MARK LIGHT APPOINTED AS RACE DIRECTOR
28 November 2016
Mark Light, 45, has been appointed as the new Race Director
of the Clipper Race.
An experienced sailor with many ocean crossings and over 120,000 nautical miles
to his name, Mark will take over the role from Justin Taylor who is stepping
down to devote more time to his family after almost a decade with the race.
Mark competed in the Clipper 2011-12 Race as Skipper of the Derry-Londonderry team before becoming
Deputy Race Director in 2012. With four years’ experience assisting the race
planning, he is now looking forward to stepping up to the lead role as Race
Director.
“I am honoured to be named Race Director of the Clipper Round the World Yacht Race”,
says Mark. “As a former Skipper, I know both the challenges and the rewards it
offers, and having worked as Deputy Race Director for the previous two race editions
I feel prepared and ready to lead the race into the 2017-18 edition and beyond.”
Mark Light and his team arriving into their home port Derry-Londonderry during the Clipper 2011-12 Race
Mark’s most immediate responsibilities will include appointing a new Deputy Race Director, and trialling and selecting the twelve professional Skippers who will lead their teams around the world, as well as overseeing the global route and stopover logistics to ensure the world-class event runs as smoothly as possible.
Mark adds: “The Clipper Race is unlike any other ocean race.
We train around 700 international crew, find and develop twelve professional
Skippers, and then work and travel round the clock applying the timelines and
logistics of getting the world’s largest matched fleet of ocean racing yachts
round the 40,000 nautical mile course, including fourteen or fifteen stopover
ports.
“It is an incredible operation but with the experience of ten previous editions
of this race, our staff, along with the support and vision of our founders Sir
Robin Knox-Johnston and William Ward, are experts and I’m very proud to be
taking the helm with them.”
Clipper Race Co-Founder and Chairman Sir Robin Knox-Johnston said: “We are very
pleased with our decision to promote Mark into the role of Race Director; he
has amassed huge experience in the past two races, in addition to his extensive
sailing record, especially during the Clipper 2011-12 Race for Derry-Londonderry. He has done a truly
excellent job for us already and I know he will continue to do so as Race
Director.”
On Justin’s departure, Sir Robin added: “I would also like to express my thanks
to the previous Race Director, Justin Taylor, for all his hard work and effort
put into the Clipper Race over the last few years.”
The eleventh edition of the biennial challenge, the Clipper 2017-18 Race starts
next summer and is expected to be the largest scale race to date. Around 700
crew, many currently training for the eleven-month challenge, will compete on
twelve one-design 70-foot yachts in fourteen or fifteen races between six continents.