Avdoulos never fully left the diving program at Springfield. After graduating in 1985 with a business degree, and beginning work in the area, the diving coach position was eliminated by the university. After work, Avdoulos would stop by and help coach his former teammates who were without a coach. Though he wasn't fully recognized as Head diving coach in 1990, Avdoulos began coaching the team as early as 1986 on a part-time basis, and has remained as diving coach since then. During his tenure as diving coach, he led his teams to seven national championships. Avdoulos's strengths can best be expressed by his swimmers and fellow coaching professionals. His High School Coach David Laing has said of Avdoulos, "Every diver that enters his program (at Springfield) leaves with not only a great and highly successful diving experience, but also that they have been part of an unbelievable, fun and educational environment.” Maintaining a thirty-year correspondence, Avdoulos's coach at Springfield, John Bransfield has said of Avdoulos, "He is unwavering in his personal convictions and his dedication to doing things right. Springfield College and the sport of diving have been fortunate to have his service". Avdoulos believes his primary objective in coaching is to bring out the best in each of his divers by appreciating their unique character and building on their strengths. He has stated in interviews, that “I may not have achieved everything I wanted in my diving career, but I think that’s what makes me a better coach because I want everyone else to live up to their potential beyond what they think their potential is.” Avdoulos's high achieving Springfield
swimmer Jen Thompson has said “Just seeing him believe in me, I suddenly began to believe in myself,” she said. “I’m so much more of a confident athlete now. He’s the first coach that’s really taken the time to sit and discuss our personal goals, discuss what we want, and really taken an interest in us as people [to] help us get there”.
Honors Avdoulos's honors are broad in their diversity and scope and recognize the unique contributions he has made to the sport of diving. In College, he won the Charles Batterman award in 1985 for excellence in his sport, an honor given for consistent excellence over a four-year period. He has been the recipient of the New England Men's and Women's Athletic Conference (NEWMAC) Diving Coach of the Year Award twenty-three times, and was the 2005 NCAA Division III Men's Diving Coach of the Year. Since 1996 he was the NCAA Division III Women's Diving Coach of the Year four times, and has been recognized eight times as the New England Diving Coach of the Year from 1991 to 2000. He was named both the NEWMAC Men's and Women's Diving Coach of the Year for the 2002–2003 season and the 2012 and 2013 campaigns. In recognition of his contributions to diving at the university, he was inducted into the Springfield College Athletic Hall of Fame in 2014. He has also received the rare honor of being selected for the College Swimming & Diving Coaches Association of America's (CSCAA) Centennial Celebration, consisting of the 100 Greatest College Swimming & Diving Coaches of the past 100 years. ==References==