St. Maarten Heineken Regatta: Changes in the Works for 31st event as fleet grows

With less than three weeks to go before racing commences in the 31st annual St. ...

St. Maarten Heineken Regatta: Changes in the Works for 31st event as fleet grows

February 16, 2011

Written by Chelsea Smith

With less than three weeks to go before racing commences in the 31st annual St. Maarten Heineken Regatta, the fleet continues to steadily grow, with nearly 150 yachts ranging from 24 feet to 115 feet now entered in the competition. For newcomers to the event, it will be their first taste of the “serious fun” for which the regatta is famously known.

St.Maarten Heineken Regatta 2010 - Photo Tom Zinn St.Maarten Heineken Regatta

St.Maarten Heineken Regatta 2010 - Photo Tom Zinn St.Maarten Heineken Regatta

 The music, magic and parties ashore won’t surprise veterans of the St. Maarten Heineken Regatta. But they’ll soon learn that race organizers have instituted several changes in how the action is orchestrated on the racecourse. As always, the new wrinkles have been introduced to make the racing as interesting, entertaining and challenging as possible.

 Some of the St. Maarten Heineken Regatta’s format—including the three days of racing over the first long weekend in March—has stood the test of time and remains in place. As in years past, there will be two course circles for the A fleet and the B fleet. And once again in 2011, Saturday’s point-to-point destination race will once again take the racers to the French side of St Martin and the lively port of Marigot, where the parties will rage long into the night.

 But for the first time ever, in a significant new change in how the contests are run, race officials will have numerous options in how they lay out the racecourses and the lengths of each race. In previous regattas, instead of one pre-set course per start each day around a fixed set of established marks, a new series of mark locations have been added to the race instructions for greater flexibility depending on wind strength and direction.

 Race officers will have four or five different courses, of varying distances ranging from 10-nautical miles to 28-nautical miles, from which to choose. In light winds, they’ll likely opt for the shorter courses. In heavier air, particularly for the fastest boats in the fleet, the longer courses will be utilized.

 There is also an innovative change in the start position of the races. Each fleet – A and B – will have their own start circle with a diameter of approximately 1 to 1 ½  mile. On this circle the designated start boat and on the other side the windward mark and an off set mark can turn to start with the most beneficial wind direction, which should make for the perfect start.

 As far as classes are concerned, more changes are in the works. In 2011 the St. Maarten Heineken Regatta will be broken into five separate divisions (which will likely be subdivided once all entries are in). The CSA Monohull Class will compete under the tried-and-true Caribbean Sailing Association (CSA) Rating Rule. For more information on the CSA, visit their website: www.caribbean-sailing.com.

 The always-popular Bareboat classes, broken down by the lengths of the yachts competing, will race under the CSA Bareboat Rating Rule. The catamarans and trimarans in the event will sail under the auspices of the St. Maarten Multihull Handicap System.

 The half-dozen boats thus far entered in the Serious Fun Class will also sail using the CSA Rating Rule (with or without spinnakers). Finally, the Lottery Class—for liveaboard and/or heavy-displacement cruising boats or those sailors who want to enjoy the fun of the St. Maarten Heineken Regatta without having a full CSA Rating—will race around short, easy courses under a modified CSA Rating Rule. To make things even more interesting for this group, every boat’s rating will be adjusted or modified each day according to their results or performance during the previous day’s racing.

 The goal, as in every St. Maarten Heineken Regatta, is to make the “playing field” as level as possible for every boat, and to make the sailing and competition as “seriously fun” as ever.

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