Hugh Edwards (rower)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Hugh Edwards
Medal record
Men's rowing
Representing  Great Britain
Olympic Games
Gold medal – first place 1932 Los Angeles Coxless pair
Gold medal – first place 1932 Los Angeles Coxless four
Representing  England
British Empire Games
Gold medal – first place 1930 Hamilton Coxed four
Gold medal – first place 1930 Hamilton Eight

Hugh Robert Arthur Edwards (17 November 1906 – 21 December 1972), also known as Jumbo Edwards, was an English rower who competed for Great Britain in the 1932 Summer Olympics.[1]

He was born to Welsh-speaking parents in Woodstock, Oxfordshire and died in Southampton.

He went to Christ Church, Oxford, in 1925, and was the only Freshman selected to row in the 1926 Blue Boat. He collapsed during the race, and was later diagnosed as having a hypertrophied heart, and was told he was no longer needed to row for the university.

Edwards left Oxford in 1927 after failing his exams, and became a school teacher.

British Empire Games in Canada in 1930, London Rowing Club crews representing England, and which contained Edwards, won two gold medals, in the eights and in the coxed fours.[1] He was then invited to row in the 1930
Oxford Blue Boat.

In the 1932 Olympics he won the gold medal in the coxless pairs event with Lewis Clive, and a second gold in the Great Britain coxless four, on the same day.[1]

He later turned to competitive flying, coming second in the 1935

King's Cup Race.[1]

During the Second World War Edwards served in

Group Captain, he was demobbed in 1946.[1]

He was invited back to be a member of the Oxford coaching team in 1949, although resigned in 1957 after a disagreement with the Australian-born president,

OUBC President Ronnie Howard, but provoked a rebellion
by certain members of the crew over his demands on them. Despite the resignation of certain members of the squad, Oxford beat Cambridge, and his subsequent coaching efforts made him an Oxford legend.

In 1962, he coached the Wales four containing his two sons that won silver at the Commonwealth Games in Perth, Australia.

He wrote a book on rowing technique in 1963 entitled The Way of a Man with a Blade. Having been a pupil of both Dr "Beja" Bourne and Steve Fairbairn, he sought to bring together the divergent rowing styles of English Orthodoxy and Fairbairnism.

A coxed four belonging to Christ Church Boat Club is named Jumbo Edwards.[1] The club's other four, is named after Jonathan Searle, another Olympic Gold medallist.

Works

  • The Way of a Man with a Blade. Routledge & Kegan Paul. 1963.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h "Jumbo rows to victory". Olympic News. International Olympic Committee. Retrieved 15 August 2016.

External links