Bell
Mumm 30 World Championship - Bell Joins Mumm 30s
For 8th World Championship In Toronto
Royal
Canadian Yacht Club / Sept. 21-24, 2004
TORONTO,
Canada---Take it from Nelson Stephenson, the Mumm
30s have found a happy home and a solid supporter
for their eighth world championship Tuesday through
Friday, Sept. 21-24.
The
Bell Mumm 30 World Championship will be contested
out of the Royal Canadian Yacht Club with Canada's
national leader in communications as the title
sponsor.
Bell
provides connectivity to residential and business
customers through wired and wireless voice and
data communications, local and long distance phone
services, high speed and wireless Internet access,
IP-broadband services, e-business solutions and
satellite television services. Bell Canada is
wholly owned by BCE Inc. For more information
please visit www.bell.ca.
Locals
say the timing is right for the best wind and
weather conditions of the year as summer slides
coolly into fall and the average high temperature
along the northern shore of Lake Ontario is 68
degrees F.
"The
venue is a world-class facility," said Stephenson,
the new North American champion and Mumm 30 World
Council president from Southport, Conn. He has
had his boat, TeamBOLD, on site since last month.
"Most
of us will probably never be able to compete in
the world championship for less and get more value
for our money," Stephenson said.
But
one thing it can't buy is the championship, which
has been in the grip of a different Italian team
each of the last four years---currently, Claudio
Recchi and Carla Umbertalli, who won sailing Cheyenne
at Portoferraio, Italy on the island of Elba last
year. In their absence, Carlo Alberini, sailing
Calvi from Pesaro, will try to continue the Italian
dominance---a tall order in this competitive and
compact fleet of 20 boats from three continents.
Stephenson
said, "In the expected conditions at Toronto,
at the end of the week the trophy will belong
to the team that displays consistency, sails cleanly
and avoids the pitfalls of sailing a major, four-day,
non-throwout regatta---no small feat in this fleet.
At Elba last year 11 different boats won races."
Stephenson's
team won the overall Mumm 30 class North American
title this year with a second place at Key West,
first place in the New York Yacht Club's 150th
annual regatta---their first major win---and a
third at the Holland (Mich.) Regatta.
Eleven
races are scheduled over the four days, starting
at 11:30 a.m., conditions permitting. The Royal
Canadian Yacht Club, founded in 1852, is on Toronto
Island, which is accessed by launch from the city
shorefront. The racers will sail a windward-leeward
course set two miles off the Centennial Pier.
The
fleet includes three teams fresh from the Farr
40 Worlds at San Francisco last week: Deneen Demourkas
of Santa Barbara, Calif.; Australia's Richard
Perini and California-Hawaii software developer
Philippe Kahn, the father of the camera phone.
Demourkas
will race a sister ship---also named Groovederci---of
the Mumm 30 she sailed in the 1,000-mile Tour
de France a la Voile this summer. The only non-European
entry, she finished third after leading the first
half of the race. Since her second place in the
Farr 40 Worlds two years ago and victories in
single races in 2003 and 2004, she has held world-class
status in both international fleets.
Her
team includes five-time Canadian Olympian Ross
Macdonald of Vancouver, B.C., who with crew Mike
Wolfs won a silver medal in the Star class at
Athens.
Richard
Clarke, a Toronto native and three-time Olympian
in the singlehanded Finn class, will be sailing
with Kahn's 15-year-old son Samuel, a.k.a. "Shark."
The younger Kahn will sail a second Mumm 30, also
named Pegasus, for the first time in competition,
and rivals would do well not to take him lightly.
When he was only 14 he won the Melges 24 class
world championship.
Meanwhile,
he sailed on his father's maxi sled Pegasus when
it won first-to-finish "Barn Door" honors
in the last two Transpacific Yacht Races.
Others
in the extraordinary depth of title contention
include the previous two North American champions,
Dan Cheresh from Holland, Mich., and David Pyles,
Easton, Md.; Tom Ritter, Bloomfield Hills, Mich.,
who won at Annapolis and Holland this year, and
hometown hope Fred Sherratt, who was third in
the 2002 Worlds at Annapolis.
The
Mumm 30, sailed by a crew of six, rates among
the elite of international one-design classes.
It has been locked in as the boat of choice for
the Tour Voile
through
2010 and was recently picked as one of three team
classes for the 2005 Admiral's Cup at Cowes, an
event regarded as the unofficial world championship
of offshore racing. The boat was created by Bruce
Farr & Associates, the designer said, as "a
state of the art one-design keelboat that would
be fast and exciting, yet uncomplicated and economical."
At
31 feet LOA, its one-ton lead bulb represents
44 per cent of its 4,461-pound displacement, giving
it stiff stability but, with limited overall weight,
good light air speed, acceleration and agility.
The power and ease of handling come from a fractional
rig complemented by masthead spinnakers.
Joining
Bell in support of the event are contributing
sponsors Champagne Mumm, CHUM Limited, Lewmar,
McMillan Binch LLP, Mount Gay Rum, North Sails,
Stella Artois and Sorgentone.
Entries
(alphabetical by boat name):
Calvi,
Carlo Alberini, Pesaro, Italy
Champosa,
Jonathan McDonagh, Minneapolis, Minn.
Cygnet,
Richard Swann, Fairfield, Conn.
Dark'n
Stormy, Kevin Young, Novelty, Ohio
Foreign
Affair, Richard Perini, Sydney, Australia
Groovederci,
Deneen Demourkas, Santa Barbara, Calif.
Hammer,
U.S. Coast Guard Academy, New London, Conn.
it,
Jim Sminchak, Euclid, Ohio
Notorious,
Kevin Brown, Toronto
Pegasus
20, Samuel Kahn, Honolulu
Pegasus
591, Philippe Kahn, Honolulu
Steadfast,
Fred Sheratt, Toronto
Surprise,
David Irish, Harbour Springs, Mich.
TeamBOLD,
Nelson Stephenson, Southport, Conn.
Team
Intermac, Dan Cheresh, Holland, Mich.
Three
Niner, David Gonzalez, Lambertville, Mich.
Tramp,
Thomas C. Ritter, Bloomfield Hills, Mich.
USA
65, David Pyles, Easton, Md.
War
Pony, Art Guerrera, Atlantic Highlands, N.J.
Wildthing,
Jeff Fogarty, Fonthill, Ontario