Redshirt freshman and Omaha native Brady Bragg celebrates after scoring his first career goal in the Creighton menβs soccer match against then No. 23 Seton Hall to level the score, 1-1.
Ask Creighton menβs soccer midfielder Brady Bragg and his younger sister, womenβs soccer forward Anna Bragg, what their relationship looked like growing up, and theyβll both smile, laugh and point to the same moment. On opposite sides of the βturfedβ yard, they each manned their own makeshift, two-cone goal, eying each other intently as younger sisters Kelsey and Addy chased the ball in the midfield and parents Scott and Jenny watched the chaos unfold.
In these intense backyard soccer battles at their home in Omaha, Neb., the idea of a tie was laughable β the Bragg siblings did not stop until a winner was crowned.
βThereβd always be a winner no matter what, either racing in the middle of the street to determine the winner or something like that. But weβd [Brady and I] always be on opposite teams,β Anna said. βI feel like we never played on the same team because that would probably be a little unfair and we never wanted to play with each other. We always wanted to play against each other.β
That passion and friendly competitive instinct was only natural in the Bragg house. It was the kind of environment where soccer felt inherited as much as learned.
Everyone in the Bragg family played soccer, but it was their father, an Evansville Division I soccer alum, who helped steer all four children toward the game.
βBefore we could walk, [my dad was] like, βThese kids will play soccer,ββ Anna said.
Scott Bragg even turned the backyard of Anna and Bradyβs childhood home into a turf field, which served as part soccer turf and part putting green. His motivation for the backyard renovation might have come in part from his hatred of grass, Anna said, but it was also βjust so soccer.β
It was here that the infamous two-on-two battles for Bragg-ing rights were held in full force.
As the Bragg siblings grew up, Kelsey and Addy chose to pursue other sports over soccer, but neither Anna nor Brady could shake the game.
Though Brady was a year older, it was Anna who committed to Creighton first, in her senior year at Marian High School in Omaha.

ALLY SEEVERS/THE CREIGHTONIAN
Sophomore Anna Bragg yells in excitement after scoring in Creighton womenβs soccer 4-0 win over South Dakota.
It was the nudge from her club coaches that prompted Anna to seriously explore the possibility of playing Division I soccer. Not long after, she met Creighton womenβs soccer head coach Jimmy Walker and committed to the Bluejay program in Dec. 2023.
Bradyβs path to playing under the lights of Morrison Stadium began a little bit differently. After Creighton Prep won the 2023 state championship title his senior year, the call that followed, from Creighton menβs soccer head coach Johnny Torres, gave Brady a walk-on tryout opportunity.
β[At the time] I didnβt know where I was going to college, and I was like, βYou know what?β Iβll try [to walk-on],ββ he said.
In the Fall of 2023, as Anna began her senior year at Marian, Bradyβs first semester at Creighton was largely spent in the Rasmussen Center, training by himself or with a friend as he prepared for the upcoming walk-on tryout.
When his opportunity came later that year, Brady stood out among the four other walk-on candidates, convincing Torres and the Bluejay staff that he was the one to bet on.
Brady still remembers where he was when he got the call from Torres. Sitting on the couch in his freshman year dorm, he heard the words that would jumpstart his Creighton soccer career.
βI was relieved, really happy [when I got the call]. β¦ ,β Brady said. βThey [the coaching staff] came in and they obviously saw something [in me] and it pushed me to climb that next ladder.β
With one Bragg already on campus and freshly added to the menβs team, the 2024β25 academic year brought Anna to Creightonβs campus for her freshman year.
While Anna was stepping into the new world of collegiate soccer, her brotherβs second year didnβt unfold the way he hoped.
In June of 2024, the summer before his sophomore year at Creighton and first season with the team, Brady broke his tibia in the first game of summer league.
Stuck on crutches for the 2024 season, Bradyβs first taste of college soccer came in an unconventional way: trying to find his place on the team while sidelined from the very game he had worked so hard to play.
βI was just trying to be around the guys as much as possible, boost them up [and] do anything I could on crutches,β he said. βIt was tough because Iβd only spent two months in the spring getting to know the guys, but as that season went on, I became really close [with them].β
That year, Brady learned to contribute while out injured, but he also continued with a role he held since he was a kid β cheering on his little sister as she started to make her mark on the pitch.
For Anna in her freshman season, the lights shining down from Morrison Stadium were a lot bigger than those of Marian. She also said the transition to the fast-paced style of college soccer wasnβt without its challenges. However, she had a great model for the way to approach the field.
βGoing into it, I had the same mindset as [Brady]. I really want to prove something to everybody and just step on the field, [and] if I can, be an impact in any way,β Anna said. βTime just kind of helped with that. I saw the field for 10 minutes or I saw the field for 15 and then the next game, Iβd want 20 [minutes].β
Through the ups and downs of Annaβs first season and Bradyβs season-long injury, the two Bragg siblings always had each other to lean on.
βItβs everything [to have that support]. Weβve both had such different journeys, yet gone through so much of the same thing,β Anna said. βItβs just easy to lean on each other for [everything] and weβve done that for a lot of our lives.β
That support β along with the competitive spark that defined their backyard battles as kids β carried into the 2025 season. Nov. 1, in particular, would prove significant not just for each soccer teamβs playoff hopes, but also as a day the siblings would remember as one of their favorite shared moments on campus.
A double-header defined that Saturday afternoon, with the womenβs team battling St. Johnβs and the men taking on then-No. 23 Seton Hall.
In the first match of the doubleheader, Anna opened the scoring account in the 31st minute, rising through traffic to head a curling corner into the net and hand Creighton a 1β0 edge. With her goal on the board, attention shifted quickly to seeing whether Brady could respond with a goal of his own.
βI remember going off the field β¦ and everyone [in the family] was like β¦ βPoints for Anna!β Not like saying Brady needed to score but like, βOh, letβs see what Brady can do this game,ββ Anna said.
The implications of Annaβs goal were not lost on Brady or anyone else in the locker room before the menβs team took to the pitch. Of course he was happy for his sister, Brady said, but he also knew that he had to even the score. The sibling rivalry was back in full force.
ββI was like, βWow, another one. Awesome,ββ Brady said jokingly. βWe lifted weights right after that [game] and Scott, our lifting coach, comes up to me [and] heβs like, βYou’ve got to score it nowβ β¦ and then Johnny and [Michael] Gabb were like, βDid you see your sister score?ββ
Brady would go on to do exactly that, scoring an eerily similar header to his sisterβs in nearly the same minute, giving the menβs team the equalizer.
βI was sitting next to my mom [and then all of a sudden,] βHe actually scored, oh my goodness!β It was a really cool, surreal moment,β Anna said.
While two goals by siblings on the same day was a rare and memorable event, the Bragg familyβs presence in the stands β grandparents and cousins included β is a familiar and ongoing sight at Morrison Stadium.
βWe have a lot of family in Omaha, so having them is just a huge benefit and a bonus and seeing them after the games. Theyβre so proud of us,β Anna said.
Even Scott Bragg, whose time at Evansville made him a longtime Bluejay skeptic, can now be seen wearing Creighton gear. It seems that all it took to put the Missouri Valley Conference rivalry to rest and make a Bluejay fan out of him was pride for his son and daughter β¦ and a little bit of Bluejay merch.
βHeβs wearing Creighton gear now,β Brady said with a smile. βHeβs got a βCreighton Dadβ shirt [too]. β¦ He was never a Creighton basketball fan, any of that, but now I think heβs turning.β
As their second season wearing the white and the blue comes to a close, neither Brady nor Anna take for granted how unique it is to have a sibling along for the journey.
βSomething like that doesnβt happen where every day youβre playing the same sport as your brother at the same college. Thatβs insane to me and I donβt think weβve realized it enough that itβs really special,β Anna said.
And though they may not always say it aloud, each has been shaped by the other, learning lessons that go beyond the field.
βThe biggest lesson Iβve learned from Anna is β¦ sheβs super resilient. Just seeing that is crazy impressive because Iβll see her at her worst and sheβs like, βI donβt want to play soccer anymore,β and then sheβll get up and fight right back through and play again and then do it again. β¦ Itβs really cool to see her commitment and her resilience in anything she does,β Brady said.
What Brady sees in Anna, she sees in him: a drive and commitment that pushes her to keep going.
β[I learned from Brady that] you can do anything you set your mind to,β Anna said. βWatching him go from not knowing where he was going to college in the spring of his senior year of high school and then watching him grind through the fall, do his soccer stuff alone, come out, try out in front of all these D1 kids β¦ and then end up making the team. β¦ Now looking a year later, Iβm like, βWow, you really can [do] anything you set your mind to.ββ
From fierce battles in their backyard in Omaha to trading points under the lights of Morrison Stadium just down the road, the Braggs have blended sibling rivalry with a shared story of perseverance, hard work and unshakable support.