42nd
TRANSPACIFIC YACHT RACE
Transpacific Yacht Club
www.transpacificyc.org
July 14, 2003 For Immediate Release
PEGASUS
77 RIDES A MOON RIVER TO VICTORY
HONOLULU---A
full moon lighted the way past the Diamond Head
finish line for Philippe Kahn's Pegasus 77 and
a second consecutive Barn Door victory in the
42nd Transpacific Yacht Race from Los Angeles
early Monday.
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At
3:15 a.m. local time Monday, Pegasus 77
turns into its slip and a Hawaiian greeting
on Transpac Row in Waikiki. The Reichel/Pugh
77 won its second consecutive Barn Door
award with the race's fastest elapsed time,
7 days 16 hours 31 minutes 17 seconds. Photo
by Rich Roberts
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Kahn's
archrival later described the path laid by the
lunar reflection on the water as "like sailing
down the moon river," but Roy E. Disney and
his crew aboard Pyewacket were nearly five hours
behind in a match of equally powerful sailing
machines.
The
Barn Door is a 3 ½-by-4-foot slab of carved
Hawaiian koa wood that goes to the boat with the
fastest elapsed time for the 2,225 nautical miles.
Four Aloha boats that started five days earlier
finished ahead of Pegasus 77 by as much as 15
hours, but their ETs were days slower.
Finishing
at 3:15 a.m. local time, Pegasus 77's time was
7 days 16 hours 31 minutes 17 seconds, the fourth
fastest ever for the race but nearly five hours
over Pyewacket's record of 7:11:41:27 in a windier
1999 race. Pyewacket's time was 7:21:18:01, the
eighth fastest ever.
"Records
aren't something you can control," Kahn said.
"Either the weather was going to cooperate
or not. We did break a record for the daily run,
and what was interesting about that is we did
it without a lot of wind."
A
day earlier, with no more than 18 knots of breeze,
Pegasus 77 completed a 24-hour run of 356 miles,
breaking the record of 353 set by Magnitude in
1999.
Disney,
whose boat has been highly modified since '99,
said, "Both of these boats are much faster
than what we set the record with."
When
the wind increased late in the race, Pegasus 77,
then in a commanding position against Pyewacket,
seemed to have a shot at the record.
"We
thought about that a lot," Disney said, laughing.
"Quite a lot."
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This
is the 14th time that Patty Disney has greeted
husband Roy E. Disney (on side of boat)
and son Roy Pat (at mast)along Transpac
Row. Pyewacket finished a bit less than
five hours behind Pegasus 77 but with its
record intact. Photo by Rich Roberts
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At
the time, Pegasus 77 still had an outside chance
of achieving a rare Transpac sweep: fastest elapsed
time and first in class and fleet on overall corrected
handicap time.
But,
ironically, a 40-year-old Cal 40 whose crew included
Pyewacket's usual navigator, Stan Honey, finished
in time late the same morning to correct out on
Pegasus 77 by about half an hour. However, Bill
Turpin's Transpac 52, Alta Vita of San Francisco,
has the inside track on the honor with about a
two-hour edge and needs to finish before 7:12
a.m. local time Tuesday to clinch it. If the trade
winds hold, that is well within its reach.
Illusion,
with Honey's wife Sally and Transpac veterans
Skip Allan and Jon Andron joining Stan, was first
overall on handicap time through most of the race
but slipped back as the larger, faster boats accelerated
in stronger breeze.
The
problem was, as Stan Honey said, "If [the
wind] picks up from 10 to 20 knots, we go from
7 to 8."
But,
flying a full-blown spinnaker in 30 knots of following
wind, they flew down through the finish line,
surfing at 16 knots to beat nine other Cal 40s
in a revival of the class that dominated the race
in the late 60s.
Later,
several of the disappointed Pyewacket team, including
Disney, greeted their teammate at Ala Wai Yacht
Harbor, where Doug Rastello told Honey, "We
needed that."
The
outcome of the Pegasus 77-Pyewacket contest was
determined early on, not by boat speed but by
strategic differences of opinion.
"We
led them past [Santa] Catalina [Island] by a mile,
but then we went right and they went left, and
they were right and we were wrong," Disney
said.
The
Pyewacket crew was stunned by the second day's
morning roll call and position report that showed
Pegasus 77 100 miles south of them.
"We
were surprised how low [south] they went the second
day," said Peter Isler, who replaced Stan
Honey as Pyewacket's navigator for this race.
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Under
a full Hawaiian moon, Pegasus 77 navigator
Mark Rudiger gets reacquainted with his
4-year-old son, Zayle. Photo by Rich Roberts
|
Then,
when the shift they were expecting failed to produce
a lively breeze, they had to eat their mistake
and give up a lot of miles to find better wind
south. That's when Pegasus 77 came slightly north
to drop into a controlling position directly in
front.
Mark
Rudiger, Pegasus 77's navigator, said, "It
was [wind strength] pressure versus angle, and
I've learned the hard way over the years that
the first half of this race you have to go for
the pressure and the second half you can start
working on angle. So I just tell the guys, 'Send
the boat the fastest way it can go.' Speed rules.
"Originally
our plan was to stay with them, but we decided
to sail our own race. Our goal was always to hold
at least 30 miles of southing on them to make
sure we had a little more pressure but try to
put them back on bearing so they had no angle
they could get at us with. Crusty did a really
good job of masterminding that [plan]."
Crusty
is Mark Christensen, who was on the winning team
in the last two Volvo Ocean Races but had never
sailed a Transpac.
"The
first couple of days I was having trouble getting
a grasp on how far off course we were going,"
he said. "Rudi's [saying], 'Get south, get
south.' After that we just had to try to think
what they were thinking and do the jibes so we'd
always set ourselves up between them and the mark.
"We
were pretty confident with all our forecasts.
It was kind of scary. We just got every shift.
Even today, Rudi would say, 'Well, the wind's
supposed to go to [a compass direction of] 060
. . . be patient, be patient.' So we waited and
waited and finally jibed on 050 and an hour later
it was 060 and we came screaming in. The whole
race was like that."
On
the last night, sailing in 26 knots of wind in
the Molokai Channel, the wind shifted after Pegasus
77 jibed---a quirk that turned into a half-hour
shortcut toward the finish.
"Again,"
Christensen said, "Rudi could do no wrong."
The
young veteran Morgan Larson said, in a way, the
race was routine.
"I
like it when things go wrong," he said. "It
was too easy."
Tracking
charts for selected boats or the entire fleet
may be viewed by clicking on the link at the right
side of the www.transpacificyc.org
home page. Daily position reports and photos also
will be posted until the completion of the race.
Boats'
handicap ratings may be checked at www.transpacificyc.org/03/tp03-ratings.html
POSITION
REPORTS AT 8 A.M. JULY 14
(Listed
in order of corrected handicap time; actual miles
to go noted)
RACING
DIVISION
Division
1 (started July 6)
1.
Pegasus 77 (Reichel/Pugh 77), Philippe Kahn, Honolulu,
finished, elapsed time 7:16:31:17. 2. Pyewacket
(R/P 75), Roy E. Disney, Los Angeles, 27 miles
to go.
Division
2 (started July 6)
1.
Alta Vita (Transpac 52), Bill Turpin, Santa Cruz,
Calif., 255.
2. Beau Geste (Transpac 52), Karl Kwok, Hong Kong,
247.
3. Pendragon 4 (Davidson 52), John MacLaurin,
Marina del Rey, Calif., 376.
4. Grand Illusion (Santa Cruz 70), James McDowell,
Lahaina, H.I., 355.
5. Icon (Perry 65), Richard Robbins/Jim Roser,
Seattle, 359.
6. Medicine Man (Andrews 61), Bob Lane, Long Beach,
Calif., 247.
7. Bengal II (Ohashi 52 ),Yoshihiko Murase, Nagoya,
Japan, 502.
8. Helsal II (Adams 60), W.E. Rawson, Melbourne,
Australia, 570.
9. Vicki (Andrews 68), Al and Vicki Schultz, Long
Beach, 420.
WD---Renegade (Andrews 70), Dan Sinclair, Vancouver,
B.C., Canada.
Division
3 (started July 4)
1.
Reinrag2 (J/125), Tom Garnier, Portland, Ore.,
121.
2. Maitri (J/160), Peter Johnson, San Diego, 157.
3. Innocent Merriment (J/160), Myron Lyon, San
Diego, 201.
4. Jeito (J/145), Francisco Guzman, Acapulco,
Mexico, 164.
5. Pipe Dream IX (J/160), Scott Piper, Coral Gables,
Fla., 303.
6. Horizon (Santa Cruz 50), Jack Taylor, Dana
Point, Calif., 279.
7. On Point (Schock 40), Nick Martin, Wilmington,
Calif., 390 .
WD---The Cone of Silence (Australian Super 30),
James and Jenny Neill, Newport, NSW, Australia.
WD---Lucky Dog (J/125), Peter Putnam, Newport
Beach (DH).
Division
4 (started July 4)
1.
Wild Thing (1D35), Chris and Kara Busch, San Diego,
316.
2. Tabasco (1D35), John Wylie, San Diego, 371.
3. Tera's XL (ILC 40), Antony and Daniel Barran,
Northridge, Calif., 316.
4. Two Guys On the Edge (1D35M), Dan Doyle, Honolulu,
380 (DH).
5. Hot Tamale (J/120), Tom and Doug Jorgensen,
Glendora, Calif., 411.
6. Swept Away (J/120), Louis Bianco, Seattle,
431.
7. Paddy Wagon (Ross 40), Richard Mainland, Marina
del Rey, Calif., 355.
8. Cool Man Cool2! (Sydney 38), Harrell Jones,
Dana Point, Calif., 439.
9. Krakatoa (Young 32), Rod Skellet, Sydney, Australia,
473.
10. Bolt (Olson 40), Craig Reynolds, Balboa, Calif.,
469.
11. Lawndart (Cape Bay Fast 40), Bill Allan, Nanaimo,
B.C., 495.
Division
5 (started July 1)
1.
Wind Dancer (Catalina 42), Paul Edwards, Wilmington,
Del., 53.
2. There and Back Again (Tripp 40), Robert Rice,
Long Beach, finished, corrected time 8:12:06:22.
3. Masquerade (Choate 40), Timothy Coker, San
Diego, 88.
4. B'Quest (Tripp 40), Challenged America/Urban
Miyares, San Diego, 78.
CAL
40 (started July 1)
1.
Illusion, Stan and Sally Honey, Palo Alto, 46.
3. Ranger, William Partridge, Richmond, Calif.,
141.
3. Seafire, John T. Harrison, Honolulu, 141.
4. Ralphie, Jill and Taylor Pillsbury, Laguna
Beach/Eleanor and Davis Pillsbury, Snowmass, Colo.,
150.
5. Flying Cloud, Darrell and Scott Wilson, Long
Beach, 161.
6. Celebrity, Gerald Finnegan, Redondo Beach,
Calif., 193.
7. . California Girl, Don and Betty Lessley, Point
Richmond, Calif., 163.
8. John B, Greg Boyer, Newport Beach, Calif.,
189.
9. Willow Wind, Wendy Siegal, Sunset Beach, Calif.,
193.
10. Redhead, Andrew Opple, Ketchum, Idaho, 288.
ALOHA
DIVISION (started July 1)
Aloha
A
1.
Between the Sheets (Sun Odyssey 52.2), Ross Pearlman,
Calabasas, Calif., finished, CT 8:15:07:00. 2.
Incredible (Swan 53), Rick Gorman, Los Alamitos,
Calif., finished, CT 8:22:00:16. 3. Enchanted
Lady (Roberts 55 ketch), Andy Sibert, Seal Beach,
Calif., 56.
4. Beautiful Day (Beneteau 47.7), William Boyd,
San Diego, finished, CT 9:01:40:16.
5. Axapac (Wylie 39), Barry Ruff, Vancouver, B.C.,
73.
6. Marla R (Beneteau 50), Jon Richards, Mesa,
Ariz., 8.
7. Lady Bleu II (Dynamique 62), Roger and Brenda
Kuske, San Diego, finished, CT 9:12:13:40.
8. Beach Music (Tayana 52), Kirby Coryell, Lafayette,
Calif., 194 (DH).
Aloha
B
1.
Barking Spider (Catalina 38), David Kory, Point
Richmond, Calif., 254.
2. Sea Dancer (Ericson 35), Alvin Wheatman, Marina
del Rey, 441.
3. Pipe Dream (Choate/Feo 37), John Davis, Long
Beach, 475.
DH---Doublehanded.
WD---Withdrawn.
COMMODORE
Brad 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