They did not qualify, however, because the Scouts' canoes were not the sculling skiffs required by the rules. |
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Rienks's international rowing career spanned five Olympic games and during that time he won medals in both sculling and sweep oar events. |
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Focuses on basic movements and orientation ability needed for swimming strokes, such as arm action, sculling and breathing. |
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Others may prove better when used with a frog kick or in sculling. |
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A true rowboat or sculling boat has an easy motion through the water and, most important, glides between strokes. |
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The term rowing refers to the use of a single oar grasped in both hands, while sculling involves the use of two oars, one grasped in each hand. |
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Undulations move along the body in propulsive waves that culminate, like oar sculling, in straight-line forward thrust. |
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Now, when you're fishing crab, there are days when you're coming across hundreds and thousands of the old harps just sculling together. |
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To get the sculling motion started, have swimmers move as if they're smearing finger paint on the top of the water. |
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The STAR program teaches synchro-specific skills such as sculling, flamingos and more. |
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Ensure athletes moving to the elite levels of rowing have strong and adaptable sculling skills. |
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Back crawl is introduced, along with sculling skills and whip kick on the back. |
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This hole was cut in the port side of the back of the boat to accommodate the sculling oar. |
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Suddenly I saw a large group of aircraft sculling along slightly above us to the right on an intersecting course at a range of 500-1000 meters. |
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The races are divided into sculling and sweep oar, with heavyweight and lightweight divisions. |
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Breathing, floating balancing, kicking and sculling are, to me, basic swimming skills? most of which are not taught at all or properly. |
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Each boat contains a crew of two and each crew rows an identical 7.1 metre boat that includes two sliding seats and the same sculling oars as used in standard rowing boats. |
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Anne Homa won women's S1 single sculls and Anna Mahlamaki won women's novice sculls in her first race in a sculling boat despite clipping the bank a few times. |
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An 'oar' is often referred to as a blade in the case of sweep oar rowing and as a scull in the case of sculling. |
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For example, in stationary sculling, have swimmers rest a toy on top of their tummy, and ask them to see if they can keep their animal buddy still! |
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At the stop, move laterally with a call in tension and a call in sculling. |
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The bow and stroke positions have a set of sculling riggers and two and three have a sweep set. |
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There is also a double push sculling effect. |
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A sculling oar is shorter and has a smaller blade area than the equivalent sweep oar. |
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That way you get your opponent so gassed up from sculling beer that all he can think about is trying to burp without spewing. |
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Focus national team programs on small boats and sculling events. |
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It will also go deeper in the technical support and sculling. |
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In 1954, Bob Hawke made the Guinness Book of Records for sculling 2.5 pints of beer in 11 seconds. |
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On a craft used in Italy, the catamaran moscone, the rower stands and takes advantage of his body weight to increase leverage while sculling. |
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They will learn eggbeater kick, sculling and breaststroke while continuing to improve their front and back crawl and work towards a 100-metre endurance swim. |
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His first as an athlete came after he and sculling mate George Hungerford stunned an unsuspecting field to bring Canada its only gold medal at the 1964 Tokyo Olympics. |
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On breaking surface, the pectoral fins are expanded, but the lower lobe of the tail remains in the water, sculling rapidly and accelerating the fish. |
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The trop shell consists of three people where the bow has a pair of sculling oars, and 2,3 each a sweeping oar. |
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John is a member of DARC, although presently rowing for his school at Yarm, and is ranked third in the men's junior 18 sculling category. |
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When the muskrat is swimming under water, however, the sculling action of the tail probably provides as much propulsive force as do the hind feet. |
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With the smaller boats, specialist versions of the shells for sculling can be made lighter. |
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The riggers in sculling apply the forces symmetrically to each side of the boat, whereas in sweep oared racing these forces are staggered alternately along the boat. |
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The world's first women's rowing team was formed in 1896 at the Furnivall Sculling Club in London. |
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Sculling involves a seated rower who pulls on two oars or sculls, attached to the boat, thereby moving the boat in the direction opposite that which the rower faces. |
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