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.
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.
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.
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.
Mark of the Oarsman II, 1979, Part 2
The second installment of the chapter on 1979
While the energy level may have dropped a little, the level
of competition for seats in the top eight was higher than ever; anyone who
wanted a seat in any SU varsity boat was going to have to work very, very hard. There were at least twelve athletes who could
make the varsity; the five returning from the 78 IRA champion varsity, several
from the ’78 JV, and perhaps half of the 78 IRA champion freshman eight, all guys
who had won at least one IRA gold. As
the crews came off the water late in the fall for the last time, there were
three full eights on the varsity and just as many freshmen heading indoors for
winter training. The coaching staff had
increased as well, with Grad Assistant Jay Printzlau joining Sanford and
Harrison. Printzlau, coming off a season
where he had coached the Yale freshman lights to an Eastern Sprints
Championship, would prove to be a valuable addition indeed, his crews
contributing to a very solid team showing at the IRA.
The winter of 78-79 saw the level of competition indoors intensify. Sophomore and future Olympian Tom Darling set
the bar in the early going, scoring well above 3200 on the Gamut erg – by far
the highest on the team. Notice had been
served to the upperclassmen; their seats in the varsity were far from
guaranteed.
The first race, the annual Rutgers – Syracuse faceoff came a
bit late in ’79, but the delay meant decent weather for the April 21 race on
Onondaga. In the varsity, Sibley was in his usual stroke seat, facing Bob
Donabella who had taken over for Ozzie Street. Henwood had moved to three from
bow, with Captain Bill Purdy in seven. For
the Varsity, finishing more than a length of open water in front of the guests
from New Jersey was more a meeting of expectations than great news; the result
was expected. The JV, stroked by future
US lightweight eight stroke Bill Bater finished a length back of Rutgers, with
the freshmen crossing the line just a few seats ahead of the Rutgers
first-years.
The next day, the crew made their way down to Cayuga Inlet
to take on Yale. All three crews lost to
Yale by considerable margins, with the closest finish – a length open - in the
JV eight. SU’s third varsity eight
paired off with the Coast Guard Academy’s JV and came back to campus with new
shirts, courtesy of their two-length margin of victory.
There was some shuffling of lineups over the next few days
of practice, as Sanford searched for the right mix while finding a substitute
for Bill Purdy, who had an appointment with the US National Team. With the short week of practice and travel on
Friday to Annapolis to race for the Goes Trophy on the always-challenging
Severn, it was a hectic time. Races were
scheduled for early in the morning in an attempt to avoid boat traffic and
potentially worsening weather, so the crews were at the boathouse just after
dawn. Four crews were racing, and while
the results weren’t what the Syracuse fans wanted, things looked to be
improving. Navy took the Goes Trophy by
a bit more than open water over SU, with Cornell a couple seconds back. The JV broke thru, crossing the line just
under a second before the Midshipmen and less than a length in front of the Big
Red. Drew Harrison’s freshmen were in a
dogfight all the way down the course, as conditions seemed to be getting
sloppier. Navy won their event by a
deck, with Cornell over a length behind second-place Syracuse. As none of the other crews had a third
varsity eight and Pete Gaines had to move up to JV to replace Purdy’s
substitute, SU’s 3V broke down into a four only to lose to Navy.
IRA SEEDING POLLS ARE UP!
Row2k.com has the latest IRA seeding polls; the Varsity is seeded 8th, JV 9th, and Frosh 12th.
If I have the heat set up right, our guys will be taking on Washington, Wisco, Yale, Penn, and Gonzaga in their Thursday heat. They'll go off at 8, 8:15, or 8:30 depending on final scheduling.
The second eight will line up against Cal, Harvard, BU, Gonzaga, and Drexel. Expect to see them on the stake boats at 9, 9:15, or 9:30.
The frosh, coming off a solid Packard Cup win over Dartmouth, are slated to face UW, Brown, Princeton, Yale, and GWU. They'll follow immediately after the JV.
No word on the open four seeding, but we do know there are three heats starting at 11 and running every 15 minutes.
After a couple pretty hot days, expect temps to drop a bit for the racing on Thursday and Friday. Saturday looks iffy, with thunderstorms likely in the am.
If I have the heat set up right, our guys will be taking on Washington, Wisco, Yale, Penn, and Gonzaga in their Thursday heat. They'll go off at 8, 8:15, or 8:30 depending on final scheduling.
The second eight will line up against Cal, Harvard, BU, Gonzaga, and Drexel. Expect to see them on the stake boats at 9, 9:15, or 9:30.
The frosh, coming off a solid Packard Cup win over Dartmouth, are slated to face UW, Brown, Princeton, Yale, and GWU. They'll follow immediately after the JV.
No word on the open four seeding, but we do know there are three heats starting at 11 and running every 15 minutes.
After a couple pretty hot days, expect temps to drop a bit for the racing on Thursday and Friday. Saturday looks iffy, with thunderstorms likely in the am.
Order Time: SU Crew Gear
This online store will be “open” for a two to three week period to batch the order and then Boathouse Sports will have one production run of the Syracuse gear. Each transaction is directly between you and Boathouse Sports. They will take payment and ship it directly to your address. The one catch is that the combined order will need to be sizable to make it profitable for Boathouse Sports, if not they will delay or cancel the order until we have a critical mass.
These funds will help SARA support events that we host at the various regattas. The store / site will close June 11, 2012 so all orders need to be placed by then. Gear should be shipped approximately two weeks after the store closes.
SARA President Joe Kieffer is available to answer any questions: jkieffer@email.com
See the Syracuse Crew store and order here - http://syracusecrew.boathousegear.com/
These funds will help SARA support events that we host at the various regattas. The store / site will close June 11, 2012 so all orders need to be placed by then. Gear should be shipped approximately two weeks after the store closes.
SARA President Joe Kieffer is available to answer any questions: jkieffer@email.com
See the Syracuse Crew store and order here - http://syracusecrew.boathousegear.com/
IRA Broadcast Information
From Coach Dave Reischman
Coaches, please pass on to your SID’s, parents, and Alumni groups early in the week:
IRA on the internet Live through Community Structure’s web portal at: http://client. stretchinternet.com/client/cs. portal
Press release below and attached.
Community Structure and Stretch Internet Partner with ECAC to Provide
Live Video Coverage of the Intercollegiate Rowing Association (IRA) Championships
CENTERVILLE, Mass. – The Eastern College Athletic Conference announced on Tuesday its spring schedule for live video streaming on the Internet for the Intercollegiate Rowing Association (IRA) Championships. The ECAC, in partnership with Community Structure, Stretch Internet and award-winning sports producer Doug Myers, will broadcast over 15 hours of live rowing action over three days of racing Thursday, May 31st through Saturday, June 2nd. Full-race coverage of the Intercollegiate Rowing Association National Championships will be broadcast for the second consecutive year from the race venue on the Cooper River in Camden County, New Jersey.
“The ECAC and its affiliates are thrilled to provide expanded HD coverage of the premier event in our rowing portfolio,” stated ECAC Director of Rowing and IRA Commissioner Gary Caldwell. “Doug Myers is a multiple Emmy winning producer with a terrific eye for our sport, and the Stretch Internet team and John Bartucz (Community Structure) are operating on the cutting edge of wireless broadcast technology.”
Viewers can access race schedules and links to all of the broadcasts through Community Structure’s web portal at: http://client. stretchinternet.com/client/cs. portal, and view full race schedules and lane assignments at ECAC media partner www.row2k.com and the ECAC website at www.ecac.org as well aswww.ecacsports.com.
Racing Schedule on the Internet:
IRA National Championships
Thursday, May 31, 2012 8:00 a.m.-12:15 p.m. and 2:00 p.m.-3:45 p.m.
Friday, June 1, 2012 8:30 a.m.-10:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m.-3:30 p.m.
Saturday, June 2, 2012 7:00 a.m.-12:30 p.m.
Friday, May 25, 2012
Mark of the Oarsman 2 - 1979, Part One
We continue the story of SU Crew, with this excerpt from the chapter provisionally titled "1979"
Three consecutive freshman eight national
championships. A convincing win for
Syracuse’ varsity eight at the IRA. Two
weeks in England racing international crews at Nottingham and Henley. A very
strong recruiting class for freshman coach Drew Harrison, the return of most of
the varsity eight and half of the medalist JV (check medal and number of
returners). All the pieces were in place for 1979 to be another championship
year fro the Orange, with expectations high for all crews. As the team brochure quoted head coach Bill
Sanford; “They’ve all tasted victory and should be hungry for the title again.”
1979 was going to be the year that cemented Syracuse
rowing’s position among the elite programs in the nation. Bill Sanford had seen the program return to
greatness after 58 years’ absence from atop the IRA podium. Yet despite all the promise, the year after
winning the IRAs would prove to be more than disappointing for the Orange. It wasn’t just the failure to win the IRA, it
was a sense that the entire season had been misspent.
All in all, the summer of 1978 had been productive on many
levels. Racing two full eights at the Henley and Nottingham International
Regatta had dramatically increased SU’s reputation in the rowing community, a
reputation that would help recruiting.
On top of Drew Harrison’s string of gold medal frosh eights, the daily
mentions in the news generated increasing interest among experienced high
school rowers. Sanford noted this in the
pre-season media kit, stating: “Because our program has done so well in recent
years we keep attracting better athletes and this year’s frosh group looks to
be the strongest I’ve seen.”
The multiple races for the varsity and a combined
freshman/JV eight was “like going to the Elite Eight in NCAA basketball, going
up against teams that were really fast, more mature, and had a different
approach. The Romanians were all in the
army, mature and older – when one of their guys started talking to a couple SU
guys, their coach yelled at him and he hurried back to his crew…” Sanford
recalled. The pressure, the level of
competition, and the reward of racing internationally raised expectations for
the future.
But the season-extending trip to the UK had a downside as
well. Coach had a feeling towards the
end that the guys had had just about enough racing and needed a break for a
while. As campus came alive again in the
fall and the team reassembled, there wasn’t the same level of intensity in the
boathouse that had been there the previous fall. It wasn’t anything really noticeable, just a
bit less energy. As Coach Sanford
recalled, “there was a motivational issue with some of those who had given all
their life to crew, initially some folks wanted a break, yet they still came
out and made an effort.”
Thursday, May 24, 2012
Better Late Than Never!
Sorry for just posting this. Here's Coach Dave Reischman giving his preview for the already-past Eastern Sprints. Some good video of the coach, team and boathouse though! Check it out.
Sunday, May 20, 2012
SU Men Sweep Dartmouth
Syracuse swept the Big Green of Dartmouth on a beautiful morning for racing on the Connecticut River, with the Varsity keeping the Packard Cup, beating Dartmouth by just about a length in very fast conditions. The JV won easily, the Freshmen edged the higher-ranked Big Green in a bang-bang finish and the Open Four won by about a length.
“I told the JV and Varsity last night these guys are going to come gunning for you, “ Coach Dave Reischman said. “Dartmouth is a good crew they’ve got a great coach.”
Reischman’s eighth-ranked varsity fell behind Topher Bordeau’s Dartmouth eight by a seat or two off the start, but pushed through in the second 500 meters, then fended off a series of pushes by the Big Green. Both crews rowed the race at about 37 on the fast-flowing river.
“We did a good job of just maintaining our composure and sticking to our rhythm,” Reischman said. “It didn’t look like we panicked at all.”
The JV race was never in doubt. SU jumped out to a lead off the start and continually extended it, with a length or more open at the halfway point. Rather than sit on the lead, SU sprinted right through the finish line to win by about four lengths.
The SU freshmen were more than three seconds slower than Dartmouth last weekend at the Eastern Sprints but made it all up this morning. Dartmouth has the early lead but SU fought back by the halfway point and neither crew ever led by more than a seat or two. Syracuse had the lead in the sprint but the finish was so close it took several minutes for the officials to announce the ruling and it was the Orange by about a quarter of a second.
“There’s nothing more gratifying for a coach than when your crew actually performs on race day,” Reischman said, crediting freshman coach Shawn Bagnall. “Shawn should take a lot of pride in that the guys did their best job in applying what they’ve been working on.”
The Open Four – made up of guys who have been spares for the varsity and frosh, started the day with a solid win over Dartmouth. They’d finished second at the Sprints, but Reischman said they were better this morning.
“I thought it was a great improvement today," Reischman said. "They were more composed, looser in the shoulders. “It’s a testament to the guys and the coach (Brad Hemmerly.)”
The Orange crews return home to get set for the IRA in less than two weeks. Reischman says the crews will work to improve and stay focused.
“You go to the IRA and you have an OK weekend you’re going to end up in the third level final. History has shown that. We’re really just focusing the next two weeks to make sure we are on our game and when the flag drops we’re ready to go.”
Results courtesy of row2k.com here: http://www.row2k.com/results/resultspage.cfm?UID=8477887&cat=1
Story from suathletics.com here: http://www.suathletics.com/news/2012/5/20/MROW_0520125826.aspx
“I told the JV and Varsity last night these guys are going to come gunning for you, “ Coach Dave Reischman said. “Dartmouth is a good crew they’ve got a great coach.”
Reischman’s eighth-ranked varsity fell behind Topher Bordeau’s Dartmouth eight by a seat or two off the start, but pushed through in the second 500 meters, then fended off a series of pushes by the Big Green. Both crews rowed the race at about 37 on the fast-flowing river.
“We did a good job of just maintaining our composure and sticking to our rhythm,” Reischman said. “It didn’t look like we panicked at all.”
The JV race was never in doubt. SU jumped out to a lead off the start and continually extended it, with a length or more open at the halfway point. Rather than sit on the lead, SU sprinted right through the finish line to win by about four lengths.
The SU freshmen were more than three seconds slower than Dartmouth last weekend at the Eastern Sprints but made it all up this morning. Dartmouth has the early lead but SU fought back by the halfway point and neither crew ever led by more than a seat or two. Syracuse had the lead in the sprint but the finish was so close it took several minutes for the officials to announce the ruling and it was the Orange by about a quarter of a second.
“There’s nothing more gratifying for a coach than when your crew actually performs on race day,” Reischman said, crediting freshman coach Shawn Bagnall. “Shawn should take a lot of pride in that the guys did their best job in applying what they’ve been working on.”
The Open Four – made up of guys who have been spares for the varsity and frosh, started the day with a solid win over Dartmouth. They’d finished second at the Sprints, but Reischman said they were better this morning.
“I thought it was a great improvement today," Reischman said. "They were more composed, looser in the shoulders. “It’s a testament to the guys and the coach (Brad Hemmerly.)”
The Orange crews return home to get set for the IRA in less than two weeks. Reischman says the crews will work to improve and stay focused.
“You go to the IRA and you have an OK weekend you’re going to end up in the third level final. History has shown that. We’re really just focusing the next two weeks to make sure we are on our game and when the flag drops we’re ready to go.”
Results courtesy of row2k.com here: http://www.row2k.com/results/resultspage.cfm?UID=8477887&cat=1
Story from suathletics.com here: http://www.suathletics.com/news/2012/5/20/MROW_0520125826.aspx
Friday, May 18, 2012
SU Takes on Dartmouth for the Packard Cup! - BROADCAST INFO HERE!
Racing in Hanover, 2010 |
The SU Men are on the road this weekend, travelling to scenic Hanover, NH where they will take on Dartmouth College for the Packard Cup. Racing is on SUNDAY.
Syracuse Alumni Rowing Association (SARA) is excited to provide live audio broadcasting of Men’s and Women’s races. Our announcers will be following the races in the chase launches, providing a stroke by stroke account of the races – from the start until the finish. Below are the details of Sunday's regatta schedule.
Via Phone / Conference Line:
Dial in number – 1 (712) 432-4418
Via Internet: http://
Event
Men’s Rowing – Packard Cup – Connecticut River, Hanover, NH
Syracuse University versus Dartmouth College
Sunday, May 20, 2012
Race Schedule:
900 am: V4+
915 am: 1F 8+
930 am: 2V 8+
945 am: V 8+
Wednesday, May 16, 2012
Jayvees get a measure of satisfaction at Sprints
In the finals of the Eastern Sprints, SU's second eight raced like they had something to prove, winning the petite finals in convincing fashion.
Rowing a 37 for most of the race, the Orange pulled clear of the field for the final push with 500 to go. From there it was all Syracuse.
With Tyler Toporowski in the stroke seat for the first time this year, the crew looked aggressive and determined. Ignoring the built-in excuse of a new lineup, a new stroke, and a brutally competitive heat, the guys did some of the best racing of the season in the heats and finals.
With two races left on the schedule, this crew is going to be fun to watch...
Rowing a 37 for most of the race, the Orange pulled clear of the field for the final push with 500 to go. From there it was all Syracuse.
With Tyler Toporowski in the stroke seat for the first time this year, the crew looked aggressive and determined. Ignoring the built-in excuse of a new lineup, a new stroke, and a brutally competitive heat, the guys did some of the best racing of the season in the heats and finals.
With two races left on the schedule, this crew is going to be fun to watch...
SU Women nationally ranked!
Coach Justin Moore's women's crew closed out the season on a high note - in today's coaches' poll they are ranked 20th in the nation.
This is the first time SU's women have been ranked in quite a while; kudos to each and every athlete on the squad, and Justin and his fellow coaches. The women have become a force to be reckoned with, and the graduating seniors had a lot to do with that.
This is the first time SU's women have been ranked in quite a while; kudos to each and every athlete on the squad, and Justin and his fellow coaches. The women have become a force to be reckoned with, and the graduating seniors had a lot to do with that.
Sunday, May 13, 2012
And the varsity's in the Grand Finals!
In a very close heat SU beat Cornell by 2.4 seconds to garner a lane in he Grand finals. It was very very close all the way down with Penn SU and Cornell fighting it out for the second qualifying spot behind Brown.
In the sprint, the Orange moved away from the Big Red convincingly.
Dave Reischman's crew will face Brown, Wisco, Harvard, Navy, and Princeton this afternoon.
First races at eastern sprints
The conditions are great for this morning's racing in Worcester. Flat water, fast times and lots of crews battling for places in the finals.
For SU, the morning began with a great race from the open four, who battled their way to second behind a Columbia crew.
The freshmen just finished fourth in their heat in 6:02; they'll be racing in the petites this afternoon. Made up a lot of time on Navy who had soundly beaten the Syracuse Frosh at the Goes Trophy earlier this spring.
More to come...
Friday, May 11, 2012
Women's Big East Championship Broadcast Information
Syracuse
Alumni Rowing Association (SARA) is excited to provide live audio broadcasting
of Men’s and Women’s races. USRowing is providing audio and live video
coverage for this year championship. Announcers will be following the races in
the chase launches, providing a stroke by stroke account of the races – from
the start until the finish. Below are
the details and today’s regatta schedule.
Streaming Video Link:
http://bigeast.org/Sports/WomensRowing/2012RowingChampionship.aspx
Syracuse
University versus University of Notre Dame, University of Connecticut, University
of Louisville, Villanova University, Georgetown University ,University of West Virginia and Rutgers University
Sunday, May 13, 2012 -Race Schedule:
8:00 a.m. Varsity
8– Time Trials
8:08 a.m. 2nd
Varsity 8 – Time Trials
8:16 a.m. Varsity
4– Time Trials
8:24 a.m. Third
Varsity 8 – Time Trials
8:32 a.m. 2nd
Varsity 8 – Heat 2
11:00 a.m. Third
Varsity 4 – GRAND FINAL
11:10 a.m. 2nd
Varsity 4 – GRAND FINAL
11:20 a.m. Third
Varsity 8 – GRAND FINAL
11:30 a.m. Varsity
4 – PETITE FINAL
11:40 a.m. Varsity
4 – GRAND FINAL
11:50 a.m. 2nd
Varsity 8 – PETITE FINAL
12:00 p.m. 2nd
V8 – GRAND FINAL
12:10 p.m. Varsity
8 – PETITE FINAL
12:20 p.m. Varsity
8 – GRAND FINAL
12:40 p.m. AWARDS
CEREMONY
Tuesday, May 8, 2012
Racing Update – SARA Men’s Crew Endowment – 750m Down.
With 750 meters down, the class of 1980 – 1984 has sprinted ahead with a key leadership gift. We still have three class years still on the stake boats. Our youngest graduates (classes 2005 – 2011) have stepped up and showed their unity and have taken the lead on number of contributors. As we enter into Sprints weekend, our men in Orange and Blue need your support with a click of a mouse or a pen and a check by contributing to the SARA Men’s Crew Endowment. There are still time to make your voice heard and contribution felt.
Checks can be made payable to:
Central New York Community Foundation
Memo line: SARA Endowment
And mail to:
Central NY Community Foundation.
431 East Fayette Street, Suite 100
Syracuse, New York 13202
Or donate by credit card by bank transfer via PayPal at: http://mygiving.cnycf.org/sara
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
Dietrick, Karpowicz, and Olson lauded at annual 'Cuse Awards
SU rowing was well-represented among winners of the annual 'Cuse awards held earlier this week at the Schine Center, with Mike Dietrick nominated for Male Athlete of the Year, and the men's crew nominated for Men's Team of the Year.
Senior Mike Dietrick also received the Doris Soladay award for excellence in academics, athletics, leadership, and service. Here's the write-up from the SU Athletics report on Mike:
"Dietrick rowed in the Varsity eight for three seasons after walking on to the team as a freshman. In 2011 Dietrick helped the varsity boat to the Grand Final at the Eastern Sprints, as well helping SU to its first IRA Grand Final appearance in 30 years. Dietrick is an active member of the community, serving as tutor to accounting students, as well as donating more than 25 hours of help to Meals on Wheels in Syracuse. In the classroom, Dietrick earned his undergraduate degree from the Whitman School of Management in three years and will complete his master’s degree in accounting upon graduation this May."
Dietrick is accompanied in the photo by fellow Soladay recipient and tennis player Emily Harman
James Olson and Emma Karpowicz were awarded the 'Cuse Award" for men's and women's rowing respectively.
Senior Mike Dietrick also received the Doris Soladay award for excellence in academics, athletics, leadership, and service. Here's the write-up from the SU Athletics report on Mike:
"Dietrick rowed in the Varsity eight for three seasons after walking on to the team as a freshman. In 2011 Dietrick helped the varsity boat to the Grand Final at the Eastern Sprints, as well helping SU to its first IRA Grand Final appearance in 30 years. Dietrick is an active member of the community, serving as tutor to accounting students, as well as donating more than 25 hours of help to Meals on Wheels in Syracuse. In the classroom, Dietrick earned his undergraduate degree from the Whitman School of Management in three years and will complete his master’s degree in accounting upon graduation this May."
Dietrick is accompanied in the photo by fellow Soladay recipient and tennis player Emily Harman
James Olson and Emma Karpowicz were awarded the 'Cuse Award" for men's and women's rowing respectively.
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