Please select your home edition
Edition
MySail Crew

Volvo Ocean Race 2017- Field announces campaign for 2017 Volvo Race

by Rebecca Hayter, Boating NZ on 1 Apr 2015
Steinlager II pictured at the start of the ANZ Fiji Race, 2014 Richard Gladwell www.photosport.co.nz
Whitbread/Volvo Ocean Race veteran Ross Field has announced he will skipper a team in the 2017 VOR. Field has raced around the world five times, including as crew on the victorious Steinlager in 1990 and as skipper of the winning Whitbread 60 Yamaha in 1994.

But while Field has extensive experience in the race, the key to winning in the new one-design format, he says, is the huge depth of experience of his crew. He is yet to confirm names until contracts are signed, but inside speculation is that Field has secured many of those who have sailed with him in the past, giving him combined VOR experience of more than 600 years.

“We’ll be a crew almost entirely of pensioners,” he says. “The average age will be around 68, although we’ll take a nominal three under-50 crew to give the younger generation a chance to gain experience.”


The Whitbread/VOR has a reputation for being tough on its crew, so how will men in their sixties cope with the conditions?
“We’ll be fine,” Field says. “We’ll have a hot chocolate machine on deck, onboard heating so our slippers are dry and granny rails around the mast to keep our crew safe.

“You see videos of the yachts in the current race and they’re under a constant firehose. When you’ve done as much sailing as we’ve done, you learn how to sail around weather systems so you stay dry.”

As for what challenges he may face as skipper, Field says pensioners are way easier to lead. “In the past, I had problems with younger guys in port. They want to go and party all night. Pensioners are easy. We’ll all be in bed by 10pm, Facebooking our grandchildren, and asleep by 1030.”


Field hasn’t lost his touch in procuring good sponsorship. It is understood that a major manufacturer of a recliner-rocking chair has come to the party as primary sponsor, with a retirement home brand in a supporting role.

An anti-inflammatory manufacturer will also support the pensioners’ campaign.

“The key to sailing competitively in your sixties is to minimise manoeuvres,” Field says. “These younger crews are sailing all over the bloody ocean, as though they can’t make up their mind, but basically you’re going around the world, so you don’t need to tack or gybe much at all. Keep the South Pole on your right and the land masses on your left. It’s not too difficult, is it?”

So realistically, how confident is he of bringing the trophy back to New Zealand?

“Totally confident, otherwise I wouldn’t be doing it.”

Prospective crew should contact Ross Field by clicking here


Henri-Lloyd - For the Obsessed2024 fill-in (bottom)Doyle_SailWorld_728X90px-03 BOTTOM

Related Articles

Road To Gold Live Q&A with Dr Tim Herzog
Top sports psychologist discusses Effective Mental Imagery and Self-Talk We've all heard the importance of the Mental Game - the factor that separates the top athletes from the rest. At a certain level, it's not your sailing skills that make the difference, but your mental state going into the competition.
Posted today at 7:55 pm
The Super Mac is back for 2024!
Celebrate the 100th running of the Bayview Mackinac Race Bayview Yacht Club, ChiciagoYacht Club, and Port Huron Yacht Club are sponsoring this event to celebrate the 100th running of the Bayview Mackinac Race Presented by National Fleet Services!
Posted today at 6:04 pm
The Evolution of the Load Pin
Few adaptations have had quite the impact of the load pin Innovative sailors are constantly observing other fields and looking for new technologies that have the potential to change the way they sail. Few adaptations have had quite the impact of the load pin.
Posted today at 2:02 pm
75th Anniversary Wilson Trophy
34 teams gathered at the West Kirby marine lake, aka the theatre of dreams In April 1948 West Kirby Sailing Club was invited to send a team to Dun Laoghaire (IRE) for a mixed class team racing event, competing against teams from the South of Ireland and the South of England.
Posted today at 11:37 am
Sir Jim Ratcliffe provides the pedal power
On-board British America's Cup yacht INEOS Chairman Sir Jim Ratcliffe joined Sir Ben Ainslie as a cyclor onboard INEOS Britannia's flying America's Cup race boat which is capable of reaching speeds of 100Km/h.
Posted today at 4:58 am
5th Annual Hotel and Tourism Regatta
Coral World Triumphs at St. Thomas Yacht Club The excitement was palpable across the waters of Cowpet Bay during the thrilling conclusion of the 5th Annual Hotel and Tourism Regatta.
Posted today at 4:51 am
Cup Spy May 18:
The Brits were the only team to sail AC75s or paired AC40s over the weekend The Brits were the only team to sail AC75s or paired AC40s over the weekend. INEOS Britannia sailed their newly christened AC75, with team principal Jim Ratcliffe, a keen cyclist, aboard and functioning as one of the four cyclors onboard.
Posted today at 3:32 am
Cup Spy May 17: Good numbers at last
Teams get a good workout on a day blessed with a solid sailing breeze, in Barcelona and Auckland Two teams(USA and GBR) sailed AC75s on Friday out of Barcelona, on a day blessed with a good solid sailing breeze. ETNZ sailed both their AC40s in contested training for all three sailing squads - Womens, Youth and Defence.
Posted today at 12:43 am
Normandy Match Cup in Le Havre Day 3
Playing the shifts Racing continued into the early evening of Day 3 of the Normandy Match Cup as the semi-finals got under way in a fresh 12-15knots, combined with a challenging current off the Le Havre beach.
Posted on 19 May
J/105 Women's Invitational Regatta a success
Arbitrage team wins three-peat at St. Francis Yacht Club On May 11th, the St. Francis Yacht Club hosted nine teams for the 2024 SF Bay J/105 Women Skipper Invitational. PRO Gerard Sheridan and his RC team ran four action-packed races on the city-front course while Karl the Fog danced across the sky.
Posted on 19 May