Peter Avdoulos
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East Longmeadow, Massachusetts
| Biographical details | |
|---|---|
| Born | circa 1964 East Longmeadow, Massachusetts |
| Alma mater | Springfield College |
| Playing career | |
| 1981–1985 | Springfield College |
| Positions | 1-meter, 3-meter Diver |
| Coaching career (HC unless noted) | |
| 1984–2024 | Springfield College Diving Coach |
| Accomplishments and honors | |
| Championships | |
| 7 National Championships | |
| Awards | |
| 23 x NEWMAC Diving Coach of the Year 2005 NCAA Men's Diving Coach of Year 4 x NCAA Women's Diving Coach of Year 8 x NE Diving Coach of the Year 1991–2000 2014 Springfield College Athletic Hall of Fame | |
Peter Avdoulos is an American former competition diver for Springfield College, who coached the Springfield College Diving team for forty years from 1984 through 2024, leading them to seven national championships. He began his career on a part-time basis when the position became open shortly after his graduation from Springfield.[1][2]
Avdoulos was born around 1964 in East Longmeadow, Massachusetts, in the greater Springfield area, where he attended High School. By his Senior year at East Longmeadow High in 1981, Avdoulos had achieved the rare triple achievement of taking top diving honors in Western Massachusetts, Massachusetts state, and New England competitions. At East Longmeadow, Avdoulos was coached by Janet Kerr and with the Springfield Springers Club's David Laing, a former All-American diver at Springfield College, who would later become the Head Diving Coach at Westfield State. In both his Junior and Senior years, Avdoulos won diving titles at the Western Massachusetts Championships. In three successive years as a High School diver at the Massachusetts State Championships, he advanced from fifth to third, and finally first in 1981 as a Senior, also winning the New England title that year. At the New England High School Championships in Gardner, Massachusetts, Avdoulos scored on a forward two-and-a-half tuck, a reverse one-and-a-half, and a forward one-and-a-half with a full twist, becoming only the second East Longmeadow diver to win the New Englands.[3][4][5][6]