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    The River Beckons

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    Andrew Triggs Hodge is hanging up his oar. It will go nicely with his four world championships and three consecutive Olympic gold medals he collected during his international rowing career for Great Britain.
    “The parts I enjoyed most about rowing was the rowing itself. Competition served as milestones for training and also it shone the light on the part I intrinsically enjoyed, the hard work and training,” he said in his retirement announcement.
    Hodge will go down as one of the United Kingdom’s most accomplished oarsmen, with his career culminating last August as part of the Olympic gold-medal-winning eight in Rio. That marked three consecutive Olympic titles, following victories in the men’s four in London and Beijing. His world championship victories came in the four in 2005 and 2006, and the eight in 2013 and 2014. All told, Hodge raced in 14 different world or Olympic championships.
    Although he wraps up his career on top, Hodge did not find immediate success when he began on the international circuit. His eight finished sixth at his first world championship in 2002, and when they placed ninth at the 2004 Olympics in Athens, he said it “seeded an anger and a ruthless desire to prove myself.”
    In his announcement, Hodge said he’s looking forward to both family and professional opportunities that await him now. “With the impending delivery of our second child, the security of an exciting job, and the feeling that my body was getting to the end of its athletic life, Rio was a fitting way to complete my Olympic journey and end my career in rowing.”
    Now the Oxford resident will turn his attention to assisting rowing startups in the U.K. and improving the environmental quality of a river he knows quite well: the Thames. He will put his master’s in environmental science to use on the Thames Tideway Tunnel, a project to direct sewage away from London’s famous river.
    “As I leave the oar behind, rowing stays with me. I have been on the receiving end of so many volunteer hours to help me to where I am now, I aim to give that back.”  Connor walters

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