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Crew team turns heads at Head of the Charles

Emma Gardner

Issue date: 11/1/07 Section: Sports
Justin Scott '08, Scott Robinson '09, Michael Chock '10.5 and Nick Palmieri '09 finished 20th in the Head of the Charles regatta.
Media Credit: Mike Bayersdorfer
Justin Scott '08, Scott Robinson '09, Michael Chock '10.5 and Nick Palmieri '09 finished 20th in the Head of the Charles regatta.
[Click to enlarge]
As most students faced the prospect of a Fall Break weekend with their families or of wild nights with friends from other colleges, the men's and women's crew teams were gearing up for the season's most important race. The annual Head of the Charles regatta in Cambridge, Mass. is one of the largest rowing events in the world, drawing athletes from all over the U.S. and abroad for two days of competition and high-intensity crew.

A significant event in any collegiate team's fall lineup, the Head of the Charles is arguably the "biggest race of the year," according to captain Justin Scott '08.

Having rowed with Middlebury since a cross country running injury led him to try out crew in his first fall on campus, Scott has watched the team's dedication and success grow throughout his four years at the College. Accordingly, the Oct. 20 regatta culminated in one of the most rewarding races of his career.

The Head of the Charles is unique among college races for several reasons - not least, said Scott, because it is "the most visible race of the year." Even with the Harvard vs. Princeton football game on the same day attracting considerable attention, thousands of spectators line the banks of the river to watch the boats battle against time and each other to obtain the glory awarded those teams that pull their weight fastest and most skillfully.

This year, the Middlebury men's varsity boat leaped 18 places ahead of its finish last fall, from 38th to 20th place. Organized in the "head" racing style, the stagger-started boats took off every 10 seconds according to seed, gliding three miles to the finish with each boat passing under historic Eliot Bridge at the section of the race that draws the largest crowd.

In the "most memorable moment" of his four years with the crew team, Scott's boat hit its stride at that bridge, managing to pull ahead of both Vassar and Roger Williams at this crucial point in the race. Scott attributes this feat to varsity coxswain Geoff Weitelman '10, whose order to stroke a 'Power-10' resulted in Middlebury burying the two boats under the bridge. Other highlights of the men's race included out-rowing Division I squads from Penn State and the College of William and Mary, along with defeating Amherst for the second time in Scott's tenure with the team.
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neil mackey

neil mackey

posted 11/01/07 @ 11:58 AM EST

Congratulations on your much deserved success! My admiration and respect for the Middlebury Crew Team members is unmatched. I live on Lake Dunmore and have witnessed first hand the practice times and conditions
which they encounter. (Continued…)

CrewAlum

posted 11/01/07 @ 3:22 PM EST

It is great to see an article on crew, as I remember my early mornings on Dunmore quite fondly. It is particularly encouraging to see the Mens' team moving up in the ranks. (Continued…)

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