Rolex
Farr 40 World Championship - World’s Best
Gear-up For Battle
San
Francisco, Calif., USA (August 25, 2004) –
One of the most elusive titles in the world of
sailing is “two-time Farr 40 World Champion.”
In the past six years of world championships no
one skipper has won the title twice. That could
change next month when the Rolex Farr 40 World
Championship returns to San Francisco, Calif.
from September 8-11. With eight countries represented
on the current 31-boat roster and a dramatic backdrop
of the Golden Gate Bridge and Alcatraz Island
in picturesque San Francisco Bay, competition
is guaranteed to be fierce and intense in pursuit
of the champion’s title.
Current
world champions Massimo Mezzaroma and Antonio
sodo Migliori (Rome, Italy), co-owners of Nerone,
have been training with one goal since winning
the Worlds last year at a windy Porto Cervo, Italy.
Nerone continued its good form with a victory
at the 2003 Rolex Farr One Design Invitational,
last November, and most recently as part of the
winning team at the Rolex Sardinia Cup in July.
The accomplished team counts the highly experienced
Vasco Vascotto as tactician.
Other
past Farr 40 World Champions who will be going
for an elusive second title include 2002 champion
Steve Phillips (Annapolis, Md.) who will have
three-time Olympic medallist Mark Reynolds as
tactician on his Le Renard. The 1998 champion
Jim Richardson (Boston, Mass./Newport, R.I.) is
back with his Barking Mad, this summer’s
victor in class at the New York Yacht Club’s
Annual Regatta and Race Week. Terry Hutchinson
will serve as tactician.
The
1999 champion John Kilroy (San Francisco, Calif.)
and his Samba Pa Ti team includes some of the
best known professionals in the business –
notably Olympic medallist Jeff Madrigali and Rolex
Yachtsman of the Year Paul Cayard, who is currently
in Athens aiming to win an Olympic medal of his
own
Kilroy
is unwilling to make any hard predictions before
the Worlds. “I don’t want to put the
jinx on myself,” he said. “But we
have been very fortunate in being one of the most
successful teams in California this year.”
Most
significant was Kilroy’s victory at the
National Championship, and he is feeling confident
about San Francisco. “I’m sailing
with a team that is very comfortable with sailing
in the Bay, and very happy in the big breeze,”
he said. “I’ve got some great category
ones with me,” said Kilroy of the required
amateur-status sailors on board. “Including
Justin Smart, an Englishman with whom I’ve
been sailing with for 27 years now.”
Kilroy
has a choice of two Farr 40s for the event, the
six-year-old Samba Pa Ti 1, in which he won the
Worlds, and the brand new Samba Pa Ti 3. The ages
might be different, but Kilroy says he can discern
no performance difference in the two hulls. And
the name doesn’t change either. “Samba
Pa Ti means ‘dance for you,’”
he said. “It is my favorite song, by Carlos
Santana, and we play it every day when we go out
and every day when we return.”
It
is hardly a song for warriors but Kilroy says
he does not look upon sailing competition as aggressive.
“It's not about battle,” he said.
“When you think about the way we are sailing
these boats, the way the crew has to move, the
trimming of the sails, the relationship with the
wind and the water, it really is a form of choreography.”
Sailors
don’t usually step on to the Farr 40 and
enjoy immediate success, but Peter de Ridder (Monaco)
has done a good job this past year of disproving
that theory aboard his Dutch-registered Mean Machine
with wins at Key West Race Week and the SORC.
He also has been honing his boat-to-boat skills
in the Farr 40 sistership, the Mumm 30, winning
both the Primo Cup in February and the Mumm 30
Europeans in June. With Volvo Ocean Race winner
Ray Davies calling tactics they look to be strong
competitors in San Francisco.
Deneen
Demourkas (Santa Barbara, Calif.) could become
the first woman to win the title. With impressive
performances including a second-place at the 2002
Rolex Farr 40 Worlds, Demourkas’ Groovederci
team includes tactician Bouwe Bekking who brings
enormous experience from many different racing
arenas, including the Volvo Ocean Race.
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.
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.
(end)
2004
Rolex Farr 40 World Championship
Roster as of August 19, 2004
Owner
(alpha listing by last name), Boat Name, Hometown
1. Eivind Astrup, Norwegian Steam, Oslo, Norway
2. Mary Coleman, Astra, Los Gatos, Calif.
3. Deneen/John Demourkas, Groovederci, Montecito,
Calif.
4. Peter DeRidder, Mean Machine, Monaco
5. Marc Ewing, Riot, Glencoe, Ill.
6. Alan Field, Temptress, Los Angeles, Calif.
7. Alex Geremia/ Scott Harris, Crocodile Rock,
Santa Barbara, Calif. 8. Steve/Fred Howe, Warpath,
San Dieg, Calif. 9. Robert Hughes, Heartbreaker,
Ada, Mich. 10. Helmut Jahn, Flash Gordon, Chicago,
Ill. 11. Philipe Kahn, Pegasus, Soquel, Calif.
12. John Kilroy, Samba Pa Ti, San Francisco, Calif.
13. John MacLaurin, Pendragon V, Los Angeles,
Calif. 14. Erik Maris, Twins2, Paris, France 15.
Giovanni Maspero, Joe Fly, Comasco, Italy 16.
Massimo Mezzaroma/Antonio sodo Migliori, Nerone,
Rome, Italy 17. Tom Neill, Nitemare, Berkeley,
Ill. 18. Takashi Okura, Sled, Tokyo, Japan 19.
Vincenzo Onorato, Mascalzone Latino, Naples, Italy
20. Ricard Perini, Evolution, Atarmon, NSW, Australia
21. Chuck Parrish, Slingshot, Hillsborough, Calif.
22. Steve Phillips, Le Renard, Arnold, Md. 23.
Jim Richardson, Barking Mad, Boston, Mass./Newport,
R.I. 24. Marco Rodolfi, TWT, Milan, Italy 25.
Wolfgang/Angela Schaefer, Struntje Light, Luneberg,
Germany 26. Peter Stoneberg, Shadow, Orinda, Calif.
27. David Thomson, Peregrine, Woodside, Calif.
28. Stuart/Marrgwen Townsend, Virago, Chicago,
Ill. 29. Arien Van Vemde, Sotto Voce, Loosdrecht,
Holland, the Netherlands 30. David Voss, Piranha,
Marina del Rey, Calif. 31. Lang Walker, Kokomo,
Sydney, Australia