After finishing runners-up in the World Flying Dutchman Championship in 1963, Tony Morgan and Keith Musto won the European Championship on home soil at Whitstable the following year. The duo were selected for the 1964 Tokyo Olympics, and going into the seventh and last Flying Dutchman race on the water at Enoshima they were overall leaders by just 21 points from the New Zealand pair. An unfortunate change of wind, however, saw Morgan and Musto finish the race in 11th place, but they still managed to hold on to the silver medal from the New Zealanders. Attempting to retain their European title in 1966, they had to again contend with silver, behind fellow Britons John Oakeley and David Hunt
The son of an assayer, a tester of precious metals to assess how pure they are, Morgan joined the Air Sea Rescue at the age of 17. He later spent many years working in the waste management and renewable energy sector, and was heavily committed the sustainability of the environment. Morgan also wanted to see democracy and social justice maintained and between 1972-77 served as a governor of the BBC.