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C A L I F O R N I A B A S K E T B A L L

THE COACHING STAFF

HEAD COACH BEN BRAUN

50

ASSOCIATE HEAD COACH

LOUIS REYNAUD

56

ASSISTANT COACH

GREG GOTTLIEB

57

ASSISTANT COACH

MIKE ROBERTS

58

SUPPORT STAFF

59

STRENGTH & CONDITIONING

62

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C A L I F O R N I A B A S K E T B A L L

Now in his 12th season as head men’s bas-ketball coach at the University of California, Ben Braun has established a Golden Bear program that has earned respect and admiration both in the Bay Area and across the country.

During his tenure at Cal, Braun has directed the Bears to more postseason appearances and more postseason victories than any coach in school history, including five NCAA Tournament berths and an NIT championship in 1999.

Two of his players have earned Pac-10 Player of the Year honors – Ed Gray in 1997 and Sean Lampley in 2001 – while Leon Powe was the 2004 Pac-10 Freshman of the Year. Overall, Braun’s charges have received All-Pac-10 sta-tus eight times, Pac-10 All-Freshman notice on seven occasions and P10 All-Academic ac-colades 14 times.

As a result of his success, not only at Cal, but during previous head coaching stops at Eastern Michigan and Siena Heights, Braun now ranks 10th among all active Division I coaches with 535 victories. In fact, Braun is second among current Pac-10 coaches in overall wins and Pac-10 wins (104).

The 1997 Pac-10 Coach of the Year and a fi-nalist for the 2003 Naismith National Coach of the Year, Braun enters the 2007-08 campaign with a 202-138 record with the Bears and a 30-year ca-reer mark of 535-373. He ranks second to Nibs Price (1925-54, 449-294) in both longevity and wins in Cal annals, while his Cal winning percent-age (.594) is the best at the school since Hall of Famer Pete Newell guided the Bears to a 119-44 mark from 1955-60.

Over the course of his time at Cal, Braun has

been rewarded with contract extensions three times, including his current contract that lasts through the 2010-11 season.

Generally regarded as one of college basket-ball’s top teachers and strategists, Braun brought his energetic style of coaching to Cal in Septem-ber 1996.

During his initial season at Cal in 1996-97, Braun took a team that was predicted to finish in the conference’s lower half, molded it into one that tied for second in the league and reached the NCAA Sweet 16 with tournament victories over Princeton and Villanova. In addition, the 23-9 overall mark gave Braun a school record for most wins by a Bear coach in his first year with the program.

In 1998-99, Braun’s club became the first Cal team ever to beat three Top 10 schools in the

Head Coach

Ben Braun

Wisconsin ’75

12th Year at California

Cal Record: 202-138

Career Record: 535-373

“There are so many things you should look for in a coach at Berkeley, and he answers about all of them. I’ve talked to coaches who know him personally and have coached against him, and there’s no hint of any real weakness. He’s a teacher, a coach who can make players better. He’s creative offensively, and there aren’t too many college coaches who are, in my view, because they all seem to play the same offense. He screens on the ball, which you don’t see many college players do. To defend it is very difficult.”

– Hall of Famer and former Cal head coach Pete Newell

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C A L I F O R N I A B A S K E T B A L L

same season, defeating North Carolina, UCLA and Arizona during the course of the year. Then, after earning a bid to the NIT, the Bears went on a 5-0 run to capture the title – Cal’s first postsea-son tournament championship since the Bears won the 1959 NCAA crown. Cal finished the 1998-99 campaign with a 22-11 record.

A year later, Braun took a freshman-dominat-ed squad back to the postseason as the Bears reached the quarterfinals of the NIT. On Jan. 15, 2000, he picked up his 400th career victory with a 71-65 win at Oregon State.

In 2000-01, the Bears returned to the NCAA Tournament, finishing with a 20-11 record, and Lampley – Braun’s first recruit at Cal – became the school’s all-time leading scorer late in his se-nior campaign, finishing with 1,776 points.

The Bears again won 23 games and tied

for second in the Pac-10 race in 2001-02. Cal reached the semifinals of the conference tourna-ment by defeating UCLA in the opening round and earned a No. 6 seed in the NCAA playoffs, where the Bears toppled Penn before falling to Pittsburgh.

In 2003, Cal reached the second round of the NCAA Tournament behind All-Pac-10 forwards Joe Shipp and Amit Tamir. Shipp ended his ca-reer with the No. 3 position on the Bears’ all-time scoring list, while teammate Brian Wethers fin-ished in the No. 15 position.

Behind tournament MVP Leon Powe, Cal defeated USC and Oregon to reach the Pac-10 Tournament final for the first time ever in 2006. The Bears then earned a No. 7 regional seed in the NCAA Tournament and finished the year with a 20-11 mark. On Nov. 21, 2005, Cal defeated

Long Beach State, 88-69, to give Braun his 500th career win.

Last year’s squad, despite playing short-handed most of the season due to injuries to a pair of key post players, reached the semifinals of the Pac-10 Tournament for the fourth time in six years. The Bears upset top-seed and fourth-ranked UCLA, 76-69, in overtime in the quarter-finals, and freshman Ryan Anderson was voted to the all-tournament team.

Although just 53 years of age, Braun already has 30 years of experience as a head coach, including 11 highly successful years at Eastern Michigan, where he guided the Eagles to four postseason berths, including three NCAA ap-pearances. During his tenure there, Braun accu-mulated a record of 185-132, averaging almost 18 wins per season, and was named Mid-American

“I’ve been impressed with Ben for a long time, and he has done a great job at Cal. He has such high personal standards, and being at a school with extremely high standards is a great match. As a coach, he has a special appreciation for the game of basketball. He understands the game in a very logical sense. and he teaches it that way. His teams are not only fundamentally sound, but they are smart in being able to take advantage of situations during the course of the game. He does a good job giving his players freedom with a solid structure.”

– Duke head coach Mike Krzyzewski

“Ben is a coach that I admire and respect. His teams are always well pre-pared, and he’s done a remarkable job of building a strong tradition at Cal. Ben is a credit to our profession.”

– Arizona head coach Lute Olson

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C A L I F O R N I A B A S K E T B A L L

Conference Coach of the Year three times. In addition, Braun coached at Siena Heights College for eight years, taking the NAIA school to a 148-103 record and five postseason tourna-ments.

Braun’s players have proved to be successful both on the court and in the classroom, with Gold-en Bears earning Pac-10 All-Academic recogni-tion 14 times under his direcrecogni-tion. In 2001, three players – Morgan Lingle, Dennis Gates and Ryan Forehan-Kelly – were first-team selections, while Donte Smith was an honorable mention pick, giv-ing Cal more than twice as many all-academic members as any other school in the conference. The Bears have had at least one all-academic pick each of the last eight years, including Alex Pribble, a second-team choice in 2005 and a first-team selection in both 2006 and ’07.

Braun began his career as an assistant coach at Park High School in Racine, Wis. Within two years, he accepted the head coaching job at Siena Heights. After an 8-21 debut season in 1977-78, his teams posted a 140-82 record over the next seven years, including four 20-win campaigns. His squads qualified for National As-sociation of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) post-season tournaments five times. During his time at Siena Heights, he not only coached, but also taught English and Physical Education classes at the school. In the summer of 1999, Braun was inducted into the first class of the Siena Heights Athletic Hall of Fame.

Braun accepted the position of associate head coach at Eastern Michigan prior to the start of the 1985-86 season, but midway through the year, on Jan. 15, 1986, he was elevated to interim

head coach. Success came quickly, as within two years he had the Eagles in the NCAA Tour-nament for the first time ever.

In 1989, Braun served as head coach of the U.S. men’s basketball team at the Maccabiah Games. He took an internationally inexperienced squad into the championship round before bow-ing to the host Israeli team in the final.

During his career, Braun has coached more than a dozen players who have gone on to play in the NBA. Among those he has coached at Cal are Ed Gray, Michael Stewart, Sean Marks, Francisco Elson, Sean Lampley, Jamal Sampson and Leon Powe. Tony Gonzalez, now an All-Pro tight end for the NFL’s Kansas City Chiefs, played basketball for Braun in 1996-97. He also coached Grant Long and Earl Boykins while at Eastern Michigan.

“Coach Braun pushed me every single day to become better. He pushed me to make my team win and my teammates better. He never let up. I can talk to Coach Braun about anything in my life. He listens to his play-ers. I feel like we have a real friendship for life.”

– 2006 All-American Leon Powe

Coaching Staff Profiles

“You always know what Coach Braun expects of you – he doesn’t have to say anything. Work hard and give your best effort – that’s all he asks.”

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C A L I F O R N I A B A S K E T B A L L

A native of Chicago, Braun graduated from New Trier High School, where he starred in both basketball and baseball. He went on to play one year of basketball at the University of Wisconsin-LaCrosse before he transferred to the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He earned a teaching degree in English in June of 1975 with a minor in African-American Studies. Five years later, he earned his master’s degree in guidance and counseling from Siena Heights.

Braun and his wife, Jessica, reside in Berkeley.

BEN BRauN’S COaChINg RECORd

Overall Pac-10

Year Record Record Postseason

CALIFORNIA 2006-07 16-17 6-12/8th 2005-06 20-11 12-6/3rd NCAA 1st Round 2004-05 13-16 6-12/T8th 2003-04 13-15 9-9/T4th 2002-03 22-9 13-5/3rd NCAA 2nd Round 2001-02 23-9 12-6/T2nd NCAA 2nd Round 2000-01 20-11 11-7/T4th NCAA 1st Round 1999-00 18-15 7-11/7th NIT Quarterfinals 1998-99 22-11 8-10/T5th NIT Champions 1997-98 12-15 8-10/T5th 1996-97 23-9 12-6/T2nd NCAA Sweet 16

Pac-10 Coach of the Year

California Totals 202-138 104-94 EASTERN MIChIGAN

1995-96 25-6 14-4/1st MAC Champions

NCAA Tournament MAC Coach of the Year

1994-95 20-10 12-6/3rd NIT Tournament 1993-94 15-12 10-8/T5th 1992-93 13-17 8-10/6th 1991-92 9-22 4-12/8th 1990-91 26-7 13-3/1st MAC Champions NCAA Sweet 16 MAC Coach of the Year

1989-90 19-13 8-8/5th

1988-89 17-12 8-8/4th Coach of U.S. Maccabiah Games team

1987-88 22-8 14-2/1st MAC Champions

NCAA Tournament MAC Coach of the Year

1986-87 14-15 8-8/4th

1985-86 5-10 4-10/T9th Named interim coach Jan. 15, 1986 Eastern Michigan 185-132 103-79 SIENA hEIGhTS 1984-85 18-15 1983-84 15-14 1982-83 21-12

1981-82 19-13 Michigan NAIA Coach of

the Year

1980-81 22-11

1979-80 21-11

1978-79 24-6

1977-78 8-21

Siena Heights Totals 148-103

CarEEr TOTalS 535-373

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C A L I F O R N I A B A S K E T B A L L

BEN BRauN CaREER hIghlIghTS

• Led Cal to five NCAA Tournaments (1997, 2001, ’02, ’03, ’06) – school record for most NCAA

appearances by a Cal coach

• Guided Cal to the NCAA Sweet 16 in 1997 and to the second round in both 2002 and ’03

• Coached Cal to the 1999 National Invitation Tournament championship – the Bears’ first post

season title since winning the NCAA crown in 1959

• Holds the school record for most postseason appearances by a Cal coach (5 NCAA, 2 NIT) and

most consecutive postseason invitations (5 – 1999-2003)

• Holds the school record for most postseason wins by a Cal coach, posting an 11-6 record

• Holds the school record for most 20-win seasons by a Cal coach (6)

• Coached two Pac-10 Players of the Year – Ed Gray (1997) and Sean Lampley (2001)

• Coached Pac-10 Freshman of the Year Leon Powe (2004)

• His teams have produced eight upper division Pac-10 finishes in 11 seasons

• Has led Cal to the postseason in seven of 10 eligible seasons

• Ranks second on Cal’s all-time victories list with 202

• Ranks 10th among active Division I coaches with 535 career wins

• The first Cal coach since Pete Newell (1954-60) to have a winning conference record (104-94)

• Voted the 1997 Pac-10 Coach of the Year – the first Cal coach ever to receive the honor

• Was a finalist for the 2003 Naismith National Coach of the Year award

• His players have earned All-Pac-10 honors eight times and Pac-10 All-Freshman honors on

seven occasions

• His players have been named to the Pac-10 All-Academic team 14 times

• Led Cal to a 23-9 record during the 1996-97 season, setting a school record for most wins by a

Cal coach in his first year

• In 1998-99, guided Cal to three wins over Top 10 teams – North Carolina, Arizona and UCLA –

the first time in school history the Bears beat three Top 10 schools in one year

• Member of the Ethics Committee for the National Association of Basketball Coaches

Coaching Staff Profiles

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C A L I F O R N I A B A S K E T B A L L

Coaching Staff Profiles

PaC-10 aWaRdS uNdER BEN BRauN

1997 Ed Gray, Pac-10 Player of the Year 1998 Sean Lampley, Pac-10 All-Freshman

Geno Carlisle, Pac-10 All-Newcomer Michael Gill, Pac-10 All-Newcomer Thomas Kilgore, Pac-10 All-Newcomer 2000 Sean Lampley, All-Pac-10

Donte Smith, Pac-10 All-Academic (HM) 2001 Sean Lampley, Pac-10 Player of the Year

Ryan Forehan-Kelly, Pac-10 All-Academic (1st team) Dennis Gates, Pac-10 All-Academic (1st team) Morgan Lingle, Pac-10 All-Academic (1st team) Donte Smith, Pac-10 All-Academic (HM) 2002 Jamal Sampson, Pac-10 All-Freshman

Amit Tamir, Pac-10 All-Freshman

Dennis Gates, Pac-10 All-Academic (1st team) Donte Smith, Pac-10 All-Academic (HM) 2003 Joe Shipp, All-Pac-10

Amit Tamir, All-Pac-10

Erik Bond, Pac-10 All-Academic (HM) Amit Tamir, Pac-10 All-Academic (1st team) Richard Midgley, Pac-10 All-Freshman

2004 Leon Powe, Pac-10 Freshman of the Year, All-Pac-10 Marquise Kately, Pac-10 All-Freshman

Ayinde Ubaka, Pac-10 All-Freshman (HM) A.J. Diggs, Pac-10 All-Academic (2nd team) Amit Tamir, Pac-10 All-Academic (1st team) 2005 Alex Pribble, Pac-10 All-Academic (2nd team) 2006 Leon Powe, All-Pac-10

Ayinde Ubaka, All-Pac-10

DeVon hardin, All-Pac-10 (hM) Theo Robertson, All-Pac-10 (hM)

Alex Pribble, Pac-10 All-Academic (1st team) 2007 Ryan Anderson, Pac-10 All-Freshman, All-Pac-10

Alex Pribble, Pac-10 All-Academic (1st team) Ayinde Ubaka, All-Pac-10 (HM)

“One of Ben’s greatest qualities is his ability to pro-mote and push up others. Besides all of his on-the-court successes over the past three decades, Ben has produced some outstanding leaders who are all now Division I head basketball coaches. The fact that he has produced seven head basketball coaches speaks volumes about the type of person Ben is.

One of the best lessons I have learned from Ben over the years is to enjoy the journey. Ben gets up early each day, exercises and, of course, eats a good meal (it was not Bilbo Baggins who created the term ‘sec-ond breakfast’).

Ben is amazingly consistent. His longevity in this business is testimony to that. He has a great concern for his student-athletes and always preaches academ-ics, rest, eating right and, of course, his famous: be sure and eat fresh fruit.

Ben is an outstanding leader, mentor and friend. I have learned and grown as a coach and a person over the past decade. He is a great example for coaches and players alike.”

– Cal Associate Head Coach Louis Reynaud

BEN BRauN COaChINg TREE

Keith Dambrot head Coach, Akron

Assistant under Braun at Eastern Michigan from 1986-89

Stan heath head Coach, South Florida

Played for Braun at Eastern Michigan from 1985-87

George Nessman head Coach, San Jose State

Assistant under Braun at Cal from 2004-05

Joe Pasternack head Coach, New Orleans

Assistant under Braun at Cal from 2002-07

Charles E. Ramsey head Coach, Eastern Michigan

Assistant under Braun at EMU from 1990-03 and at Cal from 1997-2001

Al Sandifer head Coach, Siena heights

Assistant under Braun at Siena Heights from 1983-85

Gary Waters head Coach, Cleveland State

Assistant under Braun at Eastern Michigan from 1989-93

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C A L I F O R N I A B A S K E T B A L L

Coaching Staff Profiles

Louis Reynaud, a native Californian who was born and raised in San Francisco, is in his 11th season with the Golden Bear program and sixth as associate head coach after serving five years as an assistant coach.

Reynaud is well known in the coaching profes-sion and has the reputation as an excellent coach and administrator with outstanding organizational and leadership skills. There are very few areas in the Cal basketball program in which Reynaud is not directly involved. Among his many duties are recruiting, scouting and game preparation, super-vising support staff, and overseeing the valuable “Gold Team” walk-ons. Reynaud also supervises a unique group of student managers. He is the position coach for the Bears’ perimeter players.

Prior to coming to Cal, Reynaud compiled an 84-31 record as head basketball coach at nearby De La Salle High School and led the Spartans to league titles in 1994 and ’96. Reynaud was a two-time Bay Valley Athletic League Coach of the Year, and his 1996 team captured the Division I NorCal championship and finished second in the state, earning a No. 1 ranking in the Bay Area for the first time in school history.

Reynaud had his first head coaching op-portunity at St. Patrick-St. Vincent High School in Vallejo from 1990-93. He directed the Bruins to a 69-39 record, three 20-win seasons and one Sac- Joaquin Section title. From 1986-90, Reynaud served as assistant varsity basketball coach at De La Salle HS.

In 1997, Reynaud was selected as head coach of the West Squad at the Magic Johnson Round

Ball Classic for high school All-Americans, and he directed the prestigious ABCD summer camp for five years.

In addition to his coaching experience, Reynaud served as Dean of Students at De La Salle from 1993-97 and as Dean of Students at St. Patrick-St. Vincent HS from 1990-93.

As a high school player, Reynaud was a stand-out at Archbishop Riordan High School in San Francisco and played for the late Lyle Newcomer at Skyline College in San Bruno.

Reynaud received his bachelor’s degree in liberal studies along with his teaching credential from San Francisco State in 1982 and a master’s degree in health/physical education from Saint Mary’s College in 1995. Reynaud and his wife, Cheryl, have one daughter, Lauren, and reside in the East Bay.

Associate

Head Coach

Louis Reynaud

San Francisco State ’82

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C A L I F O R N I A B A S K E T B A L L

Gregg Gottlieb joined the Golden Bears as an assistant coach last summer after eight seasons at San Diego State, where the Aztecs’ achievements included a Mountain West Conference champi-onship in 2006. Gottlieb’s tireless work ethic and coaching skills, paired with strong abilities in player development and recruiting, make him an excel-lent addition to the Cal coaching staff.

Gottlieb started his coaching career as an assistant at Cal Poly in San Luis Obispo, where he was part of staff that helped turn the program around from a one-win season in 1994-95 to a 16-win campaign in 1995-96. In July 1997, Gottlieb moved to Sacramento State, where he served as assistant coach and recruiting coordinator. He then joined the San Diego State staff in 1999 under head coach Steve Fisher.

Gottlieb began his tenure at San Diego State as director of basketball operations, a position he held for three years before being elevated to assis-tant coach and recruiting coordinator prior to the 2002-03 season. While at SDSU, Gottlieb helped the Aztecs earn postseason berths four of the past six years. In 2006-07, San Diego State fin-ished 22-11 and reached the second round of the National Invitation Tournament. In 2005-06, the Aztecs were 24-9 overall and 13-3 in the MWC, capturing both the regular-season and tournament league titles, as well as an NCAA Tournament nod. San Diego State also received an NCAA bid in 2002, when the Aztecs finished 21-12, and they reached the NIT second round in 2004.

Among the players Gottlieb helped recruit to San Diego State are all-conference performers Marcus Slaughter, Brandon Heath and Jerome

Habel. Each of SDSU’s recruiting classes was nationally ranked the past four seasons.

On the court, Gottlieb was a standout perform-er at El Modena High School in Orange, Calif., and a two-year letterman at Drake University in Iowa. After his playing career, he returned to Cali-fornia and earned his bachelor’s degree in his-tory with a minor in business from UCLA in 1995. He received an MBA from Cal Poly in 1997.

Gottlieb comes from an athletic family, as his father, Bob, is a former college coach who worked under Hall of Famer Jack Hartman at Kansas State and Eddie Sutton at Creighton. Bob Gottlieb was also head coach at Jacksonville and Wisconsin-Milwaukee. In addition, his brother, Doug, was a star guard at Oklahoma State and currently serves as a basketball analyst for ESPN.

Coaching Staff Profiles

Assistant Coach

Gregg Gottlieb

uCla ’95

(10)

C A L I F O R N I A B A S K E T B A L L

Mike Roberts joined the Golden Bear coach-ing staff for the 2007-08 season after servcoach-ing one year as Cal’s video coordinator. A former Final Four player as an Indiana Hoosier under Mike Davis who later worked for Bob Knight as a graduate assistant at Texas Tech, Roberts will be responsible for overseeing the team’s academic program and recruiting, as well as continuing his work with scouting and prepara-tion. His experience as a front-line player will also be valuable in the grooming of the Bears’ highly touted group of big men.

As video coordinator for men’s basketball in 2006-07, Roberts was involved in game prepa-ration, self scouting, game film breakdown and other administrative duties. Roberts arrived

in Berkeley after one year in Lubbock, Texas, where he aided the coaching staff in practices, supervised academic progress of the players and was an analyst for Texas Tech radio and TV broadcasts.

Roberts also participated in the ESPN 2006 production “Knight School,” in which the Texas Tech coaching staff evaluated 16 walk-ons who vied for one spot on the Red Raiders’ roster.

As an undergraduate at Indiana who was recruited by Knight, Roberts was a member of the Hoosiers’ basketball team for five seasons, helping Indiana to three NCAA Tournaments, including a national runner-up finish in 2002, and one NIT. A two-time Academic All-Big Ten honoree and recipient of a Big Ten Sportsman-ship Award, he served as team captain as a senior in 2004-05.

Roberts earned his bachelor’s degree in his-tory with a certificate in management from In-diana in 2005 and his master’s degree in inter-disciplinary studies from Texas Tech in 2006. He was born and raised in Terre Haute, Ind., until his family moved to Eugene, Ore., while he was in high school. He graduated from South Eugene HS before attending New Hampton Prep in New Hampshire for one year.

Assistant Coach

Mike Roberts

Indiana ’05

1st Year at California

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