Should i row crew
Athletics, natural ability, and desire to improve will dictate who does best. In rowing, you get a great workout.
Rowing has fewer injuries than most sports, including the latest hot-button issue of impacts to the head and the potential for future negative affects on the brain. Rowing is also lower-impact than most sports. You might be able to row when other sports are not an option. Crew is a self-cutting sport. Thus, the team does not make cuts. Rowing is not the most popular sport in America. But, if fame is not your only goal in life, then crew can help you.
Crew is all about team. Students work for the group, not themselves. Every practice encourages each athlete to learn how hard he or she can push him or herself. Everything in rowing enforces the personal development of discipline and dedication to your teammates and common goal. A season of rowing will build strong back, legs and set of lungs to help you in any other sport. Rowing is an excellent alternate sport for athletes who play a fall or spring sport and are looking a sport for another season.
Like what you read? Do an internet search for a rowing clubs, organizations or programs near you and get started soon! June 4 of this year is the International Learn to Row Day and clubs all across the United States and beyond will be hosting events where you can hop in a boat with other beginners and receive help from experienced rowers and coaches to learn the basics. But the collection of collegiate rowing programs in the United States is so much richer.
Just look at Hobart College. So collegiate rowing is available to every interested and willing high school rower out there. Rowers of all stripes can set themselves up for success wherever they choose to row by understanding the rowing landscape, getting into the system, and avoiding the mistakes that can hamper their chances. Students applying to colleges ask important questions as they seek out admission. Do I fit into the campus and student body?
Do my resume and test scores make me a viable candidate for admission? Can I afford it? These questions all remain applicable to the high school rower. After all, the diploma at the end of college is often the more practical takeaway in the eventual job search than a collection of medals.
That said, a serious recruit understands that collegiate rowing is often as demanding as the pursuit of an academic degree. What you learn on the rowing team and in the classroom, you combine the two for a terrific college experience. So answering those questions is important in first identifying schools where rowing could be a possibility. Concurrently, rowers should consider what kind of collegiate rowing experience they desire. And with the line increasingly blurred between what differentiates club and varsity teams, that calculus is becoming more difficult.
One difference that persists is the national championship race for a given team. But so do programs like the DIII Hobart, which annually strives to take its entire team to the IRA, and a handful of varsity teams at other schools that will send a crew or two each year.
We have the ability to really have an aggressive vision. Coxswains also work closely with the team coach, and one of their jobs is to meet with the coach prior to each regatta to discuss things like strategy, water currents, and wind speed. Crew attire is snug. Athletes in most other sports have some fashion options, but rowers must wear Spandex, at least on the bottom.
Many kids aren't psyched about that, but all other fabrics get caught in the boat's rigging. So if your child wants to row, they'll need Spandex shorts or pants. When they're out of the water, they can slip on some sweats. Yes, it's all part of crew. Nutritious food is obviously critical, as is staying properly hydrated. Luckily, most coaches have participated in the sport themselves, and can advise kids on proper nutrition during training.
Then, on race day, there's the food tent. One of the sport's longstanding traditions, the food tent for most high school teams is transported, stocked, and staffed by parents. It involves serious effort on the part of those parents, but it's nice to have a place where rowers, coxswains, and coaches can get plenty of healthy food and water. So what about the puking? Well, as a mom with a long history of eating disorders, I was appalled when I first heard about kids vomiting in the erg room.
But after doing some research, I learned that it happens sometimes when a person pushes too hard. I still find it upsetting. A good coach will obviously try to keep this to a minimum. The word crew once evoked images of lock-jawed college boys with names like Bif and Chip.
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