Rowing Program Makes Waves
Rowing Program Makes Waves
By Diane D'Amico
It was a season of âfirstsâ for 91ÊÓÆ”âs rowing program. After welcoming Coach John Bancheri as Stocktonâs first full-time rowing coach earlier in the season, the womenâs varsity eight team earned the first-ever Dad Vail Regatta medal by an Osprey varsity eight boat at the prestigious races May 10-11 on the Schuylkill River in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Bancheri said he realized the womenâs varsity eight team had a chance to perform well at the Dad Vail Regatta when the week before they did time trials on Lake Lenape with the menâs team. He was hoping to break an aggregate time of 7:20 and the womenâs varsity eight came in at 7:01.
âI was like âHoly smokes, we can do this,â â he said. And they did, winning a bronze medal with a time of 6:51.539, the first rowing medal in 21 years.
The Stockton women's team also rowed a varsity four boat that finished 12th overall and a novice four that took 17th place. The Stockton menâs club team had a good showing as well with the varsity four finishing second in the fifth final and the novice eight taking third in the third final.
Bancheri, who is working to build what he calls an âOsprey Navy," said the success of the team this year was a community effort of Stockton personnel and supporters. The team is young â mostly freshmen and sophomores, so they still have a lot to look forward to.
âDad Vail was a showcase for what we can be,â Bancheri said. âNo one expected much of us this year. But the team believed they could do it, and they did. I canât wait to see what we can do with a full year to train. Stockton has become a viable academic and athletic option for rowing.â
âMy goal in high school was always to row in the Dad Vail,â said freshman Michaela Pope.
âWe are the foundation to build to the goal,â said teammate Chloe Schulze.
Bancheri is an Atlantic City native who rowed for Atlantic City High School in the early 1970s. Since his arrival, the size of the womenâs rowing team has doubled. Team members come to 6 a.m. âergâ training sessions wearing T-shirts that say âThe Shape of Things to Come.â
âTo cap off a terrific season, Stockton Rowing is ranked 20th nationally in the most recent row2k Collegiate Rowing Poll for DIII and #121 for all rowing programs combined (DI, DII, DIII),â said Kevin McHugh, executive director of Athletics & Recreation. âWe are so proud of Coach Bancheri and the Osprey rowers on the amazing advancement of the program in less than four months.â
Bancheri is assisted by area coaches Joe Welsh and BJ Fox. Brad Cress continues as the menâs club coach.
A âRowing and Growingâ fund-raising event in March, honoring local rowing legend Stan Bergman, raised enough to purchase three new varsity eight boats and other equipment.
âWe are giving back to a community that supported us as adolescents and young adults,â said Karen Alton, granddaughter of Elizabeth Alton, a driving force behind Stocktonâs founding, whose family donated funds for two of the boats. âWith your help Stockton will win a national championship.â
The Stockton rowing program, both women and men, is based at the 91ÊÓÆ” Atlantic City, just steps from the beach and boardwalk. Stockton's rowers share the Atlantic City School District boathouse, a short walk from campus, and part of the University District.
âMy grandparents, Elizabeth and John, used to watch the boats rowing on the back bay, and we are part of the history of rowing in Atlantic City,â she said. âOur wish is that this will help develop a championship program.â
Alton also shared a message from her aunt about how Elizabeth Alton always strove to make the possible from the seemingly impossible. She challenged Stockton to see what could be possible for Stockton rowing and keep raising the bar.
Bancheri said building a national program will take community support and sponsorship.
âWe are doing things weâve never done before and we want them to help build it,â he said.
A 91ÊÓÆ” Rowing Advisory Committee has been formed.
Several businesses and supporters have already contributed to helping the team grow.
Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey also donated a boat, and other local supporters have included the Azeez Foundation, AtlantiCare, former Sen. Bill Gormley, Calvi Electric, Marathon Engineering and Environmental Services, George Miller, Margie and Jack Plackter, Dr. Francis Previti, Dr. David Smith and SOSH Architects.
Previti and Smith have been named honorary team physicians.
âMy mission is not just to win,â Bancheri said, âbut also to grow the spirit of rowing in the area.â
Stockton President Harvey Kesselman said the expansion of the rowing team is part of the Universityâs commitment to Atlantic City, where a new residential campus opened in Fall 2018. He said the first thing they did was to contact members of the local rowing community for advice and assistance.
âI pledged we would build a program we would be proud of, but we knew we couldnât do it alone,â Kesselman said at the event honoring Bergman. âWe need the support of our rowing community. We do have national level supporters.â
91ÊÓÆ” Rowing Advisory Committee
Stan Bergman, Joelle Bridgers, Rose Ann Cahill, Michael Chait, Ray DâAmico, Bill Gormley, Phil Guenther, Walter Johnson, John Kelley, George Miller, Maripat Perone, Sue Peterson, Jack Plackter, Rick Ricciardi, Alan Staller, John Strotbeck, Tom Sykes and Holly Zachowski