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UVA’s Esteemed Women’s Coach Kevin Sauer Retires After 29 Years

Kevin Sauer. Photo: Matt Riley

Kevin Sauer, the only varsity coach the University of Virginia women have ever known, announced his retirement in May.

One of the best-liked and most successful coaches in rowing, Sauer coached the Cavaliers for 29 years, leading the club program into the NCAA when Virginia elevated women’s rowing to varsity status in 1995.

Under Sauer, Virginia won the NCAA Division I national championship in 2010 and 2012 and trophies (top four) 11 times. The Cavaliers have ruled the Atlantic Coast Conference, winning 22 of 23 ACC regattas, including the last 13.

“This has been an incredible ride, and I have enjoyed almost every minute,” Sauer said. “I have appreciated all of the great support from administration, staff, assistant coaches, boatmen, parents, and alumni. And, most of all, the student-athletes have been awesome, and I’ll miss that the most.

“I have spent all these years working with those who are fairly fortunate, so in retirement I’d like to spend my time helping those less fortunate and with our church. But, most importantly, I want to spend more time with my wife, Barb, who has been my rock and biggest supporter.

“My kids and grandchildren are local, which is a true blessing, so I will be more involved in their lives. I know this program will thrive going forward and I cannot wait to watch and support them as well as all UVA athletics. But our immediate emphasis is to finish this season well with ACCs and NCAAs.”

Kevin Sauer. Photo: Matt Riley

Sauer surpassed 1,000 career varsity-eight wins at Virginia during the 2019 season. Under Sauer’s tutelage, 46 student-athletes have earned 62 Pocock Racing Shells All-America honors. A Virginia oarswoman has rowed at each of the last five Olympics

Sauer is a pioneer of collegiate women’s rowing, one of the coaches who took a program from club status to varsity as the sport was elevated by the NCAA. Even as full-ride scholarships and international recruiting brought a professional edge to Division I rowing, Sauer remained one of the sport’s truly nice guys, running his program with family values that endeared him to his team and many others.

“The rowing world is losing a gem,” said Princeton head coach Lori Dauphiny. “But I imagine we are not losing Kevin at all. I have never seen him stand still for a moment and I bet he is the same retired. He has always led by example in our sport. He has the ability to do it all and especially at a time when there was little support in our sport. He built a boathouse both metaphorically and physically. He could fix any rowing course blindfolded. And he developed great teams! He is a legend.”

“Kevin Sauer is on the Mount Rushmore of collegiate coaches, and the landscape of NCAA rowing will be vastly different without him,” said Texas coach Dave O’Neill. “Kevin and his teams have been an inspiration and challenge for many of us, and over the years he’s been a valued mentor, colleague, competitor, and friend.”

Virginia alumnae, friends, and families recognized and honored his contributions to Cavalier rowing by establishing the Kevin Sauer Fund for Excellence in Women’s Rowing in 2023 with an initial collective gift of over a million dollars. The fund began with a $250,000 donation from a former member of the men’s rowing club—Sauer coached both men’s and women’s club crews when he was hired originally to coach the Virginia Rowing Club in the fall of 1988—and included donations from rowers he never coached directly.

“He just cares about people,” said associate head coach Kelsie Chaudoin, who helped organize the fund drive secretly. “He has always put the person before the athlete. He shows his care and concern in his actions every day.”

June 2024 Magazine

Pocock CRCA Coaches Poll – Week 9, May 15

Story and image courtesy of the CRCA.

This week’s Pocock CRCA Coaches Poll is the final one before the DI field is set for the 2024 NCAA Women’s Rowing Championships. 11 schools will earn their spots automatically through qualification regattas, 10 of which take place this weekend between May 17-19. Unranked SMU qualified last weekend by winning American Athletic Conference. The other 11 at-large teams will be selected by the NCAA DI Rowing Committee and announced Tuesday May 21.

DII regular season racing will also conclude this weekend with conference championships. The NCAA Championship field will be set on Tuesday May 21 with six teams, one from each of the three regions and three at-large selections, competing across two events in Bethel, OH later this month.

The DIII field for the NCAA Championship has been set as the regular season concluded with conference championships last weekend.

Division I
Rank Team Points Previous Ranking
1 University of Texas 2614 1
2 Stanford University 2528 2
3 Princeton University 2320 3
4 University of California, Berkeley 2189 4
5 University of Tennessee 2129 5
6 Yale University 1996 7
7 Brown University 1963 6
8 University of Washington 1769 8
9 University of Michigan 1596 9
10 Syracuse University 1547 10
11 University of Pennsylvania 1353 11
12 The Ohio State University 1287 12
13 Rutgers University 1175 13
14 Indiana University 1079 14
15 Duke University 1075 15
16 University of Virginia 956 16
17 Washington State University 491 17
18 Columbia University 338 18
19 University of Alabama 328 19
20 Harvard-Radcliffe 307 20
ORV Gonzaga University 226
ORV University of Southern California 130
ORV University of Central Florida 120
ORV University of Miami 113
ORV University of California, Los Angeles 104
ORV Oregon State University 94
ORV University of Minnesota 78
ORV University of Notre Dame 75
ORV University of Iowa 14
Division II
Rank Team Points Previous Ranking
1 University of Central Oklahoma 180 1
2 Western Washington University 161 2
3 Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University 130 4
4 Seattle Pacific University 127 3
5 Cal Poly Humboldt 91 5
6 Mercyhurst University 82 6
7 University of Tampa 54 7
8 Rollins College 38 8
ORV Thomas Jefferson University 18
Division III
Rank Team Points Previous Ranking
1 Tufts University 730 1
2 Trinity College 660 3
2 Williams College 660 4
4 Wesleyan University 650 2
5 Wellesley College 500 7
6 Smith College 470 9
7 Bates College 450 5
8 Hamilton College 430 8
9 Ithaca College 360 6
10 US Coast Guard Academy 310 11
11 Worcester Polytechnic Institute (WPI) 263 10
12 William Smith College 176 12
13 Clark University 120 14
14 Connecticut College 60 NR
15 Rochester Institute of Technology 40 13
ORV University of Puget Sound 36
ORV St. Mary’s College of Maryland 30
ORV University of Rochester 26
ORV Skidmore College 16

IRA Lightweight Women’s Poll

In the final collegiate lightweight women’s rowing poll of the season, Princeton claims the top spot for the varsity eight with four first place votes. Boston University is the top ranked crew in both the varsity four and varsity double, coming off a strong weekend in California where they defeated Stanford in both events.

Lightweight Women’s IRA Collegiate Coaches
2024 FINAL IRA Poll
Rank Varsity 8+ (First Place Votes)
1 Princeton (4)
2 Radcliffe (1)
3 Stanford (1)
4 Boston
5 Georgetown
6 Wisconsin
Rank Varsity 4+ (First Place Votes)
1 Boston (6)
2 Radcliffe (1)
3 Stanford (1)
4 Princeton
5 MIT
6 Georgetown
7 Wisconsin
8 Gordon
Rank Varsity 2x (First Place Votes)
1 Boston (8)
2 Princeton (1)
3 Stanford
4 Oklahoma City
5 MIT
6 Georgetown
7 Wisconsin
8 Radcliffe
9 Gordon

NCAA DIII Field is Set

Graphic courtesy of NCAA.

The DIII field for the 2024 NCAA Rowing Championship has been set. Eight programs will contest two events, first and second varsity eights, for the national championship on May 31-June 1 in Bethel, OH.

Four teams earned automatic qualifying bids by winning their conference championships, making up Pool A:

Following the completion of the regular season, four more teams were selected from Pool B/C, which includes “independents, institutions from conferences that do not meet automatic-qualification standards and those Pool A institutions that do not receive their conference’s automatic qualification,” according to the 2024 NCAA Pre-Championship Manual. Additionally, each of the four regions, Mid-Atlantic, New England, New York, and Pacific, must be represented at the championships via an automatic-qualifier or the top-ranked team in the region.

Those four additional teams, announced on May 14th via the selection show, are:

  • Puget Sound
  • Trinity (Connecticut)
  • Wesleyan (Connecticut)
  • Williams

See below the 2024 DIII rowing heat and lane assignments.

IRA National Championship Division III Selected Teams Announced

Commissioner Gary Caldwell has announced the teams who have been selected to participate in the 2024 Intercollegiate Rowing Association National Championship regatta. They represent the following institutions:

Automatic Qualifiers
● Mid Atlantic Rowing Conference (MARC): Milwaukee School of Engineering
● Liberty League: Ithaca College
● New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC): Wesleyan University and Williams College

Independents
● United States Coast Guard Academy

At-large Invitations
● Trinity College
● Tufts University
● Bates College

About the regatta
The 2024 IRA regatta will be held at Mercer Lake in West Windsor, NJ and will feature Division 3 racing on Friday, May 31st and Saturday, June 1st. This will be the 121st running of the regatta and the third consecutive one to host a D3 championship.

About the competitors
Williams returns as the 2-time defending national champion, with Trinity, Tufts, and Bates joining them in making their third straight appearance at the IRA. Weselyan, last year’s silver medalists, will make their second appearance after finishing the 2024 regular season undefeated and capturing wins at the NERC, NIRC, and NESCAC Championships. This year will be the first appearance for MSOE, Ithaca, and the US Coast Guard Academy.

About the selection process
This event will be limited to 8 entries at the discretion of the Selection/Seeding Committee. If the number of IRA eligible declarations in the IRA Men’s National Championship Division III Varsity Heavyweight Eight is less than or equal to 7, allocated entries will be awarded and at-large entries may be awarded up to a limit of 6 or 7 total. If there are more than 7 IRA eligible declarations, allocation of entries will be made as follows:

2024 Regional Qualifying Regatta and Qualifying Entry Allocations
Group A: NESCAC Championship (Currently contested at NIRC); First two (2) IRA DIII Eligible Finishers
Group A: MARC Championship; First IRA DIII Eligible Finisher
Group A: Liberty League Championship; First IRA DIII Eligible Finisher
Group B: West Coast Region Allocation†; One Chosen by Selection Committee
Group D: At Large, no conference AQ; One Chosen by Selection Committee
Group F: At-Large †; Remaining available allocations

† Any entry participating in a qualifying regatta but not qualifying at that regatta, will be considered an
At-Large entry. Any unused regional or Conference Automatic allocations will revert to the At-Large pool.

Race Highlights: May 10-12

Photo by Lisa Worthy.

Dad Vails: Drexel won both the men’s and women’s varsity eights at the Jefferson Dad Vail Regatta this weekend, the third consecutive win at Vails for the men, making them the first team to do so in 23 years. On the strength of these performances, Drexel won the overall points trophy as well as the men’s points trophy. Paul Savell, the Dragon’s director of rowing, said, “I couldn’t be more proud of the entire program and their outstanding performance to capture the overall team title.”  Savell, in his 17th year with the program, continued, “Drexel Rowing’s triumph at Dad Vail’s, securing victories in the varsity women’s 8, and the men’s varsity 8, varsity 4, and 3rd 8, and topping overall team points, is a testament to the relentless dedication, passion and excellence, that define Drexel Rowing.”

Georgetown won the women’s points trophy with seven medals overall across open and lightweight events. Full results.

USRowing Mid-Atlantic and Southeast Youth Championships: This weekend, on Lake Mercer in New Jersey and at Nathan Benderson Park in Florida, over 3,500 high school athletes vied for regional championships and qualifying spots for the USRowing Youth National Championship in June at the Mid-Atlantic and Southeast Youth Championships. In the Mid-Atlantic edition of the race, St. Joseph’s Prep won the men’s youth eight while Mount Saint Joseph’s Academy won the women’s youth eight. Meanwhile, Whitemarsh won the men’s youth quad while Agnes Irwin won on the women’s side. In Sarasota, St. Andrew Rowing Club won the women’s youth eight while Belen Jesuit Prep School took home gold in the men’s youth eight. North Palm Beach Rowing Club won the women’s youth quad while Miami Rowing and Watersports Center won the men’s event. The Youth Series concludes next week with the Northeast and Northwest Youth Championships.

American Athletic Conference Championship: In the first DI conference championship of the year, Southern Methodist came away with their fourth consecutive American Athletic Conference Championship and the accompanying NCAA National Championship qualification spot with wins in the second varsity eight, varsity four, and second varsity four, earning 132 points. Tulsa won the varsity eight, scoring 128 points overall, and winning the AAC award for Staff of the Year. The rest of the DI NCAA qualification regattas will be held this upcoming weekend across the country.

#4 Stanford Lightweight Women vs. #3 Boston University: The #4 Stanford lightweight women welcomed #3 BU to Redwood Shores for the first time in program history last weekend, coming away with in a win in the varsity eight by over 10 seconds, upending the lightweight rankings. This is Stanford’s fourth straight win after sweeping WIRAs and defeating #6 Wisconsin prior to that. The Terriers came away with wins in the varsity four and double. This is the final race for both teams prior to the IRA National Championship later this month.

#4 Stanford Lightweight Women’s 8+ Tops #3 Boston

Story and photo courtesy of Stanford Athletics.

REDWOOD SHORES, Calif. – The No. 4 Stanford Lights raced No. 3 Boston today, with the varsity 8+ topping the Terriers at Redwood Shores.

The eight finished over 10 seconds ahead of Boston to take a fourth-straight win after sweeping WIRAs two weeks ago and topping No. 6 Wisconsin before that.

Next up for Stanford is the IRA Championships beginning on May 31 in Mercer, N.J.

RESULTS
Varsity 8+

  1. Stanford      6:34.9
  2. Boston         6:49.4

Varsity 4+

  1. Boston         7:24.7
  2. Stanford       7:40.7

Varsity 2+

  1. Boston          7:36.1
  2. Stanford.       7:47.8

BOATS
Varsity 8+
Coxswain: Lydia Garnett
Stroke Seat: Anna Meurer
7. Emily Molins
6. Maddie Lloyd
5. Juliette Lermusiaux
4. Brook Ruszkiewicz
3. Jordan Stock
2. Hannah Justicz
Bow Seat: Grace Padula

Varsity 4+
Coxswain: Marrisa Chow
Stroke Seat: Brooke Legenzowski
3. Lauren Koester 
2.  Sophia Ramaraju
Bow Seat: Mikayla Chen

Varsity 2x
Stroke Seat: Hannah Peters
Bow Seat: Elle Rosenfeld