Admiral’s cup
chronograph 44
Corum’s Admiral’s Cup
Sails Full Speed Ahead
O
f all the timepieces brandishing the Corum logo, the
Admiral’s Cup likely ranks as the best known. The
refined nautical watch may not register as bold as the
Corum’s Bubble watch, as patriotic as the former Coin
watch or as nostalgic as the Heritage or as complicated as the Golden Bridge—but it consolidates all four virtues into one emblematic
flagship timepiece. That alone deserves a respectful salute.
The Corum Admiral’s Cup is distinguished by its hallmark
twelve-sided bezel emblazoned with twelve colorful nautical pennants representing the maritime International Code of Signals.
The Admiral’s Cup collection is versatile—defining time, dates,
worldtime, intervals, tides and even sailing champions via automatic
or complicated movements such as chronographs, tourbillons, and,
on several models, a minute-repeater.
In recent years, Corum has been a company in transition and
keeping an unusually low profile for a brand accustomed to attracting eyeballs and turning heads. Yes the Admiral’s Cup has been
Corum’s steady force—always diversifying itself with new complications, materials and colors while representing the brand’s passion
for the sea.
History
The Admiral’s Cup model dropped anchor in 1960, unfathomably
launched as the world’s first water-resistant square timepiece—a
sports watch with a sailboat hand-inscribed on its case back.
This daring timepiece was inspired by the biennial Admiral’s
Cup sailing regatta, the unofficial international championship of
offshore yacht racing, launched in 1957 by members of the Royal
Ocean Racing Club. The race showcased national teams (England,
United States, France, Australia, among others) competing against
one another with three yachts each over six legs—three Olympic
triangles, a coastal route, and finally two challenging sea races, the
Channel Race and the Fastnet.
The legendary Admiral’s Cup race correlated to tennis’ patriotic
2016 | Wristwatch
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