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AMEN !!!
Truth is ,, That wether it was in 1956 or 2011 All these ,and those competitors ran on the edge with what they had or have now .:musik010: ( except Ken Warby he,s on his own planet ,no one will come near his record for a long time to come . IMO ) |
[QUOTE=CigDaze;3532218]Awesome shots!!! You go, guys.
There are those of us who write the future and then there are those who write history books; they are the same people who just simply don't know how to cope with the expiration of their relevance and they are sadly relegated to languishing in the dismal past. .... ... .. . that just about covers every man in every sport since time began . It,s a disease called aging, You will probably catch it as well I hope :evilb: |
BLee Thanks for the kind words and right back at ya. You still own my personal best for fastest ride ever in your capable hands.
I was thinking the other day during a different thread about people going out in rough water ect and all you racers can surely attest to this. Even though I love going out in big waves I always have the opportunity to dial it back, change course and just in general push it as far as I am comfortable with considering my skills and my boat Racers dont have that luxury. They go in the direction they need to go regardless of the conditions as fast as they can and that can make big waves far more dangerous than the same waves we weekend boaters run. It gives every one of them the title of big balls champs regardless whether they are running 60-70 in smaller boats or 150 in the big dogs. Hats off to the skills all of you possess to make that commitment now and in the past. As a side note, although I have never raced and never will I have met and watched a lot of racers and ask any of them that have ever raced on Lake Michigan, Huron and Erie and they probably have a story about the waves. Not a 133 feet mind you but fairly significant nontheless. NK |
Originally Posted by MissGeicoRacing
(Post 3533173)
After spending last night with the OFF participants last night, and in years past, getting to know the Odell Lewises, the Brownies, Bobby Saccente, Rich Lhrs etc. I can honestly say offshore racers of today and yesterday are all cut from the same cloth and I am a huge fan of them and the racers of today.
Scotty B |
Originally Posted by PhantomChaos
(Post 3533256)
Do some of them seem "bitter"? :D :drink: :drink::drink::drink::drink:
It's one of your more admirable qualities.:drink: |
Originally Posted by Matt Trulio
(Post 3533299)
You are such a s-disturber.
It's one of your more admirable qualities.:drink: |
[YOUTUBE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FmLp_bZ9uAo&feature=channel_video_title[/YOUTUBE]
Brownie at work. |
Originally Posted by PhantomChaos
(Post 3532201)
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Originally Posted by BROWNIE
(Post 3532861)
I wrote a story several years ago for Hot Boat magazine (One of several rags that I was able to put out of business) about the dawn of OCEAN powerboat racing: The opening line was "The original batch of modern day offshore racers was a rough group. Tobacco stained teeth missing, tattooed, hairy, muscles bulging, scraggly beards, brawling, nasty, cussing, and that was just the women!
Bear in mind that neither the Bikini nor the racing jump suit had been invented at that point. Racing uniforms were usually bear skins, and in Odell Lewis's case, the bear was still in it! My first raceboat was a hollowed out missionary.... but I ramble. THE AVERAGE WAVE HEIGHT IN THE 1956 NASSAU RACE WAS 133 FEET, AND THAT WAS IN THE FLATS! If you don't believe me, ask Sammy James. |
Rough water, rough guys
Remember in the movie, "The Perfect Storm", in the last couple of minutes of the movie, whe the Andrea Gale was climbing the vetrical face of the big wave? If you looked real close, on the back side of that wave, Odell Lewis and Mel Riggs were fishing in a 14' skiff............
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