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Correct. We had a girl who is rowing at lower-level Ivy who didn't even row in HS. Was recruited based on her erg score and demonstrated athleticism in other sports. |
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Doubtful. it looks like they were the one who first brought up the issues of recruiting of Coxwains which is true and confirmed by another poster. It does happen but it is very rare and they virtually get any financial support for the first couple of years. |
Is she really tall (>6'0")? What's her 2K? While I haven't heard of non-rowers getting recruited to row at Ivies, it wouldn't surprise me if the girl was 6'2" and pulled an amazing 2K. |
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For what it’s worth, I have a college rower and the team is always looking for the next best rowers. However, the best rowers actually do not come from HS rowing. They usually come from other sports or someone who has the drive to excel. So if your teen didn’t row, don’t let it discourage them. If your kid doesn’t fit the height stereotype, don’t let them discourage them either. I’ve seen shorter rowers have more success in a boat than the tallest rower on the team.
College rowing is a different beast than HS. It takes a certain kind of mental discipline and drive to wake up all four years of college at the crack of dawn before an 8am class to grind it out on an erg. Then do it again in the evening. It is your whole identity in college. If it sounds like misery to them, don’t push them into it. |
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Another college rower household here - I agree with the last post, though I will say that the top programs cream off the elite, best coached HS rowers both domestic and beyond. Not too many walk ons in that rarified atmosphere. But yes, motivated raw talent is often way more successful than a badly coached HS rower.
Also, my kid's college roster has 8 coxswains, I gather all but one were recruited and their DMV HS program has had 3 or 4 coxswains recruited in the last few years. Not a scientific sample, but anecdotally at least, it seems there are good opportunities for the right kid. |
My very short niece was recruited by an Ivy (not HYP) as a Cox. |
This. Right here is why I enjoyed the sport all through high school and was done by college. Very few of us from my HS team wanted to continue in college! |
| I always found rowing, or, more specifically, the kids who participated in it, fascinating back in the day. At my public high school where football and basketball were king, the kids who rowed were generally known as chuds who weren't good at "real" sports and likely didn't make the team. But when I got to college -- not an Ivy, but a selective private -- the rowers were total Chads: tall, athletic, well-built, and moneyed. Most belonged to top-tier fraternities. I remember noticing this first semester and thinking, "Where did these rowers come from? Did they switch over from other sports? Surely they didn't row in high school. They seem much too cool for that." It wasn't until I pledged myself that I learned rowing is viewed much differently at elite privates and boarding schools than it was at my public school. |