International
Rolex Regatta - Victors Named In Nine Classes
ST. THOMAS, USVI (March
28, 2004)--For winners in nine classes at the
three-day International Rolex Regatta 2004, life
was good today. "Real good," according
to Chris Curreri of St. Thomas, who--like the
other class leaders--claimed a Rolex watch for
his efforts in the IC-24 class. The event, in
its 31st year at the St. Thomas Yacht Club in
the U.S. Virgin Islands, hosted 91 boats and hundreds
of sailors who were tested by a variety of wind
conditions on the racecourse and never a dull
party moment ashore.
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Photo
courtesy Rolex
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Curreri,
sailing Brand New Second Hand, was barely on the
radar after a rough start early in the regatta,
but today he sent off alarms when he went into
the last of three races tied for first with yesterday's
leader Seahawk, a British Virgin Islands entry
co-skippered by Michael and Robert Hirst.
"I grew up sailing against Robert Hirst and
some of the others here in the fleet," said
Curreri, adding that Hirst is an Olympian and
national champion from the British Virgin Islands.
"and I was always the light one and they
blew me away. Today in the last race, I flashed
back to my childhood and thought, 'It's heavy
air, a long beat and we're really light--I'll
never hold them off.'" The opposite was true,
however, and Curreri took the gun, only a quarter
of a boat length ahead of the Hirsts.
Reflecting on winning the Rolex watch, the 28-year-old
noted that he'd crewed in every Rolex event here
since he was eight years old, but never had finished
aboard a winning boat. Adding an interesting twist
to Brand New Second Hand's victory was the fact
that Curreri had only last week launched the boat,
having built it himself using J/24 hull #5 and
adding the Melges 24-like deck that makes this
hybrid class unique if not unusual.
For the remaining eight classes, which sailed
on a different circle than the IC-24s, a 180-degree
windshift in today's would-be first race begged
the Race Committee's mercy and resulted in abandonment.
A race that followed in 15 knots was completed
and determined the class victors.
Locking in to keep the Spinnaker Racing ("Over
50 ft.") Class lead today was Tom Hill's
Titan XIII, a Reichel/Pugh 75 launched just last
year. Rosebud, the Reichel/Pugh Transpac 52 owned
by Roger Sturgeon of Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., was
Hill's closest competitor and finished second.
"When today's first race was cancelled, we
were going the same direction as Rosebud but they
were on the opposite tack," said Hill. "We're
not sure how we would have made out against them
if the race had continued and the wind stayed
on their side.
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Photo
courtesy Rolex
|
"It
was so much fun sailing a bigger boat here,"
added Hill, who has won his class twice before
at this event, also sailing boats named Titan
but never a Titan so large. "We were going
20-21 knots on the first day."
Bill Dockser of Bethesda, Md., also was enjoying
going fast again today to win today's race and
the series for the Spinnaker Racer/Cruiser 1 Class
on his chartered "Formula One" Farr
65 Team Atlantic. "I had an incredible time,"
said Dockser, who has never raced in the Caribbean
before but has dreamed of it. "I got to live
the dream and accomplish the dream. Four out of
four line-honor wins and four wins on corrected
time…I am very excited."
Important to Dockser was the fact that his crew
was made up of family members, friends, the crew
from his Oyster 70 cruising yacht and a few pro
sailors "who really made it come together
for all the enthusiastic amateurs.
"Today when the wind shifted and died in
the first race, we were way out in front,"
said Dockser. "We were frustrated when the
Race Committee cancelled, but we were confident
that if we resumed another race, we would be able
to win."
In Beach Cats, it came as no surprise that Puerto
Rico's 2004 Olympic Tornado team of Enrique Figueroa
and crew Jorge Fernandez aboard Movistar/Suzuki/Red
Bull won its final race to clench a four-race
series. This was the first year in recent history
that the Beach Cats were not divided into spinnaker
and non-spinnaker racing classes. Sailing to a
Portsmouth handicap while other classes sailed
to the Caribbean Sailing Association rating rule,
the Beach Cats were dominated by Figueroa's Hobie
Tiger, sailing with a spinnaker. Close on his
heels in second was the Hobie 16 Exodus/Ensysa,
sailing without a spinnaker and skippered by another,
but unrelated, Enrique Figueroa, also from Puerto
Rico.
Carlo Falcone's Caccia Alla Volpe out of Antigua
maintained his command over Spinnaker Racing Class
1 by winning today's race, while in J/24s, Fraito
Lugo of Ponce, PR sailed Orion/Coors Light to
another victory today after posting three wins
in as many races over the last two days. He also
won last year's event with all bullets.
In Spinnaker Racing 2 Class, J-Bird, skippered
by Dave Janes of Newport Beach, Calif., won, while
Spinnaker Racer/Cruiser 2 Class was won by Geoffrey
Pidduck's Antiguan entry Trouble. Non Spinnaker
Racing honors were taken by Wildflower, skippered
by Ron Noonan of Marion, Mass.
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Photo
courtesy Rolex
|
This
year's regatta started with squall-fueled wild
and windy conditions on Friday, March 26. A fresh
northeasterly made way for glorious sunshine and
a thrilling distance race for all classes yesterday,
and today's early breeze oscillated and died before
strengthening in the afternoon.
"The weather tested the Race Committee and
the sailors," said STYC Commodore Peter Holmberg,
an America's Cup veteran who sailed aboard the
winning Titan XIII, "and we all came out
looking pretty smart."
Class winners received commemorative Rolex Submariners,
manufactured with a special green bezel and unique
black dial to celebrate the 50th anniversary of
the timepiece’s debut in 1953.
Spinnaker Racing ("Over 50 ft.") (7
boats)
1. Titan XIII, Tom Hill, San Juan, PR, 1-1-2-1,
5
2. Rosebud, Roger Sturgeon, Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.,
5-2-1-2, 10
3. Flirt, Richard Matthews/J. Alvarez, Ipswich,
Suffolk, UK, 4-3-3-3, 13
Spinnaker Racing 1(7 boats)
1. Caccia Alla Volpe, Carlo Falcone, Antigua/Italy,
1-3-1-1, 6
2. Cosmic Warlord, Mick Shlens, Palos Verdes Estates,
Calif., 3-1-3-4, 11
3. Uma Kua, Julio Reguero, San Juan, PR, 5-3-2-2,
12
Spinnaker Racing 2 (16 boats)
1. J-Bird, Dave Janes, Newport Beach, Calif.,
3-1-2-1, 7
2. Lost Horizon II, James Dobbs, St. Thomas, USVI,
4-2-1-2, 9
3. Magnificent 7, John Foster, St. Thomas, USVI,
7-3-3-3, 16
Spinnaker Racer/Cruiser 1 (9 boats)
1. Team Atlantic, Bill Dockser, Bethesda, Md.,
1-1-1-1, 4
2. Lazy Dog, Sergio Sagramoso, San Juan, PR, 3-3-2-2,
10
3. Pipe Dream, Peter Haycraft, Roadtown, Tortola,
BVI, 2-2-4-3, 11
Spinnaker Racer/Cruiser 2 (6 boats)
1. Trouble, Geoffrey Pidduck, Falmouth, Antigua,
2-1-1-1, 5
2. Dehlerious, Bungie Flynn, Roadtown, Tortola,
BVI, 1-2-2-2, 7
3. Tempest, John Haracivet, St. Thomas, USVI,
3-4-3-3, 13
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Photo
courtesy Rolex
|
Non
Spinnaker Racing (15 boats)
1. Wildflower, Ron Noonan, Marion, Mass., 5-1-1,
7
2. Affinity, Jack Desmond, Marion, Mass., 2-2-3,
7
3. Nemesis, Edwin Cruz Romero, Fajardo, PR, 4-4-4,
12
J/24 (6 boats)
1. Orion/Coors Light, Fraito Lugo, Ponce, PR,
1-1-1-1, 4
2. XX Tu, Juan Jose Mari Agustini, San Juan, PR,
2-2-3-2, 9
3. San Patricio MRI, Carlos Feliciano Sanchez,
4-4-2-6, 16
IC-24 (14 boats)
1. Brand New Second Hand, Christopher Curreri,
St. Thomas, USVI, 6-6-1-2-2-5-1-5-1, 29
2. Seahawk, Robert/Michael Hirst, Roadtown, Tortola,
BVI, 2-1-2-8-3-4-2-6-4, 32
3. Old & Gray, Chris Rosenberg, St. Thomas,
USVI, 4-2-4-7-1-1-8-3-3, 33
Beach Cats (12 boats)
1. Movistar/Suzuki/Red Bull, Enrique Figueroa,
San Juan, PR, 1-2-1-1, 5
2. Exodus/Ensysa, Enrique Figueroa, San Juan,
PR, 4-1-6-2, 13
3. HF Mortgage Bankers, Ibrahaim Mustafa, San
Juan, PR, 3-4-4-4, 15
Complete
results, photos and competitor lists are online
at www.rolexcupregatta.com