Rowing-Cambridge double their double against Oxford in boat race

The week leading up to this year's race brought with it mounting concerns about inclement weather and alarming levels of bacterial contamination in the River Thames that hosts the annual event. But the spring sunshine peeked through fluffy white clouds as the races kicked off on Saturday afternoon, with thousands of spectators lining the course that runs from Putney to Mortlake.


Reuters | Updated: 30-03-2024 22:59 IST | Created: 30-03-2024 22:54 IST
Rowing-Cambridge double their double against Oxford in boat race
Image Credit: Flickr

Cambridge's male and female rowers secured the double against Oxford for a second year in a row in the university boat race on Saturday.

The four mile course, more than three times the length of a standard Olympic race, is one of the world's oldest amateur sporting events. The week leading up to this year's race brought with it mounting concerns about inclement weather and alarming levels of bacterial contamination in the River Thames that hosts the annual event.

But the spring sunshine peeked through fluffy white clouds as the races kicked off on Saturday afternoon, with thousands of spectators lining the course that runs from Putney to Mortlake. In the men's race, Cambridge took the lead early on, even as both teams were warned in the opening minutes for oar clashes.

The Cambridge crew emerged comfortably ahead soon after and ultimately held on even as stroke Matt Edge looked at the verge of collapse in the dying minutes of the race. The win is the university's fifth in the last six races. "No one ever backed off for a single second," said Cambridge boat club president, Sebastian Benzecry, who rowed his last race on Saturday.

Oxford's women, widely touted as favourites to win this year, had a flying start but were overtaken in about 10 minutes and ultimately failed to turn the tide against Cambridge who went on to notch their seventh straight victory. Oxford cox Joe Gellett appealed against the final result at the end of the race, contending that the Cambridge boat had got in their way mid-race.

But umpire Richard Phelps ultimately dismissed the claim on the basis that Oxford had instead drifted into Cambridge's station and bumped their boat. Neither the men or the women's teams dunked their cox into the Thames as is tradition. Data released earlier this week showed alarming levels of E. coli bacteria in the water, as sewage spills hit a record high in 2023.

Cambridge retains its dominance over Oxford, with 87-81 wins in the men's races, and 48-30 in the women's race.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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