The men and women of the Harvard sailing felt the wind in their sails this weekend as they competed in four regattas, which ended up being some of their strongest performances all year. With the Atlantic Coast Tournament next weekend, the team has one more chance to show what they’ve got on the water.
HAP MORE TEAM RACE
Many boats sailed in the Coast Guard’s regatta this weekend as two conferences met for the only team-race regatta of the fall season.
12 teams met for 72 rotations of one-on-one match ups on both days. In each rotation, three boats from each team competed and the aggregate lower score won.
“We usually do fleet racing, where we switch out sailors frequently,” junior Brian Drumm said. “Under this different format, it requires a lot of thinking and a lot of teamwork.”
Accompanying Drumm down to Connecticut this weekend was his twin brother Michael, sophomores Jacob Bradt, Andrew Mollerus and Sydney Karnovsky, and captain Isabel Ruane.
The Crimson finished Saturday on top with a 7-1 record and tied for first at the end of the second round. Harvard went home in second place with an 11-3 record and 78.6 percent winning percentage after losing the tiebreaker with Roger Williams University.
Brian DruMm touched upon the importance of teamwork.
“Usually what plagues a lot of teams is when one boat does poorly, and essentially loses the race for the team, it is very easy for the boat which makes the mistake to make the other boats very frustrated,” Drumm said. “That’s no good for the team dynamic and that would make it really hard for the team to move on and do well in the next race.”
Since teamwork is pivotal in this style of racing, one member of the Crimson had a solution.
“In order to limit the amount of tension we would have the people who were not racing, the people who were less frustrated by this event, discuss objectively on how the race went and how the team can improve,” Drumm said.
SECOND ESTER SISTER ANNUAL
Harvard came out in fifth place for this regatta held down in Newport, RI. Competing this weekend were 20 teams within the same conference.
In the A division, taking first with 55 points for Harvard was sophomore Marek Zaleski and freshman Emma Wheeler.
Zaleski mentioned that the coaches have been noticing a greater sense of anxiety from their sailors in the past few weeks, which limits the team from preforming at its greatest potential. The obvious example of this was the Crimson’s inability to qualify for the Atlantic Coast Championship last weekend.
Read more in Sports
Jacobson Leads Crimson to Overtime WinRecommended Articles
-
Harvard Struggles Through Four Regattas
-
Drumm Boys Sail To Their Own BeatTo the outside observer, his lifejacket color and wristwatch appear to be all that separate Harvard freshman sailor Brian Drumm from his identical twin Michael.
-
Sailing Season RecapAlthough nearly every other Harvard team has wrapped up its season, it is not yet over for the men and women of the Crimson sailing team, which qualified for ICSA National Semifinals by coming in ninth in the Coast Guard Alumni Bowl last month. This marks an improvement from last season, when the Crimson failed to qualify.
-
Sailing Takes 11th at Moody Trophy18 teams came out for this two-day inter-conference regatta hosted by the University of Rhode Island.
-
Warm-Water Sailors Adapt to Cambridge WeatherHeading out into the icy tundra that the Charles River Basin can be during the month of November is no easy task for even the most experienced cold weather New England sailors