Jim Dietz is an American volleyball coach, entrepreneur, and writer based in central Illinois. As a coach, he led St. Anthony High School of Effingham, Illinois to its first state-qualifying appearance and Lincoln Land Community College of Springfield, Illinois to all of its four appearances at NJCAA Nationals, including three consecutive Final Fours. During this time he also helped found the Crossroads Volleyball Club of Effingham, and the Capital Area Volleyball Club of Springfield.
As an entrepreneur Dietz has both started and owned multiple companies, including JD Properties, the Game Emporium, and Jolly Roger Games. In these companies he successfully maintained retail and rental properties, managed a chain of game stores, and facilitated the publication of original board, card, and role-playing games from conceptualization to final sales.
As a writer Dietz has published multiple articles, novels, and blogs. His work covers topics ranging from scholarly pieces to coaching aids to fiction and collections of poetry.
Dietz was born June 14, 1968,[ citation needed ] and raised in Davenport, Iowa.[ citation needed ] Attending Iowa State University for his undergraduate studies,[ citation needed ] he studied political science, history, and creative writing in addition to serving in student government as the president of Foster House.[ citation needed ] While in graduate school at the University of Illinois,[ citation needed ] Dietz met his wife, Julie, and they married in 1993.[ citation needed ] Deitz earned a master's degree in history from the University of Illinois and a master's degree in English/composition from Iowa State. [1]
During college and after Dietz held several jobs, ranging from disc jockey (KUSR-FM), to Instructor for the Adult Education program at Eastern Illinois University.[ citation needed ]
Dietz has taught history in both high school and college. [1]
Dietz began his career in volleyball as a statistician/manager for the University of Illinois in 1990,[ citation needed ] before returning to Iowa State as a volunteer coach for the 1991 season.[ citation needed ] After that, he served as a graduate assistant for Jim Stone and the Ohio State University program for three years, [1] including OSU’s last Big Ten title,[ citation needed ] and NCAA Final Four appearance in 1994.[ citation needed ]
Moving to Illinois after getting married, Dietz became involved with the Twin City Volleyball Club, coaching 16-and under age group for a year,[ citation needed ] before being hired at St. Anthony High School where he led the school to its first ever regional and sectional titles and a school-record 33 wins in 2000.[ citation needed ]
Dietz left St. Anthony after the 2003 season,[ citation needed ] and coached at Allen Community College in the Kansas Jayhawk Conference during the 2004 and 2005 seasons,[ citation needed ] compiling a record of 34-46, building the program to a victory over a national top-5 team, as well as taking a set from the 2005 national champions (the only set lost by the Johnson County team on its way to the national title). [2]
Dietz also served as a volunteer at the World University Games. [1]
In 2006, Dietz returned to central Illinois, assuming control of the Lincoln Land Community College (LLCC) program.[ citation needed ] During his time at LLCC, Dietz has a 410-142 record and has won 39 in-season tournaments during that time. Eleven Loggers have been named NJCAA all-American and seventeen have been named academic all-American during his time with the program.
LLCC reached the National Tournament for the first time in school history in 2012 and finished 11th with a record of 33-9.[ citation needed ] In his eighth season coaching at LLCC he had a 263-93 career record (.717 winning percentage). [1] Dietz was selected by USA Volleyball as an apprentice coach for its High Performance Tryout, as one of four coaches to help lead the USA Girls Future Select National Skills Program from July 29 to August 1, 2014 at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. [3] Dietz was named the American Volleyball Coaches Association Two-Year College Midwest Region Coach of the Year in 2015. [4] In 2015 and 2016, LLCC reached the national championship game with consecutive 40-win seasons. [5] In 2017, Lincoln Land reached the Final Four, finishing with a 37-7 record.[ citation needed ] The Loggers finished in the top five of the NJCAA National Poll in each of those seasons. [6] [7] The 2018 season was a difficult one for Dietz as players suffered concussions, infections, mangled hands and sprained ankles. [8] Dietz got his 500th victory with the Loggers in 2019 when they defeated Illinois Valley and Sauk Valley in a pair of matches on at the Parkland Tournament. [9]
Dietz suffered lingering complications from COVID-19 and retired midseason in 2021 after achieving a record of 513-196 in 16 seasons and leading the Loggers to three NJCAA Division II Final Fours. [10] Deitz lives in Egginham with his wife Jule, where he operates The Dietz Foundation nonprofit charity as its CEO and managing director. [11]
Year | School | Record | Conference | Post Season | Final rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1996 | St. Anthony | 26-5 | 1st | Sectional Semis | - |
1997 | " | 13-16 | 3rd | Regional Semis | - |
1998 | " | 18-12 | 2nd | Regional Semis | - |
1999 | " | 24-7 | 2nd | Sectional Semis | - |
2000 | " | 34-3 | 1st | Sectional Semis | - |
2001 | " | 30-6 | 1st | State Qualifier | - |
2002 | " | 18-16 | 1st | Regional Semis | - |
2003 | " | 20-12 | 3rd | Regional Semis | - |
2004 | Allen County CC | 16-24 | 5th | Regional VI Semis | Not Ranked |
2005 | Allen County CC | 18-22 | 5th | Region VI Semis | Not Ranked |
2006 | Lincoln Land CC | 29-21 | 3rd | Region XXIV Runner-Up | Not Ranked |
2007 | " | 38-14 | 2nd | Region XXIV Runner-Up | 21st |
2008 | " | 33-14 | 2nd | Region XXIV Runner-Up | 18th |
2009 | " | 34-12 | 3rd | Region XXIV Runner-Up | Not Ranked |
2010 | " | 34-11 | 2nd | Region XXIV Runner-Up | 21st |
2011 | " | 34-13 | 2nd | Region XXIV Runner-Up | 18th |
2012 | " | 33-9 | 2nd | 11th at Nationals | 7th |
2013 | " | 33-8 | 2nd | Region XXIV Runner-Up | 17th |
2014 | " | 25-18 | 2nd | Region XXIV Runner-Up | Not Ranked |
2015 | " | 40-6 | 2nd | National Runner-Up, 4th | 4th |
2016 | " | 40-9 | 2nd | National Runner-Up, 4th | 4th |
2017 | " | 37-7 | 2nd | 3rd at Nationals | 5th |
LLCC Record | 410-142 | ||||
Overall Record | 624-268 |
Aside from his work as a head coach in schools, Dietz is known to conduct summer camps at Lincoln Land as well as for other institutions. Most notably he has previously been involved with the USA Volleyball High Performance Pipeline. [12]
Dietz was a graduate student when he created his first game, which was about the American Civil War, but his lack of experience led to difficulties with finding a publisher. [13] Dietz founded Jolly Roger Games in 1996, owning it until it was sold in 2015 to Ultra Pro, International. [14] Dietz served as the president and chief executive officer of Jolly Roger Games, where he focused on publishing, editing and developing board games. [13] Jolly Roger Games remained an independent division, with Jim Dietz continuing to lead its operations. [14] Dietz designed the role-playing games Swashbuckler (first and second editions) and Parsec, and the board games A Nation on Trial: The U.S.Civil War, Fire Brigade: World War Two, Orcs at the Gates, and Last Man Standing. [13] Under Dietz’s ownership, JRG published award-winning and highly acclaimed games including designs by Alan R. Moon (Surf's Up, Dude), Richard Launius (Pirates vs. Dinosaurs), Jason Matthews/Christian Leonhard (Founding Fathers), and Urs Hostettler (republishing of Kremlin).