Passion with courage and perseverance can result in extraordinary human accomplishment.
Competitive success as a member of a sports team is particularly memorable. It requires shared effort, not just individual achievement. March Madness is the term for this intensity in the just completed NCAA college basketball national tournament.
But athletic striving extends far beyond basketball.
The following story is about my daughter Alix who returned to compete at the highest level in women’s rowing while also raising a family and building a professional career in credit unions.
The March Event
Alix’s ultimate competitive accomplishment came March 14-15 in Amsterdam in an international rowing regatta competition, the Heineken Roeivierkamp. The event was conceived in December 1972 by two Dutch rowing coaches to break the monotony of winter training and bring excitement to the early-season rowing.
The regatta’s competition was inspired by the multi-distance format of speed skating and the spectator appeal of the Henley Royal Regatta in England. It is now one of Europe’s most distinctive and enduring rowing competitions.
Held annually in the heart of the city, the course runs through the historic waterways with long head-style stretches combined with shorter sprint segments. The four distances—5000m, 2500m, 750m, and 250m—create a unique, all-around competition for speed and endurance for crews of varying strengths.
In March 2026, the 54th edition drew more than 165 teams with over 400 crews (more than 3,800 rowers) representing 11 European countries plus the US and Canada. Entries spanned elite, student, junior, and masters categories. A minimum average age of 27 determines eligibility of a boat’s crew in the masters division.
Lining up in Amsterdam

The U.S. Entry – PBC Women’s Masters Program
Founded in 1869, the Potomac Boat Club (PBC) has long been a cornerstone of rowing in Washington, DC. Its Women’s Sweep program brings together former collegiate athletes and returning rowers who share a commitment to high-level competition and early-morning workouts on the Potomac.
The team’s year-round training mirrors the rhythm of the sport: fall head races such as the Head of the Charles Regatta in Boston; winter training on the erg; spring regattas that build speed and cohesion; and a summer peak at events like the Rowfest (formerly Masters Nationals).
For 2026, PBC’s schedule included two women’s eights (intermediate and masters) and three men’s master sweeps traveling to Amsterdam.
PBC’s Women’s 2026 Crew for Amsterdam
The members of PBC’s Masters 8+ included former college club rowers at Division I institutions and a former US national team member. One of the eight was a Dutch collegiate gold medal rower who inspired the trip.
Master rowers’ minimum age is 27 to enter. PBC masters average was in the low 30’s. Just one rower, Alix, was married and had a family. At 54 years old, Alix’s age was exactly the same number as the of times the Amsterdam regatta has been held.
The PBC Masters Varsity in Amsterdam-Alix is third from front

Alix’s First Rowing Years
Alix has 40 years of varied rowing commitments. She first began crew with four years in high school. At the University of Michigan she rowed in the bow monster’s seat in four years of varsity racing.
After earning her degree in Japanese language and literature, she spent a year working at Tokyo Electric Power’s DC office. She went back to Michigan to coach for a year just as the women’s team became part of the University’s athletic department versus a club sponsored team.
She returned to school and received a degree from Johns Hopkins School of Strategic and International studies (SAIS) in Washington DC. Next, she embarked on a three-month round-the-world solo backpacking venture across Australia, Africa, Europe and the Middle East. Returning in the fall she took a “temporary job” with Callahan & Associates.
During her graduate school years and early career, she sought coaching opportunities that included positions as an assistant coach at BCC High School in Bethesda, the head coach of the Sidwell Friends high school women’s team, and a stint with a community rowing club.
Life Happens- Rowing takes a Back Seat
Alix married Scott Patterson September 15, four days after 9/11. During the next few years, she had two boys while working full time at Callahans. Competitive rowing interests were on hold. The year after her second son was born, she went back to school to earn an MBA from the SAID Business School at Oxford University, taking her family with her.
The Transition to a Rowing Parent
As her sons went through school she introduced them to the sport. The oldest, Emmett, became a high school varsity rower as a sophomore. That year his DC high school’s Wilson (now Jackson Reed) Crew team won the Scholastic Rowing Association of America (SRAA) – the premier national crew championship for high schools. Although seeded sixth in the final, rowing in the outermost lane, they came from behind to win in the final 200 meters. (link)
Supporting the high school team was a multi-parent responsibility as the school’s athletic administration had no budget to cover the expenses of coaches and boats. Alix served for years on Wilson’s parent volunteer board.
Emmett continued to compete at Cornell University, gaining a seat in the first varsity lightweight eight all four years. Parent encouragement and support was still vital and included many weekends traveling to regattas.
Back in the Boat
While involved as a parent during the last decade, Alix had not rowed competitively for almost 30 years. Then, as both boys went to college, she tried out and became a member of the PBC masters rowing program. In February the coach chose her to be in PBC’s senior masters boat for the Amsterdam regatta.
Alix rowed in the 6th seat, as part of the engine room, traditionally the team’s strongest rowers. Four races in a weekend were chaotic yet colorful and mixed with fun–plenty of free Heineken!
Ready for racing PBC in red

Following races on bike paths

The result: After the two days of international competition, PBC’s women’s varsity placed 4th out of nine boats in their division and 9th out of all 44 women’s boats entered. A record setting outcome by any standard.
On the race course: Alix is in front of rower in white hat

PBC’s Women Team in Amsterdam

Post Race

Life Comes Full Circle
Alix’s next competition is the 10-mile Credit Union Cherry Blossom run in DC on Sunday, April 12 at 7:30am. Emmett, while now working full-time, coaches his former DC high school’s third varsity boy’s rowing team in their early morning workouts.
I share Alix’s rowing Odyssey as a proud parent (Alix’s mom died when she was 13) who has seen the ups and downs of this rowing quest. Including the quixotic drive to compete again at midlife, starting the cycle of 4:00 am wakeups for workouts.
Morning Sunrise on the Potomac

But seeing her sheer joy as she recounted the Amsterdam weekend made it all seem worthwhile.
Alix with her engine room teammates

Passions give our lives purpose and often endless challenge. We celebrate and learn from the examples of what personal motivation can achieve. These examples restore our hope in the power of people to make a difference, both in their own or in others’ lives.