Mike Golding

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Mike Golding (born 27 August 1960) is an English yachtsman. He is one of the few yachtsmen to have raced round the world non-stop in both directions. He held the solo record for sailing round the world westabout (the most challenging direction for circumnavigation) between 1994 and 2000.

Golding, who is a member of Royal Southampton Yacht Club, is the eponymous co-founder of the commercial company Mike Golding Yacht Racing Ltd, a professional and competitive company whose goals are to compete and win on the water and to deliver. His partner in this venture is Jorgen Philip-Sorensen.

Golding led the team Group 4 to second place in the British Steel Challenge in 1992/3. He did one better in the next edition the BT Global Challenge 1996/7, taking first place with a new team of amateur sailors, again onboard Group 4.

Golding came seventh in the 2000-2001 Vendee Globe solo non-stop round the world race having lost seven days to the dismasting of his Open 60, again called Group 4. His present Open 60 campaign is sponsored by Ecover, a Belgian ecological cleaning products company which has sponsored his team since 2001. In 2004 he won the IMOCA World Championship and successfully defended his title the following year, in which he also won the 2005 FICO World Championship.[1]

In October 2006 he started the Velux 5 Oceans yacht race. He rescued fellow sailor Alex Thompson in the Southern Ocean, then the yacht Ecover had a mast failure with them both aboard. He announced he was retiring from the race on making emergency landfall in Cape Town.[2]


He lives with his wife and son in Warsash, Hampshire, near Southampton.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Stamm wins leg as Golding quits. BBC (December 4, 2006).
  2. ^ World Championship Crown for Mike. Royal Southampton Yacht Club (March 10, 2006).
  • 'Mike Golding', The Observer, 13 February 2006 (London).
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