The Post

Boat race to feature three Kiwis

- OLIVIA CALDWELL

Three Kiwis will hammer it out for honours in the world famous Oxford v Cambridge University boat race on London’s Thames River.

Canterbury’s Anna Dawson and Alice White, formerly of Hamilton, will row for Cambridge on Monday (NZ Time), while Harriet Austin of Wanganui will be going for glory in the Oxford eight.

Dawson, 26, a former Rangi Ruru Girl’s School rower, was in the New Zealand junior world championsh­ip crew before leaving to study at Stanford University on a scholarshi­p.

She is now in her first year at Cambridge studying education and psychology. She is studying for a PhD in clinical psychology, and wants to become a licensed clinical psychologi­st.

Dawson has been rowing since 2005 and has achieved several awards, including 2014 Pac-12 female athlete of the year. She was

"Three words spring to mind challenge, excitement and excellence." Anna Dawson on competing in the Oxford-Cambridge boat race

a three-time all-American athlete, twice won Stanford’s most valuable rower award and collected a silver and a gold at the under-23 world championsh­ips and junior world championsh­ips, respective­ly.

The course for the race is 4.374 miles (6.8km) long and stretches between Putney and Mortlake in south west London. It regularly reels in over 5 million viewers in the UK alone and 250,000 spectators line the banks of the River Thames.

The course was first used for the Boat Race in 1845 and has been running since, but it was only two years ago in 2015 that the women’s race first joined the men’s on the same day and over the same distance.

Dawson said it was a ‘‘surreal’’ feeling to be in an event that dates back to 1829. ‘‘Three words spring to mind - challenge, excitement and excellence.’’

It was her uncle, Warren Campbell, who first inspired her to take up rowing as he was a New Zealand under-23 representa­tive.

‘‘Apparently after I was born, and after seeing the size of my thighs, he said, ‘She’s definitely going to be a rower’. From there, he always talked about how great the sport of rowing was, which eventually led me to join my high school rowing team.’’

Beyond the boat, Dawson had played several sporting codes including netball, basketball, swimming, hockey and athletics where she was a 100-200m regional representa­tive sprinter.

White, 24, moved from England to Hamilton when she was 12 and earned a bronze medal with New Zealand at the 2011 world junior championsh­ips. She completed a science degree at UCLA in Los Angeles and received a bronze medal in the Great Britain women’s eight at the world under23 championsh­ips in 2015.

Austin, 28, rowed in the New Zealand women’s eight at the 2010 world championsh­ips at Lake Karapiro. She is a Massey University commerce graduate.

Both the men’s and women’s boat races are rowed upstream and are usually timed an hour before high tide, with the women up first so they often row with the fastest possible current.

For the women, the results are flush in Cambridge’s favour with 41 wins over Oxford’s 30. The men’s margins are closer with Cambridge leading 82-79.

Kiwi men have featured in the race over the years, including Olympic bronze medallist George Bridgewate­r, who won with Oxford in 2009 alongside four other Olympians.

Christchur­ch brothers Sam and James O’Connor helped Oxford win the title in 2015.

 ??  ?? Anna Dawson, second from right, rowing for Rangi Ruru in her Maadi Cup days. This weekend, she’ll compete in the famous Oxford-Cambridge boat race.
Anna Dawson, second from right, rowing for Rangi Ruru in her Maadi Cup days. This weekend, she’ll compete in the famous Oxford-Cambridge boat race.

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