Sailing
News
Jeff Linton And Sally
Barkow Are US Sailing’s 2007 Rolex Yachtsman
And Yachtswoman Of The Year
Lightning
World Champion Jeff Linton (Tampa, Fla.) and Princess
Sofia Trophy Yngling Champion Sally
Barkow (Nashotah, Wis.) were named, respectively,
US SAILING’s 2007 Rolex Yachtsman and Yachtswoman
of the Year. A shortlist of 10 male and nine female
sailors – determined from nominations by
the membership of US SAILING – were evaluated
by a panel of sailing journalists who selected
these two sailors for the noteworthy distinction.
Established in 1961 by US SAILING and sponsored
by Rolex Watch U.S.A. Since 1980, the Rolex Yachtsman
and Yachtswoman of the Year awards recognize the
outstanding on-the-water competitive achievement
of an individual man and woman in the calendar
year just concluded. The winners will be honored
and presented with specially engraved Rolex timepieces
during a luncheon on February 29, 2008, at the
New York Yacht Club in Manhattan.
Rolex Yachtsman
of the Year –
When Jeff Linton (Tampa, Fla.) received his first
nomination for the Rolex Yachtsman of the Year
award in 2005, it was the result of crewing aboard
winning boats at the Etchell's World Championship
and the J/24 Midwinter's, combined with a string
of four top-five finishes in the Lightning class.
Fast forward two years to find the 45-year-old
Linton now semi-retired, having sold his partnership
interest in Masthead Enterprises, and in the helmsman’s
position, dominating the Lightning class, for
which he has been crowned the 2007 Rolex Yachtsman
of the Year.
“This was
a remarkable year,” said Linton “Everything
fell into place. We’ve become more consistent
as a
team, and because work was secondary there was
more time to fix the boat and more time to practice.
Winning the Rolex Yachtsman of the Year award
is one of those things you dream about. You get
a few wins, and you think ‘maybe I could
get my name on that [trophy].’ It’s
the pinnacle, and after 38 years of sailing, I’ve
finally done it.”
Linton won the 2007
Lightning World Championship in Athens, Greece, in
a fleet of 48 with 11 nations represented, but
he noted that the hardest event to win in 2007
was the Lightning Winter Championship, which has
no restrictions on the number of entries. At that
71-boat event, contested in St. Petersburg, Fla.,
he edged out numerous notable sailors to win by
just one point. His success in the class also included: the
South American Championship held in Bogota, Columbia,
where first place finishes in three races ultimately
gave him a 14-point win over the 20-boatfield;
the title win at the Florida District Championship;
a second-place finish at the Lightning Deep South
Regatta in Savannah, Ga.; and second overall in
the Lightning Southern Circuit out of 42 boats.
Linton also earned
additional praise from the selection committee
for performance in two other competitive one design
classes: he won the Flying Scot North American
Championship.
“The Flying
Scot class is similar in many respects to the
Lightning, ”Linton explained. “Both
have a large membership base in the U.S.A. and
professional sailors are active in both classes.
The Moth, which was well-known in the1930s and
’40s and built in basements, is still a
build-your-own boat. My current boat is four years
old and undefeated. If someone beats her, I’ll
have to build a new one.”
Linton moved to
Florida as an infant and grew up sailing with
his father, a marine biologist, and his brother, John,
on the family’s Morgan 24. He first tasted
success in one-design racing as a teenager on
a wind surfer; and while he went to Eckerd College
on a soccer scholarship, he ultimately ended up
in the collegiate sailing program. His wife, Amy
Smith Linton, is his regular crew in the Lightning
and Flying Scot, making her a world champion as
well. “A lot of time spouses don’t
work together [in the boat]. I don’t know
the secret; we just try to have fun.
”Rolex
Yachtswoman of the Year –
Sally Barkow (Nashotah, Wis.) has reclaimed her
position as the top woman racer in the U.S.A.
upon being named the 2007 Rolex Yachtswoman of
the Year. First recognized with the honor in2005,
Barkow was nominated to the shortlist for the
sixth consecutive year and now joins a select
group of women who have received the accolade
more than once.
“This is exciting
and unexpected! I was shocked when I got the call,”
said Barkow, who is training in Florida until
the end of February with her Yngling teammates
Debbie Capozzi (Bayport, N.Y.)and Carrie Howe (Grosse
Pointe, Mich.). “The other nominated sailors
are extremely distinguished and accomplished, all
very deserving of this great honor.”Like
the football star who cannot win the Heisman Trophy
without his team, Barkow acknowledge she would
not be receiving this award for the second time
without the support of the talented team on which
she relies. “I have not sailed a single-handed
boat since2002 and I believe that teamwork is
our biggest asset on the water. Debbie has sailed
with me in every event this past year, not to
mention the preceding five years. Carrie has also
been racing with me for the past five years, only
missing a few events this year, and Annie Lush(GBR)
has raced every match race event and all three
of our successful Rolex International Women’s
Keelboat Championships. Beyond these three, there
have been numerous fantastic crew who all deserve
a piece of this award. Our sport involves a great
deal of teamwork, and it is the entire team that
makes success happen. This award is for my entire
team!”
Although Barkow’s
primary focus has been helming her Yngling with
a goal of representing the U.S.A. at the 2008
Olympic Games in China, her performance in other
classes, whether fleet or match racing, were what
set her apart in 2007. Barkow started the year
with her third consecutive win of the Rolex Miami
OCR in the Yngling class. On task in the Yngling,
she finished second at the North American Championship
in Miami, won the Princess Sofia Trophy in Spain
and collected silver at both Semaine Olympique
Française in France and the ISAF Sailing
World Championships in Portugal.
Barkow’s turn
on the match racing circuit was highlighted by
wins at the Boat U.S. Santa Maria Cup in Annapolis,
Md., and the Vitória Brasil Women’s
Cup in Brazil. Flying straight from Brazil to
Houston, Texas, Barkow took the helm of a J/22
to close the year as she had started it -- collecting
another championship title for the third consecutive
time. She won US SAILING’s Rolex International
Women’s Keelboat Championship (IWKC) without
having to sail the final race of the series after
topping a field that included past winner and
fellow Rolex Yachtswoman of the Year (’95,
’01) Cory Sertl (Rochester, N.Y.), as well
as Anna Tunnicliffe (Plantation, Fla.) who will
represent the U.S.A. at the 2008 Olympic Games
in the Laser Radial event. Only one other woman
has won the Rolex IWKC multiple times: Betsy Alison
(Newport, R.I.) has won not only the regatta but
also the Rolex Yachtswoman of the Year award a
record-setting five times.
The 27-year-old
Barkow grew up in a sailing family and started
receiving national recognition as two-time ICSA
(Inter-Collegiate Sailing Association) All-American
(2001 and 2002) while studying Psychology at Old
Dominion University (Norfolk, Va.). Since graduating
from ODU, her single-minded focus has been her
goal of competing at the Olympics in the Yngling
class. The linchpin to that quest will be the
Yngling World Championship in February which will
be the final event in a series that will determine
if Barkow’s team represents the U.S.A. at
the 2008 Olympic Games in China.
For additional information
on the awards please visit www.ussailing.org/awards/rolex.
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