As Los Gatos Rowing Club Director Jaime Velez exited the plane from Florida and raced to catch his connection in Nashville to Oakland, he was ecstatic.
Thereād been high hopes for the 59 athletes and their 14 boats at the USRowing Youth National Championships in Sarasota, Fla., and the Los Gatos contingent delivered better results, this time, than ever before.
āWe had our most successful year in our history,ā Velez told the Los Gatan over the phone. āWe won three national championships in three separate events.ā
The event, hosted at Nathan Benderson Park, was the largest ever, with 854 entries from 224 clubs across the country. The 4,000 or so athletes compete in 41 different boat classes.
And Luke Slattery, āThe Boys in the Boatā actor, was even there signing autographs.
Los Gatos won three out of four events, in quadruple sculls action on the menās and womenās sideāand placed second in the womenās youth quadruple sculls, USRowing officials said.
In a blog post, an organization spokesperson recounted how Los Gatosā menās youth quadruple sculls ābattled down the course with Whitemarsh Boat Club to win the event by 1.78 seconds. Los Gatos and Whitemarsh were even at the halfway mark before Los Gatos moved ahead to finish in a time of 6:13.10. Whitemarsh finished second in a 6:14.88, with Texas Rowing Center taking third in a 6:17.46.ā
The post notes how, in womenās youth quadruple sculls, āRedwood Scullers dominated the course from start to finish, crossing the line in 7:04.91 over two seconds ahead of silver medalists, Los Gatos. Oregon Rowing Unlimited took bronze.ā
Velez said the excellent performances came out of several years of rebuilding after the coronavirus pandemic hit.
During the lockdown era, rowers werenāt allowed to be in a boat with anyone else, so the local club shifted its focus away from having athletes row with two hands on a single oar, towards dual-oar rowing.
āEveryone was kind of by their selves,ā Velez recalled.
But by Sunday, the memory of the pandemic era had largely faded, as LGRCās menās youth quad, menās youth JV (2V) quad and womenās youth 2V quad (which Velez coaches) stroked to the top spot on the podium.
Los Gatos rowers also took bronze in the menās U17 quad and silver in the womenās U15 quad with a coxswain.
āTo be competitive across the US and be competitive even in the southwest region is really hard,ā Velez said. āWe knew, going into the regatta, we had an opportunity to perform really well.ā
That doesnāt mean it was easy, Velez stresses.
āThere was a lot of close racing,ā he said, explaining some races were won by less than a second. āOur athletes just performed exceptionally well.ā
Ultimately, Los Gatos racked up a total of six medals, with 12 boats placing in the Top 8.
āI couldnāt be happier,ā Velez said. āThey just did an amazing job.ā
From Surgery to Victory
There is perhaps nothing more emblematic of Los Gatos Rowing Clubās impressive improvementāfrom the silver tier to championsāthan the journey of one of its Womenās Youth 2V Quad rowers.
A year ago, Gianna āGiGiā Musolf was on the sidelines with back problems.
But she hung out with the team, watching Julia Kiplinger, Brynna Ruf, Annika Sivi and Sara Drabkin take second in the youth quad.
Sheād originally caught the rowing bug at summer camp, after 8th grade.
āShe really liked the team aspect,ā recalled her dad, Ben. āShe certainly fell in love with the team in general.ā
But in 2023, as LGRC sent eight boats to Sarasota, she was not among them.
Eventually, she went to see a physical therapist recommended by her coach, which led to the removal of a tumor in October.
āThey literally had to cut her open and remove her rib,ā Ben said, noting his daughter even had a lung deflate. āIt was the worst experience of my life.ā
But those feelings of helplessness morphed into a steadyāif incrementalāevolution.
āItās slow,ā Ben said. āWhen she finally realized she was out of pain, it clicked.ā
Next up: early mornings; 10-mile hikes; fine-tuning her nutrition program.
As the days turned into months, the wattage on the āergā rowing machine steadily improved.
And it all culminated on Sunday, as GiGi, now 17, got in a boat alongside Alexandra Buchowski, Scarlett Coke and Frieda Cramer, to compete against seven other crewsāincluding their archnemesis: the Redwood Scullers, from the Port of Redwood City.
Los Gatos quickly took the lead, but it wasnāt long before the team from up the peninsula began to give them a run for their money.
The girls were perhaps just a deck ahead, coming into the final stretch, with the Hockaday School threatening in third.
āRedwood Scullers and Hockaday are out for blood,ā one of the announcers commented.
Back in California, it was around 6am.
Ben was still in bed, watching with his wife Jennifer.
āIām banging on the bed,ā he said. āShe starts screaming. We both start crying.ā
āThis finish is going to be tight,ā the other announcer crescendos. āItās going to be close.ā
āThat was an absolute nail-biter,ā the first announcer states, as one boat after another completes the race.
When the ripples dissipated, it was clear Los Gatos had barely edged out their Silicon Valley rivals.
āThey won by .47ā47 hundredths of a second,ā Ben said. āThatās a blink of an eye.ā
Now GiGi, whoās going into her senior year at Saint Francis High School next year, will have a few days to rest up before heading off to Africa for a month.