The Boat Race is a sporting event held every year. The 2019 race took place on the 7th of April 2019.

It is a side-by-side rowing race. Crews from the universities of Cambridge and Oxford competed with each other. For the fourth time of the event, the men’s, women’s and both reserves’ races were all held on the same day.

The first event of the day was the women’s race. Cambridge took the lead from the start, winning by a considerable margin. It was their third consecutive victory. They managed to take the overall record in the Women’s Boat Race to 44–30 in their favour.

The final event of the day was the men’s race. It completed a second successive whitewash as Cambridge won. Plus, it was their third victory in four years. They took the overall record to 84–80 in their favour. 

It was also a great spectacle in the women’s reserve race. Cambridge’s Blondie defeated Oxford’s Osiris. It was their fourth consecutive victory. And Cambridge’s Goldie won the men’s reserve race, defeating Oxford’s Isis.

Thousands of spectators watched live the races, lining the banks of the Thames. They were also live-streamed on YouTube and by many media organisations. These include Germany, South Africa and China.

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Cambridge included double Olympic champion, James Cracknell. He beat Oxford for the second consecutive year to reap the 165th Boat Race.

Cracknell, 46, stated that it made him realise he “missed” the sport.

The latter is the oldest person to take part in the Boat Race. He mentioned: “I surprisingly did not regret my decision to do this at any point in the race. At the start, I thought, ‘I’ve missed this, I haven’t felt this for 20 years’.”

The boats clashed blades early in the race as Cambridge steered across the centre line. It was before they opened up a two-length lead.

Towards the end of the race, Oxford narrowed that gap. They finished less than one length behind. Cambridge’s cox, Matthew Holland, said victory was “indescribable”.

“This is a year of training, a year of hard work. The guys have put so much hard work into this,” he added.

Cambridge now holds 84 Boat Races compared with Oxford’s 80. They achieved back-to-back victories for the first time since 1999.

‘This is so special’ – Cambridge win women’s race

Victory in the women’s race was Cambridge’s 44th. Oxford has only 30.

“This is so special; we have been working towards this for two years,” said the Cambridge boat captain, Larkin Sayre. “This is the culmination of so much work.”

Cambridge took the lead for the women’s race from the very start. They extended that lead to three as they passed under Hammersmith Bridge.