Lolla began coaching during his playing career when he served as an assistant at
Monmouth University in 1984. In 1985, he spent time as an assistant coach with his alma mater, Duke, then served as the head coach at
Lake High School in
Uniontown, Ohio in 1987. He returned as an assistant coach with Duke in 1988 and 1989. In 1993, he became the head coach of
Belmont Abbey College an
NCAA Division II soccer team. In his three seasons as head coach, he compiled a 49–16–3 record and the team won three consecutive Carolinas Conference Championships. Lolla was named the Carolinas Conference Coach of the Year in 1990 and NSCAA-NAIA National Coach of the Year in 1992. For the next thirteen years Lolla went on to coach the
Akron Zips where he was the winningest coach in school history compiling a 160–68–25 record along with eight
Mid-American Conference Championships and a school record five straight NCAA Tournament appearances. Lolla coached 38 first team All-MAC players while at Akron and was named MAC coach of the year three times. Coach Lolla is a member of the Akron Hall of Fame. On December 16, 2005,
University of Louisville announced it had hired Lolla as the school's new head coach. In his second season at Louisville, the Cardinals finished 11–7–4 with an appearance in the NCAA Tournament's second round, where they lost to eventual National runner up
Ohio State University. In the past five seasons, Coach Lolla has taken
University of Louisville from a losing program to the 2010
NCAA College Cup Final, 2010
Big East Conference Championship, No. 1 national ranking, and 20–1–3 record. Lolla was named the 2010 National Coach of the Year and his staff was named the 2010 Big East Coaching Staff of the Year. In Fall 1999, he was appointed head coach of the
U.S. Soccer Federation Under-15 National Team. After the
2018 season, Lolla resigned after 13 years and a 155–77–39 record with the team. ==Personal==