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Friday, December 7, 2012

The Rebirth of the Carrier Dome Triathlon




The above pictures may be bring back either nightmares or unmitigated joy for Syracuse Men's Crew Alumni.  Running stadiums has a long history with our rowing program originally starting in the old Archbold Stadium and continuing in the Carrier Dome after its construction in the early '80's.  After a four year hiatus, at the request of the athletes, the men's team brought back the Carrier Dome Triathlon this year.  

The Carrier Dome Triathlon was first run in December 2003 and consists of a 7500m Erg, 2.4 mile run down to Manley Field House, and finishes with a full tour of the 3rd level of the Carrier Dome--up and down every section.  The event was last run in the Fall of 2008 and the record was held by Mike Beck '07 with a blistering 1:00:09.  Scheduling conflicts with the Dome/Crew schedule prevented the event from being run for the past three years.  This fall the team asked for the reinstatement of the event and the coaching staff quickly agreed.  

Not a single athlete in the boathouse had ever participated in the Triathlon before and the rookies wasted no time setting their mark in the event.  Senior Tyler Toporowski won the event in a new record time of 0:59:29.  Congrats to Tyler!  After hearing about the fall of his record, Mike Beck quickly asked for an alumni event to be added next year to "set the record straight..."  The coaching staff is taking this under consideration....



Marathon Men

Some of the Men's Crew alums have been spending their "retirement years" training for marathons.  Recently Mike Dietrick '12, Vince Berry '11, Ken Marfilius '11, Ryan Patton '10, and Tyson Bry '10 completed the Philadelphia Marathon (pictured above from left to right).  Mike Beck '07 also ran in the race but rumor was he was in his car on the way home by the time the youngsters finished and posed for a picture....  Also, on the same weekend, Brian Azeff '09 and John Combs '08 completed the half marathon.

Pete Kruse '10 has also been doing a bit of long distance running.  Pete completed the Edinburgh, Scotland marathon while doing an internship in London in May of 2011 and just completed the Sacramento, California marathon last weekend.  In addition, Pete has also completed 4 half marathons.

Keep logging the miles and wearing the Orange!

Saturday, November 3, 2012

Photos: Syracuse Fall Invitational 2012

In classic Syracuse conditions (freezing and overcast) the Orange took to the water to test their speed. Check out the photos below and if you want more check out the gallery!

Invitational-2012-8

Invitational-2012-10

Invitational-2012-12

Invitational-2012-19

Invitational-2012-23

Friday, October 26, 2012

Princeton Chase Race Info and Schedule

The SU Men and Women will travel to lovely Princeton, NJ on Sunday, Oct. 28 for the Princeton Chase.

Regatta info can be found here.


Race times are below.


10:00     Heavy Men's 8+

10:30     Light Men's 8+
11:00     Women's 8+
12:00     Heavy Men's 4+
12:30     Novice Women's 8+
1:00       Freshman Men's 8+
1:30       Light Men's 4+
2:30       Small Boats (1x/ 2x/ 2-)
3:00       Women's 4+

GO ORANGE!!

Saturday, September 15, 2012

Fall 2012 Edition of the Orange Oar now Online!



Click here to access the September Back to School Edition of the Orange Oar!



Highlights include:


  • Nominate for Syracuse Rowing Hall of Fame 
  • Save the Date to Honor Kris Sanford 
  • Women’s/Men’s Fall Racing Schedules 
  • A Tribute to Bart Green—Oarsman, Coach and More

Monday, August 20, 2012

SU Rowing Alum Andy Geiger Appointed AD at University of Wisconsin Milwaukee

photo of Andy Geiger by Mike DeSisti
"Geiger's sensibilities were formed when the 6-foot-4 freshman was picked out of the class-enrollment line by the rowing coach at Syracuse. Since then, his sympathies have been with Olympic sports.
"The things that happened to me intellectually and spiritually as a rower at Syracuse taught me what I know about athletics," he said."

(text and photos courtesy of Milwaukee Journal Sentinel)


Andy Geiger is one of the lucky people. All he ever wanted to do was be an athletic director. Except for a seven-year retirement after the demands of Ohio State became too great even for one of the giants in the field, it is all he has done since the Nixon Administration.
At age 32, he already was living his professional dream as the athletic director at Brown University. He later would oversee 27 national championships at Stanford and one colossal building project after another at Ohio State, which does it bigger and better than anyone in the country.
But Geiger is also one of the lucky ones because some of the most important things came to him later in life.

Twenty-five years into their marriage, Geiger and his wife, Eleanor, a math teacher who took advancing degrees at whatever college was next on her husband's career path, adopted their two sons.
"I think it was a way Eleanor and I renewed our vows in a spiritual way," he said. "Parenting changes your life. It brought us really close together. It's probably the healthiest thing I've done in my development as a human being."

Phil is now a swimming coach at a California high school. Greg, whose heritage is Nigerian, Greek and English - a "United Nations baby," Geiger calls him - is beginning his career as a junior executive with a temporary-hiring firm.

"They're both miracles, both very bright, not genetically related to us but in every other way they are our children and I am so glad we met them," Geiger said.

It was also in his late 40s that Geiger became friends with Stan Getz, the legendary jazz tenor saxophonist. Getz was the music department's artist-in-residence at Stanford about the time Geiger hired Dennis Green to coach the football team. Getz took the Geigers on tour with him to Israel and later presented Andy with a musical instrument that would change his life.

Once he picked up the sax and began to learn some of the improvisational riffs that had been filling his head for years, Geiger had found an outlet that took him away from the pressures of major-college athletics.

"Sports are my business," Geiger said. "But the music, that's a religion."

So it was no coincidence that Geiger was introduced as the new UW-Milwaukee athletic director three months ago to the sounds of John Coltrane's "Blue Train." Geiger keeps his horns in the UWM music school and practices after work. He combs his lower east side neighborhood near the Wisconsin Conservatory of Music for jazz concerts.

"It's a gift to be here," he said. "There is music in this town."

And here he is, at 73, again doing the only job he ever wanted in a place where sports blend with his off-the-field sensibilities.

Talk with Geiger for more than a few minutes and be prepared to have your mind shifted to a broader perspective on the games people play. Although Ohio State won a football national championship on his watch in 2002, Geiger would rather speak lyrically about the opportunity non-revenue sports provide most students who choose athletics as their extracurricular activity.

"The arts department" of the athletic business, Geiger calls volleyball, swimming, wrestling, his beloved rowing and the like.

"Andy is one of the icons in our industry," said Horizon League Commissioner Jon LeCrone, whose time with Geiger goes back more than 20 years when both were in the Atlantic Coast Conference. "Think of the perspective he brings to Milwaukee and our league after being in the Ivy League, the Pac-10, the ACC and the Big Ten.

"But he's also a renaissance man. That's what makes him such a good man, such good company and such a fascinating person to be around. He has an excellent mind and can talk about any topic, politically, socially or musically."

The music carried Geiger through an embarrassing public incident at Stanford, when, during a Pac-10 tour, he engaged a Seattle sportswriter in a heated argument and dumped a glass of wine on the scribe's head.

"He and I had both been over-served, and I have a temper," Geiger said. "I was mortified. It was a low moment."

Geiger immediately began attending Alcoholics Anonymous meetings and did not drink for years.
"I'm not a teetotaler now," he said, "but ever careful."
The music carried him through the trying times at the University of Maryland, which had lured Geiger away from Stanford to fix an athletic department that had been shaken to its core by the drug-overdose death of basketball star Len Bias.

And the music carried Geiger through the traumatic days at Ohio State. Although he had reached the mountaintop of his profession, the Buckeyes athletic empire, the richest and mightiest in the land, was crumbling beneath the weight of the Maurice Clarett and Jim O'Brien scandals when he voluntarily stepped down in 2005.
"I was weary, the kind of tired that a nap doesn't fix," Geiger said. "I was 66 and I felt I didn't want to do it anymore. I had lost the sense that it was fun.
"I was not feeling accomplished at the point. All I felt like I accomplished was fighting fires. The president wanted me to stay. I didn't. It was heartfelt. It didn't mean I didn't care about Ohio State or was angry. Frankly, I was worried about my health. I didn't like the way I was behaving. I was really heavy, I wasn't feeling very well and I thought, 'This is pretty dangerous.' "

Born and bred in upstate New York, Geiger had fallen in love with the Pacific Northwest during his time at Stanford. He and Eleanor retired to idyllic Port Angeles, Wash., far from the Saturday afternoon roar.

"We found a place on Olympic Peninsula where it doesn't rain, on the banks of a river," Geiger said. "I look north to Victoria, British Columbia, and south to the Olympic Mountains."

And there he stayed, playing his saxophone and occasionally teaching at the University of Washington, until Geiger received a stunning phone call last May.

Would he consider leaving retirement to redirect a struggling mid-major that had gone through three athletic directors in two years?

Geiger didn't need the money when he voluntarily walked away from Goliath in Columbus. Why would he take on the problems of David in Milwaukee when he could hear the soothing sounds of the Elwha River from the sanctuary of a retirement home literally at the end of the continental United States?
At Ohio State, Geiger oversaw 36 varsity teams when the NCAA requires only 18. An NBA-quality arena was built and historic Ohio Stadium was renovated on his watch. He had a $100 million budget and ran the largest athletic department in the country.

At UWM, he would have a $10 million budget, a deficit of up to $1.5 million annually, a handful of on-campus facilities and a low athletic profile.
Geiger likes to tell the story of Coltrane, the great jazz saxophonist, and Thelonious Monk, the legendary pianist/composer. Once while collaborating, Coltrane told Monk he could not stop soloing.
"Then take the horn out of your mouth," Monk told him.

It's Geiger's way of saying that decisions aren't that hard. Accordingly, it didn't take him long to take the one-year, $214,000 offer from new UWM Chancellor Mike Lovell to set the athletic department right.
"I don't know how to behave if I'm not on a college campus," Geiger said.
Geiger's arrival at UWM stunned many industry insiders, but LeCrone doesn't question the pairing. It is enough that he is thrilled to have Geiger in the Horizon League, which counts UWM as one of its signature members.

"Milwaukee is so important to our league," he said. "Now they have Andy, who can be a mentor to other ADs and myself. Think what he can do for the Milwaukee staff and coaches.
"He's seen everything good about college sports and everything bad about college sports as well. He brings a great perspective."
The duality of NCAA sports, from the relative purity of non-revenue teams to the corruption in high-stakes football and basketball programs, caused some to wonder why Geiger would return for any amount of time. For example, Mike McGee, Geiger's friend who retired from the pressures of directing athletic departments at Southern California and South Carolina, told Geiger he was crazy for getting back in the business.
Pat Richter, Geiger's adversary and admirer from their head-to-head competition in the Big Ten, good-naturedly questioned his sanity as well.
"I was very surprised," Richter said. "The last thing I'd do is jump back in that business."
At 71, Richter is happy to be the former Wisconsin athletic director. But Richter, who is credited for reviving the Badgers by retiring a $2 million deficit in the early '90s, believes the Panthers have the right man for the difficult job.

"If you're looking for a guy to come and try to fix things in a short amount of time, he's the perfect guy," Richter said. "He's a guy who will do things that need to be done and will slap people upside the head if he needs to."

Geiger immediately shook up the Milwaukee establishment by pulling the men's basketball team out of the downtown U.S. Cellular Arena and bringing it back to campus while he and school leaders try to figure out how to build their own multipurpose facility. It did not make the Wisconsin Center District happy, but it was the kind of quick and decisive move Lovell hired Geiger to make on behalf of an athletic department that had been adrift for too long.

"He's a bright guy who doesn't need a lot of time to solve a problem," Richter said. "He's very efficient with a lot of connections."

If anyone is going to help get an on-campus arena off the planning board at UWM, Richter believes it will be Geiger.

"He's a visionary in what needs to be accomplished," Richter said. "The thing about Andy is he was very aggressive in building facilities and was probably criticized for the cost, but I'm sure people (at Ohio State) are saying they're glad he did."
Geiger said feeding the beast that is Ohio State football was justified, even at the costs of massive financial investment and eventual trauma caused by fallout from the Clarett and Jim Tressel scandals. Because to Geiger's way of thinking, the money Ohio State football made gave fencers and gymnasts the chance to compete.

Geiger's sensibilities were formed when the 6-foot-4 freshman was picked out of the class-enrollment line by the rowing coach at Syracuse. Since then, his sympathies have been with Olympic sports.
"The things that happened to me intellectually and spiritually as a rower at Syracuse taught me what I know about athletics," he said.

So it wasn't surprising that Geiger said his best day on the UWM campus so far was meeting with the women's volleyball team on its first day of practice. Coach Susie Johnson immediately sensed the credibility Geiger is bringing.
"I feel like this is just what we needed for stability," Johnson said. "I've been here six years and this is my fourth AD. Enough is enough. I understand that maybe he's here for just a short time, but he's what we needed.

"It's more than just about winning. We need to build facilities and move forward. It's really great to have someone who has been there."

Geiger doesn't know if he'll stay beyond the length of his one-year contact that is served at Lovell's pleasure. "That may not be up to me," he said. "I'll also have to ask my wife."

It also remains to be seen if UWM will find the athletic direction it craves with the bold hire. But it's clear that Geiger has found peace in his second go-round in the only job he ever desired.

"I've done," he said, "what I always wanted to do."

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Introducing the Freshman Class for the SU Women

Many thanks to SU Athletics for this text!

Syracuse women’s rowing head coach Justin Moore has announced the addition of nine student-athletes to the Orange program.

The incoming group includes eight freshmen that will join the ranks for the 2012-13 season and one freshman that joined the program mid-year and rowed in the spring. Talented and diverse, Moore’s recruits come from four different states and four different countries.

In its second season under Moore, the Orange showed considerable improvement in 2012, resulting in a second-place overall finish at the BIG EAST Championship, the program’s first BIG EAST title for a varsity boat since 2005 (V4), and SU’s first national ranking in seven years (No. 20 in the final regular season CRCA/USRowing Coaches Poll on May 16).

Emma Basher
Rower, Adelaide, Australia
Emma Basher
Emma Basher

Basher enrolled at SU mid-year and sat five seat in the varsity eight that won silver at the 2012 BIG EAST Championship. The freshman rowed in the V8 for the entire spring season.

Prior to arriving in Syracuse, Basher won bronze at 2010 Junior World Championships and silver at the Youth Olympics with teammate Olympia Aldersey. In 2009, she won gold in coxless pair and eight, and silver in the coxless four at the Australian Youth Olympic Festival.

“We have had so much fun coaching Emma and helping her to adapt to American university life and our team culture,” Moore said. “She is an eager trainer and a fast learner. Her competitive spirit helped to infuse our team with a great racing attitude. We are very excited watch her develop in our program over the next few years.”

Alexa Driscoll
Coxswain, Harwichport, Mass.
Alexa Driscoll
Alexa Driscoll

Driscoll has been in the varsity eight at Tabor Academy since her freshmen year (2009). She led the boat to a silver medal at NEIMAS in 2009 and has been in the grand finals at NEIRAS in 2009, 2010 and 2011.

“Lexi’s leadership characteristics stood out to us immediately,” Moore said. “From the moment she walked on campus, she was completely at ease with the coaches and her peers. It was almost as if she were already part of the team. She has helped to transform the Tabor Academy crew into one of the best in New England. We are looking forward to having her help us launch Syracuse into the top 10 in the nation.”

Eliza Frank
Rower, Buffalo, N.Y.
Eliza Frank
Eliza Frank

Frank was invited to the 2010 Junior National Team Selection Camp in 2010 and chosen to the USRowing High Performance Team that raced in Berlin, Germany. Last summer, she was invited to the 2011 Sculling Development Camp. She is currently training in the single at South Niagara.

“My relationship with Eliza began when I coached her at the 2010 US Junior Selection Camp,” Moore said. “She and I worked together very well. She was an eager learner and a tough competitor. She is a very powerful athlete and I believe, with proper development, she can become a top-flight collegiate athlete.”


Yasmine Hemida
Rower, Momoroneck, N.Y.

Yasmine Hemida
Yasmine Hemida

Hemida won back-to-back New York State titles in the Pelham 4x in her junior and senior seasons. She participated in the 2011 USRowing Junior Women’s National Team East Coast Sculling Development Camp in Lowell, Mass. and was named team captain at Pelham as a senior.

“Yasmine visited Syracuse early and it just ‘felt right’,” Moore said. We are very excited to bring this versatile rower into our program. Watching her have such great success within the Pelham program, stroking both the 4x and 8+ at times, we feel that she will come to Syracuse ready to compete for a seat in our NCAA crews. Like Eliza, I believe she is far from her ultimate potential. Syracuse, with our emphasis on long-term athlete development, will be a great place for her to continue to get fast.”

Madison Leitch
Rower, London, Ontario
Madison Leitch
Madison Leitch

Leitch won Henley Gold in 2010 in the junior 1x and in 2011 stroking the U19 2x. She was named to the Canadian Can-Am-Mex team where she raced to silver in the 4x. Madison attends Ridley College and was named the 2011 Oarsman of the Year.

“Madison rows in an intense program at Ridley where there is great coaching offered to athletes due to the coaches’ experience and the small coach-to-athlete ratio,” Moore said. “I am excited that she feels that she will continue to be developed at Syracuse with science-based, yet very personal coaching. She can row in any and all boats, but shines in the 1X, where an athlete is 100% responsible for the speed of the shell. Madison aspires to row for Canada in the future and the location of our campus in relation to the National Development Center in Welland (2.5 hours) and the National Team Center (4 hours) will be a huge advantage if she desires to have frequent contact with her Canadian coaches. We feel it’s a perfect match for her academically, as well as for her collegiate and post-collegiate rowing aspirations.”

Kelsey Thornton
Rower, Ballston Lake, N.Y.
Kelsey Thornton
Kelsey Thornton

Thornton rows for Shenendehowa High School, where in her sophomore year her boat won the junior women's eight at the Canadian Schoolboys and in her junior year she stroked her boat to a win in the High School Women's 4+ at the Head of the Housatonic. She just finished third at the New York State Championships in the 8+.

“Syracuse is ‘New York’s College Team’ and one my goals when I arrived was to recruit more of the great local talent that exists in this region,” Moore said. “Kelsey has had her eye on Syracuse for a while. She is a great teammate and a hard worker. It has been exciting for us to watch her develop over the course of her high school career. Every boat-class she has raced in has been very successful. We are looking forward to that trend continuing at Syracuse.”

Marta Ulbricht
Coxswain, Severna Park, Md.
Marta Ulbricht
Marta Ulbricht

Ulbricht has been a member of the Annapolis Junior Rowing Association since the spring of 2009. She attended the US Junior National High Performance camp in 2011 and was recently invited to the 2012 USRowing Junior National Team Selection Camp.

“Marta is a true student of the sport,” Moore said. “When speaking with the developmental coaches for the US Junior National Team they told us the Marta responds tremendously well to coaching and learns from her experiences. We love the fact that at both her high school and club she coxes any boat, at any time, in any race. Perhaps the best recommendation I received was from an old rowing friend (a masters rower at Potomac) who has experienced some great coxswains over the course of his career. After Marta took control of an extremely hard training session with a bunch of 30-40 year old men, this friend wrote to me and said ‘Keep an eye on this one. She is going places.’”

Tosca Wilson
Rower, Hamilton, New Zealand
Tosca Wilson
Tosca Wilson

Wilson began rowing in 2009 and placed third at the Girls’ Under 18 Double Sculls at the 2010 New Zealand Secondary School Championships. She competed in the 2011 New Zealand Club Championships and won in the Women’s Club Double Sculls and was second in the Women’s Club Quad. She is currently training at the Waikato Regional Performance Center.

“Our recent infusion from down under has been great,” Moore said. “These women bring a wealth of experience in small-boat rowing and have done a great deal of high-quality racing. The fact that Tosca was selected to train at one of the regional developmental centers after rowing for only two years, speaks to her potential as an athlete. We are excited to help her continue her development while providing her with an outstanding education that has the potential to change her life.”

Alex Zadravec
Rower, Fairfield, Conn.
Alex Zadravec
Alex Zadravec

Alex started rowing at Saugatuck Rowing Club, in Westport Conn. in 2008 and her current affiliation is with GMS Rowing Center. She qualified for three National Championships, placing second in 2010, and third in 2011 in the 4x. She competed at the 2010 World Championships in Racice, Czech Republic in the 2x and was a member of the USRowing High Performance Sculling team in the summer of 2011.

“I met Alex when I was coaching the US Junior Women’s 8+ in 2009 and she was in the US Junior Sculling group,” Moore said. “She has two characteristics that we value tremendously in this program – discipline and toughness. After a disappointing performance in the sculling selection group in 2011, Alex has dedicated herself to becoming an international-contending sculler. Her continued belief in herself in the face of adversity leads us to believe she will arrive at Syracuse ready to race for a seat in the varsity 8.”

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Alums at Master's Nationals

Among the Orangemen spotted on the waters of Lake Quinsigamond last weekend competing at the US Masters' Nationals were:

 - Bill Purdy (winner of the D 2-, D4 and D8 and E 4 and 8, silver in the E4x),

 - Rick Tremblay,

 - Josh Stratton and Jason Premo rowing for the Chargers,

 - Steve Rogers in six Corvallis crews (second in G 2-,

 - Narraganset's Andy Washburn,

 - the ubiquitous Joey Peter,

- Paul Dudzick with the Chargers,

 - Dick "Pappy" Yochum w Genessee and Chargers

 - Jay Abbott also with the Chargers

 - Ted "Row Hard" Kakas with Occoquan International

 - Rich Lewis sculling for Potomac,

 - and your author (Joe Paduda) sculling under PBC colors and sweeping for Chargers (first in E light 4+ w Joey Peter et al).

I'm sure there were more - let me know and I'll update.

Lots of podium finishers for the alums, in an event that gets faster every year.

Monday, August 13, 2012

The Frosh - SU Class of 2016

Wondering who you'll see moving through the boating ranks these next few years at SU? Here is the incoming men's class. Photos of these fine oarsmen as they become available.

AJ Abell                          
Gwynedd Valley, PA                    
St. Joseph's Prep                                           
6'5"/185

Max Bell                        
Everett, MA                                      
Belmont Hill School                                     
6'4"/200

David Conroy                  
Lakewood, OH                                
Wildcat Rowing Club                                  
6'2"/170

Jonathan Dawson         
Pittsburg, PA                                    
Central Catholic High School (PA)          
6'2"/180

Andrew DePaulis          
Rumson, NJ                                      
The Gunnery                                                   
5'6"/127

Tom Heubusch             
Buffalo, NY                                        
The Gunnery                                                   
6'4"/180

Devin Hilsinger                
Methuen, MA                                
Essex Rowing                                                 
5'4"/115

Tyler Hudgins                 
Colorado Springs, CO                   
Northfield Mount Hermon School         
6'1"/190

Tom Johnson III            
Apopka, FL                                        
Lake Brantley Rowing Association         
6'4"/180

Conor Kelley                  
Loveland, OH                                   
The Culver Academies                                 
6'6"/210

Brian Krumm                   
Hingham, MA                                   
Hingham High School                                   
6'0"/180

Ryan McCarry                 
Lansdowne, PA                             
Bonner Prep                                                    
6'5"/210

Jake O'Donnell          
Northbrook, IL                                
New Trier High School                                 
6'5"/185

Alex Penny
Egg Harbor Twp, NJ                       
Holy Spirit High School                              
6'3"/185

Bryce Vanderberg         
Belmont, MI                                     
Rockford High School                                   
6'2"/185

Kamin Vassilos                
Glenview, IL                                    
New Trier High School                                
6'5"/ 205

Sam Weiner                   
Chevy Chase, MD                           
Bethesda Chevy Chase                               
6'0"/165

Fall Racing - SAVE THE DATES!

Save the dates and plan your tailgating now for the following Fall head races where SU will be racing:

October 21: Head of the Charles (Boston, MA)

October 28: Princeton Chase (Princeton, NJ)

November 3: Syracuse Fall Invite (Syracuse, NY)

Additional details to follow as they become available.

Anyone Watch Closing Ceremonies?

I'm not 100% sure, but I think that Mike Gennaro was there.




Tuesday, July 17, 2012

2012 Prouty Brings Out the SU Alums


Many thanks to Sharon Bry, mother of SU alum Tyson Bry, for sending this picture of the Syracuse alumni rowers participating with 'Team Bry' in The 2012 Prouty. The Prouty is a fundraiser for Dartmouth Medical Center for cancer research and patient support.

Sharon notes, "This was our first year for our own team after Brian Bry (Tyson Bry's dad) died of brain cancer on January 2, 2012 and in memory of their friend Bartosz who also died from cancer."

The picture includes:

Jack Mutty, Tyson By, Brian Azeff, Noah Chase, Vince Berry, Ryan Patton, Mark Vyzas, Matt Sisk, Ashley Neuhof (UVM rower),

A great event with a great group of guys (and girl!!)

Monday, June 18, 2012

ORANGE OAR JUNE EDITION ON LINE



The June 2012 edition of the SARA newsletter the Orange Oar is now available on line. It includes stories about the men's and women's spring season, the new rule that will allow freshmen to take part in varsity competition, Tony Johnson's induction into the SARA Hall of Fame and more.





Click here http://www.saracrew.org/orangeoar/Orange%20Oar%20-%202012%20June.pdf to view.

Friday, June 15, 2012

Gennaro second at Olympic pair trails

Mike Gennaro's bid for the 2012 Olympic team came up just a bit short, as he and partner Robert Otto finished second at the trials earlier this week.  For the SU alum and current U23 pair and eight world champion the pair trials was the last shot at the London Games, as he was one of the last athletes to leave the eight camp earlier this spring.

Anyone who has followed Mike's career since he arrived at Longbranch knows this will not be the last we hear of him on the international rowing scene.  While Mike is certainly sorely disappointed, his fierce determination ensures future success.

Finally, let's remind ourselves, and Mike, that while second in the Olympic Trials was not the goal, it is nonetheless very impressive indeed.

Orange Coaches on the Job at U23 Women's Camp

SU coaches Justin Moore, Dave Reischman and Shawn Bagnall are hard at work coaching the rowers and coxswains at the USRowing Under 23 training camp. The camp runs until -June 26 in Syracuse and will be used to select the Open Women’s 8+ and 4x to compete at the U23 World Championships in Trakai, Lithuania on July 11-15. The camp will also select Open Women’s 4-, 2-, and 2x to compete at the U23 Trails in Mercer, N.J. on June 24-27.

Moore is coaching the sweep oars with assistance from Bagnall, while Reischman is working with the scullers.

Here are some pictures from this week's Thursday morning workout on the Onondaga Lake buoy line. The four-legged assistant in Coach Moore's launch is Jake.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Mark of the Oarsman II, 1979 Part 6


The pair with was rowed by seniors Pete Hausman and Dan Hanavan, both with a 1977 3V Sprints Championship to their credit.  Their were seven other crews in their event, including what looked to be the top two guys from USC’s varsity eight.  Hanavan and Hausman rowed to a very comfortable second place in Thursday’s heats, setting themselves up for a good race in Friday’s reps.  Rowing well within themselves, the SU pair with cox “had swing and the rowing was effortless.”  They cruised into the finals, thereby ensuring every SU varsity crew would have a shot at the medals.

With Hausman stroking and Hanavan in bow, the pair were facing the same stiff headwind as the four with, but with two fewer oars to carry cox Jimmy Regan to the finish line.  If the rowing was effortless in the reps, it was anything but in the first 500 of the finals as they came close to suffering the indignity of being passed by the officials’ launches. Fortunately for the three Orangemen, this was going to be a long race and they’d have ample time to sort things out.  That they did, smoothing things out in the second 500, and from there moving steadily up from fifth place into third.  The result was ample proof of the depth of the program, and boded well for the eights.

Drew Harrison’s freshman eight was saddled with the unenviable task of continuing the program’s three-year reign atop the IRA podium, and their path was going to be anything but easy.  Their heat more resembled a final than a Thursday morning qualifier, with five of the six crews in the heat expected to be in the finals.  Coach Harrison opined “The heat is certainly stacked, without a shadow of a doubt, but it really doesn’t matter to our approach.  If we’re to win, we have to take it away from other people – sometime.” The crews his guys would have to “take it away from” in their heat were Northeastern, Cal, Cornell, Navy, and Brown. 

The heat was a close-run thing, with the Huskies crossing the line in front of SU by less than a half-length.  The other crews seemed disinterested in racing for the lone qualifying spot, with Cornell another six seconds back the closest of the also-rans.  With the loss in the heats, Harrison’s crew would face off with Dartmouth, Penn, Cal, and Brown in Friday morning’s repechage. 

Conditions Friday morning were distinctly unusual for Onondaga, with a stiff tailwind making for fast times.  The freshman won their rep, and would head to the line for a chance to win an unprecedented fourth consecutive IRA championship.  The competition was going to be fierce; although Wisconsin hadn’t gotten on the water till April 18, it had managed to post an impressive third at the Sprints behind the second-place Huskies from Northeastern.  Given the late start for the Badgers and their result at the Sprints, they would almost certainly be among the medalists.

SU led off the line, and for almost the entire race, with the biggest gap at the thousand where the Orange crew had open water on Wisco.  Towards the end of the third five hundred Wisconsin started a charge that brought them even with Syracuse; unable to push thru, Wisconsin found itself side-by-side with the Orange coming up to the finish line.  For the last few strokes of the race, the leader was the last crew to take a stroke, both boats surging into and then out of the lead.  The final margin was a fraction of a second, requiring officials to review the finish line photo. 

The streak had to send sometime, and it did in 1979.  Wisco ended Coach Drew Harrison’s string with a close win over the Orange, with Northeastern in third.  

Monday, June 11, 2012

Mark of the Oarsman II, 1979 Part 5


The IRAs began on the last day of May with heats for all seven crews on tap.  Two freshman fours with would take to the line wearing the orange, and Grad Assistant Jay Printzlau had a four with and pair with, both coming from the 3V that had enjoyed solid success in their races that spring.  The four had been together since the Sprints and was determined to do better than their third place finish at Quinsigamond.  With seniors and former IRA champions Bob Devlin in stroke and Pete Gaines at three and juniors Tom Weigartz and Joe Paduda making up the bow pair, there was plenty of experience in the boat.  There were nine boats in the four with, some comprised of lightweights from IRA schools, others boating the top four from the varsity eight, and the remainder breaking down their third varsity eights into small boats.  In the first heat, racing was very tight until halfway thru the third 500, when SU made its move with a power ten. Worcester PolyTech had been right with the Orange but couldn’t respond.  Syracuse pulled away from the field, finishing a very comfortable twelve seconds in front of the second place crew from Penn.  With its spot in the Grand Finals assured, the crew was able to relax and watch the other fours race off for the remaining lane assignments.

Saturday’s finals saw the SU four with lined up against Washington State, BU, WPI, Coast Guard, and Purdue. As the crews pulled into the stakeboats they were facing almost directly into a headwind that had picked up significantly from the day before.  Off the line, Devlin drove the rating up to a 42 for the first twenty, then kept it high for most of the first 500.  Across the 500, SU was in front of second place Washington State.  The Orange were rowing a 38, looking to take advantage of what had been the strength of their race, a fast start.  Truth be told, there had been a bit of miscommunication in the boat, and the settle didn’t happen after the initial forty strokes. 

Regardless, the lead held through the halfway point, when the size of the Washington State crew began to tell.  Outweighing the Orange by forty pounds a man, they began to pull away.  SU tried to respond, using the same hard push midway through the third 500 that had crushed WPI.  The move was hardly noticed by WSU, who continued to extend its lead.  The combination of the lengthy start, high rating thru the first quarter of the race and stiff headwind proved to be too much for the Orange, while the conditions were much to the westerners’ liking.  Washington State cruised to a comfortable victory with Syracuse winning the silver by open water over the Terriers of Boston University in third.

Saturday, June 2, 2012

Orange Varsity Eight Fifth at IRA – Best Finish in Reischman Era



Syracuse’s varsity eight came into the season rated 15th in the Coaches Poll in a year many thought would be rebuilding for Coach Dave Reischman. Reischman does not believe in rebuilding and his charges late this morning proved they belong among the best, finishing fifth in the Grand Final of the IRA.

Top-seed Washington won it all, beating East Coast powers Brown and Harvard by a length or so. Cal was fourth with SU next a length back and Boston University in the sixth spot, 2/3 of a length farther back. SU improved its best finish in this century by one slot. Two years ago the Orange finished sixth in the Grand Final.

Times here courtesy of row2k.com http://ira.qra.org/

JV Fourth in Petite: Tenth Overall


The Orange JV finished this year’s racing with a “throw a blanket over them” Petite Final, coming in fourth in a fight with three very familiar crews.  Navy won it with Cornell half a second behind, then Princeton another second-and-a-half and SU .8 seconds off the Tigers. BU and Penn were well back.

Washington won the 2V Grand Final by a couple of seconds over Brown. Harvard took the bronze medal edging Cal by 2/10ths of a second, Wisconsin by 7/10ths and Stanford by 8/10ths.

Times here courtesy of row2k.com http://ira.qra.org/

Frosh Win Third Level




When you find yourselves in the Third Level Final on Saturday morning the idea is to win and that’s exactly what Syracuse’s freshman eight did this morning. Coach Shawn Bagnall’s crew went through Stanford around the halfway point and then held off the Cardinal by 2/3 length. 

The Orange were described as “very sharp, very clean” as the flew to the finish line ahead of Stanford’s Sprint. The win gives the Orange 13th place overall in the IRA.

Open 4 Is 4th in Petite




After struggling an finishing well behind the pack in Friday’s headwind , SU’s Open Four rowed a strong second half with a tailwind Saturday morning to finish fourth in the Petite Final – 10th overall. Cornell jumped out to the lead and held on to edge Princeton.  Northeastern held off the SU charge in the sprint to take third.

 The Orange four – a combination of varsity and freshmen with Liz Abraham coxing, trailed off the start.  But this time they rowed through Drexel and Penn and went after Northeastern in the second half of the race, coming up about a length short.
Washington held off Wisconsin to win the Grand Final with California third.

Official times here courtesy of row2k.com http://ira.qra.org/

Orange Alums Second at IRA


 

The Orange Alumni Eight spotted Cornell about 36 seconds this morning in the Masters Race at the IRA and made up almost all of it. But Syracuse ran out of course and the Big Red took the race by barely half a length…about a second and a half.

The crews are handicapped by average age and Cornell was by far the oldest. Then it was Penn with SU right behind and Northeastern held well back with a crew that looked as if it had just graduated.

The Orange rowed through Penn about 500 meters in and went after the Big Red but the lead was too great and the course just a little too short.

Friday, June 1, 2012

SYRACUSE POPS THE CLUTCH!!! V8 IN GRAND FINAL!





Coach Dave Reischman’s Varsity Eight did it again this afternoon, out-rowing Princeton by half a second to make the Grand Final at the IRA.  The two teams that battled in a preseason scrimmage what seems so long ago fought to the wire this time, with the Orange getting the oars in last to grab 3rd in the race and the final spot in the Grands. Brown and Harvard were one-two, as Bruno repeated its Eastern Sprints win over the Crimson.
Top-seeded Washington won the second semi with Boston U pulling off the upset to finish second and California taking the third and last qualifying spot.

Princeton started the race challenging Harvard for the lead off the start, but soon fell into third as Brown went through Harvard to lead.  As Cornell and Penn slid back, the Orange went after the Tigers and drew even, then into a one or two seat lead. Princeton responded and SU fought back.

As they fought in the sprint, the announcer called out “Syracuse Pops the Clutch.” Aiden Barrett and his mates had found one more gear.

It took a few minutes to make it official and when the times went up, the Orange had done it by just over half a second.

Results here courtesy of row2k.com http://ira.qra.org/

Conditions were very different from Thursday and the times reflected that. A thunderstorm rolled through late morning and postponed the semis four about two hours.  When they got going the Cooper River water was rolling and the wind pushing against the crews.

The Orange dealt with it and will go against the other big boys on Saturday.

Second Varsity to Petite Finals

Syracuse’s JV eight struggled in this afternoon’s semi-final and wound last in the field of six and will race in the Petite Final on Saturday.  Washington won the heat, with Harvard and Stanford taking second and third to qualify for the Grand Final.  Navy and Princeton were next and will join Syracuse in the Petite along with Penn, Cornell and Boston University.  Cal, Wisconsin and Brown qualified for the Grand Final by finishing one-two-three in the semi.

Open 4 to Petite

SU’s Open Four fell behind at the start in its morning semi and never got close, finishing last.  It is scheduled to race againt      in the Petite Final Saturday

The SU freshman eight goes in the 3rd level final scheduled at 9:25 Saturday.

Headwinds in Camden

Looks like the weather delay is coming to an end. Racing will go at about 1:30 for the jv and 2 for the varsity. Conditions in Camden are getting slower. There's a strong headwind coming down the course as the second eight prepares to launch. As Coach Reischman would say the semi will be a barn burner. Our guys are in lane 1 closest to the reviewing stand. Hard to tell at this point if that's going to have an impact as the wind direction is shifting. The wind has brought clouds and cooler temps...

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Mark of the Oarsman II, 1979 part 3


With four races under their belts, the eights were looking forward to returning home for the Holding Trophy on May 4.  Vic Michalson’s crew was beginning to hit its stride, and the race looked to be a good test for the Orange.  The SU varsity was rowing a German rig with 5 and 4 (Jeff Braun and Bill Purdy, back from his national team duties) on starboard. Sanford had shaken things up a bit, moving sophomore former JV six-man Mark Bickford into the three seat while moving Bill Smuts down to the second eight to make room for Purdy.

The varsity race was not close; Brown won by over ten seconds, with Vesper another length behind SU.  Syracuse’ JV and freshman eights had better results, with both crews winning by open water.  The third varsity had taken off for Boston to race Harvard and Northeastern on Saturday and Sunday respectively. Both races were within a couple seconds but SU was on the losing end in both, with the Sunday race against NU tilting towards the Huskies when six-man Tom Wiegartz shattered his blade on a floating object just after the start. 

After the Sprints, the Orange headed back to Longbranch for IRA camp, where they would live in the Boathouse except for a brief sojourn to Hanover to contest the Packard Cup on May 19.

Unfortunately the trip would prove to be more of the same for the varsity; they lost to Dartmouth by just over a length, with MIT disqualified for steering issues.  The JV, frosh, and varsity four were all victorious in their races. Heading home, the bus stopped in Saratoga Springs for dinner.  Evidently then-all-female Skidmore College’s senior class was looking to celebrate their upcoming graduation, as the entire crew was invited to stay the evening as guests of the Skidmore ladies. Alas, duty prevented any dallying, and the guys boarded the bus, lamenting what might have been.

Orange Varsity, JV Eights in Semis; Frosh Slip to 3rd Level


Eight seed Syracuse won a four-way battle for second place in the first varsity eight repechage at the IRA this afternoon and qualified for tomorrow’s semifinals. Cal broke out to an early lead of a length and cruised home while behind the Golden Bears  Syracuse, Stanford, Northeastern and Yale fought for the other two spots in the semis. It was tight all the way down the course.

The Orange wound up less than .2 seconds ahead of Yale which edged Stanford by about half a second for the third spot in the semis. Northeastern was another .4 seconds behind with Drexel well off the pace.

V8 in First Semi Friday

The Orange - in Lane One - are scheduled to take on Princeton, Brown, Harvard, Cornell and Penn in the first of two varsity eight semifinals Friday at 12:15.  Brown and Harvard are the top seeds in what turns out to be an all-Eastern Semi. The top three finishers go to Saturday's Grand Final and the rest to the Petite.


JV Advances to Semis
Syracuse's JV also was second in its rep to move on to the semis. The Orange battled Navy to the wire but the Middies managed to hold them off. Penn was third to take the final spot in the semis.

The Orange also is slated for Lane One in that one, facing Princeton, Washington, Harvard, Navy and Stanford. Washington and Harvard are the top seeds in the semi.  It is scheduled for 11:45.

Frosh Just Short of Semis.

Syracuse's freshman eight finished fourth in its repechage Thursday afternoon and did not qualify for the semifinals. The crew is set to race in the 3rd Level Final at 9:25 Saturday morning.
Times here courtesy of row.2k.com http://ira.qra.org/


All Four SU Crews To Reps


 


Syracuse’s Varsity eight rowed to its #8 seed this morning in the opening heat at the IRA, finishing third behind #2 Brown and #5 Wisconsin. The Orange will compete in the repechages this afternoon in an effort to advance to the semi-finals tomorrow. Brown and Wisconsin go straight to the semis.


Also advancing: Washington, Princeton, Harvard and Boston University which upset Cal by a second in their heat.

SU led early after the start, but favored Bruno and Wisconsin edged ahead and gradually increased the lead over the Orange. Brown won the heat by about a 2/3 length over the Badgers, with SU about a length behind Wisconsin.  Penn, Yale and Gonzaga trailed.

In the first JV heat, SU again took 3rd and heads for the repechage.  Harvard and Cal were well ahead to advance to the semis. Also advancing - Wisconsin, Washington, Princeton and Brown.

The SU frosh were fourth in their morning heat and the Open Four was also fourth.

Results here courtesy of row2k.com http://ira.qra.org/

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

IRA Camp 2012

This years IRA Camp is coming to a close with the IRA racing starting this Thursday. Check out some of the footage from in the boat and around the boathouse!

ORANGE VARSITY IN FIRST HEAT AT IRA


                           Varsity (left) and JV Head for the Lake
Syracuse’s eighth-seeded Varsity Eight will start off the racing at the IRA Thursday, competing in the opening heat against two-seed Brown, #5 Wisconsin, #11 Yale, #14 Penn and 17-seed Gonzaga.  The Orange gets lane two – in between Penn on the inside and Brown in the middle of the Cooper River.  The top two advance to Friday’s semi-finals.  The heat is scheduled at 8 a.m.
SU beat Penn in the morning heat at the Eastern Sprints, and was second to Brown by a length in that heat. Brown then won the Grand Final with Wisconsin third and SU sixth. The Badgers were just over a length ahead of SU.
The Orange JV is seeded #9 and also is in the opening heat at its level  in lane two - an 8:45 start against #3 California,#4  Harvard, #10 BU, #15 Gonzaga and #16 Drexel.
The JV was third in the Sprints heat a couple of lengths behind winning Harvard. The Orange then won the Petites, defeating BU.  The Orange JV also had beaten BU in Boston earlier by 2/3 length.
For Shawn Bagnall’s #12 freshman eight, its Heat #2, scheduled at 9:45. #1 Washington and #6 Brown are the highest seeded crews in the heat, in lanes three and four. SU is in lane five, between Brown and #18 George Washington. #13  Yale and #7 Princeton complete the heat. The Orange frosh lost to the Tiger Cubs by five seconds in a scrimmage back on March 31.
The open four closes the morning racing at 11:15 in Heat #2. SU takes on California, Drexel, Cornell, Penn and Northeastern. Only the winner advances to the semi, with the rest in the Thursday afternoon reps. The SU four defeated Penn at the Sprints, coming in second to Columbia. The crew has not raced the seeds in this heat, Cal and Drexel.
Pairings here courtesy of row2k.com http://www.row2k.com/ira/2012/2012ThursdaySchedule.pdf

IRA Seedings here courtesy of row2k.com http://www.row2k.com/ira/2012/2012IRASeedingPoll.pdf

Mark of the Oarsman II, 1979 Part 4


Back in Syracuse, there were a growing number of citizens who were less than enamored with the IRA Regatta.  The event had become a rather large and boisterous party, with upwards of fifteen thousand “fans” taking the occasion to socialize on the banks of Onondaga Lake. While the partiers saw no problems, many of the locals didn’t care for the noise, traffic, occasionally-inappropriate behavior, and general uproar that was IRA Saturday.

Nichols’ supermarket owner Jim Hennigan was one of the Liverpool townsfolk who had grown disenchanted with the IRA.  Speaking to a reporter for the Herald-Journal, Hennigan said: “It was a way of introducing people to Liverpool and Central New York…It’s just turned into a such a foolish beer blast…(some of the regatta-goers) act like they’ve just been let out of Alcatraz.”  These issues may have been more perception than reality, as the police reported the previous year there were “only a few incidents, and they didn’t amount to much.”

It wasn’t just the rowdiness that was turning some against the regatta; for several years the Regatta’s finances had been running in the red, leaving the Syracuse Regatta Association with a $5,300 debt to Onondaga County.  With a revised parking plan including free nearby parking, the Association hoped attendance would rebound from the low point the previous year.

The athletes at Longbranch were oblivious to the controversy surrounding the regatta; there were some big changes going on that were of more pressing interest.  After the poor results of the last two races, Coach Bill Sanford decided to shuffle the lineup, and moved six-man John Shamlian to stroke and Art Sibley to four.