TERRA
NOVA TRADING KEY WEST 2003 / JANUARY 20-24
www.Premiere-Racing.com
Jan.
20, 2003 For Immediate Release
KEY
WEST STARTS WITH BIG BREEZE AND SOME BANGS
Monday's
weather: Clear; wind NE, 15 knots diminishing
to 10; air temperature 62.
Tuesday's
forecast: Clear; wind E, 10 knots diminishing
to 7; air temperature upper 60s.
 |
| Crocodile
Rock crew of Vince Brun (right), Austin Herlihy
(left) and helmsman Scott Harris (seated)
haul out cold-weather gear for unusually cold
Key West conditions. Photo © Rich Roberts |
KEY
WEST, Fla.---Terra Nova Trading Key West 2003
promised serious sailing this week, but it wasn't
supposed to be a swim meet.
That's
what happened Monday when 290 boats from 20 countries
squared off in a 15-knot breeze to start the competition
with a bang---three, actually. There were that
many serious collisions in the spirited racing
on four inshore courses. Ken Read, recently returned
from the America's Cup wars with Team Dennis Conner
in New Zealand, found similar intensity in this
more bucolic venue.
Read,
driving George David's Idler from New York in
the IMS class, was knocked into the water a minute
and a half before the start of the first race
when the Nelson/Marek 50 was tagged in the starboard
stern quarter by Larry Bulman's Farr 49, Javelin,
from Annapolis.
"I
went flipping over the rail," Read said.
"I was fully in the water. I had to swim
back to the boat."
Fortunately,
the water was 71 degrees and Read's freestyle
form was fine.
"We
won the race," he said. "That's something
to be proud of."
The
bad news: "Now I've got to make that fun
phone call," Read said. " 'Hey, you've
got a little hole in your boat.' "
David,
the owner, was delayed on business and won't arrive
until Wednesday. But he'd be pleased to learn
that eight hours after the incident Javelin was
disqualified in a protest hearing. Read, on port
tack, said he made a couple of moves to avoid
Javelin, which was on starboard tack, and Bulman
echoed his comments.
"We
just didn't know which way they were gonna go,"
Bulman said. "They went down and then they
went up. We were trying to get out of their way."
Two
years ago Javelin was knocked out of the regatta
on opening day in a collision with Highland Fling.
"That
was my fault," Bulman said. "This one
wasn't my fault."
 |
| Italy's
Bottado Culo leads the Farr 40 fleet to the
first windward mark in Race 1. Photo ©
Rich Roberts |
John
and Tony Esposito's J/29 Hustler, City Island,
N.Y., took a temporarily disabling hit from Paul
Anderson's Titillation, Deltaville, Va., while
Geoffrey Perini's J/30 Bada Bing, Perth Amboy,
N.J., was crunched by Paul Baehr's Fast Company,
Montreal. The striking boats were tossed.
Elsewhere
on the four courses set along Hawk Channel, the
Scott Harris/Alexandra Geremia Crocodile Rock
from Santa Barbara, Calif. slipped quietly into
first place among the Farr 40s with a pair of
second-place finishes, while Doug and Dick DeVos'
Windquest scored two wins in the 1D35s.
Robert
Hughes' Heartbreaker, Holland, Mich., and Dr.
Wolfgang Schaefer's Struntje light, Kiel, Germany,
won the two Farr 40 races but couldn't match Crocodile
Rock's consistency.
"Our
secret weapon was Vince," Harris said, referring
to multi-world champion Vince Brun, his tactician
for the week. "He's very good with the shifts,
and these light spots late in the day were very
tricky."
Struntje
light, with Olympic Finn gold medallist and new
Star class world champion Iain Percy of Britain
calling tactics, beat Crocodile Rock by about
three feet when Percy called a slam dunk by Schaefer
at the finish line. It was so close that the Crocodile
Rock crew momentarily reached out prepared to
fend off its foe, but no contact was made.
'"After
leading the whole race, we didn't want to lose,"
Schaefer said.
Percy
said, "They were all over us like a rash
the last two legs."
 |
| Paul
Cayard calls tactics for John Kilroy's Samba
Pa Ti. Kilroy is at the helm. Photo
© Rich Roberts |
Remarkable
about Heartbreaker's win was that it was over
the line early---a common fault among 15 of the
24 Farr 40s in the two races—despite the
"I" flag flying, requiring line-jumpers
to round the ends of the line to restart. Fortunately,
Hughes was at the pin end on the advice of his
tactician, two-time Olympic medallist Jeff Madrigali,
and simply spun the boat around without losing
the fleet. Then they clawed their way back to
win.
Ken
Legler, principal race officer on that course,
said, "The current was a half-knot upwind,
but the problem was that the boats were lining
up too close to the line, and when a boat ran
the line that would sucker them all up. It's easier
for us and more fun for them if they start behind
the line."
Among
the 57 Melges 24s, there were notable performances
by Kate Mullin and 14-year-old Samuel (Shark)
Kahn. Mullin, driving John Sherlock's boat Frequent
Flyer from Toronto, scored a 1-2 day. Kahn, the
son of 2001 Transpac winner Philippe Kahn, is
driving his own boat this year after crewing in
2002. He finished 22nd and 12th to stand18th overall
in a keenly competitive fleet.
Italy's
Flavio Favini, who won the delayed 2001 class
world championship here a year ago, is stalking
Mullin at 2-4. Current world champion Harry Melges
and sidekick Jeff Ecklund are crewing for Norway's
Kristian Nergaard, who stands eighth with a 4-22.
Terra
Nova Trading Key West 2003 sponsors include Terra
Nova Trading L.L.C., Mount Gay Rum, RealTick(r),
Lewmar Marine, Nautica Watches, Nautica Eyewear,
Pearson Yachts, Samson Rope Technologies, Saucony
and the Florida Keys & Key West Tourist Development
Council. The Historic Seaport at the Key West
Bight is the Official Site.
The
Performance Sailing Industry Partner Program is
in its second year, with 24 members at press time.
Participating companies and details about the
program are on the event web site.
 |
| Bill
Alcott's Equation, formerly Magnitude, douses
chute at leeward gate. Photo © Rich Roberts |
Racing
is scheduled Monday through Friday, Jan. 20-24,
on four circles off the south shore of the island.
Registration is on Sunday, Jan. 19. The regatta
is open to entries in PHRF, one-design and IMS
classes of 24 to 85 feet LOA. PHRF entries must
have a rating of 175 or lower.
Class
leaders (after 2 of 9 races):
FARR
40 (24 boats)---Crocodile Rock, Scott Harris/Alexandra
Geremia, Santa Barbara, Calif., 2-2, 4 points.
1D35
(8)—Windquest, Doug and Dick DeVos, Holland,
Mich., 1-1, 2.
MUMM
30 (15)—Tie between Printel Wind, Pierpaolo
Cristofori, Rome, Italy, 1-4, and Foreign Affair,
Richard Perini, Sydney, Australia, 2-3, 5.
MELGES
24 (57)---Frequent Flyer, Kate Mullin, Toronto,
1-2, 3.
J/105
(29)---Gigi, David Wagner, Chicago, 4-2, 6.
J/80
(22)---Warrior, Craig and Martha White, Fort Worth,
Tex., 1-2, 3.
J/29
(10)---Tie between Patriot, Case Whittemore, Deltaville,
Va., 3-2, and Rhumb Punch, John Edwards, Solomons,
Md., 2-3, 5.
TARTAN
10 (8)---Liquor Box, Robert and Bill Lehnert,
Cutchogue, N.Y., 1-2, 3.
CORSAIR
28R (14)---Tie between Hot Flash, Robert Gleason,
Wareham Mass., 1-3, and Whipper Snapper, Donald
Wigston, Atlanta, Ga., 2-2, 4.
IMS
(4)---Idler (N/M 50), George David, New York,
1-1, 2.
PHRF
1 (5)---Rosebud (Transpac 52), Roger Sturgeon,
San Francisco, 1-1, 2.
PHRF
2 (6)---Bandolier (1D48), Charles Burnett III,
Seattle, 2-4, 6.
PHRF
3 (12)---Tsunami (Farr 395), Ostberg/Aras/Daily,
Annapolis, 1-1, 2.
PHRF
4 (10)---New Wave (Henderson 30), Michael Carroll,
Clearwater, Fla., 1-1, 2.
PHRF
5 (13)---Fitikoko (Tripp 38 ML), Andrew Wilson,
Annapolis, 3-2, 5.
PHRF
6 (12)---Dr. Evil (Olson 29), Tom Treat/Cliff
Davis, Milford, Conn., 3-1, 4.
PHRF
7 (10)---Invincible (N/M 30), Brian Lees/Jeff
Gastrau, Annapolis, 1-1, 2.
PHRF
8 (9)---E-Ticket (Moorings 38), Dan Myers, Lighthouse
Point, Fla., 1-4, 5.
PHRH
9 (10)---Ruby My Dear (Express 37), Grosse Point
Park, Mich., 3-4, 7.
PHRF
10 (12)---Rumblefisch (J/24), Peter Fischel, Savannah,
Ga., 1-3, 4.
Complete
results at www.Premiere-Racing.com
CONTACTS
PREMIERE
RACING, Inc. 67B Front Street, Marblehead, MA,
01945
Tel: (781) 639-9545, Fax: (781) 639-9171
Event Email: KWInfo@Premiere-Racing.com
Event Web Site: www.Premiere-Racing.com
Terra
Nova Online: www.TerraNovaOnline.com
Race
headquarters at Key West: (305) 295-9966
PRESS
OFFICER
Rich
Roberts
Cell
phone: (310) 766-6547
Media
Center: (305) 295-9988
richsail@earthlink.net