It’s been almost seven months since I was in a Star boat. Given the last 3+ years of full time campaigning I was really crispy, tired and burned out….and wondered if I would ever hop back in the boat.
Then I got the call. “Hoss, it’s Boss. We’re going sailing,” said Paul (Cayard).
My first thought was ‘Gee, I hope I am out of this cast (post knee surgery) in time to make the Bacardi Cup!’ To make a long story longer, I rehabbed my knee five days a week. Once I was cleared to sail by Dr. James Andrews, I made the call to Paul telling him that ‘the Eagle was ready for take off!’. Truthfully, I thought I was cleared too early by the doctor, but last time I checked I didn’t have an MD at the end of my name.
My Dad and Paul drove together from San Francisco (man they have some good stories!!) towing Paul’s Star. They stopped in Mississippi for three days where they tried out far too many waffle houses and we did some training out of the Pass Christian Yacht Club. Then the three of us road tripped together for the last 800 miles to Miami.
At one point my old man was driving and forgot to pull into the toll booth lane (apparently he thought we had a sun pass on the Florida turnpike – note that none of us live in Florida). So the cameras started to flash and proceeded to record every license plate from the Star trailer to the front and back of the big Dodge Ram. We decided that at the next toll booth we would fess up and it turned out that this was a good move especially when the traffic is full on!
We have been here for one week now and I am having the time of my life. The weather is fantastic, the wind is perfect and the water is warm. I really like sailing with Paul. The guy is amazing on the tiller. Unfortunately, I am very rusty having been out of the game for seven months, but thus far we have improved every race so the trend looks promising.
We have completed four races and have two remaining, we are in 3rd place overall with about 65 boats competing for the Bacardi Cup.
Yesterday we had a great day. We finished the race 5th. We had an unbelievable start at the pin with Peter Bromby/Magnus Lilijhdal and traded tacks up most of the beat. I have to take my hat off to Peter and Magnus they are sailing a great regatta.
Truthfully, after being away with my knee surgery/therapy I didn’t know if I wanted to come back and go again but being here with Paul and the boys makes me reconsider…..besides these are my good friends so what else would I do?
Two more races to go then back to Mississippi for the Spring Championships sailed out of PCYC.
Austin
Bacardi Cup, Miami
March 12, 2009
Bacardi Cup Begins!
March 08, 2009
It’s great to be back on the water…and sailing with my buddy Paul Cayard at the 82nd edition of the Bacardi Cup. Today was our first day of racing and we did pretty well, finishing 11th among the fleet of 65 Stars.
We’ve been training in Pass Christian for the last week and are looking forward to racing here on Biscayne Bay for the next couple of days.
We’ll keep you posted.
Austin
Back in Miami... Again
March 26, 2008
It’s 10:00 pm here in Miami. Rod Hagebols and I just shut it down for the day. Our day began at 7:30 am today, like it has since last Thursday. We were very productive over the Easter weekend, albeit busy, but ticked quite a few items off our to-do list.
Rod arrived at the team house last Thursday morning on the red eye flight from San Francisco and I arrived that evening from Gulfport to Ft. Lauderdale.
The weather in Miami has been heinous! Raining non-stop thunder and lightning (one of my favorites) and for a change, it is cool. The front finally made its way through South Florida today and it started to clear up this evening, so hopefully with a bit of luck we might see the sun tomorrow!
You’ll see from the pictures that it has done nothing but rain – even the pool is overflowing! There is more than one way to skin a cat, so instead of getting wet working on the masts outside, we brought everything inside! We rigged, measured and tweaked nine masts, we also put together a new mast (this took five hours alone after Rod and I built new runners and checkstays, installed the spreader bracket, cut a new hole for the jib halyard exit point, etc). ALL INSIDE THE HOUSE!
Other than that, things are moving right along, the rest of the team arrives on Wednesday and JD will arrive on Thursday morning. We plan to get out sailing in the afternoon with our tuning partners Robert Scheidt and Bruno Prada. Bruno is possibly the funniest guy I have ever met! He is Brazilian and his motto in life is “to look busy doing nothing”.
Coach Rod and I have been riding the bike and hitting the gym, which included a three hour session in the gym today. While I was trying to shed a few pounds, Rod put the new mast in the boat along with all the sponsor logos on the Star boat for the upcoming Worlds that begin on April 11th.
Speaking of partners and suppliers, I am pleased to say that Oakley has just come on board our program. We’re really excited about having Oakley as a partner and are happy to be wearing their cool glasses on and off the water.
The next social event on my calendar is the Olympic Auction and Fundraiser on April 1st at St Francis Yacht Club in San Francisco. The St. Francis Foundation has had a major impact on my sailing career and I am really excited to attend the event and help the club raise money for future Olympians! The St. FYC has a huge tradition in producing some of the best sailors in the world. I just want to be a part of something special and hope to be on those legends’ level one day!
It will also be a great opportunity to see some of my family, my friends and meet sailing enthusiasts!
Well, I’m off to sleep because before I know it the Australian team will be pounding on the door at o’dark hundred to go for a bike ride! Judging from the past few rides with these guys, they aren’t slow and won’t wait around!
OUT
Olympic Training Update
March 16, 2008
Our biggest weakness the past few regattas had been starts, and after some intensive starting practice we got back into the starting groove halfway through the Bacardi Cup. Just in time to recover to a satisfying third place at the regatta. I think our new toys were a key to the turnaround with our starting practice. We bought some huge, regatta-sized buoys from Annapolis Performance Sailing and set full-length lines to simulate the size of the line at the Bacardi Cup, which was about a mile long. With lines this long it is very difficult to see from one end of the line to the other, then add 114 boats on the same line and you have a bit on during the pre-start. During practice we focused on time and distance runs and really familiarized ourselves with the setting so that we could be on our game by the time the Bacardi Cup starting signal sounded.
114-boat lines aren’t exactly great Olympics practice, but it is rewarding to see results in our training and that our hard work pays off. We had set a goal and tailored our preparation to reach it. Now the next step is to just make sure we do all the proper training to the specific conditions we’ll see in the Olympics. We’ll head to China for at least three training camps before the Olympics and those will be our best chance to prepare. We will fly out our training partners and have a full-on event training period so we can focus on physical endurance over a long number of days and sailing conditions at our Olympic venue in Qingdao.
Back to the Bacardi Cup for one minute. I can’t just claim it was smooth starts, and you’ll see from the results that the first two days were rough. One might see that in the second race we finished 39th… I hate to admit it but in all honesty we rounded the first weather mark back in 83rd place. We overstood the port tack lay line and with 2.4 mile beats it hurt… Oh by the way, when you crack the sheet on a Star boat it doesn’t go any faster like a tornado or a boat like that.
One of the worst parts of the week (for me) was the day the storm hit. Ask anybody I’ve sailed with and they’ll tell you I HATE lightning! It’s not in my contract and it never will be, I am not a big fan of the bad weather… When we saw those dark clouds coming we were one of the first boats into storm mode: sails down, sitting in the chase boat towing our Star behind. I could not have gotten out of there faster! I guess it was really windy and raining like cats and dogs. At least that’s what people told me I was cowering down below on the chase boat. Nice and dry and warm, and the best part is I couldn’t see the heinous weather we had outside!
Day 3 of the regatta was fantastic! We had one race, in which we finished 2nd place. (More than likely we should have won but I made a bad call on the gybe and split from the guy behind. Wouldn’t you know it he had some nice pressure to come back and beat us across the line to get the bullet. I promise I won’t do that again!) Aside from my bad call on the boat we had the mid-week award party hosted by Tito Bacardi Himself! Tito has been a friend of the Star class for a long time and he is a great guy. Well, this year the mid week awards party had a twist to it. The organizers were raffling off two jibs and we won one of them. The Star guys are my best buddies, and they all started booing once they heard us called up to collect the jib! They didn’t hate me; they just thought a huge program like ours didn’t need any freebies. After all, people don’t’ call us the Manhattan Project for nothing. A bit of heckling goes a long way, and so by the time I got up to the stage I just told the regatta organizers to keep the jib and raffle it off to the next guy. I got a lot of cheers from the crowd after that so it must have been the right thing to do! Hope the next winner enjoys the new jib! Karma goes a long way so I am sure it will come back two fold. I felt good about it…
Our awesome coach Rodney Hagebols had his birthday during the regatta so I have to give him a “Happy Birthday!” We tried to break out the model Lasers to do some birthday match-racing off our dock but they still need some tuning up. (We took them out in 25kts of breeze and we took a few waves over the bow as we were racing downwind so basically we need to replace all the servos because it’s all fried from the water…) Looks like I know my next side project. For now though, the main plan is to train hard in Miami for Worlds next month.
It’s been a great few months in Miami! Besides training our butts off on and off the water it has been great spending time with the team. When this is all over I think this is what I will miss most: The camaraderie between the guys. We have such a great team and everyone on it brings something different and positive. Rod has this fantastic attitude about him, it is so refreshing to be around, its motivating and contagious, I think after the Olympics I will hire him as a life coach. Hans Wallen is a silver medalist and he has an eye for things that are so specific its unreal. Hans had a vacation at the team house with his partner Annika and his two sons, who are fantastic kids. Not only is Hans a great guy but you can see what a tremendous father he is to his boys. Then Stevie Erickson, he is new to the team but fit right in from day one. This guy is a pro, no BS just a total pro. He is in his forties, never been married, no kids, no dogs and looks like he is twenty. He is a world champion, Olympic champion, Whitbread champion and he runs America’s Cup teams. He needs to write a book for all his stories… Just ask him about the helicopter… This guy is a legend.
I think I will get back to work… enough day dreaming about the water and winning…
Later
Austin
