HAWK TALK

March 2016

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111 E very crew calls for a coxswain and Katie Brown has spent her collegiate career learning and perfecting that role for the University of Iowa women's rowing program. Brown, a high school soccer player who joined the Hawkeye rowing team without experience as a freshman, was brought along by UI novice coach Julie Quoss and former coxswain Sheila Rinozzi. e pair showed her the ropes and she has progressed into a coach-in-the-boat for Iowa's top crew. "My main goals are to keep the rowers on task and execute what the coaches want throughout the race, because they can't be physically with us," Brown said. "I'm part coach, part cheerleader. I encourage the team and get them to move together so we can be successful." With graduation on the horizon and coxswain duties up for grabs next year, the senior knows it's time to teach others how to be a coach-in-the- boat. Freshmen coxswain Georgia Sanderson and Faith Wieland have become Brown's understudies. Neither had prior knowledge of rowing, as Sanderson was a gymnast and diver and Faith was a runner in high school. Brown taking them under her wing and working through on-water training in Texas Hill Country recently, has proven to be invaluable experiences for the rookie coxswains. "It's like submersion," Sanderson said. "ey throw you in there and you have to learn everything at once, but it's really beneficial. I've learned to stay calm under pressure. You're trying to coach eight women through a race and each one of them wants to know how they're doing and what they should fix to get to where we need to be." "(Texas Hill Country) was a good environment," Wieland said. "e coaches were there to help us learn and all the rowers had good feedback for us throughout the trip. is was our first experience with the top boats, but they were helpful and knew what to say to us." When it comes to their growth, both give credit to their mentor. "Katie is great to work with and helpful," Wieland said. "We came in this fall not knowing the sport, and she's taken us under her wing. She always comes to us and helps us learn what to say on the water." "Katie is super helpful," Sanderson said. "If I'm struggling with anything, I can go to her no matter what. Without her I wouldn't be the coxswain I am today. She's helped me focus and decide what everyone needs to do in the boat. I'm still learning, but I'm getting better." For Brown, being the leader in the boat has been fun, but it has also prepared her for her desired occupation as a special education coordinator. "It has taught me how to work with everyone, my coaches, teammates, athletic staff, and academic services, to make every individual grow," Brown said. "I'm going to use the skills I've learned as a coxswain for that in the future."

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