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BMW ORACLE Racing Team Blog

www.bmworacleracing.com/blog
Tom EhmanWelcome to the BMW ORACLE Racing Team Blog, periodic postings and postulations for our families, friends and fans as we pursue with passion our challenge for the 32nd America's Cup.

In June 2005, the BMW ORACLE Racing Team Blog was born. The enthusiastic response we have received since then has encouraged us to continue the Blog this year. The BMW ORACLE Racing Team, which has over 140 members worldwide, would like to give anyone interested the opportunity to get a closer look at the personal stories surrounding our team and the people involved. While we are professionals on a mission to win the Cup, there is a human-interest side to all that. And in many ways our team is like an extended family.

We would like to share with you our passion for sailing, the motivation it takes to meet difficult challenges, and some of our trials and tribulations.

"We are tied to the ocean. And when we go back to the sea, whether it is to sail or to watch - we are going back from whence we came." --USA President John F. Kennedy, at a dinner for the crews in Newport, RI on the eve of the 1962 America's Cup Match.

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Baby Kiko  Jan 9, 21:51

We don't often do newborn posts here on the BOB, in fact this is our first. It's not just that it's a slow time of the year, but the babe is the new daughter of a particularly popular pappy in the BMW ORACLE fold, our team doctor Francisco "Kiko" Espi Escriva -- a fitting first name if ever there was one for the team doc of a San Francisco-based AC team.

Congrats to Kiko and his wife, Toti, on the birth of the lovely Lucia, their first.

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Lucy in the sky with a real gem -- BMWOR's Dr Kiko.

High-Flying Design  Jan 9, 12:49

Not only are BMW engineers and tools helping to design and build our new ACC yachts, over the weekend it was revealed that BMW will help Airbus with the interior design of its new A350....


BMW to cooperate with Airbus on A350 design

1/6/2006, 8:25 a.m. ET
The Associated Press

BERLIN (AP) — German automaker BMW AG said Friday it will help Airbus design its new A350 jet — the chief rival of Boeing's 787 Dreamliner.

The planned cooperation was first reported by the financial daily Handelsblatt, which cited sources at Airbus as saying that BMW would design a cabin for the A350 that will provide customers with greater comfort.

BMW spokesman Michael Rebspock confirmed that an agreement had been made, but declined to give details.



There's hope yet for a comfortable airplane seat and surroundings.


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Interiors by BMW: artist's concept for the Airbus A350-800, a civilian
airliner, with a planned entry into service date of 2010.

Kudos  Jan 6, 16:22

Congrats to BMWOR sailing team members Rodney Daniel (AUS), Robbie Naismith (NZL) and Paul Westlake (AUS) for their winning ways in the 2005 Sydney-Hobart Race. They were key crew members of Bob Oatley's Wild Oats XI, the first yacht since the inaugural Sydney-Hobart race 60 years ago to "treble" -- first to finish, first on corrected time, and setting a new course record. They lopped 67 minutes off the old record set by Nokia in 1999.


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Rodney Daniel.


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Robbie "Battler" Naismith.


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Paul "Flipper" Westlake.


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With a treo of BMWOR sailors aboard, Wild Oats XI en route to
the first Sydney-Hobart "treble" since 1945. Photo courtesy of
Scuttlebutt (North America) and Carlo Borlenghi.

The More Things Change...  Jan 4, 09:10

...the more they stay the same?

An interesting and insightful (if not inciteful) letter in today's Scuttlebutt (North America):

* From Rick Best (edited to our 250-word limit): Santa brought me a copy of
Temple to the Wind, by Christopher Pastore, a wonderful book about
Herreshoff and Reliance. I sat down by the fire looking forward to a trip
to the golden age of racing and the America's Cup, when "boats were
stronger then the men that sailed them," and the American's Cup "was a
contest between nations not hired guns." Imagine my surprise when I read
that the masts of both Constitution and Shamrock II fell down in trials in
1901. The London Daily Graphic called the boats "dangerous monstrosities,"
the New York Times said they were "enormities unfit for ocean."

According to the book the challenger Lipton was not a sailor, but using the
race for advertising for his grocery store chain. Despite being nominated
by the Prince of Wales, the Royal Yacht Squadron of England refused him
admission on two occasions. He challenged for the Cup under the sponsorship
of the Royal Ulster Yacht Club. The American effort was bankrolled by
railroad, banking and oil barons who were indulging in their "predatory
habit of life."

But the worst was that the great American sailing legend Charlie Barr was
Scottish! Crews threatened to quit rather then work for the "foreigner."
Editorials were written that the American effort should be lead by "native
born Americans." But the money men, and Nat Herreshoff, wanted to win and
Charlie Barr was man to do it. I haven't even got to the Reliance-Shamrock
III race yet.




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Back to the Future.

New Year's Brings New Laws to Spain  Jan 2, 03:05

Check the Challenger Commission Blog for the post about two new laws that took effect in Spain yesterday -- one ending the siesta for government workers, the other banning smoking in public buildings.

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Promises, Promises  Dec 31, 08:38

Roland Neubauer is our dedicated webmaster. He works for an agency in Munich called Sport Media Service GmbH, and is their Chief Editor, Sailing. Roland makes our team website happen, and without him I promise you this blog would have never gotten off the ground let alone grown this year to become one of the more popular online sailing publications. Once promised, Roland rarely misses a deadline. Definitely a cool person, and on this last day of the year I wanted to thank him for his continuing support, dedication and guidance.


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Herr Neubauer.


Moreover, I wanted to keep a promise to Roland. Months ago he asked a good question about the term "Challenger of Record," and your editor promised to post something about it "at some point before the end of the year." Clock's ticking on that one....

"Challenger" is not the problem. It's the expression "of record" that is confusing, whether or not your native language is Englisch. Roland is right -- "record" is one of many words in our language that has different meanings in different contexts. Not only that, it's both a noun and a verb. (The German language is, of course, more precise!)

Just look at the long entry for the simple word "record" at Answers.com. Most helpful to us is an example found way down in the Legal Dictionary: "On the record of the court in connection with a particular proceeding (the attorney of record)."

It's not that BMWOR, as a challenger or former challenger, set some sort of "record" sporting or otherwise. Nor, per se, are we challenging Alinghi's winning record in the last Match; though, one supposes, in some ways we are. Rather, "Challenger of Record" is a legal expression stemming from the Deed of Gift.

As most of our readers will know, the Deed of Gift contemplates only one challenger at a time, and prior to 1970 there was only one Challenger for each AC Match. The Cup grew in popularity following its 1958 re-awakening in the smaller, more affordable 12-Metre Class yachts. By the mid 60's clubs in both the UK and Australia were vying to challenge the New York YC for the Cup. Likewise France's Baron Marcel Bich (of Bic pen fame and fortune), who became a proponent of allowing multiple challengers.


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Baron Marcel Bich, 1914-1994.
The initial non-Anglo challenger,
in 1970 Bich launched the first of
four consecutive challenges.



Wanting to accommodate all, NYYC made one of the more innovative moves in the Cup's history when it suggested the prospective challengers compete in a series of races off Newport in the summer of 1970. The series would determine the ultimate Challenger for AC 21 to be held in September that year. But first, NYYC's lawyers had to find a way to make it legal under the Deed.

Well, as we say in English, "Where there's a will, there's a way" and, "Necessity is the mother of invention."

To make multiple challengers possible, the lawyers drafted the Conditions Governing the 21st AC Match to state that one of the challenging clubs was the "Challenger of Record," and, that if they were beaten by the other club in the challenger racing that summer off Newport, the other club would become the "substitute challenger" with all the rights, priveleges and obligations of the Challenger of Record.

Essentially that framework remains today. BMWOR's Golden Gate YC, by agreement with Alinghi's club Societe Nautique Geneve, was the first club to file a challenge for AC 32. As such, we became the Challenger of Record under the Conditions Governing the 32nd America's Cup -- known today as "The Protocol."

As in 1970, and every Cup since (except, of course, the unfortunate 1988 Match), we are sailing a series of races to determine which of the eleven challengers will be the ultimate challenger. Since 1983 that series has been known as the Louis Vuitton Cup. For AC 32 it spans not three months but, in effect, three years -- certainly another significant AC innovation.

It's a bit disconcerting to note that the Challenger of Record has never won the Louis Vuitton Cup let alone the America's Cup. BMWOR promises to give it our best shot to change that little bit of Cup history.

Abraham Lincoln said, "We must not promise what we ought not, lest we be called on to perform what we cannot." No doubt BMW ORACLE can so perform; however, with a number of other strong Challengers to say nothing of the Defender, our work in the 18th months ahead is cut out for us.

As to the BMW ORACLE Racing Blog, we promise best efforts to keep it going in 2006. It's not always easy, but, as noted above, "Where there's a will, there's a way."

Finally, may we take this opportunity to thank our families, friends, and fans, -- and Cup fans in general, wherever in the world -- for your interest and support throughout 2005. Best wishes to all for a Happy, Healthy and Prosperous New Year.


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Out with the old, in with the new: Italy's beautiful naval training
ship, Amerigo Vespucci, saluting USA-76 at Trapani in October.

PUCK DROPS IN TO CAPE TOWN  Dec 27, 09:40

Congrats to BMWOR's Brian "Puck" MacInnes (CAN) and the ABN AMRO ONE Team for their win in yesterday's windy (40 kts) and rough Boxing Day "inshore race" off Cape Town, South Africa, that scores as part of the VOR.

The rules permit the VOR teams to add one sailor for the inshore races. In recruiting Puck, it would appear skipper Mike "Moose" Sanderson chose wisely. A member of our sailing team (grinder), Puck adds a heap of around-the-buoys experience, to say nothing of strength and stamina. Puck is featured today in a nice interview on that team's website.

Taking his family to Cape Town for a warm, albeit working, holiday, Puck helped his adopted team stay atop the VOR leaderboard -- and garnered some nice ink along the way. An excerpt from Puck's interview....


Cape Town, Monday, 26 December 2005 -- For some extra firepower on board ABN AMRO ONE during the seven in-shore races of the Volvo Ocean Race, skipper Mike Sanderson has brought on Canadian America’s Cup veteran Brian McInnes as a grinder. We recently sat down with him to talk about what he does in his ‘other’ life and why he was invited to temporarily join our TEAM.

What’s your racing background?

Right now I sail with BMW Oracle Racing, for their America’s Cup campaign. I live in Valencia with my family and train with the team year-round. This is my fourth America’s Cup campaign. I sailed with Young America in 1997 in Auckland, Abracadabra in 2000, then Oracle BMW Racing in 2003, then BMW Oracle again for the 2007 challenge.

In these in-shore races, every team can have an extra sailor on board. In crew ONE’s case, we chose for a grinder. What are the other campaigns choosing?

Here in the in-shore races some of the campaigns have chosen a tactician, and others for a grinder. The Pirates also have one.

What is it like, sailing with all these nationalities on one boat?

How a team evolves is with the input from all those nationalities. When you look at BMW Oracle, [we] have 16 different nations on the team. It’s taking not just nationalities, but the experience from all the teams and making it work. It’s also about ‘forgetting’ your old team in a way. That is, not saying ‘that’s how we did it then’. You get to say, ‘this is how we do it now going forward’.



Read the full interview here.


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Brian "Puck" MacInnes on the perpetual summer program -- above, on
USA-76 in September at balmy Trapani before Acts 8 & 9, and now enjoying
the Southern Hemisphere summer in Cape Town -- both a far cry from the
weather most any time of the year in his native Nova Scotia.

SEASON'S GREETINGS FROM VLC  Dec 25, 02:07

Valencia, 0130 Sunday

'Twas the night before Christmas (actually, the morning of) and not a creature was stirring, not even our two cats. Was about to settle down for a short winter's nap, when out in the street there arose such a clatter...

...more bloody fireworks!

Since midnight there have been sporadic fireworks and firecrackers all over the neighborhood. Just now a ferocious set of bangers went off in the yard behind us. The neighbors are outside cheering and applauding.

Hey, amigos nuevos, it's Christmas not New Year's, and for sure not las Fallas. Please, as much as we like Valencia and all the fireworks, we've had enough for one year. ¡Por favor, he tenido bastantes!! Besides, you might scare off Santa....

To those celebrating it, Feliz Navidad, and Season's Greetings to all.

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VALENCIA CRONICA  Dec 23, 09:32

Bridget Baker is the wife of sailing team member Ian "Box" Baker (NZL). She is quietly making a significant contribution to the well-being of BMWOR families living in Valencia, and families of other AC teams as well, through her weekly email newsletter Valencia Cronica. She emails it each Thursday to a list that has grown to over 200. And we post each week's issue on the Challenger Commission Blog, albeit behind a password to protect the privacy of the personal phone numbers and email addresses of Bridget and her contributors.

If you are an AC family member and wish to be added to her mailing list, or would like the password to access the Cronicas on the CC Blog, write Bridget at valenciacronicaspain [at] yahoo [dot] co [dot] nz.

Bridget is taking a holiday break for the next few weeks. In the meantime, the CC Blog has a post today with links to three nice articles about Valencia that have appeared in major newspapers this year. Nice ink about our adopted hometown.

And a special thanks -- for volunteering all the time and effort that goes into the Cronica each week -- to Bridget, another of our team's "Cool People."

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Ravishing redactor Bridget Baker.

INTEL INSIDE  Dec 17, 17:30

Congrats to BMW and the BMW Sauber F1 Team for this major development. Click here for the story, which, who knows, might someday have implications for the AC as well....

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SAILING THRU MUC  Dec 16, 14:16

Munich airport is widely regarded as among the best in the world. Good thing, because BMWOR team members spend a lot of time there connecting with flights to and from Valencia. And while USA-61 is no longer on display in the airport centrum, you can't miss this splashy display ad near the gate that normally serves the MUC-VLC Spanair flights....

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Sailing thru MUC.