M4-

Great Britain M4-

The British four has lost one race since the 2004 Olympics and that came at Lucerne just last month. They are the top ranked crew moving into a final which promises to be tight.
Steve Williams, Peter Reed, Tom James, Andy Triggs Hodge(str)


Netherlands M4-

Geert Cirkel, Matthijs Vellenga, Jan-Willem Gabriels, Gijs Vermeulen have made it into the finals after taking second to New Zealand in the semifinal.


U.S. M4- Builder

The U.S. four winds it up in practice as they prepare for racing this week.
(str)Beau Hoopman, Bryan Volpenhein, Giuseppe Lanzone, Matt Schnobrich


Germany M4-

The straight four is one of the deepest events and to win you have to go through British. This German quartet came close last year, finishing just 1 second behind to claim siler.
Gregor Hauffe, Toni Seifert, Urs Kaeufer, Philip Adamski(str)


Canada M4-

Barney Williams was a Olympic silver medalist in the four in 2004 and he's back in stroke seat again. He's joined by Rob Gibson, Peter Dembicki, Scott Frandsen.


New Zealand Men's 4-

The New Zealand men's straight four of (str)Hamish Bond, Eric Murray, James Dallinger and Carl Meyer won the second World Cup race in Amsterdam this summer and will be in the hunt next week.


U.S. M4+ and M4-

The course can get crowded sometimes, so it's nice when you can go for a swing row with other boats on your team. The men's coxed four and straight four take it down their lanes.
4- Beau Hoopman, Byran Volpenhein, Giuseppe Lanzone, Matt Schnobrich
4+ Ned DelGuercio (c), Chris Liwski, Sam Burns, Dan Beery, Matt Deakin


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