Laura Berg was named as the eighth head coach in Oregon State softball history in August 2012.
Berg joined the Beavers' staff as an assistant prior to the 2012 season after one of the most successful softball careers in NCAA and Team USA history. During the summer of 2012, Berg also served as an assistant coach for the U.S. Women's National Team in its run at the ISF XIII World Women's Championships in Whitehorse, Yukon, Canada.
Working mainly with the team's slappers and outfielders, Berg helped put Oregon State back among the nation's elite in 2012. The Beavers posted a 36-23 record en route to their first NCAA Regional appearance since 2007. OSU batted .273, the fourth-best mark in program history, set team records for both RBI (269) and runs scored (301) and its 70 stolen bases tied for third all-time.
The Beavers' renaissance in 2012 saw the team re-enter the national polls for the first time since 2008, defeat a total of 10 ranked opponents and claim a number of defining wins, including an extra-innings upset of No. 3 Arizona State and a road victory over No. 14 UCLA in April. OSU defeated its opponent by at least 10 runs on five occasions and scored more than 10 runs eight times, the second-highest totals in those respective categories in the 38-year history of the program.
Berg also helped tutor Dani Gilmore into becoming one of the best center fielders in the Pac-12, as the Beaver freshman batted .322 with nine home runs and 33 RBI while posting a nearly flawless .990 fielding percentage. Gilmore was named to the Pac-12 All-Freshman Team and was also tabbed All-Pac-12 Honorable Mention after her inaugural season in the Orange & Black.
Berg previously had two stints as an assistant coach at her alma mater, Fresno State, from 2000-03 and 2005-06, stepping down to train with the U.S. Women's National Team in the interim. Joining the national team in 1994 as a center fielder, she is the most decorated USA Softball Olympic athlete in history, helping her nation to three golds (1996 - Atlanta, 2000 - Sydney, 2004 - Athens) and one silver (2008 - Beijing). She has won 11 total medals, 10 gold, while competing for the U.S. in the Olympic Games, the ISF Women's World Championship and the Pan American Games. Her eighth-inning hit in the gold medal game in the 2000 Sydney Olympics drove in the winning run to help the Stars and Stripes defeat Japan, 2-1.
As a player for the Bulldogs in the mid-1990s, Berg was a four-time All-American whose collegiate career was highlighted by a NCAA Championship title in 1998. She led her squad to three Women's College World Series appearances, two Western Athletic Conference crowns and helped Fresno State to a 206-60 (.774) record in her four-year career.
Berg's name is scattered throughout the NCAA, WAC and Fresno State record books in a number of offensive categories. She is second all-time in career hits in NCAA history (396), is 12th in runs (245) and her 25 career triples tie her for 23rd. Berg finished her career with a .414 batting average and by the time her senior season ended in 1998, she ranked first in school history in triples, runs, hits and stolen bases, while also finishing as the WAC's career leader in triples, runs, hits, at bats, games played and total bases. She is the only Fresno State player to amass 300 or more career hits and also posted a 160-game defensive errorless streak in the field.
A native of Santa Fe Springs, Calif., she received her bachelor's degree in commercial recreation from Fresno State in 1998.