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BRAD HOLLAND, 13TH YEAR – UNIVERSITY OF
SAN DIEGO
The 2006-2007 season will be Brad
Holland's 13th at the helm of the USD
men's basketball program. Holland has
guided USD to 126 victories over the past
eight seasons, including a personal-best
20 win season in 1999-2000.
This past season he led the Toreros to an
18-12 overall mark and semi-final
appearance in the West Coast Conference
Tournament. Senior Nick Lewis was named
First Team All-WCC while senior forward
Corey Belser was tabbed the WCC Defender
of the Year and National Defender of the
Year by CollegeInsider.com. Freshman guard
Brandon Johnson was also tabbed a Freshman
All-American by CollegeInsider.com.
In 2004-05 he directed the Toreros to a
16-13 overall mark and 3rd place finish in
the competitive West Coast Conference. USD
tallied the biggest turnaround in Division
I basketball for wins with an improvement
of 12 victories. With the team's 69-61
home win over San Francisco on February
9th, Holland notched his 161st career USD
victory to become the program's all-time
winningest coach. CollegeInsider.com
tabbed Holland as the 2004-05 West Coast
Conference Coach of the Year. Seniors
Brandon Gay and Brice Vounang were both
named to the NABC District 15 Second Team.
In 2002-03 he guided USD to an impressive
18-12 mark; to the 2003 West Coast
Conference Basketball Championship title;
and to the program's first trip to the
NCAA Tournament in sixteen years. That
season was highlighted early on by the
team's 86-81 overtime win at UCLA. The
Toreros would go on to tally a 10-4 2nd
place finish in the WCC standings. With
the 2nd place mark the Toreros earned a
double-bye into the WCC Tournament
semifinals; they knocked off San Francisco
in the semi-final, then beat Gonzaga in
front of a national TV audience in the
title game to earn the league's automatic
bid into the NCAA Tournament. They gave
the Stanford Cardinal a battle before
falling 77-69 in NCAA 1st round action.
Senior center Jason Keep became the
program's first ever 1st Team NABC
District 15 selection
Four seasons ago, for the second straight
year, Holland guided the Toreros to a
16-13 mark and a semifinal appearance in
the West Coast Conference Championships.
The Toreros earned quality nonconference
wins over UC Irvine and San Diego State
(4th straight year), along with key WCC
wins over Santa Clara (on the road) and
San Francisco (twice). Senior guard Andre
Laws became the first Torero since 1987 to
earn NABC District 15 honors (2nd Team).
Six seasons ago he guided the Toreros to a
20-9 overall mark and 10-4 WCC finish. The
20 wins and 10 WCC victories were the
school's most since the 1987 season. For
his efforts, Holland was named the WCC
Coach of the Year by his peers for the
second straight season. The Toreros won
seven of their final ten games to finish
strong again, a trait of Holland coached
teams. The season was highlighted by WCC
wins at Gonzaga (82-70), and at home over
WCC champion Pepperdine (73-62). The
Toreros finished 11-2 at home, and were
9-7 on the road, including an excellent
5-2 WCC road mark.
He earned his first WCC Coach of the Year
honor during the 1998-99 campaign when he
directed USD to an 18-9 record and a
second place finish in the West Coast
Conference race (9-5). Highlights from the
1998-99 squad included the team's victory
over Texas in the Torero Tip-Off, and the
team's upset over then No. 25-ranked
Gonzaga (75-59). In 1997-98 Holland guided
USD to a 14-14 overall record and a third
straight semifinal appearance in the West
Coast Conference Tournament. The Toreros
won five of their final eight contests and
earned solid victories over WCC champion
Gonzaga, and two wins over WCC runner-up
Pepperdine.
Holland owns a twelve-year mark of 164-150
at USD -- including his two-year stint at
Cal State Fullerton, his career coaching
record sits at 187-181. During his USD
tenure he owns nine seasons with .500 or
better records.
In 1996-97 he directed the Toreros to a
17-11 record; the 17 wins were a
personal-best for Holland in six years as
a collegiate head coach. The Toreros
advanced to the semifinals of the WCC
Tournament after defeating Gonzaga in the
opener. They finished the season on a
strong note, winning seven of their final
nine. Included in the team's 17 victories
were solid nonconference wins against San
Jose State, Cal State Fullerton, UC Santa
Barbara and UC Irvine. Although they came
up short, the Toreros played Kansas to
seven points in Lawrence (72-79) and
Stanford to two (70-72) at the San Diego
Sports Arena.
The 1995-96 club, hit with a variety of
injuries throughout the year, finished
strong and ended the year at 14-14. In his
first year at USD Brad guided the Toreros
to an 11-16 overall record and a fifth
place finish in the West Coast Conference.
The season was highlighted early-on when
the Toreros downed visiting Notre Dame,
90-76, on December 3rd before 6,522 fans
at the San Diego Sports Arena.
Prior to USD Holland won rave reviews for
the manner in which he revitalized the Cal
State Fullerton men's basketball program.
During the 1992-93 season, his first as a
head coach, theTitans finished 15-12 and
posted the school's first winning record
in four years while going 10-8 in the Big
West Conference. Along the way they beat
every team in the conference except New
Mexico State, capping the year with an
exciting one-point home victory over
nationally ranked UNLV. His 1993-94 team,
which lost three players to season-ending
injuries prior to the start of the season,
finished 8-19 overall and eighth in Big
West play. They did have some memorable
victories -- they won at Nevada and UC
Santa Barbara's Thunderdome; they won for
the third year in a row at UC Irvine; and
they knocked off UNLV with a 84-75 victory
at the Thomas and Mack Center.
Prior to his appointment at Cal State
Fullerton, Holland was an assistant coach
on Jim Harrick's staff at UCLA from
August, 1988 to March, 1992. He helped the
Bruins return to national prominence while
compiling a 93-35 record that took them to
four NCAA tournaments. Success as a head
coach is merely the latest positive mark
Holland has made on Southern California
basketball. He was a basketball and
football star at Crescenta Valley High
School. He was a four-year basketball
letterman at UCLA and played with the Los
Angeles Lakers and two other National
Basketball Association teams before
retiring in 1982 due to a knee injury. He
entered private business and also was a
broadcaster for Prime Ticket from 1985 to
1988.
Holland was the last player recruited by
Coach John Wooden and became a part of
four Pac-10 championship teams at UCLA
from 1976 to 1979, two under Coach Gene
Bartow and two under Coach Gary
Cunningham. The Bruins went 102-17 during
Hollands's playing career and he was
honorable mention All-America and
second-team Academic All-America as a
senior. That year he averaged 17.5 points
and 4.8 assists and had a .598 field goal
percentage, the best ever by a Bruin
guard. He graduated in 1979 from UCLA with
a B.A.degree in Sociology.
The Lakers drafted Holland in 1979, the
14th player taken in the first round, and
went on to win the 1980 NBA championship.
The rookie guard scored eight points in
the decisive sixth game at Philadelphia.
He finished his playing career in 1981-82
with Washington and Milwaukee. Holland and
his wife, Leslie, reside in Carlsbad. They
have three children -- twins Kristin and
Lisa, seniors at USD, and a son, Kyle.
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