St Neots Rowing Club

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St Neots Rowing Club
St neots rowing logo.png
St Neots Rowing Club Rowing Blade.svg
LocationSt Neots, Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom
Home waterRiver Great Ouse
Founded1865; 156 years ago (1865)
AffiliationsBritish Rowing
boat code – SNE
Websitestneotsrc.co.uk
Events
St Neots Regatta, St Neots Small Boats Head
Notable members
Laurie Evans, Bethany Astell, Philippa Neill, Jacqui Round, Jo Fitzsimons

St Neots Rowing Club (SNRC) is a British Rowing affiliated club in the town of St Neots, Cambridgeshire, situated on a beautiful 4 km section of the River Great Ouse. It was founded in 1865.

History[]

Training for competitive rowing is believed to have started in St Neots in 1865 with the first recorded open regatta held on August Bank Holiday in 1874. They were very successful and popular events and continued annually until 1882.

St Neots Rowing Club is one of the most successful clubs in the country for producing junior international rowers. The Club has provided a member of the Great Britain squad for the World Junior Championships ten times – winning two gold medals and two bronze medals. In 2010, Bethany Astell and Philippa Neill both won a gold medal in the Women’s Eight at the World Junior Championships, taking the club’s count of world champions to three.

The Club’s first ever world champion, Jacqui Round, came about when she won gold in the Women’s Eight at the World Under-23 Championships in 2009. Jacqui had competed at another two World Under-23 Championships prior to her victory in 2009, winning a bronze medal in 2008. Jacqui also won two gold medals at the Youth Olympics. This feat was repeated a couple of years later by Jo Fitzsimons at the same venue.

On top of this, St Neots have provided eleven rowers for the Great Britain squad in the annual GB vs France J16 Match, and 21 rowers for crews in the Home Countries International, including five winning gold medals in 2009.

Facilities[]

SNRC has a large boathouse (rebuilt after severe gales in 1976 which completely demolished the boathouse and destroyed the club's fleet of boats) The Club rows on a 4 km stretch of the River Great Ouse and races in eights, fours, quads, doubles, pairs and single sculls with a fleet of excellent[citation needed] racing shells and several training boats.

The club has produced multiple British champions.

Honours[]

British champions[]

Year Winning crew/s
1980 Men 2+[1]
1986 Women J14 2x[2]
1987 Women J18 1x, Women J16 2x, Women J14 1x[3]
1988 Men J14 2x, Women J16 1x, Women J16 2x[4]
1989 Men J14 1x, Women J18 1x[5]
2000 Women J15 1x[6]
2001 Women J14 1x, Women J14 4x+[7]
2003 Women J18 4x[8]
2004 Women J18 4x, Women J14 1x[9]
2005 Women 4-, Women J18 4x, Women J15 1x[10]
2006 Open J14 1x, Women J16 2x, Women J14 2x[11]
2007 Women J15 2x[12]
2009 Women 4-, Women 8+[13]

See also[]

  • British Rowing

References[]

  1. ^ ""Rowing." Times, 21 July 1980, p. 12". Times Digital Archives.
  2. ^ "Railton, Jim. "Leander take Kingston with a late charge." Times, 21 July 1986, p. 28". Times Digital Archives.
  3. ^ "Railton, Jim. "Hampton's victory is pinched." Times, 20 July 1987, p. 32". Times Digital Archives.
  4. ^ ""For the Record." Times, 18 July 1988, p. 35". Times Digital Archives.
  5. ^ "a Special Correspondent. "Chuter to resolve selection dispute." Times, 17 July 1989, p. 32". Times Digital Archives.
  6. ^ "National Championships". Times Digital Archives.
  7. ^ ""The Daily results service." Times, 23 July 2001, p. 10". Times Digital Archives.
  8. ^ ""Today's fixtures." Times, 21 July 2003, p. 32". Times Digital Archives.
  9. ^ ""The Results Service." Times, 19 July 2004, p. 28". Times Digital Archives.
  10. ^ ""Nautilus cruise." Times, 18 July 2005, p. 53". Times Digital Archives.
  11. ^ ""Rowing." Times, 17 July 2006, p. 57". Times Digital Archives.
  12. ^ "2007 archive of results". Web Archive.
  13. ^ "2009 archive of results". Web Archive.

External links[]

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