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#ROWING: Methodist College, Belfast, won the men’s junior 18 eight and coxed four at Neptune Regatta. Two UCD crews fought it out in the final of the women’s senior coxed four, with UCD B coming out on top.

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NEPTUNE REGATTA 2012
Results - FINALS Saturday 21st April
Race Event North Station South Station Winner Margin
33 M J 18 4X- Neptune Carlow Carlow Easily
43 W J 18 1 X Carrick-on-Shannon (Kelly) Carrick-on-Shannon (Van der Speck) Carrick-on-Shannon (Kelly) 2L
58 M J 14 2X Carrick-on-Shannon Commercial Carrick-on-Shannon 1.5 L
73 W N 4+ Commercial Bann R.C UCD B 4L
76 W N 1X Garda B.C (O'Brien) DULBC (Crowe) Garda O'Brien dist.
78 W J 14 4X+ Bann Athlone Bann 2 L
82 M J 16 2X Neptune Cork Boat Club Neptune 2 L
83 W J 15 2X Commercial RC Carrick on Shannon BC Commercial 3L
88 M S 1X Commercial (Crowley) Carlow (Coughlan) Carlow (Coughlan) 1.5L
94 M Novice 1X Waterford (Corrigan) DUBC (Rooney) DUBC (Rooney) 2L
97 W J 16 2X Carrick-on-Shannon Neptune RC Neptune 5L
99 M Inter 1 X St. Michael's (O' Connor) Neptune (Harwood) SMRC (O'Connor) 3L
100 M Masters 4+ Commercial RC Waterford Boat Club Commercial 2 1/4 L
101 M N 4x+ Neptune Commercial RC Neptune Easily
106 M J 14 4X+ Bann Cork (A) Cork A 1.5 L
109 W Nov 4X+ Methodist College Neptune Neptune 1 1/4 L
110 M N 8 Commercial RC Neptune RC Neptune 5L
111 W Inter I 4+ Winner Race 79 UCD Boat Club UCD 2 L
112 W J 16 8 Methodist College RC Commercial RC Commercial 3/4 L
113 M J 16 8 Neptune Methodist College (A) Neptune 2 L
114 M J 16 1X Athlone (Hannon) Athlone (Egan) Athlone (Egan) 5 L
115 M Inter 8 Carlow RC Bann RC Bann 4 L
116 M Masters 8 Old Collegians Boat Club Commercial RC Commercial 1 L
117 W J 18 4X- Neptune Athlone Boat Club Neptune Easily
118 W J 14 2X Carlow RC (A) Carlow RC (B) Carlow A Easily
119 M J18 8 Neptune Methody Methody 1 1/4 L
120 M J18 1X Bann (Gordon) Waterford (Konan) Bann (Konan) 1 L
121 M J 15 4X+ Commercial (B) Carlow (A) Commercial 3 L
122 W N 8 UCD DULBC DULBC 2 1/2 L
123 W S 4+ UCD B UCD Boat Club (A) UCD B 2 L
124 W I 1X Garda Boat Club (Holden) Methodist College RC (Gregson) Methody (Gregson) 5 L
125 W J 16 4X+ Neptune Commercial RC Commercial 4 L
126 M N 4+ Dublin University Boat Club Neptune RC Scratch
Published in Rowing

ROWING: UCD’s men’s senior eight clocked 10 minutes 29 seconds in excellent conditions to claim the title of fastest crew at the Dublin Head of the River. Trinity took the Diane Cook trophy for best overall club. 

Dublin Head of the River 2012 – Selected Results

Overall: 1 UCD senior eight 10 minutes 29 seconds, 2 St Michael’s sen eight 10:35, 3 Neptune, Carlow, Offaly sen eight 10:44, 4 Trinity intermediate eight 10:48, 5 UCD inter eight 11:00, 6 Trinity novice eight 11:05.

Pennants – Men, Eight – Senior: 1 UCD 10:29, 2 St Michael’s 10:35, 3 Neptune, Carlow, Offaly 10:44. Intermediate: 1 Trinity 10:48, 2 UCD 11:00, 3 Queen’s. Novice: 1 Trinity 11:05, 2 Queen’s 11:21, 3 Neptune 11:21. Junior: 1 Commercial 11:26, 2 Neptune 11:27, 3 Blackrock 12:29. Masters: 1 Commercial 11:24. Fours, coxed – Senior: Commercial 13:01.

Women, Eight – Senior: 1 St Michael’s, University of Limerick 12:05, 2 Queen’s 12:21, 3 UCD. Intermediate: 1 Trinity 12:14, 2 UCD 12:41, 3 Commercial 13:05. Novice/Junior: Shannon 13:29.

 

 

 


Published in Rowing

ROWING: UCD took three of the four titles on offer at a lively set of Colours Races in Dublin today. Trinity’s novice women denied the college a second consecutive clean sweep in perfect conditions.

In the men’s senior race, the Gannon Cup, Trinity took a surprise early lead. The bigger UCD eight reeled them in and as the crews passed the Four Courts, UCD had taken a lead they were not to lose. This gave Turlough Hughes of UCD a win over his twin brother Patrick, who rowed for Trinity.

The Corcoran Cup for senior women saw UCD lead all the way, though Trinity exerted serious pressure in the closing stages.

The two novice races were notable for different reasons. In the men’s race, UCD got off to an astounding start and won much as they liked. The women’s was the best contest of the day. Leaders UCD could not hold off the late surge of Trinity, who won by over a length.

Colours Races 2012

Senior Men (Gannon Cup): UCD bt Trinity  1l

Novice Men (Dan Quinn Shield): UCD bt Trinity distance

Senior Women (Corcoran Cup): UCD bt Trinity 1¼ l

Novice Women: Trinity bt UCD 1¼ l

Published in Rowing

Twin brothers Turlough and Patrick Hughes (20) will vie for dominance in the Gannon Cup, the annual colours race between Trinity and UCD, on the Liffey on Bank Holiday Monday. UCD, who will be seeking their fifth consecutive Gannon, will be stroked by Turlough Hughes, while Patrick will be in the five seat in the Trinity boat. UCD’s Dave Neale will be seeking his fifth Gannon Cup title.

Trinity’s women’s eight, winner of two of the last three Corcoran Cups, have experience in their crew for Monday. Sinead Rodger and Keira Buttanshaw compete in their second Corcoran Cup; Susannah Cass her third and Caitlin Condon, an American, her fourth. UCD Ladies Boat Club have yet to announce their crew.

Mark Pollock, the adventurer who competed in the Gannon in 1995, 1996 and 1997 – and won all three - will be the guest of honour at the event. Pollock has shown tremendous fortitude in taking on blindness and then, separately, paralysis sustained in a fall.

Men’s Senior Eight (Gannon Cup)

UCD: Vincent Manning, Emmett Feeley, Simon Craven, Conor Walsh, Gearoid Duane, Dave Neale, Finbar Manning, Turlough Hughes; cox: Hannah Fenlon.

Trinity: P Mannix, AJ Rawlinson, Will Hurley, Charlie Landale, Patrick Hughes, Paul Flaherty, Ian Kelly, Danny Ryan; cox: Maeve Crockett.

Women’s Senior Eight (Corcoran Cup)

Trinity: Rebecca Dowling, Sinead Rodger, Keira Buttanshaw, Suzanne Daniels, Susannah Cass, Rebecca Deasy, Caitlin Condon, Ruth Morris; cox: Naomi O’Sullivan.

Monday’s Programme: 8:30 Sally Moorhead Trophy (Novice Women). 9:00 Dan Quinn Shield (Novice Men). 9:30 Corcoran Cup (Senior Women). 10:00 Gannon Cup (Senior Men)

Published in Rowing

Coastal Notes Coastal Notes covers a broad spectrum of stories, events and developments in which some can be quirky and local in nature, while other stories are of national importance and are on-going, but whatever they are about, they need to be told.

Stories can be diverse and they can be influential, albeit some are more subtle than others in nature, while other events can be immediately felt. No more so felt, is firstly to those living along the coastal rim and rural isolated communities. Here the impact poses is increased to those directly linked with the sea, where daily lives are made from earning an income ashore and within coastal waters.

The topics in Coastal Notes can also be about the rare finding of sea-life creatures, a historic shipwreck lost to the passage of time and which has yet many a secret to tell. A trawler's net caught hauling more than fish but cannon balls dating to the Napoleonic era.

Also focusing the attention of Coastal Notes, are the maritime museums which are of national importance to maintaining access and knowledge of historical exhibits for future generations.

Equally to keep an eye on the present day, with activities of existing and planned projects in the pipeline from the wind and wave renewables sector and those of the energy exploration industry.

In addition Coastal Notes has many more angles to cover, be it the weekend boat leisure user taking a sedate cruise off a long straight beach on the coast beach and making a friend with a feathered companion along the way.

In complete contrast is to those who harvest the sea, using small boats based in harbours where infrastructure and safety poses an issue, before they set off to ply their trade at the foot of our highest sea cliffs along the rugged wild western seaboard.

It's all there, as Coastal Notes tells the stories that are arguably as varied to the environment from which they came from and indeed which shape people's interaction with the surrounding environment that is the natural world and our relationship with the sea.