LSU Gold

D-D Breaux Season 2024

LSU
D-D Breaux
Title
Co-Head Coach
Email
ddbreaux@lsu.edu
Phone
(225) 578-5050
Hometown
Donaldsonville, La.
Alma Mater
LSU (1976)

2019 SEC Coach of the Year
2017 Louisiana Sports Hall of Fame
2017 Louisiana Coach of the Year
2017 National Coach of the Year
2017 Central Region Coach of the year
2017 SEC Coach of the Year
USA Gymnastics Region 8 Hall of Fame
2015 SEC Coach of the Year
2015 Central Region Coach of the Year
2014 National Coach of the Year
2014 Central Region Coach of the Year
2013 Central Region Coach of the Year
2010 Central Region Coach of the Year
2006 Central Region Coach of the Year
2005 Central Region Coach of the Year
2005 SEC Coach of the Year
2002 Central Region Coach of the Year
2000 SEC Coach of the Year
1999 Central Region Coach of the Year
1995 SEC Coach of the Year
1994 SEC Coach of the Year
1993 SEC Coach of the Year
1990 SEC Coach of the Year
1988 National Coach of the Year Finalist

With each passing season, LSU gymnastics continues to collect more honors and titles to its storied program, and head coach D-D Breaux has been the catalyst behind LSU’s sustained success.

Led by Breaux, LSU has seen increasing accomplishments that includes 17 NCAA Championships appearances in the last 18 seasons, seven NCAA Championship Finals since 2008 and 14 individual national titles since 2002.

Under Breaux’s leadership and coaching, LSU has reached new heights in individual and team success.

Now entering her 43nd season as the mastermind of the LSU gymnastics program, Breaux exudes the same passion and enthusiasm to coach the Fighting Tigers as she did in her first season on the job.

Breaux has worked tirelessly to make LSU gymnastics the most exciting and family-friend event in the city, state and country on a Friday night. Tiger fans have continually set the bar higher with record attendance numbers set and their support has led the program to a 53-3 record at home over the last eight seasons.

Friday night inside the Maravich Center is a major attraction in Baton Rouge, and the attendance records have been rewritten thanks to the hard work by Breaux and her staff. Over the last six seasons particularly, LSU has improved its average attendance numbers every season.

Twenty-four of the 25 best attended meets in school history have come in that time span. LSU has exceeded 13,000 fans on four different occasions and in 2018, the program sold out the PMAC against Alabama and Kentucky. LSU set the single-meet attendance record with 13,729 in the arena to watch the Tigers take down the Crimson Tide.

In competition, LSU has put together one of the most consistent programs in the nation with four-straight NCAA Championship Finals appearances, three-straight SEC meet championships and two SEC regular season titles.

As the “Dean of Coaches” at LSU, Breaux has represented the University at the highest level both in the gym and, most importantly, in the classroom for 42 years. Her dedication to the student-athlete on an individual basis has transcended into academic success, community involvement, Coach of the Year honors, SEC Championships, NCAA Regional Championships and top-10 national rankings throughout her tenure. In fact, there is a tremendous balance between academics and athletics as LSU has produced 250 All-Americans and 154 Scholastic All-Americans during Breaux’s tenure.

Maintaining Excellence

During her tenure Breaux has established and maintained LSU’s reputation as one of the premier collegiate gymnastics programs in the country. Under her tutelage, the Tigers have placed among the nation’s top-10 teams 30 times in 42 seasons, finishing a program-best second in 2016, 2017 and 2019, third in 2014, fourth in 1988 and 2018, fifth in 2008 and 2013 and sixth on four separate occasions.

LSU has also placed among the top three in regional competition on 34 separate occasions. The teams have won regional titles 18 times in four different decades, including back-to-back first-place regional finishes in 2008 and 2009 and the streak of seven straight from 2013-19.

Under her leadership, LSU has captured 15 individual national titles, 250 All-America honors and 89 All-SEC selections.

Additionally, Breaux’s Tigers won the inaugural SEC Championship title in 1981 and returned to the top once again in 2017, 2018 and 2019. The three-peat marked the fifth time in SEC history a team has won three or more SEC titles in a row. Her team has also gone on to finish second on five occasions and third seven other times.

For her dedication to the sport and her teams’ numerous accomplishments, Breaux has been recognized by her peers time and time again. In the summer of 2009, Breaux received one of the highest honors as she was voted into the USA Gymnastics Region 8 Hall of Fame. Breaux was first recognized as the National Coach of the Year in 2014 and once again in 2017.

She has been named the SEC Coach of the Year on nine occasions (1990, 1993, 1994, 1995, 2000, 2005, 2015, 2017 and 2019), NCAA Central Regional Coach of the Year nine times (1999, 2002, 2005, 2006, 2010, 2013, 2014, 2015 and 2017) and was a finalist for National Coach of the Year honors in 1988 when she guided the Tigers to a fourth-place finish at the NCAA Championships.

To this day, the accolades continue to roll in for Breaux and LSU as the program has seemed to reach its zenith in recent years.

Gymnastics has taken the state by storm as the program continues to shatter attendance record each year. LSU has continued to pack fans inside the Maravich Center with three-straight seasons of averaging more than 10,000 fans per meet and top-five attendance rankings nationally over the last six years.

The 2018 season was one for the record book as more than 10,000 fans attended each meet. The Tigers finished first in the SEC and second nationally with an average attendance of 12,009 for the first time in school history.

The program shattered the school record for the highest attended meet when 13,729 fans packed the PMAC to watch the Tigers take down Alabama. LSU also eclipsed the 13,000 mark with 13,185 inside the Maravich Center against Kentucky for the third-largest crowd in school history.

In 2017, LSU broke the 10,000 average attendance mark for the first time in school history. An average of 10,050 fans attended six meets to set a new attendance record a fifth straight year and finish third in the national attendance records.

Fix of the six meets ranked in the top-10 of the best gymnastics attendance figures in school history. The then third-largest crowd in school history (12,609) witnessed No. 2 LSU defeat No. 3 Florida to clinch the SEC regular season championship.

LSU set the single-meet attendance record on three different occasions between 2015 and 2016. In 2016, 13, 296 fans packed the PMAC to watch LSU defeat Alabama.

Three of the top-5 most-attended meets took place in 2016 including the most-attended meet when a school-record 13,296 fans packed the Pete Maravich Assembly Center on March 4 to watch LSU defeat Alabama.

The 2014 campaign saw LSU shatter school records left and right, including the highest score in school history on three occasions topped by a 198.325 in the NCAA Regional. The Tigers tallied an undefeated home record at 11-0, and LSU ended the season as the only team in the nation to score a 49.0 or higher in every event in every meet all year.

Not only did LSU earn a Super Six berth in 2013, but Breaux picked up career win No. 600 to open the season as the Tigers defeated NC State in the opener.

In the 2012 season, LSU produced four All-SEC and All-America gymnasts, as Hall captured the SEC Floor Exercise title at the SEC Championship and Courville became the first gymnast in LSU history to achieve First Team All-America status in the all-around as a freshman.

In 2010 LSU reached the NCAA Championships for the ninth-consecutive season, and the team finished undefeated at home. Jackson became LSU’s first NCAA All-Around national champion, and she went on to capture the beam national title as well. Jackson made Breaux and LSU proud by earning SEC Gymnast of the Year honors, winning the prestigious AAI Award, Honda Award for Gymnastics and the Corbett Award as Louisiana’s top female athlete as well as being named the SEC Female Athlete of the Year.

Four Tigers earned All-America honors, and Summer Hubbard became LSU’s first three-time First-Team All-American on bars as she was also LSU’s first national runner-up on bars.

In 2009 LSU produced a then school-record six All-American gymnasts with a total of 10 All-America honors, highlighted by senior Ashleigh Clare-Kearney who took home first-team honors on vault, bars and floor and followed that up by winning two national titles. For the first time in school history and only the fourth time in NCAA history, LSU had the first and second-place finishers in the vault event final as Clare-Kearney won the national title and junior Susan Jackson was runner-up after winning the title in 2008. Clare-Kearney and Jackson both earned All-SEC honors for the second-straight year as Clare-Kearney repeated as SEC Floor Champion and Jackson was SEC Beam Champion. Clare-Kearney was named NCAA Central Region Gymnast of the Year, and Jackson won the NCAA Central Regional All-Around title to lead the Tigers to the NCAA Championships.

In 2008 under Breaux’s tutelage, Clare-Kearney and Jackson racked up numerous individual accolades. Jackson was the NCAA Champion on vault. She also was a First Team All-American in the all-around and on vault, beam and floor. Clare-Kearney — also a First Team All-American on bars and floor — was named the SEC Gymnast of the Year and also won the SEC All-Around title, the first Tiger gymnast to do so since 1991. LSU earned a total of seven All-America honors and produced two All-SEC selections.

Breaux has led LSU to unprecedented success in the 2000’s as the Tigers finished in the top 10 in 18 seasons since 2000 with 17 NCAA Championships appearances. The Tigers also reached a No. 1 ranking in 2005, 2014, and 2016 and boasted four First-Team All-Americans in 2007 – the same year in which the legendary Breaux picked up career victory No. 500. LSU led the nation with five First-Team All-Americans in 2014, and the Tigers were second with six First-Team All-Americans in 2015.

Fourteen of LSU’s 15 individual national championships have come since 2002, with Nicki Arnstad on floor in 2002, April Burkholder on beam in 2006, Susan Jackson on vault in 2008, Ashleigh Clare-Kearney on vault and floor in 2009, Jackson again in the all-around and beam in 2010, and Courville on vault in 2013 and again in 2014. Ashleigh Gnat earned the floor title in 2017, Sarah Finnegan won bars in 2017 and 2019, and Kennedi Edney earned the vault title in 2017 and 2019.

An All-Around Coach

Aside from athletic honors, Breaux excels in recruiting quality student-athletes. A Louisianan through and through, Breaux concentrates her recruiting efforts in her native state, but her reach extends to the national and international levels where she has been responsible for recruiting some of Canada’s top athletes of all time and most recently hauled in Great Britain’s Ruby Harrold.

Outside of the gym, Breaux has taken an active role in the academic success her program has achieved in her 40-plus seasons at LSU. By making academic success her team’s No. 1 priority, Breaux’s teams have reached the highest scholastic goals she has established over the years. Throughout the country, she is acknowledged as having one of the finest academic team year in and year out. LSU gymnasts have been named Scholastic All-Americans 150 times and members of the SEC Academic Honor Roll on 231 occasions.

Breaux’s team won the Tiger Cup in 2013, 2014, and 2015, an award given to the LSU team with the most community service hours, the highest GPA and the highest national placement in postseason competition. In addition, the gymnastics team earned the Community Service Award for combining community service with excellence in the classroom at the annual LSU Academic Gala in 2013 and again in 2015.

Also active members of the community, Breaux and her team continually participate in volunteer activities throughout the Baton Rouge area. The team annually takes part in the Samaritan’s Purse Christmas Box Program and Operation Christmas Child to provide presents and gifts to children who are less fortunate. From 2005-08 Breaux’s teams were awarded the LSU CHAMPS Community Service Award after logging hundreds of hours of community service work.

Breaux, who has served as the Chairperson of the YWCA’s Pink Ribbon Campaign for Breast Cancer, and her team have also volunteered their time to benefit the Muscular Dystrophy Association, St. Jude’s Hospital and the Alzheimer’s Association, among others. The Tigers’ coach also took on a new role in 2008 as the chair for LSU’s United Way campaign, and in 2009 she received the McMain’s Community Service Award from the McMain’s Children’s Development Center, a great honor for Breaux.

From 2008-13, Breaux and the Tigers joined forces with Foundation 56 – an organization established by former LSU standout linebacker and NFL star Bradie James. James’ mother, Etta, succumbed to breast cancer in February 2002. LSU held the Etta James Memorial Meet for six years, raising money for Foundation 56’s efforts to raise awareness and fight breast cancer. In all, LSU gymnastics and the Baton Rouge community raised more than $300,000 for Foundation 56’s fight against breast cancer.

It is this delicate balance among exceptional academics, athletic excellence and exemplary community service efforts that has allowed Breaux to keep her team at the top of the national scene year in and year out.

Behind Breaux

The foundation for Breaux’s coaching career developed long before her arrival at LSU. An excellent athlete in her own right, Breaux’s affiliation with the sport began at the club level where she was a nationally-ranked gymnast by both the A.A.U. and the U.S.G.F.
She was also a Junior Olympic National Champion who earned the S.A.A.U.’s Outstanding Gymnast award. By virtue of her accomplishments Breaux qualified as one of the top-15 athletes in the country to compete at the World Games Trials and was set to compete at the 1972 Olympic Trials before a career-ending knee injury forced her to retire.

Breaux, a native of Donaldsonville, Louisiana, attended Southeastern Louisiana University where she competed for the Lady Lions gymnastics team for two seasons (1972-73) and helped SLU to a second-place finish at the 1972 AIAW Championships.

Breaux then served as an assistant coach for the Lady Lions for three seasons, where she also became a national-level judge and served as the first state director for the Louisiana USA gymnastics program. She later transferred to LSU in 1976 where she earned both her bachelor’s and master’s degrees. 

Breaux is one of eight children and comes from a great family tradition. Her parents, brothers, sisters and their spouses and children have supported the program since the coach’s arrival at LSU. 

Breaux has two daughters, Jewel and Sara. Sara, her younger child, played soccer at LSU and earned her degree in May 2009. Sara finished her master’s program in public administration in the LSU E.J. Ourso School of Business. She has two children – Robert Jr. and Rose. 

Jewel, Breaux’s older daughter, is also a graduate of LSU, and she served as a volunteer coach for the gymnastics team for several years. Jewel is married to Beau Fourrier, and they are the proud parents of Breaux’s two grandsons, Porter Thomas and Chase Hebert.

LSU Accolades under Breaux
8 NCAA Championship Finals Appearances (2008, 2009, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019)
35 Consecutive NCAA Regional Appearances
30 NCAA Championships Appearances
15 Individual National Titles
19 Regional Titles
1 Honda Award Recipient
3 AAI Award Winners
1 NCAA Woman of the Year Finalist
260 All-America Honors
22 SEC Champions with 44 SEC Titles
89 All-SEC Honors
150 Scholastic All-Americans
7 SEC Gymnasts of the Year
6 SEC Championships

Career Record
Overall – 816-427-7 
Regular Season – 528-255-6
Postseason – 288-172-1

Breaux Year-by-Year Records

Year Regular Season Postseason National Finish Regional Finish SEC Finish
1978 9-1 9th* 1st*
1979 8-1-1 11th* 1st*
1980 10-3 6th* 1st*
1981 18-5 11th* 2nd* 1st
1982 12-5 1-2 3rd 3rd
1983 11-6 6-7-1 6th 3rd 3rd
1984 8-10 4th
1985 12-13 4-1 2nd 4th
1986 7-9 6-8 9th 1st 4th
1987 13-4 10-7 7th 2nd 4th
1988 15-5-1 13-4 4th 2nd 4th
1989 17-6 5-1 2nd 4th
1990 16-3 11-6 6th 2nd 2nd
1991 9-8 9-8 7th 3rd 3rd
1992 8-14 0-6 7th 5th
1993 8-9 7-4-1 7th(t) 2nd 4th
1994 13-4-1 6-5 8th 2nd 3rd
1995 14-4 6-5 9th 3rd 2nd
1996 9-11 5-2 3rd 5th
1997 12-6-1 4-7 12th 3rd 3rd
1998 15-7 5-6 9th 3rd 3rd
1999 11-6 6-4 9th 2nd 4th
2000 15-4-1 6-4 9th 2nd 2nd
2001 11-5 3-2 18th 3rd 4th
2002 10-10 6-4 8th 1st 4th
2003 10-10 5-5 10th 2nd 4th
2004 15-6 7-3 7th 1st 3rd
2005 19-4 7-3 9th 1st 2nd
2006 14-11 5-5 8th 2nd 4th
2007 13-9 6-4 7th 2nd 4th
2008 17-6 9-6 5th 1st 4th
2009 16-5 8-7 6th 1st 4th
2010 11-7-1 4-6 9th 2nd 4th
2011 5-13 3-2 20th 3rd 5th
2012 10-12 4-6 9th 2nd 4th
2013 15-6 10-5 5th 1st 3rd
2014 10-3 16-6 3rd 1st 3rd
2015 13-1 12-5 10th 1st 2nd
2016 13-2 18-4 2nd 1st 3rd
2017 13-1 21-1 2nd 1st 1st
2018 15-1 18-4 4th 1st 1st
2019 11-3 13-2 2nd 1st 1st
2020 14-2        Season canceled     

in March 2019 due to COVID-19 Pandemic
43 Years 528-255-6 288-172-2 

* AIAW finish
Regular season records include SEC Championships until 2014