Monday, January 17, 2011

Live today: wwww.oracleracing.com


ORACLE Racing’s new website is live. Heavy on pictures and easy on the eyes, the new site is clutter free and simple to navigate.

The new site brings all channels – news, blog, galleries and team bios – under one roof and will be developed as we go forward.

The new site is very much a living site, and will continue to evolve. All future blogs will be posted at the new site, www.oracleracing.com/blog. The latest blog is from skipper James Spithill, who marvels at the ease with which they sailed the prototype AC45 on its maiden voyage.

Please visit the new site at: www.OracleRacing.com.

ORACLE Racing sailors to serve as ‘crash test dummies’

ORACLE Racing team members celebrated a milestone today when the prototype AC45 catamaran hit the water for the first time in Auckland’s Viaduct Basin.

Team members featured prominently in the design, construction and outfitting of the 45-footer, slated for use in the coming America’s Cup World Series (ACWS) events.

The boat was designed by ORACLE Racing’s design team on behalf of the America’s Cup community. The prototype was built at Core Builders Composites, the team’s in-house building team headed up by Tim Smyth and Mark Turner. Sailors such as Dirk de Ridder, Matthew Mason, Joe Newton and Joe Spooner were on hand this week to assist in the final fitting out.

“The AC45 is new, it’s modern, it’s exciting,” said Iain Murray, Regatta Director of America’s Cup Race Management (ACRM). “It’s quite different to what we would understand as a catamaran that we’ve seen in the Olympics with the Tornado or the eXtreme 40. The hull looks like a little Alinghi 5 hull with a wing that’s come off BMW ORACLE Racing, all in scale from last time.”

Full story at www.OracleRacing.com


Thursday, January 6, 2011

Honey named Rolex Yachtsman of the Year

Trophée Jules Verne winner Stan Honey (right) was named US SAILING’s 2010 Rolex Yachtsman of the Year. Honey has been working with ORACLE Racing and the America’s Cup Event Authority since last summer, helping develop new a new yacht tracking system for the 34th America’s Cup.

Honey, previously nominated for the Rolex Yachtsman of the Year Award in 2006 as the Volvo Ocean Race winning navigator aboard ABN Amro One, was cited as “one of the most outstanding offshore sailors known world-wide” by a member of the award’s selection panel that recognized him as the 2010 Rolex Yachtsman of the Year.

Honey becomes the second American in the history of the award to receive the honor for the fastest circumnavigation of the globe. Cam Lewis won the Rolex Yachtsman of the Year Award in 1993 for winning the Jules Verne prize aboard Commodore Explorer with a record time of 79 days, six hours, 15 minutes and 56 seconds – a record which had been surpassed five subsequent times before the trimaran Groupama 3, with Honey as navigator, set the latest benchmark.

In 48 days, seven hours and 45 minutes, Groupama 3 made the fastest non-stop circumnavigation under sail in history and claimed the Trophée Jules Verne while eclipsing a record – by more than two days and eight hours – that had stood for five years. Another member of the selection panel noted that Groupama 3 would not have broken the record without Honey correctly calling the weather window when they had to re-start after the first attempt was thwarted (a break down in the South Atlantic forced them to retire to fix the boat). “He did an extraordinary job getting the boat around the planet. This was the crowning achievement for a hell of a career,” said the panel member.

After sailing around the world, some might have expected Honey to spend some time on dry land, but in mid-June he was taking aim at another record, this time in the Newport Bermuda Race as navigator aboard Speedboat. “I've been navigator on Speedboat since she was built, so I carried on,” said Honey. “You get hooked on spending time at sea.” After leading the 183-boat fleet for most of the 635 nautical-mile race, Speedboat was the first boat to cross the line after racing for 59 hours.

“I am honored to receive the US SAILING Rolex Yachtsman of the Year Award,” said Honey upon hearing the news. “It is humbling to read through the list of previous winners. As an American, it was an unexpected opportunity and honor to be asked to sail with the legendary all-French Groupama offshore multihull crew. Groupama 3’s success in the Jules Verne is a tribute to Franck Cammas’ leadership and the seamanship of the entire crew. I would also like to thank Rolex and US SAILING for all they do to support sailing.”

After graduating from Yale University with a degree in Engineering and Applied Science, and from Stanford University with a Masters in Science Electrical Engineering, Honey, in 1998, co-founded Sportvision Inc. which evolved into the leading developer of live-tracking enhancements for sports TV broadcasts. Honey led the development of the yellow first-down line for televised football; the NASCAR racecar tracking and highlighting system; and the baseball K-Zone system, which highlights the pitch location and strike zone in televised baseball. He holds eight patents in navigational system design, 21 patents for TV special effects, is a member of the board of directors of KVH (a manufacturer of satellite communications and navigation sensors), and currently works for the America's Cup Event Authority on TV technology for the America's Cup. Honey is married to Sally Lindsay Honey, herself a two-time Yachtswoman of the Year (1972, ’73).

Monday, January 3, 2011

We've moved!


The turn of the calendar to 2011 also sees the team change its title to ORACLE Racing, reflecting the end of a long and mutually beneficial association with BMW. With the new team name comes a change in the blog address to http://oracleracingblog.blogspot.com. The team’s official web site remains http://www.bmworacleracing.com for the time being, until the new site is launched later this month.