The Boat Races 2015

The Boat Races 2015

The Boat Race is a side-by-side rowing competition between the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge. First held in 1829, the race takes place on the 4.2-mile Championship Course, between Putney and Mortlake on the River Thames in south-west London. For the first time in the history of the event, the men’s, women’s and both reserves’ races were all held on the Tideway. In the main men’s race, umpired by the six-time Blue Boris Rankov, Oxford won by six and a half lengths in a time of 17 minutes 34 seconds.

About The Boat Races 2015 in brief

Summary The Boat Races 2015The Boat Race is a side-by-side rowing competition between the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge. First held in 1829, the race takes place on the 4. 2-mile Championship Course, between Putney and Mortlake on the River Thames in south-west London. For the first time in the history of the event, the men’s, women’s and both reserves’ races were all held on the Tideway. In the main men’s race, umpired by the six-time Blue Boris Rankov, Oxford won by six and a half lengths in a time of 17 minutes 34 seconds, taking the overall record in the event to 81–79 in Cambridge’s favour. The women’s reserve race, held the day before, saw Oxford’s Osiris race against Cambridge’s Blondie. Oxford went into the race as reigning champions, having won the 2014 race by four lengths, with Cambridge leading 41–28 overall. The BBC sports broadcaster Eleanor Oldroyd suggested that scheduling the races on the same course and day was a game-changing move for female sport. The television presenter Clare Balding opted to cover the women’s race instead of the Grand National, claiming that the combined rowing event would have a “ripple effect all across the world” The 2015 Grand Grand National was held at the London headquarters of BNY Mellon, with the race taking place at 5:50pm on the evening of the 11th April. As Oxford had won the previous race, it was Cambridge’s responsibility to offer the traditional challenge to the Dark Blues.

To that end, Alexander Leichter and Caroline Reid, presidents of the Cambridge boat clubs, challenged Constantine Lastoulis and Anastasia Chastasia to offer to take on the role of Umpires. The race was won by the former Light Blues, Simon Harris, who oversaw the races in 1982 and 1983 and oversaw the 1982 Women’s races in 1983. The Boat Race took place on 11 April 2015 at 4:05pm, and was broadcast live on BBC1 and BBC2. It was part of the sponsorship deal with Newton Investment Management that mandated the women’s race to be rowed on theSame course, same prize money, same BBC TV coverage, to an expected audience of 100 million people. The Women’s race first took place in 1927, but on at least two occasions in the interwar period, the women competed on the Thames between Chiswick and Kew. The men’s and women’s races took place at the Henley Boat Races along the 2,000-metre course, with Oxford’s Isis winning by three lengths, and Cambridge’s Goldie winning by 15 lengths. It is the first year that all three races have been held on same day and on same course along the Tideways. The final race of the Boat Race was held on 15 April 2015, at 5.50pm, with men’s reserves’ race half an hour later and the men�s race a further half-hour after that at 5;50pm.