Rowing to scholastic stardom
- Share via
Alex Coolman
NEWPORT BEACH -- A funny thing happened to Alisia Ford on the way to
college.
Ford, a 17-year-old Corona del Mar High School senior, had been
running cross-country for three years, but she found that pounding the
pavement wasn’t really her thing. It lacked the kind of team unity she
wanted and left her unfulfilled.
What changed things for Ford was a simple comment from a friend who
took one look at her 6-foot frame and told her to try crew.
Today, Ford is a six-month mini-veteran of the rowing scene. She’s
been pulling an oar on an eight-woman boat, practicing with a girls’ team
at the Newport Aquatic Center.
The team spirit? Ford said it’s pretty good in crew.
“If we lose, we all lose,” she said.
And if the team wins, the victory is that much sweeter.
But what Ford didn’t anticipate is the way joining a crew team would
affect her education. Since jumping in a boat, she’s become a hot
commodity.
Ford is a good student. She hopes to attend Brown University next
fall, or maybe USC or UCLA.
Her grades, though, received a major boost from her participation in
crew.
“It’s opened doors for me,” she said. “A lot of schools need crew
girls.”
Christy Shaver, the girls’ rowing coach at the aquatic center, said
rowing women are in demand now because of schools’ efforts to comply with
sports funding laws.
Stricter enforcement of Title IX, a 1972 federal law requiring equal
funding for men’s and women’s sports, has meant schools have to search
for intelligent ways to balance women’s programs against expensive,
traditionally male programs, such as football teams.
“It’s really nice,” Shaver said. “We get recruiting letters from
colleges all the time. They’re finding out that rowing is a way of using”
the money for women’s sports.
For Ford, who said she just loves the spirit of the rowing experience,
the school benefits are gravy.
“I look forward to going,” she said -- just for the love of pulling an
oar.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.