Calling a great head race takes a strong race plan and lots of calls in your back pocket.
Read MoreDorris Sturges was the coxswain for Wellesley College in 1943. She says she was born too soon.
Read MoreFace forward. See across the lanes. Find your voice...
Read MoreLessons from singer and choral director Ashley Albert help you find resonance and care for your voice.
Read MoreYou’ve had it before, but never like this! Tried-and-true gazpacho gets a shake-up from watermelon and fresh cherries and the result is a packed punch of nutrients and flavor that will keep folks coming back for more. Grab your cutting board and a chopping knife and let the fun begin!
Read MoreKarissa Silva steps us through a stair and ladder workout that will crank your cardio and zoom your focus.
Read MoreThis issue's Rules of the Row covers equipment requirements.
Read More"I was a lot smaller than other people my age," Sujin Kim smiles as she explains how she found the coxswain seat. Cox Spot focuses on Kim's experience breaking into faster boats and moving through the ranks of coxing in high school.
Read MoreResolute Racing Shells invited us into their factory. What we found were more coxing-specific details that we expected.
Read MoreYour Call by Andrew Seta
Read MoreSometimes we're not talking about the dock...
Read MoreCoxswains say the strangest things...
Read MoreCoxing Magazine comes to life with Volume One, Issue One. Get it delivered to your door. Subscribe today.
Read MoreNielsen-Kellerman, the 90-person Philadelphia-based company, invited us to their plant for an insider’s look at the making of the CoxBox.
Read MoreJenny Sichel is a two-time World Champion silver medalist as the cox of the Paralympic mixed four (officially, the “LTAMix4+”). She focuses her coxing on the group of elite rowers that qualify as adaptive athletes. Her choice has taken her to international competitions and back. Now, she’s preparing for the try-outs for the Paralympic boat that will represent the United States in Rio de’Janeiro.
Read MoreRosemary Ostfeld is the coxswain of the Cambridge women’s crew that competed in The Boat Race on the Thames River this spring. Yes, that’s the one: the boat that was swamped while racing in the fastest–and most turbulent–part of the river, the Tideway. Her boat was trailing the Oxford boat; she chose to use the Tideway to help her crew gain an advantage. Risky? Maybe, but most choices we make to try to change something usually are.
Read MoreBecause we have to laugh sometimes, especially at ourselves...
Read MoreKayla Patitucci didn’t start out in the coxswain seat, but once she found it, she knew it was the right seat for her.
Read MoreMany coxswains take their crews to the starting line without knowing the rules that are governing the race. This issue, we’re covering the rules for getting to the start.
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