Key
West 2005, presented by Nautica
Jan. 18, 2005
The
World Has Come To Key West To Win
Tuesday's
weather: Wind 21 knots from 020-015.
Wednesday's
forecast: Wind N-NE 15 knots.
KEY
WEST, Fla.---Walk around the docks at Key West
2005, presented by Nautica, and you'd think you
were being bombarded by a battalion of Berlitz
instructors. Original or reflected in accented
English, the phenomenon is as much a part of the
Conch Republic atmosphere this week as the 20-knot-plus
northerly winds sweeping the four race courses
this week.
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Photo ©
Rich Roberts
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Consider:
The
Farr 40 leader after 3 of 9 scheduled races is
Dutchman Peter De Ridder's Mean Machine, which
swapped wins Tuesday with German runner-up Hasso
Plattner, each with a New Zealand tactician, Tom
Dotson and Russell Coutts, respectively.
The
PHRF-1 class's undefeated leader is Japanese industrialist
Makoto Uematsu's Transpac 52, Esmeralda, with
America's Ken Read calling tactics for Uematsu
and alternate helmsman Tom Lihan.
The
Melges 24 leader is Philippe Kahn's Pegasus 575,
driven by San Diego's Bill Hardesty, with Sweden's
Freddy Loof and America's 48-year-old Olympic
golden boy, Kevin Burnham, on the crew. At 1-6-1,
they're one point ahead of Italy's Maspero Giovanni's
Joe Fly, with Gabrio Zandona driving and American
Morgan Larson as tactician.
Kahn,
meanwhile, a native of France long settled in
Santa Cruz, Calif., and Hawaii, is driving his
Farr 40---Pegasus 80808---in fourth place, which
combined with Peg 575's score puts the USA West
team in first place in the International Team
Competition for the Nautica Trophy.
And,
finally, this personal note: John Kostecki of
San Francisco, who skippered a Volvo Ocean Race
victory for Germany's illbruck team in 2001-02,
is calling tactics on Michael Brennan's Sjambok
from Newport, R.I. Mean Machine's floater is Anne
Marie Kostecki, his wife since May 22, 2003.
"We
met during the '97-98 Whitbread," Kostecki
said, "in La Rochelle, France."
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Photo
© Rich Roberts
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Is
this an international regatta or what?
All
six Swan 45 owners list U.S. home ports---but
the boats are built by Nautor Swan in Finland.
Alice Martin's sky blue Painkiller from Chicago,
with Great Britain's Chris Law at her side, shares
the lead with Andrzej Rojek's Better Than, from
Newport, R.I., although Painkiller was facing
a pair of protest hearings later Tuesday night.
Martin,
who hadn't raced the boat before this week, is
becoming comfortable at the helm, as she demonstrated
with a 1-2 Tuesday. Although the wind was somewhat
lighter than Monday, she said, "The waves
were bigger today. It's harder to drive when [the
wind is] lighter. We left the dock a little earlier
today and did some jibing practice, and we had
perfect jibes all day."
For
Plattner, 4-1-4 so far, Key West 2005 is a major
step toward the Farr 40 Worlds in Sydney in March.
Coutts will continue with the team through that
event, then switch to Plattner's maxZ86 for the
Centennial Transpacific Yacht Race to Hawaii in
July.
"We're
trying to do all the little things better,"
Plattner said, smiling. "We're sailing well,
but it's only been two days."
Coutts
said, "Hasso was driving very well. We had
good speed, I think we learned something about
our downwind sails Monday."
Esmeralda
is one of five TP52s having their way in PHRF-1
with five big handicap boats, including Daniel
Meyers' Farr 60, Numbers, from Newport, R.I. with
five Kiwi members of Alinghi's America's Cup crew
on board. The TP52s are first, second, third,
sixth and seventh, with Tom Hill's R/P 75 Titan
12 and Numbers fourth and fifth.
Numbers
tactician Brad Butterworth noted, "We do
pretty well with the 52s upwind, but when they
turn downwind they're gone."
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© Rich RobertS
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Read
said, "I think we have the boat dialed in.
We've had pretty much the same crew going on two
years now. It makes it good from a tactical standpoint
because you can do anything you want to do and
it works—and it doesn't hurt being fast."
Titan
12 has easily finished first in all three races
but owes everyone handicap time, which sometimes
makes it difficult to cover its rivals from so
far ahead.
Crew
member Jim Alsopp said, "We just cover our
lunch."
After
Tuesday's Melges 24 racing Giovanni was laid out
on the dock while a crew member massaged his injured
left knee. Otherwise, he felt no pain after dodging
disaster in the second race to wind up 1-3.
"We
thought we might be over early at the start,"
he said, "but when they spoke our number
on the radio we heard [bow number] '32,' not '42.'
So we kept going until we were about 100 meters
upwind and they called it again. Then we went
back [to re-start] and passed the first windward
mark in 35th place [out of 58 boats]. We were
very happy to finish third."
Mean
Machine is sailing with something of a pickup
crew. "A lot of the amateur crew members
are in school now," Jon Gunderson said, "and
the bowman's wife just had a baby."
The
new bowman, Jeff Reynolds, brother of main trimmer
Matt Reynolds, formerly sailed on John Kilroy's
Samba Pa Ti. He said, "We had good speed
and good crew work. But there are some tough boats
here. [Jim Richardson's] Barking Mad is the world
champ, Mark Reynolds is on Pegasus, Russell Coutts
on Morning Glory. Any one of several boats could
win."
And
it could be from almost anywhere on earth.
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© Rich Roberts
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Key
West 2005 sponsors are Nautica, Mount Gay Rum,
B&G, Lewmar, Samson Rope Technologies, and
the Florida Keys and Key West Tourist Development
Council. The Historic Seaport is the Official
Site.
Support
also comes from a record number of 29 Industry
Partners.
Premiere
Racing is also managing the new Acura Miami Race
Week 2005 ("the SORC renaissance").
Race dates are March 10-13, 2005, with ocean and
Biscayne Bay racing. Many Key West entrants are
planning to store boats in Miami and Ft. Lauderdale
and return for more South Florida racing.
More
details about the Keys, including web cams, are
available at www.fla-keys.com
or by calling 1-800-FLA-KEYS.
CONTACTS
PREMIERE RACING, Inc.
67B Front Street, Marblehead, MA, 01945
Tel: (781) 639-9545, Fax: (781) 639-9171
KWInfo@Premiere-Racing.com
PRESS OFFICER
Rich Roberts
(310) 835-2526
richsail@earthlink.net