wideouts, we were interviewing these guys, and we were bringing them on campus, looking into their eyes, getting them on the board, and making sure they're the right fit for what we're trying to do, and attract them to what we're going to do and what we're about, and that's how you find and try to build that roster how we want and need it to be."

Once the players were on campus, Jeremy Jacobs, who Klein hired as his director of strength and conditioning, brought them into the weight room. Jacobs had served stints at three Power 4 schools over the last 10 seasons, most recently at Texas A&M, and this part of his resume in particular likely raised a few eyebrows: He manned combat rotations to Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom. A U.S. Army veteran, Jacobs served multiple combat rotations to Operation Iraqi Freedom and Operation Enduring Freedom.
"Jeremy Jacobs, our head strength coach, has done a great job," Klein says. "He's awesome. He's done a great job with our entire roster. And those guys that have elite traits and skillsets, seeing them improve as well is a testament to that."
In a span of seven weeks of winter training, five players set all-time position records in the squat, and players' added size didn't hamper their performance in spring practice. They seemingly grew faster as the days wore on.
"Effort and hard work is a habit, and that's something that we have to train and demand as a staff," Klein says. "My opinion of why I was a great fit here is because at K-State we've always been counter-cultural. In a world of the softening of college football and being afraid to step on people's toes and trying to hold onto them and player retention — and some of those are legitimate issues — I feel like we have to attack it the other way and say, 'Listen, we're going to make it really hard to wear that Powercat. We're going to make it a badge of honor. And we're going to work them and demand a level of investment and sacrifice and effort in everything that we do.'
"That started in the winter. We videotaped every single rep of every single guy the entire winter and graded every single one so we could physically show our players, 'Hey, you're finishing through this line, but that's not good enough. This is not finishing through the line. You think you are, but you are not,' and then we tried to get their engine and RPMs up to where they needed to be. Our players responded to that, and they've done an absolutely amazing job buying in and jumping in headfirst, and you could see that translate to the film on tape even in early on in practice because that's a habit and it's something you and we have to train every single day."

Klein points to K-State senior quarterback Avery Johnson as an example of taking care of business every single day.
"He's put on 16 pounds of muscle," Klein says.
The 6-foot-3 Johnson, a native of Wichita who is currently listed at 196 pounds, enters his senior season tied for the K-State all-time record with 48 touchdown passes, ranks sixth all-time with 5,576 passing yards, fourth among all K-State quarterbacks with 1,378 rushing yards, third all-time in being responsible for 70 touchdowns, and fifth all-time with 6,954 total offensive yards. Johnson has already passed a few of Klein's quarterback marks and with a solid final season could rank No. 1 all-time at K-State in many major statistical categories.
"I'll say this from 10,000 feet in talking about the quarterback position: You get way too much credit when things go well and way too much blame when things don't go well," Klein says. "The truth is always somewhere in the middle. Whether he had a good game or a bad game, the truth is probably somewhere in the middle, and there are so many factors that go into a quarterback being able to be successful and being able to lead the team.
"For me, I've just told him that being back with him is awesome. Obviously, I recruited him for three years before he even got here, so our relationship is special and has been special, and I'm really excited to finish his journey here together, but, really I want him to attack. He's so steady, and that's one of his strengths and how he's handled things really well, but I want him to let his passion loose and enjoy and cut his passion loose to play this game and have all the fun and be decisive and aggressive and really cut it loose, but be prepared to cut it loose.
"If you say, 'Cut it loose and play free,' you can be in real trouble at quarterback unless you have the foundation right before you do that. That's what I want for him. He and I, our relationship working together and having played that position, that's one of my strengths as a play-caller and offensive coordinator is understanding everything that they're going through before snap, after snap and obviously post snap and postgame in being able to help him, and he and I work together and help our offense be the best it can be."
And when Johnson takes the field and looks at the sideline, it will be Klein calling the plays.
"I hired an offensive coordinator and a really, really good offensive staff because sometimes the play-caller gets way too much credit and way too much blame when things go well or when things don't go well, because there's so much that goes into it, and it doesn't matter what play that you call," Klein says. "If that play call sheet and that gameplan is not vetted correctly and built well Monday through Thursday, you could print that play sheet on gold and it's not going to do any good for you standing out there. I'll be the one calling the plays, and I have a really, really good team around me. Some coaches have been with me for a very, very long time, and some are new and will provide new perspectives on things and how to continue to develop and advance what we do. I'll be the ones making those decisions."
A K-State fan asked Klein, "So what kind of offense are we going to look forward to? What's going to happen?"
"That's something that'll continue to take shape in fall camp," Klein says. "One of the main points of emphasis from the spring was trying to raise our football acumen, how we play the game fundamentally sound, and all the individual components to putting this offense together. I think we're very, very blessed. Our offense was pretty beat up from last season and a lot of injuries from last season this spring. I do think we're going to have some options of the packages that we put together. We have three elite tight ends and three really, really good tailbacks, and obviously have a really, really good quarterback.
"I'm excited about our offensive line. We'll have four new starters there, but we bring in some experience from the portal and have some young players who are really developing at a nice clip. I don't know exactly how those five will look, but I'm excited about how that is trending. At wideout, we had to rebuild that room out of the portal, and we did a nice job of having the experience coming back with Jaron Tibbs and his leadership, and then three transfers with Josh Manning and Izaiah Williams and Brandon White to mix in and see how all of this goes.
He pauses.
"I'm excited about all of it," he says, "and I'm not lying."
One K-State fan shouts a final question from the back of the room.
"CAN WE SEE MAYBE A DIFFERENT LOOK OF UNIFORMS THIS YEAR?"
Klein grinned.
"I can't confirm or deny anything," he says. "I know nothing. I just work here."
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