Gus Miller is the oldest Finn sailor to take part in the Finn Gold Cup and Finn World Masters. At 91 years of age, he finished every race in last month’s Porsche Centre Brisbane 2026 Finn World Masters, returning to Brisbane 50 years after he competed in the 1976 Finn Gold Cup.
While in Brisbane he sat down for a fascinating #Finntalks with Francesca Frazza, reliving his life time of Finn sailing, revealing a few stories, and how the Finn class shaped his life, his understanding of sailing and his friendships.
“I started sailing when I was three, and my father taught me how to steer by pulling a little punt with steering ropes on it up and down the beach. After that, he would take me sailing, but put me in a seat and say, stay out of the way.
“And then a little later, I was allowed to sail a small punt with leeboards. But I was given a great deal of freedom. I sailed all over Narragansett Bay on my own. The wind back then, the sou’wester would go 20, 25 knots, so I grew up learning to sail in a lot of wind.”
“I sailed in my first ocean race when I was 12, and I really have a great interest in that, so I started doing a lot of ocean racing besides racing dinghies. I’ve sailed dozens and dozens of different kinds of boats and learned a lot from each of them, and particularly the people that I met.
“There are some superb seamen that I sailed with that really guided you. There is a culture of seamanship and sailing that I was a part of without all of the legalistic legislation that goes on in sailing now. So going up in that culture, there are just things you're expected to do. The only rules I had were take care of the boat first, take care of yourself, don't get drowned, and be home for supper. Take care of the boat first and take care of yourself was excellent because if you take care of the boat, it'll take better care of you than you will of yourself. The culture of sailing worldwide is a marvellous thing to be part of.

“Along the way, John Bertrand came to Pewaukee to learn how to be a sailmaker, and he and I teamed up as training partners, so I learned a lot about that. The first thing he did is make me design three sails and build them myself, so I knew how to translate what I saw on the water onto the loft floor. We experimented with all kinds of things.
“I also learned a great deal from David Howlett, who I had met in 1973 at the pre-Olympics in Kingston, Ontario, and we really took to each other. We had a common way of looking at the world. At one point in 1973, he sat me down with David Hunt, who designed the Needlespar mast. And we spent an evening with David leading me through the design process for engineering a Needlespar mast. That coupled with what I learned from David and from John and from Bob Scoville, I began to understand the rig a lot better.
“I went to Acapulco to the pre-Olympics and Paul Elvström was there. I watched him and before he went out every day, he'd spend about a half hour with a rig, adjusting the controls and then he'd walk around the boat and study the rig. And he kept that process up every morning. He'd study what he was looking at.
“And I realised he had a precision and a depth of insight into the rig and what he was doing was unusual. So, I've kind of followed his lead since then, spending a lot of time just looking very carefully at what I was seeing. And I kept a diary throughout. It’s an intellectual adventure. Developing the theory of the Finn rig has been invaluable and applied it to all the other boats I've sailed. I think you can learn more from the Finn than any other single boat I've ever sailed.
“I had to come back here [to Brisbane] because I'd been here for the Finn Gold Cup 50 years ago. John Bertrand and Sid Howlett, my training partners, both beat me in that. And I realised that I was not strong enough to beat them. So, I went back to Ann Arbor, got permission to use football team’s training room and the trainers who had a set of brand-new equipment. And for two months, they pushed me with other exercises that built up my strength. So, when I got to the Europeans, I beat John and all the others that had beaten me here. So that started a 50-year process of continuing to train.
“And then I thought I wanted to come back here to this anniversary.”
The full Gus Miller #Finntalks can be found on The Finn Channel here:

