John
Kostecki and Liz Baylis Named Rolex Yachtsman
and Yachtswoman of the Year
PORTSMOUTH,
R.I. (Feb. 14, 2003) -- Two Californians, John
Kostecki, age 38, of Fairfax, and Liz Baylis,
age 39, of San Rafael, have been named Rolex Yachtsman
and Yachtswoman of the Year, respectively, for
2002. A panel of sailing journalists selected
the two accomplished sailors for this year’s
distinction from a shortlist of nine nominees
for the Rolex Yachtsman and five nominees for
the Rolex Yachtswoman. Established in 1961 by
US SAILING and sponsored by Rolex Watch U.S.A.
since 1980, the Rolex Yachtsman and Yachtswoman
of the Year Awards recognize outstanding on-the-water
achievement in the calendar year just concluded.
The winners will be honored and presented with
specially engraved Rolex timepieces at a March
21, 2003, luncheon and press conference at the
New York Yacht Club in New York City.
John
Kostecki
Kostecki,
who also was named Rolex Yachtsman of the Year
in 1988, made international headlines in 2002
when he skippered the yacht illbruck to win the
Volvo Ocean Race, after nine months of intense
around-the-world racing. The 32,700-mile race
was punctuated by drastic weather and the closest
racing in the history of the event. In addition
to winning overall, illbruck won four of the nine
race legs and on the seventh leg, broke the world
monohull speed record with a 484 mile 24-hour
run. Kostecki’s responsibilities as skipper
included selection of illbruck’s 14-person
crew as well as management of the training program
and onboard strategy during the race. As one of
the Rolex panelists put it, "the illbruck
team's accomplishment was like scaling Mt. Everest
without oxygen while everyone else was hiking
the Appalachian Trail."
"This
is such a prestigious award, and I'm especially
honored to win it for a second time," said
Kostecki, whose 1988 Rolex title was bestowed
after he brought home an Olympic silver medal
for the USA in the Soling class and won the Soling
World Championships in the same year. "It’s
even more exciting now than it was 14 years ago,
because the sport is more popular and there is
a whole different caliber of sailors out there."
Panelists
also considered that Kostecki served as tactician
on the winning Farr 40 at the 2002 Sailing World
NOOD Regatta in San Francisco and on the third-place
finisher at both the 2002 Farr 40 European Championships
and Rolex Farr 40 Worlds. A two-time America's
Cup tactician (Young America, 1995; America One
2000) and 10-time world champion in a range of
one-design classes, Kostecki's leadership and
sailing talents are supported by a tremendous
depth of experience. A professional sailor, he
is eyeing as his next projects the 2004 Olympics
as well as another America's Cup campaign.
Liz
Baylis
Baylis,
a first-time nominee for the award, crowned her
sailing resume with a hard-fought victory at the
2002 ISAF Women's Match Racing World Championship
in Spain. Having originally assembled her team
in preparation for the women’s match racing
discipline at the 2004 Olympics, Baylis had steadily
climbed into the top six in the ISAF Match Racing
World Rankings. Despite that, she was still considered
an underdog, as she had never competed at the
Worlds before.
"This
is by far the biggest award I've received in sailing,"
said Baylis, who is a Public Health Microbiologist
working for the State of California. "I'm
now a member of a very special group, a ‘who's
who’ of sailing in the U.S. It's pretty
incredible."
Panelists
also credited Baylis for crewing to a class victory
at the Pacific Cup, a 2200-mile race from San
Francisco to Hawaii, aboard an Antrim 27 with
just three people aboard. In addition, she co-helmed
a Farr 40 to second place at the Belvedere Cup,
a match racing series, and skippered to fourth
place at the BOAT U.S. Santa Maria Cup, also a
match racing event.
Though
a women’s match racing event is no longer
slated for the 2004 Olympics, Baylis plans to
continue competing in this discipline and will
defend her World title this year in Sweden. She
comes from a strong sailing family and points
out that her brother, Will Baylis, crewed for
her fellow Rolex award winner, John Kostecki,
when he claimed his Olympic silver medal in '88.
Since
Rolex Watch U.S.A. first presented timepieces
to America’s Cup defenders in 1958, the
company has consistently endeavored to recognize
and encourage excellence in every important arena
of competitive sailing, including Olympic Games
preparation, US SAILING championships, disabled
sailing, and offshore, one-design and women’s
events.