Bronze for Thames Tradesmen's at Master's Head of the River |
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Strong performances from three crews over the event
April 3, 2024 Thames Tradesmen’s Rowing Club (TTRC) is celebrating third place at the Master’s Head of the River race which took place this Sunday( 24 March). Its Men’s 8+ completed the 6.8 km course in just 21 minutes - only three seconds behind Dart Totnes ARC from Devon in second place. The TTRC crew, competing in the Open Novice Category, had a ding-dong dual with a crew from Twickenham Rowing Club, with the boats overtaking each other several times on the course between Chiswick Bridge and Putney Bridge. The rivalry helped push both crews to go the extra mile and was decisive for the TTRC boat - made up of cox Nicolas Sobaszek, Nathan Goodman, Jonathan Geitner, Tim Primmer, Nigel Brophy, Eddie Gillead, Michael Gatzoulis, Jay Sitaraman and Zak Keene - completing the course one minute and one second faster than their 2023 time. The Men’s Captain Nathan Goodman said, “We are making great progress in our technique and speed. Special thanks goes out to the great coaching we got from Michael Tchoubouroff and club veteran member Paul Arnold in giving us great advice and fitness programmes throughout the year. And of course the crew, who gave it their all today. They were awesome. We’re really going from strength to strength.”
Another TTRC Men’s crew, which was a composite with some members from Guildford Rowing Club, competed in the Open Masters C category and came fifth, just three seconds behind a crew from The Netherlands. The crew, coxed by veteran Olympian Woody, was made up of Dave Bulmer (TTRC), Ben Soren (TTRC), Dan Wood (Guildford), Tom Jack (TTRC), Ben Hopwood (Guildford), Manu Pezier (Guildford), Kim Williams (TTRC) and Paul Arnold (TTRC). “We were all happy with the row and overtook three crews,” TTRC’s Paul Arnold said after the race, which started late afternoon at 15.45 as the high tide came very late in the day this year. TTRC Men’s Master C Crew (L to R): Ben Soren, Paul Arnold, Manu Pezier, Tom Jack, Kim Williams, Ben Hopgood, Woody (cox), Dan Wood, Dave Bulmer. The TTRC Women’s crew were without several injured crew members but managed to bring in a person from Mortlake Anglian & Alpha Boat Club to complete the line-up of coach and cox Michael Tchoubouroff, Kasia Wroblewska, Jackie Marie, Barbara Kielim, Lisa Colles (Mortlake AA), Louise Martin, Hana Fegutová, Jacqui Sutherland and Sue Holland. The crew competed in the highly competitive Women’s Masters D Category and came a respectable 11th out of 17 crews, 27 seconds faster than their performance in last year’s race. “We are very pleased in how we rowed today, the boat felt good throughout the race,” said The Ladies Captain Jackie Marie after the race. Crew member Hana Fegutová added, “It was tough and definitely feels like an achievement! I thought there was a big improvement year on year and hopefully with lots of training and some good coaching we can improve even more before next year’s race.”
All three crews agreed that the long paddle back against the wind to the University of London Boathouse was more painful than their high-intensity races. After making it back to the club, competitor and Club Chairman, Nigel Brophy, said, “It’s great to see so many of our members competing in this prestigious event. The club is in a great place, rapidly growing, thanks to our fantastic Learn To Row courses.” He added that there are still a few places left on the next Learn To Row course, which starts mid-May 2024, for anyone who would like to become part of a thriving adult rowing club. If interested in Learning to Row go onto the TTRC website and complete the LTR form. Thames Tradesmen’s Rowing Club is located at University London Boathouse on Hartington Road whilst Hounslow Council are building a new boathouse in Duke Meadows. The Master’s Head of the River, which is rowed annually, the day after the Head of the River Race for elite crews from around the world, was the last head race of the season but also one of the few races to go ahead after several cancelled events this year due to bad weather conditions. Thankfully the Port of London Authority changed its flag status to green the day before the race, allowing it to go ahead without having to reduce the number of crews. This meant that all 260 registered boats were able to compete in 25 categories on a sunny but windy Sunday afternoon.
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