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Questions for rowers

89ute
89ute Member Posts: 2,486
1. Are scholarships offered in this sport?

2. What draws one to become a rower?

3. Do people row prior to college, such as high school, clubs or some kind of little league?

4. Other than rowing itself, how do you train?

5. How many miles per hour do you get the boat going?

6. Didn't even fucking know Pac-12 rowing was a thing, thought it was an east coast, Ivy League sport. So is it just UW, WSU, Cal and Stanford? (I looked at UW schedule)

7. Is it as demanding and time consuming as other collegiate sports?

8. What are the categories of competition?

9. Do people compete in the Olympics prior to college, during or after?

10. Proper use of the word rowing vs crew?

11. When did you row, were you on one of the national championship teams and include any bitchin stories.

12. Any post graduation benefits?
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Comments

  • EwaDawg
    EwaDawg Member Posts: 4,381
    89ute said:

    1. Are scholarships offered in this sport?

    2. What draws one to become a rower?

    3. Do people row prior to college, such as high school, clubs or some kind of little league?

    4. Other than rowing itself, how do you train?

    5. How many miles per hour do you get the boat going?

    6. Didn't even fucking know Pac-12 rowing was a thing, thought it was an east coast, Ivy League sport. So is it just UW, WSU, Cal and Stanford? (I looked at UW schedule)

    7. Is it as demanding and time consuming as other collegiate sports?

    8. What are the categories of competition?

    9. Do people compete in the Olympics prior to college, during or after?

    10. Proper use of the word rowing vs crew?

    11. When did you row, were you on one of the national championship teams and include any bitchin stories.

    12. Any post graduation benefits?


    yes

  • dnc
    dnc Member Posts: 56,855

    I got the rowing thing dialed in around here. I PM'd you with a good level of Rowing Superiority Guy shit.

    poast it here, love to read it myself
  • 89ute
    89ute Member Posts: 2,486
    here's my maff. 2000 meters in 5 min 40 sec is a 4.33 minute mile. that would be 13.86 MPH
  • YellowSnow
    YellowSnow Moderator, Swaye's Wigwam Posts: 37,710 Founders Club
    89ute said:

    here's my maff. 2000 meters in 5 min 40 sec is a 4.33 minute mile. that would be 13.86 MPH

    That sounds about right. World record times by boat type: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_world_records_in_rowing

  • whlinder
    whlinder Member Posts: 5,388
    I'll add my rowing dork response as well, where I have things to add above what YellowSnow said.

    1. The women's side for scholarships really took off as a way to offset a bunch of football scholarships. Kansas fucking State has a women's varsity rowing team.


    3. On the East Coast the major areas for youth rowing are Boston/New England, Philly and DC Metro. Boston/Philly are largely private schools with lots of money. DC Metro has a very large rowing community full of public school competition with growing private school programs.
    Where I grew up club/community rowing began around 7th grade. It's not really possible to start earlier than that as it would be too risky to send a bunch of 4th graders out on a lake. Get hit with a freak storm and they don't have the strength to row back to the dock and could easily capsize. Boats can flip in a hurry if you don't know what you're doing and you do not want to be trying to get 9 children with limited strength out of water and in to a launch before they get too tired and drown.
    All of this is magnified depending on the body of water you are on. Row on a river and you are asking children to row against the current in one direction, which can be challenge for middle schoolers.

    It's such a contrast to the era of youth sports now where most kids pick their sport before middle school. You can't actually start until middle school.

    My sister actually coached for some Salt Lake City club rowing team, so such a thing exists, but she has since moved away.

    4. Yep, the Concept II is something else. If only everyone who used them knew what they were doing. Sigh.

    6. I would add Princeton, Yale and Wisconsin to the list (UW, Cal, Harvard, Brown) of teams that care.

    8. There are also lightweight categories but UW doesn't compete in those. And sculling (two oars per rowing) is a thing. If you're talking masters rowing the categories go all over the place.

    11. I sucked so no. lol. Do I get to claim I was on the same team as Olympic Gold medalists?

    12. The older I get the more I appreciate the mental toughness, discipline and rigidity that rowing gave me. Especially since I never did anything in the military.
  • 89ute
    89ute Member Posts: 2,486
    I did a little googling to learn about how these boats are steered. Of course, this led to learning about the coxswain. Perfect home for our napoleon complex fellows, no? How do you find someone to do this? Who wants to do this outside of the napoleon complex guy? I assume it's not a member of the coaching staff, correct?
  • whlinder
    whlinder Member Posts: 5,388
    The coxswain is a student ath-uh-lete like the rest of them. Finding them can be a pain but the good ones stand out. The benefit is being part of a competitive team.

    Getting a coxswain for masters or club rowing is really a pain.