Joe Burk

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Joseph W. Burk was an American oarsman and coach.

At the University of Pennsylvania, Burk rowed in the varsity boats. After graduating in 1934, he began racing in the single scull (1x), a one man boat. Burk won 46 consecutive races in the single scull from 1937 to 1940, inclusive. He was the U.S. and Canadian champion for those four years and won the Diamond Sculls at the Henley Royal Regatta in 1938 and 1939. In his 1938 Diamond Sculls victory, Burk set a Henley course record of 8:02. Joe Burk's Henley record was to stand for 27 years. He became known as the “world’s greatest oarsman.” At the end of the 1939 season, Burk was voted the James E. Sullivan Award as the country's outstanding amateur athlete.

In 1940, Burk won the Olympic try-outs, the National Regatta and the Philadelphia Challenge Cup, also known as the Gold Cup. The 1940 Olympics, however, were cancelled because of World War II. An attempt was made to schedule a a match race with world professional sculling champion Bobby Pearce, who was then living in Canada, but that race failed to materialize.

Burk served as a PT boat commander in the Pacific in World War II.

Burk began to coach the Yale University freshman crew in 1946. In 1950 he became coach of the University of Pennsylvania varsity crew team and remained at that post until 1969. His crews won numerous championships and honors, including all cup races in the U.S. and the Grand Challenge Cup at the Henley Royal Regatta in 1955 and the Intercollegiate Rowing Association championship in 1967, 1968 and 1969. In 1968 the Penn crew (with the addition of some alumni) came within four one-hundredths [4/100] of a second of beating Harvard in the finals of the Olympic trials for the right to go to the 1968 Summer Olympics.

At Penn, Burk coached Harry Parker, both as an undergraduate, and afterwards as a sculler. Parker represented the United States at the 1960 Summer Olympics in the single scull and later became the head coach for Harvard. Parker would train by doing workouts with Burk in an opposing boat. Parker has stated that he never remembers beating Burk in practice even though Burk was 20 years his senior.

The Burk Cup, awarded annually to the winner of the rowing race between Penn and Northeastern is named after Joe Burk.

As of October 2006, Joe Burk is living in Scottsdale, Arizona.

[edit] Awards