Rolex
International Women's Keelboat Championshiop -
Record Fleet of 67 Teams Set to Compete
Annapolis,
Md. (September 26, 2003) – From September
29 to October 3 many of the world’s most
accomplished female sailors as well as budding
stars will be racing in Annapolis, Md. for US
SAILING’s 2003 Rolex International Women’s
Keelboat Championship (Rolex IWKC). Only last
week the entire downtown area of Annapolis was
under more than six feet of water due to the tidal
surge caused by Hurricane Isabel, but regatta
host Annapolis Yacht Club and its citywide corps
of volunteers rose to the challenge of returning
the sailing venue to normal. The regatta, which
is celebrating its 10th anniversary, has attracted
a record fleet of 67 international teams from
as far away as New Zealand, Denmark, Bermuda,
Cayman Islands, Canada and South Africa, as well
as from 17 U.S. states. A 10-race series is planned
in International J/22 class keelboats on Chesapeake
Bay, and at the end of five days of racing, the
winning team will receive a Rolex timepiece.
With the debut of women’s keelboat racing
at the 2004 Olympic Games, the Rolex IWKC has
attracted top Yngling talent, including five-time
Rolex Yachtswoman of the Year and five-time Rolex
IWKC champion Betsy Alison (Newport, R.I.). She
brings her world #1 ranked Yngling team members
Lee Icyda and Suzy Leech. Dini Hall, who crewed
for three of Alison’s Rolex IWKC winning
teams, rounds out the foursome.
Alison
skippered for the first seven Rolex events, took
a year off in 1999 and crewed in 2001. "With
our Yngling program in full gear, skippering a
boat again myself is the logical thing to do,"
she said. "Since its inception in 1985, the
Rolex IWKC has grown into a premier women's event
on the international scene, and the sponsorship
by Rolex is fabulous. If this year's event is
anything close to what it has been in the past,
then we're all in for a treat."
Other
Notables
Among
other notable sailors competing is the Annapolis
team of Nancy Haberland, Dina Kowalyshyn, Karina
Shelton, and Aimee Hess. Loaded with a wealth
of sailing success on their resume, Shelton and
Hess were two of the winning crew at the 2002
ISAF Women's World Match Race Championships. Haberland
joined them in 2003, and together they won the
2003 Santa Maria Cup. Kowalyshyn was part of the
winning team at the 2001 Rolex IWKC. Collectively,
the team has won over 25 national, international,
and world titles as both skipper and crew.
US
Sailing Team member Carol Cronin (Jamestown, R.I.)
returns to skipper an entry for a second time,
having crewed on the winning team at the event
in 1999. Cronin will sail with her Yngling team
members Elizabeth Filter and Kate Fears. Linda
Epstein, who has participated in years past, joins
them.
Representing the "future of women's sailing"
is 17-year-old Katie Schellie (Annapolis), who
is the first Rolex Next Step graduate to skipper
in the Rolex IWKC. The Rolex Next Step Program,
established in 1997 to expose juniors (ages 12-16)
to international women’s sailing in a mentoring
atmosphere, will host 38 participants from around
the country and overseas for a weekend at the
opening of the regatta.
Schellie
was so motivated by her Next Step experience at
the 2001 regatta that she immediately joined the
Severn High School Sailing Team. Her coach has
allowed her to practice after school in a J/22
rather than the school's 420s. "I know we
could finish last," said Schellie, "but
we're going to have so much fun and learn so much
that I just can't wait." Sailing with Schellie
will be Ally Gambarani, Lesley Sutherland and
Kim Thomas.
The
"Hot Flash" team from Minnesota –
Carol Pine, Jan Nielsen, Jan Rupert and Terry
Jewett – is made up of a diverse group of
accomplished women sailors who, as their name
implies, all are over the age of 50. With their
program, which has put them in the national media
spotlight, the team aims to accomplish three goals:
to transform the way women over 50 see themselves
and their potential; to inspire women over 50
to pursue their passions; and to challenge stereotypes
applied to mature women.
Foreign
Teams
Foreign
teams are eager to take on what has become an
American stronghold in women’s keelboat
sailing.
Jane
Moon and her Cayman Islands team of Pam McDonough,
Lindsey Macfee and a yet-to-be named crewmember
return for the fourth year. "We are not sure
how we will fare at this event," said Moon,
who finished fourth at the J/22 U.S. national
championship. "Our regular fourth crew member
is out of action due to recent knee surgery and
I haven't done much sailing in 2003 due to the
birth of my third daughter in July. However, we
are looking forward to the regatta and will definitely
have a great time in Annapolis again."
Two-time
Olympian Paula Lewin has represented Bermuda in
the Rolex IWKC before and this will be her second
showing as skipper. Since the 2001 event, she
has launched a Yngling campaign and will represent
Bermuda at the 2004 Games in Athens.
South
African Dominique Provoyeur and her crew of Tania
Coetzee, Penny Alison, Lucy Norton come from Cape
Town. Provoyeur, Coetzee and Alison have sailed
together for the last year and a half and finished
eighth in the 2002 ISAF Worlds in France.
New
Zealand is represented by three teams. Amber West
and crew Sally Garrett, Raynor Smeal and Merran
Walbridge have been among the top-ranked women’s
teams in New Zealand and have won many national
titles among them. West was the 2002 New Zealand
National Women’s Keelboat Champion, and
her toughest competition may come from the current
New Zealand National Champions Karleen Dixon,
Jenny Egnot and Paula Satherthwaite. The third
team is skippered by Kylie Jameson and has as
its crewmembers Melinda Erkelens, Stephanie Wondolleck
and Patricia Caticchio. Jameson was the second-place
skipper at the 2003 New Zealand Women's Keelboat
Nationals and second at the New Zealand Match
Racing Nationals.
Opening
Ceremonies are set for City Dock in Annapolis
on Sunday, Sept. 28.
Organizers
are using the Internet to promote the regatta
and provide information: www.race.annapolisyc.com/rolexkeelboats
is focusing on Annapolis details; www.ussailing.org/riwkc
has the official Notice of Race and Entry Form
in PDF format, event history and news releases.
There is a web server list to get direct information
by email.