TERRA NOVA TRADING
KEY WEST 2004
Presented by Nautica
Jan. 19-23, 2004 www.Premiere-Racing.com
Jan. 20, 2004 For Immediate Release
Tuesday's weather: 69 F.; wind
12-15 knots N.
Wednesday's forecast: 70 F.; wind 10-15 knots
N, seas 1-2 feet.
HERE'S
TO TUESDAY'S WINNERS, FROM 14 TO 70
MacLaurin and Kahn (the Younger) Show Sailing
Has No Bounds
KEY
WEST, Fla.---It must be the Florida water. Jack
McKeon managed the Marlins to a World Series victory
at age 73, and Tuesday's winners at Terra Nova
Trading Key West 2004, presented by Nautica, ranged
from 14 to 70.
John
MacLaurin, a lifelong sailor from Los Angeles
who just became a septuagenarian, celebrated his
initiation into the international Farr 40 class
by sailing his new Pendragon V to City of Key
West Boat of the Day honors with first- and third-place
finishes, and guess who took over first place
from his father in the Melges 24s.
 |
Erik
Maris' Twins 2 (2) from France takes up
Alexandra Geremia's and Scott Harris' Crocodile
Rock (15) of Santa Barbara at the run down
to the offset mark in Tuesday's first race,
as George Andreadis' Atalanti XII (3) of
Greece prepares to hoist its spinnaker.
Photo by Rich Roberts
|
Samuel
(Shark) Kahn of Santa Cruz, Calif. and Hawaii
went 4-1 and flew away from the rest of that 58-boat
fleet with a 12-point lead after four of nine
races. This is the same Shark who stunned the
sport last October by winning the Melges 24 Worlds---the
youngest sailor ever to win a major world championship,
as far as anyone knows.
Despite
MacLaurin's success, Steve and John Howe's Warpath
from San Diego, with John Cutler as tactician,
and James Richardson's consistently sailed Barking
Mad, Newport, R.I., with Terry Hutchinson, slipped
into a first-place tie among the 23 boats. Warpath
won the second race in ideal conditions of 12-15
knots of breeze and relatively smooth seas.
“The
key to winning (the regatta) is not necessarily
to win any of the individual races,” Steve
Howe said. “It’s consistently being
among the top five or eight boats. The boats are
so competitive and everyone is going the same
speed, so it’s easy to finish 15th or worse.”
MacLaurin
is fifth, 10.7 points off the lead, after gaining
redress for restarting after a mistaken OCS call
on Monday.
A
few other sailors also tested the emerald waters,
although not by choice. Bowman Ken Nevor went
swimming off Tom Hill's R/P 75 Titan from Newport,
R.I. when a line tangled around his foot. The
crew recovered Nevor after a minute of surfing
alongside but lost their spinnaker in the process.
Three
crew members on Stuart Townsend's Farr 40, Virago,
were dumped during a Farr 40 start when a lifeline
gave way. All were quickly recovered unharmed
and joined MacLaurin and others in the reception
tent afterward to enjoy the moment.
"These
[Farr 40] guys are really good," MacLaurin
said. "You have to work your butt off. But
it feels so good when you get it right."
Fellow
California Yacht Club member Bob Little and Whitbread/America's
Cup veteran Kimo Worthington were his tacticians,
and MacLaurin said he had little trouble conforming
to the class's owner-driver rule that says the
owner must drive for the start, finish and all
mark roundings but can take relief at other times.
"I
like to drive," MacLaurin said. "When
I get locked in I don't want to change. Monday
I [drove] both races the whole time and got too
tired. Today I took a 15-minute break in each
race."
On
the other hand, the younger Kahn isn't nearly
old enough to drive---a car, anyway. But he has
an excellent handle on a Melges 24. He took over
first place from his dad Philippe, who dropped
to second with a 20th after three consecutive
seconds.
Rival
Kristian Nergaard of Norway, currently in fourth
place, is among the rivals who realize that they'll
have to lift their games to stop the Kahns from
double-teaming their way into dominance of the
class.
"[Shark]
has a really good team and he's doing a good job,"
Nergaard said. "Having the right team is
important."
Shark's
crew is the same he had for the Worlds: Richard
Clarke, Brian Hutchinson, Mark Christensen and
Brian Lee. Father Philippe has Morgan Larson,
Stu Bannatyne and Doogie Couvreux.
"And
their coach is Mark Reynolds, who's won two gold
and one silver Olympic medals," Nergaard
said. "But the young man is doing a good
job and he's working hard to get there. You can't
take anything away from him."
Shark
attends a private school in Santa Cruz but took
leave to sail here.
His
father said, "He does well in school, too,
especially in math and science. He studies every
day. That's a condition. He wouldn't sail if he
didn't."
Sailing
itself can be an education. Other successful competitors
talked about playing the shifts in tight fleets.
Leonardo
Ferragamo, the Nautor's Swan chief competing in
the new Swan 45 one-design class, said after a
1-3 day, "It was very shifty, but I find
it's a lot of fun when the conditions are like
that."
Richard
Bergmann, whose Zuni Bear from San Diego was Boat
of the Week last year, said after a 1-2 day that
moved him into first place by one point, "It's
easier with two of these Southern California kids
that know the shifts on the boat."
He
referred to Sean Bennett of UC Berkeley and John
Horsch of USC.
Bennett
called it "college sailing---really shifty
and tactical, rather than all-out racing."
Horsch
said, "We can chip away and work our way
back up."
Title
Sponsor, Terra Nova Trading, L.L.C. (member NASD,
SIPC & PCX), is recognized as an innovative
leader in Electronic Direct Access Trading. The
Chicago-based firm enables customers to electronically
route orders to major markets and ECNs. Terra
Nova Trading's technology partner, Townsend Analytics,
Ltd., is the developer of the premier real-time
trading platform, RealTick(r), which is also a
Key West sponsor.
Nautica
has upgraded its role to the Presenting Sponsor
level. The winners of the multi-boat International
Team Competition will receive the Nautica Trophy.
Mount
Gay Rum, Lewmar, Samson Rope Technologies, Pearson
Yachts, Raymarine and the Florida Keys and Key
West Tourist Development Council round out the
official line-up. The Historic Seaport is the
Official Site for the event. The Performance Sailing
Industry Partner Program, now in its third year,
features 26 companies that have made a multi-year
commitment to the event.
CLASS
LEADERS (4 of 9 races)
Swan
45 (8 boats)---VIM, Craig Speck, Newport, R.I.
(2-2-4-1), 9 points.
Farr
40 (23)---Tie between Warpath, Steve and Fred
Howe, San Diego
(10-6-7-1) and Barking Mad, James Richardson,
Newport, R.I. (2-8-6-8), 24.
Mumm
30 (13)---Turbo Duck, Bodo Von Der Wense, Annapolis
(1-2-2-1), 6.
Melges
24 (58)---Pegasus 492, Samuel (Shark) Kahn, Waikiki,
H.I. (4-5-4-1), 14.
J/105
(29)---Zuni Bear, Richard Bergmann, San Diego
(1-19-1-2), 23.
J/80
(20)---Sooner Magic, Mac Kilpatrick, Ft. Worth,
Tex. (1-5-1-2), 9.
Corsair
28R (10)---Bad Boys, Bob Harkrider, Augusta, Ga.
(1-1-3-2), 7.
Corsair
24 (9)--- I-Fly, Steve Marsh, Miami, Fla. (1-2-2-2),
7.
C&C
99 (11)---Tie between Trumpeter, Wally Hogan,
Toronto (1-4-3-1) and Graffiti, Oat Huntley, Erie,
Pa. (2-3-1-3), 9.
T-10
(8)---Liquor Box, Chuck Simon/Bill Buckles, Key
West (1-2-3-1), 7.
PHRF
1 (9)---Chippewa (Swan 68), Clay Deutsch, Road
Harbour, BVI (7-1-1-1), 10.
PHRF
2 /IMS (8)---Storm (R/P 43), Les Crouch, San Diego
(1-2-1-1), 5.
PHRF
3 (8)---Raincloud (J/133), Mike Rose, Kemah, Tex.
(1-1-2-1), 5.
PHRF
4 (10)---Tiburon (Melges 30), Michael Gray, New
Orleans (1-5-1-1), 8.
PHRF
5 (12)---K2 (J/120), Luis Gonzalez, Mallets Bay,
Vt. (10-2-1-2), 15.
PHRF
6 (14)---Tie between Bounder (Sydney 36), David
Hudgel, Detroit
(1-5-1-2) and Le Cygne (Beneteau 1st 40.7), Don
Chapman, Annapolis, Md. (3-1-4-1), 9.
PHRF
7 (12)---Patriot (Evelyn 32-2), Chip Crawford,
Pensacola, Fla. (1-3-2-3), 9.
PHRF
8 (9)---Hot Ticket (Farr 37), Jim Hightower, Houston,
Tex. (1-1-3-1), 6.
PHRF
9 (11)---Invincible (N/M 30), Jeff Gastreau/Brian
Lees, Annapolis. Md. (3-2-2-4), 11.
PHRF
10 (7)---Ego Tripp (Tripp 26), Rich Harrison,
Annapolis, Md. (2-1-2-1), 6.
PHRF
11 (12)---Circus (J/30), Team Circus, Chicago
(3-2-3-2), 10.
Complete
results, photos and press releases HERE
CONTACTS
PREMIERE
RACING, Inc. 67B Front Street, Marblehead, MA,
01945
Tel: (781) 639-9545, Fax: (781) 639-9171
Event Email: KWInfo@Premiere-Racing.com
Event Web Site: www.Premiere-Racing.com
Terra Nova Online: www.TerraNovaOnline.com
PRESS
OFFICER
Rich Roberts
(310) 835-2526
rich@earthlink.net