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Awards Archives - RPAYC https://rpayc.com.au/tag/awards/ Wed, 14 May 2025 04:39:08 +0000 en-AU hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://rpayc.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/Logo-1-150x150.webp Awards Archives - RPAYC https://rpayc.com.au/tag/awards/ 32 32 Industry Excellence Celebrated at the 2025 Nautilus Marine Insurance Marina of the Year Awards https://rpayc.com.au/industry-excellence-celebrated-at-the-2025-nautilus-marine-insurance-marina-of-the-year-awards/ Tue, 13 May 2025 06:53:34 +0000 https://rpayc.com.au/?p=62313 The best, brightest and proudest of the marina industry were recognised on Tuesday night at the 2025 Nautilus Marine Insurance Marina of the Year Awards, held at Sydney’s picturesque Middle Harbour Skiff Club. Opening the evening, Marina Industries Association (MIA) President and Master of Ceremonies, Andrew Chapman CMM remarked, “This is another incredibly successful celebration …

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The best, brightest and proudest of the marina industry were recognised on Tuesday night at the 2025 Nautilus Marine Insurance Marina of the Year Awards, held at Sydney’s picturesque Middle Harbour Skiff Club.

Opening the evening, Marina Industries Association (MIA) President and Master of Ceremonies, Andrew Chapman CMM remarked, “This is another incredibly successful celebration of our industry. The Awards attracted record entries across several categories, with over 110 guests and finalists gathering from across Australia, New Zealand, Thailand, the UAE and Singapore.”

Andrew Mulholland, Marketing Director / Commercial Partnerships Manager of event partner Nautilus Marine Insurance (NMI), echoed the sentiment, adding, “These Awards honour all entrants and finalists who consistently raise the bar and set new standards in our industry. While outstanding facilities are important, it’s the people who deliver the excellence we celebrate tonight.”  Drawing a parallel with the Nautilus Marine Insurance values, Mullholland went on to say, “It’s about putting your customers at the core of everything you do and building trust through integrity and reliability.”  

While the Awards have traditionally focused on facilities, 2025 saw the introduction of two new categories designed to spotlight and promote the achievements of individual contributions and rising talent. The inaugural Emerging Talent Award recognised future leaders under 35, with Jacob Morris, Director at Marine Structures, taking home the honour from a strong field, recognising his innovation, operational excellence, and forward-thinking leadership.

The new Industry Woman of the Year Award also made a strong debut, receiving a wave of impressive nominations. Six finalists were selected from across the industry, reflecting both the strength and diversity of women in marina roles. The winner, Stephanie Trounce, WHS Property and Compliance Manager at Gold Coast City Marina & Shipyard, was acknowledged for her deep expertise in safety systems and her leadership in maintaining high standards of property and compliance.

The flagship Marina of the Year categories were more competitive than ever. The recently redeveloped Jones Bay Superyacht Marina in Pyrmont, Sydney, emerged victorious as the Marina of the Year under 140 boats.   Managed by Scope Marine’s Nairn Johnson CMM and Scott Cotton CMO (also an Emerging  Talent finalist), the facility accommodates vessels ranging from 20 to over 100 metres, offering advanced features such as 500-amp shore power and in-berth black water pump-out—hallmarks of a truly world-class superyacht destination.

It was a standout night for Gold Coast City Marina & Shipyard (GCCM), which claimed the Marina of the Year Award (over 140 boats)Boatyard of the Year (over 20 boats) and Dry Stack Facility Award. Celebrating 25 years of trailblazing excellence, GCCM has transformed former farming paddocks into a world-class marina and shipyard, playing a pivotal role in the development of the Coomera marine precinct.

The marina boasts 200 berths, a 300-vessel dry stack and a shipyard incorporating 50,000 sqm of hardstand, multiple vessels lifting options up to 300 tonne, sandblasting bays, keel pits and undercover sheds. Underscoring its commitment to sustainability and service, the marina is Gold Anchor, Superyacht Ready and Clean Marina accredited and delivers premium customer amenities including a customer lounge, laundry, ample parking and waterside restaurant and bar.  

Trent Gay, owner of GCCM, said that “while my family had built the business from the ground up following the purchase of the site in 1996, the award is important recognition of our team, who continue to deliver for customers day in, day out.”  

The Boathouse Marina also received a Highly Commended in the Dry Stack Storage category, recognised for its fully enclosed facility featuring the world’s only two Wiggins Marina FLX machines. 

Innovation was also in the spotlight this year, with Bellingham Marine taking home the Industry Innovation of the Year Award for its reimagined Unifloat system.

The Royal Queensland Yacht Squadron (RQYS) once again claimed the coveted Club of the Year from the highly commended Sandringham Yacht Club. Accepting the honour, Marina Manager Glenn Scott expressed his enthusiasm: “We are very proud of this award, especially when we are so aware of the other great clubs that we were up against.  We see so much more opportunity and growth ahead. It’s wonderful to experience the camaraderie and mutual respect in our industry tonight.”

This year, a first-time entrant has narrowly taken out the International Marina of the Year AwardDubai Harbour Marina beat its closest rival, Westhaven Marina in Auckland, by only a couple of points. Dubai Harbour Marinas General Manager Wayne Shepherd was at the awards to receive his trophy and made a point of recognising the investment of his owners and went on to name each member of his leadership team and said, “This award is theirs and I look forward to presenting it to them on Thursday when I am back at the marina”.  

The competition in the Boatyard of the Year category for yards servicing under 20 boats was equally fierce. Three outstanding finalists—Boatyard by d’Albora The Spit, Royal Prince Alfred Boatyard, and White Bay 6 Marine Park—were announced, with White Bay 6 Marine Park taking the win. Industry veteran Lorraine Yates CMP reflected on the honour, “We’re grateful for industry recognition through awards like these. We have a beautiful facility in a stunning location, and I’m privileged that the owners trust us to manage it every day.”

The MIA Environmental Award was highly contested, with Royal Phuket Marina (RPM)—Asia’s first and only carbon-neutral marina—taking top honours for its all-round commitment to sustainability. Marina Manager Balan Aramagan was on hand to accept the award and noted how proud he and the team are of their achievements. As a leader in sustainable practices, RPM was also the first marina to sign the MIA Sustainability Pledge. Adding to the night’s recognition, Woranart Wongwanich of RPM was named a finalist for Industry Woman of the Year Award.

Two facilities were inducted into the Marina of the Year Awards Hall of Fame, recognising their continued and consistent success.  These included two-time International Marina of the Year winner, One15 Marina, Sentosa Cove, Singapore and the outstanding Dry Stack Storage Facility of the Year multiple award winner, Sydney Harbour Boat Storage.  

Midway through the evening, a special presentation was made to Ocean Marina Jomtien, Thailand, which was recently accredited as a Superyacht Ready Platinum 5-Gold Anchor Marina.  To celebrate the marina’s achievement and to recognise nine team members who have completed 30 years of service, 13 members of the Ocean Marina team came out for the awards and proudly joined Scott Finsten CMM, Marina Manager, on stage to receive the Platinum Gold Anchor Superyacht Ready flag.  Suzanne Davies, MIA CEO commented, “The pride on that stage was overwhelming and quite emotional.  The marina team worked so hard to achieve the accreditation, and it was lovely to see them all here to celebrate.”   It was also fitting that Marina Supervisor Min Sawangphong received a highly commended award in the Woman of the Year Award.  

Representatives from Birkenhead Point Marina, Coral Sea Marina & ResortSanctuary Cove Marina, and ONE°15 Marina Sentosa Cove were also recognised on stage. These standout marinas all hold Platinum 5 Gold Anchor, Superyacht Ready & Clean Marina accreditations, reflecting their ongoing commitment to excellence in marina standards and sustainability.

The full list of 2025 Nautilus Marine Insurance Marina of the Year Awards Winners:
•    Best Commercial Marina (Over 140 Boats): Gold Coast City Marina & Shipyard (GCCM), QLD 
•    Best Commercial Marina (Under 140 Boats): Jones Bay Superyacht Marina, NSW
•    Club of the Year:  Royal Queensland Yacht Squadron, QLD
•    International Marina of the Year: Dubai Harbour Marina, UAE
•    Dry Stack Storage Facility of the Year: Gold Coast City Marina & Shipyard, QLD
•    Best Boat Yard (Under 20 Boats): White Bay 6 Marine Park, NSW
•    Best Boat Yard (Over 20 Boats): Gold Coast City Marina & Shipyard, QLD 
•    Emerging Talent of the Year: Jacob Morris, QLD
•    Industry Women of the Year: Stephanie Trounce, QLD
•    MIA Environmental Award: Royal Phuket Marina, Thailand 
•    Industry Innovation Award: Bellingham Marine Australia, QLD 
•    Hall of Fame International Marina: ONE°15 Marina Sentosa Cove, Singapore
•    Hall of Fame Dry Stack Storage Facility: Sydney Harbour Boat Storage

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Zhik Centreboard Presentation – Season 2024-25 https://rpayc.com.au/zhik-centreboard-presentation-season-2024-25/ Fri, 09 May 2025 04:30:51 +0000 https://rpayc.com.au/?p=62139 Special Guest Natasha Bryant with Victoria Lin, Oliver Dorling and Lavinia Liu Thursday evening was a special moment for competitors, volunteers and parents who participated in the Zhik Centreboard Season 2024-2025. The night congratulated the placegetters in the season and announced the Special Recognition Awards.  We were honoured to welcome Natasha Bryant as our special …

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Special Guest Natasha Bryant with Victoria Lin, Oliver Dorling and Lavinia Liu

Thursday evening was a special moment for competitors, volunteers and parents who participated in the Zhik Centreboard Season 2024-2025.

The night congratulated the placegetters in the season and announced the Special Recognition Awards. 

We were honoured to welcome Natasha Bryant as our special guest. She shared insights from her incredible journey in sailing, including her experience racing for Team GBR in the 2024 Women’s America’s Cup and sailing for Team Australia in the SailGP series.

JUNIOR CENTREBOARD FLEET

Announced by Rob Brewer Head Coach
Presented by: Special Guest, Natasha Bryant

Junior Mixed Fleet

Lucie Howell & Griffin Flint
3rd Spring Pointscore

Jack Dent & Maximillian Gajda
2nd Spring Pointscore
3rd Club Championships Pointscore

Lara Dorling & Mia Holland
1st Spring Pointscore
2nd Club Championships Pointscore

Charlie Antill & Angus Clark 
1st Club Championships Pointscore

Optimist Class

Intermediate Summer
Mia Holland
3rd Summer Pointscore

Angus Clark
2nd Summer Pointscore

Jasmine Wang
1st Summer Pointscore

Open Summer
Aaveer Patil – Chaudhari
3rd Summer Pointscore

Victoria Lin
2nd Summer Pointscore

Jayden Wang
1st Summer Pointscore

Manly Junior Class

Olivia Dorling & Frankie Wray
3rd Summer Pointscore

Charlie Antill & Coa Holland
2nd Summer Pointscore

Lara Dorling & Willow Murray
1st Summer Pointscore

Flying 11 Class

Jack Dent & Maximillian Gajda
1st Summer Pointscore

WASZP CLASS

Announced by Jervis Tilly
Presented by: Robert McClelland (Commodore)

WASZP Awards

Isabella Holdsworth
3rd Club Championship

Ollie Ross
2nd Summer Pointscore

Louis Tilly
1st Spring Pointscore
2nd Club Championship
3rd Summer Pointscore

Will Troop
1st Summer Pointscore
1st Club Championship

29er CLASS

Announced by Mark Dorling
Presented by: Robert McClelland (Commodore)

29er Awards
Mixed Handicap
Jonny Harrison & Alana Harrison
1st Club Championship

ILCA CLASS

Announced by Julia Hornsby
Presented by: ZHIK Representative Ben Suthers

Laser

Pete Farrugia
3rd Spring Pointscore

Brett Kimmorley
2nd Club Championship

Lindsay Whitton
3rd Summer Pointscore

Bruce Ferguson
2nd Summer Pointscore

Michael Hanavan
2nd Spring Pointscore
3rd Club Championship
Winner of ‘Season Pointscore Trophy’ and ‘Laser Radial Club Championship Trophy’

Phillip Malcolm
1st Summer Pointscore
Winner of the Laser Standard Summer Pointscore Trophy

Stuart Holdsworth
1st Spring Pointscore
1st Club Championship
Winner of the Colin Beashel Laser Class Club Championship Trophy

MULTIHULL / FAST HANDICAP FLEET

Announced by Mark Dorling
Presented by: Julia Hornsby – Vice Commodore

MULTIHULLS

Beau White
3rd Spring Pointscore didn’t attend

Nick Elliott
2nd Spring Pointscore

Grant & Katie Pellow
1st Spring Pointscore
1st Club Championship

CLUB CHAMPIONSHIP FAMILY DIVISION

Announced by Rear Commodore
Presented by: Julia Hornsby – Vice Commodore

1st Place: Tom & Ali Malorey

SPECIAL AWARDS

Announced by: Mark Dorling
Presented by: Robert McClelland – Commodore

Jack Gale PARTICIPATION TROPHY – Charlie Antill

Competitive Parent Award – Jonny Harrison

Centreboard Spirit Award – Bruce Clark

Special mention to…. Beau White, Jervis Tilly, Jonny Harrison

Volunteer of the Year – Mark Holland

Cricket Newling Trophy for BEST SPORTSMANSHIP – Victoria Lin

Hornblower Trophy for MOST IMPROVED – Olivia Dorling

Laurie Norton TrophyENCOURAGEMENT AWARD – Lavinia Liu

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Nautilus Marine Insurance 2025 Marina of the Year Awards – Finalist https://rpayc.com.au/nautilus-marine-insurance-2025-marina-of-the-year-awards-finalist/ Thu, 01 May 2025 06:51:05 +0000 https://rpayc.com.au/?p=61933 Media Release RPAYC Boatyard Named Finalist in the 2025 Nautilus Marine Insurance Marina of the Year Awards Newport, NSW – The Royal Prince Alfred Yacht Club (RPAYC) Boatyard has been named a Finalist in the Boatyard of the Year Award (Under 20 Boats) category in the Nautilus Marine Insurance 2025 Marina of the Year Awards, …

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Media Release

RPAYC Boatyard Named Finalist in the 2025 Nautilus Marine Insurance Marina of the Year Awards

Newport, NSW – The Royal Prince Alfred Yacht Club (RPAYC) Boatyard has been named a Finalist in the Boatyard of the Year Award (Under 20 Boats) category in the Nautilus Marine Insurance 2025 Marina of the Year Awards, presented by the Marina Industries Association (MIA).

This biennial award program recognises excellence and leadership in the marina and recreational boating industry, offering essential benchmarks for industry performance and public perception. With 12 categories in total, the awards highlight innovation, service, environmental responsibility, and business success. Award winners will be announced at the Awards Dinner on 6 May 2025 at the Middle Harbour Skiff Club.

Categories 1–3 and 5–7 are open exclusively to Australian entrants, while Category 4 is reserved for international marinas. The Boatyard of the Year Award (Under 20 Boats) recognises small boatyards demonstrating outstanding service, environmental responsibility, and operational excellence.

Located in Newport on Sydney’s Northern Beaches, the RPAYC Boatyard is a full-service marine facility offering expert antifouling, water blasting, detailing, polishing, painting, rigging, and engineering services. With a 40-tonne lift and professional hardstand support, the boatyard services a wide range of vessels with a strong emphasis on quality workmanship and sustainability.

“We are honored to be recognised as a finalist among the industry’s best,” said Jon Harkness, General Manager at RPAYC. “This nomination reflects our team’s commitment to quality, innovation, and delivering exceptional service to the boating community.”

Finalists are judged according to comprehensive criteria outlined in the official Boatyard of the Year Award submission guidelines, focusing on operational performance, customer satisfaction, environmental initiatives, and contribution to industry standards.

For further information about RPAYC and its marine services, visit https://rpayc.com.au/marine-services/boatyard-services/

Media Contact:
Brendan Rourke
Communications Manager
Royal Prince Alfred Yacht Club

**ENDS**

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The America’s Cup Hall of Fame to Induct James Spithill, Paul Cayard, and Susan Henn https://rpayc.com.au/the-americas-cup-hall-of-fame-to-induct-james-spithill-paul-cayard-and-susan-henn/ Tue, 29 Apr 2025 05:14:08 +0000 https://rpayc.com.au/?p=61863 Bristol, RI – April 17, 2025. The Herreshoff Marine Museum/America’s Cup Hall of Fame welcomes James Spithill, Paul Cayard, and Susan Henn as Class of 2025 inductees of the America’s Cup Hall of Fame. They will be honored on October 16th, 2025 at the America’s Cup Hall of Fame Induction gala in the Model Room …

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Bristol, RI – April 17, 2025.

The Herreshoff Marine Museum/America’s Cup Hall of Fame welcomes James Spithill, Paul Cayard, and Susan Henn as Class of 2025 inductees of the America’s Cup Hall of Fame. They will be honored on October 16th, 2025 at the America’s Cup Hall of Fame Induction gala in the Model Room of the New York Yacht Club.

“The Class of 2025 includes two of the most accomplished and well-known sailors of the 21st Century, and the first woman who competed for the Cup,” said America’s Cup Hall of Fame Selection Committee Chair Steven Tsuchiya. “We look forward to celebrating their accomplishments in October!”

The America’s Cup Hall of Fame has inducted over one hundred individuals since its founding in 1992. Candidates eligible for consideration include sailing team members, designers, builders, syndicate leaders, supporters, chroniclers, and other individuals of merit. Each nominee is
judged on the basis of outstanding ability, international recognition, character, performance, and contributions to the America’s Cup. The members of the Selection Committee are intimate with the history and traditions of America’s Cup and are committed to maintaining the integrity of the Hall of Fame.

“What a triumvirate the Selection Committee has given us,” said America’s Cup Hall of Fame President & Executive Director Bill Lynn. “Susan Henn is a fascinating character and an amazingly accomplished sailor, while Paul and Jimmy have been standing on the threshold of the Hall of Fame for years with never a doubt that they would both end up here. The story about the Henns’ “menagerie” on board GALATEA will be worth hearing at the induction!”

Spithill’s career highlights include:

  • Winning the 33rd and 34th America’s Cup Matches (2010, 2013),
  • Helming the revolutionary trimaran USA 17,
  • Orchestrating one of sport’s greatest comebacks, overturning an 8-1 deficit to win 9-8 in 2013,
  • And recently, co-skippering Luna Rossa Prada Pirelli at the 2024 America’s Cup in Barcelona.
  • Skippering Team USA, SailGP Series

This latest recognition follows his 2024 induction into the Australian Sailing Hall of Fame, further cementing his place among the legends of the sport.

America’s Cup Hall of Fame Inductees, Class of 2025

James “Jimmy” Spithill
(AUS) (b. 1979)

James Spithill - Americas Cup Hall of Fame 2025

In 2000, Australian James “Jimmy” Spithill cemented his place in the annals of the America’s Cup When, at just 20 years old, he became the competition’s youngest helmsman. In 2013, he accomplished something even more extraordinary, winning the 34th Match from a -2 starting deficit to a 9-8 victory. The Wall Street Journal described ORACLE Team USA’s astonishing against-the-odds triumph over Emirates Team New Zealand as one of the most remarkable comebacks in any sport. Jimmy Spithill epitomizes what it means to be an Aussie battler, a person who goes against the grain to succeed, demonstrating perseverance to overcome disadvantage.

Born on June 18, 1979 in Sydney, one of Spithill’s earliest memories is the jubilation that swept across his home country when AUSTRALIA II won the 1983 America’s Cup, especially in the Pittwater area where crew member Colin Beashel lived.

Spithill’s family had moved north from Sydney to the Pittwater area and lived on Scotland Island. “I had to go to school by boat. To get to the mainland we went by boat. It was just a way of life.” His first boat was someone else’s throwaway, recovered from a dump and made ready for racing. In 1989, Jimmy won the first race he ever entered, with his sister, but the path to his 2000 America’s Cup debut took an unconventional course.
He led his team to win the Australian High School Sailing Championship in 1997. However, unlike many of his peers who graduated through successive dinghy classes to national or Olympic squads, Jimmy switched to match racing in heavy keelboats through a youth scheme at the Royal Prince Alfred YC. This program identified talent regardless of background or identity.

Keeping a beady eye on Spithill’s progress was one of Australia’s greatest ocean racers and previous America’s Cup challenger, Syd Fischer. He invited Spithill aboard his 50-footer RAGAMUFFIN in 1998 for a third-boat-to-finish in the storm-ravaged Sydney-Hobart Race. Jimmy placed 6th in his first Grade 1 Match Race Tour event the following year and became Fischer’s pick for the skipper of Young Australia for the 2000 America’s Cup in San Diego.

A defining moment in James Spithill’s career, it also marked a significant chapter in the history of the America’s Cup. At just 20 years old, he became its youngest-ever helmsman. Young Australia was characterized by a limited budget, ambitious dreams, and the tremendous opportunity that Syd Fischer provided to his team of eager and aspiring youngsters.

Jimmy Spithill was far from alone in having his America’s Cup career launched by Fisher’s 2000 campaign. However, few maximized their opportunities as much as Spithill, who was consistently sought by top teams throughout his subsequent career. He was involved with the American OneWorld and ORACLE Team USA teams and Luna Rossa from Italy. He won the 33rd and 34th Matches as challenger and defender, representing San Francisco’s Golden Gate YC against Alinghi (Switzerland) in 2010 and Emirates Team New Zealand in 2013.
In these two matches, Jimmy Spithill made two further indelible impressions on the history of the America’s Cup. By helming the 113ft (34m) trimaran USA 17 in the 2010 match, he expanded his skillset beyond slow, heavy displacement monohulls to master high-apparent windspeed sailing on a giant multihull. USA 17 featured the tallest single-span wing ever built at 223ft (68m), double the size of a Boeing 747 or Airbus 380. This transformed America’s Cup yachts into the most advanced racing boats in the world, achieving previously unseen speeds with foiling hulls.

In the 2013 Match, the New Zealanders were the first to perfect tacking and gybing while still foiling. ORACLE Team USA started with a -2 score after the International Jury penalized the team for an earlier rules breach in another class. The Kiwis quickly advanced to match point with an 8-to-1 lead, poised to win the trophy. “It’s a long way from being over,” declared Spithill about the belief-defying odds before his crew staged their remarkable comeback to win 9-8. He reflected, “That’s the great thing about sport and in life, that, you know, if it’s not over, if they haven’t handed the trophy over, you still have a shot.”

After the 2024 America’s Cup in Barcelona, where he co-skippered the Italian Luna Rossa Prada Pirelli team, Spithill brought 25 years of helming to a close. This period spanned the most remarkable transformation of America’s Cup boats, from the conventional ACC 80-ft monohulls in 2000, 2003, and 2007 to the astonishing and extreme USA 17 trimaran in 2010, and the foiling wing sail AC72 and AC50 catamarans in 2013 and 2017, right up to the foiling AC75 monohulls in 2021 and 2024. Throughout, Spithill burnished his reputation for being about the toughest opponent his peers could ever meet. “I’m not an aggressive person, but obviously on the sporting field, I’ll do whatever it takes. I just love sport. I love competing. I’m obsessed by it, to be honest.”

Paul Cayard
(USA) (b. 1959)

Paul Cayard began his sailing career by winning in a tiny El Toro dinghy at the age of eight. Years later, he remarked, “As an eight-year-old, sailing just bit me. I really liked it. As a kid you’re always doing what your parents tell you. But when I was on my boat, I was the captain of my ship. I was in charge of my own destiny.”

One word that defines Cayard’s remarkable career is “versatile.” He has won seven World Championships and the Whitbread Round the World Race, and competed in seven America’s Cup campaigns. Beyond all this racing experience, he became one of the most effective communicators of the joys and challenges of grand prix yacht racing.

Rounding out those accomplishments are some notable complementary skills. Due to his European family roots, Cayard is fluent in English, French, and Italian; he is a licensed pilot and has demonstrated effectiveness as a marketer and manager. He learned about business practices from many of the titans of industry with whom he raced over the years. In the process, Cayard became a strong leader and a vital asset in running an America’s Cup campaign.
Cayard was first recruited for the Cup by the late Tom Blackaller to serve as a sail trimmer aboard the 12-Meter DEFENDER in 1983. The boat had below-average speed and was eliminated early from the defense trials. Despite this disappointing showing, Cayard was smitten and jumped at the opportunity to try again. His next campaign would be as tactician for Blackaller in the 1987 America’s Cup in Fremantle, Australia. Their innovative boat featured a forward canard rudder, a bulbous keel, and a traditional rudder at the stern. At times, they demonstrated remarkable speed, advancing to the semi-final round. After two America’s Cups serving as crew for Blackaller, Cayard realized it was time to branch out on his own.

In 1988, Cayard won the International Star Class World Championship in Buenos Aires, Argentina. With his Star Class victory, he gained considerable international notoriety. Business mogul Raul Gardini recruited Cayard to skipper his maxi yacht, IL MORO DI VENEZIA. In 1988, they won the Maxi Yacht World Championship. Cayard encouraged Gardini to challenge for the next America’s Cup in 1992. For Cayard, it meant joining an Italian team. He spoke Italian and felt right at home with the crew. Gardini and Cayard won the Louis Vuitton Cup Challenger Trials but lost to AMERICA3 in the America’s Cup final, 4-1.

In 1995, he served as helmsman for Dennis Conner’s America’s Cup defense effort. They reached the Cup final again but lost 5-0 to New Zealand. The American boat was outmatched by a faster boat and perhaps a more polished crew. The Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron scheduled the next match for 2000.

It was a long wait, and Cayard filled the time with a remarkable victory. He was a noted small boat champion and a match racing specialist. Shifting gears, he was recruited to compete in the Whitbread Round the World Race. Although Cayard had done some long-distance racing, he had never faced anything as compelling or exhausting as the Whitbread. Cayard also found another opportunity to maximize his exposure. The Whitbread organizers allowed the sailors to communicate with fans during the long ocean legs, a practice that had never occurred in ocean racing up to that point. Cayard excelled at writing articulate accounts of facing squalls while racing around the Southern Ocean or drifting endlessly while crossing the doldrums near the equator. EF LANGUAGE went on to win the Whitbread, and Cayard was recognized as a small boat sailor who had mastered long-distance racing.
With the momentum and confidence gained from winning the Whitbread, Cayard launched a campaign for the 2000 America’s Cup in New Zealand. This time, Cayard challenged on behalf of his home club, the St. Francis Yacht Club. His team, AmericaOne, reached the Louis Vuitton Cup final against the Prada Challenge from Italy.

In the best-of-nine series for the Louis Vuitton Cup, with the score tied at 4-4, the final race was quite a show for everyone, with the lead changing hands multiple times during the race. Cayard came up short, losing the 18.5-mile, six-leg race by 47 seconds. For many, such a tough defeat might spell the end of the line, but Cayard had greater ambitions.

After all his Grand Prix racing, he took up a new venture as a leader committed to giving back to the sport. Cayard served as board chair of the St. Francis Yacht Club, from 2018 to 2020. In 2024, Cayard was the President of the International Star Class Association. In September of that year, Cayard won three of six races in the Star World Championship sailed off San Diego against 64 boats, and finished in an impressive fourth place. At that time, Cayard was 65 years old.
With a lifetime of experience, Paul Cayard understands what it takes to prevail at the highest levels of sailing. “Sailing, like all sports, is extremely competitive and there are a lot of young, hungry sailors who would love to be sailing in the America’s Cup or the Olympic Games,” he said. “It takes nothing short of total dedication. Boats are much more athletic now. I’ve always considered myself athletic. It was bred in me, not from sailing, but from playing football and basketball in high school, and I’ve always stayed in great shape. Where sailing is right now, if you are young and you want to be at the top of this game, you might as well adopt the 100-meter sprinter’s training regime.” Paul Cayard is the epitome of what a top athlete is all about. It’s a proven formula: keep reaching high, learn from your mistakes, and move on to the next adventure.

Susan Henn
(SCO) (1853-1911)

Susan Matilda Cunninghame-Graham Henn is celebrated as the first woman to compete in the America’s Cup. Henn sailed on the 102-ft (31m) steel cutter, GALATEA, which she also commissioned, financed, and commanded during part of the 1886 match against General Charles J. Paine’s MAYFLOWER.

Born in Rothesay on the Isle of Bute, Scotland, Susan was the daughter of Susan Jane Cunninghame-Graham, from an aristocratic Scottish family, and Robert Bartholomew, a scion of a wealthy cotton family from Glasgow. She grew up in a family of sailors who raced their yachts in the Firth of Clyde, where she developed her sailing skills.

In 1877, while sailing in the Mediterranean with her younger brother Robert, Susan met and married Lt. William Henn RN from County Clare, Ireland, a retired Royal Navy officer who was then racing and cruising his yacht. Their union set her on a course for a permanent life at sea, likely giving Susan more sea time experience than perhaps any other America’s Cup sailor.
Following her brother’s death, Susan used a significant inheritance to commission yacht designer J. Beavor-Webb to design GALATEA, the first all-steel yacht to challenge for the America’s Cup. GALATEA was originally intended to compete in 1885 in a double Cup match alongside Sir Richard Sutton’s GENESTA. However, delays in GALATEA’s construction affecting her keel caused her to challenge the following year in 1886, facing MAYFLOWER, a design one generation newer than GALATEA. GALATEA’s design, like that of GENESTA, reflected the leading British yacht technology of the time, favoring cutters with long, deep, narrow hulls and a trans- Atlantic reputation for speed.

Instead of taking a faster and far more comfortable journey by steamship, Susan sailed on GALATEA across the Atlantic for the match. Although they lost both races in the Cup match, Susan demonstrated exceptional skill when she took charge of the yacht after her husband’s health declined during the competition, and he became incapacitated. This made her not only the first woman to compete in but also the first woman to command a yacht in an America’s Cup match. She earned respect in New York, with reports highlighting her enthusiasm and capabilities: “Owning to severe indisposition, Lt. Henn was to take hardly any part in the

contests, but Mrs Henn engaged in the events with all the enthusiasm and skill of a masterful helmswoman.”

Her achievements were particularly groundbreaking, considering the social and legal restrictions placed on married women in Victorian society. They often faced barriers to joining yacht clubs and participating in the sport, despite some being skilled and experienced sailors.

After their America’s Cup match, Susan and Lt. Henn explored American waters, awaiting a new Cup challenge from their Clyde-based friends and colleagues with their new G.L. Watson- designed THISTLE during the following season. They later returned to British and Mediterranean waters to continue cruising and occasionally racing in GALATEA. Susan remained aboard the yacht after Lt. Henn’s death in 1894 until her own passing in 1911. Without children, she left her estate to her cousin, the notable Scots adventurer, author, and politician Robert Bontine Cunninghame-Graham.
Susan Henn is buried in Rothesay, Scotland, where she was born. The America’s Cup Hall of Fame honors her as a pioneering and inspiring figure in sailing and an important part of the Cup’s storied history.

America’s Cup Hall of Fame Selection Committee

  • R. Steven Tsuchiya, Chairman
  • Margherita Bottini
  • John S. Burnham
  • Brad Butterworth
  • William Collier
  • Richard Gladwell
  • Jack Griffin
  • Halsey C. Herreshoff
  • Tim Jeffery
  • Gary Jobson
  • Andrew Johns
  • Murray Jones
  • William H. Dyer Jones
  • John Lammerts van Bueren
  • Ken McAlpine
  • Elizabeth E. Meyer
  • Shirley Robertson
  • Blue Robinson
  • Hamish Ross
    Mike Toppa
  • Bruno Troublé
  • Tom Whidden

About the Herreshoff Marine Museum & the America’s Cup Hall of Fame

The Herreshoff Marine Museum, located in Bristol, Rhode Island, USA, is a maritime museum dedicated to the history of the Herreshoff Manufacturing Company and the America’s Cup.
The Herreshoff Manufacturing Company (1878-1945) was most notable for producing fast
sailing yachts, including eight America’s Cup defenders, and steam-powered vessels. The museum, situated near Narragansett Bay on the grounds where the manufacturing company once stood, has a collection of over sixty boats including Nathanael Greene Herreshoff’s
CLARA, built in 1887, Harold Vanderbilt’s TRIVIA, and the 1992 ACC yacht DEFIANT. Website: www.herreshoff.org

The America’s Cup Hall of Fame was founded in 1992 to preserve the legacy and history of the America’s Cup competition, celebrating its heroes and inspiring future generations of Cup enthusiasts and participants by connecting the past with the present – and the future. It does this in part by maintaining a comprehensive collection of AC artifacts and ephemera, as well as a collection of photography and video, and by celebrating everything that makes the America’s Cup one of the world’s most compelling sporting events.

Website: www.achof.com

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Recognising RPAYC Women in Sailing https://rpayc.com.au/recognising-rpayc-women-in-sailing/ Tue, 11 Mar 2025 06:00:39 +0000 https://rpayc.com.au/?p=56911 14 members of our Women’s sailing community at RPAYC received recognition of their outstanding contributions and achievements in Women’s sailing during the 2024/25 season at Royal Prince Alfred Yacht Club (RPAYC). Following on from the final race, Race 10 of the Pantaenius Tuesday Women’s Twilight Series, held 11 March, a special presentation was held to …

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14 members of our Women’s sailing community at RPAYC received recognition of their outstanding contributions and achievements in Women’s sailing during the 2024/25 season at Royal Prince Alfred Yacht Club (RPAYC).

Following on from the final race, Race 10 of the Pantaenius Tuesday Women’s Twilight Series, held 11 March, a special presentation was held to award the sailors who had been nominated by their fellow skippers, crew or members of the sailing community at the Alfred’s.

Congratulations to the following recognition award recipients:

Leisa O’Connor
Maree Hill
Linda Coskerie
Annie Taylor
Verity Powers
Julie Warnes
Elaine Fowler

Annabelle Sampson
Karen Burns
Lindy Hardcastle
Tess Clarke
Julia Hornsby
Belinda Parkes
Rebecca McPhee

Read more on each award recipient and their nominations in the images below:

Don’t miss out on the opportunity to celebrate the end of the Pantaenius Women’s Tuesday Twilight Series at the Annual Presentation “Denim and Diamonds” being held 18 March 2025 – tickets are available HERE

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NSW/ACT Australian Sailing Awards 2023 https://rpayc.com.au/nsw-act-australian-sailing-awards-2023/ Tue, 19 Sep 2023 05:00:51 +0000 https://rpayc.com.au/?p=38921 Winners Congratulations to Louis Tilly for winning the Youth Sailor of the Year Award for the 2023 NSW/ ACT Sailing Awards! The past 12 months have seen Louis gain many first and second places at State, National and International levels in the WASZP as well as representing the Royal Prince Alfred Yacht Club (RPAYC) in …

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Winners

Congratulations to Louis Tilly for winning the Youth Sailor of the Year Award for the 2023 NSW/ ACT Sailing Awards!

The past 12 months have seen Louis gain many first and second places at State, National and International levels in the WASZP as well as representing the Royal Prince Alfred Yacht Club (RPAYC) in Match Racing. Louis has instigated and instructed at several “Try a WASZP” days at the RPAYC. This has been one of the reasons behind the strong growth in the Class on Pittwater.

At SailGP Inspire in Sydney, not only did he come first on the water, he formed a team that won the media award through their efforts promoting the event and WASZP class on social media

Congratulations to Steven Hatch for winning the Lifetime Achievement Award for the 2023 NSW/ ACT Sailing Awards!

Steve became interested in the racing rules at a young age. He became a National Judge in the early 90’s and sits on the Protest Committees at Royal Prince Alfred Yacht Club, CYCA, RSYS and regularly assists many other clubs with rules issues and hearings.

Steve became a World Sailing International Judge and International Umpire in 1995 and an International Race Officer in 1998. He is the equal 4th longest serving International Umpire at World Sailing and has been appointed to a number of World Sailing Committees over the years including Match and Teams Committees and the associated Rules and Calls working parties.

Nominees included

Special recognition is also give to the following members nominate for their performance and efforts throughout the 2022-23 season.

Life Time Achievement:

Richard Hudson

Steve Hatch

Sports Promotion

Jervis Tilly

Male Team for the Year

Jim Colley & Shaun Connor

Youth Sailor of the Year

Louis Tilly

Female Team & Female(s) of the Year

Women’s Racing Team – 

Stacy Jackson & Katie Spithill-Pellew

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