Arise, Sir
Matthew: Matthew Pinsent is knighted in the New Year's
Honours List, with crewmate James Cracknell being 'promoted' from
his post-Sydney MBE to an OBE and Steve Williams and Ed Coode both
receiving MBEs.
Best wishes for 2005: somehow, events in the Indian
Ocean make 'Happy New Year' sound a bit out of place this time round.
In our sport, however, there will still to be those striving for
international success, club honours, personal bests, the attainment
of fund-raising targets, the recruitment and coaching of tomorrow's
high performers, the successful staging of events and the general
housekeeping which keeps rowing in good order. To all of you, good
luck and best wishes for the coming year.
30 December
Indian Ocean
earthquake news: thankfully we have no news thus far of
any members of the Scottish Rowing community killed, injured or
missing in this horrendous event. I have heard from John McArthur,
who was holidaying in Thailand: happily, John assures us he is fine
- despite a wave he describes as 'three storeys high' and which
has left many dead in its wake in his area.
Which prompts me to remind readers that the Disasters Emergency
Committee, an umbrella agency encompassing many well known British
charities (eg Red Cross, Oxfam, Christian Aid, CAFOD, etc) and which
is working to deliver emergency relief to the affected areas, has
an on-line donation facility on their
web site.
22 December
Fancy fondling
two Olympic silver medals and meeting their owner TONIGHT? Katherine
Grainger is visiting Aberdeen tonight to give a talk about her 'Athens
Olympic Experience', do a Question and Answer session and meet rowing
folks so they can inspect the silverware. Starts at 7.00pm at Aberdeen
Boat Club and all members of the rowing community are very welcome
to attend. Sorry for the short notice: I was in bed with the cold
when this hit my email account yesterday.
20 December
Warnock holds
his ranking at trials: at Saturday's GB Senior Trials at
Boston, Alastair Warnock of Glasgow RC was again 'top Scot' finishing
8th. This was exactly the same ranking as in the previous trial,
but arguably an improvement given the number of 2004 GB team members
who were excused the first trial. Ellie Dorman of Clydesdale finished
32nd in the women's open trial (Lindsay Dick did not finish). In
the lightweights, Gavin Shaw (getting a last trip out of his 2004
Aberdeen Uni racing licence - who will he race for in 2005?) finished
14th with Doug Murray (Watson's) 27th and Jonny Logan (Glasgow Uni)
32nd. Full results are on the Boston
Rowing Club web site
Scottish Indoor Rowing Grand Prix: the SARA Open
INdoor Rowing Championships has been upgraded by Concept 2 to be
a ranking event for the British
Indoor Rowing Grand Prix. This means you can earn points in
each of the 6 rounds towards a national title: it also means we
expect some pretty serious pullers from south of the border to liven
up competition at the Scottish Grand Prix in Motherwell on 23rd
January. The poster,
racing
programme and entry
forms for the Scottish Indoor Rowing Grand Prix are all now
here - something to focus the mind on working off the Christmas
waistline!
16 December
Been there,
done that, got the . . . ? Rock the Boat have included
some left-over T-shirts from Scottish Rowing Championships 2004
in their end of year sale (together with lots of their other event-related
stuff from 2004). On line on their web
site
14 December
Back to skool;
George Watson's College rowing club celebrates its 50th anniversary
in 2005. One senses re-unions in the offing. Former members are
asked to email the current master in charge, Jim
Ferguson, for details. For those curious on the point, Jim insists
that it is NOT true that it was he that founded the club those 50
years ago - it just feels like it.
13 December
Let's hear
it one more time . . . : some of you will recall reading
my notes from the umpires' commission meeting (see News, 10 November,
below) in which I recorded a number of 'hot topics' likely subsequently
to be at the forefront of umpires' minds - one of these being coaching
from the bank. Events since have led the Race Control Commission
to feel they want to underline the point more formally - hence this
Notice to all
clubs. Like the man says, "you have been warned!".
SPOTY people (no, not Strathclyde University):
the GB men's coxless four were, predictably, crowned Team of the
Year at the BBC Sports Personality of the Year (SPOTY!) last night,
with Matthew Pinsent reasonably taking second place in the individual
awards behind Athens double gold medallist, Kelly Holmes. Also at
the event was Gordon Simpson of Clydesdale ARC who had already been
voted Glasgow City's sporting Volunteer of the Year and BBC Scotland's
'Unsung Hero of Sport' (in which capacity he went forward to last
night's UK final). Well done Gordon!
10 December
Rules changes
at Henley Royal Regatta: in addition to reporting a record
surplus from the 2004 regatta passed to the Stewards' Charitable
Trust (which funds, among other important projects in rowing, one
of the new Scholarship Coaches who is based in Scotland), the December
meeting of the Stewards approved some house-keeping rule changes.
Full details here.
Scots survive 'Christmas cull' for Boat Race selection:
whilst I shall not dwell on the misfortunes of any other Scottish
sporting greats not to 'make it past Christmas' in their chosen
fields this year, the official Aberdeen Asset Oxford/Cambridge University
Boat race site has biographies
of those from both universities left in the hunt for selection for
the 2005 race - and at this stage I am aware of at least one oarsman
with Scottish rowing connections in each squad. Cambridge president
Andrew Shannon (from Helensburgh) is a former captain of The Robert
Gordon University Boat Club in Aberdeen, while Oxford's Reuben Johnson
is a former captain of Glasgow University Boat Club
7 December
Clydesdale
Scullers Head results: full results are now here,
with some interesting 'ties' for time between different event winners.
Martin Holmes (Castle Semple) won men's veteran B in exactly the
same 16:08 time as Ian Rice (Glasgow University) won men's restricted
1, while Ellie Dorman (Clydesdale) won women's open in exactly the
same 17:13 time as Fran Jacob (also Clydesdale) won women's res
2.
BBC Sports Personality of the Year: the nomination
process is now open on the BBC web site here
. Plenty for rowing to crow about this year, so do nominate your
heroes.
2 December
71 scullers for
re-scheduled Clydesdale Head: plenty of interesting competition
for this Saturday's race at 1.00pm on the Clyde. Start
order here
1 December
Don't believe
everything you read . . . In writing my reports of the
Glasgow Fours Head I could only rely on the official results and
on the evidence of my own eyes from my umpiring position at the
sewage works bend (some guys get all the nice jobs!). What I didn't
know was the amount of enforced shuffling going on in some of the
crews I was writing about. Daniel Shankland did indeed stroke the
winning CSRC/SPRC M J16 4+ in Div 1, but he was 'winged' in a crash
on the first bend and had to be subbed for the J18 event. Enter
SPRC J14 super-sub Andrew Barton (after some sportsmanlike waiving
of composite substitution rules by other competitors in the class),
with whom on board the crew went on to beat Nithsdale by a cat's-whisker
2 seconds. So now you know.
30 November
University Winter League Points after 2 legs (previous position in brackets)
1 (2)
Strathclyde University
235
2 (4)
Glasgow University
220
3 (3)
Edinburgh University
193
4 (1)
Aberdeen University
190
5 (6)
St Andrews University
178
6 (5)
Dundee University
176
7 (7)
Robert Gordon University
86
8 (8)
Heriot-Watt University
71
"Athens was my last race in a Great Britain vest":
these were the words with which Matthew Pinsent, GB's 4-times Olympic
gold medallist, chose to announce his retirement from rowing at his
10 o'clock press conference at Leander Club this morning. His role
as a competitor may be at an end, but one suspects his role as an
ambassador for our sport, and for British sport, may be about to move
on to a whole new level.
'Changing places' at top of Universities Winter League:
Strathclyde (the 2003/2004 season winners) emerge from the Glasgow
Fours Head leading the university winter league. Although Glasgow
Uni scored heavily last weekend, Strathclyde have been scoring steadily
throughout the three rounds. With one round (Clydesdale) to go,
there are a series of close battles at various levels of the table.
15 points separate 1st and 2nd, just 3 points separate 3rd and 4th
and an even closer 2 points separate 5th and 6th.
29 November
Glasgow Uni 'top club' at Glasgow Fours Head: excellent day's
racing on Saturday. The Glasgow approach of having a fixed point
two-thirds of the way to the start, and of turning back all crews
who have not passed that point 20 minutes before start time, certainly
helps avoid crews freezing at their marshalling positions waiting
for a delayed start. Full results for Division
1, Division
2, by Event
Category and Club
Points
Glasgow Uni took 1st place and Edinburgh Uni 2nd place in both
M O4+ and M R1 4+, with Strathclyde Uni taking both M R2 and M Nov
4+ titles. Clydesdale took the W O and W R1 4+ events, Edinburgh
Uni the W R2 and Dundee Uni the W Nov event. Clyde won both men's
and women's 4x events.
Top junior club was George Watson's College (278.5 points) ahead
of George Heriots School (237). Interesting to note that the fastest
junior crew over the course were the winners of M J16 4+, a composite
from Strathclyde Park and Castle Semple - both clubs better known
for their junior sculling crews. The same stroke, Shankland, jumped
into the winning SPRC/NARC M J18 4+ crew in the second division.
The younger sculling events were dominated by Watson's, with a particularly
notable race by their Mixed J13 4x in Division 1, finishing 17=
in the division overall - tying for time with the EUBC winners of
W R2 4+!
200,000 and counting: as you can see, the SARA
web site 'hit counter' (left) passed the 200,000 mark this year
at some time over the weekend. This is a crude visible counter,
but the much more sophisticated one running in the background shows
that there are an average of 421 visitors to the site each day and
that, collectively since January (and despite my best efforts to
minimise file sizes!), you have downloaded pages/images/docs/PDFs
totaling over 20 Gigabytes - a daily average of 61 MB.
Inverness Fours Head results re-visited: following
a few corrections for veteran status etc, Inverness RC have now
published FINAL results for Division
1 and Division
2 of their Fours Head. Also Ron Wallace has published a
library of photos which he is pretty confident includes
every crew which raced in Division 1 at Inverness
26 November
Important
stuff about Glasgow Fours Head! Detailed instructions to
crews are here.
There are also a series of other
safety related documents on Glasgow RC's Fours Head web site
- not ones you would always see published, though they exist in
the background for every regatta. I'm drawing attention to them
here because Glasgow's decision to publish gives rower,s in general
an opportunity to see something of the lengths event organisers
are increasingly going to to provide safe racing opportunities.
25 November
University Winter League Points after 2 legs (previous position in brackets)
1 (1)
Aberdeen University
176
2 (4)
Strathclyde University
156
3 (-)
Edinburgh University
134
4 (-)
Glasgow University
110
5 (2)
Dundee University
109
6 (3)
St Andrews University
100
7 (5)
Robert Gordon University
86
8 (-)
Heriot-Watt University
41
Clydesdale Scullers Head rescheduled: the Clydesdale
Head, which was postponed from its original date due to the river
being in spate, has been rescheduled for Saturday 4th December at
1.00pm. Links here to the poster
and entry
form
Scottish Rowing Coaching Conference:
registrations for this conference (the rather 'star-studded' programme
of speakers is linked from the box-advert on the right) will close
on 1st December, and no late applications will be accepted. The
applications form is here.
Scottish Universities Winter League and Half Yearly meeting:
points after the Aberdeen and Inverness legs are tabulated (left).
University clubs are asked to note that the half yearly general
meeting of university clubs will take place in the GUBC boathouse
at 3.15 on Saturday 27th November (note from A Easson adds "unless
event is cancelled").
Updates: a few recent updates to the site, notably:
Rules of Racing
- updated for changes made at the AGM earlier this month
Over 120 fours
and quads entered for Glasgow Fours Head: another wee challenge
for the competitors, marshals and umpires - getting the more inexperienced
crews marshalled at the start on the Clyde is especially awkward
if the stream is running a bit. It takes a LONG TIME for younger
and novice crews to paddle up from the boathouses by the weir in
particular, so do give yourselves plenty of time. Provisional start
orders are now up for Division
1 and Division
2. I've been told to expect safety and marshalling instructions
separately and will publish them/links to them as soon as I hear.
Hanna pulls a pot at BIRC: Tom Hanna (Aberdeen
University) won the BUSA Lightweight division at the British
Indoor Rowing Championships at Birmingham by a 5 second margin.
IN the battle of the Boat Race presidents, Andrew Shannon, Cambridge's
Scottish president, pulled 6:02, beating his Oxford counterpart
(who was in the GB 8 at Athens) by 5 seconds. However there were
five Oxford University rowers recording times faster than the fastest
Cambridge rower. The bookies will have a field day as always!
22 November
Glasgow
University: winners of men's Coxed Fours at Inverness and
of the 'head' of antlers - a rather splendid 12-pointer on
this occasion.
Inverness Fours Head a 'sunny delight': hard to
conceive of better weather conditions for racing than we enjoyed
in Inverness on Saturday. Cold, certainly, but bright and still
(and 5 mins into the race no-one was feeling the cold!). Full
results here.
Each division contained about 50 fours and 40 other boats racing
for a time only (including some younger junior fours whose events
were not offered: at least one junior club stayed away altogether
for this reason). Meanwhile the logistics of boating so many crews
did overwhelm the facilities somewhat, resulting in late starts
to both divisions. The organisers apologised for not adequately
salting the pontoons (icy conditions slowed things down) and competitors
must share flack for not starting the boating process early enough.
Neither of these factors, however, would have overcome the fundamental
issue: the Inverness Fours Head is now such a success that its organising
committee have interesting options open to them (indeed some of
them were canvassing opinions on the day). Make it a 2 day event
like Aberdeen (fours on Saturday, small boats on Sunday) but with
no 'time only entries accepted unless/until pontoon number increase?
Make it a straightforward fours head with all age classes, excluding
the time only small boats to keep numbers manageable? Leave things
as they are? Some other option?
In 2005 the SARA regatta calendar shows
2 weekends' head racing in Inverness (unquestionably our best water
and which NEVER cancels for weather) , 2 weekends in Aberdeen (which
occasionally cancels for weather) and 8 weekends in Glasgow (which,
unfortunately, is frequently subject to weather restrictions). The
Glasgow event numbers continue to increase: to the Strathclyde University
Small Boats Head added a couple of years ago we must now add the
St Andrew BC Head, a new event in 2005. How would the Scottish Rowing
community respond if Inverness were to offer, say, a dedicated 4s
head, dedicated 8s head and dedicated small boats head in Inverness
on 3 separate days, particularly if they tied in with build-up to
the major heads for the corresponding boat sizes on the Tideway?
Food for discussion on this one.
Daniel tops junior trial: well done to Daniel
Prescott of Glasgow RC who recorded the fastest J16 1x time in the
weekend's GB long distance trial at Boston in Lincolnshire.Full
results here
Scottish selection policies, dates, etc: Selection
policies for both juniors and seniors will be published mid-December.
Seniors may want to take note of the following dates-
5/6 February Senior training camp - Inverness
26/27 March Senior Men training w/end - SCP
2/3 April Senior Women training w/end -SCP
Senior selection policy will be very similar to the 2004 policy.
Invitation to the above weekends will be based on performances at
the autumn heads and submitted 2k erg times. When the policy is
produced the team manager will be asking coaches/clubs to put forward
suitable candidates who will be aiming for HIR selection and who
wish to attend the training weekends.
Retro-Kit supply: members of the 2004 team who
have kit orders outstanding (no doubt resulting from over-enthusiastic
kit-swopping with the oppo on the day!) should note that Gary Bain
will have these orders at Glasgow Fours Head this Saturday.
19 November
University Winter League Points after 1 leg
1
Aberdeen University
79
2
Dundee University
71
3
St Andrews University
55
4
Strathclyde University
49
5
Robert Gordon University
35
University Winter League: points standings as
we go into tomorrow's Inverness Fours Head (ie after one round,
Aberdeen) are tabulated here. I'll ask Alan Easson fr an update
on the scoring system to go with the results post-Inverness.
Glasgow Fours Head - entries close this Sunday:
full details are on the Glasgow
Rowing Club web site, complete with nifty on-line and fax-based
entry systems. Entries close at 5.00pm this Sunday.
Inverness Fours Head - the FINAL start order! This
Saturday's event at Inverness has grown like Topsy, once entries
which were mislaid got reincorporated. With over 190 entries in
two divisions, Inverness have introduced special
safety rules which all competitors must obey
(a good start would be to read them now!). These arrangements focus
principally on ensuring safe separation of boats after the finish:
you can safely assume that breaking these traffic rules is quite
likely to result in your 'great row' turning into a 'disqualified
with no time taken'. So much for the lecture (Inverness did ask
me to make the points very firmly): here are the start orders for
Division 1 and Division
2 (link corrected: if you're still getting
the wrong document it's coming from cache on your computer. Force
refresh by holding down 'shift key' while clicking refresh).
It's a great entry and I wish you all a great race.
16 November
2005
Regatta Calendar now up: as some of you may know, I
had problems with links on the 2004 calendar (contracted on-line
MRSA?). Happily, now sorted for 2005. The full Scottish calendar,
with added dates of some big events outside Scotland of interest
to Scottish rowers, is now up. Links will be added as event posters/draws/results
become available (if you;re an event organiser, please keep
me posted). You can reach the page here
or by clicking the 'Events & Results' link in the header bar
of any current page on the site.
Don't want the page to try to become a complete bible of world
rowing events, but if there are events that Scottish clubs regularly
enter which I have missed out, do drop
me a line (with date and link if poss) and I'll consider adding
them.
Aberdeen Asset Inverness Fours Head start order:
massive entry for this Saturday (181 crews in two divisions) and
Inverness have elected to get a provisional draw out early to allow
time to sort any errors. The draw
is here; any howls of anguish about crews missed out, wrongly
classified or whatever, please refer urgently to the race secretary,
Ken Sinclair. In view
of the high entry and the increased winter business at Jacobite
Cruises, the Essential Information
for Competitors is absolutely vital: it will tell you exactly
where to put (and NOT put!) your trailer, car, etc.
Boating facilities at Inverness are very limited: arrive early,
register early and boat early is the best advice. Hopefully the
continuing trend of increase in participation at major events in
Inverness, allied to growth in the host club, will soon create the
critical mass of demand which will unlock the funding to develop
the site more fully.
15 November
Aberdeen
University, winners of open Men's 4+ by 2 seconds over Aberdeen
BC.
Fourteen records tumble at Aberdeen heads: full
results
are here, including the anticipated toppling of Ali Paterson's 'ABC
past masters' by her 'AUBC present proteges' in men's open coxed
fours.
First record to go was for participation - 181 crews raced over
the 4 divisions. In the Fours Head, new course
record times were set in M J15 4+ (George Heriots), M J14 4+
(Aberdeen Schools), W R1 4+ (Robert Gordon University), and W J14
4+ (Aberdeen Schools).
In the Small Boats and Coxed Quads Head the new records were set
in M R2 2- (Aberdeen University), M R2 1x (Aberdeen BC), M J14 2x,
M J12 2x, M J14 4x+ and M J12 4x+ (4 records all set by George Watson's),
W R2 2x (Aberdeen BC), W J14 2x (Strathclyde Park RC), W J16 1x
(George Watson's) and W J14 4x+ (Strathclyde Park).
Surprisingly, given that the Aberdeen races are run on a winding
tidal river where 'local knowledge' really tells, this means that
almost half the course records are held by visiting clubs. Indeed
18 of the the weekend's 40 wins went to visitors.
Small army musters to plan FISA
Masters 2005 at Strathclyde: the FISA Masters Commission
visited Strathclyde Park from Friday to Sunday to inspect facilities
and audit progress on plans for the world's largest regatta which
is to be hosted at Strathclyde Park from 6-11 September 2005.
Zdena Narkova
(centre right) gets to the point with (centre) Tone Pahle,
Ron Chen and Peter Morrison together with some of the team
leaders from the local organising committee.
All team leaders, led by SARA president Mary Massaro, attended
for the meeting chaired by FISA Masters Commission chairman Peter
Morrison who was accompanied by fellow commissioners Zdena Norkova
(Czech Republic), Tone Pahle (Norway) and Ron Chen (USA).
Aside from the well publicised investment in course infrastructure,
which will see next year's regatta take place on a full 8 lane championship
course, the meeting reviewed plans not only for racing but also
for the ‘row show', construction of a 400+ seater grandstand
for spectators and an imaginative programme of social events. Details
of these and links to the on-line accommodation bureau (which is
already taking bookings) are on the FISA
Masters 2005 web site
If the 'Golden Eight' from California, USA who I met in Hamburg
are reading this, one highlight was the announcement that far from
eliminating the H2 category (as some had feared) the Commission
plans to formalise it as a new category, I, average age over 75
yrs.
At the conclusion of the meeting, FISA pronounced themselves to
be well pleased with the preparedness and energetic commitment of
the local organising team and confident, on that basis, that the
'Masters faithful' who travel from all over the world to compete
in each year's regatta in expectation of something special, would
not be disappointed in Scotland in 2005.
11 November
Vacancy -
Part Time SARA Administrator: as part of the development
plan for the sport, SARA is to employ a part time administrator
based at the National Rowing Academy at Strathclyde Park The advertisement
(which will appear in the press this weekend) is here together with
a detailed job specification
and application form.
10 November
200 entries
for Aberdeen 'International' Fours and Small Boats Heads. Start
order now up. Crews from the Societe Nautique du Perreux near
Paris provide a true international flavour to this Saturday's Aberdeen
Fours Head - also Marlow appear in some crew names, so Englandshire
gets in on the act too. I understand the ABC Langley crew in Div
1 is a first race since 2002 for the Aberdeen crew which won the
Wyfold at Henley and took silver and bronze Commonwealth medals
that year: there are mutterings of decaying bodies and rusty technique,
so giant-killing may be on the cards. Healthy entry from the universities,
for whom this is the first round of their Winter League.
The umpire strikes back: the annual umpires' meeting
took place on Monday in Stirling. It's always handy for competitors
to know what dominated the discussion - as it also tends to be what
the umpires are then most 'on the look-out for' in the coming year.
Safety was undoubtedly the top theme: although umpires aren't responsible
for safety (crews are), the umpires' beady eye will be upon you
from long before you get afloat with a view to preventing hazardous
situations from developing; makes sure your equipment is up to scratch
and all members of your crew competent. For event organisers, make
sure you have your ducks in a row by way of risk assessments, emergency
plans, safety advisers etc: you are likely to be asked by senior
umpires to show that these exist and have been communicated to team
members and crews where appropriate. Conduct of crews and coaches
was another theme. Abusive language (wherever directed), coaching
from the bank (which is against rules in all racing, including heads)
and other forms of unsporting conduct will be dealt with robustly,
quite possibly by summary disqualification.
As participation in the sport grows and events get larger, umpires
are clearly of the view that sound organisation and firm application
of the rules which support safe and fair competition become ever
more important. Hard to disagree.
Glasgow Fours Head. Full details for this year's
Glasgow Fours Head on 27th November are now up on the Glasgow
RC web site. A challenging river on which to organise a head
or steer a head but definitely, for my money, one of the most interesting.
Glasgow is the third event in the University Winter League series
(the second being Inverness
Head on 20th November (for which entries close this weekend)
8 November
Fullers Fours
Head results:
Aberdeen University were fastest Scots (115th overall, 6th in S2
4+) with Clyde 157th overall, 21st in S2 4-. Feast of opportunity
for pundits looking for Boat Race form, with Cambridge majoring
on the 4- class and coming 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 6th but with Oxford
(Isis) getting a 4th place in 4- to add to their 1st and 2nd placings
in the 4+ events. Make of it what you will . . .
SARA Coaching Conference: the detailed timetable
for this event (4th-5th December at Strathclyde Park) is no up,
together with the application
form for places
SARA AGM Report: Paula Radcliffe wasn’t the only
one involved in a marathon yesterday! In fact Paula’s
winning time in New York (2hrs 23min 10sec) was considerably quicker
than the time taken for yesterday’s SARA AGM (approx 4 hrs
20min). Joking aside, here is an (unofficial) summary.
The secretary got the meeting off to an interesting start by handing
his resignation to the president and leaving just minutes before
the scheduled kick-off. Happily, the absence of the secretary didn’t
seem to compromise the smooth running of the meeting.
As committees took questions on their reports, the Race Control
proposals (Sandy Walker) for a 1st August start date for licence
applications extending into the following year (currently 1 Sept)
and for the introduction of ‘Day Tickets’ were approved.
Regatta Organising, National Rowing Academy and National Coach’s
reports contained no motions and were ‘read in’.
The Scotland Team Manager’s report (Gary Bain) reported a
promising start by a young senior team at HIR 2004, upon which he
hopes to build, but recognised a poorer performance by the junior
team, possibly down to an overly-narrow pool of talent upon which
to draw. Gary commented that the usual £3000 sportscotland
grant to the team ends in 2004 putting further financial pressure
on selected athletes to fully fund their own privilege of representing
Scotland. The subject of funding for the Scotland team was to be
a repeated theme (suggestions of sponsorship? A levy on clubs or
members? Other sources?)
The Treasurer's report and accounts were adopted.
Aberdeen Asset’s sponsorship of Rowing Action comes to an
end this year: the magazine is actively seeking a new sponsor.
All elections to the SARA Executive were unopposed following withdrawals
by nominees previously on the meeting papers:
- Vice President (3 years) – Iain Somerside
- Treasurer (3 years) – Ronnie Goldie
- Ordinary Members (1 year) – Jonathon Cowie, Jim Ferguson,
Mike Yeomans
The president thanked the continuing and outgoing members of the
2003-04 Executive for their work.
On amendments to the constitution, the Aberdeen BC proposals to
have club voting at the AGM proportionate to the number of racing
licences issued through each club (i.e. 100 licensed competitors
= 100 votes, 10 licensed competitors = 10 votes) were withdrawn
when the extent of opposition became clear. The club’s motion
for the past president to serve only 1 further year on the Exec
(currently 3), however, was passed with support of both the current
Exec and the clubs. The proposal for SARA officers elected unopposed
to require to seek re-election after 1 year fell.
The Regatta Calendar for 2005 was approved after a frustrating
flurry of late bids for changes and swaps of dates – perhaps
some of these could have been passed to the Race Control Convenor
in advance of the meeting?
The St Andrew BC resolution that the Regatta Organising Committee
should notify clubs of changes under discussion in advance and not
simply at the proposal stage was agreed, as were their proposals
for Intermediate events at Scottish Championships to be rowed over
2000m (Novice stay at 1000m) and for the introduction of Novice
4x+ and Intermediate 2x & 4x at the Championships. The proposal
to change the qualifying points for ‘intermediate’ events
was remitted for discussion by a working group. The proposal for
free access for the Team Manager to Academy boats for trials and
training weekends was rejected, but the proposal for free access
for squad crews after Scottish Championships (when fleet usage is
low) was adopted.
The Aberdeen BC proposal to restore the determining date for Novice
status at Scottish Championships to 1st January was adopted, but
the proposal to fix the licence fees at the Half Yearly General
Meeting fell.
The Regatta Organising Committees (ROC’s) proposals for the
restructuring of Scottish Rowing Championships events to take account
of the complex decisions minuted at the preceding AGM and Half Yearly
looked doomed from the moment, at the start of yesterday’s
meeting when, at the request of St Andrew, these earlier minutes
were corrected to show that the 5 key motions which had driven the
ROC’s review had been withdrawn at those earlier meetings,
not adopted as recorded in the draft minutes. The ROC was ‘thanked
for its work in preparing the proposal’, which I suspect (given
the confusion over the minutes which drove the review) was a tactful
way of apologising to them for having been sent on a wild goose
chase.
The Executive proposal recognising the benefits of a One Stop Plan
supporting rowing structures UK wide was adopted, as was the outline
4-Year Development Plan (with riders from the president that there
would inevitably be detail to be developed and amended within the
outline). The Aberdeen BC proposal that the period of ‘meaningful
consultation’ on the plan be continued until at least the
Half Yearly Meeting was moved down the agenda and then taken without
a vote.
The Executive proposal for a Participation Register, which was
combined with an associated fee structure to raise new association
revenues, fell: because of the ‘multi-purpose’ nature
of the motion, it is impossible to say conclusively whether the
rejection was because of opposition to a register in principle,
concern over data protection considerations in its implementation,
or opposition to the associated new revenue-raising proposals. I’ll
leave it to your club delegates to tell you their interpretation.
Racing Licence fees were set at Cadet - £6; Junior - £15;
Student - £19; Senior - £25.
The Executive was overwhelmingly instructed by the meeting to oppose
the proposals for change to the events comprising the Home International
Regatta. The changes would have seen the elimination of all eights
racing, reduction of lightweight participation to one sculler, and
the withdrawal of a number of Junior events to make way for new
Junior 15 events.
The proposal for a Development League was remitted to a working
group, a briefing on developments in Child Protection left clubs
in no doubt that ‘doing nothing is not an option’ (but
that advice and support is available through SARA child protection
officer Peter Morrison). Bob Neil canvassed for more volunteers
to assist in delivering the FISA Masters Regatta in 2005, and Iain
Somerside (director of the National Rowing Academy) drew attention
to the SARA Coaching Conference in December (full details
and application forms
here).
The meeting was adjourned around 5.20pm and the weary delegates
dispersed.
5 November
St Andrews
University Regatta cancelled: apologies for omitting this
yesterday. Unfortunately, St Andrews University received too few
entries to make their planned regatta at Forfar tomorrow viable
There'll be fireworks . . . ! Not, as you might
think, a forecast of the atmosphere at Sunday's SARA AGM (!), just
that today is 5th November. Enjoy yourselves safely: for those in
Aberdeen, I know there is an organised display at Aberdeen Boat
Club (7.30pm) at which I'm sure all members of the rowing community
would be very welcome. If any other clubs are holding events, drop
me a line and I'll happily do a wee plug.
4 November
Aberdeen Asset
'Inverness Fours Head': Saturday 20th November. If you
want to say you rowed the fours head season in Scotland this year,
you can't really NOT go to Inverness: it's the fairest water with
no excuse for clashes and no advantage for home crews through knowing
the best line at awkward bends or bridges. The poster/events
offered/postal entry form is here, with local
rules. There is also an on-line
entry system on the Inverness RC web site.
3 November
Core Stability:
the core stability follow-up to the recent GB Rowing Technique seminars
at the Academy and in Aberdeen takes place this Sunday in the National
Rowing Academy from 10.00am to 12.00 noon: all those who attended
either GB Technique event are invited to attend (free) the session,
which will be delivered by SARA Physio, John Dennis. Those planning
to attend are asked to email Iain
Somerside.
AGM reminder: a reminder that the SARA Annual
General Meeting of clubs takes place this Sunday at 1.00pm in the
National Rowing Academy at Strathclyde Park. Full papers for the
meeting, including motions to be voted on and details of those standing
for office in the coming year, were sent to clubs some time ago.
These are not matters in which a club could reasonably say it has
'no interest'(!) - the AGM decisions determine the priorities for
the sport in the next year, and who is entrusted with the responsibility
of delivering them. Hopefully all clubs will therefore be represented
at the AGM.
December issue of Rowing Action: Ailie
Ord is keen to receive articles, letters, photographs, advertisements
etc for the December issue of the Associations free magazine, 'Rowing
Action', by this Saturday 6th November
Avez-vous un bateau? Two French crews from the
Paris region are hoping to fly to Aberdeen to compete in the North
East Fours Head - but of course Aberdeen-based boats are at a premium
on local race day. Gary Bain, who is the crews' contact locally,
is keen to hear from any club who would be willing to bring an extra
four to the Aberdeen event (better yet if you could provide a cox,
which also gives you comfort over the safety of your boat). Contact
Gary by email,
and a reminder that details for the Aberdeen Fours Head
(Saturday 13th November) & Aberdeen Small Boats
Head(Sunday 14th November)are on the
Committee
of the Dee web site.
Scottish
Indoor Rowing Grand Prix
Dalziel High School, Motherwell, Sunday 23 January 2005
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