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DAVE HACKFORD - WORLD CHAMPION WINDSURFER COMPETITOR AT THE 1984 LA OLYMPICS


D


ave Hackford – World Champion Windsurfer and competitor at the 1984 LA Olympics – is relaxed, self-deprecating and easy to talk to, despite being one of the best British windsurfers ever, as we talk about his Olympic experiences. Born and raised in Weymouth, Dave was an intelligent student who did well in exams and had a place to go to university – but by then another occupation had started to grab his attention. “I started windsurfing when I was 17 years old in the late 1970s,” he said. “At the time the sport was undergoing a massive expansion. I had the chance to compete at some high-level championships but had to put off going to University. I had very supportive parents and they allowed me to do that – and the rest is history.” He never went to University but he did make the Olympics and become a multiple world champion. Not a bad trade.


Dave now is the co-owner with his business partner


Roger Tushingham of Tushingham Sails, based in Halwell, selling windsurfing, paddleboarding and other watersports


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equipment. He still competes in national championships and seems to be very content with life.


Dave has been a Blackawton resident for 13 years.


I was lining up with Daley Thompson, Seb Coe, Steve Cram and many more I’d only seen on TV


He loves the area for its beauty and people. He’s strongly involved with the local community and recently has been helping Dartmouth Academy students with an Olympic-themed project called “Be the Best You Can Be”. 28 years ago he was training like anything to prepare for the Olympics – having just won the Torquay International Regatta in May to qualify as one of the first windsurfers ever to compete for an Olympic medal. “The Olympic Committee had added Windsurfing as a yachting class for the 1984 games,” he said. “The sport had come on so quickly from virtually no-one doing it in the early 1970s to one in four households having a board in the 80s. “When I started I had no plan to be an Olympian, obviously, as it wasn’t an Olympic sport. To then have the chance to go was very exciting and a bit strange! Once I qualified I had to train so much to get used to the official board and sails. It all went in a bit of a blur.” And then, suddenly, in July, he was in LA waiting in the Olympic Velodrome for the opening ceremony to start. “It was all a bit overwhelming really – I was lining up with Daley Thompson, Seb Coe, Steve Cram and many more I’d only seen on TV. We missed most of the opening ceremony – the famous man arriving by rocket pack and all the glitz and glamour - waiting to do the procession. We were in the stadium for Lionel Ritchie though! Life was strange in the Village – we once got to meet Princess Anne and the American media went crazy – there were helicopters and goodness knows how many cameras on the ground.” Despite Dave’s relaxed manner today – he gives an insight into what it takes to just get to the level of an Olympian when he describes his life in the competitors’ village: “We got out there two weeks before the start of the event and it was basically training and then straight into the racing. I’d get up in the morning every day for running, then on the water and then in the gym. “When the racing starts – there is only really one thing on your mind – and that is to lock into the mindset of


Official 2012 Olympics Physio


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