Race Courses
The courses used in rowing races always have,
and perhaps always will, be as varied as the
varied as the nature of the waters used even
though in very recent years there has been
an attempt to bring about standardized to
the man-made Olympic 2000 meters courses.
While this may trend of this sort overlooks
the factors that brought about the varied
distances in the first place.
Rowing racing is not an ocean sport involving
great distances. It is sport involving concentrated
human endurance, which is not infinite and
rapidly reduces in a contest to the point
where either someone falters out of complete
exhaustion or the quality of rowing is so
reduced as to make the outcome dependent on
something that has little to do with rowing
itself. The median distance or most practical
is somewhere in between, easily placed somewhere
between the extremes of a quarter mile sprint
and the four mile long mile long haul. What
skills are shown by the furious thrashing
of a quarter mile sprint and what is proven,
except that someone wins it? And on a four
mile course, which of necessity must be rowed
on few available expanses of suitable open
water, subject to many variables of chance,
with the crews playing conservation strategy
in mid course at the expense of a sustained
race to finish line, somewhat akin to the
dull and meaningless roller derby or Olympic
bicycle racing.
Race courses are as individually unique as
people or places without the standardization
of mass produced items. Natural water courses
have curves, protected stretches, varying
water depths and obstacles that make equality
impossible, whether it be against time the
same variables apply with probably others
in addition. The saving grace is that it is
a sport and everyone takes their chances on
assumption that all are subject to the same
opportunities under the umbrella of sportsmanship.
At M.I.T., as at any rowing institution the
home waters for practice afford an adequate
variety of conditions to prepare the crews
for almost any condition to be encountered
in races on foreign waters. When the Charles
River was tidal and there were many more boathouses
than at present, though fewer interferences
of pleasure craft under power of sail, the
race courses used are probably currently indeterminate.
With a winding channel, varying depth of water
due both to the stage of the tide and river
bottom contours, absence of coaching or support
craft and development of the shores either
in progress or under consideration, the courses
were in all probability matters of movement
of the Tech campus to Cambridge from Back
Bay and rowing to the BAA from Union boathouse
formal college competition used either the
1 3/4 mile maximum available between the St.
Mary's Street Bridge and the West Boston (Longfellow)
Bridge or the Henley 1 5/16 mile form the
St. Mary's Street Bridge to a marker in front
of Walker Memorial. There was a shorter one
mile course close to Memorial Drive used for
class crews and some informal brushes, also
when wind and rebounding swells made the lower
basin too hazardous.
The removal of the St. Mary's Street Bridge,
which permitted not only a straight course
from the Cottage Farm Bridge to the Longfellow
Bridge but a two mile distance and still not
get into a maelstrom off the Union Boat Club
dock and under the Boston end of the bridge.
, The two mile became the long course for
the Charles leaving the traditional Henley
distance for light-weight crews and training
for crews preparing to go to England for competition
on that famous parent course.
In recent years there has been serious controversy
regarding the adoption of the Olympic course
2000 meter distance for all racing. It is
a sprint distance, about 300 feet less than
the Henley mile and five sixteenths and approximated
a mile and one quarter distance, which may
be fine for light-weight crews and class or
schoolboy rowing. But for heavyweight men's
crews and class or schoolboy rowing. But for
heavyweight mends crews, conditioned to heavy
work and endurance, it is an occupational
difference similar to that experienced by
draft and trotting horses. A draft horse would
not be put on a trotting track or a trotter
on a stone drag at a country fair.
In competition away from the Charles River,
Tech crews have had to adapt to the course
most suitable or traditional for the host
institution, or a compromise to the Henley
or 200 meter distance. This has sometimes
resulted in the ironic situation of our light-weight
crews rowing a longer course than the Varsity
heavyweights. But in general the major competitions,
IRA for the heavyweights and EARC for the
lightweights, for many years followed common
sense with the IRA adjusting to the best capability
of oarsmen by having the Varsity a four mile
race, the Junior Varsity three miles and the
freshmen two miles with all lightweight crews
at the EARC Sprints using the Henley distance.
However, everything has been made simpler
for training of all crews and planning for
regattas capabilities of the rowers or potentials
of the water courses, thereby standardizing
on the 2000 meters. Simpler, of course, but
the charisma, status and esoteric details
been sacrificed.
To the rowers, especially in a race situation,
vision is limited to a narrow tunnel centered
on head and shoulders of another coxswain
equally lost in time and space. Dependent
on the coxswain for enlightenment as well
as pace, recognizable landmarks are a positive
indication of progress to the finish line
compared to the never ending calls for "another
ten". On the Charles it is the Harvard
Bridge that had meaning, in the early days
forewarned by the rattling of loose planks
that gave it its alternate name of "Xylophone
Bridge" before passing under the gloom
and hollow sound of an arch.
Race courses on the Charles River have perhaps
had more survey performed than others that
did not have close by an active school of
engineering. While some were official determinations
of course and distance others were field training
runs by Civil Engineering students as a variation
from the training runs by Civil Engineering
students as a variation from the more common
closures along the grass and pavement of Memorial
Drive, when ice and weather was appropriate. |