March 28, 2024

Local Skipper Helms Crew in Yacht Race

Local Skipper
Scott “Gus” Ward, of Hollywood, Md., recently competed in one of the world’s top yacht races with an all-Australian crew. (Courtesy photo)
By Kristine Wilcox
Navy and Marine Corps Small Tactical Unmanned Aircraft Systems Program Office (PMA-263) communications

While most people spend the holidays with family and friends, Local Skipper Scott “Gus” Ward checked off a bucket-list item by racing in one of the world’s most prestigious yacht races.

Mr. Ward was invited to act as a watch captain and helmsman on the TP52 KOA, a 52-foot, all-carbon fiber Grand Prix-style sailboat in the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race, which kicked off on Boxing Day, Dec. 26, 2018, from Sydney Harbor, Australia.

Mr. Ward’s crew joined 85 other boats for the 628-nautical mile race through one of the largest bodies of water on the planet, finishing in three days, 16 hours and 52 minutes. The team placed 16th overall and seventh in their race division.

“The race course crosses through the Bass Strait and Southern Ocean, which are notorious for rough water and storms that can develop very quickly and have a constant big-water, big-wind feel,” Mr. Ward said. “It’s humbling to be able to say I’ve raced there.”

The local skipper has been racing sailboats for 43 years at the world and national championship professional level and is now entering his seventh year as a varsity offshore sailing team coach for the US Naval Academy. He said that experience was one of the reasons he was asked to participate in the race.

“The Naval Academy VOST program is fortunate to have many top-level Grand Prix boats donated to them; I’ve been given the tremendous opportunity to coach and mentor the midshipmen teams for the last few years aboard high performance yachts such as the TP52s along with Ker 50, Farr 40s and a newly donated RP66, [a well-known 68-foot Transatlantic and Fastnet Race winner],” he said. “These boats serve to not only enable a winning program, but teach future naval officers about leadership, decision making and determination in a focused and incredibly challenging environment. Supporting this outstanding program also helped build my knowledge and time aboard these rare and amazing machines.”

For the Sydney Hobart race, Mr. Ward was responsible for boat and crew on rotating watches of the 15-crewmember boat, alongside two of its co-owners. The skipper said, “while you are watch captain, you run the boat, and it is your call for sail selection, navigation and to ensure the boat is moving through the water as fast as possible in the right direction for that period of time.”

“It was a real challenge because the crew was full of absolute rock stars and my watch included past and future Americas Cup, Volvo Ocean Race, and Sydney Hobart veterans (one who had competed 19 times). We even had an Olympic medalist on our boat; it was crazy how much talent we had.”

Mr. Ward was also the only American-born crew member of the all-Australian team.

“This race was very much a nationality thing,” he said. “Historically not many Americans are given the opportunity to crew on an all-Aussie team. There were other international and American teams entered, but to be selected and asked to come onto an Aussie boat as a Yank was a great honor to me — the pressure was on to not mess it up!”

Mr. Ward said he would love to compete in the race again, but next on his bucket list is the Fastnet race.

“Of the major ocean races in the world, three stand out at the top for offshore competitors: Sydney Hobart, Newport Bermuda, and the Fastnet race,” Mr. Ward said. “Fastnet is off the Southern tip of England, around the Fastnet rock and back. I’ve been lucky to have raced successfully to Bermuda multiple times with my boat and team, so I’d love to be able to say I’ve done the trifecta.”

Mr. Ward is also owner and skipper of the Crocodile, a 50-foot monohull sailing yacht, in Southern Maryland. Since 2011, he and his team have been racing Crocodile and campaign for five to six races per year in offshore events on the East coast. Their first team race of the upcoming season will be the Down the Bay in May.

Mr. Ward, an employee of AVIAN and former US Marine Harrier pilot, is the operations and acquisition deputy for Navy and Marine Corps Small Tactical Unmanned Aircraft Systems Program Office (PMA-263) at Naval Air Station Patuxent River.

For more about Lexington Park, visit the St. Mary’s County Community Development Corporation’s Leader member page.

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