ON THE WATER -- Skimming the surface
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Alex Coolman
You could never hold this race in the summer, when the bay is choked
with boats and the water looks like a floating parking lot.
But in the cold air of November, the Newport Autumn Rowing Festival
has all the room it needs.
The festival, which took place Sunday, is one of the major rowing
events in California for high school and college-age competitors. More
than 1,300 athletes attended, traveling from UC Berkeley, Stanford
University and elsewhere.
It’s an event that’s been going on since the late 1970s, said Bill Whitford, director of the Newport Aquatic Center, and it’s one that
brings out some of the best things in rowing life.
For one thing, Whitford said, the course showcases the beauty of the
bay. The 2.7-mile race, which is like a drag strip for everything from
eight-person boats to single-person scullers, runs from the Lido Isle
bridge to the aquatic center.
“There’s not many venues that work well for this type of rowing,”
Whitford said -- and not many that look this good.
Not surprisingly, the race attracts some serious competition.
Though there are classes for novice rowers who have spent less than a
year studying the sport, more competitive groups see the highest caliber
rowers in the state matching talents.
“We look at this as a very meaningful gauge of where the team is at,”
said Craig Amerkhanian, the head men’s rowing coach at Stanford. “It’s
really one of the best fall races in the world.”
Stanford’s team is fairly new, and Amerkhanian said he was excited
about giving his athletes the chance to see what serious rowing is about.
“This is their first time to see a team like [UC Berkeley], or even be
in an intercollegiate competition,” he said.
For that matter, Whitford said, the rowing festival can also be an
exciting time for the moms and dads of the competitors.
“There’s a lot of parents who have never seen their kids row,” he
said. “They go, ‘I didn’t know you guys go backward!”’
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