Carl Eichenlaub passed away early this morning. In a sport full of iconic
figures, he stands with the best and most unique. Few people in the sport have
the breadth and depth of his talent.
Any one of his many accomplishments would have made him worthy of inclusion
in a list of greats. Champion sailor in the Snipe, Lightning, while also sailing
in the Star, Soling, FD’s and IOR classes. As a builder of those boats, a few of
which helped to change the face of the sport, perhaps most notably Doug
Peterson’s “Ganbare”. Friend and mentor to literally thousands of people around
the world.
Carl’s boat building skills were legendary. “In many ways Carl is a genius,”
says Lowell North, a sailmaker who has three times sailed himself to a world
championship in Eichenlaub Sta
rs. “Although some sailors on the East Coast may
not agree, we on the West Coast know that he is the best.” This quote was from
an extensive Sports
Illustrated article in 1965, the entirety of which is well worth reading,
because it captures the essence of the man, which almost literally never
changed. Anyone remember the slogan “Any slob can win in an Eichenlaub”?
Away from the sport he played classical music on a bassoon and contrabassoon
with several different local orchestras. He loved the San Diego Chargers and
NASCAR and in recent years had taken to traveling to what he called “Dog
Regattas”, otherwise known to the rest of us as dog shows, with his wife Jean
and their herd of dogs. A graduate of San Diego State in ’53, Carl is a member
of the Intercollegiate Sailing Hall of Fame and is an SDSU Distinguished Alumni.
He was 83 years old. He passed away quietly with Jean and his children Betty Sue
Sherman and Brian close by.
While winning races and building great boats for customers is interesting, of
far greater importance is the esteem with which he was held in the sport. Carl
was the shipwright for the US Sailing team for decades. He always took care of
the US team first every day, but after that work was done he would help sailors
from other countries fix their boats. For the sort of service he gave to the
sport in 2000 he was awarded US Sailing’s highest honor, the Herreshoff
Award.
Many people will have words of tribute for Carl, and we thought it
appropriate to start off with what Dennis Conner had to say about him this
morning:
“Carl Eichenlaub was truly a genius. He could sail a bath tub down the
San Diego river with a sheet as a sail. He built championship boat after
champion boat for the Snipe, Lightning and Star class He could play in the
orchestra, build a railroad, invent a cedar core spruce star mast, go to the
Olympics and not only repair the damaged US boats but help the entire fleet, He
could build, paint and launch an ocean racing boat capable of winning the SORC
“STINGER”, in 30 days from start to finish! All this as well a being a great
sailor, winning Championships from Sabot to Snipes to Lightnings. He inspired
some of our very best sailors, Lowell North, Pete Bennett, Malin Burnham, Earl
Elms in San Diego.. He will be remembered as being one of our greatest sailing
talents, along with Lowell, Buddy and Bill Buchan.There will never be another
Carl, he was simply the BEST!”
From Sailing Anarchy
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