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Harvard Lightweights Take First in Decisive Fashion

The Harvard lightweight 1V, shown above in earlier action, grabbed a convincing win at the Head of the Charles Regatta on Sunday, finishing the three-mile race in 14:35.71 to take first place. The Crimson bested second-place USRowing by nearly 12 seconds and finished well ahead of Ivy competitors Princeton and Yale, which took third and fifth with times of 14:58.24 and 14:59.70, respectively.
The Harvard lightweight 1V, shown above in earlier action, grabbed a convincing win at the Head of the Charles Regatta on Sunday, finishing the three-mile race in 14:35.71 to take first place. The Crimson bested second-place USRowing by nearly 12 seconds and finished well ahead of Ivy competitors Princeton and Yale, which took third and fifth with times of 14:58.24 and 14:59.70, respectively.
By Cordelia F Mendez, Contributing Writer

Both the Harvard men’s lightweight and heavyweight crews turned in strong performances over the weekend in their first home races of the season at the Head of the Charles Regatta.

An overturned violation left Harvard in second place in the men’s championship eights, while the men’s lightweight eights registered a big victory over the crew that edged them out a year ago, USRowing.

HEAVYWEIGHTS

A buoy violation in the men’s championship eight race on Sunday originally added 10 seconds to Washington’s time, resulting in the Harvard heavyweights being temporarily declared the winners of the race.

But hours after the competition, the penalty was reversed, putting Harvard in second place.

Despite a crash with USRowing eight before the Eliot Bridge, the Huskies finished the three-mile course in 14:37, outpacing Harvard’s time of 14:42. Cal Berkeley finished third, nearly five seconds behind the Crimson.

“Washington rowed a great race and were the victim of an unfortunate crash, but that’s the nature of the race,” said senior six-seat Josh Hicks.

The Huskies, the third boat to start, began to gain on USRowing, the second to start, but the national squad did not yield to the Huskies, and the two boats collided.

“I was sitting in stroke seat, so I could see it all unfold,” senior James O’Connor said. “[There was] angry yelling coming from the Washington crew.... It was quite funny to watch.”

USRowing, another predicted contender for victory, was docked a full three minutes for yielding infractions, causing them to finish last in a field of 28 boats.

The Tideway Scullers, composed entirely of Olympic sculling competitors, and Princeton rounded out the top five.

“The Tideway guys are off their peak from the Olympics and [they’ve had] a little bit of time off,” O’Connor said. “It was really cool today that we beat those crews. I think we all understand that those guys are incredible athletes.”

The first freshman boat also competed in the championship eight race, taking 19th place.

The third Harvard entry came in 25th with a time of 16:06. On Saturday, the two Harvard boats that competed in the club eight race took sixth and tenth places, respectively.

LIGHTWEIGHTS

By the time the Harvard 1V lightweights reached the Riverside Boat Club, the crew already held over a half-second lead on the USRowing eight, the team that Harvard fell to at last year’s Head of the Charles Regatta.

From that point on, the Crimson only extended its lead, ultimately finishing 12 seconds ahead with a time of 14:35.

“[It was] a huge win for the team,” said junior seven-seat Michael Wales. “We packed it in around the big turn, and burned down the last 500.”

By the time the crews had reached the Cambridge Boat Club, Harvard held nearly nine seconds on the USRowing eight. While the national team maintained a fast and strong stroke rate, the Crimson’s steady pace allowed it to keep increasing the size of its lead.

Princeton came in third place behind Harvard and USRowing with a time of 14:58, over three boat lengths behind the Crimson.

“It was a great piece—really aggressive and a big win for our program,” said senior three-seat Erich Schultze. “We know how tough the league we’re in is, though. If we’re still this same speed come March, they’ll make us pay. We’ve got to build off this and keep getting faster.”

Harvard’s second varsity lightweight boat also competed in the race, finishing in 13th place with a time of 15:29.

During Saturday’s club eight race, the first freshman lightweight eight finished in 12th place, two spots behind the second freshman heavyweight eight. The lightweight club four finished in the middle of the pack of 55 competitors in 26th place.

“We expect nothing but our best every day, and we showed that this afternoon,” said senior Austin Meyer, four seat of the first varsity eight. “It’s a great beginning to our year.”

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