Williams Men’s Crew Wins Head of the Charles Regatta

Williams Sports InfoKen Sluis
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BOSTON, Mass – Williams College Men’s Crew trounced 38 Varsity Boats to seize a first place finish in the nations’ largest regatta. Edging out archrival Trinity by just one second, the crew won its first Collegiate Eight Charles title in history.

“We just destroyed the Death Star” commented sophomore Jack Wadden of the winning first Varsity Boat. Trinity had claimed the first place for the last two years. Williams’ best prior showing was 11th. Williams pegged the top time of event at 15:11, despite the conditions.

The winding 5 km course was dominated by a stiff and variable wind as the Ephs prepared to boat. Whitecaps rolled incessantly at the start of the race as the crews were launched with ten seconds in between. First-Seeded Trinity began the racing salvo. Williams launched 11th. Williams soon retaliated by quickly overtaking the 10th seed Texas boat in the powerhouse stretch at a powerful 34 strokes per minute.

 The crew wanted more. Bates was also overtaken by the experienced steering of coxswain Mike Abrams ’11. His artful turn around Weeks Bridge gave the crew clean water to go to work. The team powered paste Harvard’s brick facades with a relentless stroke ratio.

Each member performed at their “redline” through the ending sprint. Thirty strokes from the finish, the crew made a strong final push. The soreness of the race was slow to abate and the crew paddled down to recover. Docking immediately after rival Trinity, the crew waited anxiously for the official results.

Unofficial reports by loyal alumni indicated a narrow victory, but the crew was still unsure. The tension was released by de-rigging the boats

Then came the news. The crew erupted in celebration just outside the parents’ tent. Mike Abrams’ remarked after the excitement had died down, “we executed our race plan as best as we could, if any one thing had gone wrongly, we wouldn’t have won the race.”

Williams’ Second Varsity boat also performed admirably. Seeded in the 24th position, they climbed eight spots to finish 16th despite a 10-second time penalty for striking a buoy.

The Williams Men finally joined the women in a tandem victory at the Head of the Charles. This new-found parity was the result of effective intense training and a well-executed taper. The work was greatly reduced as the race neared. Interim Coach Ben Lewis, formerly of Great Britain’s Leander Club, remarked: “We may have lit a fire under Trinity. They will train hard, but we must work harder.”

The Ephs look forward to the Head of the Fish Regatta next weekend, their last race of the fall season.

The Lineups:

1st Varsity Eight

Mike Abrams ’09 - Coxswain

Alex Treco ’12 – Stroke

Andy Ward ’09- 7-Seat *

Robert Buesing ’09 – 6 Seat *

Jack Wadden ’11 – 5-Seat

Ken Sluis ’11 – 4-Seat

Dan Kenefick ’11 – 3-Seat

Joey Kiernan ‘11– 2-Seat

Dan Costanza ‘11 - Bow

2nd Varsity Eight

Dan Winston ’09 – Coxswain

Cameron Skinner ’10 – Stroke

Crosby Fish ’10 – 7-Seat

Shawn Curley ’11 – 6-Seat

Michael Sacks ’09 – 5-Seat *

Patrick Chaney ’10 – 4-Seat

Faust Petkovitch ‘12 – 3-Seat

Chris Ting ’10 – 2-Seat

Nathaniel Lim ’11 - Bow

* - Indicates Captain
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Force 16U Defends Home Field with Tourney Title

By Stephen DravisiBerkshires.com Sports
PITTSFIELD, Mass. – The Berkshire Force 16U travel softball team Sunday rallied for three runs in the top of the seventh inning to pull away for an 8-4 win in the championship game of their Battle of the Berkshires tournament at the Doyle Complex.
 
Ava McMahon struck out six and gave up just one run after the first inning as the Force completed a 3-0 run through the playoffs after going 1-2 in pool play.
 
Mollie Crawford, Amelia Polidoro and McMahon each drove in a run in the late rally that finally gave McMahon a little bit of breathing room.
 
The Force jumped on top early with three runs in the top of the first, but the Nor’Easters out of New Hampshire’s Lakes Region responded right away, tying the game.
 
In the second, Amaya Alger (3-for-3) singled, moved up on Mackenzie Biros’ sacrifice bunt and scored on a combination stolen base/errant throw to give the Force a 4-3 lead it never relinquished.
 
But Berkshire missed chances to add to that lead in the third, fourth and fifth, leaving runners in scoring positions in each inning.
 
Meanwhile, McMahon was brilliant in the circle after a rough first inning, striking out six, walking just one and allowing three earned runs in a complete-game effort.
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