I'm caught in a trademark row with Cambridge University – it's terrifying

18 hours ago 13

Ben Schofieldin Cambridge

Ben Schofield/BBC Omar Terywall, to the left of centre frame and looking directly out of the image. He is smiling slightly, has a dark, neatly trimmed beard, flecked with grey on his chin, and has on circular, black-framed glasses. He is bald. He is wearing a dark blue, collared top, with a white 'Cambridge Rowing' insignia on the right. Behind Omar are several sporting rowing boats mounted on racks inside a boathouse.Ben Schofield/BBC

Omar Terywall says Cambridge University's objection to his trademark amounts to "bullying"

When Omar Terywall launched his company, Cambridge Rowing Limited seemed the obvious name for it.

The company runs the Cambridge Rowing Experience, which takes novice rowers on to the River Cam for a taste of the sport.

But the University of Cambridge has launched a legal objection to its trademark, which Terywall, 46, describes as "terrifying" and "bullying".

He founded the firm in Cambridge, his home city, in 2021 and applied to register the name the following year.

But the university lodged a formal objection a few months later, saying it had to "protect trademarks to prevent misuse".

A hearing about the challenge was held in 2025 and a decision is expected in the first months of this year.

Ben Schofield/BBC Omar sitting in a single scull rowing boat on the side of a river. He is smiling slightly, while holding an oar in each hand. It is a fine, bright day. He is wearing a dark blue, collared t-shirt, with all three buttons done up, though his arms are covered by a white top worn underneath the t-shirt. He is wearing dark blue jogging bottoms and the tops of his knees are just in shot. His boat is against a pontoon edge, which is to the right of frame. Behind Omar is the far river bank, with a narrow boat moored up, a grassy bank, trees and a building. The river looks calm and it is a bright day.Ben Schofield/BBC

Terywall's company introduces novices to the sport of rowing

Since launching, the company has "introduced rowing to over 5,000 people", including hundreds of "local children", according to Terywall.

Explaining the name, he says: "The company is Cambridge Rowing Limited and it is a Cambridge rowing experience – that's essentially it.

"It's where we are and it's what I do."

Ben Schofield/BBC The corner of a white banner, which is hung on the outside of a rowing club's boathouse. This part of the banner shows a logo with the words "Cambridge Rowing Experience" written underneath a simple drawing of a single rower in a boat, pulling a stroke on their oars. The rower image is set inside a shield, behind which are two crossed oars. Below the logo is a repeat of the words "Cambridge Rowing Experience".  Ben Schofield/BBC

The University of Cambridge has registered a trademark for the word "Cambridge"

Cambridge Rowing applied to register its trademark – a shield with a rower on it and the words "Cambridge Rowing" underneath – in January 2022.

The following May, the Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Cambridge filed an opposition to the application.

It left Terywall with "no idea where to turn".

The university was a "huge, multibillion-pound entity", while his was a "very small local business".

"It's terrifying – it really is," he says.

"When you've got a very big organisation like them coming after you, it is pretty scary."

Asked if he feels the university is trying to bully his company, Terywall speaks of his "great relationship" with "the colleges and the university".

But he adds: "The university coming along as an entity – it can be scary – and I guess, yes, there is a form of bullying there."

UK trademarks can be registered in 45 different classifications. Cambridge Rowing applied to register its logo in class 25 for sports clothing, class 35 for merchandising, and 41 for corporate hospitality, sports events and training.

The university, founded in 1209, has registered "Cambridge" as a trademark including, in class 41, for "sporting and cultural activities" and "sport camp services".

It has objected to several companies' attempts to include the word "Cambridge" in their names, arguing that "the public knows that in the contexts of education, publishing, sport, academia and research the word 'Cambridge' always refers to the University of Cambridge".

Ben Schofield/BBC A building, centre frame and shot from below. It is a boathouse on the River Cam, though the water is not in frame. It has a blue, roller shutter type door, over which a banner reading "learn to row' is hung. An external staircase can be just be seen on the left. On the first floor is a balcony with chairs. Two white flag poles stretch up from the balcony railings. The building has a pitched roof, which is set against a mostly blue sky, though there are some clouds. There are similarly sized buildings on either side.Ben Schofield/BBC

The Cambridge Rowing Experience is run from the City of Cambridge Rowing club

Terywall's company operates from the City of Cambridge Rowing Club, one of several "town clubs" in the city not run by the university.

He says the city is "very proud of what the university has achieved in Cambridge".

"They've done remarkably well, but Cambridge existed way before the university did, as did rowing."

According to World Rowing, the earliest representation of a rowing boat was found in Finland and dated back to 5,800BC, while the oar was "considered to be the most important invention before the wheel".

Its website adds the "origin of the sport of rowing as we know it today comes from England, where the world-renowned Oxford versus Cambridge University Boat Race was first held in 1829 on the River Thames".

Terywall adds: "To take ownership of the word 'Cambridge' and the word 'rowing' – it's bonkers.

"Nobody really owns the right to the word 'Cambridge' and nobody can say that they own the word 'rowing' either as well – it belongs to all of us."

Supplied Liz Ward smiling slightly and looking down the camera. She is wearing a black top and a vibrant purple scarf tied around her neck, as well as a silver, glittering necklace. She has auburn hair, cut into a wavy bob. She is standing in front of a wall that is panelled with ornately carved, dark wood.Supplied

Liz Ward says companies have to demonstrate "distinctiveness" to register a trademark

Liz Ward, an intellectual property solicitor who runs Virtuoso Legal, says she believes Terywall's attempt to register Cambridge Rowing's logo in class 41 for "training in sports" and "sports coaching" was "going to take him directly in conflict with the university".

"I don't think they're going to succeed on class 41," she says.

"You can't deny that Cambridge – of all universities in the UK – is synonymous with rowing."

John Walton/PA Wire An eight-person racing rowing boat on the River Thames in London. The rowers are wearing the pale "Cambridge Blue" sports kit and are facing towards the camera. A coxswain with "Cambridge" written across their back is seated closest to the camera, but is facing away from us. The oars are all in the water as the rowers are pulling through a stroke. Behind the boat in the far distance is an imposing road bridge. There are trees and bushes on the left of the image, where the river bank meets the water.John Walton/PA Wire

The university's men's, women's and both lightweight boats won their races in the 2025 Oxford-Cambridge Boat Race

Ward points to the university's "outstanding reputation for rowing", including the Oxford-Cambridge Boat Race and the award of the coveted Cambridge Blue to those representing the institution at the sport.

"The university is probably trying to protect its reputation when it comes to sport, and rowing is a sport," she says.

"You could say 'Well, that's something that is synonymous more with the university than it is with a newly formed company.'"

The university's previous trademark objections have targeted several Cambridge-based science and technology companies using "Cambridge" in their names, with mixed success.

In 2021, the Intellectual Property Office ruled in the university's favour that a brewery could not register "Cambridge Blue" as the name of a Boat Race-themed lager.

The hearing officer in that case said the name could lead to the "false message that the goods had been authorised, recommended or approved of" by Cambridge University, giving the brewery an "unfair advantage".

Joe Giddens/PA Wire A view over the rooftops of the city of Cambridge. Prominent in the middle of the image are the roof and spires of the chapel at King's College, Cambridge, which rises above the surrounding buildings. It is rectangular and we are looking towards one of the chapel's longer sides. From each of its four corners rise tall spires and along the side of the chapel are a series of arched windows. There are other, handsome older buildings in the foreground, while in the distance are green trees and the horizon, as the city gives way to the south Cambridgeshire countryside. Joe Giddens/PA Wire

The University of Cambridge says that without trademark protection, "fraudulent use would increase"

A spokesperson for the University of Cambridge says it is "often subject to fraudulent actors misrepresenting their association to the university" and that it spends "a lot of time supporting people who have been misled and are often in considerable distress".

They add: "While we recognise this is not the intention in every case, we have to protect trademarks to prevent misuse.

"If there is no protection, fraudulent use would increase.

"We will always try to work constructively with others who want to use our trademark for legitimate reasons."

Asked whether he could change his company's name, Terywall says that is not an option "because that would imply that I've done something wrong and I haven't".

"My company name reflects what it is that I do – so it's 'Cambridge Rowing' and that's exactly what we do."

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