TERRA
NOVA TRADING KEY WEST 2003 / JANUARY 20-24
www.Premiere-Racing.com
Jan.
23, 2003 For Immediate Release
Thursday's
weather: Clear-cloudy; wind W 15, gusts to 19.
Friday's
forecast: Strong breeze, N 25 knots at dawn, dropping
at 1 p.m. to NE 20 knots, then 25-33 late afternoon.
CROCODILE
TAKES A BIG BITE AT KEY WEST
KEY
WEST, Fla.---Big winds, collisions and a contentious
crocodile have brought Terra Nova Trading Key
West 2003 to its climax Friday. A new weather
front sweeping the southernmost corner of the
country was forecast to hit town with winds up
to 25 knots and accelerate the action into frenzy.
How
rough was it Thursday? The grounds around the
race jury tent looked like a Farr 40 class meeting
afterward. The heaviest protest activity revolved
around a three-way contretemps in which Jim Richardson's
Barking Mad from Newport, R.I. claimed it was
bitten by a denizen of a nearby swamp---namely,
the Scott Harris/Alexandra Geremia Crocodile Rock
from Santa Barbara, which wound up crunched between
Barking Mad and Vincenzo Onorato's Breeze from
Italy.
The
race jury disagreed and Barking Mad was disqualified
for failing to yield to Croc. Unlike the other
three courses, there are no throwouts in Division
1, which also includes the 1D35s and Mumm 30s,
so the jury's decision is not only final but sometimes
fatal.
Before
protests were resolved, Crocodile Rock, with two
fourth places Thursday, was in first place by
nine points over Barking Mad, which then fell
to fourth as Croc walked away from the hearing
with a near-insurmountable 20-point lead over
John Kilroy's Samba Pa Ti. George Andreadis' Atalanti
XII, looking for its fourth consecutive title
here, was a distant third and all but out of the
hunt.
Barking
Mad, Crocodile Rock and Breeze were near the second
windward mark in Thursday's second race, with
Breeze on starboard tack and the other two on
port. Barking Mad, windward of Croc by less than
an arm's length, bore away to duck Breeze at about
the same time Croc started to tack. Moments later,
all three boats were three abreast, stalled head
to wind and slamming sides.
Back
on shore, the mood of Richardson's tactician,
Volvo and America's Cup veteran Gavin Brady, was
appropriate to the boat's name.
"Quite
simply, Crocodile Rock put us and then the Italian
boat in a situation where there was no way to
avoid a serious collision," Brady said. "We
were one foot apart and we were just dipping to
duck the Italians and [Crocodile Rock] just spun
up."
Crocodile
Rock helmsman Scott Harris and tactician Vince
Brun did not immediately comment, but two crew
members and a sailor on another boat not involved
in the incident said Crocodile Rock was forced
to tack to avoid a collision with a second Italian
boat, Bottadi Culo, which was following Breeze
on the starboard tack layline.
A
Croc crew member said his boat followed the rules
because "we hailed Barking Mad for room to
tack and then hailed them again. By then we didn't
have any choice."
Nobody
was seriously injured and the boats sustained
superficial damage. Buddy Cribbs' 1D35, Victory,
from Palm Beach, Fla., was not as lucky. Victory
took what Cribbs called a "full-on T-bone"
in the middle of its port side from Hugh O'Brien's
Ripple, Stonington, Conn. A gaping hole was patched
over with a heavy application of duct tape.
Cribbs'
sail trimmer, Jon Rogers of San Diego, said, laughing,
"I almost got killed today. When we were
on the starboard tack layline. When they were
20 boat lengths away on port tack, I got a little
nervous, and when they were six lengths away I
yelled, 'Don't even think about it!' "
A
chagrined O'Brien, who suffered a cut index finger,
said, "We thought we had 'em [crossed]. We
didn't have 'em. We withdrew. We had no leg to
stand on."
David
Kirk's Détente, Chicago, clinched the class
with its fifth consecutive win, and Richard Perini's
Foreign Affair from Sydney, Australia, has a vise
grip on defending the Mumm 30 title he won last
year.
In
the International Team Competition for the Key
West Trophy, there are 10 teams but only two contenders.
Going into the last day, Italy's Breeze (Farr
40), Printel-Wind (Mumm 30) and Joe Fly (Melges
24) has gone from one point behind Germany's Struntje
light, Rainbow and Blu Moon, respectively, to
one point ahead, 84-85.
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 7 of 9 races, except 6 of 9 in
Div. 2):
FARR
40 (24 boats)---Crocodile Rock, Scott Harris/Alexandra
Geremia, Santa Barbara, 2-2-4-17-5-4-4, 38 points.
1D35
(8)—Détente, David Kirk, Chicago,
2-2-1-1-1-1-1, 9.
MUMM
30 (15)—Foreign Affair, Richard Perini,
Sydney, Australia, 2-3-4-1-4-1-3, 18.
MELGES
24 (57)---Blu Moon, Flavio Favini, Switzerland,
2-4-(12)-7-4-1-3, 21.
J/105 (29)---Wet Leopard, Jim Sorensen, Sag Harbor,
N.Y., (12)-1-7-1-3-9-7, 28.
J/80
(22)---Warrior, Craig and Martha White, Fort Worth,
Tex., 1-2-1(9)-1-3-4, 12.
J/29
(10)---Hustler, John and Tony Esposito, City Island,
N.Y., 1-2.2-1-(3)-3-2-3, 12.2.
TARTAN
10 (8)---Liquor Box, Robert and Bill Lehnert,
Cutchogue, N.Y., 1-(2)-1-1-1-1-1, 6.
CORSAIR
28R (14)---Tie between Hot Flash, Robert Gleason,
Wareham Mass., 1-3-1-6-6-3, and Bad Boys, Bob
and Doug Harkrider, Belvedere, S.C., 7-1-7-2-2-1,
20.
IMS
(4)---Idler (N/M 50), George David, New York,
1-1-2-1-1-1, 7.
PHRF
1 (5)---Rosebud (Transpac 52), Roger Sturgeon,
San Francisco, 1-1-2-2-1-3, 10.
PHRF
2 (6)---Bandolier (1D48), Charles Burnett III,
Seattle, 2-4-1-2-3-2, 14.
PHRF
3 (12)---Tsunami (Farr 395), Ostberg/Aras/Daily,
Annapolis, 1-1-2-1-5-3, 13.
PHRF
4 (10)---New Wave (Henderson 30), Michael Carroll,
Clearwater, Fla., 1-1-1-1-5-1, 10.
PHRF
5 (13)---Fitikoko (Tripp 38 ML), Andrew Wilson,
Annapolis, 3-2-1-3-7-5, 21.
PHRF
6 (12)---Defiance (B-32), Scott Taylor, Long Beach,
Calif., 1-4-(13)-2-1-1-3, 12.
PHRF
7 (10)---Invincible (N/M 30), Brian Lees/Jeff
Gastrau, Annapolis, 1-1-1-1-(2)-1-1, 6.
PHRF
8 (9)---Hot Ticket (Farr 37), Jim Hightower, Houston,
Tex., (5)-1-4-1-4-1-1, 12.
PHRH
9 (10)---Areopagus, Ed Tillinghast III, New York,
(5)-5-1-1-3-1-2, 13.
PHRF
10 (12)---Rumblefisch (J/24), Peter Fischel, Savannah,
Ga., 1-3-1-(4)-2-1-1, 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