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Rolex Big Boat Series
Posted 2 months, 19 days ago
Rolex Big Boat Series
www.Sail-Search.com: Although the grey fogged-over conditions around the St. Francis Yacht Club seemed to deter spectators from gathering along the shore, building 10-15 knot breezes on San Francisco Bay were the only thing on the minds of competitors in the 111-boat fleet racing in the Rolex Big Boat Series. Principal Race Officers Kevin Reeds (Annapolis, MD) and Jim Taylor (San Francisco) started the fleet on time at 11am for the first of the day's two races. By the end of racing, some six hours later, each competing boat had accumulated close to 30 miles under its keel. In IRC C, Dave Kirby's (Manhattan Beach, CA) J/122 TKO took the lead from John Siegel (San Francisco) and his Wylie 42 Scorpio. "So far, so good," said Kirby of racing to date. Noting that the boat excels in conditions similar to today's wind range, Kirby explained that when it gets fluky, local knowledge comes in handy. "Norman Davant is the best tactician on this body of water," he said. "He nailed it. We port tacked the fleet at the first start and stayed in front and led for the whole race." By the second race, the wind speed had increased, making things a little tricky not just for TKO, but for its competition. "Our main competition is Scorpio," continued Kirby. "They ended up over early and we ended up nailing the start. Fortunately we were able to hold off the Sydney 38s, which are faster than us but they give us time. It's hard to stay in front of them, they have symmetrical spinnakers and ours (spinnaker set-up) is a sprit. When going downwind they can bring the pole right back and drive lower." In addition to Davant, who when not racing is the regatta's chairman, StFYC board member Pat Nolan is among the 11-person crew. "The crew on the boat, they're an amazing bunch of people," said Kirby. "So you know we're happy right now. We're in first by three points. We're not launched out in front of everybody, but we're comfortable in first. But, we're not going to sit back and relax." Leaders in IRC A, B and C classes remain unchanged with Chip Megeath's (Tiburon, CA) Reichel/Pugh 45 Criminal Mischief leading IRC A; Brad Copper's (Point Richmond, CA) Custom Tripp 43 TNT leading IRC B; and White Dove, the Beneteau 40.7 owned by Mike Garl (San Francisco) leading IRC C. In one-design action, Mario Yovkov's (San Francisco) Great Sensation moved up from third place to take over the lead in the 7-boat 1D35 class, while Edward Durbin (Richmond, CA) continued to lead the 6-boat Beneteau 36. 7 class. For the J/120s, a small yet very competitive class, Barry Lewis' (San Francisco) Chance took over the lead from Steve Madeira's (Northeast Harbor, ME) Mr. Magoo in the 8-boat class. "This was an interesting day because there were more wind shifts than what is typical here," said Lewis. "It was wonderful because we got in phase and stayed; we played every one that we could possibly play." Lewis noted that he relied on tactician Doug Nugent (San Francisco) to put them in the best spot. "My plan was to go left early," said Nugent, who grew up sailing in Toronto, Canada. "But then there was a 20-degree left shift on the starting line and we ended up going off to the right, which was not what we wanted to do. We hung with the lift, it came back and we crossed the fleet. We played the shifts and stayed in front the whole race.it was a lucky shift!" Bartz Schneider (San Francisco) on Expeditious continued his winning ways, scoring a first and second place, and remains in the lead of the 10-boat Express 37 fleet. Brown Sugar, owned by Steve Brown (Santa Ana, CA) won the day's other race and is in third overall behind second-place Golden Moon, owned by Kame Richards (Alameda, CA). The top four positions in the 31-boat J/105 fleet held with Chris and Phil Perkins (both San Francisco) scoring a first and sixth, to edge out Rolf Kaiser and Scott Sellers (both San Francisco) Donkey Jack by one point. Scooter Simmons (Belvedere, CA) and his Blackhawk won the day's second race and are in third overall. Joe Fly, Giovanni Maspero San Francisco, Sail No.: ITA999, Skipper: Giovanni Maspero, Boat Type: Melges 32 Photo Credit: ROLEX/Carlo Borlenghi Michael Illbruck had an impressive day in the Melges 32 fleet on his Pinta (Munich, GER), scoring a second and first place to take over the lead from John Porter (Lake Geneva, WI) on Full Throttle. Pieter Taselaar (New York, NY), who counts among his crew young standout Jeremy Wilmot, from the Morning Light film, and multiple America's Cup competitor and Whitbread winner Marco Constant. Racing continues tomorrow and ends with one, long Bay Tour race on Sunday. At the conclusion, St. Francis Yacht Club will host the Rolex Trophy Ceremony where specially engraved Rolex timepieces will be awarded to the St. Francis Yacht Club's six Perpetual Trophy winners. Full Throttle, John Porter San Francisco, Sail No.: USA-32, Skipper: John Porter, Boat Type: Melges 32 Photo Credit: ROLEX/Carlo Borlenghi Full Story »
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