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Larry Ellison commented in a post-race interview that he thought,
once or twice, that he and his crew might actually survive the '98 Hobart while they were in the midst of the storm. Actually they were souoth of the worst part of it. .... By converse reasoning it would appear that he was convinced that his life was over, at least a portion of the time. I'm sure that would be a most depressing revelation. Joe wrote: Well then Larry's a putz, and a failure as a Captain. He's a rich boy who bought his way into a mans game and could not hang. Once he accepted he was going to die, then be assured his crew felt the same way. I think it's a wise decision for him to give up ocean racing all together. Talk is cheap, Joe. You mention how you are so manly & brave with 60 foot waves; these were 90'+ waves. Many had 40' of breaker on top. They were unusually steep because of a countering current... no surfing, you'd just fall from the crest straight down. From what I have read, it was a more violent storm than a U.S. east coast (or gulf) hurricane. You can not buy your way into being a good Captain. Now there, I agree totally. DSK |