Cambridge University Women’s Boat Club is looking to appoint a paid Head Coach for the 2011 Henley Boat Race and beyond. The role will involve: developing and leading a team of coaches in delivering a complete rowing programme, providing operational and logistical support to the club throughout the rowing season and representing and promoting the interests of the club within Cambridge and the wider rowing community. The contract would cover the 2010/11 academic year, however the nature and timing of the Henley Boat Race biases the input of the head coach towards the period from September to April. The Club expects to train for 6 days each week during that period, including a 7 day winter training camp at the beginning of January. Interested applicants should contact Simon (senior-treasurer@cuwbc.org) with a cv. Full job description provided on request. Applicants should be based in Cambridge or the surrounding area.
CUWBC looking to appoint Head Coach for 2011 HBR
June 27th, 2010 | Posted by in CUWBC - (Comments Off)After suffering three disappointing losses at the Henley Boat Races, we are happy to report that CUWBC showed a strong performance at the British Universities & College Sports (BUCS) Price Waterhouse Coopers Rowing Regatta. With 4,000 student rowers competing, it is the largest student regatta in Europe.
The CUWBC VIII, made up of the former lightweight crew made it all the way to the finals. The Blondie IV+ even won gold medals, beating the OUWBC lightweights on the way. Congratulations!

May 3rd, 2010: The victorious Blondie IV+ at BUCS in Nottingham. (C) Matthew Bryan, (S) Sophie Machin, (3) Rebecca Pound, (2) Julia Fischer, (B) Stacey Hickson.
Make a fashion statement this spring and show your support for CUWBC. The design for our Henley Boat Race hoodies has now been finalised. If you would like to order one, get in touch with out publicity officer Claudia (cc410@cam.ac.uk) for more information on colours and prices.


You’re rowers at Cambridge, that sounds impressive. We’ve seen your men on TV. How can you need money?
The Cambridge University Women rowers train extremely hard, but we have nowhere near enough sponsorship to cover even a fraction of the expenses associated with training or racing. The day-to-day costs of travel to and from Ely where we train every morning, kit, race entries, transport to and from races, accommodation etc. all fall heavily on the shoulders of the rowers, most of whom are undergraduates with already stretched student loans. This financial burden, estimated at £1,200 per trialling year (September to March), is paid personally by each athlete as the financial sacrifice for their sport, their love of rowing, and to represent their university in the boat race.
It seems to be working though – what is the problem?
On top of the day-to-day costs of rowing for Cambridge, the week leading up to the Henley Boat Races represents a significant portion of this expenditure. Accommodation in Henley for the week leading up to the race, boating, racing kit, transport and other items directly related to the boat race cost each athlete a further £500. We already struggle to pay for the costs of training. so cannot hope to pay this for ourselves on top. Therefore, CUWBC has launched a fundraising campaign called ‘Sponsor-A-Seat’. The idea is simple: each athlete is hoping to raise £500 to cover the costs associated with Race Week.
We are hoping that family and friends of athletes, companies in around Cambridge and Henley or who feel an affinity with CUWBC, College funds and bursaries and others may be able to help us. CUWBC is wholly dependent on this generous support and we are extremely grateful for it.
What would I get out of it?
If you were so kind as to offer to help sponsor one of our athletes, your name or company’s name would feature on our website. Donations of £150 and above will have the donor mentioned in the official Henley Boat Races programme as well as featuring on the T-shirts worn by rowers in training. As our athletes are frequently undergraduates from a wide variety of backgrounds, these T-shirts will be visible on top-level athletes all over the country. Apart from this you would gain the immense gratitude of a whole club and the knowledge that you had made a great contribution to women’s rowing, no matter how small your donation. Every penny is greatly appreciated!

Are you eligible for Gift Aid?
Yes we are. Through its affiliation with the University of Cambridge, donations to CUWBC via the Cambridge Foundation are eligible for gift aid. In practice, this means that for every pound you donate, we receive £1.28 which is a 28% gain! It also means that if you are a higher rate taxpayer, you can claim back for yourself the difference between the higher rate of tax at 40% and the basic rate of tax at 20% on the value of your donation.
Why should I help?
The financial burden of rowing for the University is a major deterrent for aspiring rowers and returning Blues. On race day, every individual in a rowing eight is vital. Thus, every athlete who decides not to trial is a small advantage to Oxford. If we do not succeed in our Sponsor-A-Seat campaign, it will leave a debt behind for future years of triallists to cope with. This will incur further costs, discourage more strong and able College rowers from trialling for the University, and will be extremely detrimental to our long-term campaign against the Dark Blues.
I want to help. What can I do?
First of all, thank you! For even reading this far you have done a service to our cause. If you would like to help, please get in touch with the contacts below.
If you are a U.K. taxpayer, please make out cheques to ‘The Cambridge Foundation’ and fill in a Gift Aid form. You can also donate online via the Cambridge Foundation, which is safe and quick. Follow this link and click on Cambridge University Women’s Boat Club as the benefactor of your donation:
If you are not a U.K. taxpayer, please make out cheques to ‘CUWBC’.
For further information on the Sponsor A Seat Campaign, please contact Hannah Morgan.
Hannah Morgan
Clare College
Old Court
Trinity Lane
Cambridge
CB2 1TL
Mobile: 07812 198778
Email: hlm44@cam.ac.uk
For press inquiries, please contact our publicity officer Claudia Catacchio.
Office: 01223 500750
Mobile: 07706 147951
Email: cc410@cam.ac.uk
Thank you!
CUWBC spent a week on training camp in Soustons, France, from December 14th until the 21st. What was supposed to be training in warmer climates turned out to be rather on the arctic side, but spirits remained high.
Trial VIIIs was held on December 20th. The Blue Boat (“Hook”) came in first, followed by the Lightweights (“Line”), and Blondie (“Sinker”).

Icy conditions in Soustons.

Trial VIIIs.

Early morning.
The Blue Boat celebrates while cox Mat gets ready to oversee the rescue operation.
Faced by their opposing crews, Cambridge threw down the traditional Challenge to Oxford at a formal weigh-in and challenge ceremony at The River and Rowing Museum in Henley this morning (Tuesday 17th March) in front of the press and media.
With the Cambridge Blue Boat weighing in at over a stone heavier per crew member than Oxford and Blondie over 6lbs heavier and the warm spring sunshine looking to provide excellent water for racing on Sunday, the Challenges were accepted.
The Lightweight crews weigh in on Sunday 3 hours before their race with their racing rules requiring them to race below 59 kilos per crew member.
Umpire for the Boat Races will be Michael Williams, who coxed Goldie in 1972 and the Cambridge Blue Boat to a win in 1973; Trinity Hall; FISA Treasurer and Executive Committee and Steward of Henley Royal Regatta.
I can now confirm the schedule for race day, Sunday March 22nd 2009.
1.30pm Nephthys to row over
2.00pm Women’s Reserves – Osiris v. Blondie
2.30pm Lightweight Women’s Boat Race – OUWLRC v. CUWBC Lightweights
3.00pm Women’s Boat Race – OUWBC v. CUWBC
3.30pm Lightweight Men’s Boat Race – OULRC v. CULRC
4.30pm Trophies presented at Remenham Farm.
For details of coaches to and from Cambridge and tickets to the Boat Race Ball, please contact Louise Connell on vice-president@cuwbc.org.
The President and Officers of CUWBC are pleased to announce the crews that will race Oxford at Henley-on-Thames on Sunday 22nd March 2009.
Blue Boat:
| Bow: | Fionnuala Ratcliffe+ | Clare |
| 2: | Evgenia Ilyinskaya+ | Darwin |
| 3: | Jennifer Burrows | Magdalene |
| 4: | Susannah Cass | Magdalene |
| 5: | Hermione Tuck | Magdalene |
| 6: | Anna Railton | Pembroke |
| 7: | Katie Cranleigh-Swash+ | Queens’ |
| Stroke: | Harriet Eldred+ (President) | Newnham |
| Cox: | Stephanie Warrillow * | Emmanuel |
Lightweights:
| Bow: | Anne O’Leary | Downing |
| 2: | Elizabeth Polgreen | Downing |
| 3: | Sarah Lilley | Fitzwilliam |
| 4: | Rachel Smith | Magdalene |
| 5: | Mary Björkegren | Christ’s |
| 6: | Jennifer Davenport# | St Edmund’s |
| 7: | Sarah Allen# (Lightweight Captain) | Peterhouse |
| Stroke: | Edwina Surtees | Christ’s |
| Cox: | Jessica Temple | Fitzwilliam |
Blondie:
| Bow: | Stephanie Caird | Clare |
| 2: | Eva-Maria Hempe | St John’s |
| 3: | Katie Wood+ | Girton |
| 4: | Nicola Pocock | Clare |
| 5: | Laura Creek+ | Pembroke |
| 6: | Rachel Croft+ | Trinity |
| 7: | Joanne Gaston | Caius |
| Stroke: | Hayley Simmonds | Newnham |
| Cox: | Chris Burfiend+ | Churchill |
Spares:
| Helena Matthews | Pembroke |
| Emma Smith | St Edmund’s |
| Sabrina Stewart+ | Caius |
| Christopher Williamson | Churchill |
* previous Blue
+ previous Blondie Colours
# previous Lightweight
Cambridge University Women’s Boat Club: Sponsor-A-Seat Campaign to raise money for the 2009 Henley Boat Races
You’re rowers at Cambridge, that sounds posh. We’ve seen your men on TV. How can you need money?
The Cambridge University Women rowers train extremely hard, but we have nowhere near enough sponsorship to cover even a fraction of the expenses associated with training or racing. The day-to-day costs of travel to and from Ely where we train every morning, kit, race entries, transport to and from races, accommodation etc. all fall heavily on the shoulders of the rowers, most of whom are undergraduates with already stretched student loans. This financial burden, estimated at £1,200 per trialling year (September to March), is paid personally by each athlete as the financial sacrifice for their sport their love of rowing and to represent their university in the boat race.
It seems to be working though; what is the problem?
On top of the day-to-day costs of rowing for Cambridge, the week leading up to the Henley Boat Races themselves represents a significant portion of this expenditure. Accommodation in Henley for the week leading up to the race, boating, racing kit, transport and other items directly related to the boat race cost each athlete a further £500. We already struggle to pay for the costs of training. so cannot hope to pay this for ourselves on top.
Sponsor-A-Seat
Therefore, CUWBC has launched a fundraising campaign called ‘Sponsor-A-Seat’. The idea is simple: each athlete is hoping to raise £500 to cover the costs associated with Race Week. We are hoping that family and friends of athletes, companies in around Cambridge and Henley or who feel an affinity with CUWBC, College funds and bursaries and others may be able to help us. CUWBC is wholly dependent on this generous support and we are extremely grateful for it.
What would I get out of it?
If you were so kind as to offer to help sponsor one of our athletes, your name or company’s name would feature on our website. Donations of £150 and above will have the donor mentioned in the official Henley Boat Races programme as well as featuring on the T-shirts worn by rowers in training. As our athletes are frequently undergraduates from a wide variety of backgrounds, these T-shirts will be visible on top-level athletes all over the country. Apart from this you would gain the immense gratitude of a whole club and the knowledge that you had made a great contribution to Women’s Rowing, no matter how small your donation. Every penny is greatly appreciated!
Are you eligible for Gift Aid?
Yes we are. Thorugh its affiliation with the University of Cambridge, donations to CUWBC via the Cambridge Foundation are eligible for gift aid. In practice, this means that for every pound you donate, we receive £1.28 which is a 28% gain! It also means that if you are a higher rate taxpayer, you can claim back for yourself the difference between the higher rate of tax at 40% and the basic rate of tax at 20% on the value of your donation.
Why should I help?
The financial burden of rowing for the University is a major deterrent for aspiring rowers and returning Blues. On race day, every individual in a rowing eight is vital. Thus, every athlete who decides not to trial is a small advantage to Oxford. If we do not succeed in our Sponsor-A-Seat campaign, it will leave a debt behind for future years of triallists to cope with. This will incur further costs, discourage more strong and able College rowers from trialling for the University, and will be extremely detrimental to our long-term campaign against the Dark Blues.
I want to help. What can I do?
First of all, thank you! For even reading this far you have done a service to our cause. If you would like to help, contact Anna Railton who is at six in the 2009 Blue Boat and in charge of Sponsor-A-Seat this year.
If you are a U.K. taxpayer, please make out cheques to ‘The Cambridge Foundation’ and fill in a Gift Aid form
If you are not a U.K. taxpayer, please make out cheques to ‘CUWBC’.
Cheques may be sent to:
A. Railton
Pembroke College
Cambridge
CB2 1RF
If you have any further questions please contact lightweight-captain@cuwbc.org or president@cuwbc.org
Thank you!
The run up to Four’s Head has not been as smooth as I might have hoped, with injury and illness spreading amongst the squad. However we arrived in Putney to rig the boats ready to show that we had made a good start to the trialling year.
Conditions on the day were challenging; strong wind and rain meant that the water was quite choppy in places, which provided a sharp reminder of the choppy conditions which we are expecting at Henley next March.
I was racing in CUW III, along with the bow girl and cox from my Blondie crew, and two new triallists. There was a long wait at the start before our category (WS3) was set off. The race started well, we had a strong solid start and soon settled into our race rhythm. Before long we started to overtake the crews in front of us. We came passed Cambridge 99′s III easily, before inching passed the Oxford Brooks crew which had started in front of us. When we crossed the finish line we were confident that we had rowed well, but were slightly concerned that we could have pushed a little bit harder.
When the results were published, we were very pleased to see that we had one our category, beating all of the other Cambridge fours and five of the seven Oxford fours in the process.
Click here (http://www.hor4s.org.uk/results.htm)for full results.








