Anonymous wrote:Do any of the privates have a good rowing team?
Any thoughts on whether being a Coxswain moves the needle for college admissions? Apparently, a friend was advised of this by a private college counseling company. I'm clueless when it comes to rowing and not sure if I should tell her to get a second opinion!
Anonymous wrote:The naval academy has a girls learn to row camp and you can register to learn to be a Cox if that is what your child wants
Then she can see if she likes it before school starts next year. You have to be 13.
Anonymous wrote:Do any of the privates have a good rowing team?
Any thoughts on whether being a Coxswain moves the needle for college admissions? Apparently, a friend was advised of this by a private college counseling company. I'm clueless when it comes to rowing and not sure if I should tell her to get a second opinion!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:STA
?? What does that mean?
Anonymous wrote:STA
Anonymous wrote:My DS coxed for a few years in MS. Rowing is a huge time commitment so make sure they really want to do it. My son stopped at the end of 8th grade because his 3+ hrs of HW were killing him after rowing practice. He left school right when it ended and got home around 7:15. He ate dinner and then was up until midnight working on HW. Some kids can handle that but he has ADHD and it was a slog especially after his medicine wore off. Great sport but it's a lot.
They do have camps just for coxswain so that's something to look into. He didn't get much coaching at all since his coaches were former rowers. It's a huge responsibility too since they are in charge of everything. I was always amazed that they let my 12-year-old kid be in charge of a $30K boat. Lol!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child was recruited to HYP. 2 coxes from her club team were recruited to Stanford + 1 to Harvard (TBC Club team at Gtown Harbor)
And one to Brown
As with any sport, the answer is that you have to participate on both your school and a club team to be considered for recruitment, including coxes.
From everything I know, in this area this is a sport where the public schools really dominate: Whitman, BCC and Wilson usually top the varsity podiums. Maybe in the petites or silver or bronze you will find a smattering of privates like Gonzaga, Holton, GDS, STA and NCS. But not consistently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My niece was a cox recruited from private and club to an Ivy this year. Signed in October.
That is pretty surprising since coxes are almost never recruited - they’re a dime a dozen and easy to train, so no need to waste recruited spots on a cox rather than a rower.