While in DeLand, Bria developed the program into a consistent force in the A-Sun, claiming three conference championships, a pair of bids to the NCAA Tournament and an impressive 12 postseason appearances.
The West Virginia native took over a Stetson team that had won only a combined 14 games the two seasons prior to her appointment, and in just three years, led the Hatters to her first of nine 20-win seasons and the program’s second NCAA Tournament appearance in 2011.
What followed was a combined 143 wins over the next six seasons, amassing another A-Sun tournament title and a trip to the Big Dance in 2012-13, and four appearances in the WNIT. The Hatters finished among the top-five in the conference in 14 of her 18 seasons at the helm, and in her farewell campaign in 2025-26, went 20-12 and returned to the WNIT for the seventh time.
Bria departed DeLand as the all-time winningest head coach, accumulating a 318-252 record in her legendary tenure.
Her efforts in Orlando from 1996-99 garnered her the top job at Ohio from 1999-2006, where she tallied 77 wins while leading the Bobcats. In between her stints in Ohio and her nearly two-decade career at Stetson from 2008-2026, Bria served as assistant coach under Mike Carry at West Virginia from 2006-2007 and on Katie Meier’s staff at Miami from 2007-2008.
Bria’s first head coaching role came at Texas Women’s from 1993-96, where she became the fourth-youngest head coach in the country.
She is a native of Charleston, West Virginia, eventually attending the University of Charleston in her hometown from 1985-90, with her historic career landing her in the Athletics Hall of Fame in 2003.
BRIA’S COACHING TIMELINE
|
YEARS
|
SCHOOL
|
ROLE
|
SEASONS
|
|
1990-92
|
Marshall
|
Graduate Assistant
|
Two
|
|
1992-93
|
Radford
|
Assistant Coach
|
One
|
|
1993-96
|
Texas Women’s (DII)
|
Head Coach (26-54)
|
Three
|
|
1996-99
|
UCF
|
Head Coach (50-36)
|
Three
|
|
1999-2006
|
Ohio
|
Head Coach (77-123)
|
Seven
|
|
2006-07
|
West Virginia
|
Assistant Coach
|
Two
|
|
2007-08
|
Miami
|
Assistant Coach
|
One
|
|
2008-26
|
Stetson
|
Head Coach (318-252)
|
18
|
|
2026-Pres.
|
UCF
|
Assistant Coach
|
First
|
QUICK HITS
- 471-465 (.503) all-time record as head coach
- Her 471 career wins as a head coach rank 35th among active DI coaches
- Secured 17 postseason appearances in 28 seasons as a DI head coach, including three NCAA Tournament trips, seven runs in the WNIT and a trio of WBI births
- All-time winningest head coach at Stetson (318-252)
- Ninth head coach in UCF history; led the Knights to their first NCAA Tournament appearance in her third and final season in 1998-99
- Three-time Atlantic Sun Coach of the Year
ABOUT UCF ATHLETICS
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