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Zhik 2024 December

Kiwis win the 2000 Kenwood Cup

by Susan McKeag 10 Aug 2000 08:12 BST

IT'S OFFICIAL - KIWIS WIN KENWOOD CUP 2000

USA's Esmeralda takes Molokai Race for five-in-a-row
Smile is top-scoring individual yacht

It's official - New Zealand are the winners of the Kenwood Cup 2000. The International Jury completed their deliberations this morning by awarding the Australian team yacht Smile 1hr 45min 17sec time credit for the time she spent searching for the broken-masted Cha-Ching (Sydney 41, Scooter Simmons, USA) which has put out a call requesting assistance. The credit lifted Smile from her on-the-water 17th overall (12th in the Kenwood Cup team yachts) to 4th equal, but the result of the Cup was already sealed by time credit of 2hr 38min 59secgiven to Big Apple III (Farr 45, Hideo Matsuda and Dean Barker, NZL) for her part in the same search. (Big Apple, a larger boat than Smile, was ahead of Smile on the water when the alarm was raised, and thus lost more time in turning back and delaying.)

Results were then further delayed when Smile asked the Jury to re-open the case, and asked for even more credit, while Fruit Machine entered a request that the Molokai Race be re-scored taking into account the effects of the wind-driven surface currents sometimes known as fetch. The Jury adjusted Smile's time credit by adding a further 11 minutes, which lifted her to second equal in the Kenwood Cup team standings, but dismissed Fruit Machine's request that the race be re-scored. As Race Director Ken Morrison pointed out, there is no hydrographic data on the currents around the Hawaiian islands: they are entirely wind-driven, vary from day to day and are both unpredictable and unverifiable.

Perhaps unfortunately, the interest surrounding both the outcome of the Cup and the deliberations of the Jury have somewhat overshadowed the real story of the Molokai race itself - the quite devastating performance of Ken Read and his team aboard Makoto Uematsu's Farr 50 Esmeralda, racing for the USA Red team. For the fifth time in a row Read brought the sleek green yacht home with her handicap time more than saved against the rest of the fleet. This is a particularly creditable performance considering that Esmeralda (like the larger Bumblebee of John Kahlbetzer, with Iain Murray as skipper) sails the course in lonely state, with nothing to race against but the clock and the instruments. To keep the boat and the crew at flat-out pitch for 148 miles with no others close by is no mean feat. Esmeralda crossed the Diamond Head finish line an hour behind Bumblebee and with just the masthead and tip of the spinnaker of the next boat in the race - Australia's Yendys - showing on the horizon astern.

Yendys led home New Zealand's flying pair Sea Hawk (Farr 47, Naohiko Sera/ Roy Davies) and Air NZ High 5 ( Farr 47, Mick Cookson), the two only four minutes apart. High 5 had led the Hawk at the upwind turning mark at the end of the tough 75-mile thrash to Maui, but the near-sister had slid past on the long down-wind trip home. High 5's finish was something to see. The boat is beautifully prepared, in every detail. With the sun high, the Pacific at its white-capped blue best and the Trades a steady 18-20 knots (Mick Cookson reported up to 28 knots across the deck during the night on the way to Maui) High 5 turned down and picked up each overtaking crest, great creaming wings of foam sluicing out from under her forefoot as almost the front third of the boat lifted clear of the water, every bubble and hiss reflected in the perfect dark blue gloss of her immaculate topsides. Just as she crossed the line, a stronger than usual gust swept down off Diamond Head. The yacht heeled, the spinnaker strained, High 5 bore away and took off like a planing dinghy on two wide wings of spray: 14, 15, 16, 17 and finally hitting 18 knots as she outran the chasing camera boat. If ever there was an image to encapsulate the perfect sailing to be found at this Hawaiian Offshore Series, this is surely it - check out the pictures on www.kenwoodcup.com.

Top individual scorer of the 2000 Hawaiian International Offshore Series is Chris Whiston's Smile, one of the pair of all-conquering race-optimised Beneteau 40.7 cruiser/racers which have dominated the past season of Australian offshore racing. Smile beat Esmeralda and Sea Hawk to the honour, thanks in part to the influence and decisions of the event's International Jury. Smile's redress granted in the final race lifted her from the 17th position in which she finished to equal-second, while Esmeralda had to overcome the burden of an 18th overall in Race 1. In that race, Esmeralda was OCS, had to do a re-start and then begin the long haul up through the fleet. Then there was a problem with laying mark four, as a result of which the Jury eventually decreed that the race should be scored on the basis of a finish at mark 3, rather than take the final on-the-water result. At Mark 3, Esmeralda was still working her way up the rankings.

KENWOOD CUP FINAL STANDINGS:

 1 New Zealand 535 points
 2 Australia   521
 3 USA Red     434
 4 Japan       277
 5 USA White   210
 6 USA Blue    115

More Information:

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