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2011 Audi MedCup Circuit: One Month until the start in Cascais

April 20, 2011

With one month left until the first start guns fire to open an exciting 2011 Audi MedCup Circuit, the Circuit organizers and the race teams are finalizing preparations to unfold the seventh successive year of Circuit racing, one which will see regattas returning successively to Cascais, Marseille, Cagliari, Cartagena and with the season’s finale in Barcelona.           

Audi MedCup Circuit © Stefano Gattini_Studio BorlenghiAudi MedCup

Audi MedCup Circuit © Stefano Gattini_Studio BorlenghiAudi MedCup

As did the Portuguese jewel last season, Cascais by Lisbon starts the season with the Trophy of Portugal running from May 16th – 22nd. The Circuit then returns to Marseille for the fourth year in a row (June 14-19th), to the historic capital city of Sardinia Cagliari (July 19th to 24th) to Murcia where the ever-popular Cartagena hosts the Region of Murcia Trophy (August 23rd to 28th) while the Catalan capital of Barcelona, which proved such an all-encompassing venue when the Audi MedCup Circuit visited for the first time in 2010, will host the finale between September 12th and 17th.

The winning formula has changed little for this season. Each city hosts an individual stand-alone Trophy regatta, but it is the aggregate points over the entire season, for the 52 Series and the S40 Series which will determine the overall champions.

Audi MedCup Circuit © Stefano Gattini_Studio BorlenghiAudi MedCup

Audi MedCup Circuit © Stefano Gattini_Studio BorlenghiAudi MedCup

“Returning to venues that are known to us is an advantage for everyone in terms of continuity. And the cities keep building and improving on their past years’ formula. And for the organisaton and the race crews that streamlines and improves the logistics. We have also accumulated good data on weather reliability, which makes providing high quality race management and equable racing more straightforward”, says Ignacio Triay, Director of the Audi MedCup Circuit.

Dates and Venues

Cascais, Trophy of Portugal, May 16th to 22nd

Marseille, June 14 to19th

Sardinia, July 19th to 24th

Cartagena, August 23rd to 28th

Barcelona, September 12th and 17th

Audi MedCup Circuit © Stefano Gattini_Studio BorlenghiAudi MedCup

Audi MedCup Circuit © Stefano Gattini_Studio BorlenghiAudi MedCup

Although the itinerary of venues has a familiar look, the TP52 fleet has been invigorated with a host of new boats and new faces.
Among those with new boats Quantum Racing (USA) and Synergy (RUS) will campaign very similar brand new Botín Partners designs which have been built by Longitud Zero. Of course Marcelino Botín and his team have won overall honours with their winning designs in 2008, 2009 and 2010, but Rolf Vrolijk has new TP52’s for Audi Sailing Team powered by All4ONE (FRA/GER), Audi Azzurra (ITA), RÀN (SWE/GBR) and Container (GER), to two noticeably different designs. Vrolijk also designed Bribón (ESP), which was formerly Matador (ARG) and Gladiator (GBR) which was previously Artemis (SWE).

The transition to the 2011 TP52 box rule is completed with a new standardized 4800 kgs keel format which comprises a 1000kgs solid steel fin to support the 3800kgs bulb, which has made measurement of the fin and bulb more accurate and easier. Also the new 2011 rigs are no longer allowed high modulus carbon in the rig manufacture and since 2010 boats are built to the ISO Germanischer Lloyds classification, making for slightly heavier, more robust hull and deck.

Audi MedCup Circuit © Stefano Gattini_Studio BorlenghiAudi MedCup

Audi MedCup Circuit © Stefano Gattini_Studio BorlenghiAudi MedCup

Star recruits

Among the new faces for 2011, Quantum Racing stands out with the arrival of America’s Cup winner Ed Baird (USA) as skipper-helm, stepping into the shoes of Terry Hutchinson. The strong North-American campaign have been training hard to adapt to several crew changes but the core afterguard of Adrian Stead (GBR) and Kevin Hall (USA) remain as tactician and navigator. The core of the Italian Audi Azzurra presumably won’t need the same period to gel. They are predominantly Alberto Roemmers Argentinian Matador regulars who finished third in the 2010 Circuit, including skipper Guillermo Parada and the all Italian afterguard of strategist Vasco Vascotto, tactician Francesco Bruni and navigator Bruno Zirilli.

In its second season in the Circuit but their first with brand new boat Audi ALL4ONE is skippered Jochen Schuemann, four times Olympic medalist, who has said that “The team´s main goal will be to finish in the top three in the overall standings and to win at least one of the trophies“. Frenchman Sebastian Col will be helm again for the French-German team.

Synergy´s young helmsman Evgeny Neugodnikov is objective given his Russian team´s limited amount of training time with their new first brand new boat since their programme started out: 
“Especially in Cascais at the beginning of the Circuit, we will have our new boat, it´s our first regatta with it and we will take time to get used to it”, Neugodnikov has declared.

Skype co-founder Nikklas Zennstrom´s joins the TP52 Series for the first time on the heels of string of major offshore blue riband successes.
Rán, is one of the teams that has the pedigree and experience to succeed from the get-go. Under the guidance of Tim Powell (GBR) who has many years of experience in the MedCup Circuit, Gavin Brady (NZL) as tactician and Steve Hayles (GBR) as navigator.

Rán´s sister-ship, Udo Schütz´s Container, will also debut in Cascais with Markus Wieser at the helm and Hamish Pepper (formerly Artemis strategist/tactician) as tactician.

Wieser commented recently: “The project is a great opportunity to lead the team into a new dimension, a competition with a very skilled group”.

Lastly, Tony Langley´s new TP52 programme, Gladiator, steps up to the Audi MedCup Circuit in this season after an enjoyable experience with Weapon of Choice at the TP52 Class World Championships. With the 2009 Vrolijk design (former Artemis), the British team is one of five to prepare for the Circuit´s imminent start at Palma Vela regatta in Mallorca this coming weekend.

The first Soto 40s have been training too in the Mediterranean waters

2011 will be the debut year of the Soto 40 Series in the Audi MedCup Circuit. Iberdrola Team (ESP) and Ngoni (GBR), the first European boats have been training in the waters of Valencia over recent weeks. Noticia IV (ESP), Patagonia (ARG) and XXII (ESP) are expected to land in Spain presently.

They were built in Argentinaby M Boats, where the first Soto 40 was launched in only two years ago and 20 have already been built. The Soto 40, is the Circuit’s new strict one-design boat with of 40 feet long and displaces 4200kgs.

The Audi MedCup Circuit is the world’s leading regatta circuit.

The Circuit is made up of five events that take place over five months in four countries over southern Europe.

Trophy 1 : Tuesday 17th – Sunday 22nd May

Trophy 2 : Tuesday 14th – Sunday 19th June

Trophy 3 : Tuesday 19th – Sunday 24th July

Trophy 4 : Tuesday 23nd – Sunday 28th August

Trophy 5 : Monday 12th – Saturday 17th September

Dates confirmed for Les Voiles St. Barth 2012

April 19, 2011

With the extremely successful 2011 edition of the Les Voiles de St. Barth recently completed, the organizing team is already hard at work focusing on the third edition of this major Caribbean yachting event, Les Voiles St. Barth 2012. The dates of April 2 – 7, 2012 have officially been announced to competitors on the 48 boats that, this year, took advantage of idyllic conditions on the waters off St. Barth.

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 © Christophe Jouany

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 © Christophe Jouany

“Everyone was so pleased with the concept of four days of racing in brilliant sunshine and windy conditions combined with a day to enjoy all the sybaritic pleasures of life ashore,” said Event Organizer François Tolède.  “It all but guarantees the success of the 2012 Les Voiles de St. Barth.” Ken Read (Newport, R.I.), skipper of the Maxi yacht Rambler 100, which won the 2011 event, has encouraged the organisers “not to change a thing, as it all seems perfect to me.” But Tolède, along with Race Logistics Director Luc Poupon and with the support of all the event partners, is determined to come up with an event that is even more festive ashore and just as “perfect” out on the water.

Short music video of action aboard race winner Rambler 100 at Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 Credit: Amory Ross / Les Voiles de St. Barth

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 brought together 48 yachts from 20 nations and in five classes. The event concept that delighted the sailors, skippers and owners, enabled just over 400 sailors to race on a wide range of courses around the island of St Barth and to enjoy some relaxation in the Caribbean sunshine once ashore.

Thanks to steady, strong winds, and powerful seas, the dreamy backdrop of the island, and the warm sunshine of St. Barth, the Les Voiles de St. Barth event was, in the words of several of the sailors who took part, “the ideal place to start the spring racing season.” From well-known yachtsmen Bruno Troublé, Jim Swartz and George David to top professional sailors Gavin Brady, Peter Holmberg and Bouwe Bekking, all 2011 participants look forward to next year’s edition of Les Voiles, with a fleet of racing and Maxi yachts that promise to continue growing.

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011: Second Edition a Wrap

April 13, 2011

The Weather Gods blessed St. Barthélemy from April 5 – 9, taking care to offer more than 400 competitors from 20 nations and on 48 yachts a week of perfect Caribbean sailing during the Les Voiles de St. Barth. Dominating the conditions were trade wind breezes that ranged from 17 – 32 knots, a fairly gentle Atlantic swell, and blue skies.  After four days of intense racing, separated by one day reserved for competitors and friends to discover this quaint little corner of France, the second edition of Les Voiles de St Barth seems to have etched out a place in the growing list of “must do” Caribbean events.

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011- Photo Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011- Photo Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Like for many new regattas, the best growth is slow and steady. The first edition of Les Voiles de St. Barth, in 2010, had 23 yachts, while this year the fleet grew to 48, and with positive reports coming back from competing sailors, that number can only grow. “What’s not to like?” was the commonly asked rhetorical question.  After winters in both the U.S. and Europe produced record snowfall and cold temperatures, an April trip to St Barth was a no-brainer for most.

The week kicked off with an opening ceremony and cocktails at the festive Race Village on the Quai General de Gaulle overlooking Gustavia Harbor.  This year’s Godfather of Les Voiles de St. Barth, singer/songwriter and sailor Jimmy Buffet, welcomed the competitors in English and French, a bilingual touch that would run throughout the week. Each night featured live music by a variety of bands along with tasty hors d’oeuvres provided by many of St. Barth’s finest restaurants.

Thinking already of 2012 ~

Event organizers Francois Tolede, Luc Poupon and Annelisa Gee were understandably pleased with the second edition of the event.  Tolede and his organizing committee are already busy planning for the 2012 Les Voiles de St. Barth. “We are well aware that we must continue and build on the event, following on the success of the 2011 edition,” said Tolede. “We are committed to excellence, both on the water and for the activities ashore.”

To counter balance the seriousness of the competition on the water, Les Voiles de St. Barth sought to highlight the friendly and festive spirit that presided over the event. “Imposing a day off in the middle of a week of competition was a gamble.  But it seems unanimous that this mix of good racing with maximum fun ashore is a good combination.”

While the sailors come here to make the most of the racing, the organizers are keen to showcase the St. Barth’s sybaritic pleasures, of which there are quite a few. Operation “gastronomy,” held on Friday evening, featured three of the top chefs on the island, and the mid-week party on the luxe Hotel Guanahani & Spa beach was emblematic of the successful spirit of Les Voiles.

Tolede emphasized the unrestrained involvement of the partners and suppliers and said, “The spirit that prevails at Les Voiles de St. Barth is thanks to all of our partners who believed in our concept.  Team organization, sponsors, suppliers; they are all deeply thanked, and we’ll meet again in April 2012!”  Race organizers plan to announce the dates for the 2012 edition within the next month.

Review of the week by class ~

Rambler 100: “A beast”

Faced with a daunting opponent of similar size, the 97-foot Dubois-designed Genuine Risk tapped into its resources, both technical and human, looking to exploit any weakness in the Juan Kouyoumdjian-designed maxi rocket ship Rambler 100.  A win of just two minutes on corrected time ensured Rambler 100 the advantage of the last race and consolidated its success.

Sailing Yacht Rambler at - Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011- Photo Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Sailing Yacht Rambler at - Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011- Photo Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Rambler 100, conceived and built for offshore racing and record setting, was partially crewed by Ken Read’s all-star around-the-world race team from Puma Ocean Racing, a group more accustomed to distance sprints.  According to skipper Ken Read, they came to St. Barth with some questions about their ability to perform on the shorter courses. “We are delighted with the way the boat handles and our ability to sail a hundred percent, even on the shorter courses,” said Read. 

No exercise proposed by technical director Luc Poupon and race committee chairman Jean Coadou could put off this giant maxi, which showed impressive power at all speeds on the often challenging routes between the islets and rocks, as well as on the long runs around the island.  Rambler finished 1-2-1-1 for the week, but still had a good sparring partner in the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy-owned Genuine Risk.  “It was very difficult to win,” said Read.  “Genuine Risk is a well-sailed boat, with a lot of the Swedish America’s Cup team onboard.  It’s a canting-keeled boat, different from ours, but still high performance. We had our work cut out for us.”

On the final day, Rambler 100 scorched around the course in two hours elapsed time, with Genuine Risk finishing 11 minutes behind.   On corrected time, Rambler sorted out to only two minutes ahead of their rival to win the Maxi class. Sir Peter Harrison’s Farr 115 sailing yacht Sojana, with such sailing talent aboard as Peter Holmberg, Lionel Pean, Jacques Vincent and Brian Thompson, finished third overall.

Vesper pulls out of the trap

In the Racing class, much was expected from the confrontation between Jim Swartz’s TP52 Vesper, with a crew comprised of top American and New Zealand sailors (including tactician Gavin Brady), and Peter Cunningham’s Farr 60 Venomous, with an equally competitive crew (including Tony Rey calling tactics).

Sailing Yacht Vesper at Les Voiles de Saint-Barth 2011 - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Sailing Yacht Vesper at Les Voiles de Saint-Barth 2011 - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Also posing a threat was the gang of strong Corinthian Dutch sailors on Willem Wester’s Grand Soleil 43 OT Antilope, unbeatable on their rounds of the top Caribbean regattas this season, and Raymond Magras’ Speedy Nemo, second last year at Les Voiles and whose crew was rife with local knowledge.

The group did not disappoint, with close racing and multiple lead changes. Antilope won the first race in 30+ knot winds and rough seas, but Vesper was up for the fight. After tearing two headsails, they finished under mainsail alone and still managed a second in that race to keep them in contention.

Long around-the-island courses and downwind legs satiated Vesper’s quest for speed, but the crew of Antilope kept the pressure on, and the team had to settle in the end for second overall. Speedy Nemo moved up to third overall on the final day, edging past Venomous.

Well fought in Racing Cruising

The Racing Cruising class consisted mainly of production boats, designed for both cruising and racing. With 24 boats, it was the largest class (including both spinnaker and non-spinnaker entries), with representation from the Dutch, French and British, as well as those from the regional stage of Antigua, St. Martin, St. Kitt’s and the U.S. and British Virgin Islands.

It all came down to the final race, which went to The Netherlands entry Nix and skipper Nico Cortlever. Nix completed Saturday’s 23-nautical mile race in a little less than three hours, which itself was a thrill for Cortlever, who finished last at the 2010 event.  The Dutch could have taken a double billing at the top of this group if the excellent performance of skipper Frans Vandyk on the First 50 Black Hole had been maintained, but after a strong start to the week, a 6-4 at the end left them in third overall.

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 Sailing yacht NIX - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 Sailing yacht NIX - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

 It was the determined James Dobbs and his relatively smaller J/122 Lost Horizon that showed perseverance to finish second. Dobbs, who began the week short on crew, found a couple of sailors and then lost them to prior commitments and minor injury. Then randomly, he lucked into a group of six competent female French sailors, whose prior race ride fell through.  They joined Lost Horizon mid-regatta and helped move it up in the standings with a first and a second at the end of the week, to finish second overall.

Mariella’s joie de vivre

Carlo Falcone was jubilant after leading Mariella, his venerable 1938 Bermudian yawl designed by Alfred Mylne, to victory in the Classic class. Four yachts competed in the class, which included Donald Tofias’ sleek W76 White Wings, skippered by Faraday Rosenberg. Falcone, who lives in Antigua, races with a crew of family and friends, which included the senior statesman of the event: an enthusiastic and very nimble Henry Pepper, who will turn 89 in May. Third overall was the stunning dark-hulled gaff yawl, Kate Dutch Sailing Team from St. Kitt’s.

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 Sailing yacht Mariella - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 Sailing yacht Mariella - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

 The Multis in a breeze 

Five multihulls competed this year: three catamarans and two trimarans.  It was John Winter’s 55-foot catamaran Fat Cat that prevailed to win over Stephane Penigaud’s St. Barth entry Bordelo, which ended up second.  In third was Erick Clement’s go-fast 40-foot trimaran Dauphin Telecom.  Meanwhile, the class suffered some dropouts with Lloyd Thornburg’s Gunboat 66 Phaedo suffering damage to their boom before the start of race one, and Herve Marolis’ Blanca losing her mast in race two.

What they said ~

Jim Swartz – Vesper, Racing class winner

“Today’s race (race four) was fantastic.  We went around the island, and it was very challenging; I think we used most of the sails in our inventory. It was a great day to be on the water. Last year we were third, and this year we came in first — I’ll always come back to St. Barth; anytime I have a chance I’ll be back.”

“The big attraction for me is the TP52s. There’s a group of 10-15 boats scattered through the U.S., and if we can get a group of them down here (the Caribbean) next year, that would be fabulous.”

 

Nico Cortlever – Nix, Racing Cruising class winner

“We are very happy that we did a good job here.  It was unexpected, because there is so much competition with boats that are on the same level. We were very lucky, I think. Our crew sailed really well. Next year, we’ll be here. The weather is great, the atmosphere great. There’s no reason not to be here!”

 

Ken Read, skipper – Rambler 100, Maxi class winner

On coastal course vs. windward-leewards: “Everything is cyclical. We’ve gone through a number of years with strict windward-leewards, and I think people get tired of it; I know I eventually did. I think these coastal courses are a blast. They are certainly horses for courses; the boats that get up and go on reaches certainly love these conditions even more. Quite frankly, I’m having fun not doing windward-leewards these days.”

On the boat and the Puma Ocean Racing Team: “This Rambler is clearly an animal…it’s a beast.  The old Rambler was a 90’ water-ballasted, big powerful boat. This boat is a whole new step.  One of the advantages of doing a race like this is I get to bring my VOR team, so the Puma Ocean Racing Team is here. It’s as much team building as it is learning how to sail boats like this. Obviously we’re here to try and win the event, but at the same time we’re learning more about each other. We’re about to spend a lot of time together in some pretty crummy conditions. So you really need to know people: what they’re all about, what button to push, or what not to push at certain times. So the combo of the Puma team and the Rambler team for these types of events has been successful so far, and everyone is getting along great.

About racing in the Caribbean vs. around the world: “After you come here to St. Barth, how do you actually step on another boat and sail into the middle of the Roaring Forties and dodge icebergs? That’s a good question.  I might have a mutiny on my hands, and there’s a pretty reasonable chance my wife is staying, and all of them (the crew) are staying as well, and I’m going to be sailing around singlehandedly!”

Carlo Falcone – Mariella, Classic class winner

“Mariella is an old lady, a little heavy. It takes a lot of wind, and that’s what we’ve had all week. It worked well for us, and we tried to make everything good wind speed. The result is excellent. I am sorry for our friend Donald (Tofias, skipper/owner of the W76 White Wings), but we have beaten them. We just have to rest our bodies, especially the liver, after all these festivities!”

Jerry Kirby, bowman – Rambler 100, Maxi class winner

“It’s fantastic! It reminds me of Antigua (Race Week) in the ‘70s. Anybody that isn’t at this regatta is missing probably the coolest regatta in the Caribbean. It’s got that feeling–it’s not crowded, it’s very intimate, and it’s unbelievable racing.”

Bruno Troublé - Sailing yacht SPIIP

“I was amazed to sail in St. Barth. The courses were wonderful; 20 knots all day. I will return, we had fun. We will return with a racing class boat.”

Les Voiles de Saint-Barth 2011 Overall Results ~

MAXI/SUPER YACHT class (after 4 races)
1: Rambler 100, George David/Ken Read (Hartford, Conn./Newport, R.I.) 5 points
2: Genuine Risk, Hugo Stenbeck (USA) 7 points
3: Sailing yacht Sojana, Peter Harrison/Marcus Fitzgerald (GBR) 12 points
4: S/Y Highland Breeze, Albert Keularts (NED) 16 points
5: Sail yacht SPIIP, Robin de Jong (FRA) 20 points
6: S/Y Django Too, Christophe Righezza (FRA) 28 points
7: Icarus, Barry Duck (GBR) 28 points

RACING class (after 4 races)
1: Vesper, Jim Swartz (Park City, Utah, USA) 5 points
2: Antilope, Willem Wester (NED) 7 points
3: Speedy Nemo, Raymond Magras (St. Barth, F.W.I.) 16 points
4: Venemous, Peter Cunningham (CAY) 20 points
5: Mae-Lia, Raphael Magras (St. Barth, F.W.I.) 20 points
6: Technomarine, Christian Deredec (FRA) 26 points
7: Puffy, Patrick Demarchelier (St. Barth, F.W.I.) 28 points
8: Solano, Frederic Rialland (FRA) 32 points
9: Panick Attack, Jan Van Den Eynde (St. Maarten, W.I.) 35 points
10: Spirit Of Juno, Rory Faulkner (GBR) 43 points

RACING CRUISING class (after 4 races)
1: Nix, Nico Cortlever (NED) 8 points
2: Lost Horizon, James Dobbs (Antigua, W.I.) 10 points
3: Black Hole, Jeroen Hin (GBR) 13 points
4: L’esperance, Bobby Velasquez (St. Maarten, W.I.) 16 points
5: Affinity, Jack Desmond (Boston, Mass., USA) 21 points
6: Coyote 2, M Van Oranje 22 points
7: Hotel California Too, Steve Schmidt (USA) 26 points
8: Fenix, Moritz Burmester (GBR) 29 points
9: Shamrock, Thomas Mullen (Campton, N.H., USA) 36 points
10: L’ile, Mowgli Fox (FRA) 41 points
11: Thula, Max Imrie (USA) 45 points
12: Triton, Boyd Taylor 55 points
13: Costa Mesa, Pascal Rey (St. Barth, F.W.I.) 56 points
14: Corban, Dan Harper (USA) 58 points
15: Tanagra, Andre Gahinet (FRA) 63 points
16: Mr Walker, Danielle de Luca (FRA) 66 points
17: Sugar Cane, André Reese 67 points
18: Diamonds Are Forever, Annie O’Sullivan (GBR) 72 points
19: Lancelot, Serge Maziero (FRA) 72 points
20: Ormeau, Alain Charlot (FRA) 79 points
21: Splendido, Philippe Hervouet 83 points
22: ilost, Hennecke Stegweg (NED) 87 points
23: Aegir, Gerard Beck 90 points
24: Tara II, Henry Albert (GER) 95 points

CLASSIC class (after 4 races)
1: Mariella, Carlo Falcone (Antigua, W.I.) 4 points
2: White Wings, Faraday Rosenberg (Newport, R.I.) 8 points
3: Kate Dutch Sailing Team, Philip Walwyn (St. Kitt’s, W.I.) 12 points
4: La Sirene, David Pertel (St. Barth, F.W.I.) 17 points

MULTI-HULL class (after 4 races)
1: Fat Cat, John Winter (USA) 4 points
2: Bordelo, Stephane Penigaud (St. Barth, F.W.I.) 12 points
3: Dauphin Telecom, Erick Clement (FRA) 13 points
4: Blanca, Hervé Marolis (FRA) 21 points
5: Phaedo, Lloyd Thornburg (St. Barth, F.W.I.) 24 points

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011: Down to the Wire

April 12, 2011

As if to ensure that competitors had seen all the beaches and sights that St. Barth has to offer, race officers today sent the 48-boat Les Voiles de St. Barth fleet on its final circumnavigation counter-clockwise around the eight-square mile island: a 30-nautical mile course for the Maxis, and a 23-nautical mile course for the Racing, Racing Cruising, Classics, and Multihulls.  This morning, rain clouds scudded over the island, which by the 1100 start time caused some impressive shifts in wind direction and velocity on the right side of the race course. Once around the southern end of the island, the boats were into a 17 knot east-southeasterly with a three-foot sea. While it qualified as the lightest wind speeds for the week, it still ranked as great sailing conditions.

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 Sailing yacht Rambler  - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 Sailing yacht Rambler - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

At the Maxi start, it was “all to play for” for Genuine Risk (USA), which trailed Rambler 100 (USA) by one point in the overall standings. With the pin end heavily favored, the Dubois-designed 97 footer came down the line on starboard, crossing Rambler’s bow and tacking over to weather at the gun.  The first beat to the offset was more like a fetch, which the big boats easily laid. Around the east side of the island, with spinnakers set, Genuine Risk managed to draw even with Rambler.  Though Rambler’s skipper Ken Read explained how it had shredded its running spinnaker in practice before the regatta, the canting-keeled 100-footer didn’t appear to suffer too much and made it around the race course in two hours flat. The USMMA-owned Genuine Risk did a great job of keeping the pressure on and finished 11 minutes behind, missing out on beating Rambler on corrected time by only two minutes.

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 Sailing yacht Sojana  - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 Sailing yacht Sojana - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Peter Harrison’s sailing yacht Sojana (GBR) 115-foot Farr design, with a who’s who of sailing talent including Peter Holmberg (St. Thomas, USVI) and French sailing legends Lionel Pean and Jacques Vincent, was hard-pressed against the two maxis and turned in a steady performance with a string of third places for third overall.

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 Sailing yacht Vesper - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 Sailing yacht Vesper - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

For the Racing class, a similar situation existed between Vesper (USA) and Antilope (NED), also a point apart. A win by Antilope would result in a tie that the Dutch boat would win in a count-back.  So in a bit of David and Goliath action, Antilope went after Vesper at the start line and tacked in front of them, trying to engage them in a match race on the first beat.  Vesper’s tactician Gavin Brady (Annapolis, Maryland) recalled that “before the start we talked about going after Antilope, and then decided to sail our own race. Then they came gunning for us!,” But the TP52 used its superior size and speed to make things difficult for the Grand Soleil 43 and managed to sail past its rival and push them back.

Brady described the somewhat tricky conditions, saying, “It was lighter today – well, 17 knots – so lighter for St Barth. We had a 40-degree wind shift in the rain shadow on the west side, and the breeze dropped to nine knots at one point. Then on the windward side there were some pretty big waves. We knew we couldn’t make any mistakes today. There were a lot of sail changes, and then we ripped one spinnaker and managed to nurse it into the bottom mark.” Vesper won Racing class overall with three wins and a second-place finish.

Local talent Raymond Magras, on Speedy Nemo (St. Barth), had a third-place finish today, which moved him up past Peter Cunningham’s Farr 60 Venomous and secured the team a third place overall.

In Racing Cruising, there were a handful of boats in contention for first overall going into the last race, including Nix, Lost Horizon, and Black Hole, and last year’s class winner L’Esperance from nearby St. Maarten. In the end, it was Nico Cortlever’s Nix (NED), with its second win of the week that prevailed.  James Dobbs’ J/122 Lost Horizon had been on a roll, moving up the rankings through the week, but was stopped just short of a win, correcting out today three minutes behind Nix to finish the week in second overall. Frans Vandyk’s chartered Beneteau First 50 Black Hole (NED) managed to tread water and maintain its third place overall.

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 Sailing yacht NIX - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 Sailing yacht NIX - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

In the Classics, Mariella had it all but locked up for the overall win before today’s race.  The majestic Fife yawl slipped around the island in three hours, securing her four wins in four races for first overall ahead of Donald Tofias’ (Newport, R.I.) graceful 76-foot W-class yacht White Wings. David Pertel’s (St. Barth) La Sirene finished the week in third place overall.

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 Sailing yacht Mariella - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 Sailing yacht Mariella - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

The Multihull class began the regatta with five boats, and by the final day was almost down to the last man standing as John Winter (USA) on the 80’ Fat Cat continued his sweep of the class with a fourth bullet. Eric Coulombel’s (FRA) 40-foot trimaran Dauphin Telecom finished second overall.

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

As the competing yachts crossed the finish line they were greeted by a tender manned with Les Voiles de St. Barth officials, who presented each of the crews with a bottle of Taittinger champagne – and thus putting a final French touch on a ritual that in other parts of the world involves iced cold beer.

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 Prizegiving

The prize giving took place at 6pm on the Quai General de Gaulle, where the winners of each class were presented their awards.

The winner of the Maxi class overall, George David from Rambler 100, was presented with a Richard Mille limited edition RM028 Voiles de St. Barth watch.

The winners of the Racing, Racing Cruising, Classic, and Multihull classes were presented with a week’s villa stay by WIMCO Villas and Sibarth Villas, which both specialize in luxury villa rentals.

Other awards were presented to class and daily race winners. The following event sponsors have supported Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011: 

Gaastra

Collectivité de Saint-Barthélemy

Banque des Antilles Françaises

Hôtel Guahanani & Spa

Association des Hôteliers de Saint-Barthélemy

Comité Territorial du Tourisme de Saint-Barthelémy

Coca-Cola

Champagne Taittinger

Mount Gay Rum

Following the prize giving, there was a Fireworks display over Gustavia Harbor at 8pm and a concert by the band “Days of Wild” at 9pm.

What they said ~

Ken Read (in advance of today’s race)

We give Genuine Risk a little over eleven minutes per hour, right around that range; so in a 30-mile race, an hour and a half, maybe. These boats are pretty quick; it’s pretty phenomenal how fast you can get around the track. You’re racing against the clock more than you’re racing against the other boat. We have to get to a point where we hardly see them, that’s really kind of the goal.

We like to reach.  They are a little quicker dead downwind and we owe them a lot of time. That’s not a perfect point of sail for us; upwind and reaching, that’s great. We have one problem; we blew up our running spinnaker practicing and that’s kind of put us behind the eight ball. No matter what, it’s a good, fun race course – this is the classic race course, that’s what you come here for.

Yesterday we did a nice job, had a good first beat, first reach, first few legs, and developed a nice cushion for ourselves. The day before, we just didn’t sail very well. I think if we sail well, we should be in reasonable shape.”

Ralf Steitz, Strategist on Genuine Risk, and Offshore Sailing Director at USMMA Sailing Foundation

“Genuine Risk is owned by the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy Sailing Foundation in King’s Point, N.Y. We have a bunch of Swedish people on board. We’ve done a collaboration where we’ve raced in the Pineapple Cup, St. Thomas, St. Maarten, and now St. Barth, and then we’re going to Antigua. We’re trying to get young people into sailing as much as we can, and have as much fun as we can.

“It’s spectacular sailing here in St. Barth…sailing around the rocks that are not in the right place. I know the rocks have been there for a long time, but the chart makers haven’t caught up. So, it’s entertaining, it’s fun, the conditions are awesome, the people are nice, and we’re having a ball! Today we’re going to stick it to the Rambler guys, we’re going to beat them and win the regatta – it’s perfect!

“We may lose some of the guys to the French women. They’re very beautiful, so the guys are very excited about that. They’re not used to nude beaches in the U.S., and in Sweden it’s too cold.

Jim Swartz, Vesper yacht:

“I’ve been here a number of times, but this is our second time sailing in this regatta; it’s one of my favorites really.  What’s not to like about the food, and everything French, so it’s a real treat. And the sailing’s fantastic: predictable winds, big seas, and blue water – its fabulous!

“We’re the new kid on the block, so we’ll have a run for right now, and then another boat will come along. But for now, it’s fun.

“The big attraction for me to get into the TP52’s? I like one-design racing, a box rule, where handicaps aren’t so important. There are a number of boats being built every year, and a lot of them are finding their way to the used market. There’s a group of 10-15 boats scattered through the U.S., and if we can get a group of them down here next year, that would be fabulous.”

Nico Cortlever, Sailing yacht Nix

“We are very happy that we did a very good job here; we didn’t expect it. There’s so much competition here, as equal qualities as we, so we were just lucky. The time difference (between the boats) is very small, so we are very close, and you know almost immediately how you did.

“We have an excellent team from my sailing club in Loosdrecht, The Netherlands. Yesterday we had a problem; we had a lobster pot under the keel. We couldn’t get it off, so we were only fourth. So, we had to be first today to win the overall.”

Place, Boat Name, Skipper, Race 1-2-3-4, Total Points

MAXI

1) Rambler 100, Ken Read (Newport, R.I.), 1-2-1-1, 5.0 points

2) Genuine Risk, Hugo Stenbeck (USA), 2-1-2-2, 7.0 points

3) Sojana, Marc Fitzgerald (GBR), 3-3-3-3, 12.0

RACING

1) Vesper, Jim Swartz (Park City, Utah), 2-1-1-1, 5.0 points

2) Antilope, Willem Wester (NED), 1-2-2-2, 7.0

3) Speedy Nemo, Raymond Magras (St. Barth, FWI), 4-5-4-3, 16.0

RACING CRUISING

1) Nix, Nico Cortlever (NED), 2-1-4-1, 8.0 points

2) Lost Horizon, James Dobbs, (Antigua, W.I.), 4-3-1-2, 10.0

3) Black Hole, Frans Vandyk (NED), 1-2-6-4, 13.0

CLASSIC

1) Mariella, Carlo Falcone (ITA), 1-1-1-1, 4.0 points

2) White Wings, Faraday Rosenberg (Newport, R.I.), 2-2-2-2, 8.0

3) Kate Dutch Sailing Team, Philip Walwyn (St. Kitt’s, W.I.), 3-3-3-3, 12.0

MULTIHULL

1) Fat Cat, John Winter (USA), 1-1-1-1, 4.0 points

2) Bordelo, Stephane Penigaud (St. Barth, FWI), 2-2-3-5, 12.0

3) Dauphin Telecom, Erick Clement (FRA), 6-3-2-2, 13.0

Sailing yacht Brindabella to circumnavigate Australia

April 12, 2011

Whitsunday blue water sailor Ian Thomson set a lonely record when he sailed alone around Australia last year. His challenge under the Save Our Seas banner gained international media recognition during and after the marathon voyage. He will be chasing further fame next month as an important crew member when Australia’s most famous offshore racing maxi yacht Brindabella now owned by Jim Cooney sets a course to circum-navigate Australia in under 37 days.

Sailing yacht Brindabella - Photo Credit Mainsheet Media

Sailing yacht Brindabella - Photo Credit Mainsheet Media

Sailing yacht Brindabella designed by Scott Jutson and launched in 1993 for original owner George Snow is a super fast conventional deep keel yacht and only needs similar wind conditions which Ian Thomson experienced during his successful solo voyage in 2010 to eclipse the present record of 37 days 1 Hour 23 minutes 7 seconds set by David Pescud’s Sailors with Disabilities crew in 2003.

The super sloop named after the Brindabella Range near Canberra has broken and still holds the records in the Audi Sydney to Gold Coast, Sydney to Noumea and Sydney to Mooloolaba races.

Original owner George Snow navigator Lindsay May and Geoff Cropley along with a crew of high profile blue water racing yachtsmen also have the distinction of averaging 14.03 knots the fastest ever recorded for a conventional ballast yacht in the 65 year history of the Rolex Sydney Hobart Race.

Owner Jim Cooney will be challenging previously uncharted waters when he and Ian Thomson set sail in the 2011 Qantas-Link Brisbane to Gladstone race on Good Friday April 22.

S/Y Brindabella, while setting line honours records in other Australian blue water classics will line up against dual line honours winner the Peter Harburg owned and Mark Bradford skippered Black Jack and Bruce Absolon’s Hamilton Island Yacht Club sloop Spirit of the Maid and the 2010 Audi Hamilton Island Race Week ‘Gun Boat’ in a big boat shoot out for the line honours trophy.

Size and sail power suggests the Peter Millard skippered Lahana which broke the Club Marine Brisbane to Keppel race record in 2010 heads the pre-race favouritism along with smaller maxi-chaser Black Jack while Brindabella, Spirit of The Maid and the Marcus Blackmore skippered Hooligan have the speed potential, crew endurance and skill to set the pace at the head of the fleet.

This annual coastal classic will serve as a full scale evaluation trial for the 17 member crew Brindabella crew before they set sail from Sydney in May for the anticlockwise passage around Australia’s coast in the bid to add another record entry in the log book.

It will be a physically demanding challenge for owner Jim Cooney, Ian Thomson and the Brindabella crew but at least they have the proven yacht and if any yacht can do it then Brindabella can.

Porto Cervo to host the 2011 Audi TP52 World Championship

April 12, 2011

The 2011 Audi TP52 World Championships will be hosted by the Yacht Club Costa Smeralda on the famous waters of Sardinia’s Porto Cervo.

Porto Cervo to host the 2011 Audi TP52 World Championship © Stefano Gattini

Porto Cervo to host the 2011 Audi TP52 World Championship © Stefano Gattini

The world renowned waters of Sardinia’s Porto Cervo will be the venue for the 2011 Audi TP52 World Championships as the Yacht Club Costa Smeralda (YCCS) hosts to the regatta from the 2nd to the 8th of October. The last time that the TP52 World Championships were hosted on these waters was the 2007 edition, won by Sweden’s Torbjorn Tornqvist ‘s Artemis.

Once again the event is expected to attract a high level of sailors including the defending champions Quantum Racing (USA) who won the title in Valencia last year. And for the Audi Azzurra Sailing Team, the crew which together won the 2009 world title in Palma ahead of Quantum Racing, will be racing on home waters under the flag of the host club.

The racing will comprise five days of windward-leeward racing including one coastal race.

Nacho Postigo, Technical Director of the Audi MedCup Circuit, says “this year the worlds will take place at Azzurra’s home club and those guys know those waters very well. But I think that we have seen in recent years that the result will stay open till the very end. And the difference with the worlds is that we start from zero, the Audi MedCup will be just finished. As Americans say, it will be a “one shot” week, winner takes the title. In my opinion anything’s possible”.

Antigua Sailing Week 2011: Maxi Priest to perform live

April 09, 2011

Antigua Sailing Week prides itself on delivering the sparkling racing conditions that have competitors grinning from ear to ear and the fun doesn’t stop ashore either. The Lay Day Eve is often the chosen night for race crew to let their hair down, during the regatta and everybody in Antigua is in for a rare treat.

Maxi Priest

Maxi Priest

The most successful reggae solo artist in the world, second only to legend Bob Marley, will be performing live on Tuesday 26th April at Antigua Sailing Week. Shirley Heights Lookout will be the stunning setting for the concert with panoramic views high above English and Falmouth Harbours and the magical Caribbean Sea beyond.

Maxi Priest has a distinctive style of reggae fusion with a huge string of hits on both sides of the Atlantic and around the globe. He is one of only two British reggae acts to have an American Billboard number one.  A duet with Roberta Flack reached the American Top Ten and his double act with Shaggy was also a big hit in the United States. Maxi Priest has had a long association with UB40, including a recent sell out UK tour. Maxi Priest last performed live in Antigua in 2008.

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Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011: Maxi sailing Yachts Genuine Risk and Rambler tied

April 08, 2011

Following two spectacular days of racing punctuated by strong breezes sweeping across the Caribbean, the Les Voiles de St. Barth shifted into “lay day” gear today. Understandably, the approximately 400 owners, skippers and crew competing here — on 48 boats from 17 countries — wanted to make the most of their stay on St. Barth, so some took advantage of the rest, relaxation and entertainment (including a remote-control sailboat regatta) offered at Nikki Beach resort on St. Jean Bay while others went off packing to enjoy some of the wonders the island has to offer.

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011- Photo Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011- Photo Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

This second edition of Les Voiles de St. Barth is quickly growing into an event that looks to blend the competition with the natural surroundings to be enjoyed, and this rest day will give all teams a chance to recharge and start fresh for the last two days of racing, which start tomorrow.  There is a certain hierarchy, however, that has been established across the five classes over the first two days of the regatta.

Class standings to date

Maxis: Genuine Risk and Rambler tied

These super yachts are impressive and Rambler 100, described by skipper Ken Read as a “beast,” has set the lead.  Immaculate starts, well-executed maneuvers, and seamless tacks and gybes have been leading the huge Juan Kouyoumdjian design across the finish line first on elapsed time.  Ken Read and George David’s crew are taking it somewhat cautiously, as they are aware of just how powerful the boat is.  “It’s a different game altogether, and we’re still learning,” affirms Read.  Despite Rambler 100′s overall superiority, there is a real threat with Genuine Risk, the Dubois-designed 97-footer handled by Swedish America’s Cup specialist Hugo Stenback. While it’s near impossible to match speed with the Juan K rocket ship, Stenbeck plans to stick close to Rambler’s wake in order to make the most in terms of points overall.  The two boats are currently tied on three points.

Sailing Yacht Rambler at - Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011- Photo Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Sailing Yacht Rambler at - Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011- Photo Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Sailing Yacht Genuine Risk at Les Voiles de Saint-Barth 2011 - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Sailing Yacht Genuine Risk at Les Voiles de Saint-Barth 2011 - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Racing: Status quo

The highly competitive 50-foot class really shined in the big swell on the first days of racing.  The fleet held tight around the marks and upwind with Jim Swartz’s TP52 Vesper, under Gavin Brady’s (NZL) careful direction, leading overall. Tied on points is Dutchman Willem Wester’s Grand Soleil 43 Antilope, which has managed several top podium finishes at Caribbean regattas this season. Peter Cunningham’s Venomousand his all-star crew, led by tactician Tony Rey, are sailing on the powerful Farr 60, which they’re using until they move on to their “new” TP52: the ex-Russian Team Synergy.

Sailing Yacht Puffy at - Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011- Photo Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Sailing Yacht Puffy at - Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011- Photo Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Local entries Raymond Magras’ Speedy Nemo (last year’s winner) and Patrick Demarchelier’s Swan 45Puffy are both sailing with locals and are attempting to limit their losses against the professionally crewed class leaders.

Racing Cruising: Nix and Black Hole Tied

The largest class in the fleet is the Racing Cruising, with 24 yachts. Wins in this class are hard-fought.  Two Dutch boats, Nico Cortlever’s Nix and Jeroen Min’s Black Hole, share the lead, each with a first and second place.  This leaves James Dobbs and his speedy J/122 Lost Horizon in third, with his immediate pursuer, Bobby Velasquez’s L’espérance, trailing in fourth.

Multis: first you have to finish

Class leader, John Winter’s 80-foot Morelli/Miller-designed Fat Cat, has suffered the least in the big and often crossed seas found on the northern areas of the courses. Blanca was dismasted yesterday and is out of the regatta, while the Gunboat Phaedo suffered damage to the boom on the first day and retired from the regatta as well.

Classics: Spritely for 80

What they lack in numbers they make up for in beauty. The Bermudian yawl Mariella, designed by Mylne, built by Fife and launched in 1938, has reveled in the strong, steady breeze off St Barth. Italian owner Carlo Falcone has enjoyed the opportunity of grabbing the lead over Donald Tofias’ classically styled W76 White Wings.  The majesty and elegance of these yachts grabs the attention of even the most modern sailor and is what gives Les Voiles de St. Barth a special element of charm.

Social Scene

Last night Les Voiles de St. Barth skippers and guests enjoyed a cocktail party hosted by the luxurious Guanahani & Spa hotel. The event included an auction to raise awareness and funds for Bay Kout Men Haïti, a non-profit organization set up in 1901 by people in the construction business to help rebuild the devasted Caribbean island.

François Tolède, event organizer of Les Voiles de St. Barth

“We feel that the idea that we offer here is the right recipe:  a mix of serious racing on the water and fun on shore, for the fleet of modern and classic boats of all sizes, on a really great sailing area with fantastic conditions, a dream for every sailor.  This event format is working and the word is spreading among competitors all over the world. We are going to have to be prepared for growing pains and keep a cool head as we build on our successes thus far.  We must maintain cohesion among the classes, maintain a balance between the competitive and fun aspects, as well as carefully consider our hosting capacity ashore and on-the-water. We must carefully consider all of these key points.”

Anne Lisa Gee, co-organiser of Les Voiles de St. Barth

“Everyone looks forward to a rest day, as much as they do to the perfect sailing conditions – it is in keeping with the spirit of what the owners and yachtsmen have come to look for in St Barth.  Everyone has been complimenting race organizers Luc Poupon’s and Jean Coadou’s choice of courses and we are getting the positive feedback from the sailors and owners who foresee a good future for the event.”

SCHEDULE

Racing continues on Friday and Saturday with a first warning signal at 1100. The closing ceremony and fireworks will follow the awards ceremony on Saturday, April 9.

Audi MedCup Circuit 2011: Azzurra to represent Italy

April 07, 2011

The prestigious Yacht Club Costa Smeralda have confirmed that they will compete on the Audi MedCup Circuit 2011 in the colours of the new Audi Azzurra Sailing Team with a crew built around a core group of sailors from the 2009 TP52 World Champions Matador. Guillermo Parada, Francesco Bruni and Vasco Vascotto will lead the team.                 

 A large media congretation convened Wednesday morning in the beautiful Museo Nazionale della Scienza e della Tecnica in Milan to enjoy the presentation of the Yacht Club Costa Smeralda 2011 ambitious sailing program.

Audi MedCup Circuit 2011 Azzurra to represent Italy © Stefano Gattini

Audi MedCup Circuit 2011 Azzurra to represent Italy © Stefano Gattini

The project’s key strand is the Audi Azzura Sailing Team which marks the return to top level racing again this year of the legendary Azzurra colours, which will compete on the Audi MedCup Circuit 2011 for the first time, under the guidance of Riccardo Bonadeo, the Yacht Club’s commodore, who said:

“At this stage this is the most exciting sailing you can find in Europe, and Azzurra just could not miss out on being part of it. We’ve had the chance to join again with a perfect partner in Alberto Roemmers, Matador’s owner, with whom this partnership already worked well before, with Maspero. We hope that the same succes can be achieved by Azzurra.”

Audi MedCup Circuit 2011 Azzurra to represent Italy © Stefano Gattini

Audi MedCup Circuit 2011 Azzurra to represent Italy © Stefano Gattini

Audi Azzurra Sailing Team’s project is a collaboration between the Yacht Club Costa Smeralda and Audi, who are Official Automotive Partner of the yacht club. Michael Frisch, Audi Italy’s General Manager: 
“ This is big and prestigious collaboration showing the perfect relationship between two very important entities. Both Audi and the YCCS always have and continue to display a passion for excellence, class and elegance, a showcase of dynamism and fair and clean competition.”

The crew for the 2011 Audi MedCup Circuit campaign will include some of Italy’s most important sailors, such as tactician Francesco Bruni (Azzurra’s helmsman since 2009), and strategist Vasco Vascotto who won the inaugural MedCup Circuit season in 2005 and has been a key player each year since, accumulating considerable knowledge of the class, the circuit and the venues: 
“ We’ve got one only goal: to sail well. This has always been our mentality, and the one that has helped us up to were we are now. We are true sportsmen, who go on the water to perform at the maximum, and in each regatta we will try to bring home the best result. We are proud of being here and to wear these colors, and we want to represent such an important  sponsor and the colours of the Yacht Club through our professionality. We’ve worked hard throughout the winter, and we are very motivated because we know this project means everything.”

Nacho Postigo, Audi MedCup Circuit Technical Director,  echoes  the enthusiasm about the team joining the Circuit

“For the circuit, the participation of Azzurra and the Yacht Club Costa Esmeralda is very important, and we are happy to welcome them. It is a nice mix, carrying on the strong Argentinian core but infused with the Azzurra’s soul and spirit. I believe they will be able to have good results, thanks to a strong crew and a new boat, which are some of the foundations needed to win. That doesn’t mean it will be easy, since they’ll have to beat the best sailors in the world, on a Circuit with so many competitive boats”.

Audi Azzurra Sailing Team’s new boat has been designed by Rolf Vrolijk and is being completed currently at King Marine in Valencia, due to be launched Sunday April 10th. The boat will be baptized on the first day of the first regatta trophy, planned for May 16th.

It will be skipperd by Argentinian Guillermo Parada, which has been involved in the Matador project for many years, guiding Matador to third place on the podium in 2008 and 2010 and fourth in 2009 . “Our mentality will be the same as last year, but this is a very important step forward for the team. Having the support of two sponsors like Audi and Azzurra is a big responsability, which we assume with pleasure. We consider it the reward to all the things we’ve achieved in the  past years, and we hope that our commitment will show in the results. For the team this is the beginning of a new era”.

Besides Parada, Vascotto and Bruni, the other members of the crew will be Italian Bruno Zirilli (navigator), Juan Pablo Cadario (pit), Mariano Caputo (bowman), Alejandro Colla (grinder), Pedro Rossi (mid bow), and the trimmers Maciel Cichetti, Paul Westlake, Simon Fry and Mariano Parada.

The Audi MedCup Circuit is the world’s leading regatta circuit.

The Circuit is made up of five events that take place over five months in four countries over southern Europe.

Trophy 1 : Tuesday 17th – Sunday 22nd May

Trophy 2 : Tuesday 14th – Sunday 19th June

Trophy 3 : Tuesday 19th – Sunday 24th July

Trophy 4 : Tuesday 23nd – Sunday 28th August

Trophy 5 : Monday 12th – Saturday 17th September

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011: Day 2 Déja vu all over again

April 07, 2011

The warm tropical breeze and clear blue sky is not lost on the sailors here at Les Voiles de St. Barth – especially those from the colder climes of the U.S. where spring has not quite yet sprung. Even normally jaded professional sailors were waxing on about the conditions here. Today offered 15 – 16 knots of breeze and a much reduced sea from yesterday, when many boats returned to the quay to lick their wounds and effect repairs, which included torn sails, broken head foils, and damaged rigging.

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 Day 2  - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 Day 2 - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Ken Read, skipper of Rambler 100, said, “I was here last week sailing in the Bucket, and now here we are again: same weather, same conditions, it’s like Groundhog Day. You just come back here, and it blows hard and it’s beautiful weather. I haven’t worn a jacket yet, and I think I’ve been wearing this shirt for about a month now. You can’t find any better conditions to go sailing in.”

Yacht Rambler at Les Voiles de Saint-Barth 2011 - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Yacht Rambler at Les Voiles de Saint-Barth 2011 - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

At all four race starts, the groupings were much tighter as crews ramped up their performances and rivalries reared their heads: Rambler 100 versus Genuine Risk, Vesper versus Venomous, Black Hole versus Nix (versus Affinity today). Make no mistake, with the dock lines cast off, and the prior nights’ dustiness cleared away, whether amateur or professional, most sailors here are keen to win.

Sailing Yacht Vesper at Les Voiles de Saint-Barth 2011 - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

Sailing Yacht Vesper at Les Voiles de Saint-Barth 2011 - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth

The Racing Cruising class, the largest at Les Voiles with 24 entries, today was again sent on a 16 nautical mile course, which was much less punishing than yesterday’s opening race. “Today was less windy, less wavy, so we weren’t crashing into 10 foot waves,” said Jack Desmond (Marion, Massachusetts), owner of the Swan 48 Affinity. “We sailed a little more conservatively today, a little smarter. We only have nine crew and we’re pretty well organized being short-handed. Yesterday we ripped the number three jib and the spinnaker. We didn’t rip anything today, so all in all a good day, and not very expensive.”

Desmond went on to count off Black Hole, Nix and Fenix, as his primary competition. Fenix is a 14-year old Swan 60 from Guernsey, in the Channel Islands, whose prior event this season was the RORC Caribbean 600 where they were third in class. Skipper Mortiz Burmester felt the coastal courses suited the crew well, as they are a mix of amateurs and professionals. “So it’s nice to have some slow bear-aways around the rocks.”

Of the original five entries in the Multihull class, only Fat Cat and Bordelo are still competing. Today, Blanca, a 30-foot Seacart catamaran, lost its mast, while the 40-foot trimaran Dauphine Telecom and the 66-foot Gunboat Phaedo did not start.

Thursday, April 7 is a lay day, which will give the crews a chance to relax and enjoy themselves with a full and varied program of events planned at St. Jean Beach, including an RC (radio control) model boat regatta and lunch with music. Racing continues on Friday and Saturday with a first warning signal at 1100. The closing ceremony and fireworks will follow the awards ceremony on Saturday, April 9.

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 Day 2  - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth.

Les Voiles de St. Barth 2011 Day 2 - Credit Christophe Jouany - Les Voiles de Saint-Barth.

What they said

Peter Holmberg, Sojana

“We have a big boat and our priority is to sail cleanly, and not make any mistakes while getting the most out of Sojana. This requires a real team effort on board. The crew needs to remain focused. So we’re talking about remaining focused and sailing as a team. The results will depend on our ability to sail as intensely as we can.”

Ken Read, Rambler 100

“This Rambler is clearly an animal…it’s a beast. The old Rambler was a 90-footer, water- ballasted, a big, powerful boat. This boat is a whole new step. It’s really cool to sail the boat how we sailed it yesterday, really like a normal 50-footer, around the track. Every day is a new experience. You’re looking at the loads on a boat like this, the speeds and its’ potential, and the amount of water coming over the bow yesterday. It’s a dangerous boat, it’s a big powerful boat.

“Rambler 100 was made to sail out in the ocean, so sailing these quick little legs around here, it’s a whole new thing. It’s a different mentality, there’s actually some different equipment. We had a couple sails built for inshore, but the sail system broke in trials so we couldn’t even use it. It’s a whole new way of thinking on a boat like this. You have to have the best sailors you can find from bow to stern. Without that, you really could get in trouble fast. And when you get in trouble, somebody gets hurt. It’s a different mentality, it’s a different game altogether, and we’re still learning. We’re not perfect out there right now, but we’re still learning.”

It’s interesting, the bigger the boat, the fewer the sails you carry. Yesterday we went around the course with a mainsail, two jibs, one reaching spinnaker, and one running spinnaker, and that was it. And the main reason is it’s really hard to change sails on a boat like that. So each sail has a very, very wide range.”

School’s Out:

For one hundred elementary students from the islands’ schools in Gustavia, Columbier, and Lorient, today was a sanctioned day off to enjoy the races. Les Voiles de St. Barth committee organizers arranged for the children to go out on the Scoobidoo 75′ and 60′ catamarans to enjoy the sailing spectacle.

Social Scene:

Tonight the owners, skippers and friends are invited to a cocktail party hosted by the Hotel Guanahahi & Spa. The evening will also feature an auction of the original painting by artist Pati Guyot used for the official 2011 Les Voiles de St. Barth poster, with the proceeds going to benefit a school in Haiti.

St. Barth Facts:

The island is located over 5,000 miles from Paris and over 1,500 miles from New York. It’s small, just eight square miles. St. Barth’s fauna has an unusual diversity: iguanas, land and sea turtles, marine birds – the pelican is the mascot of the island – and hummingbirds.

Key information:

This is the second edition of Les Voiles de St. Barth. The event is hosted from April 4 – 9, 2011 by the St. Barth Yacht Club, which is affiliated with the French Sailing Federation and the Caribbean Sailing Association.

RESULTS:
Place, Boat Name, Skipper, Race 1-2, Total Points

MAXI
1) Genuine Risk, Hugo Stenbeck (USA), 2-1, 3.0 points
2) Rambler 100, Ken Read (USA), 1-2, 3.0
3) Sojana, Marc Fitzgerald (GBR), 3-3, 6.0

RACING
1) Vesper, Jim Swartz (USA), 2-1, 3.0 points
2) Antilope, Willem Wester (NED), 1-2, 3.0
3) Venemous, Peter Cunningham (CAY), 3-3, 6.0

RACING CRUISING
1) Nix, Nico Cortlever (NED), 2-1, 3.0 points
2) Black Hole, Jeroen Min (GBR), 1-2, 3.0
3) Lost Horizon, James Dobbs, (Antigua, W.I.), 4-3, 7.0

CLASSIC
1) Mariella, Carlo Falcone (ITA), 1-1, 2.0 points
2) White Wings, Faraday Rosenberg (USA), 2-2, 4.0
3) Kate Dutch Sailing Team, Philip Walwyn (St. Kitt’s, W.I.), 3-3, 6.0

MULTIHULL
1) Fat Cat, John Winter (USA), 1-1, 2.0 points
2) Bordelo, Stephane Penigaud (St. Barth, FWI), 2-2, 4.0
3) Dauphin Telecom, Erick Clement (FRA), 6-3, 9.0