First blood in the 2008 Boat Races went to Oxford — Racing this weekend

Folks…

If you missed it … results from Henley on Thames. {see article below}

Racing this Saturday:

Navy Lightweights open their season vs. Princeton in competition for the Joseph Murtaugh Cup on the Severn at 0700.

Yale Heavyweights face off against Brown on the Housatonic at Derby at 0800


Folks…

If you missed it … results from Henley on Thames. {see article below}

Racing this Saturday:

Navy Lightweights open their season vs. Princeton in competition for the Joseph Murtaugh Cup on the Severn at 0700.

Yale Heavyweights face off against Brown on the Housatonic at Derby at 0800

Oxford favored over Cambridge in 2008 Boat Race. Watch it on ITV1 at http://www.itv.com/sport/boatrace/. Coverage should begin at 1215 EDT on Saturday.

GO Blue!

Cheers!

Best regards,

Coach and TB406
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – –
From London Times

March 24, 2008
Oxford women lead the way
Patrick Kidd

First blood in the 2008 Boat Races went to Oxford yesterday, when the women’s eight beat Cambridge by half a length on the course at Henley-on-Thames. The race had been brought forward by an hour to give the Blue boats the best conditions as the wind whipped up and the decision was justified because, in the words of Robert Treharne Jones, chairman of the organising committee, “conditions got progressively lumpy, especially on the first third of the course”.

The fast stream was more than compensated for by the cross-wind and times in all of the races were almost a minute slower than usual. The Oxford women won their race in 6min 38sec to continue their revival in the overall series. Oxford have won five of the past seven races, but still trail 40-23.

In the delayed race for the second eights, Osiris, of Oxford, beat Blondie comfortably. The Cambridge crew caught a crab after the first minute, which stopped the boat, and although they picked up a good rhythm, they could not get back in the race.

The Oxford men’s lightweights won their race by 2 lengths, but Cambridge women’s lightweights prevented a clean sweep with a win by one third of a length.