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Dartmouth Men's Varsity Heavyweight Eight Wins EARC's Callow Award
Courtesy of Dartmouth Athletics Communications
HANOVER, N.H. - The Dartmouth men's varsity
heavyweight eight has been awarded the Russell
S. Callow Memorial Award in honor of its performance during the
2010 spring season.
The Callow Award is presented each year by the Eastern Association
of Rowing Colleges
to the crew that, in the previous year, best personified the
virtues of "spirit,
courage and unity." Awarded annually since 1963, the winner
of the award is determined
by vote of the head coaches of the EARC at their annual meeting.
Rusty Callow
was a legendary rowing coach, whose career spanned the first half
of the 20th
century. Rusty coached for many years at Washington, the
University of Pennsylvania,
and Navy. Among his many accomplishments, Callow coached the
1952 Navy crew to
an Olympic gold medal.
Every opponent the 2010 Dartmouth varsity heavyweight eight raced
was ranked in
the top-10 nationally at the time of racing. After some satisfying
wins and a
few close early-season losses, the crew entered the Eastern
Sprints seeded 12th.
Dartmouth upended both that seeding and the conventional thinking
of the rowing
world when it outraced top-ranked Brown, sixth-ranked Syracuse,
and seventh-ranked
Northeastern to qualify for the EARC Grand Final, where the crew
finished fifth.
Dartmouth proved that its Sprints result was no fluke a week
later, when the eight
again defeated Syracuse, this time in Hanover, to win the
Packard Cup. The inspiration
carried the crew to the IRA, where it nearly qualified for the
Grand Final from
a barnburner of a semifinal before finishing eighth overall.
"The past few years have been exciting, especially 2010," said
head coach Topher
Bordeau after receiving the award on his crew's
behalf. "The oarsmen have distinguished
themselves with a commitment to improvement as rowers, teammates,
and as members
of crews on an almost constant basis. There's a capacity for
inspiration that
is a significant part of daily life at Dartmouth, and nowhere
moreso than at the
boathouse. The guys used that capacity to push through some tough
times last year
and to produce an inspired performance when the stakes were
highest. The ability
to do that has become a characteristc of rowers who thrive here,
and that has
made coaching this program incredibly rewarding. It's a credit to
the oarsmen
that their efforts have been honored by the EARC coaches."



