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Brad
Soderberg was introduced on April 12,
2002, as the 23rd head coach in the
history of the Billikens' basketball
program. He led Saint Louis into a new era
in 2005-06 as the Billikens joined the
Atlantic 10 Conference after a 10-year
tenure in Conference USA.
The Billikens were the most surprising
team in the A-10 in 2005-06 as Saint Louis
(16-13 overall, 10-6 A-10) finished tied
for third with La Salle. The Billikens far
surpassed expectations as SLU was
predicted to finish in the bottom half of
the league by college basketball preseason
prognosticators. The third-place finish
was the Bills' best since they finished
second in The Great Midwest Conference
during the 1994-95 season.
In his first two seasons at the Billikens'
helm, Soderberg directed the Bills into
the NIT each year after being eliminated
in the Conference USA postseason
tournament semifinals. He became the third
Billiken head coach to guide SLU into the
postseason in his first two seasons,
joining legendary Eddie Hickey (1948 and
1949 NIT) and John Benington (1959 and
1960 NIT). The Billikens were in the
postseason in back-to-back years for the
first time since 1994-95 and 1995-96.
He was the first Billiken coach to guide
his club into the C-USA Tournament
semifinals in back-to-back years. Except
for the Billikens 6-10 mark in their final
season in C-USA in 2004-05, Soderberg has
posted a winning conference record in
every other season of his collegiate head
coaching career.
In Soderberg's first season, the Billikens
were 16-14 overall and 9-7 in C-USA,
finishing in fourth-place in the league
race. That matched the Bills' best league
finish which occurred when national
Freshman of the Year Larry Hughes led the
Billikens to fourth place with a 10-6 mark
in 1997-98. Soderberg's second campaign
produced a 19-13 overall record and a
sixth-place tie with Louisville in C-USA
at 9-7.
The Billikens closed the 2003 regular
season with a seven-game win streak, which
was its best C-USA winning streak in the
eight-year history of the league. Saint
Louis stretched that winning streak to
eight with a victory in the quarterfinal
round in the C-USA Tournament, and that
was its best winning streak since the
1997-98 Billikens opened their season with
eight consecutive wins.
For his accomplishments during the 2002-03
season, Soderberg was named C-USA Coach of
the Year by CollegeInsider.com. Soderberg
spent one year as an assistant coach at
Saint Louis under Lorenzo Romar. The
Billikens (15-16 overall, 9-7 C-USA)
finished fifth overall in Conference USA
in 2001-02.
Soderberg came to Saint Louis after a
six-year run at the University of
Wisconsin. He served as the Badgers'
interim head coach after Dick Bennett's
retirement early in the 2000-01 season.
Bennett's unexpected retirement came in
the wake of the Badgers' magical run to
the 2000 NCAA Final Four. During his
tenure at Wisconsin, Soderberg helped
guide the Badgers to four NCAA Tournaments
and one NIT bid.
He compiled a 16-10 record and became the
first Wisconsin coach to lead the Badgers
to the NCAA Tournament in his first
season. He was just the fourth Badgers
coach ever to win his Big Ten debut and
the first since 1911 to win his first
eight games.
Soderberg moved to Wisconsin in April
1995, after two seasons as head coach at
South Dakota State. He guided the
Jackrabbits to a 36-18 (.667) record from
1993-95, including a 21-15 mark in the
highly regarded NCAA Division II North
Central Conference.
Soderberg served as head coach at Loras
College in Dubuque, Iowa, from 1988-93 and
led the Duhawks to a 79-45 (.637) record
during his five-year stint. Loras was
runner-up in the 1992 National Catholic
Basketball Tournament, and Soderberg was
named tournament Coach of the Year.
Soderberg served as assistant coach at
Loras in 1987-88 before becoming head
coach.
Prior to his arrival at Loras, Soderberg
was an assistant coach at UW-Stevens Point
(1984-85), graduate assistant at Colorado
State (1985-86) and assistant coach at
Fort Hays State (1986-87).
Soderberg is a 1985 graduate of UW-Stevens
Point, where he was a guard and team
captain for Bennett's 1984 NAIA national
runner-up, a team that included Terry
Porter, who is a former head coach of the
NBA's Milwaukee Bucks. Soderberg and
Porter started all 32 games in the
Pointers' backcourt in '83-84, and
Soderberg was a first-team All-Conference
and All-NAIA District 14 selection. He
earned the "Hustle Award" at the '84 NAIA
Tournament. Soderberg shot 56 percent from
the field and 83 percent from the free
throw line in his two years at UW-Stevens
Point.
A native of Stevens Point, Wis., Soderberg
attended Pacelli High, where his father
was head basketball coach before retiring.
He has a bachelor's degree in physical
education from UW-Stevens Point and a
master's in physical education from
Colorado State (1986).
Coaching runs in the family tree.
Soderberg's brother, Kurt, spent five
years as head coach at Milwaukee's
Marquette High School from 1998-2002. He
moved to be head coach at Northland
College in Ashland, Wis., from 2002-04,
and is now head coach at Olivet College in
Olivet, Mich.
The 44-year-old Soderberg and his wife,
Linda, have two sons, Kramer and Davis,
and a daughter, Daley.
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