Watch Head of the Charles results roll in!

October 17, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

Hey, PBC.

Stuck in DC this weekend while all your friends are up at the Charles?  We feel your pain.  Don’t forget that you can track PBC’ers racing at the HOCR in near real-time by visiting the results page here.  It’s the next best thing to watching from Weeks!

Well, better than nothing … ?

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Potomac heads home to the Charles

October 15, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

Potomac BC Head of the Charles '65

The Head of the Charles Regatta (HOCR) is like homecoming weekend for many rowers, especially for us at Potomac Boat Club.  We’ve been there each of the regatta’s 45 years, winning the Men’s Championship Eight event in year one.  When not racing, it’s our opportunity to catch up with old friends and teammates, some we haven’t seen in years.

If you’re going to the Charles this weekend, make sure you get to the racecourse in time to cheer on all the folks keeping PBC’s rich HOCR racing tradition alive.  As you’ll find below, there are quite of few of them, so remember to wear layers, bring the throat lozenges, and maybe make friends with the guy with the flask (um, if you’re into that kind of thing).

Oh, in case you weren’t at the Semi-Annual Meeting last week, the Board announced the first winners of the David Challinor Head of the Charles Memorial Fund awards!  Congratulations to Margot Shumway and Bill Greer!

Best of luck to all of you this weekend … and a special “go get ‘em, ladies” from the Star to PBC-sponsored WeCanRow DC as they compete in their very first Head of the Charles Regatta!

Saturday, October 17th

01. Grand Master Singles Men 50+ (7:45)

00052 Potomac Boat Club (E. Ryan)
00076 Potomac Boat Club (T. Baxter)

02. Grand Master Singles Women 50+ (8:16)

00012 Potomac Boat Club (C. Cole)

03. Senior Master Singles Men 40+ (8:43)

00013 Potomac Boat Club (R. Lewis)

06. Senior Master Eights Women 50+ (9:43)

00017 Potomac Boat Club

08. Senior Master Fours Women 50+ (10:17)

00012 Potomac Boat Club

10. Senior Master Doubles Women 50+ (10:52)

00014 Potomac Boat Club (G. Edie/J. Hopkins)

13. Club Singles Men (11:46)

00051 Potomac Boat Club (J. Moncton)

17. Club Eights Men (13:26)

00012 Potomac Boat Club

25. Championship Doubles Men (13:47)

00006 Riverside/Potomac Boat Club (B. Wilkinson/S. Gorman)

26. Championship Doubles Women (16:02)

00006 Potomac Boat Club (M. Wimberley/K. Stainken)

29. Championship Singles Men (16:57)

00014 Potomac Boat Club (W. Greer)

30. Championship Singles Women (17:14)

00002 Potomac Boat Club (M. Shumway)
00020 Potomac Boat Club (M. Gaab)

Sunday, October 18th

31. Senior Veteran Singles Men (8:00)

00006 Potomac Boat Club (C. Sutliff)

41. Master Singles Men (12:32)

00008 Potomac Boat Club (B. Howe)

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Register for the 29th Annual Charlie Butt Scullers’ Head of the Potomac

August 21, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

Men's 8s jockey for position at Key Bridge during the Scullers' Head of the Potomac (M. Jantzen '08)

Registration is now open!

Potomac Boat Club’s Regatta Committee is proud to announce the 29th annual Charlie Butt Scullers’ Head of the Potomac (SHOP) will be held on Sunday, September 27, 2009.

Once considered a tune up regatta for the Head of the Charles in mid-October, the SHOP today is a milestone on the fall racing calendar and includes more than 40 sweep and sculling events.

Registration for the SHOP is open from now until Saturday, September 19, 2009.  Visit the Scullers’ Head of the Potomac online registration area on Ronin Racing to sign up.  Once there, you will also find a schedule of events, directions, a link to the waiver, athlete check-in information, and the most up to date list of competitors.

Please note, entries must be received by Saturday, September 12, 2009, to avoid the late fee.  And once registration closes on Saturday, September 19, 2009, it’s closed.  There is no race day registration this year.

Still have a question about the SHOP?  Please send it to PBC’s Regatta Committee chair, Samantha Byrd, at headofthepotomac@gmail.com.

Raced through one of the Nation’s most historic corridors, the Scullers’ Head of the Potomac is a true test of physical endurance and mental toughness for sweep crews and scullers alike.  Don’t miss it!

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HOCR deadline for 1xers and Challinor Fund details!

July 28, 2009 by admin · Leave a Comment 

Thinking about racing in a single sculling event at the 2009 Head of the Charles Regatta?  Well, it’s time to quit thinking and get to registering! 

Single sculling event applications are due this Saturday, August 1!

Need more inspiration? 

Don’t forget that if you are a PBC member or a competitive program member with an accepted entry to race a single at this year’s HOCR, you could be recommended to receive reimbursement for your racing expenses from the David Challinor Head of the Charles Memorial Fund!  And if you’re one of the chosen two scullers, not only will you get reimbursement, but your name will appear on the Challinor Fund’s plaque at the boathouse with names of fellow recipients for years to come! 

For general registration information and deadlines, please visit the HOCR competitor’s information page here.  To go straight to the single sculling events registration page, just click here

For more information on the David Challinor Head of the Charles Memorial Fund, Board Member Ed Ryan has provided us with all the latest details below, on behalf of the Board.

* * *

As many of you are aware, Dave graciously and generously remembered PBC in his will, and made a significant bequest to the Club.  The Board solicited ideas from members on an appropriate use of these funds, and after receiving and considering many excellent suggestions, we arrived at the David Challinor Head of the Charles Memorial Fund (”The Fund”) as the best way to remember Dave and promote his ideals and competitive spirit.

The Fund will be used as follows:  Each year, starting this year (2009), the Racing Committee shall nominate for Board consideration qualified scullers, at least one male and one female, to receive reimbursement of up to $1000 for expenses related to racing at the Head of the Charles Regatta.  To qualify, each nominee must have an accepted entry to race in a single sculling event for PBC at the Head of the Charles Regatta.  Each nominee must be an active member of PBC (or a child of an active member) or a member of a competitive program at PBC.

The Racing Committee’s nominations are due to the Board in September, after the accepted single sculling entries are announced by the Head of the Charles Regatta organization.  From the pool of nominees, the Board will select the final recipients, one male and one female.  Recipients will be announced at PBC’s Semi-Annual Meeting in early October.  A David Challinor Head of the Charles Memorial Fund plaque will be created and displayed at PBC with the names of each year’s recipients.

The Board believes this to be a fitting and appropriate tribute to Dave’s legacy, and that Dave would appreciate this use of the funds he entrusted to the Club.  The Board intends the Fund to continue in perpetuity, meaning that it is intended to rely on the investment proceeds of Dave’s gift as opposed to the principal of the gift.  The Board reserves the right to the change the terms of this Fund at any time, and/or to discontinue it.  Any issues regarding the Fund shall be resolved exclusively by the Board.

 

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Our first PBC Profile - Guess who?

April 20, 2009 by admin · 2 Comments 

Last summer, we received the photo above via email from a fellow PBC member, who was racing at Masters Nationals in Long Beach, Calif.  The subject line simply read, “Guess who?”  We tried to play along, but after guessing everyone from Apollo mission astronauts to Joe DiMaggio and Roger Maris, the sender finally gave up on us.

It turns out, at one point at least, we had the guy on the left correct:  That’s Tony Johnson, member of Potomac Boat Club, two-time Olympian, and coach of Georgetown University.  Tony was out in Long Beach training with his pair partner for the 1964 Tokyo Olympics when this photo was snapped.  We thought it was pretty cool that another PBC rower would just happen to spot the photo at the Long Beach Rowing Center more than 40 years later.

But have you guessed who the other guy is, yet?

Well, when we envisioned the PBC Profiles area of the Potomac Star the guy on the right was first on our list of potential “victims.”  And no, it isn’t Roger Maris.  Back then, this New York guy had a few vertical inches and probably more than a few solid pounds on Maris.  Give up?  Thought so! (Drumroll, please.)

It’s Jim Edmonds!

You can find Jim at the boathouse almost any time you show up.  In fact, some of us see him there so often, we’ve wondered if he is just always there.  (Of course, he probably wonders the same about us.)  A couple of weeks ago at PBC’s Annual Meeting, House Committee Chair Cal Sutliff thanked Jim for his involvement in almost every improvement and repair project at the boathouse, but, of course, it happened to be one of those rare occasions Jim wasn’t there with us.

If you know him at all, it probably wouldn’t surprise you to learn that Jim was back out in California racing at the San Diego Crew Classic the week of the meeting.  And maybe it was just as well.  Although Jim always seems to be there when we need him, he definitely is not one who likes a big to-do to be made about all that he has done.

When we decided that readers of the Potomac Star would like to know more about Jim, we also knew it would be tough to get him to let us do a write-up about his life.  Thank goodness Jim’s sons, Eric and Marc, were more than happy to share his story with us!

Following is our very first PBC Profile.  It was written by Eric and Marc Edmonds as a tribute to their dad, former Syracuse University rowing alum, Pan Am champ, Olympian … and just one of our most beloved PBC guys of recent time, Jim Edmonds.


Jim Edmonds 1959 Upstate New YorkOur dad, Jim Edmonds, comes from a long line of farmers, not rowers.  One of three children, Dad grew up with older brother Jack and younger sister Nancy on the Edmonds family farm near Keuka Lake in the Finger Lakes region of upstate New York.  Established in the 1830’s, the Edmonds family farm produced chickens, cows, corn, and cabbage.  Lots of cabbage.  In 1974, the farm was sold to one of the first Mennonite families to move to the area from Pennsylvania, and later became the subject of a National Geographic special on Mennonites in New York.

When Dad and his brother Jack weren’t going to school or helping out on the farm, they built race cars and raced them at a track a couple of towns away.  One year, Dad won first place in the National Teenage Road-E-O contest “in recognition of expert driving ability and proper driving attitude.”  Growing up on a farm, Dad gained self-reliance and practical mechanical know-how, but also learned the importance of hard work and helping others.  His parents instilled in him the modesty, humility and integrity that he continues to exhibit today.

Jim Edmonds 1959 Pan Am Games (Rowing)In high school, Dad excelled in math and science, and never missed a day.  He did so well that he earned a state scholarship to attend Syracuse University, which is where he was first introduced to rowing.  At Syracuse, Dad majored in mechanical engineering, and initially tried out for the basketball team as a freshman.  He didn’t make it, but at 6’4”, he caught the attention of the rowing coach, who asked him to come out for the university’s rowing team.  He did and he loved it.  His freshman year, Dad rowed in the freshman eight that won the IRA regatta.  In 1959, his senior year, Dad rowed bow of the varsity eight, which beat all other competitor crews that season except for Cornell.  They would more than make up for that one loss, though, by winning gold at the 1959 Pan Am Games.

Dad ended up rowing all four years at Syracuse, one year achieving the highest GPA of any varsity athlete.  He graduated from Syracuse in 1959, with a Bachelor of Science degree in Mechanical Engineering, and went on from there to earn a Master of Science degree in Computer Science (then referred to as Mathematics) from the University of Michigan.  Following graduation, he accepted a job offer from IBM, and was assigned to supporting the Department of Defense and the Central Intelligence Agency in the DC area.  Moving to DC also brought Dad to Potomac Boat Club (PBC), where he started rowing a pair with fellow Syracuse alum, Tony J1964 U.S. Olympic Pair without Coxswain, Potomac Boat Club (Johnson and Edmonds)ohnson.  They were coached by legendary Washington-Lee High School coach, Charlie Butt, Jr.

Dad trained with Tony twice a day, and continued to hold down his job with IBM.  It seemed like the hard work had paid off.  That year, they won the Olympic trials qualifying them for the 1964 Tokyo Olympics.  In the end, the pair wasn’t able to medal, but the 1965 National Association of Amateur Oarsman (NAAO) Almanac reported that strong cross winds made their race “the most controversial race of the regatta.”  Of course, if you asked Dad why they didn’t medal at the Olympics, he most likely would not hesitate to take responsibility for it all himself.

je_img_1620Dad continued to row with Potomac Boat Club following the Olympics, and in 1965, he was in the PBC boat that won the Men’s Championship 8 event at the very first Head of the Charles Regatta, also the first official head style race in the U.S.  Around 1970, Dad hung up his oar and, as far as we know, didn’t touch one again for more than 25 years.  Instead, he focused on other outdoor activities, work, and family.  Dad met Yolanda Coppola, the future Mrs. Edmonds and our mom, at IBM.  They married and then moved to the Edmonds (r) and Malin (l) Potomac Boat Club (1972)house in Arlington where they raised us (sons Eric and Marc), and where they still live today.

Dad always loved the outdoors, and loved spending time with us outdoors.  He would pack up the whole family into a Volkswagen Bug for weekends of canoeing, hiking and camping up in the Shenandoah Mountains of Virginia, and for the annual trip to the Adirondack Mountains of New York.  Although he wasn’t actively rowing during this time, he was remained very active at PBC, and  continued to go down to the boathouse at least three times a week for a run or to help out anyway he could.  Dad  managed the timing for the Head of the Potomac Regatta from the first one in 1981 until 2005, and then again in 2008.  In fact, Dad might have been one of the first to employ a computer-based system to manage regatta timing.  In 1983, he used a simple timing program he had written on his home computer  to successfully manage the timing for the HeEdmonds IRAad of the Potomac from that year forward.

In 1997, Dad disappeared for one very long day, and returned with a Filippi single on top of his car.  It seemed to signal his return to rowing.  To this day, we are not exactly sure what the impetus was, but he jumped right back into competition, racing in various regattas, including at the IRA in a gold medal winning Syracuse alumni boat, the San Diego Crew Classic, Masters Nationals, the Head of the Charles, the Head of the Potomac, and even the Head of the River in London.

Dad retired from IBM after more than 30 years.  He still enjoys hiking and canoeing and has been a long time member of the Potomac Appalachian Trail Club, where he volunteers to help maintain equipment and trails in the Shenandoah National Park.  And of course, as you know, Dad continues to row and race.  We followed Dad into the sport of rowing, and rowed at Washington-Lee High School for Dad’s former coach, Charlie Butt.  We continued the tradition of rowing in college, and returned to row for PBC after graduation.

If you’d like to see a few more images from this PBC Profile of Jim Edmonds, please play the slideshow below.

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