Photograph: Werner Schmidt

Monday, September 30, 2013

More on 'Shaved' Blades

HTBS has received two e-mails related to the entry about Ran Laurie’s ‘narrow blade’ that was posted on Friday 27 September. In one e-mail rowing historian Bill Lanouette, who recently wrote on HTBS about Thomas Eakins’s ‘newly’ discovered rowing painting, writes:

That’s a fascinating exchange about English strokes using narrow blades. As a stroke myself I would have loved to use such an oar, but in the 1960s at least, when I rowed in England, all blades were the same size. And, honestly, as a stroke I’m glad they were because you couldn’t feel the poise and power of the crew – and know what pace to set – if you weren’t just as exhausted as the other guys.


The second e-mail came from another rowing historian, Tom Weil, who on this matter writes:

As Guy Nickalls [seen in the photograph] was casting about to improve his 1921 Yale crew, which he had termed ‘gutless’, he saw the performance of one J. Freeman, who had just stroked Yale’s very first 150 lb. crew to victory in the American Henley on the Schuylkill. He put the lightweight Freeman into the stroke seat of the New London crew, and equipped him with a shaved blade. Nickalls was fired by the Yale Committee because of his unfortunate comment, but his parting contribution to the Yale varsity, wielding his shaved oar, led the ‘gutless’ crew to victory over Harvard.

There is an interesting photograph showing Guy Nickalls and freshman coach Giannini at Yale’s training quarters at Gales Ferry on 10 June, 1915 (© Bettmann/CORBIS), here.

Are there any more ideas out there about a stroke’s narrow or ‘shaved’ blade? If so, please send it to: gbuckhorn – at – gmail.com

3 comments:

  1. Hi,

    Did you ever get your hands on The Common Sense of Coaching written by Harcourt Gold?

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi

    Did you ever get your hands on The Common Sense of Coaching written by Harcourt Gold?

    ReplyDelete
  3. Hello ~ I managed to find a copy of this brilliant little booklet at a research library, as it is IMPOSSIBLE to find on the antiquarian book market. Go to the website http://www.worldcat.org/ - put in Gold's name and the book title, and in a couple of seconds you will find the nearest library that has this booklet. Be prepared, it is probably at a library thousands of miles away....

    ReplyDelete