Please select your home edition
Edition
Leaderboard brokerage

Ramón Carlín, first Whitbread champion, dies aged 92

by Volvo Ocean Race 6 May 2016 15:33 BST 6 May 2016
Ramón Carlín passes away © Ian Roman / Volvo Ocean Race

Ramón Carlín, the 'weekend sailor' who upset the odds to become the winner of the first Whitbread Round the World Race in 1973-74, has died in Mexico City at the age of 92.

Carlín was a complete unknown in the sport when he entered the event, which later became the Volvo Ocean Race, having made his fortune manufacturing washing machines and other white goods in his native Mexico after starting his career as a door-to-door salesman selling cutlery, pots and pans and other household goods.

By 1973, he was seeking new challenges. He assembled a crew of good, but unheralded sailors, before upsetting some of the era's leading names of offshore sailing, such as Britain's Chay Blyth, by winning with his Swan 65, Sayula II.

He didn't insure Sayula II for the race, but saved on the premium to cover necessary repairs. The crew only discovered this as they approached the finish with only 14 of the 19 strands of the forestay still intact.

After the race, in which three rival sailors died in the 19-strong fleet, Carlín returned home to a presidential reception in Acapulco and became Mexico's most famous yachtsman.

Right to the end of his long life, Carlín delighted in recounting his triumph, which was commemorated in a successful movie last year, 'The Weekend Sailor', directed by his countryman, Bernardo Arsuaga.

Carlín told how his team were mocked in the English media prior to the start in September 1973, portrayed as lazy Mexicans with big sombreros and completely unprepared for the huge round-the world challenge ahead.

"The winning difference was my boat and that crew," Carlín recounted later. "We had no time to train. My plan was to get to know the crew and teach them how to manage the boat during the first leg, but all of them turned out to be very good.

"What hooked me was that it was an adventure, no one knew which way to go. It was the first time anyone had gone round the world with a full crew and the competition was real."

Two years ago, Arsuaga and Carlín, staged a 40th anniversary reunion of the crew, many of whom were meeting for the first time since their inaugural Whitbread victory.

One of the crew, Briton Butch Dalrymple-Smith, had no doubt that it was Carlín's exceptional skills of leadership that transformed a crew of friends, family members – his wife was the cook for the first leg – plus an assortment of international sailors, into world beaters.

"We won because of our skipper. We exceeded our own ability because Ramón Carlín trusted us," Dalrymple-Smith said in an interview with www.volvooceanrace.com.

"Ramón was as close to a perfect captain that I have ever experienced," added American Bob Martin, another of the crew. "He was enthusiastic, he did everything in a first class way. He cared about us, we had the best food and the boat was beautifully equipped."

"He was a perfect skipper really," said Dalrymple-Smith.

"He identified the things that were necessary to win the race and he took care of it. He let the best sailors sail the boat, and the best navigator do the navigation."

The Mexican businessman managed his team smartly, and humbly, even in the toughest Southern Ocean conditions.

"He was very, very considerate," added Dalrymple-Smith.

"If someone was sick, he would take his night watch. He would dry our wet gear if we forgot to do it. Others would scream. He just wasn't like that.

"Everything that made the difference between success and failure can be traced back to Ramón."

Related Articles

The Ocean Race joins world leaders in Athens
Nature's Baton and the Relay4Nature connect at Our Ocean Conference The Ocean Race joined world leaders at the Our Ocean Conference 2024 at the Stavros Niarchos Foundation Cultural Center (SNFCC) in Athens, Greece on Tuesday, who had gathered to advance measures to protect and restore ocean health. Posted on 17 Apr
The Ocean Race sails into Athens
For the Our Ocean Conference UN Secretary-General's Special Envoy for the Ocean hands Nature's Baton to Greece's Prime Minister's Special Envoy for Oceans and Coordinator of the conference. Posted on 15 Apr
The Ocean Race and IOC UNESCO collaborate
Contributing towards the science we need for the ocean we want In the lead up to the 2024 Ocean Decade Conference, The Ocean Race today shared the impact of the data collected by teams and sailors through the race's science on board programme. Posted on 9 Apr
The Ocean Race gathers critical polar ocean data
From Antarctica and the Northwest Passage The Ocean Race is providing critical data to international scientists studying the impact of climate change and plastic pollution on ocean health. Posted on 8 Apr
The Ocean Race Europe 2025 will start from Kiel
Aim is to combine this event with the topic of ocean health and protection Organisers of The Ocean Race have confirmed Kiel.Sailing.City as the host of the start of The Ocean Race Europe during a press conference in Kiel on Wednesday morning. Posted on 14 Feb
The Ocean Race ends an epic 2023 on a high note
An incredible race year comes to a close An incredible race year comes to a close with the Notice of Race released for The Ocean Race Europe in 2025 and The Ocean Race 2026-27 along with comprehensive reports on the 2023 event... Posted on 21 Dec 2023
The Ocean Race wins the Sustainability Award
In the International Sports Awards 2023 The Ocean Race, the toughest and longest test of a team in sport, has taken the top prize in the Sustainability category of the 2023 International Sports Awards, hosted by the International Sports Convention. Posted on 7 Dec 2023
The Ocean Race takes action at COP28
Calling for a sea change at United Nations Climate Change Conference The Ocean Race is at the United Nations Climate Change Conference, COP28, to call for the ocean to be a key consideration in the vital climate negotiations and to highlight how sport and business can help to make a positive difference for the planet. Posted on 30 Nov 2023
The Ocean Race to collect rare data in Antarctica
The analysis of tiny microplastics (down to 30 microns) has never been done before in Antarctica The Ocean Race is driving an Antarctic science mission in which vital data about the health of the ocean will be gathered at the southern fringes of the planet, where information is extremely sparse. Posted on 28 Nov 2023
11th Hour Racing is World Sailing Team of the Year
The first American team to win The Ocean Race has been recognised Skipper Charlie Enright was on hand to pick up the Team of the Year prize at the World Sailing annual awards night held in Málaga, Spain on Tuesday evening. Posted on 15 Nov 2023