Ron Bradley

Ron Bradley (born February 9, 1951) is a men's college basketball coach, currently an assistant coach with the USC Upstate Spartans.[1] He has previously served as associate head coach at DePaul, Clemson, James Madison University,[2] assistant coach for the University of Maryland, College Park[3] and Longwood University,[4] and the head coach at Radford University,[5] where he led the team to its first NCAA tournament.[6] He is a 1973 graduate of the Eastern Nazarene College, where he also served as head coach.[3] In 2009, he was one of 20 semifinalists[7][8][9] and later was named assistant coach of the year.[10]

Ron Bradley
Current position
TitleAssistant coach
TeamUSC Upstate
ConferenceBig South
Biographical details
Born (1951-02-09) February 9, 1951
Springfield, Massachusetts
Playing career
1970–1974Eastern Nazarene
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1976–1981Eastern Nazarene
1981–1989Maryland (asst.)
1991–2002Radford
2002–2003James Madison (asst.)
2003–2010Clemson (asst.)
2011–2015DePaul (asst.)
2016–2018Longwood (asst.)
2018–presentUSC Upstate (asst.)
Head coaching record
Overall193–124 (.609)
Accomplishments and honors
Championships
Big South Tournament championship (1998)
Big South regular season championship (1992, 2000, 2001)

Head coaching record

Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
Radford Highlanders (Big South Conference) (1991–2002)
1991–92 Radford 20–912–21st
1992–93 Radford 16–158–85th
1993–94 Radford 20–813–52nd
1994–95 Radford 16–129–74th
1995–96 Radford 14–138–65th
1996–97 Radford 15–138–63rd
1997–98 Radford 20–1010–22ndNCAA First Round
1998–99 Radford 20–88–22nd
1999–00 Radford 18–1012–21st
2000–01 Radford 19–1012–21st
2001–02 Radford 15–169–53rd
Radford: 193–124 (.609)109–47 (.699)
Total:193–124 (.609)

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

[11]

References

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