London RC braced for redemption rematch in the Thames Challenge Cup
London RC reach the final of the Thames Challenge Cup for the first time since 2006
Credit: AllMarkOne
After heartbreak in last year鈥檚 semi-final of the Thames Challenge Cup, London RC have vanquished those demons after a dominant display in their semi-final. Racing against home favourites Leander Club, the men of the Tideway got their bow ball in front at the end of the island and never looked back as they comfortably dispatched Leander.
鈥淭he guys held their nerve in the head wind and executed what we鈥檝e been working on for the last few days of being in Henley and all season leading up to this,鈥 said Chief Coach Stu Heap.
鈥淚t鈥檚 pretty great to be there [in the final] and we鈥檙e halfway through what we want to try to achieve today which is getting the four club boats into the final. The Britannia crew did incredibly well against Marlow RC this morning.
鈥淭hey were qualifying as I was briefing the Thames Cup which was a challenge because there were people in both boats who are very close to each other, it鈥檚 been a great morning so far.鈥
London RC will face last year鈥檚 winners Thames RC in tomorrow鈥檚 final. Both clubs also won their semi-finals of the Britannia Challenge Cup and the Putney rivalry will reignite once more in 24 hours鈥 time.
Ahead of that match-up in the Thames Challenge Cup, Heap spoke about the importance of consistency. 鈥淸We can expect] more of the same, nothing different to what they鈥檝e done this week. It鈥檚 just another race so they just need to execute the race plan and trust in each other.鈥
Amongst all of the morning鈥檚 racing, the finalists of the Prince Albert Challenge Cup were decided. After knocking out all of the overseas competitors, the final four were some of the very best that British student rowing has to offer. The University of Bristol BC were brave in the opening stages of racing, jumping out to an early lead before the tide started to turn around Fawley. UL showed their class and prowess and timed their move to perfection, taking the lead with 500m to go and cruising to a berth in tomorrow鈥檚 final.
In the other semi-final, the 2016 and 2017 winners faced off against each other as Edinburgh University BC and Newcastle University BC once again went head-to-head. The Scots blasted out of the blocks and made a decisive move at the Barrier to break clear. A terrific sprint from the Blue Star as they passed the Progress Board was too little too late despite closing the gap from clear water to half a length as they came across the finish line.

It was also a great morning for members of the GB Rowing Team, representing their home clubs at this year鈥檚 Regatta. Lauren Henry outclassed Viktorija Senkut臈 to secure a spot in the final of the Princess Royal Challenge Cup. Henry is one of two scullers from Leicester RC who qualified for this year鈥檚 regatta, along with 21-year-old Lizzie Webster. The British Women鈥檚 Coxless Four were also in action racing as Leander Club and Reading University BC. The quartet came up against the second of two Dutch crews racing as Hollandia and put together a commanding performance to beat their opposition.
In the Prince Phillip Challenge Trophy, it was business as usual. Defending champions Headington School BC beat St. Edward鈥檚 School BC in a rematch of the Peabody Cup final at Henley Women鈥檚 Regatta. A win for Headington means that they will face Shiplake College BC who beat Australian school Kinross Wolaroi 40 minutes later. Tomorrow鈥檚 final should be a corker as Shiplake, the winners of the National Schools鈥 Regatta, look to bounce back after a shock defeat to Teddies at HWR.
In the penultimate race before the luncheon interval, it was a Grand performance from Cambridge University Boat Club in the Grand Challenge Cup. Racing Hollandia, they kept overlap with the Dutch for the whole race. Inches being taken and given on every stroke. Pushed all the way to the line, Hollandia stamped their name on a Sunday finals race by just 1/3 of a length.






