Class of 2016: Malin Burnham

Published on October 12th, 2016

Nine new members of the US National Sailing Hall of Fame will be inducted at a ceremony on October 29-30 in San Francisco, CA. Roger Vaughan provides this report on America’s Cup sailor and Star World Champion Malin Burnham, one of the members of the 2016 induction class:


In 1945, at age 17, Malin Burnham became the youngest ever to win the Star World Championship. Fellow sailors say he’s the best natural helmsman they’ve seen. That’s part of it. The rest has to do with the seven virtues he was taught in the San Diego Yacht Club (SDYC) junior program.

We all know the virtues: commitment, dedication, hard work, teamwork, follow through, playing by the rules, and planning ahead. We all give them lip service while Burnham has made them his mantra. Burnham was a major contributor to a new junior sailing center at the yacht club on one condition: that the seven virtues would not only be taught there, but indelibly imprinted on the building.

One of those virtues, playing by the rules, cost him a second Star World Championship. He and crew Jim Reynolds had a strong lead in the 1963 series in Chicago. “In race four, the leech of the main touched the windward mark,” Reynolds says. No one saw the infringement, but Burnham immediately dropped out.

As a sailor, Burnham is probably best known for his influential presence in the America’s Cup as helmsman (Enterprise 1977), trial horse skipper (1980, 1983), syndicate head (1987, 1988), director of the legal defense team (1988), and design director (IACC yacht, 1989).

He says managing Dennis Conner’s comeback in 1987 was the highlight. To announce their quest, in 1984, Burnham called a press conference. “Six people attended,” Burnham recalls. “We were two guys with no money and no boats. But you’ve got to be a calculated risk-taker if you are a sailor, so off we went.”

He’s not enthused about the current direction of the Cup. “They are taking the uniqueness out of it,” he says. “Challengers and defenders are all racing together. We’ve lost the grandeur of the oldest active trophy in sport. We need a neutral authority to run things, sites announced years in advance, national teams…”

At 88, Burnham still plays handball and goes to work every day. He’s written a book about leadership – Community Before Self – and in 2013, he was presented with the esteemed Midway American Patriot Award. As a sailor, the last of his four wins in the very competitive International Masters regatta, now held at the SDYC, was in 2015, a fitting bookend to his early, and continued success in Star boats.

For a complete list of inductees… click here.

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