Please select your home edition
Edition
Ovington 2021 - ILCA 3 - LEADERBOARD
Product Feature
RS Feva
RS Feva

First Australian Olympic sailing gold medallists to be inducted into Australian Sailing Hall of Fame

by Megan McKay, Australian Sailing 2 Nov 2017 05:49 GMT 3 November 2017
Australia's first Olympic sailing gold medallists, Sir William (Bill) Northam CBE (1905-1988), Peter (Pod) O'Donnell (1939-2008) and James (Dick) Sargeant (born 1936) © Australian Sailing

Australia's first Olympic sailing gold medallists, Sir William (Bill) Northam CBE (1905-1988), Peter (Pod) O'Donnell (1939-2008) and James (Dick) Sargeant (born 1936) will be inducted into the Australian Sailing Hall of Fame this week, recognized for their gold medal winning performance at the Tokyo 1964 Olympic Games.

"The achievement of Bill Northam CBE, Pod O'Donnell and Dick Sargeant in winning Australia's first Olympic sailing gold medal in the 5.5mR class at the Tokyo Olympic Games. opened up a world of opportunity for generations of Australian Olympic sailors to come," said the Australian Sailing Hall of Fame Selection panel.

When the trio won their Olympic gold medal, Northam, the skipper, was 59 and the grandfather of five, the oldest Australian ever to have won an Olympic Gold medal.

Northam only started sailing at the age of 46. After winning the Sayonara Cup in 1955 and 1956, Northam then had many successes with Caprice of Huon in the Sydney to Hobart Yacht Race and raced the Sabre class Jazzer.

In 1963 Northam decided to set himself a new challenge, the Olympics. He went to the United States, sought out naval architect Bill Luders, and had him design the 5.5 metre craft he called Barranjoey – in a misspelt homage to the northern beaches headland in his native Sydney. He asked accomplished sailors, O'Donnell and Sargeant, both more than 30 years younger than him to join him, and entered the 1964 Australian titles and Olympic trials, against skippers like Jock Sturrock and Norman Booth.

Although Barranjoey and its crew won the championship and Olympic selection, then another set of challenge races, Northam continued to have his detractors. Some said he was too old, and many pointed out that Jock Sturrock had solid Olympic experience, having previously been to four Olympic Games. However, Northam, O'Donnell and Sargeant had won the Olympic trials and therefore earned the right to compete for Australia in the 1964 Tokyo Olympic Games.

Northam marched in the Tokyo opening ceremony with his son Rodney, a member of the rowing team. No father and son had previously represented Australia at the same Olympics; this time two pairs did - the Northams and the Roycrofts, Bill and Barry (Equestrian).

With Northam as helmsman, Sargeant the for'ard hand and O'Donnell on the main sheet, Barranjoey made its mark quickly at the Olympic regatta, with a win in the first race. McNamara, the danger man from the United States, finished 10th in the first race, and Northam couldn't resist the temptation to heckle.

McNamara went on to win the next two races in 'Bingo'. The Australian team won the fourth and sixth races. With the final race to go, Australia had 5407 points, the United States 5106. McNamara could take the gold only if he won, and Barranjoey finished worse than fourth.

In a desperate finish, fighting out first place with the Swedish boat Rush VII, McNamara, the American favourite, was disqualified. The Australians finished fourth, qualifying as overall winners, and taking Australia's first sailing gold medal.

After the Tokyo Olympics, Northam was honoured as Australian Yachtsman of the Year. In 1966 he was made Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1966 and in 1976 was knighted for his distinguished services to the community.

Northam, O'Donnell and Sargeant were also all involved with the Jock Sturrock-skippered Gretel when it challenged for the America's Cup in 1962.

Although he did not attend another Olympic Games after Tokyo, O'Donnell continued his involvement with the Australian and international sailing world in the ensuing decades. He won the 1974 world championship in the 5.5-metre class, with Norman Booth and Carl Ryves.

In 1980, O'Donnell won the International Etchells 22 world championship, with Richard Coxon and Dick Lawson, and was Australian Yachtsman of the Year in 1979-80. O'Donnell and Coxon were selected to go to the 1980 Moscow Olympics in the Star class, but the sailing contingent withdrew from the Australian team due to the proposed boycott.

After Tokyo, Dick Sargeant also continued to sail at the highest level for many decades. In 1968 he competed at the Mexico City Olympics, where he and Carl Ryves sailed their Flying Dutchman class boat into fourth place, an agonising 0.7 points off a medal.

Barranjoey, the boat that Northam, O'Donnell and Sargeant sailed to victory in Tokyo, is on display at the Australian National Maritime Museum in Sydney. More information on Barranjoey is available at arhv.anmm.gov.au/objects/132337

Seven Hall of Famers will be inducted at the inaugural Australian Sailing Hall of Fame induction ceremony on Friday 3 November at the Hyatt Regency, Sydney.

Related Articles

Australians come out firing at Hyeres
20 Australian entries are set to battle it out over the coming week The French Olympic Week commenced today in Hyeres, France where 20 Australian entries are set to battle it out over the coming week. As the first fleets took to the water, Australian sailors revelled in the light seabreeze. Posted on 21 Apr
Five sailors selected for Paris 2024
Young guns ready for action On the shores of the Mediterranean Sea not far from the Olympic waters of Marseille, the Australian Olympic Team announced five sailors for the upcoming Olympic Games. Posted on 20 Apr
An overall victory with a side of Gold and Silver
For Whitehead and Thomson in Palma at the Princesa Sofía Regatta Australians seized two medals and the overall trophy at the 53rd Trofeo S.A.R. Princesa Sofía Regatta on the shores of Spain after an immense performance from the team. Posted on 6 Apr
Big numbers set for Palma en route to Paris 2024
At the 53rd Trofeo S.A.R. Princesa Sofía Regatta, starting on Monday Huge numbers are gathering on the island of Palma off Spain, with a staggering 46 Australian entries among the 1,000 athletes on over 850 boats and boards set to start racing at the 53rd Trofeo S.A.R. Princesa Sofía Regatta on Monday. Posted on 1 Apr
AOC announces Paris Olympics skiff selections
Olivia Price set to return to the Olympic stage Olivia Price will return to the Olympic stage after being selected to the Australian Olympic Team by the Australian Olympic Committee this year's Paris Games, 12 years after becoming the youngest female sailor to win an Olympic medal. Posted on 28 Mar
Plymo – Weddings, Parties, Anything
What a guy. Andrew John Plympton AM may have had many nicknames, but Plymo describes him best What a guy. Andrew John Plympton AM may have had many nicknames, like ‘Cheese', ‘The Admiral', ‘Dingo', and ‘Prez', but there can be no doubt that it is ‘Plymo' which best describes his disarming smile and entertaining wit. Posted on 26 Mar
Harding and Wilmot finish fifth at 49erFX Worlds
Ascending Australians wrapped up a helter-skelter week in Lanzarote Ascending Australian 49erFX team Laura Harding and Annie Wilmot have wrapped up a helter-skelter World Championships with a fifth-place finish in Lanzarote. Posted on 11 Mar
Olympic hopefuls set for Worlds gain in Spain
Three Olympic classes will hold their World Championships in the coming weeks Three Olympic classes will hold their World Championships on Spanish waters in the coming weeks, with the Mixed 470, 49er and 49erFX events likely to shape the prospects of Australia's Paris 2024 hopefuls. Posted on 27 Feb
Wearn returns and Morris set to go
Australian sailors selected for Paris Olympics Reigning ILCA 7 Olympic gold medallist Matt Wearn and 20-year-old iQFOiL sailor Grae Morris are both off to Paris, having been selected to the Australian Olympic Team for this year's Games. Posted on 16 Feb
America's Cup Campaign launches Pathway Program
Australia's America's Cup Campaign launches legacy Pathway Program with ASF The Team Australia Challenge campaign for the 2024 Puig Women's and Youth America's Cup has established an education and training Pathway Program to mentor the next generation of emerging, pathway and elite sailors Posted on 14 Feb