DAY
ONE CLICHÉ AND PICTURE PERFECT
Dickenson
Bay, Antigua, April 27, 2003 Today the curtain
rose on the Caribbean racing grand finale with
a clichéd but most definitely perfect 15-18
knot breeze occasionally reaching 22 knots, Caribbean
sun and moderately bumpy seas. After the final
count today 186 boats sailed the circuitous course
to Dickenson Bay.
Division
A headed upwind past Shirley Heights, downwind
to a buoy off Curtain Bluff, dog-legged out to
a buoy leading the fleet out past Cades Reef and
then west of a number buoys to a close-reaching
finish off Dickenson Bay. Flying in the face of
local knowledge it paid to "head out"
on the first beat as the wind clocked south
rather than hug the coast under Shirley Heights.
Bill
Alcott and his Equation crew that includes Stu
Argo and Ron Sherry in the afterguard racked up
his first win in the Caribbean against Sotto Voce
today. However, it was a close run thing beating
Sotto Voce by a mere three seconds on corrected
time. There was only 10 seconds between the entire
big boat class with Favonious third and Chippewa
fourth. Pleased that today¹s racing consisted
of short windward legs and long downwind legs
Argo did concede that, "We ate it on the
reaching leg" when they couldn't carry their
chute. Today's race was for the downwind machines
but spinnakers were only really carried as far
as Curtain Bluff.
The
note in the sailing instructions that "All
boats shall pass to the west of Warrington Bank
Buoys, all oil mooring buoys and the Sister Rocks"
was not read by a number of competitors and generated
a flurry of calls lodging protests to the race
committee. Seven of the nine protests today were
related to this and boats were either disqualified
or managed to save themselves a point by retiring
gracefully before the protest was heard.
Richard
Matthews' Flirt managed to top racing II beating
the flock of Swan 56s in its class despite views
that it needs more modifications and a larger
keel.
Jamie
Dobbs and crew on Lost Horizon II topped racing
III followed by First class 10 EIB Marina Bas
Du Fort and Caccia Alla Volpe; but no walkover
with only 1.6 seconds between them. Bernie Wong,
another Antiguan sailor, topped the three-boat
sport boat class.
Racer
Cruiser I saw highs and lows. Helsal 2, Constanter
and Javelin were first second and third respectively.
Spirit of Diana and Spirit of Minerva would have
been a lot closer to the top of the scoreboard
but, engrossed in a match race, sailed past the
Curtain Bluff mark and had to head back upwind
to round it. Gibian, the 100 foot Wally, suffered
a terminal wrap as it dropped for Curtain Bluff
mark and wasn¹t able to finally drop the
chute until it had sufficiently shredded itself
to do so.
Stuart
Robinson¹s Swan 48 Celerity beat J/46 Jacana
by the slim margin of 3/1000s of a second in racer/cruiser
II so that could have gone either way. Swan
59 Tazani with Eddie Warden-Owen on the helm was
third.
Chris
Haswell¹s 1st Away won racer/cruiser III,
Milt Baehr¹s iGoodia won performance cruising
I while Hugh Bailey¹s HuGo, an Antiguan boat
won performance cruising II.
Division
B sailed a similar course to division B but without
the initial beat into the Atlantic.
Illyria,
Sir David Cooksey¹s Oyster 53, beat the 70-foot
CNB Excalibur by a hair in cruising I and cruising
II went to Doug DeCluitt¹s Columbia 50 Arawa.
In
bareboat III five-times overall bareboat champ
Jan Soderberg came close to losing to Sea Biscuit
- ex-Waisters and the boat that Soderberg has
won on in previous years. Sea Biscuit, the lower
rated boat crossed the line ahead of Soderberg's
Lofoten I but was, alas, one of those that neglected
to following the sailing instructions and retired.
Fabi
skippered by Dieter Kuhn and Rosco skippered by
Joaquin Prager topped bareboat I and II respectively
and Casanova and Tac Tic Toc won IV and V.
Racers
were met by the second annual Great Dickenson
Bay Beach Bash on their arrival today. As they
dropped their anchors Curtley Ambrose and Ritchie
Richardson were already taking on all comers in
the celebrity cricket, a fundraiser for the Antiguan
sickle cell fund. Sound systems were warming up,
chicken and ribs were cooking, drinks were cooling
and five bands were limbering up for action. Fireworks
ushered in Atlantic, the last band for the Bash.
Tomorrow
division A will race a windward leeward course
in the morning and an Olympic course in the afternoon.
Division B will sail 'the long way back' to Jolly
Harbour, the venue for the second night of fun
and frivolity.
Antigua
Sailing Week has created a completely new sponsorship
platform going in to the next three years designed
specifically to enhance the growth and marketing
potential of the event. A new level of sponsorship,
diamond level, was created and the first ever
diamond level sponsor is Stanford International
Bank Limited which is very involved on an international
level. New platinum sponsors Air Jamaica and Heineken
join Cable & Wireless, English Harbour Rum,
Rolex and American Express. LIAT is a new silver
sponsor while Sticky Wicket Restaurant and Going
Places Travel are copper sponsors. All these sponsors
are involved in a three-year strategic marketing
plan.