42nd
TRANSPACIFIC YACHT RACE Transpacific Yacht Club
Starts July 1-4-6, 2003 www.transpacificyc.org
March 10, 2003 For Immediate Release
57
TRANSPAC ENTRIES FROM 5 COUNTRIES AND ACROSS THE
U.S.
LONG
BEACH, Calif.---A total of 57 entries and counting
at the discount entry fee deadline promises that
the 42nd biennial Transpacific Yacht Race to Hawaii
will have its largest fleet since the mid-80s
when the ULDB 70 "sleds" held sway.
From
what looms as a match race for the Barn Door trophy
between Philippe Kahn's Pegasus and Roy E. Disney's
record holder Pyewacket to a vintage mix of competitive
Cal 40s, the West Coast's most prestigious offshore
event offers a wide range of rivalries at every
level, large and small.
The
current list, representing five countries, three
continents and home ports from Honolulu to Florida,
includes 34 boats in the four racing divisions
and 10 in the Aloha class, along with four doublehanders
and nine Cal 40s celebrating the 40th anniversary
of the class and their dominance of the race in
the 60s. Entry fees were discounted until March
7, but more entries are anticipated before the
final deadline of May 23.
Transpac
entries hit a peak with 80 in 1979, followed by
74, 66, 64 and 55 through 1987. This year's race,
scheduled to start July 1, 4 and 6 off the Palos
Verdes Peninsula south of Los Angeles, includes
six foreign entries---two each from Australia
and Canada, one from New Zealand and Karl Kwok's
new Transpac 52, Beau Geste, from Hong Kong, with
Gavin Brady on board.
One
of the Canadians is Bill Allan, sailing Lawndart,
a Cape Bay Fast 40 from Nanaimo, B.C. with a past
and a purpose. Allan is an investment advisor
who said, "I work with ordinary people who
have dreams and goals that are a part of what
makes up the real world."
Allan's
lifelong dream has been to sail---and finish---the
Transpac. He fell somewhat short two years ago
when he dropped out on the second day at sea and
returned to the mainland. Those daunting 2,225
nautical miles still separate him from his dream.
"I
have been working hard to ensure that the boat
is perfectly prepared this time, and I am mindful
of the lessons learned last time," he said.
Allan
became enamored of the Transpac at age 10 while
reading an uncle's sailing magazines. "Never
did I think a time would come that I would have
the courage or the opportunity to cross the ocean
in a Transpac race, to follow in the wakes of
other great men and great sailors who made the
trip before me," he said. "Now wild
horses could not keep me away. My crew and I have
a sense of unfinished business."
Disney,
who raced his first Transpac in 1975, could relate
to Allan's feelings for the Transpac. "My
first two races that's all I was thinking about---finishing,"
he said. "Just getting that boat there was
a reward in itself."
Nowadays
Disney's goal is the Barn Door, a 3 1/2-by-4-foot
slab of carved native koa wood awarded to the
monohull with the fastest elapsed time, dating
to 1949. Pegasus and Pyewacket, the only entries
to date in Division 1, have dominated it for the
last three races and will be "turbocharged"
into even faster configurations this time.
However,
there is plenty of hardware at stake for large
and small boats alike, including the equally prestigious
King Kalakaua trophy for first place overall on
corrected handicap time. The 2001 winner was Bull,
Seth Radow's Sydney 40 from Marina del Rey.
Meanwhile,
a safety at sea seminar is scheduled March 15
at the Orange Coast College School of Sailing
and Seamanship in Newport Beach. A Transpac rule
requires that 30 per cent of the crew have attended
a Safety at Sea Seminar within the last five years.
Information: (949) 645-9412.
OFFICIAL
ENTRIES (as of March 7, 2003):
(Division
assignments provisional)
RACING
DIVISION
Division
1 (starts July 6)
Pegasus
77 (Reichel/Pugh 77), Philippe Kahn, Honolulu.
Pyewacket (R/P 75), Roy E. Disney, Los Angeles.
Division
2 (starts July 6)
Alta
Vita (Transpac 52), Bill Turpin, Santa Cruz, Calif.
Beau Geste (Transpac 52), Karl Kwok, Hong Kong.
Grand Illusion (Santa Cruz 70), Lahaina, H.I.
Helsal II (Adams 60), W.E. Rawson, Melbourne,
Australia.
Icon (Perry 65), Richard Robbins/Jim Roser, Seattle.
Medicine Man (Andrews 61), Bob Lane, Long Beach,
Calif. Mongoose (Santa Cruz 70), Robert Saielli,
San Diego. Pendragon 4 (Davidson 52), John MacLaurin,
Marina del Rey, Calif. Vicki (Andrews 68), Al
and Vicki Schwartz, Long Beach.
Division
3 (starts July 4)
Dasher
(Santa Cruz 50), Roger Groh, San Francisco.
Horizon (Santa Cruz 50), Jack Taylor, Dana Point,
Calif. Innocent Merriment (J/160), Myron Lyon,
San Diego. Maitri (J/160), Peter Johnson, San
Diego. Pipe Dream IX (J/160), Scott Piper, Coral
Gables, Fla. Reinrag (J/125), Tom Garnier, Portland,
Ore.
Division
4 (starts July 4)
Bolt
(Olson 40), Craig Reynolds, Balboa, Calif.
Bravado (Elliott 46), Charles Breed, Alameda,
Calif.
Challenged America (Tripp 40), Urban Miyares,
San Diego.
Cool Man Cool 2 (Sydney 38), Harrell Jones, Dana
Point. Lawndart (Cape Bay Fast 40), Bill Allan,
Nanaimo, B.C. Paddy Wagon (Ross 40), Richard Mainland,
Marina del Rey, Calif. Swept Away (J/120), Louis
Bianco, Seattle. Terra's XL (ILC 40), Anthony
Barron, Las Vegas, Nev. There and Back Again (Tripp
40), Robert Rice, Long Beach. Uproarious (Olson
40), Robert Bussard, San Diego.
Divisions
to be determined
Axapac
(Wylie 39), Barry Ruff, Vancouver, B.C.
Krakatoa (Young 32), Rod Skellet, Sydney, Australia.
Masquerade (Choate 40), Timothy Coker, San Diego.
Pipe Dream (Choate/Feo 37), John Davis, Long Beach.
Rapport (Farr 1104), Gavin Morris, Auckland, N.Z.
Tabasco (1D35), John Wylie, San Diego.
Wild Thing (1D35), Chris and Kara Busch, San Diego.
ALOHA
DIVISION (starts July 1)
Aloha
A
Enchanted
Lady (Roberts 55), Andy Sibert, Seal Beach, Calif.
Incredible (Swan 53), Rick Gorman, Los Alamitos,
Calif. Just Imagine (49' cutter), Thomas Camp,
Walnut Creek, Calif. Lady Bleu II (Dynamique 62),
Roger and Brenda Kuske, San Diego. Maria R (Beneteau
50), Jon Richards, Mesa, Ariz. Windborne (Gulfstar
50), Tom Ryan, Marina del Rey.
Aloha
B
Barking
Spider (Catalina 38), David Kory, Point Richmond,
Calif. Sea Dancer (Ericson 35), Alvin Wheatman,
Marina del Rey. Tango (Beneteau 40), Howard Raphael,
Sausalito, Calif. Wind Dancer (Catalina 42), Paul
Edwards, Wilmington, Del.
Aloha
B/Cal 40
California
Girl (Cal 40), Don and Betty Lesley, Point Richmond,
Calif. Celebrity (Cal 40), Gerald Finnegan, Redondo
Beach, Calif. Flying Cloud (Cal 40), Darrell and
Scott Wilson, Long Beach. Illusion (Cal 40), Stan
Honey, Palo Alto. John B (Cal 40), Greg Boyer,
Newport Beach, Calif. Ralphie (Cal 40), Jack and
Taylor Pillsbury/Eleanor and Davis Pillsbury,
San Francisco. Ranger (Cal 40), William Partridge,
Richmond, Calif. Redhead (Cal 40), Andrew Opple,
Ketchum, Idaho. Willow Wind (Cal 40), Wendy Siegal,
Seal Beach, Calif.
DOUBLEHANDED
(start dates to be determined)
Beach
Music (Tayana 52), Kirby Coryell, Lafayette, Calif.
Beautiful Day (Beneteau 47.7), William Boyd, San
Diego. Lucky Dog (J/125), Peter Putnam, Newport
Beach. Starbuck Black Soo 31), Greg Nelson, Piedmont,
Calif.
COMMODORE
Brady
Avery
(949)
645-9412
brad@occsailing.com
ENTRIES
CHAIRMAN
Bill
Lee
(831)
464-4872
wizard@fastisfun.com
PRESS
OFFICER
Rich
Roberts
(310)
835-2526
richsail@earthlink.net