Pinta was a series of racing yachts owned by German industrialist and yachtsman Willi Illbruck. Pinta raced for Dyck (Der Hassle-free Yacht)[1][2] and KYC (Keller Yacht-Club).
Willi Illbruck started sailing his first Pinta, a one-ton yacht, in 1969.
Pinta had her first international successes at the beginning of the 1970s and was runner-up in her first participation in the 1975[3]Admiral's Cup.
Between 1982 and 1983, Willi Illbruck and Udo Schultz built 7/8-rigged boats using the new honeycomb technique. Germany won the 1983[4] Admiral's Cup with Willi Illbruck Pinta and Udo Schultz Container.
Introducing the slogan “The Fight Goes On!” in 1993, the year turned out to be “Year of the Cups,”[5] the most successful year in Pinta’s history. With a 100% professional crew, Pinta won the Admiral's Cup[5][6][7] and the 1993 One Ton Cup[8] with Russell Coutts as skipper/tactician. Pinta defended the One Ton Cup again in 1994,[8] now with John Kostecki as skipper/tactician and Rod Davis as helmsman.
John Kostecki continued as skipper/tactician on the team from 1994.[9][10]
Willi celebrates the Admirals Cup 1993 win with Pinta team members Russell Coutts, Ross 'Roscow' Halcrow and Niels Henrik Sodemann, Plymouth 1993
1993, Year of the Cups
In 1993 Willi Illbruck gathered a new crew for the 1992 build Judel/Vrolijk designed One-Tonner, including Russell Coutts as skipper/tactician, Peter Lester as helmsman, Don Cowie, Ross 'Roscow' Halcrow, Alan Smith, Niels Henrik Sodemann, Uwe Roch, Gunnar Knierim, Thomas 'Beppo' Michaelsen and Arne Wilcken.
The Pinta team sailed for Germany in Admiral's Cup, with German Jörg Diesch replacing Peter Lester as helmsman.
In 1993 after twenty-three years IOR (International Offshore Rule) was the primary rule for racing around the world. As a swan song, the 1993 Champagne Mumm Admiral's Cup was keen, tight and incident-filled. The German team of Pinta, Rubin XII (Hans-Otto Schumann) and Container (Udo Schütz) were outsiders before the start but clinched victory with 279.13 points seven races later by the narrowest ever margin, 0.25 points.[5][6] The victory was even slimmer than that of the French in 1991.
It was a fine reward for the Germans, winners of the series in 1973, 1983 and 1985, especially as Willi Illbruck, owner of Pinta, and Hans-Otto Schumann, on his twelfth Rubin, had supported the event for three decades. Schumann was part of the 1973 and 1985 winning teams, having started his run of twelve Admiral's Cups as far back as 1963. Willi Illbruck was a member of the 1983 line-up.
This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Pinta_(yacht), and is written by contributors.
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