Rolex
America’s Cup Hall Of Fame 12th Annual Induction
Ceremony - Legends Honored: Butterworth, Fife,
Haff And Whidden
Newport,
R.I., USA (June 15, 2004) – Two living sailing
legends – Brad Butterworth and Tom Whidden
– and two of the past’s most outstanding
contributors to the America’s Cup –
Hank Haff and William Fife – were honored
at the Rolex America’s Cup Hall of Fame
Induction on June 10 in Newport, R.I. Halsey Herreshoff,
president of the Herreshoff Marine Museum, presided
over the ceremony that doubled as a fundraiser
for the America's Cup Hall of Fame. The Rolex
event attracted many who made their own special
mark on the America's Cup, including Rolex Yachtsman
of the Year Ken Read, Henry H. Anderson, Ted Hood,
Bruno Bich, Dave Pedrick, Jerry Kirby, Mike Toppa,
Peter Harrison and 2003 inductee Gary Jobson,
who entertained the 300-plus audience of America's
Cup devotees with career-summarizing videos on
each inductee.
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Rolex
America's Cup Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony.
Photo © Billy Black.
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“I
accept this award hesitantly,” said Brad
Butterworth of New Zealand. “because one
of the problems about being honored like this
is all the guys I ’ve sailed with –
Matthew Mason, Simon Daubney, Murray Jones, Russell
Coutts, Warwick Fleury –are the best guys
there are and I wouldn’t be standing here
without them.”
Butterworth
continued by praising his idols in the sport,
especially fellow inductee, Tom Whidden, against
whom he first sailed in Perth, Australia in 1987
aboard Chris Dickson’s KZ-7 Kiwi Magic.
“It seems like only yesterday we were in
Perth and were beaten by Dennis Conner 4-1 in
the Louis Vuitton Cup final,” he recalled.
“We couldn’t understand how the old
guys could beat us, but then I got to know Tom
Whidden.
“I
used to look up to those guys as my role models,”
Butterworth continued. “Eventually I formed
a great friendship with them. I learned a lot
from Tom and I thank him especially tonight.”
For
Hall of Fame inductee Tom Whidden of Essex, Conn.,
USA, the evening capped a career spanning eight
campaigns for the America’s Cup. Gary Jobson
presented him for induction, summarizing: “His
strongest attribute is his honesty. It’s
good to win, but the real measure of someone is
how you lose. Tom’s been in some of the
most unique spots in all of sailing and, unofficially,
he has sailed in more Cup races than any other
person.” The compilation of images culled
by Jobson from Whidden’s career and set
to Billy Joel’s ‘This is the Time’
inspired a standing ovation.
“Of
all the honors I’ve received in 25 years
of America’s Cup racing, this is the most
outstanding,” said Whidden.
As
a young sailor, he began making sails and learning
to trim them. “I knew from the beginning
that I wanted to be a sailmaker,” said Whidden.
“I got my start in America’s Cup racing
in Newport in 1979 and I had the luck of becoming
the trial skipper in 1980 for Dennis Conner’s
Freedom.” Whidden tasted his first victory
early and it inspired his future involvement.
As
Conner’s tactician aboard Liberty in 1983,
Whidden played a key role in the historic match
in which the slower defender pushed the faster
Australia II to the limit. “Our best Cup
race ever may have been the one we lost,”
said Whidden.
In
1987 he helped Stars & Stripes regain the
Cup in Perth, and a year later won his third Cup
match aboard Stars & Stripes, the catamaran.
Dennis
Conner sent a telegram marking the occasion. Betsy
Whidden, Tom’s wife, displayed a poignant
photograph taken of Conner and Whidden after their
Cup win with then-President Ronald Reagan.
“For
those of you who like to dream, reach and go for
it,” said Whidden. “It’s amazing
what you can accomplish.”
Entrepreneur
and founder of the GBR Challenge for the America’s
Cup Peter Harrison presented William Fife III
of Scotland. He recounted the historic days of
America’s Cup competition when, in 1899,
Sir Thomas Lipton chose Fife to draw the lines
of the first-in-a-series of yachts named Shamrock.
Notably it was Shamrock III, hailed as the largest,
fastest and most advanced racing boat known that
sparred against Reliance, Captain Nat Herreshoff’s
winning entry of 1903. “Fife’s name
remains connected with Lipton as his famous patron,”
said Harrison. “Both were successful, however
neither fulfilled their Cup ambitions.”
Long
celebrated as one of the best yacht designers
in history, Fife’s designs set a standard
of excellence for the creation of able, fast boats
of remarkable beauty.
Selection
Committee member John Rousmaniere presented the
late Henry Coleman Haff, whom he called ‘that
foxy old Hank Haff’ while noting his America’s
Cup accomplishments. “He was the oldest
winning skipper in America’s Cup history,
taking it at the goodly age of 58 when he won
in 1895.
“Nobody
in America’s Cup history has sailed in the
afterguards of more Cup winners. Not even Brad
Butterworth and Tom Whidden and Russell Coutts
can match his record. Haff was skipper or tactician
of four winners over a stretch of 14 years. Only
three other sailors have done so well –
Dennis Conner, C. Oliver Iselin, and Nat Herreshoff.
That places Hank Haff in the pantheon of Cup gods.”
Held
in the Grand Ballroom of Rosecliff, the famed
“summer cottage” built in the Gilded
Age of Newport, the evening’s notable guests
included Peter Harken; Elizabeth Meyer, founder
of the International Yacht Restoration School;
Dyer Jones, regatta director of America’s
Cup Management, organizer of America’s Cup
2007; Dr. Robin Wallace, advisor to many America’s
Cups and chairman of the Rhode Island State Yachting
Commission; Honorable John Wood, New Zealand Ambassador
to the U.S.; and Honorable Jane Cunliffe of New
Zealand.
For
more information, visit www.herreshoff.org, or
contact the Museum at P.O. Box 450, One Burnside
Street, Bristol, RI 02809-0450, Phone: 401-253-5000,
Fax: 401-253-6222.
About
the America's Cup Hall of Fame
The America's Cup Hall of Fame was created to
honor the challengers, defenders, and legendary
personages of the world's most distinguished sporting
competition. The present prototype Hall of Fame
was established in 1994 in an historic building
on the grounds of the former Herreshoff Manufacturing
Company in Bristol, Rhode Island, where yachts
were constructed for eight consecutive America's
Cup defenses between 1893 and 1934. The Herreshoff
Marine Museum, situated on this historic site,
operates the America's Cup Hall of Fame.
Commencing
with its first induction ceremony in 1993, 60
legends of the Cup have been invested with membership.
Candidates eligible for consideration include
skippers, afterguard, crew, designers, builders,
organizers, syndicate leaders, managers, supporters,
chroniclers, race managers, and other individuals
of merit. Each nominee is judged on the basis
of outstanding ability, international recognition,
character, performance, and contributions to the
sport. The 17 members of the Hall of Fame Selection
Committee bring a wealth of knowledge to the selection
process. They are persons intimate with the America's
Cup tradition of yacht racing and committed to
the integrity of the Hall of Fame.
The
Herreshoff Marine Museum and America's Cup Hall
of Fame are dedicated to preserving, exhibiting,
and interpreting the accomplishments of the Herreshoff
Manufacturing Company and demonstrating the influence
of America's Cup Competition, for the purpose
of education, research, and the inspiration of
excellence in the world of yachting.