Sir Peter Blake
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Sir Peter Blake (October
1, 1948–December
6, 2001)
was a New
Zealand yachtsman who led his country to two successive America’s
Cup victories. He won the Whitbread
Round the World Race in 1989.
Blake won the Jules
Verne Trophy in 1994 by
setting the fastest time around the world of 74 days 22 hours 17 minutes 22
seconds on catamaran Enza.
In 1995 he was knighted for
services to yachting and New Zealand.
Whitbread Round the World Race
Blake is the only sailor to have taken part in the first five Whitbread Round
the World races.
In 1974, Blake
competed in his first Whitbread race as a watch officer on Les
Williams' and Alan Smith's damage-riddled Burton Cutter.
In the 1977–78 race,
he rejoined Les Williams this time with co-skipper Robin Knox-Johnston on board Heath’s
Condor.
For the 1981–82 race,
Blake mounted his own campaign as skipper of Ceramco New Zealand,
a 68 ft sloop designed
by an up-and-coming naval architect called Bruce
Farr.
Blake returned to the Whitbread Round the World race in 1985 with
one of the race favourites, Lion New Zealand, sponsored by the Lion
Brewery.
In the 1989–90 Whitbread
race, Blake skippered Steinlager to an unprecedented clean sweep.
His team walked off with line, handicap and overall honours on each of the
race's six legs.
[edit]
America’s Cup
Brought in at the last minute by Michael
Fay to manage New Zealand's 1992 America’s
Cup challenge, Blake led the Kiwi team to the challenger finals with NZL-20.
However, Italy emerged from the controversial series with the Louis
Vuitton Cup, and went on to face America³ in the America's
Cup match.
In 1995 Blake was back, this time as the syndicate head of Team
New Zealand.
[edit]
His Death and His Legacy
On December 5th, 2001, Sir Peter Blake, 53, was murdered by pirates. A group
of seven or eight armed, masked robbers wearing balaclavas and crash helmets
boarded his yacht, Seamaster, while Blake was on an environmental
exploration trip in South America for Blake
Expeditions. Sir Peter was shot and died instantly. Two other crew members
were injured, and the remaining seven were unhurt.
The two-month expedition was anchored off Macapá,
at the mouth of the Amazon
delta, waiting to clear customs after their trip up the Amazon river. The
assailants are believed to have been a local pirate group
known as the Water Rats, whose booty was
a 15 hp outboard motor and some watches. The pirates were soon captured and
sentenced to 32 years in prison each.
Sir Peter is survived by his wife Lady Pippa Blake and their two children Sarah-Jane
and James. National
Geographic has stated that Blake Expeditions plans to continue Blake's
environmental work.
On October
23, 2002 the International
Olympic Committee awarded the Olympic
Order, one of its highest honours, posthumously to Blake.
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