~~~Learn
to Row~~~
~~Improve your Sculling Technique~~
~~~~Private Lessons~~~~
Coaching Available this Fall 2009:
Private and Group Lessons
J. D. Bridges, Crescent's Senior/Intermediate Coach,
is available for private and group lessons this fall for all age groups.
No age
limit or previous experience is required.
Learn
under the guidance of Crescent coach, J.D. Bridges. Crescent Boat Club
teaches that fine technique, as well as strength and endurance, is needed
to make a boat move quickly.
Whether you're looking to just get started rowing, improve your technique
and enjoyment of the sport, or you're preparing to race here in Philadelphia
or beyond.
Services provided
can include: technical feedback, video analysis, rigging and rigging
instruction, race preparation, or seasonal training plans for the experienced
athlete.
Coach Bridges is available mornings during the week before work or
school and weekends, both Saturday and Sunday.
Individual rate: $40 per hour
Group rates: Please contact Coach Bridges.
(Novices: a minimum of six hours is required if you are brand-new to
the sport.)
Contact the coach at - crewcoachjd@yahoo.com
J. D. Bridges got his start rowing on the Schuylkill for Haverford
College and has coached middle school through masters, including state,
regional, National, and Canadian Henley Champions.
J. D. Bridges
Crescent Boat Club Intermediate Coach
www.crescentboatclub.org
****************************
Jacob,
Felix - Double, June 23, 2007
Use pause
button to stop action at different points in the strokes. Examine body
position at those points - are arms straight during leg drive, is the
back opening too soon (before leg drive is complete), are arms flexing
too early in the drive. View carefully the three or four frames before
the boat goes off balance to see the small changes in hand levels, or
shoulder level, or leg assymetry that precede and cause the loss of
keel.
Check
bladework - a Crescent coach is instructing scullers to make a "quick
catch" - at the very moment that the sculler's bodys get to the
catch position, the blade must go into the water, immersing blade but
not the shaft. And at that very instant, not a thousandth of a second
sooner, or later, the leg drive begins and must be linked to the face
of the blade.
Scullers
from Hungary call this moment of the catch, "the plant", the
blade's face goes into and against the water, and the sculler "stands
on it" - the rower will feel the exact same amount of pressure
on the bottom of his feet as is on the face of the blade pushing against
the river.
On the
strokes that Felix and Jacob got a good catch, you'll note a very small
backsplash coming off the back of the blade as it drops quickly into
the water, and an immediate lift of the bow of the boat, as pressure
is instantly applied to blade face. In a double, the catch (pressurizing)of
all four blades must occur at exactly the same time. Notice in the video,
the balance and velocity improvement when this happens - the boat seems
to jump at the catch.
At some
strokes at the end of this sequence, the bow's blade goes deep at the
catch. The rowers will feel this as an imbalance in the beginning of
the drive, that is adjusted for by diminishing pressure on that side
of the boat (as well as loss of velocity), in order to have boat on
keel and balanced for a clean finish.