The Hard Winter Months: A Coxswain in the Winter
Now is the time to listen to those recordings that we took months back and never listened to because we hate to.
Now is the time to listen to those recordings that we took months back and never listened to because we hate to.
At the elite level, there are two responsibilities that all coxswains must do all the time, and those are to be at weight (55.0 kg) and to steer straight.
You have to respect your rival. Having competition forces you to get better.
Darcy Marquardt shares tips on goal-setting and trust-building as a way to build strong team dynamics.
Mike Teti shares his summary of the key traits that make for a good coxswain.
One of the best things I learned from rowing [is by] not being afraid to screw up while still trying my hardest all the time, I always walk away with something.
If coxswains get along, the whole team gets better and so do they. If they do not, it can be chaos and practices are disrupted.
Boat feel is critical for choosing the right technical calls to make your crew go faster.
Pete Cipollone shares coxswain tips on how to avoid rowers tuning you out.
Leigh Heyman shares his experience of becoming a national team coxswain in his 30’s.