J/122 TEAMWORK Wins PHRF A/ J-Class & LE TIGRE Wins J/80 Midwinters
(Key West, FL)- It was a frantic finish for the 119 entrants at Quantum
Key West 2012 as several boats snatched victory with strong performances
on the final day. It was a fitting end to the 25th Silver Anniversary
Edition of Key West. As usual, Key West delivered on an almost
picture-perfect "postcard" week of sailing. The weather conditions
provided a challenge for all over the course of the five days and the
creme d'la creme rose to the top in every class.
The
weekend before Race Week started was fabulous, great N/NW winds blowing
10-20 knots, sunny, flags snapping away, with gorgeous aquamarine
waters sparkling in the fresh breezes. Happy dolphins were frolicking
and jumping everywhere and curious sea turtles kept poking their heads
out to see strange contraptions approaching them looking for all the
world like an upside-down shark. Pelicans walked around the docks and
massive 8-10 ft long tarpon swimming beneath hung around like stray dogs
waiting for any scrap of food the sailors might toss them. It was even
more amazing to watch giant, sleek black cormorants dive beneath the
surface to seemingly always come up with a fish stuck in their gullet--
amazing fishermen! While the "wildlife" on the waters were appreciated
by all, perhaps the most ambivalent opinions were directed at all the
wild hens and roosters (not talking about sailors here!) that were
scampering around the streets-- if you were unlucky, you'd have a
rooster crowing really loudly near your bedroom window at around 5-6 am
every morning! Certainly not a good thing for those sailors who
themselves were enjoying Key West's notorious nightlife into the wee
hours of the morning!
The
sailing was simply incredible. Each day presented a new challenge and
each day ultimately presented a unique set of sailing conditions-- they
may have appeared to be the same, but they never are exactly the same.
Monday was the windiest day, with 18-24 knots of wind from the NNE,
starting out grey but clearing as the day went on for two excellent
races. While it was forecast to be an oscillating-persistent shift
veering further East, one could often play the wind shifts and make
gains on the left side of the course upwind. By Tuesday, as the fronts
kept moving and the High went offshore, the wind moved into the Easterly
quadrant and diminished to 8-14 knots-- again it was sunny with
deliciously clear, azure-colored waters reflecting the white sands
beneath the boats and the fleet was treated to three races. Much like
Monday's racing, you could not hit a corner upwind or downwind, lest you
get killed by those playing the wind shifts. As predicted, Wednesday's
sailing was washed out, no wind, not even a breath of air. Thursday
and Friday's sailing were simply classic Key West "shorts & shades"
sailing days- ESE winds 8-14 kts, sunny, with temps in the balmy 70s all
day. With three races on Thursday and two on Friday, it was a fitting,
memorable finale for this Silver Anniversary event.
Making
the most of the conditions was Glenn Darden's J/80 LE TIGRE team from
Fort Worth Boat Club, Fort Worth, Texas. Glenn and his affable team
comprised of co-owner Reese Hillard, Johnnie Gluek (Newport, RI) and
Karl Anderson (Cape Cod, MA) never looked back after the first day; it
was clear their experience as past J/80 World and North American
Champions was keeping them out of trouble and sailing fast. Leading the
regatta from wire-to-wire, LE TIGRE walked off with the J/80 Class and
were declared J/80 Midwinter Champions. Giving them a run-for-the-money
at times was Swedish J/80 Champion Mikael Lindqvist on ROCAD RACING.
Mikael's team ended the regatta on a high-note, winning the last race
and tied LE TIGRE for top J/80 of the day on Friday, securing 2nd place
for the regatta. Third was Ron Buzil's VAYU 2, fourth was past J/80
North American Champion John Storck, Jr on RUMOR and fifth was Chris and
Liz Chadwick's CHURCH KEY- one of their best J/80 Championship
performances to-date.
Of
special note, the SAIL Magazine's Best Around the Buoys competition
winner, Ryan Glaze from Dallas, Texas, sailed remarkably well to finish
6th on their boat SAIL BAB-Team Gringo. In fact, after the first two
days of sailing on Monday/Tuesday, Ryan and crew were lying in a solid
second place overall! However, perhaps the lay-day Wednesday and the
classic Key West "daze" (e.g. late evenings) got to them as they faded
from their podium position and fell out of the top five in the last two
days, posting a 10-12-6-3.
Competition
was fierce all week in PHRF 1 class with four different boats winning
races. TEAMWORK, a J/122 owned by Robin Team of Lexington, NC, fought
its way through the fray to edge the J/111 MENTAL (Paul Stahlberg,
Barrington, IL) by four points. It came down to the final day and
TEAMWORK was up to the challenge, winning Race 9 and placing second in
Race 10. "We come down here to Key West to get the best competition we
can find and boy did we this year," Team said. "We could not believe how
close the racing was in this class. TRES HOMBRES, MENTAL and RUSH were
all very well-sailed and pushed us from start to finish."
This
was the second Key West victory for Robin's TEAMWORK crew, who won in
2003 with a J/120. North Sails professional Jonathan Bartlett called
tactics while fellow Annapolis residents Jeff Riedel and Kevin Ryman
trimmed the jib and spinnaker. It was a particularly special win for
Team since he had brother Adam and sons Alston and Coleman aboard. "We
were as well prepared as we ever have been for this regatta and it's a
good thing because our competitors were really, really good," said Team,
who also took top honors in the J/Class.
Rounding out the top five in PHRF A behind TEAMWORK in 1st and MENTAL in
2nd was Bill Sweetser's Annapolis, MD based team on the J/109 RUSH in
fourth and Doug Curtiss's New England/ Buzzards Bay team on the J/111
WICKED 2.0 in fifth.
In
the J-Class ToT (time-on-time) Division, behind TEAMWORK was Bill's
J/109 RUSH taking second overall, interestingly enough, over a
tie-breaker with Paul's J/111 MENTAL. Fourth was Doug's J/111 WICKED
2.0 and fifth was Gary Weisberg's J/109 HEATWAVE from Boston/
Marblehead, MA. A notable accomplishment was that Sweetser's RUSH team
(see right) were the Boat of the Day after Tuesday's racing with a
1-1-2!
In the final analysis, perhaps what was most interesting about this
year's 25th Silver Edition of Key West was to see the dominance of J
sailors past and present who've risen to the top in other racing classes
at Key West Race Week. As the primary winter sailing event worldwide
for many leaders in the sailing industry, for sailing professionals and
for top amateur teams, its quite remarkable to see how many of them are
alumni of the larger J/One-Design classes; proving yet again that many
of the world's best sailors (legendary, famous sailors at that) have
"gone to school" learning the ropes of sailboat racing on a "J".
Examples abound across the spectrum of the fleets.
In the Farr 40s, Jim Richardson (Newport, RI) raced J/24s for years,
proving that he's still got it to race at the top of the game, winning
the Farr 40 class in BARKING MAD. "I wasn't too optimistic that we
could win the regatta after what happened in that second race, but we
just had to keep sailing with the understanding that every point was
crucial," Richardson said. "We got better as the week went along and
everything just sort of fell into place at the end." In other words,
exactly what any good J/24 sailor would do to win.
It was a similar story in Farr 30s as skipper Deneen Demourkas (Santa
Barbara, CA) and the GROOVERDERCI crew compiled an entire line of
bullets. Deneen has raced J/105s with her husband "Johnnie D" for years
in Santa Barbara, California on-board their J/105 ROCKIN & GROOVIN
and learned the nuances of what it takes to get around the race track
while minimizing mistakes and going fast, not the least of which why
it's so important to have a good crew!
The
TP/IRC 52-foot class was a bare knuckle brawl with all eight entries
filled with fully professional world-class crews, the best that money
can buy for these multi-million dollar campagins. Virtually every single
boat had a J/Class veteran aboard steering or calling tactics to keep
them going in the right direction. Tough company for sure! Regatta
winner was former J/24 and J/44 owner Doug Devos sailing QUANTUM RACING,
with J/24 World Champion Terry Hutchinson (Annapolis, MD) calling
tactics. Second was J/22 Cayman Islands owner (and former J/29 owner)
Peter Cunningham racing POWERPLAY with J/24 class champion Tony Rey
(Newport, RI) calling tactics (seen left here). Third was Hap Fauth on
Team BELLA MENTE with a crew loaded with J/Class sailors from Newport,
RI. Fifth was Ashley Wolfe sailing MAYHEM with Seattle J/24 champion
sailor Charlie
McKee calling tactics. Seventh was Austin and Gwen Fragomen's
INTERLODGE with J/24 World Champion Brad Read (Newport, RI) calling
tactics and eighth was past J/24 sailor Irvine Laidlaw sailing his brand
new HIGHLAND FLING XII with Caribbean J/24 Champion Peter Holmberg (St
Thomas, USVI) calling the shots. Needless to say, for a class filled
with "superstar" sailors, it was the top J/Class sailors that guided all
the winners home!
In the Farr 400s, the top boat RED sailed by Joe Woods and Paul Goodison
are all former J/24 UK sailors. And the rest of the fleet was
dominated by top J/24 and J/105 sailors across the board, Eric Arndt
from California was tactician on BLADE, Nick Turney from Ohio was
tactician on SPACEMAN SPIFF, Mark Foster from Texas was calling the
shots on MERIDIAN X and Kevin Miller from California was directing
traffic on TEAM PREMIERE NORCAL!
In the High Performance Class, past J/24 Champion Larry Leonard
(Annapolis, MD) was tactician on second place STRAY DOG. And, former
J/105 owner Patrick Eudy replaced one infamous BIG BOOTY with another
"bigger BOOTY", sailing well enough to capture third.
In
the highly professional, talent-laden class of Melges 32s, most of the
top boats were all either past J/Class owners or had J/Class Champions
calling tactics on-board. Former J/80 sailor Ben Schwatrz (New York)
sailed PISCES with J/24 World Champion and America's Cup Champion Ed
Baird (St Petersburg, FL) as tactician, adding in top J/24 sailor Scott
Nixon as trimmer; they led the fleet at one point and finished a solid
second place. Capturing third was past J/24 and J/39 owner Vincenzo
Onorato sailing MASCALZONE LATINO (his family owns the Italian
ferry-boat/shipping group called MOBY Lines). Fourth was past J/105
North American Champion Alec Cutler (Annapolis/ Bermuda) sailing
HEDGEHOG. Sixth was past J/35 Great Lakes/ North American Champion Bob
Hughes (Ada, MI) sailing HEARTBREAKER. Eighth was CATAPULT with J/24
World Champion Chris Larson (Annapolis, MD) calling tactics along with
another J/24 and Intercollegiate Champion (and 2011 Rolex Sailor of the
Year) on-board- Bill Hardesty (Chicago, IL).
All
in all, Key West was a fun event (a "bucket list" event for sure!) and
to see the dozens of J sailing "alumni" makes for an entertaining
regatta. And, especially in Key West where sailing friends from around
America, Europe, the Antipodes and points further beyond congregate for
what may be one of the few events worldwide (like a Cowes, Spi Ouest,
Block Island, Big Boat Series and others) that attracts a broad spectrum
of sailors- industry, professional and amateur alike! Next time, we
all hope to see more J/Teams and J/Sailors participating in 2013! Sailing photo credits- Tim Wilkes For more QUANTUM SAILS Key West Race Week Sailing information
J/Boats News is a digest of worldwide events, regattas, and news for sailing enthusiasts and members of our J Community. Contributions regarding your racing, cruising or human interest stories on-board J's are welcome- please send to "editor@jboats.com".
Tuesday, January 31, 2012
ECC VIVIENDAS Leading Trofeo Bodegas Maximo Bolado
(Santander, Spain)- One of the world's top J/80 fleets is at it again.
When the Santander J/80 fleet gets rolling in early January on the
spectacular northern shores of Spain, it not only marks the start of the
J/80 sailing season in Spain, it is also an opportunity for the newer
J/80 teams to test themselves against some of the world's best sailors.
The first trophy event of the season for the Santander J/80s is the Trofeo Bodegas Maximo Bolado, an event that runs for over four weekends and attracts many of Spain's top J/80 sailors from other fleets- the depth of talent in the twenty-eight boat fleet is simply breath-taking!
The first weekend saw two very tough races sailed in beautiful spring weather. The day started slowly with a postponement, but by 1500 hours the wind began to blow from the northwest about eight knots. The race course was set south of the navigation channel in the area known as "The Moors", making for tough tactical decisions regarding both current and wind as the breeze kept veering in an oscillating-persistent scenario further Northeast.
In the first race, the favored side of the line was the port "pin" end, but the wind shifted to the right so much that the entire fleet arrived in a very compact package at the first windward mark. Setting the standard by leading at the first windward mark was Pichu Torcida's J/80 World Champion team on ECC VIVIENDAS followed by Paco Cospedal skippering WIND and OPTICA CENTRALE sailed by Julia Casanueva. On the first downwind leg, ECC VIVIENDAS managed to escape clear and held first place throughout the race. It was a very tough fight behind them for the next few positions. In the end, GO FIT sailed by David Madrazo finished 2nd, followed by Toño Piris' YATES Y COSAS in 3rd, FONESTAR (Jaime Piris) in 4th and OPTICA CENTRALE with Fernando Pereda at the helm in 5th. J/80 World Champion Ignacio Camino on NEXTEL ENGINEERING was 6th.
The second race was much more complicated. It was a "black flag" start with three boats sent home! The wind kept shifting and was full of holes, making for complex decisions related to current as well. In the end, A&G PRIVATE BANKING sailed by Tono Ribalaygua won their first race of the season. FONESTAR was second, followed by GO FIT, ECC VIVIENDAS and MATRAKO to round out the top five.
The leading trio is very tight with ECC VIVIENDAS and GO FIT at the top of the standings with 5 points each and FONESTAR is third with one more. Then, in a tie for fourth is YATES Y COSAS and Paco Cospedal's WIND with 13 points each. For more Trofeo Bodegas Máximo Bolado sailing information
The first trophy event of the season for the Santander J/80s is the Trofeo Bodegas Maximo Bolado, an event that runs for over four weekends and attracts many of Spain's top J/80 sailors from other fleets- the depth of talent in the twenty-eight boat fleet is simply breath-taking!
The first weekend saw two very tough races sailed in beautiful spring weather. The day started slowly with a postponement, but by 1500 hours the wind began to blow from the northwest about eight knots. The race course was set south of the navigation channel in the area known as "The Moors", making for tough tactical decisions regarding both current and wind as the breeze kept veering in an oscillating-persistent scenario further Northeast.
In the first race, the favored side of the line was the port "pin" end, but the wind shifted to the right so much that the entire fleet arrived in a very compact package at the first windward mark. Setting the standard by leading at the first windward mark was Pichu Torcida's J/80 World Champion team on ECC VIVIENDAS followed by Paco Cospedal skippering WIND and OPTICA CENTRALE sailed by Julia Casanueva. On the first downwind leg, ECC VIVIENDAS managed to escape clear and held first place throughout the race. It was a very tough fight behind them for the next few positions. In the end, GO FIT sailed by David Madrazo finished 2nd, followed by Toño Piris' YATES Y COSAS in 3rd, FONESTAR (Jaime Piris) in 4th and OPTICA CENTRALE with Fernando Pereda at the helm in 5th. J/80 World Champion Ignacio Camino on NEXTEL ENGINEERING was 6th.
The second race was much more complicated. It was a "black flag" start with three boats sent home! The wind kept shifting and was full of holes, making for complex decisions related to current as well. In the end, A&G PRIVATE BANKING sailed by Tono Ribalaygua won their first race of the season. FONESTAR was second, followed by GO FIT, ECC VIVIENDAS and MATRAKO to round out the top five.
The leading trio is very tight with ECC VIVIENDAS and GO FIT at the top of the standings with 5 points each and FONESTAR is third with one more. Then, in a tie for fourth is YATES Y COSAS and Paco Cospedal's WIND with 13 points each. For more Trofeo Bodegas Máximo Bolado sailing information
J/111, J/80 & J/92 Frostbiting In England
Sailing Southampton Winter Series
(Southampton, England)- The Royal Southampton YC started its Doyle Sails Frostbite Series on the 8th January. The first racing in the Solent of 2012 started early this year but with the warm dry weather continuing it felt more like a spring day . The wind was a gentle 5 knots from the west which caused consternation for the race management team just before the start by dying away to a little over 3 knots. Postpone or not to postpone that was the question. It did appear that the start line was in the light spot and the rest of the race area seemed solid so start they did.
There were 30 boats on the water out of an entry of 33 which was an excellent start to the series and perhaps an indication of how good the weather was. The class 1 IRC were 1st away and as always the start was competitive and there was an OCS who quickly restarted before the beat from Hover 1 across to the Hythe ship buoys, the course then running back to Hover 1 before a return to Hythe and then a short reach to the finish at Bird Pile. Class 2 IRC were up next and had a clean start before their beat to the same mark although the run was shorter to a laid mark to the west of Hover 1. Finally the J class for J92’s and J80 were away but they too were over enthusiastic and there was an OCS.
In Class 1, J-DREAM, David & Kirsty Apthorp’s new J/111 finished 2nd, just 27 sec behind the leader. Stuart Hawthorn's J/80 J'AI DEUX AMOURS won by 9 sec over JAMIN, John Cooper and Ian Townsend’s J/92. So it is close racing indeed.
With the wind slowly building to the low teens but steady in the West race 2 was quickly under way on the same course . This time they were all well behaved and clean starts were had by all. This time it was the J/111 J-DREAM who won Class 1 taking "all the chocolates". Currently, J-DREAM's 3-1-1 is leading the class for the series. Class 4 was won by BOJANGLES, Richard Sainsbury’s J/92s. However, Stuart Hawthorn's J/80 J'AI DEUX AMOURS is leading the series with a 1-2-1. For more Royal Southampton Frostbite Series sailing information
(Southampton, England)- The Royal Southampton YC started its Doyle Sails Frostbite Series on the 8th January. The first racing in the Solent of 2012 started early this year but with the warm dry weather continuing it felt more like a spring day . The wind was a gentle 5 knots from the west which caused consternation for the race management team just before the start by dying away to a little over 3 knots. Postpone or not to postpone that was the question. It did appear that the start line was in the light spot and the rest of the race area seemed solid so start they did.
There were 30 boats on the water out of an entry of 33 which was an excellent start to the series and perhaps an indication of how good the weather was. The class 1 IRC were 1st away and as always the start was competitive and there was an OCS who quickly restarted before the beat from Hover 1 across to the Hythe ship buoys, the course then running back to Hover 1 before a return to Hythe and then a short reach to the finish at Bird Pile. Class 2 IRC were up next and had a clean start before their beat to the same mark although the run was shorter to a laid mark to the west of Hover 1. Finally the J class for J92’s and J80 were away but they too were over enthusiastic and there was an OCS.
In Class 1, J-DREAM, David & Kirsty Apthorp’s new J/111 finished 2nd, just 27 sec behind the leader. Stuart Hawthorn's J/80 J'AI DEUX AMOURS won by 9 sec over JAMIN, John Cooper and Ian Townsend’s J/92. So it is close racing indeed.
With the wind slowly building to the low teens but steady in the West race 2 was quickly under way on the same course . This time they were all well behaved and clean starts were had by all. This time it was the J/111 J-DREAM who won Class 1 taking "all the chocolates". Currently, J-DREAM's 3-1-1 is leading the class for the series. Class 4 was won by BOJANGLES, Richard Sainsbury’s J/92s. However, Stuart Hawthorn's J/80 J'AI DEUX AMOURS is leading the series with a 1-2-1. For more Royal Southampton Frostbite Series sailing information
Monday, January 30, 2012
French J80s Prepare For Sailing Season And Worlds
First England 2012, Then France 2013
(La Trinite Sur Mer, France)- As their Spanish counterparts are ramping up their sailing and training schedules, the French J/80 Class are doing the same in La Trinite, Lorient and other ports around the French coastline. No question the top French teams have in their sights top 10 finishes (or better) at this year's J/80 Worlds in Dartmouth, England and later in the 2013 J/80 Worlds in France.
The first event called the ARNO SKIPPER is now also a Sport Boat Regatta in La Trinite sur Mer. Leading up to the famous monster spring event called SPI Ouest Regatta, there will be five training weekends for any French J/80s wishing to participate. The dates are: January 28/29, then February 11/12 and 25/26, then 10/11 and 24/25 March.
These training programs are being organized on the following basis: on-the-water sailing, racing, speed-testing, boat-handling and so forth followed by a de-briefing in the evening with video, photos and questions/answers with the top sailors (tactical, strategy, weather, boat-settings, etc). If you want to get your J/80 team up-to-speed very, very quickly, then participation in these training weekends will be the best investment of time and resources you can possibly make!
For further J/80 training/ sailing information, please contact- Arnaud Walter- ph- 06 69 58 21 21 or arnoskipper@yahoo.fr For more J/80 France sailing information
(La Trinite Sur Mer, France)- As their Spanish counterparts are ramping up their sailing and training schedules, the French J/80 Class are doing the same in La Trinite, Lorient and other ports around the French coastline. No question the top French teams have in their sights top 10 finishes (or better) at this year's J/80 Worlds in Dartmouth, England and later in the 2013 J/80 Worlds in France.
The first event called the ARNO SKIPPER is now also a Sport Boat Regatta in La Trinite sur Mer. Leading up to the famous monster spring event called SPI Ouest Regatta, there will be five training weekends for any French J/80s wishing to participate. The dates are: January 28/29, then February 11/12 and 25/26, then 10/11 and 24/25 March.
These training programs are being organized on the following basis: on-the-water sailing, racing, speed-testing, boat-handling and so forth followed by a de-briefing in the evening with video, photos and questions/answers with the top sailors (tactical, strategy, weather, boat-settings, etc). If you want to get your J/80 team up-to-speed very, very quickly, then participation in these training weekends will be the best investment of time and resources you can possibly make!
For further J/80 training/ sailing information, please contact- Arnaud Walter- ph- 06 69 58 21 21 or arnoskipper@yahoo.fr For more J/80 France sailing information
J/111 First Sailboat To Start New Year!
Mind-blowing Australia New Year's Experience on-board JAKE
(Sydney, Australia)- New Year's Day. Australia. One of first nations on Earth to celebrate the New Year. It is a fact. Peter Gustafsson flew down to Sydney, Australia to not only "test sail" the J/111 Down Under, but joined Ray and Sandra Entwistle and family on the J/111 JAKE for New Year's festivities.
Ray, Peter and the "JAKE family" were the first J sailors to experience the dawning of the end of civilization as we know it in the Chinese Year of the Dragon 2012. After all, only one hour past the dateline, they celebrated New Year's Day in Sydney at 12 AM when it was 5 AM the day before in Southern California 19 hours later! So, the Sydney J sailors can easily lay claim to be the first sailors in the world to start the New Year! OMG, looks like they had one helluva lot of fun! Read more about it here on Peter Gustafsson's BLUR.se sailing website.
(Sydney, Australia)- New Year's Day. Australia. One of first nations on Earth to celebrate the New Year. It is a fact. Peter Gustafsson flew down to Sydney, Australia to not only "test sail" the J/111 Down Under, but joined Ray and Sandra Entwistle and family on the J/111 JAKE for New Year's festivities.
Ray, Peter and the "JAKE family" were the first J sailors to experience the dawning of the end of civilization as we know it in the Chinese Year of the Dragon 2012. After all, only one hour past the dateline, they celebrated New Year's Day in Sydney at 12 AM when it was 5 AM the day before in Southern California 19 hours later! So, the Sydney J sailors can easily lay claim to be the first sailors in the world to start the New Year! OMG, looks like they had one helluva lot of fun! Read more about it here on Peter Gustafsson's BLUR.se sailing website.
J/92 Sailing Fast, Fun in France
* In the "We Love to Get These Emails" category, we recently got a note from JP Teague, owner of a J/92 in France and sailing in the Mediterranean. JP's note- "Hello- We race our J/92 in IRC in France and elsewhere. We recently bought a nice suit of North Sails 3DL sails for our boat, so we're competitive! It's very beautiful sailing in Palmares on the Mediterranean in 2011 and we plan to continue having fun in 2012! Bravo J/Boats, beautiful boat!" Thanks JP! We love you guys, too! :)
J/World's Tihansky Leads US Naval Academy Sailing
* Kid Leadership!? Seven years ago, if you had told Jahn Tihansky, owner J/ World Annapolis,
that he would be the head coach of the U.S Naval Academy (USNA) varsity
offshore sailing team, he would have told you that you were nuts. With a
sailing school to run, he wasn't exactly looking for work - certainly
not the kind which would consume 60 or 70 hours per week in sailing
season. But, opportunity knocked.
After much debate, as well as some prodding from Annapolis sailor Gary Jobson, (who's a "rainmaker," says Tihansky), who assured him that it was the opportunity of a lifetime, the business owner had to quickly find a way to make his school run without him and immerse himself into his new challenging post. Six years later, Coach T, as the midshipmen call him, is still surprised at his good fortune and how well the pieces have come together.
A native of Tampa, FL, Tihansky's family joined the Davis Island YC "because it had a pool." Curiosity and courage enough to hitch a ride on a Cal 27 at the age of 12 led him deep into the sport. "The crew figured out that I'd do anything on the boat from open beers to set the spinnaker, so they taught me to sail," he says, which opened the door to yacht deliveries and many years of interesting racing experiences such as the 1978 Key West to Cuba Race.
After having run his own Sobstad loft as a young man and a stint at Sobstad's corporate headquarters in Connecticut, Tihansky moved to Annapolis where he worked for Sobstad for four years before his opportunity to run J/World Annapolis and in 1993, to buy the sailing school.
It was his brainchild, the J/World big boat winter training program - during which students would train for and successfully compete in big regattas such as the Fort Lauderdale to Key West Race and Key West Race Week - that fit the type of coaching experience USNA was seeking.
What makes the USNA offshore sailing team unique is that beyond winning sailboat races, participation on the team counts as professional leadership development. "Other sports just can't compare to a kid leading a team of seven to prepare a big boat to go to Bermuda or even down the Bay," says Tihansky, who says that coaches are on the boats as mentors, but the team runs the boat.
"It's a huge responsibility to learn to take care of an asset and take care of teammates. In the tough situations, that's when your character comes out - you're puking and cold. It's 2 a.m., and you're called on watch. The crew must perform. They have to drive, trim sails, navigate, and compete. We do sail to sail well." -- The Stern Scoop from APS Ltd, read on.
After much debate, as well as some prodding from Annapolis sailor Gary Jobson, (who's a "rainmaker," says Tihansky), who assured him that it was the opportunity of a lifetime, the business owner had to quickly find a way to make his school run without him and immerse himself into his new challenging post. Six years later, Coach T, as the midshipmen call him, is still surprised at his good fortune and how well the pieces have come together.
A native of Tampa, FL, Tihansky's family joined the Davis Island YC "because it had a pool." Curiosity and courage enough to hitch a ride on a Cal 27 at the age of 12 led him deep into the sport. "The crew figured out that I'd do anything on the boat from open beers to set the spinnaker, so they taught me to sail," he says, which opened the door to yacht deliveries and many years of interesting racing experiences such as the 1978 Key West to Cuba Race.
After having run his own Sobstad loft as a young man and a stint at Sobstad's corporate headquarters in Connecticut, Tihansky moved to Annapolis where he worked for Sobstad for four years before his opportunity to run J/World Annapolis and in 1993, to buy the sailing school.
It was his brainchild, the J/World big boat winter training program - during which students would train for and successfully compete in big regattas such as the Fort Lauderdale to Key West Race and Key West Race Week - that fit the type of coaching experience USNA was seeking.
What makes the USNA offshore sailing team unique is that beyond winning sailboat races, participation on the team counts as professional leadership development. "Other sports just can't compare to a kid leading a team of seven to prepare a big boat to go to Bermuda or even down the Bay," says Tihansky, who says that coaches are on the boats as mentors, but the team runs the boat.
"It's a huge responsibility to learn to take care of an asset and take care of teammates. In the tough situations, that's when your character comes out - you're puking and cold. It's 2 a.m., and you're called on watch. The crew must perform. They have to drive, trim sails, navigate, and compete. We do sail to sail well." -- The Stern Scoop from APS Ltd, read on.
Sunday, January 29, 2012
J/105 Loving South Africa's Southerly Busters!
(Capetown, South Africa)- It seems that a bunch of fun-loving sailors in
South Africa decided that some of the bigger J's might be good offshore
boats for the gear-busting conditions often seen of the tip of South
Africa. In recent years, both a J/105 and a J/133 have shown up on the
local racing scene and have been enjoying themselves often as leaders of
the pack. We recently got a heart-warming note from one of our J/105
owners, Dwayne Assis, proud owner of J/105 #591 called PANTS ON FIRE!
Here's Dwayne's story:
"Hi J/Team- By the way here are some images of my J/105 PANTS ON FIRE and another J/133 JACANA participating in Simon’s Town’s Spring Regatta in South Africa in September 2011.
My crew of 3 and I sailed the J/105 from Cape Town round Cape Point (my first rounding) in very pleasant weather (thank goodness) a few days before the regatta. First J/105 rounding the notorious Cape of Storms? I certainly think so!
We competed in a return race from Simon’s Town to Cape Town after the Spring Regatta and completed the course in 6 hours 16 min beating into a mild South-easterly to the Point and enjoying a marvelous run all the way to Cape Tow-- broaching spectacularly under masthead A2 on the finish line as the South-easterly wind crept up to 35 kts! We finished 4th on club handicap behind the J/133 (1st) an Archambault 35 (2nd) and a Beneteau 44.7 (3rd) beating a Simonis 42, Farr 40, Lavranos 52 and some others.
Coming up on February 24-25 is the annual downwind dash from Cape Town to the huge, wildly luxurious Mykonos resort in Langebaan Lagoon some 60nm north of Cape Town. Last year’s race attracted over 100 entries! It's fun! Pictured here is how they start to promote the regatta, my oh my!
Keep up to date with the event and the Royal Cape Yacht Club sailing scene at http://www.rcyc.co.za. Please note, our resident photographer Trevor Wilkins has a sailing photo collection here.
Regards from Sunny South Africa! Dwayne"
"Hi J/Team- By the way here are some images of my J/105 PANTS ON FIRE and another J/133 JACANA participating in Simon’s Town’s Spring Regatta in South Africa in September 2011.
My crew of 3 and I sailed the J/105 from Cape Town round Cape Point (my first rounding) in very pleasant weather (thank goodness) a few days before the regatta. First J/105 rounding the notorious Cape of Storms? I certainly think so!
We competed in a return race from Simon’s Town to Cape Town after the Spring Regatta and completed the course in 6 hours 16 min beating into a mild South-easterly to the Point and enjoying a marvelous run all the way to Cape Tow-- broaching spectacularly under masthead A2 on the finish line as the South-easterly wind crept up to 35 kts! We finished 4th on club handicap behind the J/133 (1st) an Archambault 35 (2nd) and a Beneteau 44.7 (3rd) beating a Simonis 42, Farr 40, Lavranos 52 and some others.
Coming up on February 24-25 is the annual downwind dash from Cape Town to the huge, wildly luxurious Mykonos resort in Langebaan Lagoon some 60nm north of Cape Town. Last year’s race attracted over 100 entries! It's fun! Pictured here is how they start to promote the regatta, my oh my!
Keep up to date with the event and the Royal Cape Yacht Club sailing scene at http://www.rcyc.co.za. Please note, our resident photographer Trevor Wilkins has a sailing photo collection here.
Regards from Sunny South Africa! Dwayne"
Villanova Wins College Regatta Video Contest
* Villanova Wins First-Ever Intercollegiate Offshore Regatta Video Contest-
Sailors captured the breeze from a creative angle during a video
challenge at the Larchmont Yacht Club and Storm Trysail Foundation 2011
Intercollegiate Offshore Regatta (IOR), which took place over Columbus
Day Weekend. Nearly 85% of the 47 boat fleet were J's- ranging from
J/105s to J/109s to J/122s! During the two-day event, 30 HD Flip video
cameras, donated to the Foundation by Storm Trysail Club members Rick
Lyall (owner of the J/109 STORM) and Barry Gold (owner of a J/122 and
J/105), were made available so that each sailing team had the
opportunity to document as much action as possible onboard their boats
and dockside before and after racing as well as during social events.
This week, Villanova University, with sophomore Scott Barnhill
(Baltimore, Md.) serving as video editor, was declared the winner of the
video challenge (click to view video) and will receive a $1,500
donation made out to its sailing team.
“We’re in a big fundraising stage for our team, so this a fantastic boost for us,” said Barnhill, adding that it was Villanova’s first time attending the event and that it certainly lived up to its reputation as the world’s largest, if not most exciting, college regatta. Over 400 collegiate sailors from across the country raced on the placid waters of Long Island Sound off Larchmont, N.Y. They sailed on 47 offshore boats, which were lent for the weekend by private owners. The boats ranged in size from 35 to 44 feet.
“The cameras really brought everyone together; you saw a lot of people come forward to share their creative ideas with each other,” said Barnhill. “Looking back, the level of footage that we got to work with was fantastic because we had cameras in so many different places. It is impossible to be at every spot and to capture all the shots, but because we had all those cameras we were able to document the whole event.”
Once the regatta had concluded, the footage, which totaled over 50 hours, was uploaded to a server, and each team was challenged to turn the collective work into a short video that would best capture the atmosphere of the event. “The video that Villanova submitted not only met the criteria of the contest, but it was a superior effort that will serve to show what this regatta is all about and help the Storm Trysail Foundation and Larchmont Yacht Club build interest in the event,” said IOR Regatta Chairman Adam Loory.
“We will definitely run the contest again in the future,” Loory added. “Having cameras on all the boats and in the hands of so many different shooters let us cover the regatta so much better than just one or two professional photographers, and we have a lot of good footage that was left on the cutting room floor, so to speak, that we will be able to use in other projects.” To watch the winning sailing video, click here.
“We’re in a big fundraising stage for our team, so this a fantastic boost for us,” said Barnhill, adding that it was Villanova’s first time attending the event and that it certainly lived up to its reputation as the world’s largest, if not most exciting, college regatta. Over 400 collegiate sailors from across the country raced on the placid waters of Long Island Sound off Larchmont, N.Y. They sailed on 47 offshore boats, which were lent for the weekend by private owners. The boats ranged in size from 35 to 44 feet.
“The cameras really brought everyone together; you saw a lot of people come forward to share their creative ideas with each other,” said Barnhill. “Looking back, the level of footage that we got to work with was fantastic because we had cameras in so many different places. It is impossible to be at every spot and to capture all the shots, but because we had all those cameras we were able to document the whole event.”
Once the regatta had concluded, the footage, which totaled over 50 hours, was uploaded to a server, and each team was challenged to turn the collective work into a short video that would best capture the atmosphere of the event. “The video that Villanova submitted not only met the criteria of the contest, but it was a superior effort that will serve to show what this regatta is all about and help the Storm Trysail Foundation and Larchmont Yacht Club build interest in the event,” said IOR Regatta Chairman Adam Loory.
“We will definitely run the contest again in the future,” Loory added. “Having cameras on all the boats and in the hands of so many different shooters let us cover the regatta so much better than just one or two professional photographers, and we have a lot of good footage that was left on the cutting room floor, so to speak, that we will be able to use in other projects.” To watch the winning sailing video, click here.
J-Sailors Ken Read & Iker Martinez Leading Volvo Race
* Fellow J-Sailors Ken Read on PUMA and Iker Martinez on TELEFONICA
are now back to real "live" ocean-racing on their Volvo 70s in the
Volvo Ocean Race. They're now sailing the Maldives (Indian Ocean) to
Sanya, China leg. Ken had this to say about the experience for Leg 3-
"And now we are off. Sailing the leg that really nobody looks forward to
when they sign up for this race. Upwind for about a million miles!" So
far, in the tight, tactical racing relished by Ken and his PUMA MAR
MOSTRO gang, they're currently leading the fleet into the Singapore
Straits before making a long left turn to head north up to Sanya (a
gorgeous, almost Hawaiian-like island that is China's southernmost point
of land).
Saturday, January 28, 2012
Winter Sailboat Shopping Season
(The World)- While our friends in the Southern Hemisphere are "simply
messing around on their boats" in the height of "Mid-summer series" and
having a ball, their northern neighbors are still feeling like they're
either living in an icebox or on the verge of becoming Eskimos
themselves. Nevertheless, since most all northern "winter" boatshows
are indoors (other than SoCal & Florida), it's a great time to get
out and socialize with friends and take a look at some of the latest J's
that are making headlines around the globe. Here's a shortlist for you
globe-trotting J sailors to consider visiting in the near future:
San Diego Sunroad Boat Show- from Jan 26-29, the southern California J/Dealer JK3 Yachts will be showcasing an exciting lineup of new boats at the upcoming San Diego Boat Show. Come by the show to see the J/95 and for info on the new J/70 – the latest hotrod from J/Boats. Please note, JK3 is hosting a reception on Sunday for J/Boat Owners, Fans and Friends as well. For more info contact JK3 at ph- 619-224-6200, email- jeff@jk3yachts.com or http://www.jk3yachts.com. For more Sunroad Boatshow information
Strictly Sail Chicago- from Jan 26-29 at Navy Pier- the J/111 on display is an example of the boat that dominated the two Mackinac Races this past year in 2011. Also, please visit J/105 Fleet 5- Lake Michigan at Booth #204E where J/105 fleet members will be happy to discuss with you the virtues of low-key, fun J/105 class participation. Please be sure to contact Richard Stearns at Stearns Boating- ph-312-994-9153 or email- rich@stearnsboating.com For more Chicago Strictly Sailboat Show information
Gothenburg Boatshow- from Feb 4-12- to be sure the J/108 will be displayed very comfortably indoors at the Gothenburg Show in Sweden! Come on in and enjoy classic Swedish hospitality in the most enjoyable surroundings one might possibly imagine- with healthy Swedish hostesses addressing any of the craziest questions one might ask as it relates to DSPL/L, BMax/ BWL, Sprit Extension/ SPL Midgirths and Prismatic Coefficients/ High VCG ratios. Please be sure to arrange for a personal tour with Henning Mittlesman- ph- 49-4642 2722/ info@mittelmannswerft.de/ www.JBoats.de For more Gothenburg Boatshow information
Boston/ New England Boatshow- from Feb 11-19 - on display comfortably in-doors in a wonderfully warm ambiance will be the Hill & Lowden display that will be showcasing the J/111. Please be sure to come by, convince them to give you a "lobster roll & beer"- contact Rich Hill and George Lowden at ph- 781-631-3313 or hilllowden@aol.com For more Boston Boat Show information
San Diego Sunroad Boat Show- from Jan 26-29, the southern California J/Dealer JK3 Yachts will be showcasing an exciting lineup of new boats at the upcoming San Diego Boat Show. Come by the show to see the J/95 and for info on the new J/70 – the latest hotrod from J/Boats. Please note, JK3 is hosting a reception on Sunday for J/Boat Owners, Fans and Friends as well. For more info contact JK3 at ph- 619-224-6200, email- jeff@jk3yachts.com or http://www.jk3yachts.com. For more Sunroad Boatshow information
Strictly Sail Chicago- from Jan 26-29 at Navy Pier- the J/111 on display is an example of the boat that dominated the two Mackinac Races this past year in 2011. Also, please visit J/105 Fleet 5- Lake Michigan at Booth #204E where J/105 fleet members will be happy to discuss with you the virtues of low-key, fun J/105 class participation. Please be sure to contact Richard Stearns at Stearns Boating- ph-312-994-9153 or email- rich@stearnsboating.com For more Chicago Strictly Sailboat Show information
Gothenburg Boatshow- from Feb 4-12- to be sure the J/108 will be displayed very comfortably indoors at the Gothenburg Show in Sweden! Come on in and enjoy classic Swedish hospitality in the most enjoyable surroundings one might possibly imagine- with healthy Swedish hostesses addressing any of the craziest questions one might ask as it relates to DSPL/L, BMax/ BWL, Sprit Extension/ SPL Midgirths and Prismatic Coefficients/ High VCG ratios. Please be sure to arrange for a personal tour with Henning Mittlesman- ph- 49-4642 2722/ info@mittelmannswerft.de/ www.JBoats.de For more Gothenburg Boatshow information
Boston/ New England Boatshow- from Feb 11-19 - on display comfortably in-doors in a wonderfully warm ambiance will be the Hill & Lowden display that will be showcasing the J/111. Please be sure to come by, convince them to give you a "lobster roll & beer"- contact Rich Hill and George Lowden at ph- 781-631-3313 or hilllowden@aol.com For more Boston Boat Show information
Friday, January 20, 2012
Key West- Day Five- Classic Key West, Spectacular Finale!
LE TIGRE Three-Peats J/80s, J/122 TEAMWORK Wins PHRF/ J-Class
(Key West, FL)- Today is what everyone dreams about when sailing Key West. Gorgeous light bouncing off the pearl white sands creating a neon blue water color. Steady, oscillating ESE gradient breeze with near trade-wind like consistency flowing along at 10-15 knots. Solid race committee and PRO management making for fun, fair racing on mostly windward-leeward courses. One cannot imagine that anyone would be disappointed by such spectacular weather conditions.
While Thursday's sailing saw breezes in the NE quadrant, Friday's final day of sailing saw mostly ENE breezes that hardly fluctuated more than 15 degrees in direction. The key was staying in wind pressure and ensuring you sailed the lifted tack as long as possible. Some boats hit the corners and when they did it usually turned into a disaster-- corner shots sometimes pay in Key West, but not this week. For the most part, so long as you played the wind shifts and the wind pressure you could always stay in the hunt with the race leaders.
It was a runaway in the 18-boat J/80 class as Glenn Darden steered LE TIGRE to a steady stream of first, second and third place results. John Gluek was serving as tactician on LE TIGRE, winning with an 18-point lead over second place ROCAD RACING skippered by Mikael Lindqvist from Stockholm, Sweden.
LE TIGRE was named Mount Gay Rum Boat of the Day for winning the class which had the closest, most competitive racing for the day on Thursday. The boat is co-owned by Reese Hillard, who works the bow while Karl Anderson trims the jib aboard the Forth Worth, Texas entry. They captured the J/80 World Championship in 2006 and got the three-peat for Key West!
“Our team really meshed well. We’ve had a lot of time in the boat and that makes a big difference,” Darden said. “John has done a great job of keeping us in phase and everyone else is just doing their job at a high level.”
The next three places in the J/80s were a horse-race to the very end of the regatta. Snagging third place by virtue of a 5-5 on the last day was Ron Buzil on VAYU 2 for a total of 48 pts. Fourth place went to the fast-climbing veteran J/80 campaigners, John Storck Jr and family on RUMOR finishing with a 3-8 to get fourth overall with 50 pts. Behind them in fifth place was Chris & Liz Chadwick on CHURCH KEY with a 9-9 for a total of 53 pts. The SAIL Best Around Buoys Team, Ryan Glaze and the Scott brothers hung tough against some top J/80 teams and managed to finish off with a 6-3 for 54 points, good enough for sixth place.
SAILING WORLD'S Mike Lovett had a quick interview with this fast team: "What was the most fun is that the conditions were up and down, shifting around," says tactician John Gluek, who is president of Dimension-Polyant. "It was all about staying calm and not panicking, deciding a side that's favorable and digging through the fleet to get there, and shifting gears. From five to ten to fifteen knots, there's a range of adjustments [we] make that is really the speed, that's the gas pedal."
Trimmer Karl Anderson is the team's gear-changer. "We try to keep the boat rolling, fully powered up," he says. "There's a lot of small adjustments you can make that are minor adjustments, but they all add up. The trick is to have it all in sync with the trim of the boat and the pressure on the sails. In that way, it's a little back to dinghy sailing. When the wind drops, we try to focus on making the boat go faster forward. We'll heel the boat to make it easier for the helmsman, and we try to keep everybody from freaking out! When everybody's working together, we're able to work through those lights spots."
Of course, skipper Glenn Darden prefers to avoid the light spots altogether. "What John [Gluek] did was keep us in the breeze," says Darden. "There were big breeze lanes—more than shifts, there were breeze lanes—and John kept us in these lanes. A couple of races, we didn't get off the line as well as we wanted, we were a little bit behind, and up the first beat we weren't looking great. John had the patience to work us into better lanes."
Gluek explains his wind-hunting method: "Today was what I call lake sailing, where you had to be patient. You couldn't hit a corner; you couldn't say it's right or left. You had to go with the velocity and move up the water, a little like skiing down a slalom course."
In the PHRF One Division, the sailing could not have been more interesting and more fun competitively amongst the ten boats sailing in the division. Many incredibly well-sailed boats, all with great teamwork, good tacticians, great boat speed. There was nowhere to hide amongst the top six boats, it was a tough battle every single race to scrap for every place you could get as each and every team sought to make incremental gains against one another-- perhaps some of the best "almost one-design" racing one could find sailing handicap racing. On this last day, the moderate conditions seemed to be working well for Robin Team's J/122 TEAMWORK (pictured at right) and Paul Stahlberg's J/111 MENTAL, each compiling a 1-2 record to be the "J-Boat of the Day". At the end of the day, the late charge by MENTAL was not enough to overcome the strong showing of TEAMWORK on the first two days/ five races of the series. Robin's team on TEAMWORK sailed a fantastic series to win with a total of 22 pts. Second by virtue of their three 1sts and two 2nds on the last two days was Paul's MENTAL team from Chicago, IL, good enough for 26 pts. Finishing fourth overall was Bill Sweetser's veteran J/109 RUSH with a 4-3 for the day and Doug Curtiss' J/111 WICKED 2.0 sailed to a 5-5 for a total of 43 pts to snag fifth place in class. Gary Weissberg's J/109 HEATWAVE sailed a strong last day to get a 6-7 and finish sixth in class.
Within the J/Division (PHRF Time-on-Time), Robin's J/122 TEAMWORK won the class with a 1-3 on the last day for 20 pts. Second was determined on a tie-breaker, with Bill's J/109 RUSH with a 3-2 on the final day to snag 2nd place. Losing the tie-breaker was Paul's J/111 MENTAL with a 2-1 for 23 pts to secure third place. Sailing their J/111 WICKED 2.0 well was Doug Curtiss' team that included skipper Ted Scott and tactician Neal Fowler (both Tufts Sailing Team classmates of the Editor), securing a 4-4 on the last day to finish fourth in class. Debuting for his first time in Key West was Gary Weisberg's team on the J/109 HEATWAVE, sailing to a 5-6 to get fifth overall in the J/Class.
In the PHRF Two Division, Gerrit Schulze sailed strongly on the J/105 MAX POWER to finish fourth overall in class with a 4-5 on the last day. Ed and Justin Palm's J/95 STILL CRAZY sailed to a 6-7 to get sixth place and Dave Whealon's J/80 BOND---JAMES BOND sailed to 9th overall.
In the IRC Three Division, Jim Bishop on the IRC Modified J/44 WHITE GOLD had a serious battle on their hands going into the last day for second place on the podium. However, despite their valiant efforts to overcome stiff competition, the 2-4 was just not enough to win this cliff-hanger to get onto the podium. The WHITE GOLD crew missed 2nd place by one point and their two competitors in themselves had to settle the score on a tie-breaker at 33 pts each!
Photo credits- Tim Wilkes- http://www.timwilkes.com
For more Quantum Key West Race Week sailing results:
http://www.premiere-racing.com
(Key West, FL)- Today is what everyone dreams about when sailing Key West. Gorgeous light bouncing off the pearl white sands creating a neon blue water color. Steady, oscillating ESE gradient breeze with near trade-wind like consistency flowing along at 10-15 knots. Solid race committee and PRO management making for fun, fair racing on mostly windward-leeward courses. One cannot imagine that anyone would be disappointed by such spectacular weather conditions.
While Thursday's sailing saw breezes in the NE quadrant, Friday's final day of sailing saw mostly ENE breezes that hardly fluctuated more than 15 degrees in direction. The key was staying in wind pressure and ensuring you sailed the lifted tack as long as possible. Some boats hit the corners and when they did it usually turned into a disaster-- corner shots sometimes pay in Key West, but not this week. For the most part, so long as you played the wind shifts and the wind pressure you could always stay in the hunt with the race leaders.
It was a runaway in the 18-boat J/80 class as Glenn Darden steered LE TIGRE to a steady stream of first, second and third place results. John Gluek was serving as tactician on LE TIGRE, winning with an 18-point lead over second place ROCAD RACING skippered by Mikael Lindqvist from Stockholm, Sweden.
LE TIGRE was named Mount Gay Rum Boat of the Day for winning the class which had the closest, most competitive racing for the day on Thursday. The boat is co-owned by Reese Hillard, who works the bow while Karl Anderson trims the jib aboard the Forth Worth, Texas entry. They captured the J/80 World Championship in 2006 and got the three-peat for Key West!
“Our team really meshed well. We’ve had a lot of time in the boat and that makes a big difference,” Darden said. “John has done a great job of keeping us in phase and everyone else is just doing their job at a high level.”
The next three places in the J/80s were a horse-race to the very end of the regatta. Snagging third place by virtue of a 5-5 on the last day was Ron Buzil on VAYU 2 for a total of 48 pts. Fourth place went to the fast-climbing veteran J/80 campaigners, John Storck Jr and family on RUMOR finishing with a 3-8 to get fourth overall with 50 pts. Behind them in fifth place was Chris & Liz Chadwick on CHURCH KEY with a 9-9 for a total of 53 pts. The SAIL Best Around Buoys Team, Ryan Glaze and the Scott brothers hung tough against some top J/80 teams and managed to finish off with a 6-3 for 54 points, good enough for sixth place.
SAILING WORLD'S Mike Lovett had a quick interview with this fast team: "What was the most fun is that the conditions were up and down, shifting around," says tactician John Gluek, who is president of Dimension-Polyant. "It was all about staying calm and not panicking, deciding a side that's favorable and digging through the fleet to get there, and shifting gears. From five to ten to fifteen knots, there's a range of adjustments [we] make that is really the speed, that's the gas pedal."
Trimmer Karl Anderson is the team's gear-changer. "We try to keep the boat rolling, fully powered up," he says. "There's a lot of small adjustments you can make that are minor adjustments, but they all add up. The trick is to have it all in sync with the trim of the boat and the pressure on the sails. In that way, it's a little back to dinghy sailing. When the wind drops, we try to focus on making the boat go faster forward. We'll heel the boat to make it easier for the helmsman, and we try to keep everybody from freaking out! When everybody's working together, we're able to work through those lights spots."
Of course, skipper Glenn Darden prefers to avoid the light spots altogether. "What John [Gluek] did was keep us in the breeze," says Darden. "There were big breeze lanes—more than shifts, there were breeze lanes—and John kept us in these lanes. A couple of races, we didn't get off the line as well as we wanted, we were a little bit behind, and up the first beat we weren't looking great. John had the patience to work us into better lanes."
Gluek explains his wind-hunting method: "Today was what I call lake sailing, where you had to be patient. You couldn't hit a corner; you couldn't say it's right or left. You had to go with the velocity and move up the water, a little like skiing down a slalom course."
In the PHRF One Division, the sailing could not have been more interesting and more fun competitively amongst the ten boats sailing in the division. Many incredibly well-sailed boats, all with great teamwork, good tacticians, great boat speed. There was nowhere to hide amongst the top six boats, it was a tough battle every single race to scrap for every place you could get as each and every team sought to make incremental gains against one another-- perhaps some of the best "almost one-design" racing one could find sailing handicap racing. On this last day, the moderate conditions seemed to be working well for Robin Team's J/122 TEAMWORK (pictured at right) and Paul Stahlberg's J/111 MENTAL, each compiling a 1-2 record to be the "J-Boat of the Day". At the end of the day, the late charge by MENTAL was not enough to overcome the strong showing of TEAMWORK on the first two days/ five races of the series. Robin's team on TEAMWORK sailed a fantastic series to win with a total of 22 pts. Second by virtue of their three 1sts and two 2nds on the last two days was Paul's MENTAL team from Chicago, IL, good enough for 26 pts. Finishing fourth overall was Bill Sweetser's veteran J/109 RUSH with a 4-3 for the day and Doug Curtiss' J/111 WICKED 2.0 sailed to a 5-5 for a total of 43 pts to snag fifth place in class. Gary Weissberg's J/109 HEATWAVE sailed a strong last day to get a 6-7 and finish sixth in class.
Within the J/Division (PHRF Time-on-Time), Robin's J/122 TEAMWORK won the class with a 1-3 on the last day for 20 pts. Second was determined on a tie-breaker, with Bill's J/109 RUSH with a 3-2 on the final day to snag 2nd place. Losing the tie-breaker was Paul's J/111 MENTAL with a 2-1 for 23 pts to secure third place. Sailing their J/111 WICKED 2.0 well was Doug Curtiss' team that included skipper Ted Scott and tactician Neal Fowler (both Tufts Sailing Team classmates of the Editor), securing a 4-4 on the last day to finish fourth in class. Debuting for his first time in Key West was Gary Weisberg's team on the J/109 HEATWAVE, sailing to a 5-6 to get fifth overall in the J/Class.
In the PHRF Two Division, Gerrit Schulze sailed strongly on the J/105 MAX POWER to finish fourth overall in class with a 4-5 on the last day. Ed and Justin Palm's J/95 STILL CRAZY sailed to a 6-7 to get sixth place and Dave Whealon's J/80 BOND---JAMES BOND sailed to 9th overall.
In the IRC Three Division, Jim Bishop on the IRC Modified J/44 WHITE GOLD had a serious battle on their hands going into the last day for second place on the podium. However, despite their valiant efforts to overcome stiff competition, the 2-4 was just not enough to win this cliff-hanger to get onto the podium. The WHITE GOLD crew missed 2nd place by one point and their two competitors in themselves had to settle the score on a tie-breaker at 33 pts each!
Photo credits- Tim Wilkes- http://www.timwilkes.com
For more Quantum Key West Race Week sailing results:
http://www.premiere-racing.com
Thursday, January 19, 2012
Key West- Day Four- Tricky Sailing Day
Good Day For MENTAL Crew!
(Key West, FL)- After Wednesday's sailing was thankfully canceled due to lack of wind, everyone was looking forward to another nice day of sailing Thursday. The forecasts all showed a front passing over the Keys in the early morning hours followed by NNE wind blowing 7-13 knots with clearing skies during the day. Remarkably, the forecasters got it right!
Thursday's sailing was an enormous challenge, a lot like the first two days of sailing when the wind is filling behind a large frontal system headed out to sea over the Bahamas. No telling whether the wind will back or veer and whether or not the forecasts are remotely accurate. Why? The combination of the fast-moving, 85 degree river known as the Gulf Stream and exceedingly warm waters over the Bahamas Banks are renown for killing many a front, much to the chagrin of even the most experienced weather forecasters. The day's racing started off with about an hour postponement-- wise move. The wind was shifting a good 20-30 degrees with enormous fluctuations in velocity. Once the wind settled down, it certainly oscillated like crazy with large wind streaks filling in from both sides of the course. There was no "magic bullet", just keep your head out of the boat and stay on top of developing breezes (or massive, glassy holes in the wind) and keep the boat moving towards the mark uphill or downhill. Starboard tack saw headings vary from 345 to 005 degrees and on port from 45 to 80 degrees. No question the tacticians anywhere on all three courses were suffering moments of stark terror and extreme anxiety as boats from BOTH corners of the course were making gains!
For the J/80s, the Glenn Darden/ Reese Hillard team on LE TIGRE continued to knock out strong, consistent scores, avoiding corners and sailing super fast. Their 2-3-1 tally enabled them to extend their lead to a solid 18 points over the closest rivals for a total of 14 pts in 8 races-- not bad, just below a 2nd average! Making a comeback after a slow day Tuesday was Mikael Lindqvist on ROCAD RACING with a 4-1-4 for a total of 32 points. The next three places in the J/80s are in a horse-race for the silver and bronze on the podium. Just 3 points back from ROCAD RACING is that fast rising CHURCH KEY team led by Chris and Liz Chadwick with a 1-5-3 for 35 pts total. Three points back are Ron Buzil on VAYU 2 sailing to a 5-2-5 and just one point back are another fast-climbing team, the past North American Champion team, the Storck family sailing their RUMOR to a 6-4-2 for 39 pts. The high-flying SAIL Best Around Buoys Team, Ryan Glaze and the Scott's from the famous lake yacht club, Rush Crush YC, in Dallas, Texas had a rough day, accumulating a 3-10-12 to drop into 6th with 45 pts. Check out the latest video by Adam Cort on the SAIL BAB blog with a debrief of Tuesday’s racing with skipper Ryan Glaze.
http://www.sailmagazine.com/key-west-race-week/best-around-buoys-quantum-kwrw-2012
In the PHRF One Division, the lighter conditions started to create a changeover in the standings as some boats excelled and others took a nose-dive. Savoring the conditions was Paul Stahlberg's J/111 MENTAL, compiling a 2-1-1 record to be the "J-Boat of the Day", for a total of 23 pts, good enough for third place. Still leading the division is Robin Team's J/122 TEAMWORK with yet another consistent performance, scoring a 4-3-2 to be leading PHRF One by one point for 19 pts. Dropping into fourth place is Bill Sweetser's J/109 RUSH with a 3-4-6 for a total of 28 pts. Laying in fifth is Doug Curtiss' J/111 WICKED 2.0 with a 5-2-3 for 33 pts.
Within the J/Division (PHRF Time-on-Time), Robin's J/122 TEAMWORK continues to lead the pack with a 3-4-2 for 16 pts. Second is Mr. Bill's J/109 RUSH with a 1-1-4 for 18 pts. Third is Paul's J/111 MENTAL with a 2-2-1 for 20 pts.
“We’re having a great time because the conditions have been terrific and the competition has been spectacular,” said Team, who has his brother and two sons in the crew. “We’ve been mixing it up with Tres Hombres and finished overlapped with them in the first two races today. RUSH is also tough so I think it will be a dogfight the whole way.”
RUSH, a J/109 skippered by Bill Sweetser and team of Annapolis (pictured right), was named LEWMAR/ NAVTEC BOAT OF THE DAY on Tuesday after posting a superb score line of 3-2-1. Quantum pro Tad Hutchins is calling tactics on RUSH. “The conditions were very good for us today. When the wind is 14 knots or less we can fly our big jib, which is kind of like our secret weapon,” Sweetser said. “We pay for that jib in our rating so it’s good whenever we can use it.” It’s been close but no cigar for Rush at Key West as Sweetser’s boat has finished first or second in class several times, but never come away as overall winner at week’s end. “One of these years we’re going to finally break through and it’s going to be wonderful,” he said. Here's a YouTube Interview with the RUSH crew:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5jK1rtZXkyo
In the PHRF Two Division, Gerrit Schulze sailed strongly on the J/105 MAX POWER to stay in 4th place with a 7-5-4. Ed and Justin Palm's J/95 STILL CRAZY is hanging in for sixth place and Dave Whealon's J/80 BOND---JAMES BOND are enjoying themselves and hanging in 9th overall.
In the IRC Three Division, Jim Bishop on the IRC Modified J/44 WHITE GOLD got a 3-5-2 for a total of 28 pts, exactly 2 pts out of second place overall! We wish him well on Friday.
Amongst the J sailors, champions and alumni in other racing divisions, it's pretty clear they're having a dominating impact on both IRC Divisions and other one-design divisions. Top amongst them is long-time J/80 sailor Ben Schwartz, now leading the notoriously pro-heavy M32 Class with his boat PISCES over such notables as John Kilroy on SAMBA PA TI. Sailing with him is America’s Cup veteran and J/24 World Champion Ed Baird calling tactics and Quantum professional and J/24 Champion Scott Nixon trimming the jib and spinnaker. “You have to give Ed and Scott a lot of credit for getting our boat up to speed,” said Ben. “I’m fortunate to have a great crew, the guys never stopped working and we were able to change gears pretty well.”
POWERPLAY lived up to its name by making a strong move in IRC 2/ TP52 class with a strong line of 1-3-4 on Tuesday and a 2-6.5-3 today. Owner Peter Cunningham, a resident of Georgetown in the Cayman Islands and a champion J/22 sailor locally, has a nice mix of amateur and professional crew with tactician Tony Rey from Newport (yet another top J/24 sailor). “We’ve only had the boat for six months and we’ve made a lot of modifications during that time,” Cunningham said. “We’re pretty happy with our performance so far. We’re sailing fairly well and having a lot of fun.”
QUANTUM RACING, skippered by former J/24 and J/44 owner Doug DeVos, continues to set the pace in the 52-foot class and leads PowerPlay by 14 points. Terry Hutchinson, helmsman for the Swedish syndicate Artemis Racing that is Challenge of Record for the America’s Cup and a J/24 World Champion, has made strong tactical calls in leading Quantum to the top of the leader board. “Tuesday was far from straightforward. The wind was very shifty and there are some tricky current patches to deal with,” Hutchinson said.
Photo credits- Tim Wilkes- http://www.timwilkes.com
For more Quantum Key West Race Week sailing results:
http://www.premiere-racing.com
(Key West, FL)- After Wednesday's sailing was thankfully canceled due to lack of wind, everyone was looking forward to another nice day of sailing Thursday. The forecasts all showed a front passing over the Keys in the early morning hours followed by NNE wind blowing 7-13 knots with clearing skies during the day. Remarkably, the forecasters got it right!
Thursday's sailing was an enormous challenge, a lot like the first two days of sailing when the wind is filling behind a large frontal system headed out to sea over the Bahamas. No telling whether the wind will back or veer and whether or not the forecasts are remotely accurate. Why? The combination of the fast-moving, 85 degree river known as the Gulf Stream and exceedingly warm waters over the Bahamas Banks are renown for killing many a front, much to the chagrin of even the most experienced weather forecasters. The day's racing started off with about an hour postponement-- wise move. The wind was shifting a good 20-30 degrees with enormous fluctuations in velocity. Once the wind settled down, it certainly oscillated like crazy with large wind streaks filling in from both sides of the course. There was no "magic bullet", just keep your head out of the boat and stay on top of developing breezes (or massive, glassy holes in the wind) and keep the boat moving towards the mark uphill or downhill. Starboard tack saw headings vary from 345 to 005 degrees and on port from 45 to 80 degrees. No question the tacticians anywhere on all three courses were suffering moments of stark terror and extreme anxiety as boats from BOTH corners of the course were making gains!
For the J/80s, the Glenn Darden/ Reese Hillard team on LE TIGRE continued to knock out strong, consistent scores, avoiding corners and sailing super fast. Their 2-3-1 tally enabled them to extend their lead to a solid 18 points over the closest rivals for a total of 14 pts in 8 races-- not bad, just below a 2nd average! Making a comeback after a slow day Tuesday was Mikael Lindqvist on ROCAD RACING with a 4-1-4 for a total of 32 points. The next three places in the J/80s are in a horse-race for the silver and bronze on the podium. Just 3 points back from ROCAD RACING is that fast rising CHURCH KEY team led by Chris and Liz Chadwick with a 1-5-3 for 35 pts total. Three points back are Ron Buzil on VAYU 2 sailing to a 5-2-5 and just one point back are another fast-climbing team, the past North American Champion team, the Storck family sailing their RUMOR to a 6-4-2 for 39 pts. The high-flying SAIL Best Around Buoys Team, Ryan Glaze and the Scott's from the famous lake yacht club, Rush Crush YC, in Dallas, Texas had a rough day, accumulating a 3-10-12 to drop into 6th with 45 pts. Check out the latest video by Adam Cort on the SAIL BAB blog with a debrief of Tuesday’s racing with skipper Ryan Glaze.
http://www.sailmagazine.com/key-west-race-week/best-around-buoys-quantum-kwrw-2012
In the PHRF One Division, the lighter conditions started to create a changeover in the standings as some boats excelled and others took a nose-dive. Savoring the conditions was Paul Stahlberg's J/111 MENTAL, compiling a 2-1-1 record to be the "J-Boat of the Day", for a total of 23 pts, good enough for third place. Still leading the division is Robin Team's J/122 TEAMWORK with yet another consistent performance, scoring a 4-3-2 to be leading PHRF One by one point for 19 pts. Dropping into fourth place is Bill Sweetser's J/109 RUSH with a 3-4-6 for a total of 28 pts. Laying in fifth is Doug Curtiss' J/111 WICKED 2.0 with a 5-2-3 for 33 pts.
Within the J/Division (PHRF Time-on-Time), Robin's J/122 TEAMWORK continues to lead the pack with a 3-4-2 for 16 pts. Second is Mr. Bill's J/109 RUSH with a 1-1-4 for 18 pts. Third is Paul's J/111 MENTAL with a 2-2-1 for 20 pts.
“We’re having a great time because the conditions have been terrific and the competition has been spectacular,” said Team, who has his brother and two sons in the crew. “We’ve been mixing it up with Tres Hombres and finished overlapped with them in the first two races today. RUSH is also tough so I think it will be a dogfight the whole way.”
RUSH, a J/109 skippered by Bill Sweetser and team of Annapolis (pictured right), was named LEWMAR/ NAVTEC BOAT OF THE DAY on Tuesday after posting a superb score line of 3-2-1. Quantum pro Tad Hutchins is calling tactics on RUSH. “The conditions were very good for us today. When the wind is 14 knots or less we can fly our big jib, which is kind of like our secret weapon,” Sweetser said. “We pay for that jib in our rating so it’s good whenever we can use it.” It’s been close but no cigar for Rush at Key West as Sweetser’s boat has finished first or second in class several times, but never come away as overall winner at week’s end. “One of these years we’re going to finally break through and it’s going to be wonderful,” he said. Here's a YouTube Interview with the RUSH crew:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5jK1rtZXkyo
In the PHRF Two Division, Gerrit Schulze sailed strongly on the J/105 MAX POWER to stay in 4th place with a 7-5-4. Ed and Justin Palm's J/95 STILL CRAZY is hanging in for sixth place and Dave Whealon's J/80 BOND---JAMES BOND are enjoying themselves and hanging in 9th overall.
In the IRC Three Division, Jim Bishop on the IRC Modified J/44 WHITE GOLD got a 3-5-2 for a total of 28 pts, exactly 2 pts out of second place overall! We wish him well on Friday.
Amongst the J sailors, champions and alumni in other racing divisions, it's pretty clear they're having a dominating impact on both IRC Divisions and other one-design divisions. Top amongst them is long-time J/80 sailor Ben Schwartz, now leading the notoriously pro-heavy M32 Class with his boat PISCES over such notables as John Kilroy on SAMBA PA TI. Sailing with him is America’s Cup veteran and J/24 World Champion Ed Baird calling tactics and Quantum professional and J/24 Champion Scott Nixon trimming the jib and spinnaker. “You have to give Ed and Scott a lot of credit for getting our boat up to speed,” said Ben. “I’m fortunate to have a great crew, the guys never stopped working and we were able to change gears pretty well.”
POWERPLAY lived up to its name by making a strong move in IRC 2/ TP52 class with a strong line of 1-3-4 on Tuesday and a 2-6.5-3 today. Owner Peter Cunningham, a resident of Georgetown in the Cayman Islands and a champion J/22 sailor locally, has a nice mix of amateur and professional crew with tactician Tony Rey from Newport (yet another top J/24 sailor). “We’ve only had the boat for six months and we’ve made a lot of modifications during that time,” Cunningham said. “We’re pretty happy with our performance so far. We’re sailing fairly well and having a lot of fun.”
QUANTUM RACING, skippered by former J/24 and J/44 owner Doug DeVos, continues to set the pace in the 52-foot class and leads PowerPlay by 14 points. Terry Hutchinson, helmsman for the Swedish syndicate Artemis Racing that is Challenge of Record for the America’s Cup and a J/24 World Champion, has made strong tactical calls in leading Quantum to the top of the leader board. “Tuesday was far from straightforward. The wind was very shifty and there are some tricky current patches to deal with,” Hutchinson said.
Photo credits- Tim Wilkes- http://www.timwilkes.com
For more Quantum Key West Race Week sailing results:
http://www.premiere-racing.com