TERRA NOVA TRADING
KEY WEST 2004
Presented by Nautica
Jan. 19-23, 2004 www.Premiere-Racing.com
Jan. 29, 2004 For Immediate Release
KEY
WEST WINDS MADE EVERYONE A WINNER
Flying Dutchman Is Terra Nova Trading Boat of
the Week
KEY
WEST, Fla.---This little capital of the Conch
Republic is back to normal now, returned to the
ambience of pedicabs, Harleys, bicycles and roosters
roving the rustic and historic streets. It's a
change of pace from the blizzard of boats that
blew through for a perfectly wonderful week of
Terra Nova Trading Key West 2004, presented by
Nautica.
While
much of the nation shivered, for five days it
was the sailors' time to crow in consistently
double digit winds that produced winners from
five countries and 11 states coast to coast and
allowed a Key West record number of nine races
to be sailed. Conditions were so nice that there
were moments when it looked like a swim meet.
More on that later.
There
were 301 boats in 10 one-design and 11 PHRF classes
representing 18 countries and 32 states. Eighty
were J Boats, sprinkled through both groups.
Underscoring
the event's evolution into a global event through
its 17 years, the big winner came from The Netherlands,
and an epic human contest was played out between
a young Frenchman and his much younger American
adversary.
Peter
De Ridder, a 57-year-old Dutch investor who lives
in Monaco, elbowed his way to the table and rolled
the dice in the tough Farr 40 fleet, cashing out
some world-class rivals with a one-point victory.
That also earned him the Terra Nova Trading Trophy
as "Boat of the Week" for winning the
most competitive class and a share of the Nautica
Trophy in the International Team Competition.
His
Mean Machine was paired with Kristian Nergaard's
Melges 24, Baghdad, from Norway as the Europe
B team, which outsailed nine other Farr 40-Melges
24 global alliances.
"All
of that makes it a very big day for us,"
De Ridder said.
He
has sailed most of his life on boats called Mean
Machine, but he wasn't taken seriously as a contender.
After all, when he had to drive his boat a year
earlier in Key West---that's the class rule---he
finished 15th.
"I'd
never helmed a boat at this high a level,"
he said. "We improved during the year, and
here we started low key and sneaked into second
place [the next to last day] with a fourth and
a second---and all of a sudden we're tied with
Barking Mad."
In
the last race, Jim Richardson's perennial entry
from Newport, R.I. chased him all the way to the
finish line for second overall.
Mean
Machine's tactician, Ray Davies of New Zealand,
said, "I've done a lot of sailing with Peter,
including the Admiral's Cup we won in '99. But
this is huge. To win in a fleet like this is a
special achievement."
Sebastian
Col also sneaked up on people. While most observers
tried to pick a Melges 24 winner from among several
former world champions, including 14-year-old
Samuel (Shark) Kahn of Santa Cruz and Hawaii,
Col drove Philippe Ligot's P&P Sailing Team
from La Rochelle back from a 59-point premature
start penalty on Day 1 to a four-point win over
the California prodigy, whose father Philippe
wound up sixth.
As
Kahn ran away from the fleet at mid-week, it was
easy to overlook that Col, sailing consistently
well and quietly, would be able to discard those
59 points after seven races and reel the Shark
in decisively. In the final race Kahn passed Col
on the beat to the finish for his third consecutive
win and fourth overall, but he needed four boats
between them.
Col
said, "We wanted to stay close to Shark the
whole time. We started in the same position as
Shark, and by the middle of the first beat we
were in front and were able to sail our own course
and focus on going fast."
Philippe
Kahn said it was still a good week for Team Pegasus.
"Without the throwouts, he [Shark] wins the
regatta," he said. "But the French deserved
to win. They're a great team."
The
first five boats represented as many countries.
Kelly,
Andrew Cheney's Beneteau 1st 10 from St. Petersburg,
Fla., received the Lewmar Trophy as PHRF Boat
of the Week for winning PHRF 9, where six of the
10 entries won races but he won three.
"Boat
of the Day" honors were awarded to those
that prevailed in the class with the most competitive
racing each day. California entrants were recognized
the first four days: Philippe Kahn (Melges 24),
Santa Cruz, on Nautica Day Monday; John MacLaurin's
Pendragon V (Farr 40), Los Angeles, on City of
Key West Day Tuesday; Roger Sturgeon's Transpac
52, Rosebud (PHRF 1), San Francisco, on Mount
Gay Rum Day Wednesday, and Tom Coates' Masquerade
(J/105), on Lewmar Day Thursday.
Rumor,
John Storck Jr.'s J/80 from Huntington, N.Y. was
Terra Nova Trading Boat of the Day for winning
Friday's finale, which earned him fourth place
overall.
Swan
45 and C&C 99 one-design fleets were new on
the scene. Six of the eight Swans won races, but
consistency was key for Thomas Stark's RUSH (Reloaded),
Newport, R.I., with Ed Baird as tactician. Colin
Andrew’s Trumpeter, one of six C&C 99
entries from central Canada in this 11-boat class,
won four of the nine races.
The
Swan Performance Trophy went to So Far, Lawrence
Hillman's Swan 48 from Chicago, for its consistent
dominance in PHRF 8, where it was first or second
in seven races. Seven-time Soling world champion
Jorgen Johnsson steered So Far while 17-year-old
Brian Smith distinguished himself as tactician.
Some
sailors also worked on their freestyles. Three
hard-hiking crew members fell off a Farr 40 when
their lifeline gave way at the start, and America's
Cup star Peter Holmberg took a dive when Tom Hill's
R/P 75, Titan, the biggest boat in the event,
shrimped its spinnaker with a sheet wrapped around
his left ankle. Two days earlier Titan bowman
Ken Nevor also went overboard in a similar incident.
All were recovered safely.
Philippe
Kahn summed up the general feeling afterward when
he said, "It's a great event---a perfect
regatta. The race committee did a great job. Starting
58 Melges 24s isn't easy. They talk on the radio
and explain everything to you. It's awesome. It's
the greatest regatta in North America."
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
was the Presenting Sponsor. Their high fashion
eyewear and elegant timepieces were awarded to
each day’s Boat of the Day, class champions,
and the top three teams in the International Team
Competition.
Mount
Gay Rum, Lewmar, Samson Rope Technologies, Pearson
Yachts, Raymarine and the Florida Keys and Key
West Tourist Development Council rounded out the
official line-up. The Historic Seaport was 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
WINNERS (9 races; 1 throwout, except in Swan 45,
Farr 40 and Mumm 30)
Swan
45 (8 boats)---RUSH (Reloaded), Thomas Stark,
Newport, R.I. (4-2-2-4-1-2-4-5-1), 25 points.
Amid some rough and tumble elegance, Stark chartered
the boat he once owned and survived a flurry of
final-day protests. Veteran Andreas Josenhans
of North Sails, a trimmer on board, said, "The
crew put in a lot of hours practicing on the tiny
details that win regattas."
Farr
40 (23)---Mean Machine, Peter De Ridder, The Netherlands
(6-7-18-5-6-12-4-2-1), 61. Defending champion
Crocodile Rock from California led five boats
that were within two points entering the last
race, but co-owner/helmsman Scott Harris said,
"It's tough sailing. The fleet has improved.
There are more boats and they're better prepared."
Mumm
30 (13)---Turbo Duck, Bodo Von Der Wense, Annapolis,
Md. (1-2-2-1-2-4-3-5-3), 23. Showed its winning
'02 style after a slip last year. "Last year
we were OCS a bunch of times," Von Der Wense
said. "Our goal this time was to stay out
of trouble." Husband-wife John and Deneen
Demourkas of Santa Barbara, Calif., drove his
and her entries to fourth and third place, respectively---and
were still compatible at week's end.
Melges
24 (58)---P&P Sailing Team, Philippe Ligot/Sebastian
Col, France (1-(59)-1-2-1-6-7-3-2), 23. Ligot
said, "We came here to study the other top
teams. We were sailing without pressure because
our target was not to win the regatta but rather
the Worlds." That showdown is scheduled for
August in Sweden.
J/105
(29)---Zuni Bear, Richard Bergmann, San Diego
(1-(19)-1-2-1-1-9-6-7), 28. Last year's Boat of
the Week was working on a runaway until Tom Coates'
Masquerade from San Francisco got hot the last
two days and forced Zuni Bear to claim victory
on a tiebreaker---four wins to Masquerade's two.
J/80
(20)---Warrior, Craig and Martha White, Ft. Worth,
Tex. ((13)-2-2-1-7-6-1-1-4), 24. A repeat for
the husband-wife team from the Lone Star State.
Corsair
28R (10)---Bad Boys, Bob and Doug Harkrider, Augusta,
Ga. (1-1-3-2-1-(5)-1-2-2), 13. Repeat winners
but, oh brothers!---this time they had to beat
America's best multihull sailor, Randy Smyth,
who finished third behind Condor from Florida
by one point.
Corsair
24 (9)---Breaking Wind, Robert Remmers, Buda,
Tex. ((10)-1-1-1-1-1-2-1-2), 10. A two-boat contest.
Steve Marsh's I-Fly, Miami, FL, had two firsts
and six seconds.
C&C
99 (11)---Trumpeter, Colin Andrews, Toronto, Canada
(1-(4)-3-1-1-2-2-3-1), 14. A smash debut for this
new class. Helmsman Wally Hogan, a winner by 14
points, said, "We got mediocre starts, but
we caught most of the shifts and sailed very clean."
T-10
(8)---Liquor Box, Chuck Simon/Bill Buckles, Vermilion,
Ohio and Key West (1-2-3-1-1-3-1-1-(9)), 13. A
bittersweet victory after owner Simon went home
early following the death of his brother. "He
gave us a really inspiring talk before leaving,"
Buckles said. "I'm proud we were able to
finish off the series so well for Chuck."
PHRF
1 (9)---Chippewa (Swan 68), Clay Deutsch, Road
Harbour, BVI (7-1-1-1-(8)-1-1-1-1), 14. The boat's
on the heavy side, but a crew of 18, strong winds
and great tactics were a winning combination when
you're finishing last, boat for boat, but getting
30 to 102 seconds from the rest of the fleet.
"We came down here to see what Key West Race
Week was all about," Deutsch said. "It's
everything I've heard and more---great sailing
and great racing. I've had an absolute blast."
PHRF
2 (8)---Storm (R/P 43), Les Crouch, San Diego
(1-2-1-1-4-5-1-1-(9)), 16. With the smallest boat,
Crouch said, "We tried to get off by ourselves
rather than slug it out with everybody else. They
are bigger and they do block your wind."
And forget handicaps---boat for boat, Storm had
four seconds and two thirds. North Sails President
Gary Weisman was tactician.
IMS
(5)---Talisman, Marco Birch, New York, N.Y. (DSQ-2-1-1-1-1-1-1-1),
9. Birch said, "This boat bas been optimized
for winds in the 12-16 range, so the conditions
were very much to our liking."
PHRF
3 (8)---Raincloud (J/133), Mike Rose, Kemah, Tex.
(1-1-(2)-1-1-1-2-1-1), 9. Brothers Jody and Jay
Lutz drove and called tactics. They were having
so much fun they raced the last day for the fun
of it.
PHRF
4 (10)---Tiburon (Melges 30), Michael Gray/John
Dane, New Orleans, La. (1-(5)-1-1-2-1-1-2-3),
12. Dane drove with his wife Leslie and son Shaffer
as crew. Gray said, "We just went about our
business."
PHRF
5 (12)---K2 (J/120), Luis Gonzalez, Mallets Bay,
Vt. ((10)-2-1-2-9-1-2-3-3), 23. The way Howard
Dean's week went, this was the best thing that
happened for the state of Vermont.
PHRF
6 (14)---Bounder (Sydney 36), David Hudgel, Detroit
(1-(5)-1-2-2-1-3-1-2), 13. Hudgel gave time to
10 boats but sailed consistently and won comfortably.
This is the third Key West for Hudgel, who took
10th in a 13-boat class in 2002 then improved
to 3rd in PHRF 5 a year ago.
PHRF
7 (12)---Phaedra (Evelyn 32-2), Robert Patroni,
Pensacola, Fla. ((7)-1-3-2-1-2-2-5-3), 19. Evelyn
32s finished 1-2-3 as Phaedra held off Mike Perry's
Bloody Hell from New Jersey by one point.
PHRF
8 (9)---So Far (Swan 48), Lawrence Hillman, Chicago,
Ill. ((9)-2-1-5-2-1-2-1-1), 15. The Swan Performance
Trophy winner was built in 1974. "It shows
they built them great back then," Hillman
said.
PHRF
9 (11)---Kelly (Beneteau 1st 10), Andrew Cheney,
St. Petersburg, Fla. ((7)-3-1-5-6-2-1-1-2), 21.
A strong stretch run that beat out John Edwards'
J/29, Rhumb Punch, earned the Lewmar Trophy as
PHRF Boat of the Week.
PHRF
10 (7)---Phantom (B-25), Frank Silver, Kill Devil
Hills, N.C. (1-(6)-1-2-4-2-3-1-1), 15. As a tribute
to its home port for the 100th anniversary of
powered flight, this boat was airborne.
PHRF
11 (12)---Circus (J/30), Team Circus, Chicago,
Ill. ((3)-2-3-2-3-3-1-3-1), 18. The circus was
in town with a high-wire act that triumphed in
a class that included five J/24s.
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