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Buy a University of Wisconsin Hoody for Men, Women and Kids. Wisconsin Badgers Hoodies include: Full Zip Hoody Sweatshirt, Classic Hoodie Sweatshirt, Pullover fleece sweat shirt, Performance Hoody and Crew Sweatshirt. When you buy Wisconsin Badgers fleece at the Official Big Ten Shop today, your order ships in 1 business day.He won Olympic gold five times, but could rower Steve Redgrave transform a group of young hoodies into an elite crew capable of racing at Henley - and turn their lives around in the process?Rowing is a rarified world. One thinks of Oxford and Cambridge, of Henley-on-Thames; of straw boaters, striped blazers, Pimm's and champagne. One does not, typically, think of Liverpool. But, lined up on the banks of the Mersey two winters ago, stood 40 young Scousers in hoodies and gold necklaces. They were being offered the chance to qualify for the Henley Royal Regatta - in just seven months' time. None of them had ever been in a boat before. Guiding this experiment - which was, to crank up the pressure even further, being filmed for a reality TV show - was Olympic rowing champion Sir Steven Redgrave.

Steve Redgrave, centre, with his final crew of rowers - selected from a group of young hoodies from Liverpool 'Believe me,' Redgrave told the lads, 'it's going to be hell.' Privately, he had his doubts about whether they'd rise to the challenge. 'Seven months in our sport is not a lot of time. A beginner usually takes years to learn the art. How would they cope with the mental pressure and the fatigue?' He really didn't know. But after 30 years of rowing himself, with five consecutive Olympic gold medals to his name, Redgrave wanted to give something back. It might seem like just another reality TV stunt, but, refreshingly, this was not about pitting individuals against each other for audience entertainment. This was about creating a cast-iron, harmonious team - and about giving these boys a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to shine. For them, getting to Henley would clearly represent more than just a boat race. The ideal rower is a 6ft 4in-plus athlete who trains six days a week, eight hours a day.

He is a poised, self-disciplined, formidable machine. These boys' lives were scratchy, uneven and fraught. some had parents in prison; some had looming court cases. 'If you want to make it in this sport, you've got to cut down on the booze, on the late nights, on the drugs,' rowing coach Paul Turner told them at the start of training. 'Give up drugs?' snorted one. And so the punishing regime began: stomach crunches, rowing machines, weight lifting, more stomach crunches. 'We hurt as much as anybody else!' Turner would shout, like an army bootcamp officer. They began to get fitter, but they also learned things. 'Some of these lads think that "respect" is about wearing the right tracksuit, or looking cool,' said Redgrave. 'Respect in rowing is about commitment to what you're doing.' By week two, the raw recruits were dropping like flies. 'Getting up too early was tiring me out,' said one, preferring to return to his listless life on the dole. Nineteen-year-old Abraham Altairy, from a single-parent family in Toxteth, recognised the chance he was being given and, like a drowning man thrown a lifebelt, clung on for dear life.

'There are no opportunities in our area,' he said. 'If I wasn't doing this, then I'd be walking the streets, up to no good.' Five weeks in, 22 out of 40 young men remained. They already looked different: their faces glowed with health, their shoulders had broadened and their biceps were beginning to bulge through T-shirts and tracksuits. In the changing room, Coke and bags of crisps had been swapped for apples and mineral water. They first got into their boats one cold winter morning on the choppy Mersey. Snow lined the banks. The Scallies wore a ramshackle collection of hats to keep warm; their breath puffed white in the freezing air as they learned how to sit in a rocking boat and handle an oar. Rowing looks so easy when you see it done well: the crew moving in perfect synchronicity, the eight oars dipping as one into the water, the boat skimming the surface at speed. Redgrave's crews were soon swearing at each other for rocking the boat, unable to find a rhythm and pull together. One boat capsized into freezing water, leaving Ryan Vaughan upside down and terrified, trapped by the Velcro foot straps he'd been too panicked to undo.

Quickly, team mate Micky Hornby swam under the boat and managed to undo the straps. Ryan emerged, his back lacerated by the metal oar supports, deeply shaken but breathing. The accident knocked their confidence but it also brought them closer - and Micky, who had lost his mother at the age of nine, and, halfway through the project, was sent to prison for assault, was given a huge boost by being hailed as the hero of the hour. Redgrave's boys hard at it in training for the race All the time, the boys were under close observation by Redgrave and the coaches. There was room for just eight in a boat - who would make it to the end? Every time there was a cull, tears were shed by these hard-as-nails young men. Robbed of their sense of purpose, what did they have to go back to? Khalid Morny, 18 at the time, was a borderline case. His attendance was erratic and his temper kept flaring. But when he realised he was in with a chance, he became, according to Redgrave, 'a changed person'. With his father in jail and his mother a heroin addict, Khalid had his own court case looming, for violent disorder.

If he was sent to prison, his new start would be extinguished. 'The rowing's been a godsend,' he said. 'I never used to do nothing. I'd see a police car and start running for no reason, just to get a chase. I look back now and think, "What was the point of that?" This has shown me that if you work hard, you get good things.' By the time of the first long-distance race in Chester, the team had been pared down further. 'In any other circumstances we wouldn't have got on,' said one crew member, but now they were tightly bonded and, perhaps just a little cocky about their chances of winning, high on the adrenaline of the past few months. They were pipped at the finish by Newcastle University, which was, according to Redgrave, 'the best result for the boys. It'll make them hungrier.' A trip to Henley-on-Thames took the lads into another world. Over a champagne lunch they met luminaries such as rowing champion James Cracknell, who thought they were in with a chance, adding, 'But I'm not sure what the posh totty will make of you lot!'

Rowing crews try year after year to get through the Henley Qualifier to row in the Regatta. The June day dawned promisingly blue, and the Liverpool crew were sick with nerves. This was it: the goal of seven, highly focused months. They were up against the country's elite, both in terms of fitness and privilege: crews from Oxford, Cambridge, London and Bristol, among many others. 'Your legs are going to be screaming; you'll be thinking, "I can't row another stroke,"' Redgrave told them, minutes before they took to the water. 'I can assure you, you can.' Did they get through? It is perhaps more interesting to ask, two summers later, what happened to those young men who defied all expectations - not least their own. Are they still rowing? Have their lives turned around? The captain, Luke McMurray, 26, has gone back to his old job working as a joiner for his father, but he has also enrolled at university in Liverpool to study building and surveying. 'I got the impression it was going to change my life and open doors,' he told me.

'But here I am, doing what I was doing before.' It proved impossible to balance rowing with the need to earn a living. 'I still think it's a rich man's sport,' he says. 'You need backing to do eight hours' training a day. You can't work and row really well.' It would be easy to feel some bitterness in the aftermath of the experiment. Like Professor Higgins with Eliza Doolittle, Redgrave plucked these lads out of obscurity, showed them the thrills and the spoils, then dropped them back where they came from. 'It was like someone in your family had died when it was all over,' says Luke. Yet he insists he feels no resentment. 'It gave me the best experience of my life. I grew up a lot over the time it was filmed. I was up to no good before then, but when I started the rowing, the younger lads looked up to me.' Steven Callaghan, 21, and Luke Pendlebury, 25, completed their A-levels and now row in the First Eight for Oxford Brookes University and Homerton College, Cambridge respectively, and the old crew travel to regattas to cheers them on.