Rowing is
a total body workout.
Rowing only looks
like an upper body sport. Although upper body strength is important, the
strength of the rowing stroke comes from the legs. Rowing is one of the
few athletic activities that involves all of the body’s major muscle
groups. It is a great aerobic workout, in the same vein as cross-country
skiing, and is a low-impact sport on the joints.
Rowers are
probably the world’s best athletes.
Rowing looks graceful, elegant and sometimes effortless when it is done
well. Don’t be fooled. Rowers haven’t been called the world’s most
physically fit athletes for nothing. The sport demands endurance,
strength, balance, mental discipline, and an ability to continue on when
your body is demanding that you stop.
The boat.
Although
spectators will see hundreds of different races at a rowing event, there
are only six basic boat configurations. Sweep rowers come in pairs (2s),
fours (4s) and eights (8s). Scullers row in singles (1x), doubles (2x) and
quads (4x). Sweep rowers may or may not carry a coxswain (cox-n), the
person who steers the boat and serves as the on-the-water coach. All
eights have coxswains, but pairs and fours may or may not. In all sculling
boats and sweep boats without coxswains, a rower steers the boat by using
a rudder moved with the foot.
The
equipment.
Today’s rowing
boats are called shells, and they’re made of lightweight carbon fiber. The
smallest boat on the water is the single scull, which is only 27-30 feet
long, a foot wide and approximately 30 pounds. Eights are the largest
boats at 60 feet and a little over 200 pounds. Rowers use oars to propel
their shells. Sweep oars are longer than sculling oars, typically with
carbon fiber handles and rubber grips (although some sweepers still prefer
wooden handles). Sculling oars are almost never wood.
SPM not
MPH.
Rowers speak in terms of strokes per minute (SPM), literally the number of
strokes the boat completes in a minute’s time. The stroke rate at the
start is high – 38-45, even into the 50s for an eight – and then “settles”
to a race cadence typically in the 30s. Crews sprint to the finish, taking
the rate up once again. Crews may call for a “Power 10” during the race –
a demand for the crew’s most intense 10 strokes.
Race
watching.
The crew that’s
making it look easy is most likely the one doing the best job. When
watching a race, look for a continuous, fluid motion from the rowers;
synchronization in the boat; clean catches, i.e. oars entering the water
with little splash; and the boat with the most consistent speed.
Teamwork
is number one.
Rowing isn’t a
great sport for athletes looking for MVP status. It is, however,
teamwork’s best teacher. The athlete trying to stand out in an eight will
only make the boat slower. The crew made up of individuals willing to
sacrifice their personal goals for the team will be on the medal stand
together. Winning teammates successfullymatch their desire, talent and
bladework with one another.
Rowing is
the ultimate walk-on sport.
(It’s easier to
get started than you think.) USRowing is a membership organization that
serves rowers of every age and ability from the beginner to the
experienced rower to the national team. So, there’s definitely a place for
you.
800-314-4ROW