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Mike Sanderson (white
shirt) is surrounded by Morning Light crew
as they fly downwind off Honolulu Morning Light/Uhl
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Morning
Light PRESS RELEASE
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March.
25, 2007
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Overnight on their
own; Sanderson: 'They'll be ready'
HONOLULU---No worries, mate. Mike Sanderson, winning skipper
of the 2005- 06 Volvo Ocean Race, says the young Morning Light
team is "certainly going to be ready for Transpac."
The New Zealander rejoined his Volvo navigator, Morning Light
instructor Stan Honey, to spend four days tutoring the team on
land and sea during its third monthly training session on the
Transpac 52, less than a year after Roy E. Disney started from
scratch to build his team of young sailors to sail the 44th
Transpacific Yacht Race from Los Angeles to Honolulu.
With the race four months away it was time for a progress report,
measured from two overnight sails---first with Sanderson aboard,
then completely on their own.
Piet van Os, 23, of La Jolla, Calif. was the designated skipper and
primary helmsman for the first run to Molokai and back, with the
Volvo winner breathing over his shoulder.
"He's one of the best coaches I ever had," van Os said. "He wants
you to drive so hard and do so well. He just likes to sail fast, day
and night."
Sailing manager Robbie Haines said "the timing was right" for
Sanderson's involvement. The sailors had learned how to sail the
boat but not really race it.
"He brought them up to a new level when they were ready to step
up," Haines said. "He impressed upon them that if they're going to
win they have to work harder than the next guy."
Sanderson said, "It's about intensity. If you want to go on vacation
you should go somewhere else. If you want to win sailboat races
you have to get on with it."
But not by yelling. Van Os said, "We talked tactics and team
management . . . as a skipper what you do. You don’t get respect;
you have to earn it, and that you're in charge of all the groups that
take care of different areas of the boat. For this I had two really
good watch captains in Jeremy [Wilmot of Australia] and Charlie
Enright [Bristol, R.I.]."
After Sanderson checked out, the team sailed away again, this
time leaving all of their instructors at the Waikiki Yacht Club dock.
Haines and Honey tabbed Wilmot as skipper for the second
overnighter about 200 nautical miles upwind and downwind through
the Molokai Channel between Oahu and Molokai.
Wilmot, 21, said, "It was great. I loved having that role, trying to
earn the spot, working with trimmers, trying to keep the boat fast. It
was up to me to get the team motivated and push them, since
there were no coaches there to do it. I liked the challenge."
Soon, the team got into it. "The difference between the start of the
trip and the end of the trip was amazing," Wilmot said.
Enright, who was a watch captain again, said, "There was a lot of
changing gears. It was a beautiful night with a pretty easy breeze
averaging 18 knots. We have it more figured out than in the other
sessions, but [no positions are] solidified yet."
Van Os said when he was skipper he had only a half-hour of sleep
the whole trip because he didn't want to miss anything Sanderson
had to offer.
Chris Clark, 21, of Old Greenwich, Conn., said Sanderson
"observed how we handled situations, and when he thought his
input was necessary he gave it. Every word out of his mouth was a
valuable piece of input."
Steve Manson, 22, of Baltimore, said, "That was definitely a step
forward for the team. Last time we didn’t get the ultimate feel of
night sailing. This time [with Sanderson] we had some overcast
and it felt like real night sailing where you don't want to fall off [the
boat]. The waves were splashing you and everything was so pitch
black you could barely see anything in front of your hands. We had
a few problems, but everything got handled quickly and
professionally."
The problems, Manson said, included a couple of "scary"
accidental crash jibes and spinouts in 25 to 30 knots of breeze
down the Molokai Channel . . . at night.
Van Os, who wasn't driving either time, said Sanderson "wasn't
happy with it, but he was very constructive about it, [telling the
sailors] 'do better next time' and 'realize why it happened.' "
Could there be Volvo races in the Morning Light team's future?
Sanderson, 36, was only 21 when he sailed his first Whitbread
Round the World Race, then largely an amateur competition that
has evolved into the totally professional Volvo Ocean Race.
"There's a good chance a lot of these people would have gotten
Volvo rides in my day," Sanderson said. "The ante's been upped a
whole lot, [but] there certainly are some people here that will end
up on Volvo boats or America's Cup boats. There's some real talent
with really good attitudes."
The entire Morning Light project---crew selection, training and the
race- -- will be the subject of a documentary film produced by Roy
E. Disney and Leslie DeMeuse of Pacific High Productions in
association with Disney Studios. It's scheduled for theater release
early next year.
More information:
www.transpacificyc.org
MEDIA CONTACTS
Rich Roberts
(310) 835-2526
cell (310) 766-6547
Michiko Wada
(808) 554-3328
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Piet van Os drives with Mike
Sanderson at his shoulder
Moring
Light/Uhl

Jeremy Wilmot's turn as skipper
Morning Light/Roberts

Charlie Enright cranks it up
Morning Light/Roberts
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The Morning Light team
(Ages at time of race)
CHRIS BRANNING, 21, Sarasota, Fla.,
2/C Midshipman, U.S. Merchant Marine
Academy.
GRAHAM BRANT- ZAWADZKI,
22,
Newport Beach, Calif., graduate,
Stanford Univ.
CHRIS CLARK, 21,
Old Greenwich,
Conn., sailmaker.
CHARLIE ENRIGHT,
22, Bristol, R.I.,
Brown Univ. sailing coach.
JESSE FIELDING,
20, North Kingstown,
R.I., student Univ. of Rhode Island.
ROBBIE KANE, 22,
Fairfield, Conn., Univ,
of Rhode Island, racing sailboat captain.
STEVE MANSON, 22,
Baltimore, Md.,
asst. fleet manager Downtown Sailing
Center, sailing instructor.
CHRIS SCHUBERT,
22, Rye, N.Y., 1/C
Midshipman, U.S. Naval Academy.
KATE THEISEN, 20,
Socorro, N.M., junior
New Mexico Tech, astrophysics.
MARK TOWILL, 18,
Kahalu'u, Hawaii,
senior Punahou School, sailing instructor.
GENNY TULLOCH, 22,
Houston, Texas,
sailor, graduate Harvard Univ., Quantum
female college sailor of the year.
PIET VAN OS, 23,
La Jolla, Calif., senior
California Maritime Academy, sailing
coach, boat captain.
CHRIS WELCH, 19,
Grosse Pointe,
Mich., sophomore Michigan State Univ.
KIT WILL, 22, Milton,
Mass., senior
Connecticut College.
JEREMY WILMOT, 21,
Sydney,
Australia, St. Mary's College of Maryland
international student.
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