Rolex Farr 40 World
Championship
Press Release
4th July 2003
Crocodile Rock wins only race
in ‘limit’ conditions
Nerone still ahead overall
The
third day of the Rolex Farr 40 World Championship
proved to be a short one with only one race being
sailed in the ever windy conditions. With 25 knots
blowing across the course by late morning and
more forecast for the afternoon, the Yacht Club
Costa Smeralda’s Race Committee, headed
by Peter Reggio, brought the fleet to a more sheltered
part of the Costa Smeralda coastline, inside Caprera
Island. The highly spectacular race was won by
Scott Harris and Alexia Geremia’s Crocodile
Rock but it is still Massimo Mezzaroma’s
Nerone that leads overall.
A
short delay before the start saw the 37-boat fleet
make final preparations for what was going to
be a physical race on a new race track area that
many of the entries had not sailed before. Due
to shoal water on one side and the physical extremities
of the landlocked bay a course of only 1.9 miles
could be set. The fleet seemed more interested
in the right hand side of the course, due to the
shelter offered from the current by the Southern
tip of Caprera Island. The same piece of land
also meant a tack back onto starboard below the
final weather mark layline, meaning the beat was
indeed complex.
The
favoured right hand side meant plenty of congestion
at the committee boat end and overall leader Nerone
misjudged the approach and were blocked out to
weather of the line at the gun, eventually crossing
the startline in last position. Initially the
left hand side looked favoured but half way up
the leg when those that had chosen the right side
started to feel the benefits of the tidal shelter
starting last proved to be far from fatal, with
Nerone moving swiftly through the fleet and back
into contention. And indeed at the top mark those
that were still unconvinced about the wind driven
current had a sharp lesson as they saw what looked
like a good layline call to the mark fall short
by the time they reached the turn. Several boats
in the cluster approaching the mark missed the
buoy and finding no way out had to bare away and
gybe around for another attempt to find the true
layline, only to be confronted with a wall of
starboard tack boats ultimately requiring a second
go around and the loss of 20 places.
Jim
Richardson, owner of Barking Mad, has consistently
been a leader at the first mark right through
this regatta and today he rounded the top mark
in the lead again. Next back was Crocodile Rock
and Ernesto Bertarelli’s Alinghi. The run
was nothing other than fast with flat water and
strong gusts propelling the fleet straight downwind.
Gybing was an adventure for many, but the strong
gusts were the real danger, boats that weren’t
already planing when the gusts hit loaded up and
many broached out one way or the other. The trick
was to anticipate their arrival, make sure the
boat was planing fast so that the gust just meant
another few knots added to the already mid-teens
boatspeed.
Boathandling
was key today and the leaders showed how easy
it is to pull away from the pack of boats that
weren’t so foot sure with the various manoeuvres
required. By the first leeward gate Tony DeMulder’s
Victric VII had passed Alinghi and then opted
for the starboard hand leeward mark leaving Barking
Mad and Crocodile Rock to head for the right hand
side of the course for the second weather leg.
By now the top ten had broken away from the following
pack, the consensus still being to work the right
hand side of the course, exploiting the shifts
on the way.
By
the last weather mark, and with the wind building
all the time, Crocodile Rock and Barking Mad were
effectively overlapped, with Barking Mad to weather.
Jim Richardson’s dark blue hull with a bit
more speed on the spreader leg, rolled up beside
the leader who then luffed to keep the agressor
behind. Victric VII, just behind, used the opportunity
to drive in to leeward and hoist the spinnaker
before the others. The three way race for the
lead lasted all the way down the high speed run,
the boats reaching speeds of 18 knots at times
in the puffs. Calling the moment for the final
gybe was going to be key and once again boathandling
would decide the outcome. By the finish Crocodile
Rock had escaped from Barking Mad’s clutches
and was now concentrating on keeping the British
boat Victric VII behind who by now had moved up
to second.
Other
consistent teams on the water today included Michael
Illbruck’s Nela who with today’s fourth
place moves into third overall. The most consistent
boat to date is Nerone, who goes into the final
day with an eight-point buffer on the second placed
boat Barking Mad. The Race Committee’s decision
to abandon hopes of further competition on Friday
instigated an amendment to the race instructions
which will allow three races to be held tomorrow,
Saturday, the first of which will start at 10:30.
The forecast is once again for fresh winds although
they should moderate in the late afternoon.
Rolex
Farr 40 World Championship - Provisional Results
after six races
Pos.
Yacht Owner Tactician Race 1,2,3,4,5,6/TP
1 Nerone Massimo Mezzaroma Vasco Vascotto 14,1,2,2,4,7/30
2 Barking Mad Jim Richardson Terry Hutchinson
14.5,2,14,4,1,3/38.5
3 Nela Michael Illbruck John Kostecki 19,16,18,1,2,4/60
4 Bambakou John Coumantaros Chris Larson 1,7,6,12,8,27/61
5 Alinghi Ernesto Bertarelli Russell Coutts 10.5,12,7,15,13,6/63.5
6 Morning Glory Hasso Plattner Dee Smith 13,20,3,7,3,18/64
7 Game On Oswald/Bainbridge Anthony Haines 11,11,16,8,10,16/72
8 Southern Star John Calvert-Jones Grant Simmer
17,34,9,5,5,5/72
9 Seven Alberto Signorini Tommasso Chieffi 8,10,15,14,24,8/79
10 Warlord VII Philip Tolhurst Chris Mains 10,4,19,22,18,9/82
Rolex
Farr 40 World Championship – Day Three
Quotes:
“A
lot of fun today, we were really reaching the
limits of what you can do in a Farr 40. The adrenalin
was really pumping downwind. We had an average
start, but we sailed amazingly well up the first
beat. When we rounded in third place I couldn’t
believe it. Russell (Coutts) as ever had a great
first beat. We also seemed to have pretty good
speed today.“
“I’m
not sure this class is any harder than it was
two years ago when we won the World Championship.
We didn’t do a great job at the beginning
of the regatta, but now we are getting better.
The Farr 40 is the best One Design Class in the
world right now, and being consistently strong
makes you win regattas.”
Ernesto
Bertarelli, owner/skipper of Alinghi, fifth overall
after six races.
The
Complete Entry List for the 2003 Rolex Farr 40
World Championship can be found at: www.farr40.org
The
2003 Rolex supported sailing season continues
with the Giraglia Rolex Cup (23rd – 29th
June) St Tropez-Genoa, the Rolex Farr 40 World
Championships (1st - 5th July) Porto Cervo, the
Rolex Fastnet Race (10th – 16th August)
Cowes-Plymouth, the Maxi Rolex Cup (7th - 13th
September) Porto Cervo, St. Francis Yacht Club's
Big Boat Series presented by Rolex (11th –
14th September) San Francisco, the Rolex International
Women’s Keelboat Championships (27th September
- 3rd October) Annapolis, the Rolex Middle Sea
Race (22nd October - 1st November) Malta, and
the Rolex Sydney to Hobart Race (26th December
- 2nd January 2004) Sydney-Hobart.