Rowing

   
Rowing is propelling a boat by means of oars. The purpose can be transportation, recreation or sport. As a sport it is sometimes known as crew.

River, Amsterdam, The Netherlands]]

Table of contents
1 Rowing sport
2 History
3 Competition Format
4 One Stroke
5 Rowing Terminology
6 Rowing Clubs/Organizations

Rowing sport

Rowing is a speed sport in narrow wooden or composite boats, where the athlete sits on a sliding seat above the water level and faces backwards, using oars to move the boat. This may be done on a river, a lake, or on the sea. Sweep rowing involves one oar per rower while sculling involves two oars per rower. Rowing boats can be coxed (steered and commanded by a coxswain) or coxless (also known as "straight").

Racing boats (usually called "shells") are long and narrow in order to reduce drag to a minimum. This makes them unstable and liable to tip. Being able to balance the boat while putting maximum effort into the oars is therefore an essential skill of rowing. Originally wooden, now carbon fiber, racing shells are now almost all composite at the top levels of compeition.

Rowers may take part in the sport for their leisure or they may competitively row. There are different types of competition in the sport of rowing. Regattas that are held in the spring and summer are generally "sprint races." Regulation length sprint races are 2000 m long, however occasionally the distance will be 1000 m. Dashes are 500 m long. The boats start at the same time from a stationary position and the winner will cross the finish line first. The winner will then race in semi finals, generally having to place in the top 3 to move on to the finals, and the finals to try to win the regatta. A head race is another type of regatta rowers can compete in, which take place from the fall season to spring (depending on local conditions). Boats begin with a rolling start at intervals of 10-20 seconds, and race against the clock. Distances can vary from 2,000 m to over 12,000 m. Examples of Head races are the 3 mile (4,828 m) Head of the Charles in Boston MA in October and the 4 1/4 mile (6,840 m) Head of the River Race on the Thames in London in March. A third type of race is the bumps race, as held in Oxford and Cambridge. In these races, crews start lined up along the river at set intervals, and all start at the same time. The aim is to catch up with the boat in front, and avoid being caught by the boat behind. If a crew catches up with the crew ahead of them, and a bump is awarded, both crews pull to the side of the bank and take no further part in that race. However, the next day, the bumping crew will start ahead of the crew that was bumped. Bumps races take place over several days, and the positions at the end of the last race are used to set the positions on the first day of the races the next year. Oxford and Cambridge hold bumps races for their respective colleges twice a year, and there are also Town Bumps races in both cities, open to all crews. Bump races are very rare in the United States.

Rowing is unusual in the demands it places on competitors. The standard race distance of 2,000 m is long enough to have a large endurance element, but short enough (typically 5.5 to 7.5 minutes) to feel like a sprint. This means that rowers have some of the highest power outputs of athletes in any sport. At the same time the motion involved in the sport compresses the rowers' lungs, limiting the amount of oxygen available to them. This requires rowers to tailor their breathing to the stroke, typically inhaling and exhaling twice per stroke, unlike most other sports such as cycling where competitors can breathe freely.

The relative obscurity of rowing has helped it develop an introspective atmosphere, where long hours, early mornings on the river, and the physical pain of the event are the price of being a part of the rowing community. The intense focus of top rowers on their sport is unusual even by the standard of similarly excellent competitors in other sports.

One piece of equipment commonly used when training for rowing, the 'indoor rower' or 'ergometer', has become popular as a sport in its own right.

History

Rowing boats (or similar vessels) have been around for centuries, but before the 18th century, there is little mention of boat races. In the 13th century, Venetian festivals called regata included boat races among others. Nowadays, rowing competitions are still called regattas (with a second 't' added).

The first modern rowing races, in the second half of the 18th century, were races between watermen on the River Thames in England. Subsequently, rowing became extremely popular as an amateur sport, often with thousands of spectators for events. From the first University Boat Race between Oxford and Cambridge on the River Thames (known as the Isis when flowing through Oxford), student rowing has become increasingly popular. In the Anglo-Saxon world, there is also a sizeable school rowing community. The Harvard-Yale race is the oldest intercollegiate sporting event in the United States.

Rowing today is governed by the FISA, which organises World Championships since 1962. Rowing has also been conducted at the Olympic Games since 1900 (cancelled at the first modern Games in 1896).

Strong rowing nations include the United Kingdom, the United States, France, Germany, Australia. Well-known rowers of the recent years include Sir Steve Redgrave (UK), who won Olympic golds in five successive Olympics in the coxed four, coxless pair and the coxless four, Rob Waddell (New Zealand) and Xeno Muller (Switzerland), opponents in the single sculls, Ekaterina Karsten (Belarus) in women's single sculls, Katrin Boron (Germany) in women's double sculls and quadruples.

Competition Format

At World Championship level, sculling races include :

and sweep oar rowing races include:

  • coxed eight (or eight)
  • coxed fours
  • coxless fours
  • coxless pairs (occasionally coxed pairs are rowed).

There are also lightweight men's (<72.5 kg) and lightweight women's (<57.5 kg) races in the aforementioned classes. All races are held over 2000 metres.

Coxed fours and coxed pairs are no longer Olympic events. It is rumored that this decision was made to make room for the lightweight men's and women's competition at the Olympics. As a result of the cancelation of the coxed fours and coxed pairs at the Olympics, rowers take less interest in rowing those types of boats at World Championships as well.

At national, regional and local levels, Masters rowers (those 27 and up who have not won major competitions in the last year) generally race over a 1000-meter distance.

One Stroke

Rowing Terminology

  • Backstop -- (UK) the sliding seat position closest to the boat's bow.
  • Bow -- the rower in the front (i.e. the direction the boat is moving while rowing) of a multi-person shell. In coxless boats often the person who keeps an eye on the water behind him to avoid accidents.
  • Bow ball -- an essential small, soft ball no smaller than 4centimetres dia. securely attached to a rowing or scullnng boat's bow. Primarily intended for safety but also useful in deciding which boat crossed the finish line first in very close races.
  • Bowside -- (UK) starboard side.
  • Catch -- the part of the stroke at which the blade enters the water.
  • Cleaver blade or Hatchet blade -- Modern, hatchet-shaped blade.
  • Coxbox -- portable voice amplifier; may also optionally incorporate digital readouts displaying stroke rate, boat speed & times.
  • Crab -- a rowing error in which the blade is pushed under the water and becomes caught in the flow of the water past the boat, referred to as 'catching a crab'. This always results in slowing the boat down, and can even lift a rower out of the shell or make the boat capsize (unlikely).
  • "Easy oars" -- To stop.
  • Engine Room -- middle rowers in the boat. In an 8-person shell, this is generally seats 3,4,5,6. They are generally the biggest & strongest rowers. Because they are situated in the middle, their technique doesn't have to be as perfect as the others.
  • Erg -- Short for ergometer: a rowing machine.
  • Feather -- To turn the oar so that its blade is parallel with the water (opposite of 'square').
  • Frontstop -- (UK) the sliding seat position closest to the boat's stern.
  • Gunnels -- the top rib of the shell.
  • Hatchet -- New oar blades that have a more rectangular (hatchet) look to them.
  • "Hold it/her up" -- (UK) stop the boat.
  • "Hold it/her hard" -- (UK) emergency stop.
  • Launch -- A motorboat used by rowing instructors, coaches or umpires.
  • "Let it Run" -- To stop rowing, but to let the boat glide along with oars skimming the water.
  • Macon blade -- Traditional U-shaped blade
  • Port -- A sweep rower who rows with the oar on the port side.
  • Pot -- a tankard awarded as a prize to each member of a winning crew.
  • Rating -- the number of strokes executed per minute.
  • Ratio -- the relationship between the time taken during the propulsive and recovery phases of a rowing or sculling action.
  • Scull -- To row with two oars (per rower), or a shell designed to be sculled.
  • Seat race -- a method to compare two rowers in fours or eights. Two boats race against each other once. One rower from each boat switch positions, and the two boats race again. Relative performance in the two races is used to compare the abilities of the two rowers.
  • Shell -- The boat used for rowing.
  • Shoes--The piece of the boat to which the rower's feet are attached, either by tying their actual shoes (sneakers) in, or by putting their feet into a permanently-attached pair of sneaker.
  • Slides -- hollow rails upon which a rower or sculler's sliding seat will roll.
  • Smoothie -- A blade design in which the face of the oar blade is smooth, without the traditional central spine.
  • Split time (split)--Amount of time it takes to row 500 meters. Displayed on all ergs.
  • Square -- To turn the oar so that its blade is perpendicular to the water (opposite of 'feather').
  • Starboard -- A sweep rower who rows with the oar on the starboard side.
  • Stretcher -- (UK) an adjustable footplate.
  • Stroke -- (1) one complete cycle through the process above (2) the rower in the stern of a multi-person shell, whose timing is followed by the other rowers.
  • Stroke rate - the number of strokes per minute a crew is rowing
  • Strokeside -- (UK) port side.
  • "Weigh-enough" -- The command to stop. (American)

Rowing Clubs/Organizations

Clubs:





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