The Cavalier Daily
Serving the University Community Since 1890

Rowing ends season victorious in Rivanna Romp

<p>To conclude its fall season Sunday at the Rivanna Romp, women's rowing won both the Varsity Eight and Varsity Four races.</p>

To conclude its fall season Sunday at the Rivanna Romp, women's rowing won both the Varsity Eight and Varsity Four races.

The Virginia women’s rowing team wrapped up its fall season Sunday with a pair of victories in the Rivanna Romp. On the Rivanna Reservoir, the host Cavaliers posted several notable times and took the top spot in both the Varsity Eight and Varsity Four races.

In the Varsity Eight competition, Virginia completed the 4000-meter race with a time of 13:01.1, fast enough to capture its 11th-straight win in the Romp. The Cavaliers finished 19 seconds ahead of second-place Duke, who finished in 13:20.1. Behind Virginia’s Eight A and Duke’s A, Virginia’s B captured third place with a time of 13:20.4.

The victorious Varsity Eight was made up of seniors Taylor Leonard, Jo Gurman, Ellen Pate, Erin Briggs, Georgia Ratcliff and coxswain Colette Lucas-Conwell, as well as juniors Alice Darry and Jane Hudson and sophomore Heidi Long.

The Cavaliers also dominated in the Varsity Four race, claiming the top spot and five of the top seven times. Virginia’s Varsity Four A — made up of Lucas-Conwell, Ratcliff, Briggs, Long and Pate — took first with a time of 14:24.3, defeating second-place Duke by over 28 seconds. Virginia’s B, C and D took third, fourth and fifth, respectively, while their E took seventh.

With the conclusion of the fall season, the Cavaliers now head into the winter indoor training season and will return to the water with the beginning of the spring season in March to pursue a third NCAA championship.

Local Savings

Puzzles
Hoos Spelling

Latest Podcast

All University students are required to live on Grounds in their first year, but they have many on and off-Grounds housing options going into their second year. Students face immense pressure to decide on housing as soon as possible, and this high demand has strained the capacities of both on and off-Grounds accommodations. Lauren Seeliger and Brandon Kile, two third-year Cavalier Daily News writers, discuss the impact of the student housing frenzy on both University students and the Charlottesville community.