Head of the River (Western Australia)

Last updated

The Head of the River rowing regatta in Western Australia is an annual rowing event held at the Champion Lakes Regatta Centre in Champion Lakes. There are two separate events. The boys regatta held in autumn, and the girls regatta held in winter.

Contents

Boys Regatta

The Head of the River regatta is the last rowing event of the Public Schools Association (PSA) calendar. The boys regatta held in early autumn is contested between the seven PSA boys schools: Aquinas College, Christ Church Grammar School, Guildford Grammar School, Hale School, Scotch College, Trinity College, and Wesley College.

The boys regatta for Head of the River was first held in 1899 between CBC Perth, The Church of England Grammar School (renamed Guildford Grammar School in 1906), The Alexander Scotch College (name shortened to Scotch College in 1908), and The High School (renamed Hale School in 1929).

Originally, the race for Head of the River was held between coxed fours from each school and the winning crew was awarded the Challenge Cup. When the PSA formed in 1905 rowing was one of the five inaugural sports of the competition and the Challenge Cup was awarded as a PSA trophy. In 1938 the Challenge Cup changed to the current race format between the first coxed eights from each school. Over the years the number of rowing events increased. In 1982 the Hamer Cup was introduced and awarded annually to the school which scored the most points for placings in each event at the regatta.

The course has changed many times. The regatta was originally held on the swan river. When Perth won the 1962 British Empire and Commonwealth Games, the regatta moved to the 6 lane Canning River course. In 1969 the event returned to the wider course on the Swan River at the base of Kings Park near the Narrows Bridge. Since 2009 the event has been held at the purpose built rowing course at Champion Lakes, Kelmscott. [1] Records have tumbled since the venue change with records set in 2009 and 2010. The current record time for the 2000m event is 5 minutes 48.2 seconds, set by Trinity College. [1]

Challenge Cup

1st IV winners 1899-1937 & 1st VIII winners 1938–present

YearWinner
1899 CBC Perth
1900 CBC Perth
1901 The Alexander Scotch College
1902 The Church of England Grammar School
1903 The Alexander Scotch College
1904 The Alexander Scotch College
1905 The High School
1906 The Alexander Scotch College
1907 The Alexander Scotch College
1908 Scotch
1909 CBC Perth
1910 CBC Perth
1911 CBC Perth
1912 CBC Perth
1913 Scotch
1914 The High School
1915 CBC Perth
1916 CBC Perth
1917 CBC Perth
1918 The High School
1919 The High School
1920 Scotch
1921 CBC Perth
1922 The High School
1923 CBC Perth
1924 Guildford
1925 The High School
1926 CBC Perth
1927 CBC Perth
1928 CBC Perth
1929 CBC Perth
1930 CBC Perth
1931 CBC Perth
1932 Scotch
1933 Hale
1934 Scotch
1935 Scotch
1936 Scotch
1937 Scotch
1938 Scotch
1939 Hale
1940 Scotch
1941 Scotch
1942 Aquinas (unofficial)
1943 Aquinas
1944 Hale
1945 Hale
1946 Aquinas
1947 Hale
1948 Aquinas
1949 Aquinas
1950 Hale
1951 Hale
1952 Hale
1953 Hale
1954 Hale
1955 Hale
1956 Hale
1957 Scotch
1958 Christ Church
1959 Christ Church
1960 Scotch
1961 Christ Church
1962 Guildford
1963 Christ Church
1964 Christ Church
1965 Aquinas
1966 Aquinas
1967 Christ Church [2] / Scotch
1968 Scotch
1969 Aquinas
1970 Aquinas
1971 Hale
1972 Aquinas
1973 Aquinas
1974 Aquinas
1975 Aquinas
1976 Aquinas
1977 Aquinas
1978 Scotch
1979 Christ Church
1980 Aquinas
1981 Christ Church
1982 Aquinas
1983 Hale
1984 Scotch
1985 Scotch
1986 Christ Church
1987 Aquinas
1988 Guildford
1989 Aquinas
1990 Scotch
1991 Hale
1992 Christ Church
1993 Guildford
1994 Aquinas
1995 Aquinas
1996 Trinity
1997 Aquinas
1998 Aquinas
1999 Trinity
2000 Hale
2001 Wesley
2002 Christ Church
2003 Christ Church
2004 Trinity
2005 Christ Church
2006 Christ Church
2007 Trinity
2008 Christ Church
2009 Trinity
2010 Trinity
2011 Christ Church
2012 Christ Church
2013 Trinity
2014 Christ Church
2015 Scotch
2016 Trinity
2017 Guildford
2018 Hale
2019 Christ Church
2020 †N/A
2021 Scotch
2022 Christ Church
2023 Trinity

NB: † Denotes no race

Challenge Cup tally

WinsSchool
21 Aquinas
26 Scotch
24 Hale
20 Christ Church
9 Trinity
6 Guildford
1 Wesley

Hamer Cup

Overall points

YearWinner
1982 Scotch
1983 Aquinas
1984 Scotch
1985 Aquinas
1986 Aquinas
1987 Aquinas
1988 Aquinas
1989 Aquinas
1990 Aquinas
1991 Aquinas
1992 Guildford
1993 Aquinas
1994 Aquinas
1995 Aquinas
1996 Aquinas
1997 Aquinas
1998 Aquinas
1999 Aquinas
2000 Hale
2001 Guildford/Hale
2002 Trinity
2003 Trinity
2004 Trinity
2005 Christ Church
2006 Scotch
2007 Trinity
2008 Trinity
2009 Scotch
2010 Trinity
2011 Trinity
2012 Trinity
2013 Guildford
2014 Scotch
2015 Trinity
2016 Trinity
2017 Trinity
2018 Christ Church [3]
2019 Trinity
2020 †N/A
2021 Trinity
2022 Trinity
2023 Trinity

NB: † Denotes no racing

Hamer Cup tally

WinsSchool
15 Trinity
15 Aquinas
5 Scotch
3 Guildford
2 Christ Church
1 Hale
0 Wesley

Girls regatta

In the winter season several private Perth girls schools in the Independent Girls Schools Sports Association (IGSSA) race for the title.

1st VIII winners

YearWinner2nd3rdRefs.
1999 St Hilda's PLC MLC
2000 St Hilda's Penrhos PLC
2001 MLC Perth College PLC
2002 MLC Penrhos PLC
2003 MLC
2004 MLC St Hilda's MLC
2005 Penrhos MLC Perth College
2006 MLC Perth College Penrhos
2007 Perth College PLC MLC
2008 Perth College St Hilda's MLC
2009 MLC Penrhos Perth College
2010 MLC Penrhos Perth College
2011 MLC Perth College St Hilda's
2012 PLC MLC
2013 PLC MLC
2014 MLC PLC St Hilda's
2015 PLC MLC Perth College
2016 PLC MLC St Hilda's
2017 PLC MLC St Hilda's [4]
2018 PLC MLC St Hilda's [5]

Overall points score

YearWinner2nd3rdRefs.
2005 Penrhos Perth College St Hilda's
2006 Perth College Penrhos St Hilda's
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014 PLC Perth College St Hilda's
2015 PLC MLC Perth College
2016 PLC Perth College MLC
2017 PLC Perth College MLC [4]
2018 PLC MLC Perth College [5]

See also

Related Research Articles

Boat racing is a sport in which boats, or other types of watercraft, race on water. Boat racing powered by oars is recorded as having occurred in ancient Egypt, and it is likely that people have engaged in races involving boats and other water-borne craft for as long as such watercraft have existed.

The Head of the River is a name given to annual Australian rowing regattas held in South Australia, New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, Tasmania and Western Australia. The regattas feature competing independent schools, and the winner of the 1st division boys or girls race is crowned the "Head of the River".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Associated Public Schools of Victoria</span> School association in Victoria, Australia

The Associated Public Schools of Victoria (APS) are a group of eleven independent schools in Victoria, Australia, similar to the Athletic Association of the Great Public Schools of New South Wales in New South Wales and the Public Schools Association in Western Australia. The descriptor 'Public School' references the historical usage of the term and the model of the British public school.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Scotch College, Perth</span> School in Western Australia

Scotch College, is an independent Uniting Church primary and secondary school for boys, located in the Perth suburb of Swanbourne, Western Australia. It has both day and boarding students.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Guildford Grammar School</span> School in Western Australia

Guildford Grammar School, informally known as Guildford Grammar, Guildford or GGS, is an independent Anglican coeducational primary and secondary day and boarding school, located in Guildford, a suburb of Perth, Western Australia.

The Maadi Cup is the prize for the New Zealand Secondary Schools Boys' Under 18 Rowing Eights. More colloquially, it is the name given to the New Zealand Secondary Schools Rowing Regatta, at which the Maadi Cup is raced. The regatta is the largest school sports event in the Southern Hemisphere, with over 2,087 rowers from 113 secondary schools participating in 2023 The regatta is held annually in late March, alternating between the country's two main rowing venues: Lake Karapiro near Cambridge, and Lake Ruataniwha near Twizel.

Established in 1905 the Public Schools Association, or the PSA, is an association of seven independent boys schools in Perth, Western Australia. The descriptor 'public school' references the historical usage of the term and the model of the British public school. The schools compete against each other in athletic competition throughout the year. There are three main events held annually; the Head of the River rowing regatta, The Interschool Athletics Carnival, and the Interschool Swimming Carnival.

Shiplake College is a private boarding and day school in Shiplake, by the River Thames, just outside Henley-on-Thames, England. The school, with 520 pupils, takes boys from 11–18 and girls from 16–18. From September 2023 girls will join Year 7 as the school transitions to become fully co-educational by 2027.

The Princess Elizabeth Challenge Cup is a rowing event at Henley Royal Regatta open to school 1st VIIIs.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Stotesbury Cup</span>

The Stotesbury Cup Regatta, sponsored by the Schuylkill Navy, is the world's oldest and largest high school rowing competition. It is held annually in mid-May over a two-day period on the Schuylkill River near Boathouse Row in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Competing crews come from schools all over North America, though most hail from the Northeastern and Mid-Atlantic United States.

The Head of the River rowing regatta refers to two New South Wales school rowing competitions, one for boys and one for girls.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Head of the River (Victoria)</span>

The Victorian Head of the River regatta is contested between the eleven Associated Public Schools of Victoria (APS).

The Queensland Head of the River refers to two high school rowing regattas in Queensland Australia, one for boys and one for girls. The boys' regatta is held in mid to late March while the girls' regatta is held in late August to early September. Due to the lack of water at Wivenhoe Dam the boys' Head of the River was moved to Hinze Dam for 2006, and was then moved to Lake Kawana on the Sunshine Coast, Queensland the following year. Since the girls require 10 lanes for their regattas, the BSRA Head of the River was held at Hinze Dam from 2005 to 2007. However, due to construction work currently underway to increase the size of the dam, the BSRA Head of the River was also moved to Lake Kawana for the 2008 season. Both the GPS and BSRA competitions moved to Wyralong Dam in 2017 following the opening of the Queensland State Regatta Center the previous year.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">National Schools' Regatta</span> Rowing regatta for junior rowers in Great Britain

National Schools' Regatta is the largest rowing regatta for junior rowers in Great Britain. Held annually in May, the three day regatta offers events for junior rowers between the categories J14 and J18.

The Thames is one of the main rowing rivers in Europe. Several annual competitions are held along its course, including the Henley Royal Regatta, the The Boat Race and other long-distance events, called Head of the River races (Heads).

The Riverview Gold Cup Regatta is a rowing regatta with limited club events and mainly school crew events, held annually by Saint Ignatius' College, Riverview, in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It is an official Rowing NSW event within the New South Wales club season. The Riverview Gold Cup is the trophy contested by the men's open senior eight - the blue riband event of the day.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Head of the Schoolgirls (Victoria)</span>

The Victorian Head of the Schoolgirls regatta is contested between girls at schools from all across the state of Victoria Australia. Schools from the Girls Sport Victoria (GSV) and also Associated Public Schools of Victoria (APS), as well as smaller school rowing groups which enter under a rowing club banner, compete in a range of events over 1000m for the Year 9 and Year 10 events or 1500m for the Open events.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Champion Lakes Regatta Centre</span> Man made aquatic sports facility in Perth, Western Australia

Champion Lakes Regatta Centre is an aquatic sporting facility south of Perth, Western Australia in the suburb of Champion Lakes. It cost approximately over 30 million dollars to build. It is an international standard facility for rowing, kayaking and dragon boat racing and includes a 2,000-metre (6,600 ft) buoyed course for competition.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">St Edward's School Boat Club</span> British rowing club

St Edward's School Boat Club is a rowing club on the River Thames based at St Edwards School Boathouse on Godstow Road, Oxford, Oxfordshire. It is the rowing club belonging to St Edward's School, Oxford.

References

  1. 1 2 "Armadale Redevelopment Authority - Champion Lakes". 2009. Archived from the original on 2011-07-06. Retrieved 2010-09-12.
  2. "Rowing | PSA". www.psa.wa.edu.au. Archived from the original on 2011-10-21.
  3. Quartermain, Glen (2018-03-17). "Hale snares Head of the River title". PerthNow. Archived from the original on 2018-03-18. Retrieved 2018-03-18.
  4. 1 2 Lacy, Bridget (2017-06-24). "PLC completes Head of the River hat-trick". The West Australian. Archived from the original on 2017-06-24. Retrieved 2018-06-27.
  5. 1 2 "PLC snares Head of the River triumph". PerthNow. 2018-06-23. Archived from the original on 2018-06-27. Retrieved 2018-06-27.