Jim Stillson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Borncirca 1953
Aberdeen, Maryland
AlmamaterOhio State University 1974
PositionsDiver, 3-meter board
Jim Stillson
Biographical details
Borncirca 1953
Aberdeen, Maryland
Alma materOhio State University 1974
Playing career
1970-1974Ohio State University
PositionsDiver, 3-meter board
Coaching career (HC unless noted)
1984-2017Southern Methodist University
Diving Coach
1987-1991
1997
U.S. Diving National Team
Diving Coach
Accomplishments and honors
Awards
3 x NCAA Diving Coach of the Year
16 x Conference Coach of the Year
1992 Mike Malone Memorial Award
1999 USOC Diving Coach of the Year
2015 Swim. Hall of Fame Paragon Award
2017 Phil Boggs Award

Jim Stillson is an American former competition diver for Ohio State University, who coached the Southern Methodist University Diving team for thirty-three years from 1984 through 2017, where twenty-one of his divers won 89 conference championships, and ten of his divers won U.S. National Championships. Recognized for outstanding contributions to sport of Diving, two years before his retirement from coaching at SMU he received the Paragon Award from the International Swimming Hall of Fame in 2015.[1][2]

Born in Aberdeen, Maryland, Stillson received All-American honors as a competitor at Cambell, California's Campbell High School, and attended and swam for Ohio State University where he earned All-America honors from the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) on the 3 meter board his senior year, graduating in 1974.[1][3]

After collegiate competition, he began coaching diving at Barnard College by 1976, and then did a longer stint as Diving Coach at Columbia University, where he also coached an AAU age group team that met at Columbia.[4] From 1984 to 2017, he coached at Southern Methodist University. While at SMU, in 1989, Stillson was named the NCAA Men's Diving Coach of the Year and subsequently the NCAA Women's Diving Coach of the Year in 1990 and 1995. During his SMU Coaching tenure, his athletes earned 88 all-America honors, and the men's and women's teams won a total of 32 conference championships.[1][3]

Upon his retirement in July 1997, SMU Head Swimming Coach Eddie Sinnott, who knew him well, remarked "He (Stillson) has impacted so many people, young and old, over the last three-plus decades here on the Hilltop, and I am sure he will continue to do that as he moves into the next phase of his life. I have no doubt that we will continue to feel Jim's presence around SMU for years to come."[1][5]

International coaching

From 1987 to 1991, Stillson was a U.S. Diving National Team coach and served again in 1997, where he led events in Europe, Australia, China and the Soviet Union, as well as other countries. He was also selected as a team leader for the USA Diving team at the 2007 Pan American Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.[1]

Service to the swimming community

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI