Reflections Magazine Issue #68 - Fall 2008 | Page 10

Athletics Feature Siena Who? In 1977, Braun was content as a young high school basketball coach in Racine, Wis., when then Siena Heights athletic director Orby Moss called. “He had just taken the job (at Siena Heights) and was somebody I knew back in Racine,”Braun said. “I didn’t have any interest in becoming a college coach. But he kept trying to recruit me to (Siena Heights). He said, ‘It’s a great opportunity.’I said, ‘I’m happy coaching in high school.’He said, ‘You can always go back to high school, so try college.’ He must have been a heck of a recruiter, because he convinced me to go to Adrian.” When Braun arrived at Siena Heights, he realized the immediate challenge at hand. For starters, Siena did not have a gym, except for the archaic half court in the basement of Sage Union. That meant practice and home games were played at the Piotter Center a few blocks from campus. Becoming a Saint Leaving Siena Once he got a taste of coaching college basketball, Braun was hooked. In fact, he thrived in the Siena environment, and not just on the basketball court. The man who was reluctant to even get into college coaching was now being courted by larger schools. One of those schools was Eastern Michigan, which offered Braun an associate head coaching position in 1985. “Siena had a real nice feel about it. It had a real warm atmosphere,”Braun said. “Every day somebody would come up, stop by the office and say hi. One of the Sisters would come by and give us a blessing for the day, and they would tell us how happy they were that I was there, which was unique. I just felt at home there.” Braun also got a chance to teach not only on the court, but in the classroom. “We played in a bingo hall. We practiced in a bingo hall. We recruited out of a bingo hall,”said Braun of the Piotter Center, which had a maximum capacity of about 200 people. “They were hanging off the stage there. When you talk about crackerbox, that was an all-time crackerbox.” “That was huge,” Braun said of Siena’s current athletic complex. “Our program kind of turned around in conjunction with that.” The results on the scoreboard proved that. Braun was 8-21 in his first season with the Saints, but Siena finished 24-6 the next. In fact, Braun did not have a losing season again, winning at least 20 games four times in compiling a 148-103 record with the Saints. And he said the relationship between academics and athletics was another distinctive aspect of Siena Heights. “There’s some tremendous people who are still associated with Siena Heights who not only were great for the community academically, but they were very supportive of basketball,”said Braun, rattling off familiar Siena names such as Doug Miller, Pat Palmer and Bob Gordon. “That’s something a lot of big colleges miss. These are people who had hard jobs on the academic side, but they would always manage to get over and were big supporters of our program.” And he still misses meals at those “mom and pop” restaurants in Adrian. “You felt like you were