The official crews for the 2017 Cancer Research UK Boat Races were announced today. The crews who will take to the water on the 2nd April were revealed at the Francis Crick Institute in a combined event.
The 163rd Boat Race will see Cambridge, weighing in at 93.5kg per man, start as the heavier of the two men's crews, with Oxford weighing in at 90.2kg per man. Cambridge are also taller than their opponents, reaching 194cm per man compared to Oxford's 191cm. Oxford are the older of the two boats though, with an average age of 27 years as opposed to Cambridge at 24.
The Cancer Research UK Boat Race competitors cover six nations, with American, Canadian, Australian, French, Dutch and British representation. Eight of the eighteen athletes hail solely from the UK, although six of these will be competing for Oxford - the Dark Blues have one American, in Matthew O'Leary, and one Dutch athlete in Olivier Siegelaar. The 30-year-old becomes the 5th Dutchman to earn a Blue and has also represented the Netherlands at two Olympic Games. William Warr, who will be sitting in the bow-seat for Oxford, becomes only the 3rd Blue to represent both universities, having competed for Cambridge in 2015.
Abingdon School are extremely well represented within the Oxford Blue Boat, with three alumni on-board. Brothers Jamie and Oliver Cook make up two of these athletes, with Jamie returning for his third Boat Race. Oliver has previously competed for the Great Britain senior team at international level.
Cambridge are more diverse, with four Americans and a Canadian whilst stroke Henry Meek has dual British Australian nationality. Meek maintains a long tradition of Geelong Grammar School alumni competing in the Boat Race, although he is the first for 52 years. Hugo Ramambason will be the 1st French British Blue since 2011 and only the 3rd Frenchman of any kind to compete in the Boat Race.
Cambridge contain two returning Blues, including President Lance Tredell, whilst Oxford have three. OUBC President Michael DiSanto raced and won for OUBC in 2014 and 2015, before taking a year's break to compete at the Rio Olympic Games for the USA.
Once again, Cambridge are the heavier of the two women's crews, tipping the scales at 74kg per woman compared to Oxford at 70.1kg. The height difference is around 2 inches per athlete, with Cambridge at 177cm per woman and Oxford at 173cm.
The women's crews are slightly more diverse, with eight nationalities represented across the two boats. Oxford have athletes from Canada, South Africa, New Zealand, America and the UK, whilst Cambridge contain Irish, Canadian, American, New Zealand, French, Australian and British rowers. Ashton Brown, President of CUWBC and returning for her third Boat Race, will sit in the bow seat for Cambridge whilst Myriam Goudet of France will looks to record her first Boat Race win in her second attempt. The crew will be steered by Matthew Holland, who steered Westminster School to successive titles at the National Schools' Regatta in 2015 and 2016.
Claire Lambe, who will sit at 3 for the Light Blues, raced in the lightweight double for her native Ireland at the Rio Olympic Games, whilst Holly Hill returns to the Boat Race program after a year's absence. She earned her first Blue in 2015 as part of the first CUWBC crew to compete with Oxford on the championship course.
Oxford have a completely fresh crew this year to match the fact that coach Ali Williams is also in her inaugural year as head of the OUWBC program. Harriet Austin, who hails from New Zealand, competed internationally for her home country in the women's eight back in 2010, whilst Flo Pickles represented Great Britain at the U23 World Championships last summer. At 34, Emily Cameron is the oldest athlete in this year's Boat Races across all four crews and has a long history of international representation for Canada.
Oxford's average age is 25 years and Cambridge are a year older at 26.
The 163rd Boat Race and The 72nd Women's Boat Race will take place on Sunday 2nd April 2017. The Cancer Research UK Women's Boat Race will start at 16:35, with The Cancer Research UK Boat Race an hour later at 17:35.