Steve Bultman | |
Birth Date: | circa 1949 |
Alma Mater: | Louisiana State University 1970 |
Player Years1: | 1966-1970 |
Player Team1: | Louisiana State University |
Coach Team1: | Lynn Park Pirahnas New Orleans |
Coach Years1: | 1970-1975 |
Coach Team2: | Greater Pensacola AC |
Coach Years2: | 1975-1979 1980-1989 |
Coach Team3: | Nashville Aquatic Club |
Coach Years3: | 1979-1980 |
Coach Years4: | 1985 |
Coach Team4: | Pan Pacific Games |
Coach Team5: | Mission Bay Makos Boca Raton |
Coach Years5: | 1989-1990 |
Coach Team6: | Louisiana State University Asst. Coach |
Coach Years6: | 1990-1991 1969-1970 |
Coach Team7: | Dynamo Swim Club Atlanta |
Coach Years7: | 1991-1995 |
Coach Team8: | University of Georgia Asst. Coach |
Coach Years8: | 1995-1999 |
Coach Team9: | Texas A&M University |
Coach Years9: | 1999-2024 |
Coach Team10: | U.S. Olympic Team |
Coach Years10: | 1988, 2012 |
Coach Team11: | Pan Pacific Games |
Coach Years11: | 1985 |
Coach Team12: | World University Games Coach |
Coach Years12: | 2001, 09, 15 |
Coach Team13: | World Championships Staff |
Coach Years13: | 2013 |
Championships: | 4 x Big 12 Conference Championships 4 x SEC Championships 2016-2019 |
Awards: | 9 x Conference Coach of the Year |
Steve Bultman is a former American competitive swimmer for Louisiana State University and an Olympic and college swim coach best known for coaching the Texas A & M Women's team from 1999 through 2024 where he led them to four Big 10 Conference Championships and four consecutive Southeastern Conference Championships from 2016 to 2019. He coached an exceptional total of 16 Olympians in his career.[1] [2]
He attended Jesuit High School in New Orleans, where he won the State Title for Louisiana in the 50 freestyle. Swimming 50-yards for Jesuit in May, 1964 at the State Championships in Shreveport, he was on a winning 200-yard freestyle relay team that took the Louisiana Boys Prep School State title.[3]
Bultman attended LSU, graduating in 1970, where he obtained a B.A. in psychology, then received a Physical Education certification from Tulane in 1975. He was an LSU letterman in swimming in both 1969, and 1970, where he was a student coach in 1969-70 under Head Coach Layne Jorgensen, where the team had a record of 9-8. Completing his education in 1979, he obtained an MA in Physical Education from the University of West Florida. From his senior year in college at LSU, he coached swimming while he was obtaining most of his post-graduate education.[1] [4]
In addition to swimming for LSU, Bultman swam for the Metairie YMCA during his college years, where he performed well in butterfly and freestyle.[5] As early as 1966, swimming for the Metairie YMCA at a Jefferson Community Championship meet he won the 100-yard freestyle in 56.3 and the 50-yard butterfly event in 26.9, and placed second in the 50-yard back, leading his team to a second place finish.[6] In the summer of 1967, he was named to the All Star team at the Louisiana State Championships for his performance in the 100-yard butterfly.[7]
Bultman's coaching history includes a number of Aquatics Clubs, beginning with New Orlean's Lynne Park Pirhanas, the Greater Pensacola Aquatic Club, where he had several Olympians, the Nashville Aquatic Club, Boca Raton's Mission Bay Makos, and Atlanta's Dynamo Swim Club.[1]
For his first experience as a college coach, Bultman worked as an assistant coach at LSU from 1969 to 1970. He then directed the University of Georgia Swim Team as an assistant coach from 1995 to 1999. He would again be assistant coach at LSU from 1990 to 1991.[1]
During Bultman's most accomplished and longest serving coaching tenure was with the Women's team at LSU from 1999 to 2024, his swimmers beat every standing school record. He led his teams to four Big 12 Conference team championship trophies, in the years 2007, 2008, 2010 and 2012. From 2016 to 2019, under his direction, A&M claimed four consecutive Southeastern Conference Championships. At the NCAA Championships, Bultman led his Women's Aggie swim teams to 12 top-10 team finishes, and coached six individual national champions, 80 All-Americans and an outstanding total of 16 Olympians.[1]
In 1988, and 2012, he served on the coaching staff for the U.S. Olympic swim Team. In other Olympic coaching years, he served with Estonia's Olympic Team in 2008 and Mexico's Olympic Team in 2016. He helped with the coaching staff for the 1985 Pan Pacific Games, as well as the World University Games in 2001, 2009, and 2015.[1]
Bultman had an exceptional number of his swimmers attend the Olympics for the U.S. and other countries. He had three of his swimmers from Greater Pensacola Aquatic Club (GPAC) attend the 1988 Seoul Olympics; Beth Barr, Andrea Hayes, and Daniel Watters. Bultman had nine of his swimmers from Texas A & M compete in the 2012 Olympic Games in London; Cammile Adams, breaststroke record holder and 2012 Olympic gold medalist Breeja Larson, Triin Aljand (Estonia), Alia Atkinson (Jamaica), Erica Dittmer (Mexico), Liliana Ibanez (Mexico), Rita Medrano (Mexico), Kim Pavlin (Croatia) and Julia Wilkinson (Canada).[1]
Bultman was admitted to the American Swimming Coaches Association Hall of Fame in 2015, having been active as a coach since 1970.[8] During his coaching career, he was a nine time Conference Coach of the Year, and had the unique honor of being named to the College Swim Coaches Association of America's 100 Greatest Coaches of the Century.[9] Nearing the end of his collegiate coaching career at Texas A&M, he was admitted into the highly selective International Swimming Coaches Hall of Fame in 2021.[10]