ALLROUNDERS MOVE
ON UP IN DAY TWO
Jolly
Harbour, April 28, 2003 - Day two of the 36th
annual Antigua Sailing Week dawned with more glorious
Caribbean sailing conditions. Periodic overcast
skies accompanied 15-18 knot winds in the morning
but the clouds gave way to sunshine in the afternoon
and the winds held. Racers from division A came
ashore late afternoon looking a little wrung out
after the two races of 15 miles each as
the crow flies.
Division
A tackled a three-loop windward/leeward course
in the morning followed by an Olympic course in
the afternoon. Division B's course had the fleet
wending its way to Jolly Harbour, party central
and overnight stop for day two.
Arien
van Vemde's Sotto Voce ended the day top of big
boat racing while Swan 56 Lolita leads racing
B and fleet after two wins today. Sotto Voce and
Equation went to arbitration after Sotto Voce's
spinnaker brushed Equation's backstay as they
were jibing their way to the finish and received
a 40 per cent penalty putting her at the bottom
of the class in race one. However she bounced
back in the second race with a first place.
The
Swan 56s are starting to move in on Flirt in racing
II who found herself bumped to third in class
and tied with Vellamo 2 after a fourth and third
today.
Antigua¹s
Vallicelli 44 Caccia all Volpe has jumped to the
top of racing III after a third and a first today
and Lost Horizon II is one point behind in second
place. EIB Marina Bas du Fort is in third place
after a win this morning.
Credit
Moderne has bumped local Melges to second after
two bullets today in racing sport boat.
Bermudian
Farr 72 Starr Trail is sharing six points with
Swan 62 Constanter in racer/cruiser I with Spirit
of Diana in third. Spirit of Diana's position
took a bit of a dive after a first race kafuffle
in which it appears that her chute 'escaped' as
the were heading to the windward mark and she
headed back downwind with it flying at half mast
to recover it. Javelin, after a good a start yesterday,
has dropped down the rankings to fifth with a
short-handed crew on the 75-footer.
Swan
59, Tazani, with Eddie Warden-Owen at the wheel
has moved herself to the top of racer/cruiser
II with J/46 Jacana second. Celerity, after a
promising start yesterday, ended third in class
today; a poor start in the first race contributed
to a sixth place finish and she finished fourth
in the second. Disappointed with their results
but happy to be in the Caribbean one crew member
said: "It's still better than beating your
brains out in the Solent."
1st
Away and Grain de Soleil are in a neck and neck
battle for racer/cruiser III.
On
the division B course Igoodia topped performance
cruising I for the second day. In the melee of
the marinas Bobby Velasquez of Bobby's Marina
and his St Maarten crew sailing L'Esperance beat
Hugh Bailey and his HuGo crew of Antigua's Catamaran
Marina. Bobby is looking to even his score after
his defeat to Hugh in St Maarten¹s Heineken
Regatta but has an uphill struggle after posting
a twelfth place yesterday.
After
a fifth yesterday, Kevin Paul, skipper of Frers
76 Kalikobass and charter guests from the Brill
Nautical Society were delighted with their win
today. Helped along by Tony Brooks, Whitbread
veteran and a man with twenty years of local knowledge,
Kalikobass had to beat Hark, a Beneteau 53, round
the course by over twenty-five minutes to win
today. An ebullient Mike Tuckey, charter organizer,
also mentioned that it was one of two recent victories
with the crew having beaten the Antiguan Defence
Force in the tug-of-war yesterday on Dickenson
Bay Beach.
Jan
Soderberg and his Lofoten I team secured Bareboat
III against young pretenders Sea Biscuit. Fabi
clinched another win in bareboat I, Rosco racked
up another bullet in bareboat II with Blue Bayou
and Taz taking IV and V.
The
fleet heads back to English Harbour tomorrow in
an 'uphill' race; good news for the grinders.
While sailing a predominantly similar course,
division A's course is 25 miles and division B's
is 20 miles.
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.