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T.C. Williams Crew Closes Season at Canadian Nationals

Women’s First 8 brings home Silver Medal.

Women's First 8 boat.

Women's First 8 boat. Photo courtesy of Alexandria Crew Boosters

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Men's Mid-Weight 8 boat.

The T.C. Williams Crew Team closed its 2018 Spring season on June 1-3 at the Canadian Secondary Schools Rowing Association’s 73rd Annual Championship Regatta, generally known as the Canadian Nationals, in St. Catharines, Ontario. The Canadian Nationals are open to any high school team from around the world, and typically draws the best boats in Canada, including strong teams from as far as Vancouver, and a few U.S. teams.

This premier regatta provides T.C. rowers with a taste of international and collegiate rowing. The course is a collegiate-level 2000 meters instead of the U.S. high school standard 1500 meters, the coxswains must weigh a minimum of 45 kilograms (99 pounds) or carry a deadweight in the boat to even the competition, and the use of metric weights means the maximum weights for rowers in lightweight boats differ from the U.S. standards.

Capping a powerful postseason run, the T.C. Women’s First 8 won the Silver Medal in their Women’s Senior 8 final with a time of 6:59.44, only 1.17 seconds behind Canadian rowing powerhouse E.L. Crossley and almost 8 seconds ahead of the squad from Branksome. The T.C. Women’s 1-V-8 – seniors Rachel Knapp, Grace Asch, Grace Vannatta, Grace Hogan and Charlotte Carey, juniors Grace Fluharty and Blythe Markel, sophomore Madeline Toaso, and junior coxswain Paula Filios – compiled an impressive postseason record, capturing the Virginia State Championship, placing 5th in the Stotesbury Cup finals, landing the Bronze at the U.S. Nationals, and the Silver in Canada.

“TCW ladies had a good run through the season, gaining speed every race,” said T.C. veteran First 8 Women’s Coach Jaime Rubini. “The Canadian experience was awesome.”

“We gave it all to the end,” he continued. “Our boat jumped up at the start and was leading up to the [last] 500 meters, when E.L. Crossley took the lead and held it to the finish, withstanding the charges from the Titans by 1 second. I take my hat off to the Crossley rowers and coaches, and I am very proud of the T.C. Women’s performance.”

In addition to the Women’s First 8, the Titans brought three men’s and two other women’s boats to Canada, and also deployed a few of the men to row in additional boats, entering a total of nine different categories. The Virginia State Champion T.C. Men’s First 4 rowed their way from Friday heats to Saturday semi-finals, and two hours before that race, First 4 seniors Stefanos Psaltis-Ivanis and Connor McGivern also rowed for the first time as a pair – two rowers with one oar each – after only two days of practice. They finished 8th, just missing the finals against experienced pair boats that rowed all season and that were equipped with toe steering, an important feature for pairs racing.

Rowers from T.C.’s 2018 Men’s Junior 8 and Frosh 8 boats, Silver Medalists at Virginia State Championships, rowed in the Canadian Nationals Senior 8 and Junior 8 semi-final categories, respectively, but did not advance to finals. However, T.C. Junior 8 rowers Adam Elnahas, Townson Cocke, and Emmett Cocke, along with coxswain Clare Williams, teamed with T.C. Frosh Men’s rowers Noah Schuerhoff, Matt Posson, Harris Babin, Anthony Castellano, and Stephen Ralis to form a Senior 72 kg (158.75 pounds) Mid-Weight boat that advanced from Saturday semi-finals to Sunday morning finals. Also competing after only a couple days of practice, T.C.’s Men’s Mid-Weights placed 5th in their final with a time of 6:37.05.