Please select your home edition
Edition
Leaderboard new launch 2023 Spring

Sperry Top-Sider Charleston Race Week - Day 1

by Sperry Top-Sider Charleston Race Week 12 Apr 2014 07:27 BST 11-13 April 2014

Light to moderate breeze helps young skippers stand out

South Carolina's shining sun and crystal clear skies welcomed nearly 300 teams to Charleston Harbor for the 19th edition of Sperry Top-Sider Charleston Race Week today. With a moderate southerly wind allowing for three to four ideal races, Steve and Heidi Benjamin (Norwalk, CT) and their crew aboard the ultra-high-performance Carkeek 40 "Spookie," used their light-air prowess to take three first-place finishes in the High Performance Rule Class. The competition in this group, which includes some of the fastest monohulls for their size ever built is fierce. But that appears to be a constant theme across the 16 classes that make up the regatta's fleet.

On board "Spookie," navigator Bora Gulari of Detroit, Mich., gave credit to the braintrust in the back of the boat. "We've got a great afterguard on the boat, and Heidi put the boat in good spots." "There's never a minute to relax though – one bad maneuver and the rest of the fleet will pass you before you know what happened."

The HPR Class tried something new for this year. The group's final race of the day sent the boats around the conventional windward-leeward course, and then back ashore through the Charleston Harbor jetties, past Fort Sumter, and all the way to the finish line at Patriot's Point. Gulari said this middle-distance addition was a welcome change. "These boats sail so much faster than they can go under engine power, and it's ten times more fun to race back to the harbor than it is to drive a motorboat back."

Another grand prix raceboat – the brand new Farr 280 "Chessie Racing," leads her PHRF B class by three points over perennial Charleston stalwart Gerry Taylor on the Cape Fear 38 "Tangent" – this despite the fact that the sparkling new "Chessie" had never even touched the water before Wednesday. "We're working through a few teething issues, but we had an absolute blast on the water today," said skipper Ian Gordon. "This class had plenty of tight racing with similarly sized boats all finishing within a short space, and we definitely feel like we earned our results."

The Pursuit Class, particularly those boats sailing in the non-spinnaker divisions may lack carbon fiber and other high-tech accoutrement, but the racers certainly don't lack spirit. Sailing with a mostly family crew on board his Soverel 36 yawl "Houzee," Francisco Davilas looked like a sure thing for the wire-to-wire victory in today's single race until fellow Charlestonian Scott Strother aboard Destiny chased him down just before the finish. Davilas, whose boat is likely the oldest one in the regatta (circa 1964), settled for second place, but you wouldn't have known it from his smile at the finish line.

A highlight this year is the regatta's first-ever Multihull Class, whose entrants provided a spectacle for the entire harbor, with the fastest of them – the Marine City, Mich.-based F-31R trimaran "Cheekee," scorching down the harbor to the finish at around 23 knots. Chicago-Mackinac Race Safety Director Ron White said it was a little dicey at that angle, but nothing his old boat couldn't handle. "This is the kind of flat-water, reaching stuff that these boats just eat up, and there's only one problem I have with the racing today: There should be 50 more multihulls out here doing the same thing," said White. "This is about as good as it gets, from the downtown to the amazing welcome you get to the shoreside organization; if you have a multihull, you should be here."

Charleston is a growing and vibrant city, and it's fitting that Sperry Top-Sider Charleston Race Week attracts dozens of young sailors to the race course; current and past College of Charleston sailors fill the fleet while teens and twenty-somethings from around the country crew and helm their way through the Race Week courses. Charleston is pleased to welcome the young adults of the US Coast Guard Academy's sailing team to the Race Week starting line to the first time. The New London based school sent seven cadets to race two of the Academy's new J/70s in Charleston's big fleets, along with the sailing team's offshore racing coach, Jack Neades. "We're currently transitioning to a fleet of J/70s for our students, and we thought Charleston would be the perfect event to test the waters and see how we'd go at this level of one-design racing." Neades says sailing is great for his cadets' training. "They're on the water, navigating boats, driving boats, paying attention to the wind, the currents, and the competition, and that's going to make them better mariners," he said.

No fleet has more young standouts than the Audi Melges 20 fleet, with three twenty-somethings in the top five skippers after four races. 24-year old Jason Michas from New York, NY leads the fleet by a 16 point gap, while 23-year-old College of Charleston racer Grace Lucas (Little Silver, NJl) sits in third place, just one point out of second. Rounding out the top five is another College of Charleston student, 20-year old Declan Whitmyer Jr, just a point behind Lucas. Lucas said she felt incredibly lucky to be competing in this event, and attributes her success to her crew. "We've got a couple of great college sailors and 'big daddy' Sam Rogers on tactics, and they're making it fun and fast out there," said Lucas. "It's definitely going to be hard to go back to FJs and 420s after this week!"

Representatives from the regatta's official weather source, Weatherflow, say that tomorrow, racers can expect more of the same; an expanding Atlantic high pressure system means more light to moderate southerlies, with the chance for another good sea breeze tomorrow afternoon. Monitor local conditions live and check out forecast tables at www.charlestonraceweek.com/weather.html.

Follow Along At Home

Sperry Top-Sider Charleston Race Week continues to provide some of the best spectator action of any regatta, and the place to see dozens of racing videos and interviews, hundreds of high-res photos, and daily news and information is the event's Facebook Page. Racing begins for the 16 classes on five race courses tomorrow at 9:30.

The full results from Friday's action are available online here.

www.charlestonraceweek.com

Related Articles

New Race Village venue for Charleston Race Week
Now on the USS Yorktown at Patriots Point in Mt. Pleasant Organizers of Charleston Race Week are excited to announce a new venue for the Regatta Village, coming up April 20-23, on the USS Yorktown at Patriots Point in Mt. Posted on 3 Feb 2023
2022 Charleston Race Week overall
Charleston Race Week delivered once again Consistent breeze that ranged from light to medium to heavy? Check. Close competition and exciting racing across the broad spectrum of classes? Check. High-quality race committee work? Check. Posted on 2 May 2022
2022 Charleston Race Week day 2
Wild, wacky, and windy day on the water Competitors at Charleston Race Week encountered winds that started fairly light in the morning then steadily built to the low teens. Posted on 1 May 2022
2022 Charleston Race Week day 1
Action-packed opening day Race Day 1 of Charleston Race Week got off to a rousing start with ideal conditions delivering an action-packed opening day. Southeasterly winds ranging from 6 to 11 knots enabled organizers to complete four races for all of the inshore courses. Posted on 30 Apr 2022
Multiple champions highlight Charleston Race Week
A whirlwind of activity on the docks as on Thursday There was a whirlwind of activity on the docks of Charleston Harbor Marina and Resort on Thursday morning. Some crew members were hauling sail bags while others were busily rigging sailboats. Posted on 29 Apr 2022
A return to normal at Charleston Race Week
Back in full force after the disruption of the past two years Charleston Race Week is back in full force. Coronavirus canceled the iconic spring regatta in 2020, while the ongoing pandemic forced organizers to hold a scaled-back event in 2021. Posted on 22 Mar 2022
Charleston Race Week overall
All three days deliver solid conditions While major regattas around the world are still getting canceled because of coronavirus, Charleston Race Week elected to press forward with its 25th anniversary celebration. Posted on 12 Apr 2021
Charleston Race Week day 2
Moving day shakes up standings in some classes It was moving day at Charleston Race Week and many teams took that mandate to heart. There was a shakeup of the standings within several classes as certain boats many opening day leaders were overtaken. Posted on 11 Apr 2021
Charleston Race Week day 1
Off to rousing start with multiple races completed Charleston Race Week 2021 got off to a rousing start on Thursday with organizers completing multiple races for all classes in moderate to medium conditions. Posted on 10 Apr 2021
Sperry Charleston Race Week overall
An interesting dynamic on the docks on the final day There was an interesting dynamic taking place on the docks of Charleston Harbor Resort and Marina Sunday morning. Posted on 17 Apr 2018