sure they do....along with their teammates |
Team sports don't have that same phenomenon. |
We know a female coxswain recruited to Notre Dame this year, and know of a male coxswain recruited to UCB last year. |
Correlation not causation. In college rowing is pretty much always in the morning. And the afternoon as well. The water is usually calmer in the morning so less risk of practice getting washed out. For HS, the difference in times is mainly a coach convenience issue combined with what the team/club can expect rowers to be willing to do in HS, and the need to get to campus by ~8am for school to start. |
While a cox is part of a team, the position comes with incentives to be light. That's where the problem is. |
Also when there are weight cutoffs to qualify as lightweight |
| Eating disorders can be an issue, since the coxswain needs to be light (not short, it is just easier to be light if you are short), but the coxswains we know are strong and healthy. |
| It is a difficult and elite sport. Also the Cox is usually very small. |
| Cousin was cox at Harvard. She’s 5’ tall the size of a 10 year old and has iron constitution. |
| O’Connell, Ireton and St John’s also have crew teams that row out of TBC. |
| Do they even get any exercise in that position? |
Physical, no. But many run, etc outside of practice to keep those lean physiques! |
Mine did because he erged along with the team. |
| Coxes typically train alongside the rowers, it's just that their erg times aren't as scrutinized. |
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I did because “my” rowers made me run with them down to the boathouse every morning and back.
I loved coxing. I hope people take it up for what it is, and not just a means to get into the right college. |