Rolex Farr 40 World
Championship
Press Release
5th July 2003
Nerone crowned World Champion
on a busy, windy day.
Illbruck’s Nela keeps second and Richardson’s
Barking Mad saves third
The
fourth day of the Rolex Farr 40 World Championship
saw Massimo Mezzaroma crowned as the new world
champion after another impressive performance.
Three races were run on the last day of the event,
and Mezzaroma’s team, which includes tactician
Vasco Vascotto, had effectively won the regatta
with a race to spare after posting a 2nd and a
1st in the first two races. Second overall was
Michael Illbruck’s Nela and third was Jim
Richardson’s Barking Mad.
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Photo
by Carlo Borlenghi/Rolex
|
The
Yacht Club Costa Smeralda’s Race Committee
succeeded in its ambitious task of catching up
on yesterday’s lost races, nine of the ten
scheduled races were run. Wind conditions today
were again near the top of the range although
sunshine and warm waters meant that spectacular
action and enjoyment was again to the fore.
Principal
Race Officer Peter Reggio had brought the fleet
out an hour earlier than originally scheduled
to try and get three races in, the early rise
not suiting Jim Richardson’s Barking Mad
however as the dark blue American boat was recalled
from a premature start in the first race. The
37-boat fleet opted mostly for the left hand side
of the course again although the first two boats
at the top mark, Scott Harris and Alex Geremia’
s Crocodile Rock and Michael Illbruck’s
Nela found the right to be the side to be on,
rounding the first mark in the top two slots,
with the ever present Nerone following round in
third place. The order remained the same for the
next lap until Mezzaroma’s boat again found
overdrive on the last run to collect a handy second
place.
The
second start saw Richardson’s Barking Mad
win the start at the committee boat end and storm
off upwind. The points leader Nerone starting
further down the line and Mark Heeley’s
GBR-25 all came together near the starboard tack
layline for a long stretch to the mark on port.
With Heeley to windward and Nerone to leeward
the Richardson’s American boat was eventually
squeezed back into the pack, the former two rounding
the mark in good order behind Vincenzo Onorato’s
Breeze and Michael Illbruck’s lately consistent
Nela.
The
port tack layline near the weather mark is always
a dangerous place to be. Now firmly in the pack
on the approach to the top mark Barking Mad on
port, just got across the bow of Crocodile Rock
before throwing in a hasty tack to windward. Crocodile
Rock promptly came up right in the wind shadow,
the crew on the weather rail could just watch
as the mainsheet trimmer on Barking Mad eased
the sheet to accelerate letting the boom run along
the side of the leeward boat removing all the
stanchions and lifelines to the mast, the last
crewmember in the line sitting out to windward,
co-owner Alex Germia, also collecting the boom
in her face. Crocodile Rock retired, Barking Mad
flew an ‘I’ flag accepting a 20% penalty,
but the incident was to cost Richardson dearly
when he ended up in the protest room later, was
disqualified and lost any remaining chances of
winning the championship.
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Photo
by Carlo Borlenghi/Rolex
|
Back
at the front of the fleet Onorato’s Breeze
led all the way down the run and opted for the
port rounding of the gate and the right hand side
of the second beat. Breeze lost one place on the
second beat to Eivind Astrup’s Norwegian
Steam before the second weather mark and then
lost another four when the spinnaker sheet became
disconnected from the sail in the set. Mezzaroma’s
Nerone, along with Wolgang Schaefer’s Struntje
Light, pounced at this point and moved through
to eventually finish first and second at the finish
line, with Illbruck’s Nela finishing in
third.
By
now the battle was for second place overall with
Nerone having only to finish out of third last
place to collect overall honours. Illbruck’s
Nela, with John Kostecki calling the shots, had
started the regatta slowly but had had nothing
but a string of single digit results from the
second day. Ultimately it was John Coumantaris’
Bambakou that collected third overall, followed
by Ernesto Bertarelli’s Alinghi in fourth.
The
next Rolex Farr 40 Worlds will be in San Francisco
in September 2004.
Rolex
Farr 40 World Championship - Final Results after
nine races, Top 10
Pos.
Yacht Owner Tactician R-1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9/TP
1 Nerone Massimo Mezzaroma Vasco Vascotto 14,1,2,2,4,7,2,1,18/51
2 Nela Michael Illbruck John Kostecki 19,16,18,1,2,4,3,4,7/74
3 Bambakou John Coumantaros Chris Larson 1,7,6,12,8,26,9,17,6/92
4 Alinghi Ernesto Bertarelli Russell Coutts 10.5,12,7,15,13,6,4,8,24/99.5
5 Southern Star John Calvert-Jones Grant Simmer
17,34,9,5,5,5,13,11,1/100
6 Barking Mad Jim Richardson Terry Hutchinson
`14.5,2,14,4,1,3,10,11,38,15/101.5
7 Morning Glory Hasso Plattner Dee Smith 13,20,3,7,3,17,8,22,9/102
8 Crocodile Rock Harris/Geremia Vince Brun 2,38,31,9,7,1,1,8,12/109
9 Struntje Light Wolfgang Schaefer Michael Coxon
3,18,11,13,27,11,6,2,19/110
10 Seven Alberto Signorini Tommaso Chieffi 8,10,15,14,24,8,19,23,5/126
Rolex Farr 40 World Championship – Day Four
Quotes:
“There
are no words to describe how happy we feel as
a crew right now. We have travelled all over the
world for the last three years sailing Farr 40
regattas, but it was here at home with an all
Italian crew that we became world champions with
the biggest ever fleet. This is a 100% crew victory.
For the last three years we have spent 10-12 weeks
together as a crew, racing, training, travelling.
It has all been worth it.” Massimo Mezzaroma,
owner of Nerone, winner of the 2003 Rolex Farr
40 World Championship.
“Anyone
who knows this class knows how hard it is to stay
in touch. We had three bad starts at the beginning
of the championship but then we settled in and
things just ticked. Our objective was to finish
in the top ten here. We are new in this class
we have sailed only five events and to finish
in second place is unbelievable. The intensity
in this class is full time, and full on. There
is no room for excuses. Mistakes cost dearly.”
Michael Illbruck, owner of Nela, second overall
in the 2003 Rolex Farr 40 Worlds.
“It
was great to win the last race. We won the last
race at the Worlds in 2001 too. Its been a bit
of a local Derby between ourselves and Alinghi,
our tactician Grant Simmer is the head of the
design team for Alinghi and we beat Ernesto and
the boys by one place, so we’re pretty pleased
about that. We’ve only used the Heavy and
No 4 headsails all week. It has been a strong
sailors’ regatta. Nerone has been working
hard for three years. I first noticed them in
Newport in 2001, they were already a well organised
team. The key is commitment and consistency, they
have showed both, they never had a bad race. We
started in 27th place at the beginning of the
week and we finish today with a win, we’ve
progressed every day.” John Calvert-Jones,
owner of Southern Star, winner of the last race
of the 2003 Rolex Farr 40 World Championship,
fifth overall.
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.