Feb 25, 2021
Team USA
Women’s Single Olympic Berth Up for Grabs Friday at 2020 U.S. Olympic Team Trials – Rowing
SARASOTA, Fla. – The first spot on the 2020 U.S. Olympic Rowing Team will be up for grabs on Friday during the finals of the first 2020 U.S. Olympic Team Trials – Rowing at Nathan Benderson Park.
While five boat classes are being contested during the five-day event, only the winner of the women's single sculls will earn her ticket to Tokyo, pending USOPC approval.
Racing in the first semifinal of the women's single on Thursday morning, USRowing Training Center-Princeton's Kara Kohler (Clayton, Calif./University of California, Berkeley), the reigning world championships' bronze medalist, established an open-water advantage in the first 500 meters and continued to increase her margin over the middle portion of the race. Kohler, a 2012 Olympic bronze medalist in the women's quadruple sculls, crossed the finish line in a 7:51.22, more than 11 seconds ahead of ARION's Kristina Wagner (Weston, Mass./Yale University).
With two to advance to the final, Wagner sat in fourth position through the halfway point of the race before overtaking Craftsbury Green Racing Project's Jenifer Forbes (Baltimore, Md./Northeastern University) in the third 500 and then reeling in Cambridge Boat Club's Cicely Madden (Weston, Mass./Brown University) in the final 500 meters. Wagner finished with a time of 8:02.38, with Madden crossing in an 8:08.38.
"It was very nerve-wracking – the semifinal into the final to be able to have the chance at achieving the goal is pretty nerve-wracking, so I'm happy, relieved, that it's over, and I'm on to the final and have a shot at making the Olympic team tomorrow." Kohler said. "I knew everyone would be pushing pretty hard in the first 1,000 (meters) to stay in the race, so I expected that. I tried to stay as relaxed as possible going into the second thousand and then push away."
In the second semifinal, Cambridge's Gevvie Stone (Newton, Mass./Princeton University), the 2016 Olympic silver medalist in the event, took a lead in the first 500 meters and methodically built her advantage during the middle half of the race. As the scullers crossed the midway point, USTC-Princeton's Sophia Vitas (Franklin, Wis./University of Wisconsin), Boston Rowing Federation's Alison Rusher (West Bend, Wis./Stanford University), and Boston Rowing Federation's Maggie Fellows (Warwick, Mass./St. Lawrence University) were dueling for second position. Vitas continued to hold the second qualifying spot as the boats entered the final 500 meters, but Fellows was able to overtake Vitas in the final 250 meters to claim a place in the finals. Stone won the race in a 7:58.12, with Fellows crossing in an 8:02.12. Vitas finished with a time of 8:04.08.
Tomorrow, Kohler, Stone, Wagner and Fellows will race with an Olympic spot on the line.
"I'm very excited," Kohler said about tomorrow's race. "It's been a long road, lots of ups and downs that have made this journey what it is so far. I'm proud of what I've done so far, and I would love to finish it off and make the Olympic team tomorrow."
The other four event winners on Friday in the men's single sculls, men's double sculls, lightweight women's double sculls, and lightweight men's double sculls will need to race at the Final Olympic Qualification Regatta May 15-17 to claim their spots on the Olympic roster.
In Thursday's first semifinal of the men's single, the four scullers waged a tight battle the entire way down the course, with Malta Boat Club's Leonard Futterman (New York, N.Y./Boston University) pulling ahead during the last 500 meters of the race to claim the victory in a 7:23.43. Riverside Boat Club's Kevin Meador (Berkeley, Calif./Northeastern University), who has represented the U.S. in the event at the past two world championships, held off Penn AC's Thomas Phifer (New York, N.Y./Middlebury College) by less than one second to take the second spot in tomorrow's final. Meador crossed the line in a 7:25.64, with Phifer finishing in a 7:26.23. Mike Clougher (Canton, Mass./Connecticut College), a two-time senior national team member, placed fourth, one second behind Phifer.
"I was happy with today's race," Futterman said. "I've trained against Phifer and raced against Kevin a ton. Big Mike is a competitor. I knew what I had to do out there, so I was just focusing on me and trying to go as fast as possible.
"This year has been great for me in terms of my personal development, my mental development in terms of understanding the role of the sport in my life, and just being very grateful that I have this … This year has been a wild ride for people, and I'm just really grateful that everything has been confirmed of how hard I've been working this year and that I get the opportunity to race tomorrow."
In the second semifinal, Craftsbury's John Graves (Cincinnati, Ohio/Trinity College) took the top spot in a 7:18.67, with teammate Lucas Bellows (Forest Lake, Minn./University of Minnesota) placing second in a 7:21.52. Craftsbury's William Legenzowski (Vista, N.Y./Brown University) finished third, followed by Maritime Rowing Club's Casey Fuller (Newtown, Conn./Fairfield University). Graves and Bellows will take on Futterman and Meador in tomorrow's final.
In the lightweight women's double sculls, the Cambridge Boat Club/Sarasota Crew composite boat of Michelle Sechser (Folsom, Calif./University of Tulsa) and Molly Reckford (Short Hills, N.J./Dartmouth College) continued to race in top form, dominating the first semifinal. Sechser and Reckford took the early lead and then pulled away during the middle 1,000 meters, winning the race by more than seven seconds in a 7:32.66. Craftsbury's Grace Joyce (Northfield, Ill./University of Wisconsin) and Christine Cavallo (Windermere, Fla./Stanford University) finished second in a 7:40.08 to also advance to the final.
The Cambridge/Potomac Boat Club duo of Mary Jones (Huntsville, Ala./University of Tennessee) and Emily Schmieg (Philadelphia, Pa./University of Pittsburgh), the 2018 World Rowing Championships' silver medalists in the event, won the second semifinal with a time of 7:43.01, finishing more than 13 seconds ahead of the second-place crew from Mission Rowing of Sophie Heywood (Tempe Ariz./University of Wisconsin) and Sophia Denison-Johnston (Berkeley, Calif./UCLA). The four boats will face off in tomorrow's final.
Penn AC's Charles Anderson (Upper Darby, Pa./Temple University) and Eliot Putnam (Littleton, Mass./Cornell University) overtook Craftsbury's Jacob Plihal (Vashon Island, Wash./Northeastern University) and Mark Couwenhoven (Parkton, Md./ University of Maryland - Baltimore County) in the second half of the race to win the first semifinal of the men's double sculls. Anderson and Putnam crossed the line in a 6:41.98, just over two seconds ahead of the Craftsbury crew.
In the second semifinal, the Vesper Boat Club/Oklahoma City High Performance Center composite crew of Kevin Cardno (Huntsville, Ala./ University of Alabama, Huntsville) and Jonathan Kirkegaard (Philadelphia, Pa./Purdue University) defeated Penn AC's Justin Keen (Philadelphia, Pa./Penn State University) and Sorin Koszyk (Grosse Pointe Park, Mich./Cornell University) by just over five seconds to earn the victory. Cardno and Kirkegaard finished with a time of 6:43.87. The four boats will face off in tomorrow's final.
In the lightweight men's double sculls, the final was set after yesterday morning's repechages. Vesper Boat Club's Zachary Heese (Pelham, N.Y./University of Virginia) and Jasper Liu (Phoenix, Ariz./University of Pennsylvania) and teammates Jimmy McCullough (Philadelphia, Pa./ University of Delaware) and Josh Remland (Temecula, Calif./Brown University) enter the final as the favorites, having won their heats. They are joined by the Riverside Boat Club composite crew of Alex Twist (Boston, Mass./University of Puget Sound) and Hugh McAdam (Hollis, N.H./Washington College), who won the first repechage, and Vesper Boat Club's Cooper Tuckerman (Bozeman, Mont./Dartmouth College) and Charles Bickhart (Villanova, Pa./Lehigh University), who won the second repechage.
Click here for complete results from today's racing.
Racing concludes on Friday with finals starting at 8:30 a.m. Finals will be streamed live on NBCSports.com and the NBC Sports App.
In total, 111 athletes in 85 boats are racing during the five-day event. Due to COVID-19, there will be no spectators allowed on the island at Nathan Benderson Park.
The second 2020 U.S. Olympic & Paralympic Team Trials will take place April 12-16 in West Windsor, N.J. That regatta will feature racing in the women's double sculls, men's quadruple sculls, men's pair, PR1 men's single sculls, PR1 women's single sculls and PR2 mixed double sculls.
The Olympic Games Tokyo 2020 will be held July 23-August 9, with rowing events slated to start on the morning of July 23. The Paralympic Games Tokyo 2020 are scheduled to take place August 24-September 5, with para rowing events starting August 27.
United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee
Founded in 1894 and headquartered in Colorado Springs, Colorado, the United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee serves as both the National Olympic Committee and National Paralympic Committee for the United States. The USOPC is focused on protecting, supporting and empowering America's athletes, and is responsible for fielding U.S. teams for the Olympic, Paralympic, Pan American and Parapan American Games, and serving as the steward of the Olympic and Paralympic movements in the U.S. A federally chartered nonprofit corporation, the USOPC does not receive federal financial support (other than for select Paralympic military veteran programs) and is one of only four NOCs in the world that also manages Paralympic activities. More information is available at TeamUSA.org.
USRowing
USRowing is a nonprofit organization recognized by the United States Olympic & Paralympic Committee as the governing body for the sport of rowing in the United States. USRowing has 83,000 individual members and 1,350 member organizations, offering rowing programs for all. USRowing receives generous support from the National Rowing Foundation and its corporate sponsors and partners.
Suncoast Aquatic Nature Center Associates Inc.
Suncoast Aquatic Nature Center Associates Inc. (SANCA) is a not-for-profit 501c3 business created to manage Nathan Benderson Park (NBP), a community/public asset and world-class, multi-use sports venue. Our mission is to improve the quality of life for our community and be an economic generator for our region. SANCA's primary purpose is to develop and promote NBP as a world class event center, team training site and Sarasota County park, while providing outreach programs through recreation, safety training, education and volunteering as a service to our community. For more information, go to nathanbendersonpark.org/about-us/sanca-mission.