John Brady (basketball coach)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John Brady

Title Head coach
Sport Basketball
Born September 17, 1954 (1954-09-17) (age 53)
Place of birth Flag of the United States McComb, Mississippi
Career highlights
Overall 273-203 (.574)
Championships
SEC Regular Season Championship (2000, 2006)
Awards
SEC Coach of the Year (2000, 2006)
Playing career
1972–1976 Belhaven
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1976–1977
1977–1982
1982–1990
1990–1991
1991–1997
1997–2008
2008–present
Mississippi State (asst.)
Crowley HS
Mississippi State (asst.)
New Orleans (asst.)
Samford
LSU
Arkansas State

John Brady (born September 17, 1954 in McComb, Mississippi) is the head men's basketball coach for Arkansas State University.

Brady was previously the head men's basketball coach at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. On February 8, 2008, LSU dismissed Brady, [1] and named his assistant coach, Butch Pierre, the interim head coach for the remainder of the season. On March 21, 2008 Coach John Brady was named the 15th head basketball coach at Arkansas State University

Brady had coached the Tigers to an unlikely Final Four run in the 2006 NCAA Tournament, the fourth men's Final Four in LSU history.

Contents

[edit] Early life and education

Brady was born in 1954 in McComb, Mississippi, about 80 miles south of Jackson. He earned his BS from Belhaven College in 1976, where he played varsity basketball. He then received his master's in 1977 from Mississippi State University.

[edit] Coaching career

[edit] Early career

After a year as a graduate assistant at Mississippi State, Brady began coaching in the high school ranks of Louisiana. In 1981 Brady was named the Louisiana Sports Writers Association Class AAA "Coach of the Year." After returning to MSU to serve eight years as an assistant under Bob Boyd and Richard Williams, Brady was named head coach at Samford University in 1992. In six years, Brady became the winningest coach in Samford history, garnering a 89-77 record.

[edit] LSU

In 1997, Brady replaced the legendary Dale Brown as head coach at LSU. When Brady arrived, the program was under probation and stinging from a recruiting scandal. Brady's first two years were rough.

In 2000 the Tigers broke through, posting a 28-6 record and an NCAA Tournament Sweet 16 appearance. However, due to the loss of Stromile Swift and Jabari Smith to the 2000 NBA Draft, the Tigers could not carry their momentum to the next year, going 13-16 in 2001.

Brady's team entered the 2005-06 season unranked, but were coming off a solid season in which they went 20-10 and made the NCAA Tournament. Led by Glen "Big Baby" Davis and Tyrus Thomas, the Tigers won their first outright SEC regular season championship since 1985, and earned a #4 seed in the NCAA Tournament. After wins over Iona and Texas A&M, LSU defeated the #1 seed Duke and #2 seed Texas to make it to their first Final Four since 1986. Set at the RCA Dome in Indianapolis, Indiana, the 2006 Final Four was the first since 1980 to feature no #1 seeds (LSU, #2 UCLA, #3 Florida and #11 George Mason). Facing the #2 seed Bruins in the national semifinals, the Tigers were unable to solve UCLA's defense, losing 59-45, dropping LSU to 0-6 all-time in the men's Final Four (and 0-10 in all Final Four games, including an 0-4 mark in the women's Final Four). Despite the loss, the 2005-06 season will be remembered as one of the most successful in LSU men's basketball history. John Brady was fired in the middle of his 11th season as LSU's head basketball coach and just two seasons after the Tigers' latest Final Four appearance.

In 10 seasons at LSU, Brady compiled a 184-126 record, including two SEC Western division titles and four NCAA tournament appearances.

On February 08, 2008, Brady was fired from LSU. Earlier news reports stated that he would coach the Tennessee game on February 9th, but LSU officials stated that his termination was immediate. Brady's assistant coach, Butch Pierre, took over as the interim head coach. [2]

[edit] Arkansas State

On March 18, 2008, Brady was hired by Arkansas State as head basketball coach.[3]

[edit] Head coaching record

Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Samford (Atlantic Sun) (1991 — 1997)
1991–1992 Samford 11-18 7-7 T-3rd
1992–1993 Samford 17-10 7-5 T-2nd
1993–1994 Samford 10-18 4-12 8th
1994–1995 Samford 16-11 11-5 T-2nd
1995–1996 Samford 16-11 11-5 1st (West)
1996–1997 Samford 19-9 11-5 1st (West)
Samford: 89-77 51-39
LSU (SEC) (1997 — 2008)
1997–1998 LSU 9-18 2-14 6th (West)
1998–1999 LSU 12-15 4-12 6th (West)
1999–2000 LSU 28-6 12-4 1st (West) NCAA Sweet 16
2000–2001 LSU 13-16 2-14 6th (West)
2001–2002 LSU 19-15 6-10 T-4th (West) NIT 2nd Round
2002–2003 LSU 21-11 8-8 T-2nd (West) NCAA 1st Round
2003–2004 LSU 18-11 8-8 T-2nd (West) NIT 1st Round
2004–2005 LSU 20-10 12-4 T-1st (West) NCAA 1st Round
2005–2006 LSU 27-9 14-2 1st (West) NCAA Final Four
2006–2007 LSU 17-15 5-11 6th (West)
2007–2008 LSU 8-13 1-6 6th (West)
LSU: 192-139 74-93
Arkansas State (Sun Belt) (2008 — present)
2008–2009 Arkansas State 0-0 0-0
Arkansas State: 0-0 0-0
Total: 273-203

      National Champion         Conference Champion         Conference Tournament Champion


[edit] References

  1. ^ "Brady fired, will not coach Tennessee game Saturday -- 1:35 p.m.", The Daily Reveille, 2008-02-08. Retrieved on 2008-02-08. 
  2. ^ "Brady out as LSU basketball coach", Rivals.com, 2008-02-08. Retrieved on 2008-02-08. 
  3. ^ Discarded by LSU, Brady gets job at Arkansas State. ESPN.com. Retrieved on 2008-03-23.

[edit] External links