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Unfortunately
for college sailing, the best means of recruiting prospective
college sailors might be the monthly rankings that appear in this
magazine. Since the sport gets very little publicity, and many
college sailing teams are run on a shoestring with little time
or money for active recruiting, the Sailing World collegiate rankings
are a primary source of information about college sailing programs.
Because of this, many up-and-coming scholastic sailors mistakenly
think that to get the most out of their college sailing experience,
they must attend one of the few powerhouse programs.
"The
perception among junior sailors is, if you're a good sailor and
want to be big in college sailing, you've got to go to one of
the top few schools," says Dan Winters, the head coach
at Christopher Newport. "The names that keep showing
up in Sailing World in the top 20 are the ones on the kids' minds."
On
the surface, the evidence seems to support this point of view.
Sailing varsity for Tufts, Charleston, or St. Mary's is about
as close as one can get to a guaranteed spot on the Intercollegiate
Yacht Racing Association All-America list. From 1995 through 1999,
those three schools earned a third (39 of 115) of the All-America
honors given out by the ICYRA and won 11 national titles.
It's
important to remember, however, that each of these schools annually
attracts a bevy of junior rock stars, some of whom sit on the
bench for three years before earning a chance to start or who
grow disillusioned long before they get the chance to strut their
stuff in an intersectional. It takes only four good sailors
to win a national coed or women's dinghy title, and there are
over 150 schools recognized by the ICYRA, collegiate sailing's
governing body. Many of these schools are just one or two great
sailors away from a top-10 national ranking.
In
addition, the values of college sailing go well beyond the results.
Team trophies and individual honors are, in many cases, a small
part of the overall experience.
As
a team captain and high-school team racing champion at Tabor Academy,
Andy Horton had the skills and grades to get into and sail for
most schools in the country. However, having grown up in northern
Vermont and carrying a fairly thin junior-sailing résumé, he fell
just below the radar of the few college coaches with the resources
to recruit incoming talent. Rather than fight his way through
the pack at a power school, Horton took a chance on a fledgling
program and attended Hobart and William Smith Colleges in upstate
New York.
"I
like to work hard, and Scott [Iklé, HWS coach] said he could help
out," Horton says. "I thought I'd have a better chance
of doing what I wanted to do than if I went to a place where success
is expected." Horton, who's now in the midst of an Olympic
Soling campaign, sailed nearly every intersectional regatta HWS
over for four years. He earned All-America honors three times
and finished his career with a third-place finish in A Division
at the 1998 Dinghy Nationals. He also played a key role in
building what's now one of the stronger teams in the country,
an experience that would've been difficult to find at a school
that's been ranked in the top 20 for the past decade.
This
is what lies behind the rankings and race results: the part of
college sailing that's rarely written about but is for many the
most memorable. Collegiate sailing has always depended on student
involvement in the day-to-day operations both of individual teams
and the ICYRA as a whole. Initially this was a necessity. Few
teams had the money to hire a coach, even on a part-time basis,
so everything from boat maintenance to regatta scheduling to running
practices was done by the team members. During the last few decades,
sailing has edged closer to other college sports in terms of funding
and coaching. Even so, some of the programs with the funding
to be run like a Division I football team still cling to the cooperative
spirit upon which college sailing was built.
"Our
team captains run tryouts," says coach Adam Werblow, whose
St. Mary's College team is one of the better-supported in the
nation. "It's our team captains who decide what's going to
happen there. I do this because of my experience as a student
at Connecticut College. We were a student-run team, and I thought
there was some value in some of the things we did at Conn. I wanted
to combine the best elements of both."
For
many teams this autonomy—though at St. Mary's, Werblow says he
still makes the big decisions—is not a choice. Countless collegiate
sailing teams are run virtually independent of any "adult"
leadership, leaving the success or failure of the squad in the
hands of the team members. Of course, this does have a downside.
Numerous teams, like the Colby squad of the late 1980s, that left
its JY-15s moored in Great Pond during a typically frigid Maine
winter, have faded or disappeared completely because the energetic
souls who kept the programs going graduated, leaving the teams
in the hands of ill-prepared or unmotivated successors.
But
there are as many triumphs as there are failures. Stories abound
of programs in which victory is measured not in medals or postseason
honors but in personal growth, long-lasting friendships, and sunny
fall days spent on the water. (Colby has resurrected its program
and, despite the misgivings of the administration, which seemed
to hold the current students responsible for incidents that happened
when they were still learning their multiplication tables, recently
raised enough money to buy a fleet of six used Larks.)
In
Peter Beardsley's first semester at Amherst College in Amherst,
Mass., the sailing team had one boat, held three practices, and
attended one regatta. This past fall, just two years later, the
Amherst squad practiced regularly in a fleet of eight 420s and
attended more than 20 regattas, including four intersectionals.
Beardsley, who is both team captain and volunteer coach, says
he spends about 30 hours a week running the team and often has
to sacrifice his own practice time to help instruct his teammates.
Breaking into the top five in the New England Intercollegiate
Sailing Association and qualifying for nationals is a difficult
task, and Amherst isn't likely to reach that level before Beardsley,
a junior, dons a cap and gown and walks across a stage and into
the real world. But the native of New Rochelle, N.Y., has long
since realized there's more to success than a spot in the rankings
or a trip to nationals. In fact, what he's learned running the
team may prove to be more helpful in the future than a spot on
the All-America list.
"Sometimes
it can be frustrating out there because we're sailing against
Dartmouth, Connecticut College, and Boston College, and they have
great programs," Beardsley says. "I don't think we're
ever going to have that caliber of team here. But all I want is
for the people who race to at least constantly improve. The thing
I looked for last spring was, I always wanted to do better in
the last race than in the first race. If I had gone to a larger
school that was more established, sure I would've developed more
as a racer, but I don't think I'd be as proud of what I've accomplished.
I don't know if I would've developed as much personally."
Gilly
Chamberlain, the team captain for the University of New Orleans,
agrees. Chamberlain briefly attended the Coast Guard Academy,
and he does, on occasion, pine for the seemingly unlimited funding
of the Academy as well as the top-flight, easily accessible competition
in NEISA. But he's also quite proud of the work he's done at UNO.
Just three years old, the team qualified for two national championships
last year—sloops and dinghies—and spent a few months at No. 20
in the Sailing World rankings.
"What
bothered me was that a lot of guys who got All-American last year
were from NEISA, and I was up there with those guys," Chamberlain
says. "I would've been a good sailor, but I wouldn't have
known how to run a team. I was really dependent on Al [Kruger,
USCGA's head coach]. I've learned so much about management. If
you want to get something done in a business, you've got to deal
with red tape."
Though
the team receives no regular funding from the school, Chamberlain
was recently able to convince the UNO student government— "a
lot of mean and ugly faces," he recalls—to contribute
$21,000 toward a fleet of six new 420s. Chamberlain's struggle
is typical of what teams have to deal with in the South-Eastern
Intercollegiate Sailing Association, which is comprised essentially
of schools from Texas and Louisiana. Almost all of the teams are
student run, and funding is an annual battle, though of late it
is a battle that a number of SEISA schools have been winning.
In addition to UNO's new fleet, Tulane, Baylor, Texas A &
M-Galveston, and Texas all have new boats.
Performancewise,
the schools in SEISA, like those in the Midwest (MCSA) and the
Northwest (NWICYRA), are still lagging a step behind the better-funded
teams in New England (NEISA), the Middle Atlantic (MAISA), the
South Atlantic (SAISA), and California and Hawaii (PCIYRA), many
of which have consistent coaching and varsity status.
While
the view from the back of the fleet may not be so much fun at
nationals, there are many sailors in the Midwest, Northwest, and
South who are very happy with their situations.
"I've
enjoyed the chance to sail Midwest regattas, which are more laid
back and more oriented toward meeting the people in your district,"
says Kathleen Clark, a junior at Michigan. "But we also do
a lot of traveling out East which gives you more fierce competition
and strengthens your team." Clark says she was slightly burned
out on sailing when she entered college and unsure of whether
she even wanted to sail at the college level. But she found the
mellower Midwest attitude was a perfect match for the amount of
time and effort she wanted to commit to the team.
"I
really wanted to go to Boston College. I had gotten in and talked
to the sailing coach, but it was too much money," Clark says.
"I'm actually really glad I went to Michigan. If I went out
there, I would've been under too much pressure to sail, and I
wouldn't have had the time to get involved in other things."
The
parity is also excellent in the Midwest, perhaps as good as any
district in the nation. Last spring, five different schools qualified
for the six berths at nationals allotted to the MCSA. Notre Dame
was the only team to earn a double.
"The
Midwest sticks together, but at the same time there are huge rivalries
between the schools," says Evangeline Callahan, a 1997
graduate of Old Dominion and a former volunteer coach for Northwestern.
"They love to race, they love to sail, and they love to have
a good time. They do it in horrible conditions, so they might
as well be having a good time."
The
sacrifices willingly endured for the sport, from routinely sailing
in near-freezing temperatures in NEISA and the MCSA to driving
15 hours each weekend to get to a regatta in SEISA and on the
West Coast, might be the best measure of how much fun, enjoyment,
and personal satisfaction can be gained from college sailing.
College
sailing definitely requires some effort, often a lot of effort.
For the smaller programs, this effort is rarely rewarded with
medals or individual accolades. But few people will deny that
even the intangible rewards are well worth the commitment.
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