Offshore racing legend Betty Cook's 'KAAMA' rides again

by Julia Dunn

Offshore racing legend Betty Cook's 'KAAMA' rides again. (Betty Cook)

WARREN COUNTY, N.Y. — She was one of the most famous racing boats in the world, bombing across the waters at speeds upwards of 80 miles per hour.

Now, more than 40 years later, KAAMA is back and better than ever, having undergone a full restoration.

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Once owned and raced by the legendary Betty Cook of Glens Falls, KAAMA has spent the last year undergoing work by the team at Performance Marine in Bolton Landing.

Owner Tom Jewsbury bought the 38' Scarab about 15 years ago after successfully restoring the original boat from the TV series, Miami Vice.

"It's kind of a hobby for me," he said. "And I was looking for another boat."

He found KAAMA in Louisiana, stripped to the hull. He says plans to restore the boat kept getting delayed year and year for various reasons until 2022 when he and his wife, Libby, found Jason Saris at Performance Marine.

"He was the missing piece of the puzzle," Libby said. "We knew of his expertise and were so excited when his team agreed to do it."

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Saris, an offshore boat racer himself, knew of KAAMA and met Betty Cook when he got into the sport back in the 80's in Florida.

"She was an awesome lady," Saris said. "She wasn't large, she was small in stature but tough as nails. She won her first championship as a grandmother."

Cook, a graduate of MIT, was 56 years-old when she started powerboat racing. She won 17 races in all including 2 world championships and 3 national championships. She passed away in 1991 at the age of 70. For Saris, who now races with his son, restoring Cook's boat was emotional.

"To be able to walk in Betty's footsteps, so the speak ... I looked up to her when I was young and she was 'the man,'" he laughed. "To be able to do that (work on the boat)? What a thrill."

Tom and Libby Jewsbury are thrilled with the final product. They live in Alexandria Bay on the Saint Lawrence River and also own a home in Old Forge.

This summer they, along with Saris, were able to enjoy the fruits of their labor by racing KAAMA in a NYC poker run.

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"We got out there for the first time with other boats, went fast and saw what she could do," Libby said.

Two people can operate a boat like KAAMA, three is optimal. Someone to drive, someone to operate the throttle and someone to navigate. Navigation is done with coordinates since GPS wasn't around in the late 1970's. Saris says while all jobs are crucial, a small error in navigation can be catastrophic in a race.

"Sometimes you're racing from Miami to the Bahamas and you don't even see the other boats," Saris said. "You're off course just a little bit? You miss the Bahamas."

Everything on KAAMA was restored to it's original form, which required Saris and his team to build some parts that are no longer produced.

Her hull is made out of kevlar, the same material used in bulletproof vests. It had just been invented when the boat was built. The fiber was used on speed boats because of it's incredible strength and lightweight.

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What's next for KAAMA? The Jewsburys say they don't plan on selling her at the moment. They're planning to enter a few more poker runs and enjoy the boat they brought back to its former glory.

If you'd like to learn more about what KAAMA is up to you can follow her on Facebook.

betty cook powerboat racer

Powerboat Racer Betty Cook Dead at 70 : Champion: The Newport Beach resident was the only woman to win U.S. and world titles in the offshore sport.

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Betty Cook, the only woman to win national and world championship titles in offshore powerboat racing, has died of cancer. She was 70.

When Mrs. Cook joined the male-dominated sport in 1970, piloting a high-powered boat over ocean waves at speeds up to 100 m.p.h., she was dismissed as a wealthy and bored housewife trying to while away the hours, she once told a reporter.

“I guess the other drivers thought I was just some rich lady who was going to try something new for excitement,” Mrs. Cook said after winning her first world championship in 1977 at Key West, Fla.

Mrs. Cook proved her critics wrong. She was inducted into the American Powerboat Assn. Hall of Champions in Detroit--the first woman in any class of boat to be honored--and was named England’s “Powerboat Personality of the Year” in 1973 after she won the famed Cowes-Torquay race.

She won 17 races in all, including another world championship in Venice, Italy, in 1979, and three U.S. championship titles, said John Crouse, a chronicler of offshore powerboat racing. The five championships tied the record held by the late Don Aronow, Crouse said.

“She was very courageous and very canny when it comes to racing,” Crouse said. Offshore powerboat racing “is one of the most brutal of all the motor sports . . . and she gave the sport a great push. Even today, very few women (compete), and none has ever reached the height that she did.”

Before she joined the race circuit, Mrs. Cook worked as a researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Stanford Research Institute. She also participated in the presidential campaigns of John F. and Robert Kennedy.

Besides her racing interests, Mrs. Cook was president of Kaama Marine Industries in Newport Beach. She was married to Paul Cook, president of Rachem Corp. They were divorced in 1980. She is survived by two sons, Eugene Ashley and Gavin Cook, two grandchildren and two nieces.

A memorial service for Mrs. Cook, who died Dec. 23 at Hoag Hospital in Newport Beach, will be held in Lake George, N.Y., where she maintained a home. A date has yet to be set.

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KAAMA MARINE

Founded in 1976, the KAAMA Racing Team is widely regarded as one of the most successful offshore powerboat racing teams in history.

Having started in well over 70 races, KAAMA earned its respect not only on the racecourse, but also through its forward-thinking engineering solutions, which undoubtedly helped advance the performance boat industry.

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WORLD CHAMPION

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US - CHAMPION

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The KAAMA Racing Team consisted of Betty Cook as driver, John Connor as crew chief & throttleman, various navigators as well as engineering partner Peter Weismann.

The team ran 4 different boat hulls, a 36’ Cigarette, a 38’ Scarab, a 38’ Cougar catamaran and a 38’ Formula catamaran, all set-up and modified by John Connor.

36' CIGARETTE

Kaama Cigarette 36

The 36-foot Cigarette was like many boat designs that followed, the origin of countless offshore victories. 

Famous for winning the legendary Cowes-Torquay-Cowes offshore race, the boats design quickly became noted on the racecourse and in the news.

KAAMA Racing consequently set up an engineering workshop in its parent company KUDU AEROSEACRAFT INC. and started developing their own drivetrain and power systems.

Kaama Scarab 38

The 38-foot Scarab is by far one of the most recognised hull designs in the world and respected because of its light weight and high speeds.

Initially engineered by John Connor as replacement for the Cigarette hull, the first Scarab hull was built by Larry Smith for KAAMA Racing. 

Once licensed to Wellcraft the design set out to become an absolute powerboat best-seller  and gained further notoriety through its appearance in the TV series "Miami Vice".

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The 38-foot Cougar catamaran was equipped with twin 482 Mercruiser putting out more than 700 hp each. These engines were modified by KAAMA Marine Engineering Inc., the racing teams own development and production company for engines and propulsion systems.

The catamaran was capable of speeds exceeding 100mph in ideal water conditions, thus secured the team their second World Championship in Venice, Italy in 1979.

38' FORMULA

KAAMA Formula 38

In the 1980‘s KAAMA Racing Team accepted sponsorship from Michelob Light for a number of races and introduced a new 38-foot Formula Hull.

the team ran several races as well as multiple Top-Speed runs with this particular hull. The innovative Kevlar 49 structure became test-bench for KAAMA surface drive applications.

Formula later offered "KAAMA Special Edition" upgrades for their performance line of recreational powerboats.

KAAMA MARINE ENGINEERING

KAAMAMarineEngineering.png

In addition to the famous racing team the company developed KAAMA performance engines and surface drive systems.

During his involvement with KAAMA Racing, throttleman and crew chief John Connor and Peter Weismann co-developed the KAAMA surface drive. The company continued to release and sell their own products, as special performance upgrades for pleasure boats.

Next to the in-house developed KAAMA engines, Betty Cook and John Connor race-tested all their products in the open class and ran the drives on both their KAAMA scarab 38 and Formula catamaran. Their race boats were perfect test benches for speed assessment, efficiency and durability.

KAAMA MARINE for MERCRUISER

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The KAAMA Racing Team shares a long history with Mercruiser, having run their engines and drives in a majority of their races. The KAAMA boats were also test bench for many innovative technologies that, once proven on the racecourse became production standard.

From hull materials such as 49 Kevlar, to engine and propulsion systems by Mercruiser, KAAMA acted as exclusive development partner, always willing to put new technologies to the test.

The team regularly used Mercruiser’s “Lake X” facility for test runs and configurations assessments. Betty Cook and KAAMA were featured in several Mercruiser Advertisements.

KAAMA SPECIAL EDITIONS

The popular TV Series “Riptide” featured a Scarab powered by KAAMA Power Systems

The popular TV Series “Riptide” featured a Scarab powered by KAAMA Power Systems

The international success in the offshore arena paired with KAAMA MARINE's own product development lead to several product partnerships, extending the brands reach and introducing their race-proven developments to the consumer market.

Wellcraft licensed KAAMA's original 38' design (Scarab) from Larry Smith to manufacture several variants of the record-breaking hull. KAAMA MARINE upgrades became popular options to increase the boats performance, speed and efficiency. A combination of the 425 KAAMA engine and KAAMA surface drive, were popular upgrades for many Wellcraft owners. Consequently Wellcraft introduced a limited KAAMA Special Edition, which was fully equipped with KAAMA hardware, a choice of "competition type" engine variants and drives. 

Formula stepped up thier partnership with KAAMA Racing Team by following Wellcraft and also introducing KAAMA Edition Formula boats. These boats were offered with exclusive paint jobs and the KAAMA surface drive system.

KAAMA Power Systems "competition type" engine

KAAMA Power Systems "competition type" engine

Up until today many Wellcraft and Formula models are still equipped with the KAAMA surface drive after having been run for more than 25 years.

Ultimately Chris-Craft engaged in a partnership with KAAMA Racing in order to set up a Mississippi River speed record. The catamaran was set up by KAAMA MARINE and powered by KAAMA POWER SYSTEMS engines and drives.

Motorsports Hall of Fame

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Betty Cook is widely regarded as having been one of the most successful off shore boat racers of all time having won two UIM World Championships and three APBA National Championships.  Ms. Cook won her first race in 1974 driving the Mongoose, a second-hand 32 foot offshore boat.  After purchasing a new 38 foot Scarab named Kaama, she won numerous races, including the 193 mile Bushmills Grand Prix at a speed of 73.3 mph.  In 1978, she became the first woman to complete, in one day, the 580 mile run down the Gulf of California from San Felipe to La Paz.  Averaging just over 50 mph, she completed the race in 12 hours and 45 minutes in a 29 foot Scarab hull.  A world and national champion driver who could hold her own on any race course in the world, Betty was inducted into the prestigious APBA Hall of Champions in the years 1977, 1978, and 1981 and became a member of the APBA Honor Squadron in 1993.  She retired from active competition in 1982 and passed away on December 23, 1990 at the age of 67.

Bill Jenkins

Peter Revson

Johnny Rutherford

Malcolm Smith

Chip Hanauer

Danny Foster

Fran Muncey

Bernard Little

Carl Kiekhaefer

Dean Chenoweth

Mira Slovak

Classic Offshore Powerboat Club - COPC

  • History of the Sport

Make way for the Ladies

Make way for the ladies….

In a sport dominated by men it was not entirely surprising that there should be interlopers of the fair sex, all possibly out to emulate the most famous Lady racer Miss Betty Carstairs.

When the pre war sport of power boat racing was reaching its peak in the 1920’s and 30’s, the years of Gar Wood, Campbell and Seagrave, who by the way also raced powerful cars. There was a small influx of Lady competitors who also raced cars and some then turned their attention to the powerboat scene also with great success. One of these ladies a certain Miss Betty Carstairs had the audacity to challenge the power boat master American Gar Wood in the 1928 staging in Detroit of the mighty Harmsworth Trophy. Her craft “Estelle II” was a single step hydroplane powered by a 900hp Napier aero engine.

Wood slightly disappointed that his challenger was a woman had the choice of 4 specially built Miss America’s, his original rebuilt 1920 boat plus Miss America 6,7 and 8 powered by Liberty engines producing 700 to 1000hp dependant on the craft.

Miss America VII won the contest at a speed of 93 miles and unfortunately Betty capsized Estelle.

But even before Betty Corsairs, Dorithy Levitt drove with and for Selwyn Edge and although his name appears on the Trophy it was Dorothy who piloted “NAPIER” to win the inaugural Harmsworth Trophy at Cork in 1903. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorothy_Levitt

Also in 1905 Camille Du Gast tackled the Mediterranean in a race from France to Morocco. www.historicracing.com/drivers_female.cfm

Then there was Delphine Dodge heiress to the Motor Empire in the 1920’s and Maude Rutherford in the 30’s.

When the sport was revived by Red Crise in the late 50’s with the Miami Nassau race entrants included the mother and daughter team, Gale and Rene Jacoby, whose mount one year was a Thunderbird Houseboat!

So if we roll forward to 1961 the start of modern day racing in Europe, the first Cowes Torquay international had no female competitors although Pamela Campbell was crew on board Christina. It was 1962 that saw several husband and wife teams participate including Sir Max and Lady Vi Aitken racing Glass Moppie plus Peter and Jane Hicks in Connie 2 (unfortunately Connie sank when her batteries broke loose). Pamela Campbell was certainly the first lady entrant and drove the previous years winner Thunderbolt with Lettice Curtis only to run out of fuel whilst placed 5th.

By 1963 Lady Aitken had her own Bertram 31 “Ultra Violet” for the CT in which she came 5th beating Sir Max, Thunderbolt was back again in the hands of Hilary Laing a member of the 1950 victorious Ski Slalom team, finishing 12th.

Charles and Jimmy Gardner started racing in 1963 with “Scorpion” but in 1964 Mrs N Gardner was now the entrant of the 25ft Betram special. Hilary Laing had teamed up with Hilary Twiss wife of air ace Peter, to race the 25ft Hunt designed HUMDRUM. Lady Vi again finished with Ultra Violet.

The ladies of the sport were not yet challenging for honours but there were certainly more of them taking up the sport. They included Miranda Cundy in her Ernie Freezer built Willick then Penny Carter made a glamorous impact with her Fairey huntsman “Flower Power” other Huntsman were raced by Mrs J Hawkes and Mrs B Currey.

Then of course there arrived a certain Fiona, Countess of Arran, where do you start with the exploits of such a colourful character? Countess Arran was a regular entrant not only in Class1 and 2 but also set records of which some still stand today and is deserving of her own entry.

Of course the men, in this male dominated sport were winning the world championship but this was to change with the emergence of an American grandmother by the name of Betty Cook. Before racing in her own right Betty had been part of husband Paul’s KUDU offshore team but with her own boats went on to win not just one but two world crowns in 1977 and 79 and the American championships twice also.

British fans will remember fondly her outstanding win in the 1978 Cowes Torquay Cowes with the Scarab KAAMA smashing in the process the record with an average speed of 77.42mph for the 230 mile round trip. The headlines that weekend read “Granny wins Powerboat race! Sadly Betty passed away after a battle with cancer on 23rd December 1990 aged 67. http://vault.sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1123658/1/index.htm

The changing face of the sport in the 1980’s saw Lady Aitken make a welcome return with daughter Laura competing in the cruiser class. This was where she had made her mark back in the 60’s and 70’s although it was an Italian that started making headlines in the top echelon of the sport, one Giovanna Repossi.

Wife of Italian racer and Precious Metal Scrap dealer Damiano Spelta, the family were instrumental in bringing to the sport the high powered diesel, their Isotta Franchini

motors, descendants of the CRM’s that powered Tramontana in 1962, powered Shead designed class 1 CUV built boats. It was in 1986 that Signora Spelta or as the lady preferred to be known Giovanna Repossi, won the CTC, in Nooxy Fresh and Clean. The race was over 2 parts, first leg winner Len Bylock arrived in Torquay only to start sinking dockside, Giovanna after hunting down replacement batteries left Torquay and all others in her wake as she sped back to Cowes, completing the trip at an average 74.3 mph.

This is a very brief history of the fair sex and their foray into the macho world of Offshore Powerboat Racing. As you have read they left a lasting memory and still in today’s sport the ladies are beating the men including one Shelly Jory who is out to put more history on the map, Sarah Donohue who is now a big hit in America and not forgetting the daughter of speed ace Donald Campbell, Gina who is now involved in the rebuilding of the salvaged Bluebird in which her father lost his life.

I am sure there will be more taking up the sport in the future and if I have forgotten to mention any one please forgive me it will be rectified, whoops sorry Jan! (Armstrong that is)

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Taking a thrashing—and giving one

  • Author: Coles Phinizy

TABLE OF CONTENTS

TABLE OF CONTENTS

ORIGINAL LAYOUT

ORIGINAL LAYOUT

Through all its tangled and uncertain years the city of Key West has tried to be a perfect host to all kinds of people: octogenarians and libertarians; politicians and political refugees; tycoons and drifters; butchers, bakers and cigar makers. Despite its record of largesse, there has always been a tinge of deceit about Key West. The town has long boasted that it is frost-free in winter and always cooled by ocean breezes. Frost-free it is and perhaps ever shall be, but oh, those breezes. Instead of simply cooling the town, occasionally they almost knock it out cold, particularly when they get a running start out in the mid-Atlantic and are traveling at hurricane speed when they lift beach chairs into the air all over the island.

Of all the varied folk who have been exposed to an excess of wind in Key West in the last three years, the offshore powerboat crews who assemble annually for a race in November have had the worst of it. Two years ago, 24 hours after the U.S. Weather Service had forecast two days of bonny weather, the offshore racing men were busting along through 40-knot squalls and 10-foot seas, breaking bones, bruising egos and severely denting their bankrolls. Again last year the weather battled them, forcing officials to shorten the course to 114 statute miles—60 less than the minimum required for world championship points. Although earning points for the national title was incentive enough for almost every driver, they were still a suffering lot. Even on the shortened course that used the most protected waters, the drivers had the better part of 15 miles in 10-foot seas.

Last week the first real cold front of winter reached down across the Florida panhandle and stalled around St. Petersburg, waiting for race day in Key West. On the eve of race day the front moved into town. By starting time last Saturday, the wind at the Dry Tortugas, where the full-length race course of 183 miles turns back for home, was over 25 knots and the seas 12 feet. Of the nine drivers on hand to compete for the 1977 offshore world title in Class I (boats with a maximum displacement of 1,000 cubic inches), the happiest under the circumstances was Joel Halpern, the U.S. national champion. Two years ago in the Key West race—his debut in the high-powered open class—Halpern was second to the 1975 world champion, Wally Franz of Brazil. His boat was Beep Beep, a novel, very deep-V hull of narrow beam. In the same craft in the sloppy seas at Key West last year, he was again second to the world champion, Tom Gentry of Hawaii. This year he had a new Beep Beep, identical in configuration to the one in which he had chased world champions, won two national titles and earned the reputation as the very best of rough-water men. When last week's race was postponed from Saturday to Sunday, Halpern merely shrugged off the delay. "The boat is ready, the crew is ready, so all we can do is sit around and get nervous."

Because the Sunday forecast was for continuing high seas, Michael Doxford of England, the European offshore champion, was particularly downcast. The 35-foot Cigarette hull, Limit Up, in which he had won most of his glory in the past year, had been badly bashed in rough water in the last race of the European circuit. A dock strike had prevented the Cigarette from getting back to its home plant in Miami in time for repairs. As a consequence, Doxford was faced with the prospect of taking on Key West's short, steep swells in a tunnel catamaran, also called Limit Up, which appeared to have as much chance as a teak raft in the anticipated conditions. On Saturday, after the postponement was announced, and while the wind was still building white-caps on the shoals and blowing the wigs off some of the dollies on the streets of Key West, Halpern helpfully suggested to his English rival that he put a steering wheel in both the port and starboard hulls of the catamaran. The theory was that if the boat broke apart in the rough going, Doxford in one hull and navigator Tim Powell in the other would be able to complete the course separately.

Until this year the Key West offshore race served as a beginning and an end. It was the first race that counted for national title points in the upcoming year and the last race that counted for world championship points in the current year. There were about 20 races on five continents where world points could be earned, with drivers counting only their six or seven best performances regardless of how many races they had entered. Because some driver had usually locked up the world title well before November, the Key West race became a meaningless international event.

Two years ago, when he was president of the American Power Boat Association, Bob Nordskog, a 64-year-old Californian, proposed a different world title format to the International Motor-boating Union. With a mind to giving world competition the sort of uncomplicated pizzazz that might attract the unknowing public as well as cut the extreme cost of worldwide campaigning, Nordskog suggested that continental competitions be held, open to all comers, and that the three drivers with the best record on each continent meet in one race for the title. The idea was accepted and Key West was chosen as the first venue under the new system.

In any game so freakishly ridden with bad luck, a single race is a very shaky way to pick a world champ. But in defense of Nordskog's idea, not many drivers liked the old system. In the past, before the world circuit was half completed, the competition often had been reduced to a scrap between a pair of drivers—American, English or Italian—who had the talent, money, equipment and time to chase each other around the world in quest of the title. Don Aronow, the boat-builder, is the only American who ever tried seriously (and with success) to win both the U.S. and world titles the same year, and because Aronow has been a powerboat builder most of his life, his campaigning could hardly be said to have cut into his breadwinning. In contrast, Dr. Bob Magoon, the only man to win three consecutive U.S. titles, could never afford the time away from his surgery to campaign abroad.

For better or worse, it became "winner take all" at Key West. Although there are only three Class I boats operating in Australia, Peter Dean of Melbourne and Arnold Glass of Sydney (who failed this year to even finish a race Down Under) were undismayed at the prospect of meeting four Yanks, an Englishman and two Italians who had been scrapping hard through a long season to earn their berths. Nordskog, who had gone to South America to qualify in an attempt to stimulate competition down there, rated himself a doubtful winner because his new, light Kevlar hull was not proving as tractable as he liked in rough water.

On the eve of the race, Joe Ippolito, the rookie who had placed second to Halpern on the U.S. circuit, also became an unlikely choice as winner. His crewmen, Richie Powers and Bob Beich, had toiled more than 100 hours a week for a month trying to get a new 38-foot, lightweight Scarab hull completed, but failed, Beich passing out from exhaustion two days before the race. As a consequence, Ippolito took off for the starting line in a 35-footer that would not reach across the steep crests as well as the Scarab. Betty Cook, the only grandmother in the game, who finished third on the U.S. circuit driving a Scarab similar to the one Ippolito wanted to use, seemed to have as good a chance as anybody. Although the two Italians, Guido Niccolai and Francesco Cosentino, were somewhat doubtful about how they and their English-designed, Italian-built aluminum boats would behave in steep seas, Jack Stuteville, the U.S. throttleman for Niccolai, exuded confidence as readily as he did tobacco juice. "In six-to 10-foot water," he said between spits, "all these big hulls are going to be about the same. It'll get down to who has the most hair on his chest."

Although he has vast experience in offshore racing, Stuteville turned out to be dead wrong. On a shortened, 127-mile course the rough-and-tumble waters, which Stuteville had maintained would be an equalizer, brought a different kind of grief to almost every boat, and the world title went not to the hairiest man but to Betty Cook. In Kaama she thumped over the rock-hard water at an average of 54.9 mph, beating her nearest rival, Halpern, who had trim-control problems through much of the race, by 16 miles.

Dean, the Melbournite, was the first to take a bad lick from the sea. Just two miles after the start, he swapped ends, damaging his steering linkage so badly he was compelled to run the rest of the way at an average speed of 38 mph, using his trim tabs for control. Shortly thereafter Glass, the Sydneyite, quit, having hit a reef and busted an outdrive. Doxford in his ill-suited tunnel hull was the next to retire, forced out when the connecting rod tore loose from one of his widely separated outdrives.

The two Italian hulls, all-purpose wonders though they may be, behaved poorly in the skittery conditions. After leaping erratically from one seven-foot crest to the next, they would suddenly plow into a stray 10-footer and rocket skyward as if moon bound. Twenty-five miles from the start Cosentino withdrew with a badly gashed face. Feeling ill, Niccolai instructed Stuteville to complete the course at an easier pace. When his light and bouncy Kevlar hull proved as unsuited for the course as he suspected it might. Nordskog also backed off, satisfied to finish. After a two-foot crack opened in his little secondhand hull in the first 15 miles, Ippolito carried on, lead-footing it for another 15, until a fuel tank ruptured.

It was not carnage—just one of those days with enough minor disasters for everybody except Betty Cook, who in the last 50 miles was the only one still traveling at a champion's pace. Savoring the sweetest victory of her two-year career, Cook observed, "I have always said Key West is the worst course we run, but I think I could learn to love it."

Pounding through 10-foot waves at 54.9 mph, Cook was battered like her foes, but a buoyant victor.

IMAGES

  1. Betty Cook

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  2. Historic Offshore Race Boat Association

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  3. Historic Offshore Race Boat Association

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  4. Discover the Forgotten Women of Sport

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  5. Historic Offshore Race Boat Association

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  6. America’s ’first lady of powerboat racing’ Betty Cook wins the 1982

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COMMENTS

  1. Betty Cook

    Betty Cook (1923-1990) was an Honors Graduate from MIT and a world champion offshore powerboat racer and was inducted in to the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America in 1996. [1] She grew up as Betty Young in Glens Falls, New York , earned a degree in political science from Boston University and then attended Massachusetts Institute of Technology ...

  2. Offshore racing legend Betty Cook's 'KAAMA' rides again

    Cook, a graduate of MIT, was 56 years-old when she started powerboat racing. She won 17 races in all including 2 world championships and 3 national championships. She passed away in 1991 at the ...

  3. Powerboat Racer Betty Cook Dead at 70

    Powerboat Racer Betty Cook Dead at 70 : Champion: The Newport Beach resident was the only woman to win U.S. and world titles in the offshore sport. By LILY DIZON . Jan. 9, 1991 12 AM PT .

  4. KAAMA MARINE

    The KAAMA Racing Team consisted of Betty Cook as driver, John Connor as crew chief & throttleman, various navigators as well as engineering partner Peter Weismann. The team ran 4 different boat hulls, a 36' Cigarette, a 38' Scarab, a 38' Cougar catamaran and a 38' Formula catamaran, all set-up and modified by John Connor.

  5. Betty Cook

    (With permission) 1978 BBC Radio Solent Interview with Betty Cook, World Powerboat Champion, recorded days before she went on to win the Cowes Torquay Cowes ...

  6. Betty Cook

    Betty Cook is widely regarded as having been one of the most successful off shore boat racers of all time having won two UIM World Championships and three APBA National Championships. Ms. Cook won her first race in 1974 driving the Mongoose, a second-hand 32 foot offshore boat. After purchasing a new 38 foot Scarab named Kaama, she won numerous ...

  7. Kaama Raceboat Restoration Moving Forward

    Among the storied raceboats piloted by the late Betty Cook—the only woman to win national and world championships in offshore powerboat racing—was a 38-foot Scarab called Kaama and later Michelob Light. Cook, who ran the boat with legendary throttleman John Connor in the early 1980s, died at age 70 in 1991. But her famed 38-footer is still here and, thanks to the efforts of its current ...

  8. Betty Cook: 'Woman Becomes a Power in Powerboats

    Mrs. Cook was at the Coliseum yesterday to accept the Sam Griffith Trophy that goes with the world offshore powerboat championship she won in a rugged' 110‐mile race in Nov. 13 at Key West ...

  9. VÉHICULE Presents: Betty Cook & KAAMA

    Founded in 1976, the Kaama Racing Team consisted of Betty Cook as its owner and driver, John Connor as crew chief and throttleman, along with a number of navigators. The team ran four different hulls: a 36-foot Cigarette hull, a 38-foot Scarab, a 38-foot Cougar catamaran and a 38-foot Formula catamaran, all set up by John Connor.

  10. 1978 Betty Cook dominates

    60 years of Offshore Powerboat Racing When America turned up in force at Cowes and win the 1978 Beaverbrook Trophy. Thunder, Beep Beep, Bounty Hunter II and Kaama start off the Royal Yacht Squandron line but it's only California's finest Betty Cook that makes it back and become the first lady to win the historic Cowes Torquay Cowes.

  11. Inside The Cowes Classic, Offshore Powerboating's Toughest Endurance Race

    American offshore racing pioneer Betty Cook competed in the Cowes-Torquay-Cowes event in 1978 and claimed victory in KAAMA, a 38-foot Scarab V-bottom powered by two MerCruiser engines alongside, John Connor and British racer Mike Mantle. In 1996, she was inducted into the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America incorporated in Novi, Mich.

  12. ANY MORE QUESTIONS, FELLAS?

    Betty Cook asked. Good question. Race officials yelled to Cook that she was the first one in; the other boats were still out there in the murk. They also noted that she was now the new open-class world champion, having averaged a surprising 54.9 mph going over, under and through that wild sea. ... Offshore powerboat racing hasn't been the same ...

  13. Historic Offshore Race Boat Association

    Here is Betty with her first race boat, MONGOOSE. Betty Cook and her husband, Paul, celebrate her first victory in 1974. She was 52 years old and a grandmother, stood 5' 4" tall and weighed barely 114 pounds. Within three years she would be World Champion in Key West. Betty on race morning with her famous KAAMA emblem on her jumpsuit.

  14. Make way for the Ladies

    Make way for the Ladies…. In a sport dominated by men it was not entirely surprising that there should be interlopers of the fair sex, all possibly out to emulate the most famous Lady racer Miss Betty Carstairs. When the pre war sport of power boat racing was reaching its peak in the 1920's and 30's, the years of Gar Wood, Campbell and ...

  15. Betty Cook, in Kaama, Wins Powerboat Race

    She held on for a 47‐second victory at an average speed of 68.5 miles per hour in the 19‐boat race. Driving Kaama, a V‐hull named after an antelope, Mrs. Cook won her seventh offshore race ...

  16. Betty Cook powerboat racer

    1.9K views, 72 likes, 6 loves, 1 comments, 19 shares, Facebook Watch Videos from British Powerboat Racing Club: **The American Dream ** Betty Cook...

  17. Women played pioneering role in Cowes-Torquay race history

    Betty Cook, nicknamed the Queen of Offshore by her male counterparts, won the Cowes-Torquay-Cowes race in 1978 — setting a course record. Photos courtesy of Powerboat Archive (Sarah Donohue). POWERBOAT racing has traditionally been recognised as a male dominated sport, but throughout the sport's long history, women have certainly made their mark.

  18. Taking a thrashing—and giving one

    Betty Cook, a 54-year-old grandmother, gunned her Scarab through tumultuous seas off Key West to win the world offshore powerboat championship by 16 miles ... Of all the varied folk who have been exposed to an excess of wind in Key West in the last three years, the offshore powerboat crews who assemble annually for a race in November have had ...

  19. Cowes Torquay Powerboat Race 2022 Recap

    Jory-Leigh is a powerboat racing champion, having also taken second in the 2016 Cowes-Torquay Race, making her the highest-ranking British woman finisher, with only Betty Cook besting her record. As the MC for the awards ceremony, she did a fabulous job, and graciously presented me with a beautiful commemorative Cowes Torquay Powerboat Festival ...

  20. Betty Cook Era

    John Conner is still alive and living in FL. Don Holloway is a retired airline pilot last I knew he was living in Newport Beach CA. Hope that helps a little Regards Dan. Reply. The following 2 users liked this post by Team Archer: hblair (05-23-2022), Twin O/B Sonic (05-23-2022) 05-22-2022, 01:31 PM. # 3.

  21. About: Betty Cook

    Betty Cook (1923-1990) was an Honors Graduate from MIT and a world champion offshore powerboat racer and was inducted in to the Motorsports Hall of Fame of America in 1996. She grew up as Betty Young in Glens Falls, New York, earned a degree in political science from Boston University and then attended Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where she met her future husband, Paul Cook. They ...

  22. 1981 OffShore Powerboat Race Season

    Cuts from the 1981 Offshore Powerboat Season. Betty Cook, Cigarette's, Apaches. Made by Innerspace Video

  23. Betty Cook?

    Betty Cook was a two time winner of the Sam Griffith Tropy which I created in 1964. She won it in 1977 and 1979. ... The History of Offshore Powerboat Racing, to be titled SEARACE...The Legends, Etc. John Crouse Publications Texjoc@aol,com 1 352-344-1528 Reply. The following users liked this post: David J. Keogh (09-05-2022) 10-08-2006, 07:30 ...