- 9 Aug 08, 08:04 AM
"British rowing losing grip", shouted a China Daily headline this week - not a question, a statement.
It was above an interview with Steve Williams, the only member of the 2004 gold medal-winning coxless four to still be in the boat in Beijing.
The general tone of the piece was that without the gold-laden heroes of yesteryear, Team GB's hopes in the rowing regatta had sprung a leak.
That withering analysis followed another underwhelming assessment of our prospects from Sports Illustrated.
The highly-respected US publication made podium predictions for all 302 events in Beijing and pencilled Britain in for a gold, a silver and a bronze in the rowing - one less than British Rowing's four-medal target.
Three medals ain't bad, especially if at least one of them is a nugget, but it is hardly Rule Britannia material, is it?
We won four in Athens and plenty in international events in the years since - shouldn't we be looking for a famous five, a super six or perhaps even a seven up?
And if we're seriously thinking about finishing fourth in the medal table in London next time around the Olympic block, aren't backward moves (even in rowing) a bad thing, particularly with all this lottery lucre floating about?
So it was with these thoughts swirling around my head, that I took the trip out to the rowing venue. It was perhaps the best decision I've made since arriving.
First, Shunyi is lovely.

If you can ignore the six-lane toll road that takes you out there and the enormous brewery (whose chimneys were still belching beery burps into the air when I drove past) just down the road from the lake, it is almost countryside.
Second, having shared conference facility space with the cream of the world's press corps (full-fat, mostly) for five days, it was great to actually be outside, surrounded by strapping specimens in damp lycra.
And third, rowers are really very nice.
Between the front gate and the main stand I passed two Aussie scullers, an Italian quartet of some description, five Poles and three huge Yanks from the men's eight.
I asked them all the same daft questions - "How's it going?" "What's the lake like?" "Seen any British rowers?" - and they all stopped to chat ("great", "great" and "yes", were their answers, by the way).
But they weren't the questions I really wanted answered.
For those questions, only GB rowers would do, which meant I was pretty relieved when I opened the door of a grey Nissen hut behind the media stand and found almost half the British team sitting about waiting to be asked stuff.
So, lads and lasses, what's the mood in the camp like? Are we going to win more than three medals? Who are you most worried about? Who did you vote for in the flag-bearer vote? What are you reading?
I'll spare you a full run-down but the good news is the mood is universally good, we will win more than three medals (with all the usual provisos), it varies from boat to boat but the Chinese are a concern, slalom canoeist Campbell Walsh got a lot of love in the ballot and books range from Bruce Parry's Tribe to "what's a book?".
But the man I really wanted to ask about where the British rowing team was in relation to its regatta rivals was performance director David Tanner (a man the team referred to as "our headmaster").
So David, what do you think about the China Daily headline and SI's medal prediction? Are we on the slide?
"Really?" he said. "I hadn't heard that.
"Well, I think some people are going to be looking a bit stupid in a week's time."
He didn't need to add that it wouldn't be him and his rowers.
The bottom line, however, is this is the first British team to go to an Olympics without a recognised star, somebody who has managed to bridge the periphery sport gap and make a mark in the mainstream media.
That does not, however, mean the team is not packed with talent and proven performers on the world stage. There are potential Pinsents and Redgraves in this bunch, they just need a bigger stage to prove it.
Well, they'll get one here.
The Shunyi venue, which holds 37,000 fans along its 2km length, is a picture and the rowing regatta is perfectly poised to set many of the Olympic jungle's biggest beasts against one another.
Most of the nations with top-10 pretensions in the medal table will need to pick up trinkets here.
In terms of British hopes (and future mainstream stars), I like the look of Zac Purchase and Mark Hunter in the lightweight double sculls. They won all three World Cup events this year and talk a good game.
The women's quad, stroked (not like that) by Katherine Grainger, have a superb shot of becoming the first British female crew to win Olympic gold, and the men's eight, buoyed by their recent YouTube hit, are right up for the scrap in the sport's showpiece event.
In fact, every British rower I spoke to said they were in with a serious shout, and they sounded like they meant it. And indeed the man who set the benchmark for them all to match, Steve Redgrave (working for BBC TV covering the rowing), reckons the team may have a chance in up to eight or nine finals.
Keep a close eye on our women's sculls pairing, Anna Bebbington and Elise Laverick - Anna is healthy again and they're convinced they can take down their Chinese rivals.
So is British rowing losing grip? Nah, it's lost a few legends but it remains a star factory and it should be about to deliver its next batch.
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Comments
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I certainly don't think we have lost it in rowing. Some of the heats may have been a bit hairy to watch this morning, and some of the boats may still be relatively unfamiliar with one another surely class and pedigree never really go away?
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I wish the BBC commentators would do two things:
1. Stop commenting on the former medical problems of our team. These are begining to sound like excuses for loosing. The athletes themselves are bad enough.
2. As well as giving the rowing club that the individuals belong to could they also tell us where these people are from please. Most of the general public do not know the location of the clubs.
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@PhilipNew - Leander is in Henley, Thames RC is in Putney. Most of the rest are self-explanatory.
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I must confess that I have been (along with others I am sure) lobbying for a long time to ensure that the commentators do try to mention the clubs every now and again.
I am very pleased that they have now got into this habit. It's good to give credit where it's due and also to help viewers realise that there is rowing life beyong Oxford and Cambridge.
London RC is perhaps the other one that is not obvious - like Thames RC, LRC is in Putney.
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regarding clubs, I've found the numerous mentions of the clubs by Gary Herbert a little annoying,....not when they are local clubs like Wallingford etc, but when the eight is named with Leander as the club for 6 of the crew, it tells the audience nothing. Leander rowers rarely actually come from Henley. What would be nice and informative is information about where the competitors actually grew up, and where they learned to row. This would give people more of an idea of the geographical spread of competitors, hailing from all parts of Britain, and an idea of where one can go to learn to row, should you be inspired by the fantastic performances our team are putting in.
As for us getting only 3 rowing medals (!), we have so many boats through to the A finals, I'm sure it's more than we had in Athens and Sydney. 3 golds might be nearer the mark, with maybe a sprinkling of other colours too?
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Garry and Dan have all that information in the biogs in the GB Rowing presspack should they choose to use it. I agree that they probably should.
I still think it's better than it was a few years ago. It used to be that the only clubs every mentioned were:
1) Leander (Garry: "That's my old club")
2) Oxford University (Dan: "I used to coach there")
Now at least the likes of Molesey, London, Thames, Marlow, Wallingford etc are now getting an occasional credit.
These clubs and others put money and effort into trying to help promising athletes make the jump to the national squad. I think it's right that they get a namecheck.
They've been doing it for years on the athletics and swimming commentary: Birchfield Harriers, Loughborough Uni etc often get mentions.
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Please to be taking note Matt, in rowing the oars are referred to as sculls rather than skulls. Though the latter would make for some amusment, especially if we could have a choice on who was to be decapitated for the privilege.
Rowers are generally a nice bunch - it's having crewmates that does it. Anyone who sets himself up as being a bit better than the rest swiftly gets brought back into the pack and reminded that that there's no I in team.
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Only 3 medals? From the look of the heats and semi's I think we're on for a lot more! Pretty much every boat we've got in the A-Finals has a chance at getting a medal. I think we're going to see a few golds for team GB here, and along with sailing and cycling this is going to be one of our most successful sports at these games.
I'm tipping the men's fours, the men's eights, the men's lightweight double-sculls and the women's quad sculls to come good and grab us gold!
Maybe I'm being optimistic, but we've looked good out on the water this week!
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Doh! Apologies bowsider5, I see it's fixed now (cheers sub) but I'll take your word for it. I promise I did actually know that one but these things happen. Never again, though. I promise. I'm up there again tomorrow and fully expect to hear my first God Save the Queen. Twice would be nice, three times even better.
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