New Zealand women's rowing looks set to receive its biggest boost since Caroline and Georgina Evers-Swindell triumphed at the Athens and Beijing Olympics.
Four of the nine Rio-bound crews named at Lake Karapiro yesterday were tenanted by women, and each boat is capable of securing a medal.
Lightweight double scullers Julia Edward and Sophie MacKenzie, and double scullers Zoe Stevenson and Eve Macfarlane are world champions. The eight of Rebecca Scown, Genevieve Behrent, Kerri Gowler, Grace Prendergast, Kelsey Bevan, Ruby Tew, Emma Dyke, Kayla Pratt and coxswain Francie Turner were silver medallists last year. If you're looking for further depth and competitiveness, the Rio-bound pair of Scown and Behrent have been preferred over world championship silver medallists Gowler and Prendergast.
Emma Twigg, 2014 single sculls world champion, also shapes as a podium contender after a year off studying. She must qualify her boat at Lucerne in May.
To put their capability in context, New Zealand has had four women's medal-winning crews since women first participated in rowing at the Olympics in 1976. Joining the Evers-Swindells' double gold was Nikki Payne and Lynley Hannen's bronze in the pair at Seoul, and Scown and Juliette Haigh's bronze in the pair at London.