Showing posts with label Bryan Kitch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bryan Kitch. Show all posts
Thursday, August 8, 2013
Learn from the Legends
The Finnish Legend Pertti Karppinen in 1976.
On Monday, 5 August, HTBS's friend Bryan Kitch, of the brilliant blog Rowing Related, posted a marvellous old video in his series "Video of the Week". The good fellow Bryan also sent a tweet to HTBS (@boatsing) to make sure that we would not miss this 'education movie', showing among others Pertti Karppinen's and Peter-Michael Kolbe's sculling styles. The film, "Learning with Legends", is a true gem and we would not like any of HTBS's readers to miss it. That is why we happily direct you to Bryan's Rowing Related - enjoy, and thank you very much Bryan! Watch "Learning with Legends" here. (Seeing Karppinen sculling takes me back to the 1970s and a couple of Nordic Championships held in Denmark and Sweden where no one was able to give the Gentle Finn a match.)
On Monday, 5 August, HTBS's friend Bryan Kitch, of the brilliant blog Rowing Related, posted a marvellous old video in his series "Video of the Week". The good fellow Bryan also sent a tweet to HTBS (@boatsing) to make sure that we would not miss this 'education movie', showing among others Pertti Karppinen's and Peter-Michael Kolbe's sculling styles. The film, "Learning with Legends", is a true gem and we would not like any of HTBS's readers to miss it. That is why we happily direct you to Bryan's Rowing Related - enjoy, and thank you very much Bryan! Watch "Learning with Legends" here. (Seeing Karppinen sculling takes me back to the 1970s and a couple of Nordic Championships held in Denmark and Sweden where no one was able to give the Gentle Finn a match.)
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Huskies v Tabs, Deutschland über Isis
HTBS's Tim Koch reports from London,
The 159th Oxford – Cambridge Boat Race is now less than six weeks away. It is claimed that over seven months the crews will spend two hours training for each of the 600 strokes in the race. Most of this preparation and testing is done in relative privacy but there are a few public appearances before the crews line up in front of 1/4 million on the river bank and 120 million people watching worldwide. Not bad for a ‘private match’.
The first public appearance of the potential competitors was for the pre Christmas Trial Eights. For this year’s race, they were held on 13 December, 2012, and the HTBS report is here.
The next exposure to public gaze will happen on the ‘Press Days’ on the weekends of 16/17 February and 16/17 March. This is an opportunity for the Blue boats and the reserve crews to race over the course against strong opposition and for the press to see what is probably the final line ups.
Cambridge’s Press Day will be on 16 February when CUBC will race the University of Washington (16.30) and Goldie (the reserve crew) will race the University of London (16.10). These races will be followed by a press launch. The following day, Sunday 17, Oxford will race the University of London (12.30) and Isis (the reserve crew) will race a crew yet to be confirmed (12.00). There will be no launch following the Dark Blue races, their turn to be pursued down the course by a boat full of journalists will be a month later, on 17 March, when OUBC will race ‘a German Eight’ (16.00). I hope to find out more about the Germanic opposition soon. Earlier, Isis will race Tideway Scullers School (15.30). The day before this, CUBC will race Molesey BC (15.45) and Goldie will race London RC (15.15). This will be Cambridge’s turn to be spared the following press pack.
Oxford’s race against the Germans may, or may not, be particularly exciting depending on the composition of the latter crew but Cambridge’s race against the University of Washington (‘The Huskies’) is going to be thrilling. At the US 2012 Intercollegiate Rowing Association Championship Regatta, UW won all five events, their fourth IRA Championship in six years. The (slightly biased) gohuskies.com claims this to be ‘... one of the most dominating seasons an athletic team has produced at the University of Washington’. Our good friend Bryan Kitch at the excellent website rowingrelated.com has found out who is likely to be in the Washington crew. Most notable amongst an already impressive line up is the man in the six seat, Conlin McCabe, 2012 London Olympic silver medallist in the Canadian Eight. Cambridge, already the underdogs for the Boat Race, should be worried, but this is not 2,000 metres on a buoyed course in a straight line on still water, this is 6,800 metres on a ‘living river’. As Bryan points out:
‘The question, as always, will be can the visiting crew adapt to both the unfamiliar environs and the “unpredictable” nature of the Thames well enough to take on an opponent well versed in such things...’
We will find out this Saturday.
Saturday, December 8, 2012
This Month's 'Rowing Related' Magazine is Out!
In yesterday's mail was the latest issue of the magazine Rowing Related. There is the section called 'Quick Catches', an article about the 2012 rowing season: about the people, crews, and teams that won the NCAAs, ACRs, IRAs, Youth Nationals, Henley Royal Regatta, London Olympics, London Paralympics, Senior and Junior Worlds, and then an article about the best athletes during the year: Female: Kim Crow (AU); Male: Hamish Bond and Eric Murray (NZ); Coach: Kevin Sauer (University of Virginia); International Crew: U.S. Women's Eight; Men's Collegiate Crew of the Year: Harvard Lightweight Varsity Eight; Women's Collegiate Crew of the Year: University of Virginia Varsity Eight; Event of the Year: The Head of the Charles; and Race of the Year: The Olympic Men's Eight. The interesting feature article, 'All Rise', is about Luke and Portia McGee.
And, of course... wait a minute, did I just write 'Rowing Related' as the name of the magazine? Ohh, I see now that it's actually just called Rowing. Well, all the articles mentioned above are by Bryan Kitch, HTBS's friend over at the blog 'Rowing Related'. An amazing man, Mr. Kitch, because not only is he running his eminent blog, he is obviously also writing 'everything' in the magazine Rowing, too. Well, almost everything, Marlene Royle has her 'technique' page, Volker Nolte doesn't even have a half page of his 'sport science', Rich Davis has a narrow column of his 'ask the coach', and a few others have their little blurbs here and there. Thank god, Andy Anderson - 'Doctor Rowing' - has his full-page piece, or, nowadays, even a little bit more (although, I think it funny that we readers have to go back a page to read the end of his article).
But, congratulations to Bryan for some well executed, well-written articles!
And, of course... wait a minute, did I just write 'Rowing Related' as the name of the magazine? Ohh, I see now that it's actually just called Rowing. Well, all the articles mentioned above are by Bryan Kitch, HTBS's friend over at the blog 'Rowing Related'. An amazing man, Mr. Kitch, because not only is he running his eminent blog, he is obviously also writing 'everything' in the magazine Rowing, too. Well, almost everything, Marlene Royle has her 'technique' page, Volker Nolte doesn't even have a half page of his 'sport science', Rich Davis has a narrow column of his 'ask the coach', and a few others have their little blurbs here and there. Thank god, Andy Anderson - 'Doctor Rowing' - has his full-page piece, or, nowadays, even a little bit more (although, I think it funny that we readers have to go back a page to read the end of his article).
But, congratulations to Bryan for some well executed, well-written articles!
Thursday, October 4, 2012
New News on 'Rowing'
The world's most famous treble, or triple, scull crew: Ernest Barry, Wally Kinnear and Harry Blackstaffe.
Yesterday, Rowing News arrived in my mailbox, or that is, the “new” magazine from the people behind the old Rowing News, now simplified to just Rowing. The magazine has got a new, nice, readable lay-out – except the section called “Training” which has so many different fonts, and sizes and colours that they make your head spin. ‘Doctor Rowing’ – Andy Anderson – is still having his column, thank god. In this issue he is telling the story of some American “triple sculls” (in England also called treble scull). Rowing legend Frank Cunningham in Seattle built one out of an old Pocock coxed pair, then Susan Kinne, from Cunningham’s club, came along and built three more.
“Well, dear readers”, Andy writes, “triples are alive and well.” And Kinne makes a good point, saying that this boat type is great to have when someone doesn’t show up, or if two experienced scullers would like to take a beginner for an outing.
HTBS’s friend Bryan Kitch, at Rowing Related, is still writing for the magazine, and this time he has a well-written and well-researched article called “America’s Best Rowing Towns”. It doesn’t have that many surprises, though, it’s Boston, Philadelphia, Seattle, Richmond, Oklahoma City, and a few more.
Thumbs up – all around!
“Well, dear readers”, Andy writes, “triples are alive and well.” And Kinne makes a good point, saying that this boat type is great to have when someone doesn’t show up, or if two experienced scullers would like to take a beginner for an outing.
HTBS’s friend Bryan Kitch, at Rowing Related, is still writing for the magazine, and this time he has a well-written and well-researched article called “America’s Best Rowing Towns”. It doesn’t have that many surprises, though, it’s Boston, Philadelphia, Seattle, Richmond, Oklahoma City, and a few more.
Thumbs up – all around!
Monday, April 9, 2012
April Is The Cruellest Month
Even now, two days after the 2012 Boat Race between Oxford and Cambridge, I have to confess that I am still feeling anger, sadness, and bewilderment thinking of ‘the swimming man’, who took upon himself to stop this annual and traditional sport event due to selfishness to get his own murky political agenda exposed before the eyes of millions and millions of people. This was truly an act of a very disturbed man, whose name should not be mentioned here, nor should his political statement.
On Saturday, 7 April, both my HTBS-fellow-in-arms, Tim Koch, and I read something on the eminent blog RowingRelated written by our clever colleague Bryan Kitch. Bryan’s article is very much worth reading as it is, in Tim’s words, ‘eloquent, articulate and well thought out’, and so is Oxford’s two-seat man, William Zeng’s words which Bryan is quoting in his article.
Read “Op-Ed: Thoughts on The 2012 Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race"
On Saturday, 7 April, both my HTBS-fellow-in-arms, Tim Koch, and I read something on the eminent blog RowingRelated written by our clever colleague Bryan Kitch. Bryan’s article is very much worth reading as it is, in Tim’s words, ‘eloquent, articulate and well thought out’, and so is Oxford’s two-seat man, William Zeng’s words which Bryan is quoting in his article.
Read “Op-Ed: Thoughts on The 2012 Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race"
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