Misplaced Pages

Maginn

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

The Australian Rowing Championships is an annual rowing event that determines Australia 's national rowing champions and facilitates selection of Australian representative crews for World Championships and the Olympic Games . It is Australia's premier regatta, with states, clubs and schools sending their best crews. The Championships commence with the National Regatta - men's, women's and lightweight events in open, under 23, under 19, under 17 and school age events. Rowers at the National Regatta race in their local club colours with composite crews permitted. The Championships conclude with the Interstate Regatta - currently eight events competed by state representative crews or scullers selected by the state rowing associations. The states compete for an overall points tally which decides the Zurich Cup.

#657342

21-606: Maginn is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Adrian Maginn (born 1954), Australian former rower and rowing coach Bonnie Maginn (1880–1964), American actor Edward Maginn (1802–1849), Irish Roman Catholic priest, advocate of Catholic Emancipation, supporter of Daniel O'Connell in the Repeal movement Edward Joseph Maginn (1897–1984), Scottish-born American Catholic Bishop for Albany, New York State Francis Maginn (1861–1918), Church of Ireland missionary and one of

42-602: A King's Cup victory. Maginn steered other Victorian eights contesting the King's Cup in 1972, 1973 and 1977 to places but no victories. In 1970 and 1974 he competed at the Australian Rowing Championships in Mercantile men's junior eights. The 1974 eight won that championship title. In 1975 in Mercantile colours he won a national championship in the stern of a second-grade eight. 1976 saw him in

63-436: A Sydney crew raced a Hobart crew in whalers. Schools, varsity and club events were the top-class races throughout the mid 19th century although New South Wales and Victoria raced regularly (though not annually) in men's IVs from 1863. In 1878 Victoria and New South Wales commenced inter-colonial racing in eight-oared boats and the other colonies and (later states) joined them such that by 1906 all six Australian states were sending

84-878: A bronze medal. Maginn carried on coaching at the MUBC after his coxing career ceased. He coached the 1980 MUBC eight to victory at the 1980 Intervarsity Championships in Canberra. In 1981 he coached the Victorian state youth eight which contested the Noel Wilkinson Trophy at the 1981 Interstate Regatta. He has had a long association with Masters rowing at the Melbourne University Boat Club. Australian Rowing Championships Inter-colonial racing began in Australia in 1833 when

105-532: A composite Monash/MUBC coxed four which competed at the Australian Championships and he coxed another Monash/MUBC four to a second place in 1977. In 1977 Maginn moved to the Melbourne University Boat Club and to an involvement in their lightweight program. He was in the stern of the 1978 MUBC lightweight eight which won the national championship that year and was selected to cox the Victorian state lightweight four which won in that last year when

126-443: A diverse program of club and school events. The Sydney Cup was first presented in 2005. The current title holders are Melbourne Girls' Grammar. The Barrington Cup was first presented in 1984. The current title holders are St Ignatius. Interstate Men's Championships for VIIIs ( Kings Cup ) and single sculls ( Presidents Cup ) were held in the following locations after Federation : The Penrith Cup for lightweight fours

147-591: A football stadium located in Buncrana, County Donegal, Ireland [REDACTED] Surname list This page lists people with the surname Maginn . If an internal link intending to refer to a specific person led you to this page, you may wish to change that link by adding the person's given name (s) to the link. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Maginn&oldid=1204458460 " Category : Surnames Hidden categories: Articles with short description Short description

168-586: A lightweight men's IV was introduced in 1958. Since 1963 the interstate women's scull competition has been for the Nell Slatter Trophy. From 1968 until 1998 the premier women's lightweight interstate event was the Victoria Cup competed for by coxless IVs. Since 1999, lightweight quad sculls have raced for the Cup. Since 1974 men's youth crews have competed at the state representative level for

189-531: A men's VIII and perhaps a sculler, to the annual Interstate Regatta. A national open rowing championship was discussed at Australian Rowing Council meetings from 1946 but it wasn't until the 1960s that support for the concept was unanimous outside of New South Wales and Victoria. The first National Open Championship Regatta was held in 1962 and then was held every two years. Since 1969 the National Regatta has been annual and since 1976 has been held within

210-569: Is different from Wikidata All set index articles Adrian Maginn Adrian Maginn (born 1953 in Melbourne) is an Australian former rowing coxswain and rowing coach. He was a five-time national champion and won a bronze medal at the 1978 World Rowing Championships . Maginn's rowing association with the Mercantile Rowing Club started as a thirteen year old in 1967 before he took up coxing at school. He then coxed

231-492: The St Kevin's College, Melbourne first VIII for three consecutive years from 1968 to 1970. As a seventeen year old in his first year out of school Maginn took up the ropes of the 1971 Victorian senior men's eight contesting the King's Cup at the 1971 Interstate Regatta within the Australian Rowing Championships . That crew came home over South Australia in the final 500m and Maginn won his first Australian Championship title -

SECTION 10

#1732773133658

252-698: The Noel Wilkinson Cup. Noel Wilkinson (died 1992) OAM was a long serving treasurer of the Australian Rowing Council who had worked tirelessly in fund-raising over many years for Australian national and Olympic squads. He had managed Victorian and national representative crews and was a club stalwart at the Banks Rowing Club in Melbourne from 1930 till his death. The event has been raced over 2000 metres since 1983. In

273-613: The co-founders of British Deaf Association Matt Maginn , musician from Omaha, Nebraska Robert Maginn (born 1956), United States businessman, former chairman in the Massachusetts Republican Party Simon Maginn (born 1961), British writer William Maginn (1794–1842), Irish journalist and miscellaneous writer See also [ edit ] Bishop Maginn High School , a Catholic high school in Albany, New York State Maginn Park ,

294-492: The first thirty-seven years of competition for the title up till 2011, Victoria were the most consistent winners with seventeen wins, followed by New South Wales with ten victories. A women's youth event commenced in 1988 in coxed IVs and converted to VIIIs in 1994. Since 1999 the overall cumulative points winner in the interstate championships is awarded the Zurich Cup. States are awarded points in each interstate event on

315-431: The following basis: first place, eight points; second place, six points; third place, five points; fourth place, four points; fifth place, three points; sixth place, two points; seventh place, one point. In the sixteen regattas at which it was presented up till 2014, the Zurich Cup was won on eleven occasions by Victoria, thrice by New South Wales and by Queensland in 2003 and 2014. The National Regatta currently includes

336-526: The interstate lightweight title was contested in a coxed boat. In 1979 he coxed a Mercantile/MUBC lightweight eight to second place in their national title attempt at the Australian Rowing Championships . Maginn made his sole Australian representative appearance at the 1978 World Rowing Championships - a lightweight only championships - in Copenhagen. He steered the Australian lightweight eight to

357-465: The race was held in IVs, New South Wales won thirty-one times with eleven of those victories consecutive between 1955 and 1965. Victoria managed twenty-four victories in that period also with eleven of them consecutive (1978–1988) and then enjoying another eleven year consecutive run from 2005 to 2015. Of the twenty-five events up until 2015, Victoria were the victors on eighteen occasions. The Penrith Cup for

378-516: The same single programme as the Interstate Regatta creating the combined Australian Rowing Championships. The Interstate Regatta is held at the conclusion of the National Regatta and currently includes the following races for state representative crews: Australia's blue-ribbon annual rowing race for men. Contested by state representative senior heavyweight men's eights. An intercolonial sculling race between New South Wales and Victoria

399-746: Was added to the Kings Cup and Presidents Cup at Interstate Men's Championships for VIIIs as follows: An Interstate Women's Race for the ULVA Trophy was held in the following locations: With the Nell Slatter Trophy for women's single sculls added to the Women's Interstate Regatta from 1963 and the Victoria Cup added from 1968: Interstate Championships with both Men's and Women's events were held in

420-643: Was first competed for in 1926 and won by A A Baynes of Queensland. The premier interstate event for women was the ULVA trophy which from 1920 till 1998 was a fours event. The trophy had first been presented by the United Licensed Victuallers Association (ULVA) of Queensland. In 1999 the women's interstate race was changed to an event for VIIIs with the Queen's Cup as the prize. Of the seventy-eight occasions between 1920 and 1999 that

441-609: Was first held in 1868 and then annually from 1895 with Queensland also racing. Tasmania has consistently been represented since 1903. South Australia and West Australia have entered scullers with some regularity but not consistently until the 1960s. The first President of the Australian Amateur Rowing Council, Mr E.C. Watchorn, donated the President's Cup in 1925 as the perpetual trophy for the annual Australian Interstate Single Sculling Championship. It

SECTION 20

#1732773133658
#657342