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Current Biography Excerpts: Boating
CONNER, DENNIS CONNER, DENNIS 1943- Yacht racer.
The America's Cup, the most coveted of regatta prizes, is
"the holy grail" to Dennis Conner, a yachtsman of middle-class origins who
pursues the blueblood sport with a full-time dedication and aggressiveness that offends
some of its more gentrified participants. Conner, who has been winning world match races
since 1973, successfully defended the America's Cup as skipper of Freedom in 1980. Three
years later he became the first American in 132 years to lose the Cup, to Australia, and
he reclaimed the trophy as the skipper of Stars & Stripes '87 in February 1987. Not
the least of Conner's talents is his ability to organize around him a winning team--or
syndicate, as it is known in the sport--of financial backers, yacht designers, high-tech
scientists, crewmen, and others, and to infuse that team with his own enthusiasm. For him,
leaving a single "stone unturned" is giving oneself "an excuse to
lose." "I don't like to sail," he told Tom Callahan of Time (February 9,
1987). "I like to compete. I guess I don't dislike it, but my sailing is just the
bottom line, like adding up the score in bridge. My real interest is in the tremendous
game of life....Funding, staffing, operating, planning, logistics, everything--isn't that
the game of life?" Because of the "amateur" nature of the sport, Conner
classifies yacht racing as his "hobby," despite the time and energy he devotes
to it; his livelihood is a wholesale and retail carpeting and drapery business in San
Diego.
Copyright © 1996 by The H. W. Wilson Co.
The complete article can be found on the Current Biography
CD-ROM and in the 1987 Current Biography Yearbook.
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