Please select your home edition
Edition
CoastWaterSports 2014

Volvo Ocean Race announce Legends Regatta covering all editions

by Volvo Ocean Race Media on 5 Jul 2010
The Garden Party, which was held at Cape Town to celebrate the arrival of Ceramco Ceramco NZ

The great and the good from the 37-year history of the Volvo and its predecessor Whitbread races are already putting the first week of November 2011 in their diaries, following the announcement of the Volvo Ocean Race Legends Regatta.

Professional skippers and owners of the boats which made the planet their race track are drawing up plans to sail once again to a round the world race village. The destination will be Alicante and the gathering will be the first ever official reunion of all who have ever sailed in the world's premier ocean race.

The aim is to have at least one representative boat from every edition of the race since 1973 and to attract as many people as possible who have ever crewed in any of the races. This is a pilgrimage with no penance at the end of it, a round the world club gathering to be enjoyed by the racers, and to give recognition to all that they achieved.

With around 2000 sailors having sailed in the 10 editions of what is now the Volvo Ocean Race, it's inevitable that there have been plenty of behind-the-scenes stories - fun and shenanigans aboard the boats and in port that haven't made it to the public domain.

Now, with the launch of the new Legends Regatta, taking place next year, it's time to spill the beans on a few such events. As a precaution, we have deliberately omitted the names of some of those involved... just to protect the guilty.

New Zealander Grant Dalton, himself a legend of six races, says you have to go back to the good old days to find the bad old days.

'The further you go back, the greater the fun,' he says. 'That was when the race was there to get you from one party to another; you had to go to sea to recover. We played hard when we were in port and sailed hard when we were at sea.'

Dalton did his first circumnavigation onboard the 1981-82 winner, the 76' Flyer, owned by Conny van Rietschoten of The Netherlands. 'We were never ever going very far very fast, so we had plenty of time to kill.

'In those days you had real food on the yachts, and there was plenty of it, so to stop ourselves from getting board, we set up a wine biscuit eating competition - the challenge being to see how many of these thin, shortbread-like biscuits you could get in your mouth without choking or breaking a biscuit. It's amazing how much time stupid things like this consumed.'

'In that same race, Mar del Plata, in Argentina, proved to be a nightmare stopover. We were there for six weeks with absolutely nothing to do except got to the beer tent, the scene of many memorable happenings. One night someone said, ‘we should get a stereo in here and liven this place up,'.

'With that said, one of our finest disappeared outside, got hold of Conny's car and drove it straight through the front of the tent, sending tables and chairs flying everywhere. He got out of the car, threw open both doors, turned up the volume on the car's sound system and we had our stereo - and a great party.'

More recently, Ross Field, a former race winner and veteran of five races, tells a story from the Volvo Ocean Race 2001-02 aboard News Corp on the Cape Town to Sydney stage.

'Jeff ‘Scotty' Scott has four false front teeth and when he steers the boat he's always got his tongue hanging out and flicking his teeth in and out of place. It was blowing ‘dogs off chains' this particular night and Scotty, who was steering, was yelling so hard to one of the crew, trying to be heard over all the noise, that he literally blew his teeth out. All the crew heard then was a cry of ‘Crytht, cor, I've loth my ething teef'.

So there we were in the middle of this high level competition and Scotty's got all the crew crawling around the back of the cockpit with torches, trying to find his false teeth. I was in my bunk and asleep at the time and the first I knew about it was when Scotty came below, shook me and woke me up. ‘Roth, Roth,' he shouted.

'I shot bolt upright, wide awake immediately, thinking the rig must have fallen out. ‘What's wrong Scotty?' I asked anxiously, trying to gather my senses. ‘Roth, I've loth my ething teef'. ‘What are you waking me for? I haven't got any effing teeth to give you'. The teeth were never found.

As far as parties go, the biggest and best was in Punta del Este, Uruguay in 1993-94 at the end of the leg from Auckland, recalls Field. 'Just about the entire fleet arrived in Punta at around 4am and as soon as we hit the dock everyone headed to a bar that was still open down on the foreshore.

'Within no time, we had one huge party on our hands. It was almost out of control, with all sorts of things, including chairs flying through the air for hell of it. Suddenly there was a drama; a very prominent Kiwi sailor had fallen off the terrace at the bar and cracked open his head - but not seriously. Still, the ambulance was called and while it was outside, one of our stood on a table and it collapsed, so the next thing he's in the back of the ambulance as well.

'Watching the local ambulance men trying to care for the two guys was all a bit much for another who shall remain nameless. He didn't trust them, so he decided he should step in and take control of the situation; he would be come the ambulance driver. With that decision made, he slipped into the ambulance and tried to drive it off, much to the horror of the ambos. The final scene was a massive ruckus with the ambulance men trying desperately to get the sailor out of their ambulance.'

The stories are endless and will no doubt be re-lived during the Legends Regatta next year. Perhaps then we shall find out who it was that ‘borrowed' a forklift truck in Uruguay and ‘parked' shore manager David Glen's car very precariously atop a shipping container in the boatyard... answers on a postcard please.

For more on the Legends http://www.volvooceanrace.com/news/news-legends/!click_here

To read the free online edition of the Volvo Ocean Race magazine, Life on the Extreme http://edition.pagesuite-professional.co.uk/launch.aspx?referral=other&refresh=aD1603Eg7Xx1&PBID=d2623da3-09c6-443e-ae19-44f7fd101fec&skip=!click_here

Trinidad and Tobago - Sail Service StayRooster SB1 Inshore RangeLloyd Stevenson - AC ETNZ 1456x180px BOTTOM

Related Articles

Gloves off! (Or is that actually gloves on?)
Gloves off, bare-knuckle street fighter style, or tape the hands up and go the padded mitts Well now... Isn't that actually a really good point. Normally, you'd say it was gloves off, time to get physical in a bare-knuckle street fighter sense.
Posted on 17 Nov
Vendée Globe Day 8: Play it again Sam!
Goodchild on the rise again as Sébastien Simon takes the lead Sébastien Simon (Groupe Dubreuil), the French skipper who grew up in Les Sables d'Olonne with the Vendée Globe as the backdrop to his life, is Sunday's new leader of the solo non-stop round the world race.
Posted on 17 Nov
18ft Skiff Sixt Spring Championship Race 5
Another brilliant exhibition by the Rag & Famish Hotel team in the strong north-east wind The Rag & Famish Hotel team of Harry Price, Max Paul and Finn Rodowicz continued their domination of the 2024-25 Australian 18 Footers League with another brilliant exhibition in the strong north-east wind conditions on a near-deserted Sydney Harbour.
Posted on 17 Nov
Vendée Globe Sunday Morning Update
Damage for Louis Burton on Bureau Vallée, is West now Best? One of the expected front runners, Louis Burton reported to race control that he had found deck cracks on Bureau Vallée. Meanwhile, the western group is making good progress in strong winds, and we discuss the VMG numbers and why they're important.
Posted on 17 Nov
Vendee Globe Day 7 - Deck cracks on Bureau Vallée
Le Cam ventures into Groupama Corner; "Big crack" on Bureau Vallée The casualty count in the Vendée Globe Race is potentially about to increase with the news that one of the expected front runners Louis Burton has just reported to race control that he had found deck cracks on his foiling IMOCA Bureau Vallée.
Posted on 17 Nov
Vendée Globe Day 7: the African king?
The six times Vendée Globe starter seems to have benefited from a radical easterly option Jean Le Cam, at 65 the oldest and most experienced skipper among the 39 solo racers still competing, leads the Vendée Globe singlehanded non-stop race around the world as the tenth edition completes its first week at sea tomorrow Sunday.
Posted on 16 Nov
World Diam Tour Caribbean: a promising 4th season
Joining the Diam24 one design adventure has never been easier With 10 boats already registered for a six-stage season starting from Saint Martin, the World Diam Tour Caribbean continues to draw sailing enthusiasts to the exceptional waters of the Caribbean.
Posted on 16 Nov
Giancarlo Pedote in the Vendée Globe update
"Trust in your strategy in the hope that it pays off!" This Saturday, as he prepares to tackle his sixth day at sea in the Vendée Globe, some 500 miles offshore of the Western Sahara, Giancarlo Pedote is currently at front of the pack after a spectacular comeback late yesterday.
Posted on 16 Nov
2025 Nacra 17 calendar is here
Get ready to sail into an action-packed year! We're thrilled to announce the complete 2025 Nacra 17 class racing calendar. With regattas in stunning locations worldwide, this season promises high-speed excitement and fierce competition for teams and fans alike.
Posted on 16 Nov
Jean Le Cam: Vendée Globe King for a Day
Top of the ranking, but this could be short lived On the official Vendée Globe website tracker at 0600 CET on Saturday 16th November, Jean Le Cam is at the top of the ranking, but this could be short lived.
Posted on 16 Nov