Quick answer....add a few tons of weights onto the stacks.
Not so quick...find out why it's warping. Get a kiln expert to come and have a look. The fee will probably pay for itself in quality retention in a few days/weeks
If you are the DIY type...start here... Not knowing maple...take this as "broad & general" advise. Any warp (bow, twist, spring, cup) is partly due to the inherent structure of timber, and/or caused my differential shrinkage, either across the face, thickness or the length of the board. In short, one section of the board shrinks more than the other, causing distortion. Bad drying practice makes it worse because some boards or areas of the stacks gets more exposure to hotter dryer air than others, drying out faster and shrinking more/quicker.
Bad drying can refer to physical factors...stacking, loading, baffling & maintenance. Getting any one or more of these 4 wrong will result in uneven air flow and energy distribution through the stack and bad results. Get as close to 100% of the air through 100% of the timber..evenly. These should always be the first things to check, and must be a constant.
Next, get drying control and schedule right. It is possible that your schedule may be very harsh in the beginning. There is enough literature available to guide you on the web. Also speak to other dryers in your area drying similar timber
Good luck