Born January 25,
1931, in Cullowhee, North Carolina
AA, Campbell College, 1956; BS, Western Carolina
University, 1958
Campbell College Varsity Baseball and Basketball
Campbell College: Physical Education Instructor,
1962-1971; Dean of
Men, 1971-1975;
Dean of Students then Director of Alumni, 1975-1978
The first soccer
match Jim Cole ever saw was one that he coached.
That’s how the winningest coach in Campbell
University history
describes his beginnings in the sport. He must have
been a quick
learner. Jim “Catfish” Cole led the
Campbell Camels to three NAIA
National Tournament appearances in his 13 years
as a head coach and a
138-48-7 record for a .733 winning percentage. For
13 years the only
soccer coach Campbell ever had led his club to five
District and
three Area championships. Not bad, for someone who
had absolutely no
background in the game.
“Coach Fred
McCall was the athletic director at the time, and
I was
an assistant basketball coach under him, and he
asked me to coach the
soccer team when the program was started in 1963,”
said Cole. “I
said, ‘I don’t know anything about soccer,’
and he said, ‘Well, get a
book.’ So I did.”
The good-natured
native of Cullowhee in the Blue Ridge Mountains
of
North Carolina was able to attract players from
the talent-rich
northeast. With that nucleus, Cole built a team
that won the NAIA
District 29 and Area V championship in both 1969
and 1970, then went
on to fifth and third place showings, respectively,
at the national
tournament. Those teams posted identical 16-2-1
records, while the
1971 squad went 14-1-1 and took a third-consecutive
District title.
In his last five years at the helm of the Camel
program, Cole led his
teams to no fewer than 11 wins per year. His 1975
team finished
sixth nationally.
Cole helped lay the
foundation for the Campbell program virtually
from nothing. “It just took hard work,”
recalled Cole, who was 33
years old and a Korean War veteran when he took
the whistle as the
institution’s first soccer coach. “The
first team that I had, only
two players had ever played soccer at all in their
lives. There was
no high school soccer in North Carolina to speak
of. So it was just
the idea of going out and beating the bushes and
getting the kids
interested in coming to Campbell. I read books and
attended coaching
clinics, but I learned the most just from getting
out and being with
the team.”
Cole not only sold
the game to the school and players, but also to
the community of roughly 3000. Attendance soared
during his tenure.
During the “Catfish” years, the school
hosted bonfires and pep
rallies before big matches.
Cole also raised the level of soccer awareness and
appeal statewide.
He instituted an annual high school tournament and
invited teams from
all over the state to participate. He helped attract
the NAIA
national tournament to Dunn, just 11 miles from
the campus, in the
early ‘70s when organizers were seeking a
warm-weather venue.
1970: First-ever
recipient of the NAIA Soccer Coach of the Year award
1976: NAIA Meritorious Achievement Award for contributions
to
collegiate soccer
1997: Campbell University Sports Hall of Fame
Comments from a former
player: he put his heart and soul into
recruiting and got involved in national organizations;
his
organizational skills were great and he was a student
of the game;
he’ll tell you that he had enough sense to
know that he had to learn
the game from our talented players.