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(La Trinite sur Mer, France)- Of the 423 boats sailing, over 130 alone
were J/Teams (31% of the entire fleet) and, it's safe to say, that after
the first day of racing many were wondering how they were going to
survive the chilling weather forecasts for the next four days of
sailing. Facing unusually cold, windy conditions for this traditional
Easter Regatta, the competitors woke up three mornings in a row to
temperatures in below 0 C. (under 32 degrees F), winds blowing 15-25 kts
for two of the days. Over the course of the regatta, dropouts were not
uncommon, especially with the smaller one-designs-- several people were
"med-evac'd" to the hospital using RIBS for treatment of hypothermia.
After a freezing rainy and windy Thursday, the next two days were
relatively quiet. However, on Sunday, the last day of racing saw a
return to the strong winds and an icy northeast breeze gusting to thirty
knots! While some suffered, others rubbed their hands with glee. For
Eric Brezellec and his tactician, Sebastien Col, the last day of breeze
left them ashore. Their J/80, INTERFACE CONCEPT, did not have to sail
the last race as they had already won the regatta the day before!
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Others
in the J/80 class were less fortunate. The phrase "caught a cold" fits
perfectly with the beginning of the competition and for those that
endured it for four days. The OMANI SAIL girls team, in particular, had
a tough challenge for them, sailing in conditions they've never
experienced in their lives-- icy cold rain, hail, and huge winds. Said
Nicolas Honor, the head of the OMANI SAIL team, "the shock was violent,
they'd never seen hail, much less sailed in less than 0 deg C! After
hoisting their spinnaker on the first day, the decided to return to home
port-- a good idea and I understand!"
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For
the rest of the J/80 teams, it was a battle to overcome cold as well as
the challenge of sailing smart. In the beginning, ATLANTIS's Louis
Sambron gave Brezellec's crew on INTERFACE CONCEPT some tough battles.
But, a 19-5-38 on Saturday killed their chances of being a contender for
the lead. The same was true for Michael Vasquez's GOLD SAILING from
Spain, accumulating a 7, BFD and 14 to drop them from contention as
well. Then, the team on GENERALI led by Nicolas Lunven compounded
finishes of 10-9-10 over the first 7 races with a 26th in race 9 on
Saturday to torpedo their chances as well. In the end, while
Brezellec's win was a "runaway", a total score over ten races of 12
points (seven 1sts, 2,3 as counters), the fight for the balance of the
top five was a dog fight, to say the least. In the end, Vazquez's team
on GOLD SAILING hung in to finish 2nd overall, a full thirty points back
from Brezellec's with 42 pts. Lying third just one point back was
Lunven's GENERALI with 43 pts. One point back in fourth was Sambron's
ATLANTIS with 44 pts and rounding out the top five watching all the
drama unfold before him was Simon Moriceau's team on INTERFACE CONCEPT
2.
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As
for the J/70s, suffering no less than their counterparts in the J/80s,
the cold was equally taxing on their abilities to sail fast and smart
and not be too "numb" from the chilly, windy sailing conditions. In the
end, perhaps the ultimate survivor was M Thomas skippering OEUST
GREEMENT, winning the J/70 class by just one point! The top four places
were so close, that the last race determined how the entire top five
finished in the overall standings. Second was Fred Bouvier of
J/Composites sailing J BECRE. Third was M. Kerscaven sailing PL YACHTING
with 24 pts. Fourth was FLAHAULT MARINE sailed by M. Ferchaud, perhaps
sailing the most "dyslexic" series- five 1sts and three 10ths!
Rounding out the top five was M. Chapelot sailing ALBERTO.
In the world of IRC racing, many crews either dropped out, replaced
crews, or spent time keeping crew-members warm. With just 18 boats, IRC
4A may well be one of the smaller IRC divisions, but it's incredibly
competitive. And, up to that task was the J/97 MISPICKEL V sailed by B.
Fagart, capturing a 5th overall in the difficult weather.
Finally, the "little boat" division is IRC 4B with 40 boats thrashing
around the race track freezing their butts off for most of the regatta,
much like their colleagues in the J/70s and J/80s. And, none other than
the "classic" J/24, now over 35 years young, managed to sporting a
fleet of six boats to duel it out for J/24 "bragging rights". In the
end, top J/24 was INSULARIS's A. Garcia taking 7th in class. Second
J/24 was MARTA's P. Lemaistre taking 9th in class. And, third J/24 was
BOLERO's P. Ravel. Until next year! May it be much warmer for all
sailors in the third weekend of April- Easter Weekend 2014! For
more SPI OUEST France Intermarche sailing information