Pioneer LogLewis & Clark College’s Student-Run Newspaper
Crew successful in Salem
March 19, 2010
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photo courtesy Pioneer Crew Blog
by Lindsey Bosse
Crew eased into their spring season this past weekend with a warm up regatta against Willamette. The two teams hit the river last Saturday, doing race pieces against each other, separating into men and women divisions, and varsity and novice. The races were kept on rate caps so that the teams could row over a certain maximum strokes per minute.
The men consistently beat Willamette in all of their pieces.
“We’re strong, but we’re not the powerhouses that are prevalent in other schools,” Daniel Saxton (’12) said. “Willamette was stronger than us, but we were able to beat them with technique.”
The races were kept between three and four minutes, with a rate cap in the mid-twenties. The men have a fairly light team, in comparison, but still boast high endurance. Their technical skills also strengthen Lewis & Clark rowers. Coming back from the regatta, the men look to work on improving their strokes per minute while also keeping their technique. Thus far in the season, both the men and women’s teams have worked heavily on their technique.
“Once you speed up, generally your technique begins to wane,” said Saxton.
The novice team, on the men’s side, really showed their gained improvement since the beginning of the season. Last fall, the novice team competed in the WIRA competition and ended near the top of the teams. The WIRA regatta includes a lot of the western colleges, and is a huge meet. The novice team this spring season looks to follow in the successful footsteps of fall’s novice team.
“The coaching staff is really impressive,” Saxton said. “They’ve been able to make novice rowersreally good really fast.”
The women’s team was opposed a bigger, faster, more experienced group this last weekend. On the LC side of things, the team is fairly new, and still getting used to the water. However, the team kept up the competition. The varsity women’s boats struggled slightly, just from lack of experience.
The novice boats, on the other hand, kept up with Willamette’s novice rowers.
Coming back to training this week before spring break the team, both men and women and varsity and novice, will start working on starts and race rhythm.
“It’s going to be exciting to take out the other teams with big guys,” said Saxton. “It’s going to be fun.”







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