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Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Women's Squad Announces Five Recruits

While the search for Kris Sanford's successor as head coach goes on, Assistant Coach Alicea Kochis has announced a hanfdul of recruits set to join the Orange squad this fall.
See the story here from suathletics.com.

Thursday, June 10, 2010

New Edition of the Orange Oar is Online

The latest version of the Orange Oar is now available online. Click here to access.

Coach Kris Sanford Moves On


After 14 seasons as head coach of the SU Women’s Rowing Team, Kris Sanford has announced that she is stepping down. In an email to her team, Sanford said she does so with mixed emotions. “You were all a real pleasure to coach and I thank you for that,” she said.

Sanford informed her team after a meeting with Senior Associate Director of Athletics Rob Edson on Monday. “Daryl (Director of Athletics Daryl Gross) will begin searching for my replacement immediately,” she said in the email. “I am very excited to watch the progress of the program in the coming years because I know it is going to get faster.”

Edson confirmed the search in an email to SARA President Tracy Smith and suathletics.com put out a news release this afternoon.

Edson said Associate Athletics Director Jamie Mullin will coordinate the search and that he and Mullin will present a short list to Gross. “I suspect that we will formally interview anywhere from 3-5 candidates and will attempt to do so as quickly as possible given summer schedules of those on campus and the candidates themselves,” he wrote.

Edson said he welcomes SARA’s offer of support. “While the involvement may not be formal,” Edson wrote, “I believe it will prove very valuable to us and the future of the program. For that, I very much appreciate your willingness to assist and value the perspectives and insights you can bring to us.”

The daughter of long-time men’s head coach Bill Sanford, Kristen Sanford grew up in the S.U. Boathouse and came home to Syracuse in the fall of 1994 after a stellar rowing career at the University of Washington and experience as executive director of the Indianapolis Rowing Center and Midwest Regional Technical Director for USRowing.

She started here as novice coach and recruiting coordinator and moved up to head coach in the fall of 1996. Her first varsity eight made the inaugural NCAA regatta in 1997 and she would take the V8 to the NCAA’s again in 2000, 2001, 2002 and 2005.

This year’s varsity eight began with a strong win at home over Boston University, but then struggled against a schedule of highly-ranked crews and wound up the season finishing tenth (4th in petite final) at the EAWRC sprints.

Sanford’s athletes excelled in the classroom. 41 team members made the Athletic Director’s Honor Roll in the fall semester of 2009.

Sanford plans to enroll in nursing school in January. “This is something I have always wanted to do and I am excited about the next chapter in my life,” she wrote in the email.

Saturday, June 5, 2010

A Few More...and Thank Yous!

Many thanks to David Beck ('77 Frosh 4+ stroke, 1974 IRAs) for sending along the last photo in this series and a gigantic thank you to Carol Kruse for coordinating the unbelievable refreshments and hospitality at the SU tent. Nicely done!





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Scenes from the IRAs

Phew. What a day at the IRAs. A fantastic day of unbelievably close racing. We could not be prouder of the SU coaches or athletes. A tremendous performance by all. Here are a few photos from the day....










More from Camden: V8 "took our shot" - JV, Frosh win their races, V4 in a tight one and Master's Eight Just Short


The truth is they would have preferred to do even better, but the 2010 SU Varsity Eight did something an SU V8 hadn’t done in 20 years – made it to the Grand Final at the I.R.A. On this blistering hot Saturday, the Orange went after a medal but ran out of gas and finished sixth.

“You want to look back on your last race and say you got everything out of your guys you could,” Head Coach Dave Reischman said afterward. “The varsity left the last bit of everything they had on the water.”

After SU made the Grand Final by holding off BU Friday by .02 seconds, Reischman said he told his varsity, “We’re in the final and we’re going to end up road kill in the third 500 or we’re taking a medal, but we’re going to take our shot at this thing. We took our shot and it didn’t work out.”

“We went physically all out as hard as we could,” senior bow man Ryan Patton said.
“We gave it our all,” senior three man Tyson Bry said.

Cal 5:23.897
Washington 5:24.160
Cornell 5:30.356
Harvard 5:31.106
Brown 5:40.513
SU 5:43.902


JV TAKES PETITE FINAL

After a finishing fourth in the semi-final on Friday, the JV came out fired up Saturday morning and knocked off five good crews to win the petite final. "The guys put together probably the best race I think they’ve had to this point," sophomore coxswain Isaac Budmen said.

In previous races the JV had run into problems in the second thousand meters, so when the Orange crossed the halfway point this time Budmen had a message " I said ‘this is it, let’s take control.’ We took 20 strokes and kind of pushed out about ¾ of a length and they knew they were in control at that point."

Princeton came after the Orange in the final 500 but SU was ready. "We had a nice little pickup with 300 to go," stroke Kynan Reelick said. "a good little ten stroke push there and kept it there and kept going and it got us to the finish."

SU5:44.725
Princeton 5:45.892
BU 5:47.446
Yale 5:47.934
Northeastern 5:52.072
Columbia 5:54.030



FROSH WIN THIRD LEVEL FINAL

You want to win the race you’re in and the Freshman eight found itself in the third level final at this year’s IRA – so that’s the one the Orange won, doing a nice job of holding off Penn at the finish.

"I was proud of these guys for coming back from in their minds what was a disappointment a couple of days ago and racing I think a tough race and flat out just seeing what they’ve got," frosh coach Dave Weiss said.

"It was our goal to make the petite final so it’s a little bittersweet but it gives us something to build on for next year it gives a little motivation," stroke Nick Pickard said.

Cox Matt Cosmann would have liked the chance to make some noise in the petites, but "It’s fun to end the season with a win," he said.

SU 5:53.345
Penn 5:54.234
Northeastern 5:56.283
Yale 6:02.202
Dartmouth 6:10.660



V4 THIRD IN PETITES

The varsity four battled it out in the petites, finishing in the middle of a three boat jam with Penn and Temple a length or so behind winning Yale. The Orange wound up third, edging the Owls, but a beat behind the Quakers.

"I thought it was the best race we had of the four," sophomore two-man James Olson said. "Today we had a good rhythm all the way through and it helped us walk through Temple and George Washington in the middle of the race."


Yale 6:24.573
Penn 6:28.212
SU 6:28.565
Temple 6:28.698
George Washington 6:34.253
Princteon 6:44.270





MASTER’S EIGHT SECOND – RUNS OUT OF WATER CHASING BIG RED.

SU’s master’s eight started about 30 seconds behind Cornell because of the adjustment for average age of the boat (57 to Cornell’s 67) and went flying after the Big Red. But the finish line came about a length too soon and Cornell held on to win it. SU was second, then MIT and a pair of eights from Penn.

"We had a good row," two-man Ted Kakas '64 said. "We just didn’t have enough real estate."

"It was a good piece," said Don Smith '90. "We ran out of space. The course wasn’t long enough."



Staggered Start
Cornell 7:08.215
SU 7:13.506
MIT 7:38.084
Penn B 7:51.405
Penn 7:57.434

S U varsity sixth in grand final

The varsity eight, in the grands for the first time in over two decades came in sixth. Winner Cal posted a 5:23, a blazing fast time even with the stiff tailwind.

According to two man Dan Berry, "this was the toughest racing if the year but the guys came in with the right focus and attitude and raced against the best crews in the world.

Sophomore Mike Dietrick, who first sat in a shell a mere 20 months ago and made the big boat in his secind season, said "after a Disappointing sprints and Dartmouth race we came in with no real expectations and nothing to lose. We came out here racing hard. Speaking about today's race, Mike commented "We tried to race just like Seattle and go really hard in the first 1000 and try to be in a position in the last 800 to compete."

Coach Dave said he revamped the lineup to shake things up a bit. In speaking to the crew after last nights race "we are going to take a shot to put ourselves in a position to medal by the third 500. That gamble didn't pay off today but hats off to Dave and the guys for their willingness to put it all on the line and race for a medal.

Dave didn't limit his praise to the Varsity, deserved a measure of credit for the varsity's grand final position as the two crews force each other to get faster every day.


Cornell took third behind Washington, with Harvard in fourth and Brown fifth.

Conditions have steadily gotten faster as the day has gone on, as the wind has built and backed around.

Freshmen 8 wins third level final

The yearlings won the third level finals convincingly earlier today, rowing a solid race despite their position in one of the less-windy lanes. While the guys would have much preferred to race in a higher level final, they rowed well and raced even better in their final contest.

There are more alums here on the course than I've seen in years, a good thing because there is more food here than a normal crowd could handle.

SU's JV wins petites at IRA

In a terrific race they led wire to wire, the JVs won the petite final by a second thanks to a very solid middle thousand. Speaking about the effort, Coach Dave Reischman said "we've been working on the second thousand all year: had 3/4 a length with 800 to go and that was just enough. A great way to send out Kruse and White, the two seniors in the boat."

For a crew that gave away height and weight to every other crew in the race, the victory was well deserved. The guys defeated several crews that had bested them earlier in the year.

And now the SU JV is seventh in the nation.

Friday, June 4, 2010

AIN'T IT GRAND??? SU VARSITY MAKES THE GRAND FINAL AT THE I.R.A.

The Syracuse Varsity, trailing early, battling Columbia through the middle of the race and then sprinting hell for leather, held off a furious charge by Boston University and made it the Grand Finals at the IRA, with a margin of .02 seconds.
Sure, Washington won the heat and Cal was second, but the Orange men, for the first time in 20 years have made the Grand Final!!!!!
Washington 5:32.362
Cal 5:33.617
SU 5:40.111
BU 5:40.131
Columbia 5:45.739
Northeastern 5:48.070

The second heat went to Harvard with Brown just behind, Cornell not even a blink after Bruno for third and edging Dartmouth by half a second.

Harvard 5:37.284
Brown 5:37.786
Cornell 5:37.819
Dartmouth 5:38.371
Yale 5:43.081
Princeton 5:46.523

SU's Varsity eight was in the Grand Final and took the bronze in 1990 under Coach Bill Sanford. This is Coach Dave Reischman's first trip to the Grands with SU.

“We pulled the trigger at the right time," Reischman told suathletics.com. "Sometimes those photo finishes come down to luck and it felt really good to be on the right-side of the line. We were in sixth place early, but our guys kept their composure and made the right move with about 500 meters remaining.” Full suathletics.com story here.

The tenth seeded Orange will face heavily favored Washington, plus two-seed California, three- seed Harvard, five seed Brown and eight seed Cornell in the Grand Final at 12:15.

You can listen here - or come on down to Camden. SU' master's eight kicks off the racing at 7:48 in the morning.

Results courtesy of powerhousetiming.com
Additional info courtesy of row2k.com

Orange JV, Varsity Four to Petite Finals

Syracuse’s JV gave Wisconsin a strong fight but wound up short this afternoon, finishing fourth in the semi-final. Washington won it, with Brown second. SU caught up to the Badgers at about the halfway point but Wisconsin came back and then opened a length lead in the third 500 meters and held onto it.

Washington 5:45.823
Brown 5:46.803
Wisconsin 5:52.197
SU 5:57.016
Yale 6:05.649
Princeton 6:08.975

Cal won the first JV semi-final in a tight one over Harvard and Cornell held on for the third spot to qualify for the Grand Final.

Cal 5:48.266
Harvard 5:49.871
Cornell 5:56.726
Columbia 6:00.247
Northeastern 6:00.454
BU 6:00.800


Syracuse races Yale, Princeton, Columbia, Northeastern and BU in the petite final tomorrow at 10:30.



The Orange Varsity four, racing for the third time in less than 24 hours wound up fifth in this morning’s semi-final and will finish its racing in the Petite Finals tomorrow. The Orange came back in the sprint to beat out Penn by .72 seconds. That margin was huge compared to what happened up front - a four-way photo finish that saw Wisconsin win it by a hair over Stanford in second – a split hair over Georgetown which took third by less than a split hair over George Washington.

Wisconsin 6:28.966
Stanford 6:29.356
Georgetown 6:29.365
George Washington 6:29.412
Syracuse 6:45.086
Penn 6:45.807


Washington won the first semi easily with Cal second and Brown taking third after going through Temple with about 500 meters to go and holding off the Owls in the sprint by half a second.

Washington 6:24.30
Cal 6:28.67
Brown 6:30.98
Temple 6:31.24
Yale 6:36.51
Princeton 6:46.10

SU will take on George Washington, Penn, Temple, Yale and Princeton in the petite final on Saturday scheduled at 9:24 a.m.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

VARSITY EIGHT ADVANCES TO SEMIS - FACES WASHINGTON, CAL, COLUMBIA, NE, BU ON FRIDAY - JV, V4 ALSO IN SEMIS

The Syracuse Varsity Eight rowed its way into the semi-finals with a second place finish in this afternoon’s repechage, going through Princeton in the last 30 strokes. Brown won it, racing a blistering 39 strokes a minute with Princeton trying to keep up through the first 1,000 meters. The Orange fought off Navy then went after the Tigers and caught them near the end. All three crews advance. Navy, Oregon State and Jacksonville go to the third level final.

Brown 5:37.60
Syracuse 5:39.93
Princeton 5:41.19
Navy 5:44.11
Oregon State 5;49.78
Jacksonville 5:52.81

BU, Cornell and Northeastern advanced from the first repechage, with BU coming from behind at the end to win by .06 seconds. Stanford came in fourth and was shut out – trailing #3 Northeastern by .78 seconds. Perhaps the biggest surprise – Wisconsin was fifth.

BU 5:31.64
Cornell 5:31.70
Northeastern 5:32.066
Stanford 5:32.84
Wisconsin 5:38.14
Penn 5:50.13

So - SU, Brown, Princeton, BU, Cornell and Northeastern join this morning's qualifiers - Washington, Cal, Harvard, Yale, Dartmouth and Columbia in the semi-finals tomorrow.

Syracuse will race in semi-final #1 on Friday, scheduled at 12:15. The Orange will be in lane one with Columbia in two, Washington in three, Cal in four, BU in five and Northeastern in lane six. The top three advance to the Grand Final on Saturday with the others in the Petites. To get to the Grands, Syracuse will have to beat three crews it has beaten before this year, Columbia, BU and Northeastern. That, of course was then. This is now – well, tomorrow.


The JV eight rows in the second semi-final on Friday at noon. SU is on the outside in lane six. Yale is in lane one, Wisconsin in two, Washington in three, Brown in four and Princeton next to the Orange in lane five.

Frosh Fall to Third Level


SU’s Frosh fell short in this afternoon’s repechage, finishing fifth in a race that sends the top three finishers on to the semi-finals. Stanford and Wisconsin battled for the lead with Stanford winning it by just over a second. Oregon State took third with Penn coming back to edge SU for fourth. So the Orange frosh wind up in the third level and have a day to get ready for Saturday’s racing.

Stanford 5:44.24
Wisconsin 5:45.48
Oregon State 5:47.88
Penn 5:52.21
SU 5:52.28
Northeastern 6:00.66

Brown rowed through Navy to win the first repechage with the Midshipmen second and Columbia third. All three advance to the semis.

Brown 5:42.72
Navy 5:44.15
Columbia 5:46.47
Yale 5:48.76
Dartmouth 6:03.03

The Frosh will race Saturday morning at 8:12 against Northeastern, Yale, Dartmouth, and Penn.
Varsity Four Moves into Semis

Syracuse’s varsity four wrapped up the Orange racing for the day by qualifying for the semi-finals with a second place finish in the repechage. Brown won the race easily with the Orange coming through Princeton in the second half of the race and then holding onto second by nine-thousandths of a second. All three crews advance.

Brown 6:31.00
SU 6:35.000
Princeton 6:35.009
Holy Cross 6:39.07
Loyola, Md. 6:50.01
Navy 6:50.92

George Washington edged Temple in the second repechage with Penn holding off Harvard to take the third qualifying spot.

GWU 6:23.17
Temple 6:23.30
Penn 6:25.16
Harvard 6:26.10
Drexel 6:45.70
St. Joseph’s 6:50/49

Brown, SU, Princeton, George Washington, Temple and Penn join Wisconsin, Yale, Washington, Georgetown, Stanford, and Cal all of whom qualified in the morning heats.

Varsity Eight Repechage at 2:15, Frosh at 3:00, V4 at 3:30

SU’s Varsity eight has been slotted into the second repechage this afternoon – slated to start at 2:15. The Orange are in lane five, facing Princeton, Brown, Navy, Oregon State and Jacksonville. Top three advance to the semifinals.

The Orange Freshman eight will race in the second repechage – scheduled at 3 o’clock. SU is in lane four and takes on Penn, Wisconsin, Stanford,Oregon State and Northeastern. The top three advance to the semi-final tomorrow.

The varsity four gets lane three in its repechage this afternoon at 3:30. The Orange men take on Navy, Holy Cross, Brown, Princeton and Loyola, Md. Top three to the semi-final.

JV Advances to Semis; V8, Freshman Eight, V4 to Repechages at IRA

The Orange JV took third in the first heat this morning, moving on to the semi-finals on Friday. Brown won the heat with Cornell second. Brown and Cornell battled back and forth for the lead with SU in the mix for about half the race. Once Yale and Penn fell back, the three lead crews pretty much took it home, saving strength for Friday.

Brown 5:37.27
Cornell 5:41.11
SU 5:46.54
Yale 5:58.47
Penn 6:14.97

California won the second JV heat after a fight with Wisconsin. The Badgers also move on to the semi-finals and Northeastern fought through to take the third spot. BU and Navy will have to race this afternoon in the repechage.

Cal 5:42.87
Wisconsin 5:47.45
Northeastern 5:48.95
BU 5:54.87
Navy 5:55.61

Top seed and defending JV champion Washington won the third heat, rowing away from Princeton in the first half of the race and extending the lead the rest of the way. Harvard’s Crimson came through the Tigers in the second half of the race with both qualifying for the semi-finals. Columbia and Dartmouth trailed.

Washington 5:41.44
Harvard 5:46.66
Princeton 5:50.19
Columbia 6:04.07
Dartmouth 6:09.44


Varsity Eight to Race Again this Afternoon

The Orange Varsity eight gave it a fight this morning but fell short in the second qualifying heat - a heat that saw the top four crews finish bang-bang-bang-bang - with the Orange Fifth. Harvard won it with Columbia second and Princeton third.
BU passed Syracuse in the end and Penn trailed.

Harvard 5:34.65
Columbia 5:35.05
Princeton 5:35.47
BU 5:36.67
SU 5:39.36
Penn 6:04.42

Syracuse goes to the repechage this afternoon.


Cal won the first heat this morning with Yale hitting its stride and taking second - both advancing to the semi-finals. The rest to the repechage

Cal 5:31.94
Yale 5:33. 98
Cornell 5:37.30
Brown 5:41.61
Notheastern 5:49.26
Oregon State 6:16.17

Top seeded Washington won the third heat with Dartmouth continuing its late season roll, finishing second behind the Huskies. Both advance to the semis while Wisconsin, Navy, Stanford and Jacksonville will race again this afternoon.

Washington 5:30.46
Dartmouth 5:35.88
Navy 5:43.37
Stanford 5:43.87
Wisconsin 5:50.02
Jacksonville 6:05.36

Frosh Eight Fourth in Heat


The Orange frosh were not able to qualify for the semis in this morning’s heat, finishing fourth. That sets up an afternoon repechage. Harvard and Cornell battled at the front of the heat with the Crimson holding off the Big Red - both move on to the semi-finals. Columbia was in it early but fell off and finished third.

Harvard 5:44.55
Cornell 5:45.73
Columbia 5: 53.01
SU 5:58.78
Dartmouth 6:02.29
Penn 6:21.99

Washington and BU move on to the semifinals from heat two. The Terriers edged Stanford for the second spot with Navy and Oregon State trailing.

Washington 5:40.82
BU 5:44.17
Stanford 5:46.36
Navy 5:56.58
OSU 5:57.57

Cal and Princeton round out the list of six qualifiers for the freshman eight semi-finals. The Tigers and Bears fought all the way down the course with Cal pulling it out in the sprint.

Cal 5:40.96
Princeton 5:44.08
Brown 5:53.90
Wisconsin 6:00.85
Yale 6:13.27
Northeastern 6:19.63



Varsity Four Heads to Repechage

SU’s varsity four took third in the morning heat, but only the top two spots move right on to the semi-finals so the Orange go into a repechage this afternoon. Washington won the heat easily with Georgetown taking the second spot over SU in third.

Washington 6:22.93
Georgetown 6:29.42
Syracuse 6:34.10
Penn 6:41.68
Princeton 6:49.53
St. Josephs’ 7:02.31

Wisconsin and Yale qualified for the semis in the first V4 heat

Wisconsin 6:26.65
Yale 6:28.95
Temple 6:39.18
Holy Cross 6:43.45
Drexel 6:50.82
Loyola, Md. 7:06.34

Stanford and Cal qualify for the semis coming in one-two in a tight heat #3.

Stanford 6:22.12
Cal 6:23.88
Harvard 6:26.34
Brown 6:28.06
George Washington 6:32.27
Navy 7:11.72

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Rearranging for the IRA

The men in the Varsity Eight for SU are the same, but Coach Dave Reischman has changed where most of them are seated for the IRA.

Mike Gennaro remains at stroke and Chris Lutz at seven but the rest of the oarsmen have flipped. Starboard oar Vince Berry moves up to six forming a bucket with Lutz and port oar Dan Turner moves back a seat to five.

The bow four finds Mike Dietrick now in the four seat, rowing on the starboard side, Tyson Bry (port) at three, Dan Berry (starboard) at two and Ryan Patton (port) in the bow.

Two other changes:
* Sophomore Isaac Budmen has moved up to cox the JV eight. Senior Jack Mutty takes over as cox of the varsity four.
* In the freshman eight Kyle Rogers and Mason Leasure swap seats, Rogers moving up to seven and Leasure back to five.

Click here for lineups courtesy of suathletics.com

CMax Rankings Offer One Last Topic for Speculation Before the Crews Get Down to Racing on the Cooper River

Without rowing a stroke in competition SU has managed to creep a tenth of a second closer to the Washington Huskies in this week’s CMax rankings and two-tenths of a second closer to Dartmouth. CMax now ranks the Orange V8 as 11.4 seconds back of top-ranked Washington and .8 behind seventh ranked Dartmouth, which has beaten SU twice this season.

After a romp over Penn in the Madeira Cup, Cornell stays at number six but now is rated 9.6 seconds behind Washington - .6 closer than a week ago. Harvard won its four-miler over Yale but only about a length and a half. The Crimson stays at number three but loses 1.1 seconds in the CMax – now 7.1 behind UW.

CMax comparison for Thursday’s Morning Heat

#3 Seed Harvard is tops, with #4 Princeton rated 1.4 seconds behind. Ten seed SU is rated 4.4 behind Harvard and nine-seed Columbia 7.1 behind. 15-seed BU is 9.1 behind and 16-seed Penn 14.6.

So much for hypothetical based on performance so far. Thursday morning they’ll race.

CMax rankings and results courtesy of row2k.com

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

V8, JV Seeded tenth for IRA, Frosh 11th

The final seedings for this weekend's IRA are out and the SU Varsity finds itself in the ten slot. The opening heat for the varsity will include Harvard, Princeton, Columbia, BU and Penn.
SU is in lane five. The heat is set at 8:15.

SU's varsity rose as high as #5 in the US Rowing Collegiate Poll after the San Diego Crew Classic, slipped to tenth after a split second loss to Cornell, then got back to #6 before the Eastern Sprints. But an overall eighth at the Sprints dropped SU back to tenth and the tight loss at Dartmouth the next weekend kept the Orange there.


JV Also Seeded #10

For the JV it's Brown, Cornell, Yale and Penn. SU again is in lane five in the heat scheduled at 8:45.

The JV (2V) went into the Sprints seeded sixth but fell victim to a surging Northeastern crew in the morning heat and wound up losing the petite final to Yale by less than a tenth of a second. Add in the West Coast crews and the Orange JV gets that ten seed.

SU's won over Dartmouth's JV the week after the Sprints.




Frosh Draw Harvard, Cornell, Columbia

The freshman eight is seeded #11 - which sets up a heat that includes Harvard, Cornell, Columbia, Penn and Dartmouth. The Orange again is in lane five and the heat is scheduled at 9:30.

The freshmen went into the Sprints as the eight seed and wound up 9th overall. They hadn't raced much prior to that as the conditions canceled the Goes Cup freshman event, leaving only a competition with BU and Columbia. The frosh were third in that one although they moved into Columbia in the sprint. SU defeated Dartmouth handily the week after the Sprints.


Varsity Four Looks for Three Straight.

The varsity four takes on Penn, Georgetown, St. Joseph's, Washington and Princeton. SU is in lane two for this one which starts at 11:15. The V4 has won its last two outings, at the Eastern Sprints and at Dartmouth.


Heats and where to listen

The V8 heats start at 8:00 Thursday morning. Top two in each go to semi-finals on Friday. Others to repechages Thursday afternoon.



Seedings and schedule courtesy of row2k.com