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    Three Keys to Success

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    Rowing is a beautiful, elegantly simple sport: The first boat across the line wins. There are no judged points, no time-outs, and no substitutions. We race to win, with no room for debate about the result, which is decided on the water.

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    Off the water, coaches should leave plenty of room for debate, especially regarding non-rowing matters. A coach is a teacher, and most rowers are student-athletes. Our sport is but one part of a person’s development as a member of society, and as Madeline Davis Tully points out in her Coaching Development column on page 63, coaches should create a welcoming environment for rowers of all kinds by not taking a stand on the social issues that have distracted so many in our sport from the actual rowing over the past few years.

    Now–spring and summer–is when our races matter, when the trophies are awarded, and when championships are determined, by racing and by crossing the line first.

    A lot goes in to the roughly 260 strokes it takes to cover the 2,000 meters of these victories and championships. Hours of training over the four years of a school career—or the eight or more years of an Olympic journey—are behind each and every stroke of a six-minute race.

    Only one crew gets to be the best at the final regatta, and what all the best have in common are three keys to success: great athletes guided by great coaches with great organizational support. In this issue, we feature two programs, one at each end of the years-long process of harnessing those elements to develop successful crews.

    Deerfield Academy, a school as old as our country, found immediate success switching from racing in coxed fours to eights last year, but it came after years of building.

    This year, on the NCAA Division I level, UCF is beginning the process, putting great organizational support behind a great coach, Mara Allen, in her first year of developing great athletes in Orlando.

    Also this year, as pictured and explained in Big News, beginning on page 25, great U.S. athletes have won the opportunity to race against the world’s best rowers coached by great coaches with great organizational support at this summer’s Olympics and Paralympics in Paris.

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