World IRC History
Posted by Concept2 News on the 13th of July 2005
The World Indoor Rowing Championship is also known as the Crash-B's. To find out why, and to help provide some background on the event, we got the organisers to say a few words.
"In the beginning, CRASH-B was a group of 1976-1980 US Olympic and World Team athletes who lurked on the Charles River, never rowing the same lineup twice, never practicing before a race, always jumping the start against Harvard and having a lot of fun too. The 1980 U.S. boycott of the Olympics was not fun though, and about the same time Concept 2 invented their later-named Model A rowing ergometer, the one with the bicycle wheel, a wooden handle and an odometer. The guys (and a few gals) of CRASH-B (Charles River All Star Has-Beens), led by the likes of Tiff Wood, Dick Cashin, Jake Everett and Holly Hatton, formed a fun little regatta of about twenty rowers in Harvard's Newell Boathouse, to break up the monotony of winter training.
"Within a few short years CRASH-B grew into the international world indoor rowing championships it is now. The regatta outgrew Newell, and then the IAB (the Indoor Athletic Building, now MAC, the Malkin Athletic Center), the RQAC (Radcliffe Quadrangle Athletic Center), moving to MIT's Rockwell Cage for many years. In 1995 the regatta moved to Harvard's Indoor Track Facility, perhaps three times the size of Rockwell Cage. And in 1997 CRASH-B moved to an even larger and ultra-modern facility, the Reggie Lewis Track and Field Center at Roxbury Community College.
"In the late 1980s, when Tiff Wood and his wife Kristy Aserlind moved to Seattle, Kurt Somerville, a member of the 1980 US Olympic Eight, took over as Commodore for Life.
"In the very beginning, the race was five miles on the Concept 2 Model A ergometer, which had an odometer and a bicycle wheel. From the introduction of the Model B in the mid-1980s through to 1995, the big race in mid-February was 2,500 meters on the new digital display, because the times were comparable even with the equipment change. To meet the specific training demands of international coaches who stress 6K and 2K rankings in the winter, starting with the 1996 World Indoor Rowing Championships the distance has been 2,000m."