Please select your home edition
Edition
Sailingfast 2018 728x90

Allegra claims inaugural IMA Caribbean Maxi Multihull Series by a point

by James Boyd / International Maxi Association 9 Apr 18:11 BST
Adrian Keller's Irens 84 catamaran Allegra enjoyed the breezy conditions of the first two days in the BVI © Alex Turnbull / Tidal Pulse Media

The first running of the International Maxi Association's Caribbean Maxi Multihull Series concluded on Sunday with the end of the BVI Spring Regatta & Sailing Festival held out of Nanny Cay, Tortola in the British Virgin Islands.

The new series recognises the growing part of maxi yachting - private owners who wish to race large, fast multihulls, either for their pure blistering speed, in the case of the MOD70 trimarans, or, in the case of the catamarans, because their performance, combined with their huge interiors, make them the ultimate cruiser-racers.

The Series kicked off with the Caribbean Multihull Challenge held in St Maarten at the beginning of February, continued mid-February with the RORC Caribbean 600 (the Series' sole offshore race), returned north for St Maarten Heineken Regatta at the beginning of March before finishing last week in the BVI. The series featured ten 60+ft maxi multihulls. Ultimately the Nigel Irens-designed 84ft catamaran Allegra of Switzerland's Adrian Keller won the inaugural IMA Caribbean Maxi Multihull Series by a single point over Todd Slyngstad's HH66 catamaran Nemo.

In fact the accomplished, well-seasoned crew on Nemo, led by Slyngstad and including experienced American pro Ryan Braymaier, sailed supremely, winning their class both at the Caribbean Multihull Challenge and BVI Spring Regatta and Sailing Festival. However a premium points co-efficient for the RORC Caribbean 600 just put Keller's catamaran ahead.

Keller was delighted to win the first IMA Caribbean Maxi Multihull Series. He said: "Overall we did well, but if it is light wind, it is not for us and going up again MOD70s in light wind makes it doubly hard - but that's sailing. We have enjoyed the Caribbean. We enjoyed the first two days here [in the BVI] a lot."

For the first two races in the BVI - the Nanny Cay Round Tortola and Wednesday's Scrubs Island Invitational - there was breeze and the mighty Allegra prevailed in both. "The around the island race was fun and provided the whole variety," Keller continued. "Although we were only three boats [maxi catamarans], we were never more than two to three minutes apart. It was real racing." During these races there were lead changes and the maxi catamarans were regularly flying their hulls.

While there were six in the Performance Multihull class, Allegra's direct competition were Nemo and Don Wilson's Gunboat 68 Convexity" with an all-star crew led by the Australia SailGP team's Kinley Fowler and with Ocean Race winning skipper Charlie Enright calling tactics.

However there were significant differences between the trio, as Allegra's Australian co-skipper Paul Larsen explained: "It is like getting into a dogfight with fighters in your four-engined bomber - Nemo and Convexity" are half our weight. They accelerate and can duck and dive and you try and put pressure on them and they can get out of that and turn the situation around." Matters were made all the harder in the BVI when the wind turned light for the remainder of the event. "It has been a struggle, so for the big girl to still be able to punch her weight and come second in a sub-6 knot regatta is a pretty good result." In the BVI Allegra was assisted for the first time on tactics by Paul 'CJ' Campbell-James, wing trimmer for the Canadian SailGP team.

"The racing was amazing," continued Larsen of the first two days. "There was full flying, boat-on-boat and neck and neck racing. CJ doesn't know the limits of the boat so he pushes the sail calls and I sit there and go '...alright...' and let him make that call. So we have been pushing to learn things and see what the boat is capable of. If you bring on someone of that calibre you need to let them loose and then we can mop up later! It has been really good."

Perhaps most memorable to the maxi catamaran competitors was the spirit between the crews. During the Scrubs Island Invitational Convexity" blew up her headboard and the very top of her mast track but it was two crew from Allegra (both part of mast and deck hardware company Rigging Projects) who offered their services and were up Convexity"'s rig until the early hours of the following morning effecting a repair, so the US team could continue racing. "The next day after racing they [Convexity"'s crew] came over with a bunch of drinks and we invited our other competitor too [Nemo]. And yesterday we visited Nemo," continued Keller.

Fortunately the giant expanse of cabin and deck area makes these catamarans perfect for hosting large parties fuelled by, as Larsen described it "the four gallons of Painkillers [the local rum-based BVI cocktail]," Convexity"'s crew brought them.

From here Allegra heads north to the US for the Newport Bermuda Race before returning to Europe where she will take part in the IMA's new Mediterranean Maxi Multihull Challenge. The trophy for the IMA Caribbean Maxi Multihull Series will be presented to Keller at the Association's Annual Members Dinner in Porto Cervo in September. The IMA Caribbean Maxi Multihull Series will take place again in 2025.

More information here.

Related Articles

Strong 100 footer competition IMA Maxi Europeans
31 registered entries for May's event at the Circolo del Remo e della Vela Italia With seven weeks remaining until the third edition of the IMA Maxi European Championship, so far there have been 31 registered entries with 24 firmed up for the event, organised by the Circolo del Remo e della Vela Italia in conjunction with the IMA. Posted on 8 Apr
IMA Caribbean Maxi Multihull Series finale preview
Two horse race as the series heads for its BVI conclusion Next week the International Maxi Association's inaugural Caribbean Maxi Multihull Series (CMMS) has its deciding event in the BVI Spring Regatta and Sailing Festival, taking place out of Nanny Cay, Tortola. Posted on 29 Mar
New IMA Mediterranean Maxi Multihull Challenge
IMA's latest series will provide a framework and some focus for the owners of maxi multihulls To complement its recently announced IMA Caribbean Maxi Multihull Series, the International Maxi Association is to hold its first IMA Mediterranean Maxi Multihull Challenge in 2024. Posted on 6 Mar
IMA Caribbean Maxi Multihull Series launched
Starting with the RORC Caribbean 600 Following its successful series in the Mediterranean for maxi monohulls, the International Maxi Association has similarly gathered together the most popular local sailing events to create the IMA Caribbean Maxi Multihull Series (CMMS). Posted on 14 Feb
Strong entries already for 3rd IMA Maxi Europeans
Returning to Sorrento and the Bay of Naples Following two successful editions, the IMA Maxi European Championship returns to Sorrento and the Bay of Naples for a third consecutive year in May 2024. Posted on 6 Dec 2023
Maxis set for the Rolex Middle Sea Race
A huge, top quality maxi yacht line-up for the Mediterranean classic The International Maxi Association's 2023-24 Mediterranean Maxi Offshore Challenge starts this Saturday with a huge, top quality maxi yacht line-up as part of the Royal Malta Yacht Club's Rolex Middle Sea Race. Posted on 19 Oct 2023
IMA Mediterranean Maxi Inshore Challenge concludes
Wallyño wins for the second time While it was close when International Maxi Association President Benoît de Froidmont's Wallyño won the first ever edition of the IMA's Mediterranean Maxi Inshore Challenge (MMIC) in 2019, this year it wasn't. Posted on 17 Oct 2023
Winners crowned at Les Voiles de Saint-Tropez
Cannonball, Lyra, Wallyño and Stella Maris win in the Maxi classes The final day of maxi yacht competition at Les Voiles de Saint-Tropez took place on a large trapezoidal course off the Bay of Pampelonne in a 7-10 knot easterly in seas that ranged from flat to occasionally lumpy and irregular. Posted on 6 Oct 2023
Wallyño wins class at Les Voiles de Saint-Tropez
Decisive win with a day to space in Maxi C While in some classes the victors are now close to being decided going into tomorrow's last race for the 39 maxi yachts at Les Voiles de Saint-Tropez, more light conditions off the Cote d'Azur produced some new winners today. Posted on 5 Oct 2023
Les Voiles de Saint-Tropez 2023 Day 3
Big breeze and straight bullets for Lyra and Wallyño Today the crews of the 39 maxi yachts competing in the Bay of Pampelonne braced themselves for a well-forecast pummeling with winds that built into the mid-20s allowing the faster boats to hit 20+ speeds. Posted on 3 Oct 2023