Transactions and year book 1921 . o team; 2nd in the 200 yards, and 1stman on School relay team. A. Fitzgerald. 2T3, left forward Var-sity Polo team; 1st in 50 yards breast. C. Wells, 2T3, ManagerSchool Polo team; defence player Varsity Polo team; 1st 200yards; Ontario 220 yards champion (won at Central, Feb. 28,1921.) These men also played in the School Polo team. , 2T3, 3rd in Diving Contest, although handicapped bynot having practised. A. A. Bell, 2T3, goal-keeper for the Inter-collegiate and School teams; probably the best goalie in Cana-dian water polo. J. Langford, 2T2, Matson, 2T


Transactions and year book 1921 . o team; 2nd in the 200 yards, and 1stman on School relay team. A. Fitzgerald. 2T3, left forward Var-sity Polo team; 1st in 50 yards breast. C. Wells, 2T3, ManagerSchool Polo team; defence player Varsity Polo team; 1st 200yards; Ontario 220 yards champion (won at Central, Feb. 28,1921.) These men also played in the School Polo team. , 2T3, 3rd in Diving Contest, although handicapped bynot having practised. A. A. Bell, 2T3, goal-keeper for the Inter-collegiate and School teams; probably the best goalie in Cana-dian water polo. J. Langford, 2T2, Matson, 2T4, and Schin-bein, 2T3, were the other three men who represented School inthe Water Polo series. The last-named accompanied the VarsityPolo team to Montreal. Rowing In the fall of 1919, Prof. T. R. Loudon, probably the great-est authority on rowing in Canada, and one of the most famousof Argonaut coxswains, considered the possibilities of directingthe U. of T. after new championships in sport. The only rowing 168 THE TRANSACTIONS. SCHOOL ATHLETICS 1920-21 169 requisites that Varsity possessed was Prof. Loudons knowledgeof the game and the spirit that brought the Grey and Allan Cups,among other championships, to Hart House. With this end inview, Prof. Loudon talked the matter over with three Argonauts,who were undergraduates, and it was decided to call a generalmeeting to see what could be done. The result was that Varsitynow holds the rowing championship of Canada and the HanlonMemorial Trophy is parked at Hart House among the otherchampionships. Every race in which a Varsity crew was entered, they four-oared 140-pound crew, Coventry and Tufford of Medsand Hamilton and McGee of School, defeated everything in theirclass at the Dominion Day regatta on July 1st, 1920. A Juniorfour (heavyweight) won the final in their event, and incidentallybroke the record. Geoff. Beatty of Arts was the original strokeof this four, but he unfortunately took sick a week before therace, so Str


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