It is the final update in our “new” head coaches review, and today we are looking at the 4th year head coaches from the Power Four programs.
Just like the 3rd-year coaches, we are focusing specifically on power four coaches to streamline the review process to just power four schools.
Neil Versfeld, Georgia Men
| Year | Conference Standing | NCAA Standing |
| 2022 (pre-Versfeld) | 4th, 919 points | 8th, 194 points |
| 2023 | 5th, 828.5 points | 12th, 96 points |
| 2024 | 3rd, 1042 points | 11th, 116 points |
| 2025 | 4th, 796.5 points |
7th, 238.5 points
|
| 2026 | 4th, 721 points |
15th, 64.5 points
|
The Georgia men have been strong under head coach Neil Versfeld, and were steadily improving their NCAA performances over the last four years. In 2025, they finished 7th with 238.5 points, doubling their 2024 score of 116 points when they finished 11th.
They were on track to have another strong season this year, until star swimmer Luca Urlando pulled out of the meet shortly before it began due to an undisclosed “minor” injury. Urlando would have helped tremendously in individual and relay events, and without him the Bulldogs dropped in their overall finish.
The Bulldogs did have a few strong performances from other athletes like senior Ruard van Renen and freshman Sean Green. Green scored in two events as a freshman, seeing massive time improvements during his first year with the program.
With Urlando potentially returning for one more year (he has six years of eligibility due to the Covid extension and a redshirt season), the Bulldogs will be trying to break back into the top 10 next season, but they have thrived under Versfeld.
Stephanie Williams Moreno, Georgia Women
| Conference Standing | NCAA Standing | |
| 2022 (pre-Williams Moreno) | 4th, 986 points |
15th, 104.5 points
|
| 2023 | 6th, 756 points |
16th, 90.5 points
|
| 2024 | 5th, 822 points | 13th, 116 points |
| 2025 | 4th, 689.5 points | 16th, 58 points |
| 2026 | 8th, 604 points | 15th, 63 points |
The Bulldog women also got a new head coach in 2022, and the biggest story out of the program this year was the addition of major scorer Kennedi Dobson, who burst onto the scene with massive drops and scored in all three of her events as a freshman.
While Dobson is a huge individual scorer, she is limited with her relay contributions due to her status as a primary distance swimmer. UGA has a huge recruiting class coming in, though, and Williams Moreno has proven her skill at developing athletes across the board. With the right series of events, they could find themselves challenging for a top-10 spot in 2027.
Lea Maurer, USC
| Women | Men | |||
| NCAA Standing | Conference Standing | Year | Conference Standing | NCAA Standing |
| 16th, 102 points | 3rd, 1373.5 points | 2022 (pre Maurer) | 4th, 449 points | 26th, 25 points |
| 12th, 125 points | 2nd, 1267.5 points | 2023 | 5th, 314.5 points | 22nd, 31 points |
| 8th, 200 points | 2nd, 1291 points | 2024 | 5th, 394.5 points | 22nd, 31 points |
| 11th, 130 points | 5th, 835 points | 2025 | 4th, 878 points | 15th, 80 points |
| 14th, 66 points | 5th, 768 points | 2026 | 7th, 707.5 points | 14th, 69 points |
The USC Trojans have seen some ups and downs under the tutelage of Lea Maurer. The women had a few strong years for the final two seasons in the Pac-12, finishing as the runner-ups in both 2023 and 2024. They have finished 5th their last two years in the Big Ten, but dropped a few points from 2025 to 2026.
They have also dropped in the NCAA placements over the last few seasons, though some of that can be attributed to Kaitlyn Dobler graduating. Minna Abraham has thrived while training with the program, though she dealt with injury this season and missed the Big Ten Championships. She was back for NCAAs, where she finished 4th in the 200 free, 17th in the 100 back, and 23rd in the 100 free.
On the men’s side, they have also been a little up and down, and had their highest finish under Maurer this year, finishing 14th overall. The top two scorers, Moritz Wesemann and Laurent Gosselin-Paradis, were both divers. Michal Chmielewski was their only individual swimming scorer with 12 points.
Chase Kreitler, Pitt
| Women | Men | |||
| NCAA Standing | Conference Standing | Year | Conference Standing | NCAA Standing |
| N/A | 11th, 328 points | 2022 (pre-Kreitler) | 9th, 431 points | N/A |
| N/A | 11th, 315 points | 2023 | 7th, 660.5 points | 33rd, 4 points |
| N/A | 10th, 407 points | 2024 | 7th, 647.5 points | 24th, 24 points |
| 27th, 21 points | 8th, 462 points | 2025 | 10th, 456.5 points | 34th, 13 points |
| 16th, 55 points | 6th, 552 points | 2026 | 11th, 401 points | 20th, 48 points |
This review is bittersweet for the Pitt team, who will return to coaching reviews next season after Chase Kreitler left the program earlier this month following historic success with the Panthers.
One of the most clear examples of a coach improving the program came from Pitt, where the women had their first NCAA relay in 19 years, and Sophie Yendell was the highest women’s NCAA finisher in program history after she took 5th in the 50 free. Along with Claire Jansen, they became the first two Pitt women to score at the meet since 1984.
In 2026, the women continued to excel, finishing 16th at NCAAs, their highest finish in the history of the program. Jansen finished 4th in 200 back, taking over Yendell’s title as the highest finisher in Pitt history.
The men also saw NCAA improvements, though they dropped at the ACC Championships (some of that drop came from the addition of programs to the conference and the return of Notre Dame). At NCAAs, they finished 20th overall, their best finish in 73 years, partially thanks to the development of sophomore Julian Koch.
Pitt recently hired head diving coach Katie Kasprzak to lead the program as the Director of Swimming and Diving. They will be hiring a new swimming coach to take over that aspect of the program.
Jonas Persson, Utah
| Women | Men | |||
| NCAA Standing | Conference Standing | Year | Conference Standing | NCAA Standing |
| N/A | 7th, 608 points | 2022 (pre-Persson) | 6th, 264 points | 37th, 2 points |
| 39th, 2 points | 7th, 594 points | 2023 | 6th, 300.5 points | 27th, 14 points |
| 25th, 22 points | 6th, 628.5 points | 2024 | 6th, 211.5 points | 36th, 6 points |
| N/A | 5th, 809.5 points | 2025 | 3rd, 1153.5 points | 30th, 15 points |
| N/A | 7th, 693 points | 2026 | 3rd, 1305 points | 34th, 17 points |
The University of Utah hired Jonas Persson at the start of the 2022-2023 swim season, and the men’s team has seen significant improvements under his leadership, while the women have stayed relatively steady in their performance, though dipping this year.
The Utah men had a very strong performance at the Big 12 Championships, scoring 1305 points after huge swimming performances from Nick Chirafisi, who won the 500 freestyle, and Evan VanBrocklin, who won the 200 IM.
Both men went on to the NCAA Championships, but the only team scorer was diver Elias Petersen, who scored on all three boards.
Persson recently signed a contract extension through 2031, and will be with the Utes for a while to come.

Fire Lea
Is Jonas only foreign HC in NCAA swimming?
He’s not even the only one mentioned in this article! (Versfeld is from South Africa)
I’m sorry does that say Luca Urlando might have another year of eligibility
Yes.
20-21: didn’t count (COVID)
21-22: competed (1/4)
22-23: medical redshirt
23-24: Olympic redshirt
24-25: competed (2/4)
25-26: competed (3/4)
He’s got 1 more season.
Unless the new 5 year clock starts immediately.
Oh my, I hadn’t thought about Luca. David Johnston also!
He BETTER go 1:34 with all these chances
The arrival of this stacked recruiting class is going to help Stef massively in the future. It might not be next year, but a return to the top 10 seems imminent with all the talent coming in + Dobson’s excellence. Another freshman that did very well is Clarke Neace, but got overshadowed by Dobson.
Neil has been awesome, and I do think that we would have improved on 7th place if Luca had been there. The men did pretty well PR-wise anyways at NCAAs without Luca.
Do you just copy and paste the Stef/women’s comments every year?
Different format of the Williams Moreno table is triggering
It’s the same for both Georgia HCs, then flips after that. Maddening!