With ten years of previous head coaching experience, Jim Sollars was hired in 1986 as the head women’s basketball coach at the University of Portland. In his first 11 years at Portland, Sollars also served the university as a history professor. He ended his 31-year teaching career upon announcing his retirement following the 1996-97 academic year.
Despite injuries to key players throughout the season, the 2006-07 Portland Pilots managed a six-win improvement over the previous season, while offering a glimpse into the future with the emergence of a strong freshman class. Portland consistently featured a line-up dominated by underclassmen on its way to a 10-20 overall record and a 2-12 mark in the WCC.
In 2003-04, Sollars led Portland to a fourth-place finish in the WCC with an 8-6 conference record. The Pilots advanced to the semifinals of the WCC Tournament, losing a heartbreaker to top-seed Loyola Marymount 59-54 in overtime.
Sollars recorded his 250th career victory as the Pilot head coach with a 64-62 win over conference rival San Francisco on Feb. 14, 2003. Under Sollars’ leadership at Portland, 29 players have earned All-West Coast Conference honors, four players have been named the WCC Player of the Year, and he has coached two Pilots (Laura Sale and Deana Lansing) to honorable mention All-America status. His players also show excellence in the classroom as he has guided 26 WCC All-Academic Team selections, 11 CoSIDA Academic All-District Team picks and one WCC Scholar Athlete of the Year, while two athletes have earned first team CoSida Academic All-America honors.
The Pilots have made five postseason appearances in the last 14 years, most recently in 1998-99 with an appearance in the WNIT in Seattle, Wash. After just missing the NCAA Tournament in 1997-98, Sollars had four consecutive NCAA Tournament berths (1993-97), including the first in school history in 1993-94. From 1993-99, Sollars and the Pilots compiled a 125-51 record, including a 27-3 mark during the 1996-97 season, the program’s best since joining the NCAA Division-I ranks. His 1994-95 and 1995-96 squads each posted 23-7 records.
In 1996-97, the team racked up the second-highest win total in program history, won a second-consecutive West Coast Conference Championship (the third overall during Sollars’ tenure), became the first team in league history to go undefeated (14-0) in WCC play and was the school’s first NCAA Division-I basketball team to earn a national ranking (highest rating No. 21 USA Today/ No. 25 in the final poll). Sollars was named WBCA District-8 Coach of the Year and was WCC Coach of the Year for the fourth time in his career.
Sollars was hired prior to the 1986-87 season, Portland’s first at the NCAA Division-I level. He led his 1987-88 team to a 17-11 record, a second-place WCC finish and garnered WCC Coach of the Year honors. Sollars claimed the school’s first WCC Basketball Championship (men or women) in 1991-92 and he was again named the WCC Coach of the Year, making him the first coach in the WCC to win the award twice. His 1993-94 team recorded upsets over league leaders Santa Clara and Gonzaga, capturing the WCC Tournament Championship, and earning the school’s first NCAA Tournament bid. The Pilots kept ninth-ranked Southern California on the ropes for most of the game before losing 77-62 in a first round, Mideast Regional game at the Los Angeles Sports Arena. His 1994-95 team received an NCAA at-large berth (lost 74-59 to Purdue in the West Regional at San Diego State). At-large bids followed in 1996 (lost 78-61 at Texas Tech, Midwest Regional) and 1997 (lost 75-70 in OT to Michigan State at the East Regional, hosted by North Carolina).
Sollars previously coached at Wenatchee Valley Community College (1976-83) and Portland State University (1983-86). His Wenatchee program won six Northwest Athletic Association of Community Colleges (NWAACC) regional championships and compiled a 154-25 record (.860). Besides building a basketball dynasty, Sollars was also the dean of WVCC’s social sciences department for two years and its athletics director for one year.
At Centralia College, Sollars earned was a letterwinner in basketball and baseball.
Born January 5, 1943 in Longview, Wash., and raised in Tenino, Wash., Sollars was a high school standout in football, basketball and baseball at Tenino High School. His wife, Pam, is an elementary school teacher who completed her Masters requirements at the University of Portland. They have four grown children: Jill, Anne, Tony and Abby.