Friday, March 5, 2010
Desert Sprints 3/6/10
I know it's been a while since my last post, sorry about that!
This Saturday, March 6th, both the men's and women's teams will be competing in the Desert Sprints Regatta on Tempe Town Lake. This is our only home race of the season and we would really appreciate any support from friends and family! Racing starts bright and early at 7am with the first ASU race being the novice women's 4+ at 7:16. Both teams will actually be able to sleep in! Race schedule can be found in full on www.regattacentral.com and is as follows:
7:16am Women's Novice 4+ Heat- ASU is in lane 1.
9:00am Women's Novice 8+ Heat- ASU is in lane 4.
10:22am Women's Open 8+ Final- Coach Burkett and senior Kirstin MacLean will be competing for Tempe Town Lake.
11:02am Men's Open 4+ Final- ASU will be in lanes 1 and 3.
11:34am Women's Open 4+ Final- Again, Coach Burkett and Kirstin MacLean will be competing for TTLR.
11:58am Women's Novice 4+ Final- If ASU places top 3 in the 7:16am race, you will see them again here.
1:08pm Men's Open 8+ Final- ASU will be in lane 2.
2:20pm Women's Novice 8+ Final- If ASU places top 3 in the 9:00am race, you will see them again here.
4:22pm Mixed 8+ Final- ASU will be in lane 6. The top 4 men and top 4 women will be in this boat.
Hope to see you all there!
Friday, October 30, 2009
8th Annual Hot Head Regatta 10/10/09- The women's Side
The ASU women entered boats in a number of different events in the 2009 Hot Head Regatta on Tempe Town Lake. In the Women’s Open 8+, ASU’s boat included rowers Cristina Rayas, Molly Heil, Taylor Barker, Justine Cisneros, Erin Paul, Sarah Katz, Kirstin MacLean, Brittany Cimmarusti and coxswain Jennifer Harley. ASU finished second to a boat from Tempe Town Lake Rowing that incorporated several rowers who recently won a national masters championship (including ASU Women’s coach Emily Burkett); ASU finished in a time of 21:13. ASU won the Women’s Novice 8+ with a time of 23:12, but had the distinct advantage of being the only boat entered in the event; rowers in the boat were Whitney Bannerman, Amy Willits, Cheyenne Lopez, Sarah Katz, Alee Hefton, Justine Cisneros, Kaitlyn Krolak, Victoria Morrow, and coxswain Jennifer Harley. In the Women’s Open 4+ (for shells with four rowers and a coxswain), ASU finished in second place, with a time of 20:39. The rowers in the boat were Cristina Rayas, Erin Paul, Molly Heil and Brittany Cimmarusti with coxswain Kirstin MacLean. In ASU’s final event of the regatta, the Women’s Novice 4+, ASU again entered the only boat, which finished in a time of 24:54. The rowers were Whitney Bannerman, Amy Willits, Taylor Barker, Cheyenee Lopez, and coxswain Jennifer Harley. Note that a number of ASU women rowed in multiple events – a considerable feat, given how back-breakingly hard it is to race 5K in a rowing shell even once. Coach Burkett summed the performance of the ASU women up by stating: “I threw a lot at the girls for Hot Head, I wanted them to get multiple races under their belt for the only home race of the season. I am very pleased with how everyone performed, especially the true novices in their first race ever. Kudos to the varsity 4+ for a hard fought race as well, we came through the turn 3 boats across and the ASU boat held a tight course to pass the TTLR B entry which had two ASU alumnae.”

The Women's Open 4+. From L to R, Molly Heil, Cristina Rayas, Kirstin MacLean, Erin Paul and Brittany Cimmarusti

The Women's Novice 8+. From L to R, Jennifer Harley, Whitney Bannerman, Amy Willits, Cheyenne Lopez, Sarah Katz, Alee Hefton, Justine Cisneros, Kaitlyn Krolak and Victoria Morrow.
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Never underestimate the power of spandex!



It's always the freshman who get excited! Two of ASU Crew's newest members, Sarah Katz and Cheyenne Lopez (both class of 2013, wow, that was hard to write!) model their new racing suits they received this morning at practice. Four more days to Hot Head!
Friday, October 2, 2009
Hot Head & Parents Weekend
Our next event will be parents weekend on Saturday, October 17th. This corresponds with parents weekend on the ASU campus. Please join us at the Tempe Town Lake Marina from 11am-1pm to meet coaches, parents and current team members. Get a tour of the marina and see where your sons and daughters spend their pre dawn hours 5 days a week! There will be a short rowing demonstration by both teams followed by a talk from Matt Steinmann, the men's coach (I will unfortunately be racing in the Head of the Charles that weekend in Boston and will be unable to make it) and lunch. The Arizona Collegiate Rowing collection will have an assortment of ASU Crew gear available for purchase (t-shirts $10, hats $10, hat & t-shirt $15, polo shirt $20), so please be sure to bring money if you are interested (cash and check only please!).
Thanks everyone!
Thursday, September 10, 2009
Week 3
Just this morning I realized we were almost at the end of our THIRD WEEK!!! So crazy to think about the fact that less than three weeks ago I was walking up to the boathouse early Monday morning with my fingers crossed hoping we would have enough people show up. Luckily we have a good group of kids (hopefully a core group will stick with it!) who are all showing a lot of promise and continue to arrive at the marina bleary eyed in the pitch black at 5am. I've been trying not to scare them too much with our serial killer/killer clown stories from last spring (kept it to one so far), but didn't do so well when one of our alumni, Jackie McNeely (pictured above), decided to hide in the boathouse last week and jump out at me. I can admit, I haven't screamed that loudly in a while!
Practice ends for the week tomorrow with a tradition I am trying to keep up, Friday Fun Day! Hopefully the athletes get a workout in while doing something other than rowing, erging and running. For the past two weeks we played ultimate frisbee, tomorrow will be volleyball. Should be interesting to see the hand eye coordination!
Please keep checking back with us for future updates!
Sunday, August 30, 2009
Mange Tak
I raced today. In a boat! But I will not sing "I'm On A Boat"! But I did... really. I was in one.
I raced three times back to back, and barely had time to dry off from the enormous waves that kept slamming into the rigger frames and showering me with freezing cold water. I spent most of the day shivering, and since I had begun the day with a bad taste in my mouth - ah, hello homesickness! How I didn't miss you - I was sure that this would put me in an even more sour mood. Luckily, it did the opposite. I need to make the effort to get out of my apartment even when I have no motivation. Laying around on the random double bed in our front room watching re-runs of House and eating frozen chocolate is a bad, BAD idea.
I thought it was funny when I found that there were even MORE differences between Danish rowing terminology and American rowing terminology. For example: We'll preface this with an explanation of the American saying. When a rower "catches a crab", it means that the oar gets caught under the water and is made especially difficult to get back up to the surface. Now, this saying is ODD - whatever - but it vaguely makes sense when you think of it in terms of, 'yes, crabs are water creatures. If a crab for whatever reason decided to latch onto your oar blade, it would probably create a somewhat similar response**. Yes? Yes.
In Denmark, people don't catch "crabs". No. They catch owls. SERIOUSLY. "Careful, you could catch an OWL. With your OAR." Do owls in Denmark frequently dive underwater? Do Danish owls have a fish fettish? Rather, how do people not laugh when someone says that?
Additionally, I was told that when I said our boat was 'walking' on another boat (this one means that you're gaining on another boat - i.e. you're 'walking through' a boat) it made it sound as if we were prancing down the lane, splashing water and singing. Frolicking? Maybe. Anyway, I need to entirely reassess my calls during races here. Don't want to conjure up any more images of us with bonnets and pink baskets, picking flowers. All in all, it was a good day. A great way to shake
off some of the crap that the week had muddled up in my brain. Tomorrow morning I'll be off to the gym with new fervency, seeing as I've had much too much fun this week, and it's beginning to show around my waistline.
**I told my friend Rebecca that we lost by a tenth of a second because we had caught a "baby crap" during the last 100 meters of our race. Later on, she told me she was so sad that we had lost because, and I quote, "a creature had somehow
gotten caught on our oars". My life is complete now.
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
2nd day of fall 2009!
Keep checking this site for an updated from Karen Hewell ('11) who is spending the year abroad in Denmark and is rowing with a local team there. Check out her blog at www.redwreck.com for an interesting take on coxing in a foreign country!
That's all for now, thanks for checking in!
Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Bio- Emily Burkett- Women's Head Coach
Schooling: Bachelor of Arts in Sociology from the University of California, Berkeley. Pursuing a possible life in coaching and poverty.
Rowing Experience: A 2005 NCAA National Champion, Emily began rowing in Boston at age 13 at Community Rowing Inc. The eventual captain of her junior team, Emily amassed eight National Championship titles during her high school career and trained with the U.S. Junior National Team. She was among the top two single scullers at the New England Interscholastic Championships every year she raced it, winning the singles title in 2000. She made a clean sweep of all her events at the 2000 Northeast Junior Championships, winning in the coxed-four, the quad and the eight. In 2001, her senior year, she won the Northeast Junior Championships in the varsity 8 and placed 3rd at the Youth Invite (now the USRowing Youth National Championship). She was elected MVP of her team at the end of her senior year. After high school Emily was recruited to row at the University of California, Berkeley. Her freshman eight's victory over the University of Washington in 2002 was the first Cal women's 8+ to win the bitter rivalry between those two schools since 1990. A four-year letter winner, she was one of only four freshmen called up from the frosh squad to row for the varsity in her first year. During her tenure, Berkeley's women's crew won the overall titles at the PAC-10 championships in 2004 and 2005. Although injured for most of her senior year, Emily capped off her college career by winning the Carley Copley Cup at the San Diego Crew Classic as well as Cal's first-ever NCAA Women's Rowing National Championship. Emily comes to Arizona State after two years as the assistant coach of Berkeley High School crew and is now entering her third year with ASU.
Goals: To take a group of girls who have never rowed before and turn them into a PAC-10 challenging boat. Making ASU crew into the team everyone wants to cheer for.
Likes: Sunrise and sunset over the water. People who take responsibility for their actions. Being able to laugh between pieces and then turning your game face on during three to build.
Dislikes: People who ask how many pieces we have left (answer: previous total plus 2 for asking). Motor boats. Wet oar handles. Check.