Online link:
http://sailingteams.ussailing.org/News/2010/2010_Coach_of_the_Year.htm

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Dana Paxton, US SAILING, Tel: 401-683-0800,
[email protected]

US SAILING Recognizes 2010's Outstanding Sailing Coaches

Portsmouth, R.I. (November 12, 2010) - US SAILING's Olympic Sailing
Committee (OSC) has chosen two exemplary sailing coaches for the 2010
Coaches of the Year Awards. Based on nominations from the public, the
OSC has named Greg Wilkinson (Rockport, Mass.) the National Coach of the
Year and Jay Kehoe (Annapolis, Md.) the Developmental Coach of the Year.
These two winners exhibited extraordinary dedication to the sport of
sailing and made an impact on the sailors they coached in 2010.



The OSC has also nominated these winners to the United States Olympic
Committee (USOC) for consideration for the 2010 Coaches of the Year
Awards across all Olympic and Paralympic sports. The awards are a part
of the USOC Coach Recognition Program, which highlights the
accomplishments and contributions of coaches who train athletes at all
levels of sailing.




US SAILING's 2010 National Coach of the Year: Greg Wilkinson
As the Head Sailing Coach at Boston College (Chestnut Hill, Mass.), Greg
Wilkinson coached the sailing team to an impressive record and
maintained the #1 national ranking for the majority of the year by
winning three of five national Inter-Collegiate Sailing Association
(ICSA) championships: ICSA Women's Singlehanded Championship and ICSA
Sloop National Championship, in September, and ICSA/Gill Coed National
Championship, in June. For the 2009-2010 school year, the BC Eagles
received the Leonard M. Fowle Memorial Trophy, which annually recognizes
the best all-around performance in college sailing determined by points
accumulated at major Intercollegiate Sailing Association (ICSA)
Championships.

With the school year spread over two calendar years, the team competes
in multiple coed and women's events (there is no men's collegiate
sailing) on most weekends between September and November and again
between February and May. In the New England Intercollegiate Sailing
Association (NEISA) Conference Championships for the 2009-2010 school
year, the BC Eagles won four titles - Women's Singlehanded, Sloop, Coed
Dinghy and Team Race - and finished in third place at the Women's.
During the current 2010-2011 school year, the Eagles captured the Match
Race title and finished in second place at the Women's Singlehanded.





Based on Wilkinson's philosophy of being "one team, not individual
sailors," the Eagles draw on a large pool of talent among 36 athletes to
field consistently successful teams. The team culture also paid off with
seven BC sailors named to the 2010 ICSA All-American list including
finalists in the Sailor of the Year and the Quantum Female Sailor of the
Year categories. BC is the sixth school in 42 years of Inter-Collegiate
Sailing Association history to win all three spring championships (ICSA
Women's Nationals, ICSA/APS Team Race Nationals, and the ICSA/Gill
National Championship).



In 2010 BC sailors and alumni won the Vanguard 15 Nationals (Andrew
Schneider '09, crew) and the 2010 U.S. Team Racing Championship (Carrie
Amarante '09, crew); finished second at the Snipe Nationals (Brian
Kamilar '09, skipper); and fifth at Bermuda Gold Cup (Taylor Canfield
'11, skipper and Alden Reid '08, crew).


In addition to coaching the highly successful BC Eagles, Wilkinson is
heavily involved in the administration of collegiate sailing.  He served
as Conference Commissioner of the New England Intercollegiate Sailing
Association for four years, and has also served on the Board of
Directors of the national governing body of college sailing, the ICSA.
In late 2008 he joined the Eastern Yacht Club (EYC) in a newly created
position - year-round Sailing Director/Sailing Professional. In 2010 he
coached an EYC team to second place at the Hinman Master Team Race
championship.


Previous winners of sailing's National Coach of the Year Award are Mark
Ivey (Tiburon, Calif.), Betsy Alison (Newport, R.I.), Bill Ward (Newport
Beach, Calif.), Zachary Leonard (Branford, CT), Rollin "Skip" Whyte
(Wickford, R.I.), Roger "Scott" Ikle (Geneva, N.Y.), Serge Jorgensen
(Sarasota, Fla.), Jay Glaser (Long Beach, Calif.), Betsy Alison
(Newport, R.I.) and Luther Carpenter (New Orleans, La.).

US SAILING's 2010 Developmental Coach of the Year: Jay Kehoe
Known for his energy, humor, teaching skills and work ethic over the
past 17-plus years as a coach, Jay Kehoe (Annapolis, Md.) has inspired a
generation of youth sailors ranging from the St. Petersburg  Yacht Club
Optimist junior program (1991-1994), Sunfish/Laser educational programs
(1995-1997), Yale University's sailing program (1997-2000), U.S.
Merchant Marine Academy's sailing program (2000-2001) to Stanford
University's sailing program (2001-2008). For the past two years he has
served as Annapolis Yacht Club's (Annapolis, Md.) Waterfront Director,
transforming the marina and junior sailing programs into models for
other clubs across the country.



In his estimation, Kehoe said that he has coached over 1,000 junior
sailors, but his biggest professional achievement has been, at one time
in their careers, a coach to five members of the 2008 U.S. Olympic
Sailing Team: Zach Railey, Stu McNay, Andrew Campbell, Amanda Clark and
Charlie Ogletree, who Kehoe also coached with the Team Pegasus Farr 40
team.



"Jay was my first coach in a full-time racing team at the St. Petersburg
Yacht Club," said 2008 Olympic Silver Medalist Zach Railey (Clearwater,
Fla.). "His energy and passion for the sport of sailing is evident from
the time you meet him. His sailors' achievements are a direct result of
his enthusiasm in helping them reach their goals. From Optimist world
team members to Olympic medalists, Jay has had his hand in making many
sailors dreams come true including my own!"



For 2008 Olympian Stuart McNay, who with Graham Biehl is campaigning
toward a 2012 Olympic berth in the 470 class, Kehoe's influence started
early. "Jay coached me for most of my youth sailing, from the Opti to
Radial to my first attempts at the 470," he said. "He pushed me very
hard in practice and taught me the fundamentals of racing. His coaching
style kept sailing fun as we learned, and always made us want to sail
more. Also, he helped me establish my goal of one day sailing in the
Olympics. Jay was key in my development as a sailor."



At the Annapolis Yacht Club, in the summer of 2009, Kehoe created
innovative programs to provide AYC's youth sailors a transition from
Optimist racing to competitive international events.  Within the first
year of the Kehoe introducing the I-420 class program, one of the teams,
Brady Stagg and Jack Ortel, qualified for the world championship where
they placed 27th. Stagg also joined Fletcher Sims to finish as the top
international team in 9th place at the 2009 U.K. I-420 National
Championship, in Haifa, Israel. 



"Over the past two years, I have been among the many Annapolis junior
sailors to be lucky enough to have Jay Kehoe as the Waterfront Director
at Annapolis Yacht Club," said Jack Ortel (Annapolis, Md.).  "His
knowledge, experience, and commitment to junior sailing has benefitted
us all. He came to our program at not only at a significant time in my
sailing career, but also a year before my sister and I would begin the
grueling college search."



Brady Stagg's father Geoff Stagg, who manages the highly-successful Farr
40 Class, summed up Kehoe's influence on his son. "Brady has benefited
hugely from Jay's expert coaching and life skill lessons. He had a heck
of a year in the I-420 and as a result is now on the Old Dominion
University sailing team as a freshman starting skipper." At the recently
concluded Rolex Farr 40 North American Championship, Kehoe facilitated
getting a junior sailor on each Farr 40 for the last day of racing.



The Youth Match Racing program sent a team - Mike Carr, Brady Stagg and
Jack Ortel - to the Balboa Yacht Club's Inaugural Youth Match Race
Clinic & Regatta where they finished fifth and were recognized with the
Nick Scandone Sportsmanship/Leadership Memorial for their generous,
cooperative Corinthian attitude throughout the event. Named in honor of
the late 2008 Paralympic Gold Medalist Nick Scandone, the award was
presented by his wife, Mary Kate, who proudly congratulated each of the
young men.



Previous winners of sailing's Developmental Coach of the Year Award are
Ryan Minth (New York, N.Y.), Brett Davis (Naples, Fla.), Ben Glass
(Seattle, Wash.), Duffy Markham (Wellesley, Mass.), Tom Coleman (Hixson,
Tenn.), Rob Hallawell (Marblehead, Mass./Coronado, Calif.), Brian Doyle
(Darien, Conn./Hanover, N.H.), Adam Werblow (St. Mary's, Md.), Mike Zani
(Bristol, R.I.) and Amy Gross-Kehoe, who is married to Jay Kehoe.

The goals of the USOC's Coaching Recognition Program are to recognize
the tremendous accomplishments and contributions coaches make to sports
at all levels of athlete development and to elevate the status of
coaching as a profession. The winners of the USOC's coaching awards
across all sports will be honored at the 2011 National Coaching
Educators' Conference.



About the US Sailing Team AlphaGraphics
The US Sailing Team AlphaGraphics is managed by the United States
Sailing Association (US SAILING), the national governing body for the
sport of sailing and sailboat racing. The top boats in each Olympic and
Paralympic class are selected annually to be members of the US Sailing
Team AlphaGraphics. US SAILING supports these elite athletes with
funding, coaching and training. The title sponsor of the team is
AlphaGraphics; other sponsors include Rolex Watch USA, Atlantis
WeatherGear, Sperry Top-Sider, LaserPerformance, Harken Team McLube, Bow
Down Training, New England Ropes, Group Experiential Learning and
Trinity Yachts.



The United States Sailing Association (US SAILING), the national
governing body for sailing, provides leadership, integrity, and
advancement for the sport in the United States.  Founded in 1897 and
headquartered in Portsmouth, Rhode Island, US SAILING is a 501(c) (3)
non-profit organization.  US SAILING offers training and education
programs for instructors and race officials, supports a wide range of
sailing organizations and communities, issues offshore rating
certificates, and provides administration and oversight of competitive
sailing across the country, including National Championships and the US
Sailing Team AlphaGraphics. For more information, please visit
www.ussailing.org.



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Dana Paxton
Communications Director
US Sailing Team AlphaGraphics
[email protected]
Phone: 401-683-0800 x615
Fax: 401-683-0840
15 Maritime Drive
Portsmouth RI 02871
http://www.ussailing.org
http://sailingteams.ussailing.org/
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