Sports & Recreation

Blue’s Crews

Wisconsin rowers compete for a seat in Oxford’s coveted Blue Boat.

Big Red goes Blue: Ed Newman rowed for the Badgers before his graduation; now he pulls for Oxford. Photo: Greg Anderson

Big Red goes Blue: Ed Newman rowed for the Badgers before his graduation; now he pulls for Oxford. Photo: Greg Anderson

There must be something in the water: a steady stream of Wisconsin rowers have caught the bug to row for Oxford University, trading in their Badger reds for Oxford blues.

Since 2002, four Badger men’s rowers have enrolled in England’s University of Oxford as graduate students, and a fifth oarsman is heading across the pond this fall. “On the rowing side, it’s fun for the athletes to be involved in a sport that has a tremendous attachment,” says Badger men’s head crew coach Chris Clark. “On the academic side, it’s a boon for them to be part of a university system that’s very different from here.”

The rowing tradition runs deep at both universities. Rowing is Wisconsin’s oldest sport, beginning as an intramural competition in 1874, and is the oldest intercollegiate event in Europe. Oxford’s top athletes can earn a “Blue,” a dark blue blazer, by competing against rival Cambridge in a few select sports, while top athletes from Cambridge can earn a light blue blazer.

Dating back to 1829, the storied Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race is now a major international sporting event, with some 250,000 spectators lining the banks of the River Thames and millions of television viewers from around the world tuning in to watch the seventeen- minute regatta. Cambridge narrowly leads the series, though the Dark Blues have won four times in the past five years, with help from their Badger teammates.

Clark is the likely source of this international fever — he rowed at Oxford himself in 1986. The young Badgers following in his wake include Sam McLennan ’02, who rowed in Oxford boats that beat Cambridge in 2003 and 2004, and Paul Daniels ’04, who rowed in the blue boat that defeated Cambridge in 2006. Adam Barhamand ’08 participated in Oxford’s most recent victory in March 2009, and Ed Newman ’09, who rowed in the 2008 national champion varsity eight for Wisconsin, will enroll at Oxford in fall 2009. Further, Badger rower Mike Triebwasser ’05 earned his Blue on wheels instead of water — he was on the Oxford cycling team in 2006.

Some 90 percent of the Americans who attend Oxford are from private schools, and “none of them are any more qualified or sharper than the kids we send,” Clark says. “What I love about the public schools is that everything is available for you and it’s highly competitive. If you survive and thrive at Wisconsin, which is what the best students do, you’ll absolutely dominate when you go to a place like Oxford or Cambridge or any top private school, because it’s so much easier. Kids appreciate their time at Wisconsin and they realize how well prepared they are academically. They shine when they get to these places.”

Before his stint at Oxford, Clark spent a year at Stanford and earned three Pacific Coast Championships for the University of California. He was a member of the U.S. National Rowing team and went on to coach a number of American teams at the World Championships. And he likes a challenge: when Clark took over the reins at Wisconsin in 1996, he replaced legendary men’s rowing coach Randy Jablonic, who had a twenty-eight-year tenure. Since Clark’s arrival, the Badgers have consistently ranked among the nation’s elite.

Published in the Fall 2009 issue

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