| EMMA
GETS A NEW BOAT
28th May 2003
While Derek Hatfield soldiers on
towards the finish of the Around Alone, there is
other news to report. And it's good news for two
of the skippers. Those close to the race have known
for sometime that discussions were underway between
Pindar and Hexagon to purchase Hexagon for Emma
Richards. Hexagon, you will remember, was dismasted
on Leg 4 and has been stuck in Argentina after Graham
Dalton sailed it there under jury rig. Dalton tried
everything he could to get his boat back in the
race, but the logistics of building a new mast and
getting it to the remote seaside town on the east
coast of Argentina proved too much for the Kiwi
skipper. Instead he made other plans and once again
the kindness and generosity of Emma's sponsor Andrew
Pindar came into play. Today Mr. Pindar announced
that he had purchased the boat and had ordered a
new mast.
"We have acquired what we consider
to be one of the best Open 60's on the water,"
Andrew Pindar said. "We want to build on our
success from the Around Alone and give Emma the
opportunity to compete at the very highest level.
She has been a great ambassador for us throughout
the past four years and we have received considerable
business benefit through our involvement in sailing.
Our ultimate aim is to put together a syndicate
for the Volvo Ocean Race in 2005." In order
for Emma to skipper an entry in the prestigious
Volvo Ocean Race, Pindar will have to pull in some
partners since the sponsorship ticket for that event
is considerably more than that for an Around Alone
campaign.
Emma of course is delighted with
her new boat. "I am absolutely thrilled that
we have managed to acquire such a good boat,"
she said. "We have a great race schedule planned
for the next three years and we are also hoping
that we could potentially use the boat for development
and training purposes for a Volvo campaign. Either
way, I am really excited as this is the first boat
that we have actually owned, and it will enable
us to build a team that will be very competitive
over the next couple of years." The partnership
between Emma and Pindar is one shining example that
sailing sponsorship is a very good investment on
behalf of the company putting up the cash. There
are other equally talented sailors out there looking
to work hard on behalf of a corporation interested
in global exposure and an association with high
profile sailing events. Maybe Tim Kent and Bruce
Schwab do not have that same dazzling smile as Emma,
but they are no less marketable.
Another equally marketable sailor,
Derek Hatfield is closing in on his first warm shower
and day off in many weeks. He has passed the island
of Bermuda and at the last poll Spirit of Canada
was 558 miles from the finish in Newport. In order
to arrive before the sun sets on Friday, Derek is
going to have to average a little over 8 knots (sailing
on course). For the last 24 hours he averaged exactly
7.5 knots. The weather is reasonable and he should
get a speed boost from the Gulf Stream, but Hatfield
well knows that sailing is unpredictable at best.
"I am sailing as hard as I can and will get
there as soon as I can," he said.
--- Brian Hancock great.circle@verizon.net
Source:
Around
Alone Official Site
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