By Jeff White (jwhite@virginia.edu)
VirginiaSports.com
CHARLOTTESVILLE –– Kelsie Chaudoin still remembers a conversation she had during her fourth year at the University of Virginia, where she was a student in the architecture school and one of the rowing team’s captains.
She was meeting with Phil Gates, then the life skills director for the UVA athletics department. “He said, ‘Kelsie, there’s glue on the streets here. You’re going to be back some day,’ ” Chaudoin recalled Sunday, “and I was like, ‘Yeah, OK, whatever.’ ”
She laughed. “But here I am, heading back.”
A 2008 graduate of UVA, Chaudoin spent the past five seasons on the coaching staff of Stanford University’s powerful women’s rowing program, most recently as associate head coach. She’s still on the West Coast, but this is her first week as UVA’s associate head coach and recruiting coordinator.
She and her fiancé, Corey Hennegan, will move to Charlottesville early next month, along with her dog, Riptide (pictured above). They wanted to relocate sooner, but concerns about flying during the COVID-19 pandemic prompted a change of plans. And so Chaudoin will be telecommuting for the next several weeks, with head coach Kevin Sauer’s blessing.
Chaudoin and Hennegan had planned to be married on Sept. 19 in California. Then came the pandemic. They’ve rescheduled their wedding for August 2021.
“We’re hoping that it’s more accessible for everybody,” Chaudoin said. “We didn’t want to put people in a tough position to have to decide if they’d fly out.”
Chaudoin, 33, filled the spot on Sauer’s staff that opened when Emily Ford resigned after the abbreviated 2019-20 season to be closer to family in Oregon. As an undergraduate, Chaudoin rowed for Sauer, and she remained close with him and his wife, Barb, after leaving Charlottesville.
“I’ve always looked up to Kevin,” Chaudoin said. “People say it all the time, but he’s a great coach because he cares so much about his athletes, not only as rowers but as people, and that’s something that I’ve always really admired about him. I just think he’s a top-notch leader, so I’m really excited to learn from him as a co-worker and to see everything behind the scenes that I wasn’t able to witness as an athlete. And I’ve always loved Charlottesville.”
Rounding out the staff are assistant coaches Erin Neppel and Caroline King, graduate assistant Anne Campbell, director of boathouse and program operations Jeff Mork, and volunteer assistant Roger Payne. A revered figure in the rowing world, Payne was the Cavaliers’ boatman when Chaudoin was in college.
Chaudoin has met the other members of the staff, and “I’m just pumped to be able to work with them, too,” she said.
Sauer and Chaudoin were on the United States’ coaching staff at the U23 world championships last summer, and he’d followed her rise in the profession with interest.
“She’s proven herself as a coach first, but then as a recruiter, too,” Sauer said. “She’s got great relationships with kids and with their parents. I’m looking forward to her taking that banner.”

