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Brad Huse


Bradley Richard Huse (born June 27, 1966) is an American college basketball coach and the former head men's basketball coach at Montana State University. On April 4, 2006, he was hired following the departure of Mick Durham.

During his first season back on the Bobcat bench he began building the program using a proven blueprint for success. He even dismissed a player for unspecified reasons.

A three-time conference coach of the year at the NAIA level and a Division I assistant, Huse's first Bobcats squad compiled an 11–19 record. MSU finished 8–8 in the Big Sky in 2007.

Huse brings a broad coaching background to the Bobcat program. The Missoula native sandwiched eight highly successful years as head coach at North Dakota's Jamestown College with two-year stints as an assistant at Montana State (1994–96) and Montana (2004–06). He rolled up a 184–60 record with the Jimmies, leading that squad to championships in five of his eight years there.

Just as important as the lessons learned at the end of the bench, Huse built a strong foundation during his time a couple of seats over. His coaching tutelage began as a cager at Montana Tech, first for former Indiana coach Kelvin Sampson, and later for Rick Dessing, who would put together a highly successful coaching career in the Frontier Conference. Huse was a three-time All-Frontier Conference honoree at Tech, earning NAIA All-America honors as a senior.

After three years as an engineer, Huse returned to Tech to work on the Diggers' coaching staff. After three years on Dessing's bench, Huse joined Mick Durham's coaching staff at Montana State in 1994.

Huse's arrival coincided with one of the finest two-year runs in Bobcat Basketball history. MSU posted its first 20-win season in nearly a decade in 1994–95, Huse's first as a Bobcat assistant, and the next year's squad authored one of the memorable chapters in Bobcat history. MSU rolled up a 21–9 record, winning the Big Sky regular season title and grabbing the Big Sky tourney title amidst the Worthington Arena frenzy.

After MSU's championship season, Huse landed the head coaching job at Jamestown College. After leading the Jimmies to 17–10 and 19–9 records in his first two seasons, the program took off. Jamestown won at least 20 games in each of Huse's final half-dozen campaigns there, improving in each of the last four seasons and culminating in a 30–3 record in 2003–04. That year, Jamestown won the DAC 10 tournament and regular season titles for the third straight year, finishing 18–0 in conference play. Jamestown finished 52–2 in league play from 2002 to 2004.


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