Clipper 2002 Round the World Race Skippers revealed
by MHL 4 Jul 2002 11:29 BST
Legendary single-handed yachtsman Sir Robin Knox-Johnston has today revealed the eight individuals set to skipper in the highly competitive Clipper 2002 Round The World Yacht Race, which will set sail on October 27 from Liverpool, UK.
Sir Robin Knox-Johnston, Chairman of race organisers Clipper Ventures Plc,
and the Clipper 2002 Race Director core team, Colin de Mowbray and Tim
Hedges, both former Clipper Round the World Skippers, sailed with twelve
finalists in order to reach the decision of who will skipper in the esteemed
race. Of the finalists, eight successful candidates will command the eight
identical 60-foot Clipper yachts, backed by the cities of Bristol, Cape
Town, Glasgow, Hong Kong, Jersey, Liverpool, London and New York, in the
world's longest circumnavigation.
The identities of the skippers and their pairings with the international
field of yacht sponsors were announced today at ExCeL, London's newest and
most modern events venue in the increasingly developing and thriving
Docklands:
Richard Butler (39) from Crewkerne, Somerset, will skipper Bristol Clipper,
defending the city's Clipper 2000 race title against a formidable
international field. Butler joins Bristol Clipper from Aerosystems
International, a world-class company specialising in complex, software
intensive systems for the aerospace industry, and will bestow a wealth of
managerial and organisational skills upon the city's yacht and amateur crew.
With 33,000 sea miles and many successful ocean passages under his belt,
Richard has considerable offshore experience and has successfully raced in
three Fastnet Races, one as skipper, winning his class aboard 'Boozeroo' his
own Sigma 33 in 2001.
Captain Roger Steven-Jennings (46) from Plumstead, Cape Town, will command
the South African racing entry, Cape Town Clipper. Currently serving in the
SA Navy, Steven-Jennings will take an 18-month sabbatical approved by the
Chief of the SA Navy in order to take on the challenge of the Clipper 2002
race. Having commanded a major war vessel and completed a number of
successful ocean passages, Steven-Jennings, the Naval Harbour Master at
Simon's Town, will lead the Cape Town crew through a wide variety of weather
systems which require the full range of sailing skills, from patience to
steer through calms, flying downwind under spinnaker before a trade wind, to
beating through the Southern Ocean around the Cape of Good Hope.
Rupert Parkhouse (33) from Chichester, West Sussex, will lead the Glasgow
Clipper around the globe in the world's longest circumnavigation race. Most
recently Parkhouse gained his MCA Class 4, and has been working as a
freelance skipper with Southern Sailing. He has sailed with the Ocean Youth
Trust (South), a registered educational charity providing sail training for
young people, on board the 70-foot steel ketch "John Laing", and prior to
this he skippered a Jeanneau Sun Oddessey 52.2 as a Charter Captain in the
British Virgin Islands and also successfully skippered RYA courses on board
"Menai II", a Westerly Fulmar 33, for the National Watersports Centre in
Plas Menai, North Wales.
James Gair (31) from Burnham On Crouch, Essex, will take the helm of Hong
Kong's 60-foot racing yacht. A professional coastal and offshore sailor with
over 50,000 sea miles under his belt, Gair, also know as Chippie, will lead
Hong Kong Clipper around the world and will race into Hong Kong at the
halfway point of the circumnavigation in April 2003. Last winter saw Gair
sail aboard a Volvo 60 whilst corporate racing in Sydney, Australia, and he
also sailed as Mate on the America's Cup Class yacht 'Spirit'. Sailing has
been part of his life since a very early age, growing up exploring the
backwaters of the United Kingdom's East Coast. Gair started racing first in
the Mirror Dinghy class, then on to Lasers, 420's, 470's and many other
classes as crew and helmsman winning many club, area and national trophies.
Johnathan Brockhouse (33) from Lincoln has won the race to skipper the
Channel Islands' racing entry, Jersey Clipper, which finished second overall
in the 2000 Clipper race. Brockhouse joins Jersey Clipper from a
distinguished military background, although was most recently the House
Master at Lincoln Minster School. Formerly a Colour Sergeant in Her Majesty
's Forces, Brockhouse has lead sailing, canoeing and Out of Bounds sports
expeditions in Australia, Africa, U.S.A., Canada and Europe, so is well
equipped to provide leadership and guidance to the Jersey Clipper crew, many
of whom are sailing novices.
Adam Kyffin (37) from Wallasey, Wirral, will aptly set sail from Liverpool
this autumn at the helm of Liverpool Clipper. Kyffin, a Qualified
Mechanical Engineer and experienced coastal and offshore sailor, started
sailing at Porthmadog and Trawsfynydd Sailing Club aboard an optimist
dinghy, aged just 8. Kyffin also enjoyed much success in the laser dinghy
class, claiming 2nd place in the Welsh Youth Championships in 1981. More
recently, Kyffin bought a Hunter Formula 28 for club racing and national
events and has achieved fourth overall in Ford Cork Week 2000, second in the
IRC 2 Class in ISORA Week 2001 in Pwllheli and was overall winner of the
Lyver Trophy 2001, a 180-mile RORC (Royal Ocean Racing Club) Race from
Liverpool to Pwllheli.
Christopher Hazeldene (42) from Teignmouth, South Devon, joins London
Clipper from Reliance Yacht Management, a specialist company providing a
comprehensive marine management service for corporate and private clients.
As a Shipwright and professional yachtsman, and having served in the 42
Commando Royal Marines, Hazeldene is set to bring a wealth of nautical
knowledge, yacht racing skills and expert guidance to the UK capital's
racing yacht. He started dinghy sailing aged six, crewing in GP 14's and
Flying Fifteens, and took to the position of helm at just seven years of
age. Hazeldene moved to offshore yachting in 1987 and has been seriously
focussed on achieving his ambition of skippering in the Clipper 2002 Round
The World Yacht Race for the last three years.
Samantha Fuller, a 25 year old professional sailing and windsurfing
instructor from Colchester, Essex, will take charge of the USA's first ever
Clipper racing entry sailing under New York's colours. Fuller, the first
female to skipper a yacht in the esteemed event's seven year history, has
spent many hundreds of hours instructing on dinghies and windsurfers. She
joins New York Clipper having most recently skippered for the United Kingdom
Sailing Academy (UKSA), instructing aboard 'Albatross', the 67-foot ex-BT
Global Challenge yacht, and has also undertaken corporate racing and day
sailing for Sunsail UK. As a former offshore mate for Challenge Business,
Samantha has achieved a northern European tour, completed delivery trips,
raced in the 1999 ARC and undertaken crew training and corporate events.
Commenting today on the skipper selection, Sir Robin Knox-Johnston said,
"This is a first-rate group of skippers to lead the crews around the world
on the very unique Clipper 2002 race. The calibre of aspiring Clipper
skippers grows exponentially with each event and this, the fourth running of
the world's longest circumnavigation, promises to be the most gripping yet,
with international cities competing for the first time. I wish every
skipper, and their crews, a fast, safe and memorable race."
The eight dynamic racing yachts are now berthed in Royal Victoria Dock,
ExCeL, and are available for public viewing from 10:00 - 17:00 on Thursday,
Friday and Saturday, and from 10:00 - 12:00 on Sunday 7 July. Open house
sessions for prospective crew members will take place on Friday 5 July
between 12:00 - 14:00 then 17:00 - 19:00 and on Saturday 6 July between
15:00 - 17:00, when the Race Director will provide an informative talk on
the Clipper Race and will introduce past and present crew members.