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Trailblazing Sir Thomas Rich's school rowers reunite 50 years on

Trailblazing Sir Thomas Rich's school rowers reunite 50 years on

BBC News7 days ago

A group of former schoolboy rowers have reunited - 50 years after they were last in a boat together. The crew of eight had success in the late 1960s, winning the prestigious Boston Marathon in 1972, competing against international-level rowers for Sir Thomas Rich's school in Gloucester.Now in their 70s, the rowers returned to Gloucester Rowing Club on Saturday, where they trained, under the watchful eye of their original coach Graham Middleton.Nick Cooper, one of the original crew members, said they are proud of their achievements raising the profile of state school athletes in what he described as public school dominated sport.
"We were a state school in what was then a sport very much dominated by public school rowing and we turned that on it's head really."Locally, throughout the South West and the Midlands, we were a force to deal with."Certainly in 1970 we ran silver medal at the national school which was pretty remarkable actually."
Mr Cooper said their original coach Graham Middleton, was instrumental in shaping the crew's success."I can remember sitting in science labs reading books on a German crew to see how we could improve," he said.
Mr Cooper said: "Places like Gloucester Rowing Club are doing a great job at bringing young people in. "It's a growing sport, but I'd love to see more of it happening in state schools," he added.

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'Do you really row?' were the first words Jordan Cracknell uttered to her now husband, the Olympic rower James Cracknell, when they met. She laughs, recalling how she found herself sitting next to him for a matriculation photo for Peterhouse College, Cambridge, in 2018. Fresh off a plane from her native New York, Jordan was there to study for an MBA, while Cracknell was studying for an MPhil in human evolution, and preparing to become the oldest ever competitor in the Boat Race. 'James wasn't wearing a tie, so the porter handed him one saying this was the best rowing tie they had. And I'm looking at this guy, who looks really thin, and I'm thinking, 'This guy does not look like an athlete'.' 'He liked the fact that I didn't know him' The double Olympic gold medalist – who'd just finished filming Celebrity Island with Bear Grylls – was understandably bemused. 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Back in 2018, however, she remembers, three weeks into first term, a young college friend of hers trying to tell her about the kind of profile the Olympian Cracknell had. Jordan was still slightly underawed. 'When you turn on the Olympics in the States, all the programming is focused towards swimming and gymnastics. That's why Michael Phelps and Simone Biles are huge. 'Even later when I started dating James, he was talking about events in the Olympics that I had no idea existed. The coverage in the UK and Europe is much more rounded than in the US.' As the pair got closer, even Cracknell tried to prepare her for how public his life was, but still it didn't land. 'I was like, 'Yeah, yeah'. I grew up in New York, I went to school with Christie Brinkley and Billy Joel's daughter. In New York, you ignore celebrities. Everyone's famous for something.' She finally started to get it when on a night out at Wetherspoons a drunken hen party guest asked her, 'Do you know who this man is? 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