Terpene

Mansfield College Boat Club
Longbridges Boat House and MCBC blade colours
Coordinates51°44′37″N 1°15′00″W / 51.743503°N 1.249915°W / 51.743503; -1.249915
Home waterRiver Thames
Founded1965 (1965)
Key people
  • James Bennett (President)
  • Lucy Lansdown (Women's Captain)
  • Mikey Matthews (Open-side Captain)
  • Sam Hudspith (Captain of Coxes)
UniversityUniversity of Oxford
Colours     
AffiliationsBritish Rowing (boat code MAN)
Homerton College, Cambridge (Sister college)
Websitemansfieldcollegeboatclub.co.uk

Mansfield College Boat Club (MCBC) is a rowing club for the members of Mansfield College, University of Oxford. Founded in 1965, the club is the largest sporting society at Mansfield College and offers all college members the opportunity to row, regardless of prior experience.

Established by a group of students led by Michael Mahony[1], the club continues to be run by Mansfield students, who comprise the Mansfield College Boat Club Committee. It is affiliated with Oxford University Rowing Clubs (OURCs).[2]

MCBC is based on the Isis (Thames) and shares a club room and boat storage space with St Hilda's College Boat Club at the Longbridges Boat House, which opened in 1997.

Results

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Despite being one of the smallest Colleges of the University of Oxford, Mansfield's boat club has had numerous successes. The club fields an Open First VIII and a Women's First VIII in the annual inter-collegiate Torpids and Summer Eights bumps racing competitions. An Open Second VIII and a Women's Second VIII also tend to be entered in both competitions by the club.

In Torpids, the Mansfield W1 currently sits 19th on the river (placing it in Division II of the competition), and the M1 sits 29th (placing it in Division III). In Summer Eights, the W1 sits 20th on the river (placing it in Division II of the competition), and the M1 sits 26th (placing it in Division III).[3]

MCBC crews have won blades - bumping the crew they were chasing every day without being bumped - in Torpids; 1991 (M1), 1996 (M1, W1), 2004 (W1), 2009 (M1), 2010 (W1), 2015 (M1, M2), 2016 (M1, W1), 2017 (M1, W2), 2019 (W2), 2023 (W1) and in Summer Eights; 1966 (M1), 1974 (M1), 1975 (M1), 1979 (M1), 1983 (M2), 1988 (W1), 1995 (M1, W1), 2000 (W1), 2003 (M1), 2007 (W1), 2008 (W1), 2009 (W1, M2), 2016 (W1, M2).[4]

MCBC has also won miniature blades in Oxford City Bumps - an annual bumps racing event for coxed eights open to all rowing clubs, universities, colleges, and schools[5] - by bumping in all four of the day's races without being bumped; 2024 (W1)[6]

The club also tends to field an Open VIII and a Women's VIII in the Isis Winter League (IWL). The Isis Winter League is a series of head races run throughout Michaelmas and Hilary terms. IWLs are open not only to OURCs affiliated crews but also to other rowing clubs based on the Isis. The course usually runs from Donnington Bridge to Cox's Stone opposite Christ Church Meadow.[7] In 2023, the Mansfield Women's VIII won the competition (winning both races where they received an official time), and the Open VIII placed 5th, meaning that the club placed second victor ludorum, out of 25 clubs.[8]

History

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On 4th July 2005, Longbridges Boat House was the victim of an arson attack [Longbridges boathouse fire] which destroyed most of MCBC's equipment. [9] However, the committee, college, and generous alumni rallied to replace the lost equipment, enabling the crews to continue moving up the bumps divisions.

The club has spawned multiple blues rowers including Jack Shuttleworth (2015 Lwt crew)[10], Merel Lefferts (2016), and Ruby Mullin (2024 Women's Lwt crew)[11], but most famously Donald MacDonald, the President of OUBC in the mutiny year of 1987, the events of which are told in the book and film ‘True Blue’.

While 2020 saw the cancellation of many rowing events due to flooding, high stream, and the COVID-19 pandemic, three Mansfield rowers were selected as part of the squads that would have raced on Boat Race Day. Moreover, the selection of Martha Birtles[12] for the OUWBC blue boat and Caspar Jopling for the OUBC blue boat[13] was a first in that both university openweight blue boats featured Mansfield rowers in the same year.

Notable members

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Donald MacDonald was President of Oxford University Boat Club in the mutiny year of 1987, the events of which received publicity in the book True Blue: The Oxford Boat Race Mutiny and the film True Blue.[14]

References

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  1. ^ "Mansfield College Boat Club - POI". RouteYou. Retrieved 2021-06-19.
  2. ^ "OURCs: Home". ourcs.co.uk. Retrieved 2024-07-23.
  3. ^ "Oxford Bumps". bumps.live. Retrieved 2024-07-24.
  4. ^ "Oxford Bumps Charts". eodg.atm.ox.ac.uk. Retrieved 2024-07-23.
  5. ^ "Bumps". City of Oxford Rowing Club Events. Retrieved 2024-07-23.
  6. ^ "Oxford City Bumps 2024". Google Docs. Retrieved 2024-07-23.
  7. ^ "OURCs: Isis Winter League 2023-2024". ourcs.co.uk. Retrieved 2024-07-23.
  8. ^ "OURCs: IWL Historical Results". ourcs.co.uk. Retrieved 2024-07-23.
  9. ^ Laville, Sandra (2005-07-21). "Animal militants set fire to Oxford boathouse". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2024-07-23.
  10. ^ "Past Crews". The Oxford Universit. Retrieved 2024-07-23.
  11. ^ "Instagram". www.instagram.com. Retrieved 2024-07-23.
  12. ^ "The Boat Race 2020", Wikipedia, 2023-01-24, retrieved 2024-07-23
  13. ^ "The Boat Race 2020", Wikipedia, 2023-01-24, retrieved 2024-07-23
  14. ^ Fairfax, Ferdinand (1996-11-15), True Blue (Drama, Sport), Johan Leysen, Dominic West, Dylan Baker, Booker Entertainment, Channel Four Films, Film and General Productions, retrieved 2024-07-23
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