Legends of
America’s Cup sailing Ben Lexcen (born Robert Miller, New South Wales,
Australia) and Stephen A. Van Dyck (Clearwater, Fla., USA), have been
named as the 2006 inductees to the America’s Cup Hall of Fame. The
inductees, who exemplify the best in both the design and tactical
aspects of racing for the Cup, will be honored on the occasion of the
Rolex America’s Cup Hall of Fame 14th Annual Induction Ceremony to be
held Thursday, October 26, 2006. This black-tie dinner, sponsored by
longtime supporter Rolex Watch U.S.A., is scheduled for 6:30 p.m. at
the Union League Club, New York, N.Y. Tickets are available to the
public by contacting the America’s Cup Hall of Fame or e-mailing
t.souto@herreshoff.org.
America’s Cup Hall of
Fame President Halsey C. Herreshoff, who will preside over the
Induction Ceremony, said: "The selection of these two outstanding
America’s Cup individuals fits perfectly with the mission of the Hall
of Fame to elevate only the very best to the honored status for the
America’s Cup. Ben Lexcen oversaw the design of a fantastic 12-Meter
yacht Australia II that was the first to lift the Cup from America.
Steve Van Dyck sailed in two America’s Cup matches and was
particularly significant to the close, hard-fought match of 1970
aboard Intrepid. I take my hat off to these special individuals that
we honor."
Ben Lexcen
1936-1988
The man whose name is synonymous with the winged keel, Ben Lexcen was
the most prolific Cup designer over the five-match period that ran
from 1974 through 1987. Of the six 12-Meter boats that he designed,
three sailed in Cup matches. Most important, one of those boats,
Australia II, became the first challenger ever to win the America’s
Cup.
Born Robert Miller in
New South Wales, Australia, he left school at the age of 14 and
discovered boats in the coastal town of Newcastle. He built his first
boat at 16, started winning races, and became a sailmaker and
part-time yacht designer specializing in the 18-foot skiff class,
which he revolutionized. He designed light-displacement ocean racers,
including Apollo for Alan Bond. When Bond challenged for the America’s
Cup for 1974, he commissioned Miller to design his boat. An unusually
long 12-Meter, Southern Cross showed bursts of speed, but lost the
match. Miller soon after changed his name to Ben Lexcen in order to
avoid confusion with the sailmaking firm of which he had been a
partner.
From Southern Cross
through Australia IV (1987), all his 12-Meters showed a flare of
originality. "Good ideas are all around us," he often said. Lexcen
constantly experimented with keels, rigs, and concepts from aircraft
design. Lexcen and his associate Johan Valentijn tried out some of
these ideas on Bond’s 1977 and 1980 challenger, Australia. In 1980
Lexcen borrowed an idea for a bendy mast from the British challenger
and Australia won a light air race.
Bond became convinced
that the only way to win the America’s Cup from the New York Yacht
Club was to have a superior boat. In 1981 Lexcen headed the
international design team working in the Netherlands and Australia
that produced the design that changed America’s Cup and yachting
history. The team of Lexcen and two Dutch research scientists, Peter
van Oossanen and Joop Slooff, working in Dutch towing tank and
aeronautical research facilities, came up with an unusually small hull
over an upside-down keel sprouting winglets. Looking unlike any yacht
that had ever been launched, Australia II beat Dennis Conner’s Liberty
in seven races. Lexcen was later awarded a Member of the Order of
Australia.
People who worked with
Lexcen have described him as brilliantly intuitive. Bob Fisher, a
British yachting journalist and member of the America's Cup Hall of
Fame Selection Committee, has described his talent as "outrageous in
its naiveté, fundamental in its approach, and gloriously effective in
its delivery." His premature death from a heart attack left a vacuum
in Australian yachting, and the entire America’s Cup.
Stephen A. Van Dyck
(1943- )
Stephen Van Dyck
epitomizes the skilled and successful Corinthian yachtsmen who crewed
Cup boats during most of the 12-Meter era (1958-1987) as well as a new
breed of tactician. Born in Rochester, N.Y., he grew up sailing in
Southport, Conn. and as a youth learned extensively from involvement
with America’s Cup Hall of Fame member Briggs Cunningham who sailed
the 1958 defender, Columbia.
Van Dyck sailed on two
Cup defenders: Constellation as a trimmer in 1964 when a college
student and Intrepid in 1970 as tactician for skipper Bill Ficker.
While Ficker concentrated on steering the small-ruddered boat and
never looked at the competition, Van Dyck called the tactics and
directed the sail trimmers. This was in part necessitated by
Intrepid's deck-sweeping boom (grinders were below deck), which
prevented the skipper from seeing to leeward when steering upwind.
The modified 1970
Intrepid was not as fast as she had been in 1967 and in the
light-to-moderate conditions in which all but the first race was
sailed, she was clearly slower than the Australian challenger, Gretel
II. Intrepid won in 1970 because of the superior tactics employed by
the cockpit team. Steve was not aboard for the second race in which
the famous collision at the start resulted in the disqualification of
Gretel II . He had an allergic reaction to a bee sting on the tow out
to the start and was removed to the hospital by a helicopter. His
place was taken by navigator Peter Wilson, while Toby Tobin was
brought on board to navigate.
Van Dyck, who had been
employed at Sparkman & Stephens as a "rookie draftsman" before
college, contributed to Constellation's deck layout and is credited
with inventing the sheet lock-off or clutch which significantly
improved the ease and speed of headsail and spinnaker changes. At
Steve’s suggestion a full-size, inclinable mock up of Constellation's
cockpit and part of the deck was built to test layout ideas. He was
also involved in the design of the 1974 Sparkman & Stephens defender
Courageous.
In the late 1970s, Van
Dyck, though running a shipping company, became deeply involved with
Dennis Conner and his 1980 two-boat campaign that culminated in the
S&S-designed Freedom’s successful defense. Freedom’s low freeboard was
one of his design contributions. During two years of practice sailing
on both coasts, Van Dyck planned to serve as tactician, but business
simply would not allow time. He did continue to coach and assist with
syndicate management.
After 22 years as a deck
hand, tactician or advisor in seven campaigns, Van Dyck retired from
the America’s Cup after 1983, but his involvement with the sea
continued. He actively raced two 48-footers named Wonder to Bermuda
and along the East Coast in the 1990s. Now retired from the
Philadelphia-based shipping company he ran for many years, he heads
INTERTANKO, an organization working to protect the marine environment.
He is once again
competing in meter boats, the one-man 2.4-Meter miniature 12-Meter.
Thirty-five years after beating Gretel II in Intrepid, he is still
identified as a Cup winner. "When I am introduced giving speeches
these days, I am still a little amazed at how people still refer to me
as an America’s Cup tactician," he said.
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 is located 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 the
first induction ceremony in 1993, 64 legends of the Cup have been
selected for membership in the Hall of Fame. 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 21 members
of the Hall of Fame Selection Committee bring a wealth of knowledge to
the selection process. This illustrious international group is made up
of persons intimate with the America's Cup tradition of yacht racing
and committed to the integrity of the Hall of Fame. The America’s Cup
Hall of Fame is honored to conduct its yearly induction ceremonies in
conjunction with Rolex Watch U.S.A.
The America's Cup Hall
of Fame is dedicated to preserving and demonstrating the influence of
America's Cup Competition, for the purpose of education and the
inspiration of excellence in the world of yachting.
For more information,
visit
www.herreshoff.org
or contact the
Herreshoff Marine Museum at P.O. Box 450, One Burnside Street,
Bristol, RI 02809-0450, Phone: 401-253-5000, Fax: 401-253-6222.
Selection Committee for the America’s
Cup Hall of Fame
John S. Burnham, Chairman
Henry H. Anderson Jr.
B. Devereux Barker III
Bruno Bich
Dr. William Collier
Edward I. du Moulin
Bob Fisher
Halsey C. Herreshoff
Nathanael G Herreshoff III
Frederick E. Hood
William H. Dyer Jones
Bruce Kirby
Stanley Livingston Jr.
Elizabeth E. Meyer
Peter Montgomery
Rob Mundle
David M. Philips
John Rousmaniere
Olin J. Stephens II
Bruno Troublé
William G. Winterer
1993-2006
Hall of Fame Honor Roll
Charles Francis Adams
James L. Ashbury
Charles Barr
J. Burr Bartram
Robert N. Bavier Jr.
John Bertrand
Baron Marcel Bich
Sir Peter Blake
Alan Bond
Dick Brown
Edward Burgess
W. Starling Burgess
Malin Burnham
Bradley W. Butterworth OBE
James E. Buttersworth
William F. Carstens
Dennis Conner
Russell Coutts
Briggs S. Cunningham
Edward I. du Moulin
Sir Michael Fay
William P. Ficker
William Fife III
Henry Coleman Haff
Sir James Hardy
Nathanael G. Herreshoff
F.E. “Ted” Hood
Chandler Hovey
Sherman Hoyt
C. Oliver Iselin
George “Fritz” Jewett Jr.
Gary Jobson
Arthur Knapp Jr.
William I. Koch
Ben Lexcen
Sir Thomas J. Lipton
Harry “Buddy” Melges
E.D. Morgan
Henry Sturgis Morgan
Emil “Bus” Mosbacher Jr.
Frank J. Murdoch
Charles E. Nicholson
Sir Frank Packer
General Charles J. Paine
Alan Payne
Victor A. Romagna
Morris Rosenfeld
Stanley Rosenfeld
Tom Schnackenberg
George L. Schuyler
Henry Sears
T.O.M. Sopwith
George Steers
John Cox Stevens
Olin J. Stephens II
Roderick Stephens Jr.
Jack Sutphen
R.E. “Ted” Turner
Stephen A. Van Dyck
Harold S.Vanderbilt
Gertrude Vanderbilt
George L. Watson
Thomas A. Whidden
The Earl of Wilton
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