SPORTS

TC Williams Crew Captures Silver & Bronze at Nationals

TC Women’s First 8 & Coach Rubini at 2018 SRAA Nationals. (Courtesy photo)

Women’s First 8 Secures Bronze, Frosh 8s Win Silver

In their second visit to the Cooper River in Camden, NJ in as many weeks, seven boats from the T.C. Williams Crew Team competed against the top high school boats in the nation on May 25-26 in the National Championship Regatta sponsored by the Scholastic Rowing Association of America. (The SRAA “Nationals” is unofficial because high school athletics do not allow sporting events to be held that decide national champions.)

The top one or two boats in each category from seven state and regional qualifying championship regattas receive an invitation to Nationals. The seven T.C. boats in this elite group got their tickets to Nationals at the two-day Virginia Scholastic Rowing Association State Championships.

Compared to the inclement weather the previous weekend at the abbreviated and relocated Stotesbury Cup Regatta, Nationals featured warm but otherwise favorable conditions for rowers.  Following qualifying heats, four T.C. boats – the Women’s First 8, Men’s First Four, Women’s Second 8, and Women’s Frosh 8 – claimed a lane in the Saturday morning semi-final races featuring the top 12 or 18 boats in their categories.

The Stotesbury Champion T.C. Women’s Frosh 8 snagged a second-place finish in their semi-final with a time of 5:20.942, behind Stotesbury Silver Medalist Mount St. Joseph’s 5:17.216 time and ahead of Upper Arlington, Ohio’s time of 5:23.353. In the other Frosh Women’s semi-final, Virginia State Champion McLean lead the field with a blazing time of 5:10.926, followed by Chicago’s New Trier (5:11.972) and Bethesda’s Whitman (5:22.589) to set the six-boat field for the final.

The Virginia State Champion T.C. Men’s First 4 placed fifth in their semi-final with a time of 5:12.051, and the Women’s Second 8, also a Virginia State Champion, placed fourth in their semi-final with a time of 5:21.530, ending both boats’ runs for a spot in the finals.

TC Women’s Frosh 8 & Coach Marquardt at 2018 SRAA Nationals. (Courtesy photo)

The Titan Women’s First 8, Virginia State Champions and a finalist a week earlier at Stotesbury, placed second in their semi-final dash with a time of 5:03.186 behind Florida State Champion Winter Park’s 4:57.856 to gain a spot in the final. Other Women’s First 8 finalists included Saratoga (New York State Scholastic Champion), Moorestown (NJ, Garden State Scholastic Champion), Loyola Academy (IL, Midwest Scholastic Rowing Association Champion), and New Trier (MSRA Silver Medalist).

As temperatures pushed towards the upper 8os, the T.C. Women’s Frosh 8 lined up at high noon for their final with three boats they had faced earlier in the season and the 5th fastest time in morning semi-finals.  The six boats all remained in a tight pack in the first 500 meters, but the middle third of the race saw New Trier push to a lead that it never relinquished.  At the 1000-meter mark, T.C., Whitman, and Mount St. Joseph’s moved slightly ahead of McLean and Upper Arlington as the final sprints began.

With a screaming crowd and a flurry of oars, the Frosh 8s reached for the finish with a pitched battle for second that ended in a photo finish and exhausted rowers on the water wondering about the results. When the announcers finally called the race, it was New Trier in first at 5:12.198, the jubilant T.C. Women’s Frosh 8 at 5:18.105, and the Whitman squad only inches behind at 5:18.125. Mount St. Joseph’s finished out of the medal count with an achingly close 5:18.761.

With their Silver Medal at Nationals, the T.C. Women’s Frosh 8 – rowers Riley Bucholz, Libby Padilla, Mackenzie Allen, Kaitie Dennis, Wellesley Snyder, Grace Yokitis, Adrienne Carter, and Halle Reinholtz, and coxswain Caroline Miles – added hard-earned hardware to their Stotesbury Gold and Virginia State Silver medals.

Over three hours later, the T.C. Women’s First 8 rowed to the start of their Nationals run with a burning sun overhead, air practically dripping with humidity, and only occasional puffs of a breeze to provide momentary relief. Unlike their T.C. Frosh teammates, none of their fellow Stotesbury finalists earned a berth in the final at Nationals. And like the Frosh, the T.C. First 8’s had the fifth fastest time in their semi-finals.

With a drone hovering over the race and providing live video, Saratoga and Winter Park battled for the top spot almost from the beginning as the T.C. 1-V-8s started behind the pack but battled their way to third at the half-way point, with Loyola and Moorestown closing fast.  Over the next few hundred meters, T.C., Loyola, and Moorestown traded positions, each finding themselves in third place at one point before T.C. began its sprint at the 300-meter mark.  The Titan Women stroked to a Bronze Medal finish in 4:55.661, 3.5 seconds behind Winter Park and 2.5 seconds ahead of Loyola. Saratoga took the Gold.

T.C. Women’s 1-V-8 seniors Rachel Knapp, Grace Asch, Grace Vannatta, Grace Hogan and Charlotte Carey, juniors Grace Fluharty and Blythe Markel, sophomore Madeline Toaso, and junior coxswain Paula Filios claimed a Women’s First 8 medal at Nationals for T.C. for the first time in a decade.

Next weekend the Titans travel to Saint Catharines in Ontario for their last regatta of the 2018 spring season, the Canadian Secondary School Rowing Association Championships on June 1-3.

 

 

Mary Wadland

Mary Wadland is the Publisher and Editor in Chief of The Zebra Press, founded by her in 2010. Originally from Delray Beach, Florida, Mary is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Hollins College in Roanoke, VA and has lived and worked in the Alexandria publishing community since 1987.

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