2004
Rolex Farr 40 Worlds - Norwegians Steam Ahead:
Day 1 Report
San
Francisco, Calif., USA (September 8, 2004) - Contrary
to expectations, the opening day of the Rolex
Farr 40 Worlds produced a fleet leader without
professional crew or a two boat program or even
a coach boat. Norwegian Steam owned by Eivind
Astrup (Oslo, Norway) leads the 31-boat fleet
after two races.
 |
Mary Coleman's Astra, Los Gatos, Calif.
(25), and Vincenzo Onorato's Mascalzone
Latino (nearest camera) were both over the
line early in Wednesday's first race and
had to re-start. They finished last in that
order, but Astra came back to 7th in the
second race. Photo © Rich Roberts
|
In
front of a backdrop that includes downtown San
Francisco, the Golden Gate and Bay Bridges and
Alcatraz Island, racing got underway on time in
eight knots of breeze, with an inevitable two
general recalls from the anxious teams.
At
the weather mark rounding, Italian boat TWT, owned
by Marco Rodolfi (Comasco, Italy), led Peter de
Ridder's (Monaco) Mean Machine and Norwegian Steam.
By the leeward mark Norwegian Steam had slipped
ahead, a position it clung on to for the remaining
three legs of the race.
"We
were lucky in our choice of where we went on the
course; we did more right than wrong," explained
Astrup. "At the start we were on the right
side near the committee boat. We tacked over immediately
and had a good run out to the right. We had a
small wind shift at the end, so we overstood,
but it was worth it. Then downwind, we were catching
the wind shifts and jibing on them well."
During
the course of the race the breeze built to around
15 knots. Finishing 45 seconds after the Norwegian
boat was TWT and Takashi Okura's (Tokyo,
Japan) Sled on which Tony Rey (Portsmouth, R.I.)
is calling tactics. Mean Machine was close behind
until it had a collision with TWT at the weather
mark.
 |
|
Mascalzone Latino powers upwind in 20-plus
knots of breeze. Photo © Rich Roberts
|
"We
were coming alongside TWT and we tried to pass
them at the top mark by forcing them a little
past it," recounted Mean Machine's tactician
Ray Davies. "The current was sweeping us
up and when we tacked, we had overlaid the mark
and had to come back down. We were having trouble
getting the bow down and we hit TWT." Acknowledging
their mistake the team performed a 720-degree
penalty turn, losing four places that they were
unable to regain during the rest of the race.
Prior
to the start of the second race there was drama
on board David Voss' (Marina del Rey, Calif.)
Piranha. Although they are the most successful
team in the Schlock 35 class, Voss' crew is one
of the newest racing here. Voss purchased the
boat in July. During the pre-start, tactician
Gordon Palmer was caught by the main sheet during
a jibe, hurling him down to leeward. Palmer was
unloaded onto a chase boat and taken to the hospital
where he received two stitches. Apart from this
and two black eyes, Palmer is expected to be back
racing tomorrow.
By
the start of race two the westerly sea breeze
had filled in and was blowing 20 knots.
 |
Peter de Ridder's Mean Machine from Monaco
won the second race to stand second after
the first day of the Rolex Farr 40 Worlds.
Photo © Rich Roberts
|
Mean
Machine had one of the best starts, in the middle
of the line. "There was a lot of sag in the
line and we had nearly a boat length on everyone
around us," explained Davies. They continued
to the left, the only occasion today when this
tactic paid, and rounded the top mark first ahead
of two class favorites - Jim Richardson's (Boston,
Mass./Newport, R.I.) Barking Mad and defending
World Champions Antonio sodo Migliori and Massimo
Mezzaroma (Rome, Italy) on Nerone.
Mean
Machine extended on the run, to approximately
200 yards ahead of its competitors as the boats
flew downwind, semi-planing, in 25 knots of wind
and an increasingly choppy sea. From here the
Dutch team was untouchable finishing one minute
ahead of Barking Mad.
Mean
Machine is clearly one of the top boats to watch
this week. This is only de Ridder's second season
in the Farr 40, but to date this year he has won
both Key West Race Week and the SORC. Here in
San Francisco he is sailing with most of the same
crew on board as took part in the East Coast regattas
earlier this year.
The
second race was one of mixed fortunes for the
Norwegian Steam team. After a poor start and picking
the wrong side of the first run the team was down
to around 25th place. They then staged a remarkable
recovery getting to the right side of the course
on the second run, then hitting the left side
aggressively on the final beat up to the finish
by which time they had dropped to fifth.
 |
| Gordon
Palmer (blue shirt), tactician on David
Voss's Piranha, Playa del Rey, Calif., suffered
a bad cut to his nose when struck by the
mainsheet before the start of Race 2. Piranha
retired as Palmer was taken to a Berkeley
hospital for stitches. He was expected to
return Thursday. Photo © Rich Roberts
|
After
the first day Norwegian Steam leads the fleet.
Astrup, who is in the shipping business in Oslo,
has been campaigning the boat for three years
and has an all-Norwegian crew including Arve Roaas,
who sailed the last Volvo Ocean Race aboard djuice
and tactician Herman Jorn Johannessen, 2000 Olympic
bronze medallist in the Soling class.
Racing
continues through Sunday. Three races are planned
for tomorrow, the second day of racing.
The
2004 Rolex Farr 40 World Championship takes place
September 8-11 at the St. Francis Yacht Club in
San Francisco, Calif. For more information about
the Rolex Farr 40 World Championship, including
daily racing reports, results and photos go to
www.farr40.org
or www.stfyc.org.
Founded
in 1927, St. Francis Yacht Club, within view of
the Golden Gate Bridge, is a year-round host of
over 40 regattas on San Francisco Bay. The club
is renowned for its expertise in running world
and national championships, including the Melges
24 Worlds, and the J/105 and Star North American
Championships.
Rolex
Farr 40 Worlds
Preliminary
Results - Day 1, September 8, 2004 (Top 10 of
31)
Place, Owner Name, Hometown, Boat Name, Race 1,
Race 2, Total Points
1.
Eivind Astrup, Oslo, Norway, Norwegian Steam,
1-5, 6
2. Peter De Ridder, Monaco, Mean Machine, 7-1,
8
3. James Richardson, Boston, Mass., Barking Mad,
9-2, 11
4. Massimo Mezzaroma, Rome, Italy, Nerone, 10-3,
13
5. Peter Stoneberg, Orinda, Calif., Shadow, 11-6,
17
6. Marco Rodolfi, Comasco, Italy, TWT, 2-16, 18
7. Erik Maris, Paris, France, Twins2, 5-, 18
8. Takashi Okura, Tokyo, Japan, Sled, 3-17, 20
9. Richard Perini, Atamaron, Australia, Evolution,
12-11, 23
10. Alan Field, Temptress, Los Angeles, Calif.,
4, 21, 25