Five young women at North Carolinaβs Saint Augustineβs University are making history. They will compete as the first historically Black university womenβs crew team, ever. βWe are trailblazers. We are literally Black history,β sophomore Breanna Dorway said. βIβm just really excited for whatβs in store for us.β Saint Augustineβs is a small liberal arts university established in 1867 by the Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina.
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Rowing first came to Saint Augustineβs as a virtual sports program in the School of Business, Management & Technology. There, Professor Mark Janas has introduced students to golf, motorsports and cycling that may have otherwise been unavailable at the school with an enrollment of nearly 1,000 students.
Rowing is not a cheap sport to participate in, which is why itβs more common at Ivy League institutions like Harvard and Yale. That is until the Howard University menβs crew team made history as the first HBCU crew team in the mid-1960s. Saint Augustineβs women do not pay to participate in the sport and will rely on fundraising to obtain the money they need to compete.
When it comes to training, the teamβs sessions are mostly indoors, where theyβve had to turn a dorm room into a training facility, complete with rowing machines connected to Bluetooth so coaches can track their movements. North Carolina State Universityβs club rowing team outfitted the Saint Augustineβs women with boats, rowing equipment and coaches to prepare them for competition. The team takes their practice to the water on weekends.
Kees Koupman is the teamβs volunteer coach.βIt is the opportunity to build something, to build a culture and teach new rowers,β Koupman said. βAnd this is really about accessibility to the sport.β Competition starts for the team in the fall, where they will compete in regattas through the American Collegiate Rowing Association.
The women of the Saint Augustineβs crew team got into the sport with no previous rowing experience. But they hope that by being trailblazers, they will inspire other women of color to get into the sport. βMaybe we can try this and introduce more people that look like us into a sport thatβs not made for us,β junior Mikhaya Hill said. βI wanted to be a part of that.β
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