TERRA
NOVA TRADING KEY WEST 2003 / JANUARY 20-24
www.Premiere-Racing.com
Jan.
21, 2003 For Immediate Release
GREECE'S
ATALANTI XII ON A FARR 40 ROLL AGAIN
Tuesday's
weather: Clear; wind NE-E, 10-8 knots; air 71.
Wednesday's
forecast: Clear to partly cloudy; wind E, 5-10
knots; air 73.
KEY WEST, Fla.---Is Terra Nova Trading Key West
2003 building to a Big Fat Greek Winning again?
With
apologies to Hollywood and no offense of George
Andreadis intended, the Athens banker has won
the Farr 40 class three consecutive years and
event Boat of the Week the last two years, and
Tuesday he sailed Atalanti XII into first place
after two days of the five-day event.
Another
defending champion, Richard Perini from Sydney,
Australia, rose to the top with a 4-1 day. Perini's
Mumm 30, Foreign Affair, sits one point ahead
of Pierpaolo Cristofori's Printel Wind, the runner-up
in the class worlds.
Also
in Division 1, David Kirk of Chicago drove his
1D35, Détente, to a pair of wins to take
over first place from Doug and Dick DeVos' Windquest.
Atalanti
XII, with first- and second-place finishes following
Monday's 11th and third, has as commanding a lead
as that rough-and-tumble class allows with 17
points to 26 for Crocodile Rock, the Scott Harris/Alexandra
Geremia entry from Santa Barbara, Calif. that
led after day one.
"We
try very hard," Andreadis said with a shrug
and a smile.
Close
does not begin to describe it. The starts were
cavalry charges and the mark roundings gridlocks.
Dr. Wolfgang Schaefer's Struntje light from Germany
won the second race Monday but got squeezed out
at a mark Tuesday, fouled a rival and while doing
a 720-degree penalty turn (two complete circles)
almost ran over a photographer who was in the
water.
And
what happened to Samba Pa Ti? John Kilroy's entry
from L.A., the third-place boat in the recent
class Worlds and with a fairly experienced tactician
named Paul Cayard on board, finished dead last
in the 24-boat fleet in the second race.
"We
were over early at the start," Kilroy said,
"and on the first run we were outside [the
fleet] when a 35-degree shift came."
He
thought they were sailing conservatively. "We
aren't into flyers," he said.
There
also was a problem getting clumps of weed off
the rudder and propeller "that was ugly,"
Kilroy said.
Worse,
the Farr 40s' Division 1 course, where the 1D35s
and Mumm 30s also are sailing, is the only one
of four courses with no throwouts---the others
will discard their worst finish after seven races---so
one bad race can be fatal.
Atalanti
XII, with Robbie Haines on tactics, edged Jim
Richardson's Barking Mad (Gavin Brady) for its
win Tuesday as the boats finished at opposite
ends of the line. Then Andreadis chased home Vincenzo
Onorato's Italian entry, Breeze (Adrian Stead).
"We
had the lead and lost it," Andreadis said.
"It was very close with the other boats."
Crew
member Rick Brent said, "Robbie was very
good on the tactics, and George settled in after
eight months of no sailing. We were fortunate
because some of the boats had trouble at the start."
Steve
Phillips, who won the Worlds with Le Renard, had
a pair of fifths, despite the fact "we hit
a lobster pot and couldn't get it off the keel."
Perini
is sailing Foreign Affair with a different crew
than last year, except for mastman Darren Jones.
The others had trouble getting time off, so the
boat has four Australians, two Americans and a
Canadian. One of the Americans is the veteran
Jud Smith of Marblehead, Mass., serving as tactician.
"It's
still going pretty good," Perini said. "In
the first race, we got a good start and then had
to give away two boat lengths to avoid a crab
pot that was trailing its line. It forced us to
tack off and lose some boats."
Those,
along with subtle currents and fickle wind shifts,
are the challenges facing the 290 boats on the
inshore courses. By the end of the week the winners
will have earned their awards.
The
event's largest fleet of 57 Melges 24s saw flashes
of form when Norway's Kristian Neergaard, sailing
with world champion Harry Melges as crew, and
California's versatile Morgan Larson scored wins,
although overall they lie eighth and fifth, respectively.
Meanwhile,
Bruce Ayres of Newport Beach, Calif. has put together
two thirds and two eighths to reach first place,
three points ahead of defending champion Flavio
Favini, sailing Franco Rossini's Blu Moon from
Switzerland. Favini, incidentally, sailed on Onorato's
America's Cup challenger, Mascalzone Latino.
Neergaard
won Tuesday's first race by 70 yards over Argyle
Campbell's Rock N'Roll from Newport Beach with
a good start and "protecting the right"
side of the course. But he was blocked out of
that side in the next race and slipped to 15th.
In
the International Team Competition for the Key
West Trophy, the Italian team of Onorato's Farr
40, Breeze; Cristofori's Mumm 30, Printel Wind,
and Maspero Giovanni's Melges 24, Joe Fly, has
a two-point lead over the German team composed
of Struntje light, Blu Moon and Bent Dietrich's
Mumm 30, Rainbow. Italy won the trophy three years
running until last year.
The
event is scheduled for nine races, but wind prospects
for Wednesday were grim, although another cold
front was expected to bring back more breeze Thursday
and Friday.
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.
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 4 of 9 races):
FARR
40 (24 boats)---Atalanti XII, George Andreadis,
Athens, Greece, 11-3-1-2, 17 points.
1D35
(8)—Détente, David Kirk, Chicago,
2-2-1-1, 6.
MUMM
30 (15)—Foreign Affair, Richard Perini,
Sydney, Australia, 2-3-4-1, 10.
MELGES
24 (57)---Monsoon, Bruce Ayres, Newport Beach,
Calif., 3-8-3-8, 22.
J/105 (29)---Eclipse, Damian Emery, Shoreham,
N.Y., 3-8-2-6, 19.
J/80
(22)---Warrior, Craig and Martha White, Fort Worth,
Tex., 1-2-1-9, 13.
J/29
(10)---Hustler, John and Tony Esposito, City Island,
N.Y., 1-1.7-1-3, 6.7.
TARTAN
10 (8)---Liquor Box, Robert and Bill Lehnert,
Cutchogue, N.Y., 1-2-1-1, 5.
CORSAIR
28R (14)---Hot Flash, Robert Gleason, Wareham
Mass., 1-3-1-6, 11.
IMS
(4)---Idler (N/M 50), George David, New York,
1-1-2-1, 5.
PHRF
1 (5)---Rosebud (Transpac 52), Roger Sturgeon,
San Francisco, 1-1-2-2, 6.
PHRF
2 (6)---Bandolier (1D48), Charles Burnett III,
Seattle, 2-4-1-2, 9.
PHRF
3 (12)---Tsunami (Farr 395), Ostberg/Aras/Daily,
Annapolis, 1-1-2-1, 5.
PHRF
4 (10)---New Wave (Henderson 30), Michael Carroll,
Clearwater, Fla., 1-1-1-1, 4.
PHRF
5 (13)---Fitikoko (Tripp 38 ML), Andrew Wilson,
Annapolis, 3-2-1-3, 9.
PHRF
6 (12)---Dr. Evil (Olson 29), Tom Treat/Cliff
Davis, Milford, Conn., 3-1-3-1, 8.
PHRF
7 (10)---Invincible (N/M 30), Brian Lees/Jeff
Gastrau, Annapolis, 1-1-1-1, 4.
PHRF
8 (9)---E-Ticket (Moorings 38), Dan Myers, Lighthouse
Point, Fla., 1-4-1-4, 5.
PHRH
9 (10)---Ruby My Dear (Express 37), Grosse Point
Park, Mich., 3-4-2-2, 11.
PHRF
10 (12)---Rumblefisch (J/24), Peter Fischel, Savannah,
Ga., 1-3-1-4, 9.
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