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Northwest Junior Regionals Rowing Regatta, Vancouver Lake, Washington, Saturday 2016 5 21
[Photo: John Rudoff]
Northwest Junior Regionals Rowing Regatta, Vancouver Lake, Washington, Saturday 2016 5 21
[Photo: John Rudoff]
Northwest Junior Regionals Rowing Regatta, Vancouver Lake, Washington, Saturday 2016 5 21
[Photo: John Rudoff]
Northwest Junior Regionals Rowing Regatta, Vancouver Lake, Washington, Saturday 2016 5 21
[Photo: John Rudoff]
Varsity Boys Eight prepare to row up for another run down the course.
#usrowing #youthnats2018 #lakenatoma #ranchocordova
Northwest Junior Regionals Rowing Regatta, Vancouver Lake, Washington, Saturday 2016 5 21
[Photo: John Rudoff]
(Staff Photos by Rob Mattson/Amherst College, Office of Communications) Varsity and novice rowers from Amherst College Women's Crew informally train together for upcoming spring season sprint races, in the ergometer room at Alumni Gymnasium, on the Amherst College campus in Amherst, Mass., Tuesday afternoon, January 20, 2014. Fall regattas are generally on winding, 5-6km courses, for which training involves low-cadence, long duration workouts. Spring's sprint races, however, are usually on straight, 2km courses, with off-season training being especially important, so rowers can prepare their bodies for shorter distances at nearly twice the pace of fall "head" races.
His oar (apparently) trapped under UW's Empacher, Ian Silvera (USR 4) raises his hand to deflect Alexander Bunkers' (UW 6) oncoming oar. Henry Meek (UW 4) draws in his oar to extricate it from Grant James' (USR 2).
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(Staff Photos by Rob Mattson/Amherst College, Office of Communications) Varsity and novice rowers from Amherst College Women's Crew informally train together for upcoming spring season sprint races, in the ergometer room at Alumni Gymnasium, on the Amherst College campus in Amherst, Mass., Tuesday afternoon, January 20, 2014. Fall regattas are generally on winding, 5-6km courses, for which training involves low-cadence, long duration workouts. Spring's sprint races, however, are usually on straight, 2km courses, with off-season training being especially important, so rowers can prepare their bodies for shorter distances at nearly twice the pace of fall "head" races.
(Staff Photos by Rob Mattson/Amherst College, Office of Communications) Varsity and novice rowers from Amherst College Women's Crew informally train together for upcoming spring season sprint races, in the ergometer room at Alumni Gymnasium, on the Amherst College campus in Amherst, Mass., Tuesday afternoon, January 20, 2014. Fall regattas are generally on winding, 5-6km courses, for which training involves low-cadence, long duration workouts. Spring's sprint races, however, are usually on straight, 2km courses, with off-season training being especially important, so rowers can prepare their bodies for shorter distances at nearly twice the pace of fall "head" races.
Northwest Junior Regionals Rowing Regatta, Vancouver Lake, Washington, Saturday 2016 5 21
[Photo: John Rudoff]
(Staff Photos by Rob Mattson/Amherst College, Office of Communications) Varsity and novice rowers from Amherst College Women's Crew informally train together for upcoming spring season sprint races, in the ergometer room at Alumni Gymnasium, on the Amherst College campus in Amherst, Mass., Tuesday afternoon, January 20, 2014. Fall regattas are generally on winding, 5-6km courses, for which training involves low-cadence, long duration workouts. Spring's sprint races, however, are usually on straight, 2km courses, with off-season training being especially important, so rowers can prepare their bodies for shorter distances at nearly twice the pace of fall "head" races.