Please select your home edition
Edition
Rooster 2023 - LEADERBOARD

Time for winners at the 2016 St. Thomas International Regatta

by Carol Bareuther 28 Mar 2016 08:16 BST 25-27 March 2016

Wind was the word at the 43rd St. Thomas International Regatta (STIR). Lots of it, in fact. Gusts blustered over 30 knots all three days with 6 to 8 foot seas. Combine these conditions with courses that offered a mix of round-the-buoy and round-the-island racing and it was a recipe that many racers on the 67 entered yachts relished.

Chief among these happy sailors was 2015 Rolex Yachtsman of the Year, Steve Benjamin. Benjamin's TP52, Spookie, not only won the tune-up Round the Rocks Race on Thursday, but didn't break from his bullet-only streak in the CSA (Caribbean Sailing Association) Spinnaker Racing 1 Class during the three days of STIR.

"The second race today in north Pillsbury Sound was extraordinary," says Benjamin, from Norwalk, CT. "It was a challenge for the crew in the strong winds, shifts, waves and currents that thoroughly tested us all. Overall, we had a marvelous experience and highly recommend this regatta to everyone."

In CSA Spinnaker Racing 2, it was Long Beach, CA's Doug Baker's team on the chartered J/122, Team Magnitude-El Ocaso, that bested the class with flawless first place finishes.

"The big breeze was definitely challenging. It made boat handling and crew work really important," says helmsman, Chadwick 'Chad' Hough, who sailed with Baker and his all-California crew. "What we really liked was that every race was on a new course. That meant it didn't get boring because we constantly had to figure out the currents and the wind shifts."

Two boats were tied on points going into the final day of racing in the CSA Spinnaker Racing 3 Class. In the end, Puerto Rico's Jonathan Lipuscek and his crew on the J/105, Dark Star took first by five points over St. Thomas' Lawrence Aqui aboard the Dufour 40, Wild T'ing.

"This is two class wins in a row for us and a fourth time total," says Rafael 'Rafi' Martinez, Dark Star's tactician. "We had a tacking duel with Wild T'ing at the start on the last race. We knew we had to keep them behind us and we did by good boat handling. It was a blast to go 14 to 15 knots. Definitely a wild wet ride."

In the CSA Non-Spinnaker Class, Jack Desmond's affinity for winning clearly showed. Desmond, based in Marion, MA, won the class aboard his Swan 48, Affinity, after close racing with Puerto Rico's Claudia Nicolow on the Swan 53, Bella Vela.

"We've finished second 7 or 8 times in this regatta. This morning, we had a team meeting and decided we were really going to put the skill and knowledge of our eclectic crew from all over the Caribbean and world to good use. That's how we won," says Desmond.

The home-grown one-design IC24 class was the largest of the regatta. The craft's creator, St. Thomas' Chris Rosenberg's aboard his Bill T drove a highly competitive route to the top of the scoreboard.

"It took a lot of effect to win with the high-caliber of sailors in this class," says Rosenberg, who revealed his most incredible STIR moment was surfing the first day downwind to the Charlotte Amalie harbour on an all-out plane aboard this modified J/24.

Two of eight beach cats braved the regatta's big winds. In the end, it was California's Olympic and America's Cup sailor, Annie Gardner, and husband Eric Witte who won onboard the Nacra 17, Flight Risk.

This year marked the first STIR welcomed two new classes. Gunboats and VX Ones.

Stephen Cucchiaro's Flow, a Gunboat 60, started out slow on the scoreboard when a breakdown caused the team not to finish the first race to the Charlotte Amalie harbour nor start the second back to the host St. Thomas Yacht Club in Cowpet Bay on the first day. The Flow team came back to win every race thereafter as well as the Gunboat Class.

"The last beat to windward today on the north side of St. John we were flying over the flat water in 22 knots of breeze. It was pretty incredible. Other than that, we were pushing it pretty hard in the big winds this weekend and punching through the waves. Definitely fun," says veteran international multihull sailor, Cam Lewis, a member of the San Diego Yacht Club who crewed for the Boston, MA-based Cucchiaro.

It was a test of the class rules in the VX One Class. Class rules for regattas call for no starts when the median wind speed exceeds 22 knots. Class vice-president, St. Croix native and owner of the first place Cruzan Rhode, Tim Pitts, called for an increase in that limit to 27 knots. As a result, the class raced all three days.

"We're maturing as a class and although anything over 25 knots is challenging, the skill level is there to handle it," says Pitts, who now lives in Newport, RI, and his responsible bringing the VX One Class to the Virgin Islands. "On the other hand, it's kind of ironic to invite your friends down and beat them in your own backyard. Still, although I've been on several STIR winning boats, this is the first time it was my boat that won. That's pretty sweet."

Trevor Davis, a 13-year-old junior sailor from Annapolis, MD, was one person who didn't mind the baptism by fire that saw many in the VX One class experience broches and capsizes.

"The first race we shot off the start line like a rocket and clocked 19.4 knots," says the eighth-grader, who sails Optimist and 420 dinghies as well as bigger boats in regattas he visits with his well-known father, Dobbs Davis, the U.S. Correspondent for Seahorse Magazine. "I wouldn't say it was scary in the high winds, except in the last race where a competitors' sprit ripped off two of our shrouds, but it was definitely a really fun boat."

Class winners received limited edition Island timepieces from Cardow Jewelers. In addition, Spookie achieved the fastest elapsed time and with it a skipper's member's weight in Cruzan Rum.

STIR 2016 is sponsored by Cruzan Rum and Presidente, distributed by Glazer's Premier Distributors; the U.S. Virgin Islands Department of Tourism; the Moorings; Sunsail; Cardow Jewelers; Yacht Haven Grande; Choice Wireless; K3; AeroMD; Switlik; Gill; and Budget Marine.

For more information, contact Regatta Director Chuck Pessler at (340) 642-3204 or Email . For full information about the Round the Rounds and St. Thomas International Regatta, including results, photos, social schedule and more, please visit www.stthomasinternationalregatta.com. Follow us on Social Media! Check out STIR on Facebook (www.facebook.com/stirvi), Twitter @stirvi and Instagram #STIRVI

Related Articles

Register for 31st International Optimist Regatta
Want to tune up for the North American Championships in Puerto Rico in July? Want to tune up for the Optimist North American Championships in Puerto Rico in July? Or learn new tactics for a summer of racing? Then register now for the 31st International Optimist Regatta (IOR), TOTE Clinic and TOTE Team Race. Posted on 27 Apr
Reasons to attend the Virgin Islands Boating Expo
The ultimate luxury yacht show The Virgin Islands Boating Expo (VIBE), set for May 10-12, 2024, at IGY's Yacht Haven Grande St. Thomas, offers a paradise setting for both buying a boat and chartering. Posted on 18 Apr
50th St. Thomas International Regatta overall
Spinnakers popped up on the horizon like Easter bonnets Spinnakers popped up on the horizon like Easter bonnets on parade during the third and final day of racing in the 50th St. Thomas International Regatta (STIR). Posted on 1 Apr
50th St. Thomas International Regatta Day 2
Leads Lengthened, Leads Lost Puerto Rico's Francisco Velez, tactician on Giberto Rivera's IC24, Urayo, perfectly summed up the challenge of the day, and the first two days, of the 50th St. Thomas International Regatta (STIR). Posted on 31 Mar
50th St. Thomas International Regatta Day 1
Multiple races make for competitive racing The strategy for the team aboard the USA's Marc McMorris' Cape 31, M2, on the first day of racing in the 50th anniversary St. Thomas International Regatta was "to not be that guy who made the mistakes," says James Espey, M2's tactician. Posted on 30 Mar
50th St. Thomas International Regatta kicks off
Flying Jenny & Apollo win classes in Round the Rocks Race This one-day tune-up for the main event 50th Anniversary St. Thomas International Regatta (STIR), which kicks off tomorrow, featured a course that circumnavigated the 19-square-mile island counterclockwise. Posted on 29 Mar
St. Thomas International Regatta starts tomorrow
Nearly 50 yachts are expected to race in this 'Crown Jewel of Caribbean Regattas' Sailors from around the Caribbean and the World are ready to STIR-up the fun this week at the 50th Anniversary St. Thomas International Regatta (STIR). Posted on 27 Mar
50th St. Thomas International Regatta preview
Enter the race now to secure your spot on the start line Enter the race now to secure your spot on the start line of the 8th Round the Rocks Race on March 28, and the 50th St. Thomas International Regatta (STIR), March 29-31, 2024. Posted on 18 Mar
Reasons to attend the Virgin Islands Boating Expo
Take advantage of duty-free tax benefits when buying a yacht in the USVI There's nothing like cruising a luxe new yacht through the Caribbean seas. Fulfill that dream by attending the Virgin Islands Boating Expo (VIBE), set for May 10-12, 2024. Posted on 14 Mar
St. Thomas International Regatta preview
Keen competition complete with cool prizes over the Easter Weekend Keen competition complete with cool prizes like K3 Waterproof Bags, and a headlining Quelbe band brings the best of the present and past to the 50th Anniversary St. Thomas International Regatta (STIR), set for Easter Weekend. Posted on 6 Mar