, 2004]]
With the exception of 1964, a college boat won every Olympics Trials in the eight oared boat (8+) from 1920 through 1968. And in an amazing streak, all of the boats from 1920 through 1956 won gold medals. College boats also have had some success in the four man events (4+) and (4-) and the pair (2-).
Beginning in 1972, the United States has chosen its eight from a national selection camp. Numerous college athletes have made Olympic boats, but they were not specifically representing their University either at the camp, or at the Olympic trials for some of the smaller boats.
Below is a list of college boats that represented the United States at the Olympics:
If a regatta has a point system for determining the overall champion, it is based on the showing of the Varsity 8, the Second Varsity 8, and the Freshman 8 plus other boats. The de facto national championship of Division I men's rowing is the Intercollegiate Rowing Association (IRA) Championships, which between 1995 and 2008 was located on the Cooper River in Camden, New Jersey around the end of May or beginning of June. Beginning with the 2009 regatta in Sacramento, the IRA Championships will be held on the West coast every four years.
There has been a spectacular growth in women's rowing over the past twenty-five years. In 1985 the FISA and Olympic course distance for women was increased from the previous 1000 meters to 2000 meters (the same distance raced by men), marking significant progress in public perception of women's strength, endurance and competitive drive. Universities that have never had a men's team have added women's rowing to the athletic department and are providing funding and athletic scholarships for the expensive and demanding sport, contributing to a noticeable increase in the success and competitiveness of many collegiate women's rowing teams. This, in part, is to comply with Title IX; many of the football powers use women's rowing to help balance out the large number of scholarships awarded to male football players.
There are races for both men's and women's lightweight rowing. However, many of the smaller colleges have limited sized programs and simply field open weight boats, which include rowers who would qualify as lightweights. At many of the larger universities, where the competition to make a boat is intense, lightweight programs often don't exist, and if they do, they are typically underfunded club sports. This has not always been the case, however, as many lightweight programs have deteriorated or disappeared over time. This is especially apparent in the west, where California Lightweight Crew remains the sole program for men's lightweight rowing.
However, on the east coast, most Ivy League and EARC schools have excellent, well-funded men's lightweight teams; the lightweight men's events at Eastern Sprints and the Intercollegiate Rowing Association Championship (IRAs) are fiercely contested. Since the NCAA Rowing Championships does not have a lightweight event for women, a select number of these teams (e.g., University of Wisconsin) are eligible to compete at IRAs with the top men's programs.
Lightweight events have recently been added to the Olympics and it is possible that this might increase funding for these teams.
There are also several large regattas, such as the Dad Vail Regatta and the Eastern Sprints, which may be on the schedule. In this case, the teams compete in either flights, in which the winner is final, or a series of heats and semifinals before the winners move on to the finals. Sprint races begin with all teams lined up and started simultaneously, as opposed to the time trials in the fall.
Performing well in these races is the most important selection criteria for the various post season invitation rowing championships. If the crew is in a league, the dual race and regatta results will also typically be used in determining the team's seeding for the league championship. The Dad Vail Regatta is the largest and most prestigious for smaller schools and is held every May in Philadelphia, PA.
The lightweight division becomes more prominent during the spring. Many head races lack separate categories for heavyweight/lightweight, but many spring races have a separate weight category for lighter rowers.
Since the 1920s, when the West Coast crews, notably California and University of Washington began to attend and regularly win, most crews considered the Intercollegiate Rowing Association's championship (known as the IRA) to be a de facto national championship. Two important crews, Harvard and Yale, however, did not participate in the heavyweight divisions of the event. (After losing to Cornell in 1897, Harvard and Yale chose to avoid the IRA, so as not to diminish the Harvard-Yale race. It soon became part of each school's tradition not to go). And beginning in 1973, Washington decided to skip the IRA because of change in schedule conflicted with its finals.
Even though rowing is the oldest intercollegiate sport, the men have always chosen not to join the NCAA. If they did, the NCAA would sponsor a championship, but it would also force the sport to abide by NCAA rules and mandates. Notwithstanding, collegiate crews generally abide by NCAA rules, and they also have to abide by athletic conference rules, which mirror the NCAA rules.
In 1982, a Harvard alumnus decided to remedy this perceived problem by establishing a heavyweight varsity National Collegiate Rowing Championship race in Cincinnati, Ohio. It paid for the winners of the Pac-10 Championship, the Eastern Sprints, the IRA and the Harvard-Yale race to attend. It was a finals only event and other crews could attend if they paid their own way and there was room in the field. The winner received an expense paid trip to the Henley Royal Regatta as a prize. After 1996, however, the race was discontinued.
Given Washington's return to the IRA in 1995 and the demise of the National Collegiate Rowing Championship, the IRA again was considered to be the National Championship. In 2003, Harvard and Yale, after an absence of over one hundred years, decided to participate.
For men's rowing the Dad Vail Regatta which is held in Philadelphia, PA is considered the national championship for smaller college teams unable to compete at the IRA standard (similar to Division III or I-AA in other sports). It is the largest collegiate race in the nation.
The first women’s collegiate championship was held in 1980 at Oak Ridge, Tennessee. This race was open solely to collegiate rowing teams.
Since 1997, the NCAA has hosted an invitational rowing championship for women. Unlike the former women's collegiate championship, the NCAA does not have a championship race for women's lightweight rowing. In response, the IRA hosts a women's lightweight event.
The NCAA currently hosts championships for Division I, Division II and Division III colleges, Division II and III having been added in 2002.
NCAA Division I requires colleges to enter two eight-oared shells and one four-oared shell in the team championship. The championship is restricted to 16 schools. The NCAA Division II championship consists of an eight-oared shells and four-oared shell competition . The Division III championship involves both varsity and second varsity eights in the same event.
{| border="1" cellpadding="2" |+CAA Schools |- Women (Open Weight) |- | University of Delaware |- | Drexel University |- | George Mason University |- | Old Dominion University |- | Northeastern University |- | University of Buffalo |}
===Eastern Association of Rowing Colleges=== The Eastern Association of Rowing Colleges (EARC) was formed in 1946. It is composed of the Ivy League schools plus other select universities. Each year the EARC schools race at the Eastern Sprints regatta on Lake Quinsigamond in Massachusetts, which, for the men, is generally considered the most important race of the year aside from the IRA. The Pac-10 championship, with California, Stanford, Oregon State and the University of Washington is also highly competitive.
On the women's side, the conference is called the Eastern Association of Women's Rowing Colleges (EAWRC). Its Eastern Sprints, held on the Cooper River in New Jersey, are highly competitive, but because of the huge growth in women's rowing, the Aramark Central Region Championships and Pac-10 Championships are deep and highly competitive as well.
The Eastern Sprints also serve as the Ivy League Championship, with the best placed boat from an Ivy League school being crowned Ivy League Champion.
{| border="1" cellpadding="2" |+EARC/EAWRC Schools |- ! Lightweight Men !! Heavyweight Men !! Openweight Women !! Lightweight Women |- | -- || -- || Boston College || -- |- | -- || Boston University || Boston University || -- |- | -- || Brown || Brown || -- |- | Columbia || Columbia || Columbia || -- |- | Cornell || Cornell || Cornell || -- |- | Dartmouth || Dartmouth || Dartmouth || -- |- | Delaware || -- || -- || -- |- | Georgetown || Georgetown || Georgetown || Georgetown |- | -- || George Washington || George Washington || -- |- | Harvard || Harvard || Radcliffe || Radcliffe |- | -- || Holy Cross || -- || -- |- | MIT || MIT || MIT || MIT |- | Navy || Navy || Navy || -- |- | -- || Northeastern || Northeastern || -- |- | Penn || Penn || Penn || -- |- | Princeton || Princeton || Princeton || Princeton |- | Rutgers || Rutgers || Rutgers || -- |- | -- || Syracuse || Syracuse || -- |- | -- || Wisconsin || -- || Wisconsin |- | Yale || Yale || Yale || -- |}
The participating schools are: Buffalo, Colgate, Delaware, Fordham, UMass, UNH, URI, Villanova, WVU
{| border="1" cellpadding="2" |+Liberty League Schools |- ! Men !! Women |- | Hamilton || Hamilton |- | Union || Union |- | St. Lawrence || St. Lawrence |- | Hobart || William Smith |- | Skidmore || Skidmore |- | Vassar || Vassar |}
{| border="1" cellpadding="2" |+Mid-Atlantic Rowing Conference Schools |- ! Men !! Women |- | -- || Bryn Mawr College |- | Franklin & Marshall College || Franklin & Marshall College |- | -- || Marietta College |- | University of Mary Washington || Mary Washington |- | North Park University || North Park |- | Richard Stockton College || Richard Stockton |- | Rutgers-Camden || Rugters–Camden |- | Washington College || Washington |}
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