Terrence Scook Explained

Terrence Scook
Headercolor:gold
Nationality:Australian
Sport:Rowing
Birth Date:8 February 1935
Birth Place:Western Australia, Australia

Terrence Scook (born 8 February 1935) is an Australian former representative rowing coxswain. He competed in the men's eight event at the 1960 Summer Olympics.[1] A Western Australian, Scook coxed state crews competing at the elite national level over a 43 year competitive career from 1951 to 1994.

Club and state rowing

Scook's joined the West Australian Rowing Club as a fourteen year old in 1949 and in that debut year steered Don Fraser and Bryn Haaguard to a state championship in the coxed pair. Most of his career was from the WARC although in 1970s he raced in ANA Rowing Club colours.

In the 1990s Scook took up the rudder ropes at the Curtin University Rowing Club where coach Tony Lovrich was running a successful high performance sweep men's squad under the auspices of the Western Australian Institute of Sport.

Scook first made state representative selection for Western Australia in the 1951 senior eight which contested and placed third in the King's Cup at the Australian annual Interstate Regatta.[2] In his long career Scook raced 19 times in WA eights for the King's Cup, 3 times in women's fours for the ULVA trophy and once in the lightweight women's four for the Victoria Cup.

International representative rowing

The entire West Australian champion King's Cup eight of 1960 were selected without alteration as the Australian eight to compete at the 1960 Rome Olympics. The crew was graded as the second of the seven Australian Olympic boats picked for Rome and was therefore fully funded by the Australian Olympic Committee. They were eliminated in the repechage on Lake Albano at the 1960 Olympics.[3]

Palmares

Olympic Games

The King's Cup

The ULVA Trophy

The Victoria Cup

Notes and References

  1. Terrence Scook Olympic Results . https://web.archive.org/web/20200418055211/https://www.sports-reference.com/olympics/athletes/sc/terrence-scook-1.html . dead . 18 April 2020 . 14 August 2018.
  2. https://www.rowinghistory-aus.info/rower-profiles/scook-terrence-j#gsc.tab=0 Scook Profile at Australian Rowing History
  3. http://www.rowinghistory-aus.info/olympic-games/1960-Rome.php 1960 Olympics