Hmmm. Good guys, all.
Bill Wagner from The Capital Gazette in Annapolis, MD had an interesting
chat with Terry Hutchinson recently.
For the un-initiated, Terry was a
2x College Sailor of the Year at Old Dominion University, a J/24 World
Champion, a J/70 East Coast Champion, and a great family guy. That he's
won the Farr 40, TP 52, and Maxi 72 Worlds with other teams is merely
an asterisk to his J/24 accomplishments (the foundation of many of the
world's best sailors worldwide).
As a kid growing up in Maryland, Terry Hutchinson couldn’t wait until
weekends. Most Saturdays and Sundays were spent on the West River where
his father Phil berthed a Concordia Yawl at Hartge Yacht Harbor in
Galesville.
“We would go down there on the weekends and I would always beg my dad to
rig up the dinghy so I could go sailing,” Hutchinson recalled. “I’d
spend all day out on the water. It felt like my own little place of
freedom.”
That love and passion for sailing that was instilled at a young age
would become a guiding force in Hutchinson’s life. He attended Old
Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia primarily because it boasted a
strong sailing team.
Hutchinson was named College Sailor of the Year in 1989 and 1990,
establishing a reputation that would lead to a career he never
envisioned. He graduated from Old Dominion with an education degree, but
wound up working for Ed Reynolds out of a Shore Sails loft in Traverse
City, Michigan.
“My job was as much about promoting the product as selling,” Hutchinson
said. “The J/24 class was wildly popular at the time and was a target
market for our loft.”
So
Hutchinson hit the J/24 circuit and quickly ascended to the top,
reaching the pinnacle by capturing the 1998 world championship off San
Francisco.
Twenty years later, Hutchinson is still competing at the highest level
of the sport. Last month, the veteran professional led Quantum Racing to
the TP52 World Championship out of Cascais, Portugal.
That was just the latest in a long line of significant accomplishments
for Hutchinson, who ranks among the greatest sailors in the long history
of the sport. The 1986 St. Mary’s High graduate has been part of five
America’s Cup campaigns and has been named Rolex Yachtsman of the Year
twice (2008, 2014). He has claimed a total of 15 world championships in
five different classes as either a skipper or tactician.
Hutchinson’s legendary career as a professional sailor was recognized
when it was recently announced he was a member of the 2018 induction
class into the Maryland State Athletic Hall of Fame. The Harwood native
becomes just the second sailor ever selected for the state shrine,
joining Annapolis resident Gary Jobson (2016 inductee).
“When
you look at all the notable people who are members of the Maryland
State Athletic Hall of Fame it is really humbling. I don’t look at
myself in the same manner as someone like Cal Ripken,” Hutchinson said.
“To be considered on par with so many great athletes is a tremendous
honor.”
Hutchinson was particularly proud to represent the sport of sailing and
happy the Maryland State Athletic Hall of Fame selection committee gave
it equal consideration to more mainstream pursuits such as football,
basketball, baseball, golf and tennis.
Hutchinson’s professional career is far from complete and he is still
chasing the one dream he’s held since boyhood. The 50-year-old is
serving as skipper and CEO of American Magic, the New York Yacht Club’s
challenger for the 36th America’s Cup.
Hutchinson came close to hoisting the Auld Mug in 2007 as tactician for
Team New Zealand, which reached the finals of the 32nd America’s Cup. It
was one of the greatest matches in America’s Cup history with
Switzerland-based Alinghi Racing beating Team New Zealand 5-2.
“I don’t really want to sit back and reflect on my career right now
because I haven’t achieved the greatest goal I set for myself,”
Hutchinson said. “I want to become an America’s Cup champion, so there
is still work to be done.”
The induction ceremony will be on Nov. 8, 2018. As J/Boats, we always wish him well! :)