Lea Maurer joined the Stanford men's water polo staff as volunteer assistant coach in 2013.
Maurer, a 1994 graduate of Stanford, spent seven years on The Farm as head coach of the women's swimming and diving program from 2006-12. During that time her Cardinal teams went 66-5 in dual meets and never finished lower than fifth at the NCAA Championships, peaking with a runner-up finish in 2010. She also guided the Cardinal to back-to-back Pac-10 titles in 2010 and 2011.
Individually, Maurer's charges captured 13 NCAA titles, 37 conference championships and 163 All-America honors. In 2008 two of her swimmers, Elaine Breeden and Julia Smit, combined to earn three relay medals at the Olympic Games in Beijing. Maurer has coached swimmers onto teams representing the United States at the World Championships, Pan Pacific Championships, World University Games in addition to the Olympics.
Her 2006-07 Cardinal team finished a perfect 10-0 in dual meets and was tabbed the top dual meet team in the country by the College Swimming Coaches Association of America (CSCAA) for the first time in program history. The 2011 senior class lost just two dual meets during their careers (once their freshman year and once in 2011).
Maurer's coaching influence can be seen throughout the Stanford record books, as nine members of the 2011-12 Cardinal squad combined to own 31 spots in the school's all-time top-10.
She coached Stanford alum Tara Kirk (2004) to American records in both the 100 and 200 yard breaststroke in 2006 with times of 57.77 and 2:05.73, respectively. Kirk also won a silver at the 2007 World Championships. Breeden set an American and NCAA record in the 200 fly and Smit set world, American, U.S. and NCAA records int the 200 and 400 individual medleys throughout her career.
Maurer was a member of Team USA's coaching staff for the 2007 Pan American Games in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, helping Smit swim away with five medals (four gold, one silver). Smit's meet was highlighted by her 200 IM victory with a Pan American Games record performance.
Maurer began her collegiate coaching career in 1994-95 as an assistant at Northwestern, which placed 11th at the NCAA's and third in the Big-10 in her only season.
The following year, she began a prep dynasty as the head boys' and girls' coach at Lake Forest High School in Lake Forest, Illinois, leading the boys' squad to the 2002-03 mythical national championship and the girls' team to the mythical 2003 public school national championship. She coached 2003 National High School Swimmer of the Year Matt Grevers, who recorded the second-fastest prep time ever in the 50 free and went on to become a two-time NCAA champion at Northwestern before winning three medals at the 2008 Olympics.
During her 10-year run at Lake Forest, her girls' team also won a pair of state titles (2002, '03) while her boys' squad earned the honor in 2003, which were all unprecedented accomplishments for the school. In addition, she was named the Illinois Swimming Association Coach of the Year on eight occasions (five girls, three boys) while coaching her swimmers to 85 All-American and honorable mention All-American awards, as well as nine individual and seven relay state titles, and six high school state records.
A former Stanford swimmer from 1991 to 1994, Maurer (formerly Loveless) swam on three of Stanford's national championship squads (1992, '93, '94). Maurer won three consecutive wins in the 100 back (1992, '93, '94) as well as a 200 back victory in 1993. She was also a member of six winning NCAA relay teams. Maurer added 15 Pac-10 titles (seven individual, eight relays) and 21 All-American honors (19 at Stanford). She was inducted into the Stanford Athletic Hall of Fame in November of 2006.
Maurer continued to compete until 2000, spending a total of 11 years (1989-96, 1998-2000) on the U.S. National Team. Maurer held the American record in the 100-meter backstroke from 1992-2001, originally setting the mark on the leadoff leg of a gold medal 4x100 American medley relay team at the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, where she also earned a bronze medal in the 100 back. She broke her own 100 back record during the preliminaries at the 1998 World Championships and went on to win the gold medal. Maurer earned a spot on the USA Swimming All-Century team in the 100 back.
Maurer graduated from Stanford with a bachelor's degree in American Studies and a master's in education in 1994. She is married to Erik Maurer, who won the 1992 NCAA title in the 50 free and four relay crowns while competing for the Cardinal from 1989-93. The couple has two children, Luke and Rex.