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World Cup I Set to Unite Rowers in Serbia

Belgrade, SERBIA,Bows lined up for the start at the 2014 FISA European Rowing Championships. Lake Sava. 12:08:22 Saturday 31/05/2014 [Mandatory Credit; Peter Spurrier/Intersport-images]

STAFF REPORTS
PHOTO BY PETER SPURRIER

Only one American is set to compete at the 2022 World Rowing Cup I May 27.

Mary Jones Nabel will represent the United States in the lightweight women’s single in Belgrade, Serbia. Jones Nabel is a five-time U.S. National Team member.

In addition to the women’s lightweight single, rowers will compete across 20 events May 27-29 on Sava Lake in Belgrade, Serbia.

Racing is set to begin at 2:00 a.m. Central time. Live stream here (Saturday 28 May – 11:00 CET until 13:20 CET, Sunday 29 May – 10:30 CET until 15:20 CET.) Entries here.

Hydrow Backs National Schools Regatta

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PHOTO PROVIDED

Connected fitness juggernaut Hydrow has backed the 2022 National Schools Regatta as a gold sponsor.

Hydrow will set up a demo station at the event for spectators to try the rowing machine.

“‘National Schools’ Regatta is delighted to welcome Hydrow to our even,” National School’s Regatta Chairman George Hammond said. “Rowing as a sport can be enjoyed by all ages on and off the water, Hydrow has reimagined our sport and the way it can be enjoyed. We encourage everyone to come and try out the state-of-the-art rower over the weekend. We would like to thank Hydrow for supporting junior rowing by sponsoring our event, this sponsorship enables NSR to retain the first-class event delivery we aspire to for all our competitors.”

USRowing, HOCR Announce Partnership

.Description;Spectators watch the racing from the Cambridge Boathouse, at the 2012 Head of the Charles". Boston, USA..16:13:50 Saturday 20/10/2012. .[Mandatory Credit: Peter Spurrier/Intersport Images]

STAFF REPORTS
PHOTO BY PETER SPURRIER

USRowing announced May 25 that the Head of the Charles Regatta will be providing “substantial financial support” to the U.S. National Team for its upcoming international trip to the 2022 Henley Royal Regatta.

In addition to the financial support, HOCR Executive Director Fred Schoch will join the U.S. National Team in the United Kingdom and is serving as an honorary U.S. coach during Henley.

“We are excited for this opportunity to support USRowing and the national team,” said Schoch. “Our national team athletes work tirelessly to represent our country and our sport – it’s an honor to come alongside and support their efforts.”

“USRowing has a long and important relationship with the Head Of The Charles Regatta, and we are so grateful for their continued and generous support of the U.S. National Team,” said USRowing CEO Amanda Kraus. “We look forward to a special chance to see the U.S. team race at the Henley Royal Regatta – an opportunity made possible through the support of our friends at the HOCR.”

Full release here.

In Pursuit of ‘Late-Season Speed’ – An NCAA Women’s Rowing Championship Primer

BY SOFIA SCEKIC
PHOTO BY LISA WORTHY

“Late-season speed.” That’s the most common goal moving into the postseason for all rowing teams, from the college level to club teams to juniors. For some teams, though, “late-season speed” means improving on the already-fast times the crews have been rowing this season in hope of winning a championship. But for other teams, particularly ones that have been hit hard by Covid, that means just showing up and giving it your best effort, without a trophy in mind.

Every rowing team has faced unique challenges over the last two years, but the 2021-22 season looked more normal than any season since 2018-19. As most teams wrap up the regular season by mid-May and championship racing is in full swing by the end of May, here is some insight into which teams are leading the polls and how they fared during regular-season competition.

NCAA

Moving into postseason competition, Texas sits on top of the NCAA rankings for Division I. The Longhorns enter the postseason having lost only one race: the team’s second four finished less than one second behind No. 6 Michigan in early April. Among the highlights of the season was a four-race sweep of the finals races at the prestigious San Diego Crew Classic. The Longhorns beat three teams that ranked among the top 16 in the nation in then-No. 3 Washington, then-No. 9 Washington, and then-No. 16 USC. In its final regular-season regatta on April 30, the first varsity eight extended its season-long winning streak to 15, and the Longhorns won all five races against three more teams currently ranked in the top 16. The team will turn its attention to the Big 12 Championship on May 15 before the NCAA Championships begin on May 27.

No. 2 Stanford is the only other team that received a first-place vote in the Week 7 edition of the poll. The Cardinal started their season with a nearly seven-second win in the championship-eight division at the Head of the Charles Regatta and followed up that performance with a Cal Cup victory at the San Diego Crew Classic. The team’s boats then won every event in which they competed at the Pac-12 Invite and 12 out of 15 events at the Big 10 Invite. Their final regular-season regatta against No. 9 California was canceled due to Covid cases within the program, so the Cardinal’s next opportunity to race will come at the Pac-12 Championships in Oregon on May 15, this time against only Pac-12 teams. Six of the top-20 teams in the most recent poll come from the Pac-12, so the Cardinal will have their work cut out for them as they gear up for the national championship.

No. 3 Yale is another team that has spent most of its time near the top of the weekly polls this season. After starting the season at No. 11, the team has earned its climb up the polls with its 11-0 record and most recently swept five weekend races against Radcliffe and Northeastern en route to its ninth-straight Case Cup victory. The Bulldogs’ boats have won nearly all races in which they have entered this season, losing just one of five races to then-No. 4 Princeton in mid-April at their first home race of the season. The team will compete at the Ivy League Championship in Camden, N.J., on May 15 before the NCAA Championship. Yale is one of three ranked teams among Ivy League schools; Princeton and Brown sit right behind the Bulldogs in the rankings at No. 4 and No. 5, respectively. 

There has not been much movement among the top 10 in the Pocock CRCA poll this season, as Texas has held the top spot all season and Stanford has been just below the Longhorns for five of seven weeks. One notable mover is the University of Washington, which started out at No. 3 in Week 1 and fell steadily to No. 10 last week before moving up slightly to No. 7 on April 27. Consistent second- and third-place finishes for several boats during mid-season races seem to have contributed to the drop in the rankings, but the Huskies had a stellar showing at last week’s dual at then-No. 7 Cal. Washington took the victory in the V8+, 2V8+, 3V8+, and 4V8+ while Cal won in the V4+. 

In Division II, Mercyhurst University sits atop the rankings — a spot the team has occupied for the last three weeks. Both the Mercyhurst men (who do not compete in the NCAA) and women have competed against numerous Division I teams this season and held their own in all races, including the season opener at Bucknell, where the women’s four took wins over three Division I opponents in Michigan, Bucknell, and Lehigh. Head coach Adrian Spracklen also singled out the Knecht Cup as a regular-season highlight; between the men and women, Mercyhurst came home with four medals. 

“We got to race several of the Division I schools and that really helped us get battle-hardened and race-ready because the racing was close,” Spracklen said. “You learn a lot more in close races than you do by winning by a lot or losing by a lot, so having close races really gave us a lot of confidence and the belief that we’re doing some things right.”

Spracklen was particularly happy with the performance of his women’s team against Division I Drexel, which, although not currently ranked in the Top 20, he called a strong team. 

“We raced a school that we knew was strong in Drexel,” he said. “We came close to them three times, which was really exciting and really made us have a lot of self-belief and belief that we have some speed and that we can compete in Division II.” 

Most recently, the women’s eights team competed at the Division II East Regional Invite to take on No. 7 Jefferson and Franklin Pierce — the teams ranked No. 2 and No. 3, respectively, in the East Region. Mercyhurst defeated Jefferson by less than one second and Franklin Pierce by nearly a minute, turning in times under 6:40 in both races. The competition served as a tune-up for the Mid-America Collegiate Rowing Association (MACRA) Championships, and the women’s eights, along with four other boats, took home gold medals at that meet. The team will compete at the Dad Vails on May 13 and 14 before the women row at the NCAA Championships from May 27 to 29 and the men row at the IRA Championships on June 3.

As for postseason goals, Spracklen said that, first and foremost, he hopes his rowers “feel like all the work they’ve done has paid off.”

“Irrespective of what you achieve is knowing that all the work and all the sacrifice, including all the Covid things that have struck us down,” he continued, “everything you’ve put forward has counted for something.”

The other Division II team that has spent time on top of the polls is defending national champion No. 3 University of Central Oklahoma, which held the top spot for four weeks before dropping to No. 2 and now to No. 3. The Bronchos have competed against various Division I and II teams this season as well, most recently at the SIRA Championships, where the team finished fifth in the V8+ finals and fourth in the V4+ finals. UCO will have about a month off before it takes the water again for the Great Northwest Athletic Conference Championships on May 14 before competing at the NCAA Championships, where it could give Mercyhurst a run for the national title.

In Division III, Wellesley College has held the top spot in the polls all season. Its V8+ and 2V8+ have finished no lower than second place in a regatta all season, and just last weekend, the V8+ won the New England Rowing Championship for the first time in school history. The Blue has competed against numerous highly-ranked teams this season, including No. 2 Bates, the team that has held the ranking just below Wellesley for all but one week this season. At the New England Women’s and Men’s Athletic Conference (NEWMAC) Rowing Championship on April 23, the Blue won the conference title for the ninth time in 10 tries with victories in the first, second, and third varsity eights. Wellesley took down No. 3 Worcester Polytechnic Institute, No. 8 Clark, No. 10 Smith, and No. 12 Coast Guard at the conference meet and seems poised to make a run at the national championship in late May after automatically qualifying with its conference victory.

Bates, the team that has won five of the last six Division III national championships, has also finished at or near the top in nearly every race in which its team has competed. At the New England Rowing Championships, despite Wellesley’s taking the victory in the varsity eight, the Bates team score of 92.11 was nearly 20 points higher than the score of runner-up Wellesley. The Bobcats’ depth is exceptional this year, which will serve the team well in postseason competition, especially if further Covid outbreaks affect the team. The women’s team dealt with an outbreak about two weeks ago, while the men’s team had its own outbreak last week.

“We have an expression around here—‘Bring your flexibility trousers with you’—because we’ve got to be ready to adjust in any circumstances at the drop of a hat,” Head Coach Peter Steenstra said, referring to the last several years of Covid-related challenges.

The Bobcats are in a good position moving into the postseason and seem to be finding their top speed at the right time, as evidenced by their recent wins at the New England Rowing Championship. The team’s final competition before the women take on the NCAA Championships is the National Invitational Rowing Championship in Worcester, Mass. As for the postseason, Steenstra said, “Our goals are no different than they’ve ever been in the past, which is to just find our top speed.”

“There’s only so many things that we can control, and we certainly can’t control anything our competition is doing,” Steenstra added. “We’ve got to pull everything in our lane and put our best crews together and see what we can make for boat speed out of those groups.”

USRowing Announces Selection Camp Invitees

STAFF REPORTS
PHOTO BY ED MORAN

This summer ten athletes will train out of the Caspersen Rowing Center hoping to earn a spot in the PR3 coxed four that will represent the United States at the 2022 World Rowing Championships.

Among the ten athletes are five national team veterans and one Paralympian.

The United States’ PR3 coxed four is a storied boat class having won silver in the event seven consecutive years in Paralympic and world championship competition including picking up a silver medal at the Tokyo Paralympic Games behind the gold-medal crew representing Great Britain.

“It feels good,” Dani Hansen told Rowing News reporter Ed Moran after the race in Tokyo. Hansen has been part of the silver streak and was the only returning 2016 Paralympian in the crew. “It’s an accomplishment to bring back a medal for the U.S. We’re really pumped. We put a lot into it and we’re happy that we came out like this. It’s awesome.”

Hansen was not among those invited to the PR3 camp nor was John Tanguay, Karen Petrik, Charley Nordin, or Allie Reilly—Hansen’s teammates in the silver-medal Tokyo crew.

Jaclyn Smith, however, is the lone Paralympian on the list of ten. Smith, along with other camp invitees Andrew Wigren, Todd Vogt, and Pearl Outlaw recently competed at National Selection Regatta I in Sarasota-Bradenton, Florida.

More recently, Vogt and Outlaw swept four races at Gavirate International Para Rowing Regatta.

Here is the full list of selection camp invitees:

Emilie Eldracher (Andover, Mass./Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Alex Flynn (Danvers, Mass./St. John’s Prep)
Julian Green (Arlington, Mass./Temple University)
Saige Harper (Easthampton, Mass./Sacred Heart University)
Serafina King (Los Angeles, Calif./University of Oklahoma)
Molly Moore (Indianapolis, Ind./Harvard College)
Pearl Outlaw (Charlottesville, Va./Ithaca College)
Jaclyn Smith (Williston Park, N.Y./Sacred Heart University)
Todd Vogt (Rochester, N.Y./University of Buffalo)
Andrew Wigren (Providence, R.I./Hobart College)

The 2022 World Rowing Championships is set to take place September 18-25 in Racice, Czech Republic.

2022 ACRA National Championship Triumphs After Covid Hiatus

BY LUKE REYNOLDS
PHOTOS BY BARRY HOUCHIN

After a two-year Covid-induced hiatus, the 2022 American Collegiate Rowing Association National Championship brought life back to the club college rowing scene.

The break didn’t come without consequences, though. Michigan’s longtime head coach Greg Hartsuff recently told Rowing News reporter Sofia Scekic that the virus had disrupted the collegiate club rowing ecosystem.

“I don’t have a single guy on my team who’s raced a full season in a varsity boat,” Hartsuff said. “The seniors were freshmen last time they had a season and they rowed in that category. It’s pretty clear to me the pandemic really hurt the club teams, the ACRA teams, more than it did the varsity teams,” Hartsuff said. “Entries are down across the board across the country, and a lot of it is our sophomore classes. I’ve got only two sophomores [this year].”

This weekend, though, on the shores and on the water of Melton Lake in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, the hard-fought battles of keeping collegiate club rowing alive paid off as athletes were finally back in boats, rowing together and competing at the highest level of ACRA rowing.

It was a triumph.

George Washington University—a program that was stripped of its varsity status in July of 2020 due to the virus—was a bright light at the event, winning the men’s eight grand final with a time of 5:52.994. The crew was coxswained by Luke Ames, who graduated from George Washington May 16.

“I am feeling so proud of the guys in not only the varsity eight, but the entire GW family for being resilient through the past year,” Ames said. “This win means so much to us. We wanted this race to be a statement to the rowing community that we are still here and we are still excited to compete.”

Ames was joined by Patrick George, Brian O’Rourke, Clement Banwell, Maximilian Hanna, Noah Axford, Oliver Broadrick, James Canfield, and Gaspard Cuvelier.

In the women’s varsity eight grand final, the Grand Valley crew of coxswain Stephanie Bruck, stroke Hannah Shorkey, seven-seat Emmeline Dyer, six-seat Isabel Albaitis, five-seat Hailey Engvall, four-seat Anna Foster, three-seat Emili Barth, two-seat Rebecca Kelley, and bow-seat McKenzie Sandel won the event with a time of 6:54.083.

Purdue and Middlebury rounded out the top three in the event.

Grand Valley had a busy weekend overall with nine entries at the regatta, picking up another win in the women’s 2nd varsity eight grand final, besting Purdue and Vermont.

All in all, more than 68 clubs participated in the event across 23 events, with just about every flavor or rowing imaginable.

“Hats off to the entire ACRA Regatta,” Ames said. “We were welcomed with open arms. The team is excited to come back next year.”

For a complete list of results, click here.

Day Two of ACRA National Championship Wrapped Up May 21; Finals Set

STAFF REPORTS
PHOTO BY LUKE REYNOLDS

The second day of racing at the 2022 ACRA National Championship started with heats in the women’s single and ended with the fourth men’s varsity eight semifinal.

It was a reminder that the ACRA National Championship is a unique one. One that offers the full range of rowing opportunities for collegiate athletes regardless of club size or class of rowing.

Today’s events on Melton Hill Lake in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, included sweeping, sculling, heats, repechages, semifinals, and finals.

In the women’s varsity eight repechage Vermont, UC Davis, and UC Santa Barbara took the top three spots but only Vermont earned a bid in the grand final. The Catamounts will race Sunday along with UC Davis, UC Irvine, Purdue, Grand Valley, and Middlebury at 12:51 p.m.

In the four men’s eight semifinals that took place at the end of the day, George Washington, UC Irvine, Vanderbilt, and Middlebury won each of their respective semis.

For a full list of results visit here. Racing picks back up Sunday morning at 7:34 a.m. with the C final of the men’s single.

ACRA National Championship Brings Nationals-Level Club College Racing Back Online After Covid Hiatus

STAFF REPORTS
PHOTO BY ED MORAN

After day one of the 2022 ACRA National Championship on Melton Hill Lake in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, crews are poised for another full day of racing on Saturday.

Friday’s racing included heats, time trials, and repechages in a range of events.

In the women’s varsity eight heats Grand Valley and Purdue took the top spots in heats one and two, respectively. In the four men’s varsity eight heats, George Washington, UC Irvine, UCLA, and Michigan won each of their respective heats.

A full list of results can be viewed here. Racing picks back up Saturday morning, May 20 at 9:00 a.m.