Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup - Day 3
by Mark Chisnell 9 Sep 1999 08:52 BST
ROUND UP
Photo: © KOS
A fifty mile offshore race began at 11.40 for the Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup
Fleet.
The course started with a two mile beat to a windward mark, into a twelve
to fifteen knot north-easterly breeze - and bright sunshine.
The wind shifted a little to the right by the afternoon, but stayed at
approximately the same velocity and direction all day.
After the beat, the fleet sailed north-west to the Ecueil de Lavezzi, a
gradually broadening reach, going from headsails to spinnakers.
Turning for home, spinnakers came down and headsails went back up, as the
fleet returned on the picturesque inside passage of the Islands of
Maddalena. Passing through the Porto Cervo line, the fleet then headsail
reached to Monaci. Followed by a gennaker reach to Mortoriotto. A
headsail reach to the finish.
A day dominated by boatspeed.Boomerang beats Sayonara to tie Maxi's
overall. Tiketitan takes line honours for third time.
Latest results at time of sending - final results to follow.
ILC Maxi - Race Five
1. Boomerang
2. Sayonara
3. Alexia
4. Sagamore
Cruising Division - Line Honours
1. Tiketitan
2. Nariida
3. Wally B
THE INSIDE STORY
Perfect yacht racing conditions once again greeted the Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup
fleet, as they sailed out of Porto Cervo to find the Yacht Club Costa
Smeralda's Committee Boat ready and waiting. Today was the coastal race,
and the numeral code pennants one and six were flying, to indicate course
sixteen. There will have been a few wry grins around the fleet - that one
is the fifty miler, rather than the ninety miler that could have been set.
After a short two mile beat to the windward mark, the fleet were to head
north-west, leaving the Islands of Monaci, Caprera, Maddalena and
Barettinelli di Fuori to port, keeping them in the open ocean. Then, after
rounding the Ecueil de Lavezzi, they had to turn for home through the
inside passage, leaving the same chain of islands to starboard - a route
known as "bomb alley" to the crews. They re-emerge into open ocean just
north of Porto Cervo, and head south to a rounding mark off the harbour
entrance. Then north again to the Island of Monaci, south past Porto Cervo
to the island of Mortoriotto, and from there to the finish.
The Cruising Division were first to start again, and it was Simon Fry's
Wally B - currently languishing in eighth overall - that took the first
beat by storm, with Peter Bateman and Admiral's Cup navigator Julian Salter
were making the right moves. Next came Luca Bassani's Tiketitan, and then
Nariida - but it was the first race winner, Marco Tronchetti Provera's
Kauris II, that looked to have had the mall on handicap, rounding just
afterwards.
Back down the track the ILC Maxi class were in a desperate struggle
forascendancy. With such a long reach ahead of them after the first beat,
they leader at the windward mark would have a clear lane to build a lead.
Sagamore was to leeward, with Alexia above her. Sayonara started to
windward this time, joined at the hip with Boomerang - these two neck and
neck for three different titles at the moment. Sayonara tacked off - either
wanting the right hand side of the beat, or concerned that Boomerang had
the better of the start.
It was the left hand side of the beat that paid, and by the top mark, Chris
Larsonand Michael Coxon, aboard Alberto Roemmers Alexia, had the lead.
Sagamore and Boomerang was behind them, with overall leader Sayonara in
last. All four boats had the stunning 41 metre Alejandra ahead. But the
only view the crews willhave been interested in would be the one they can't
see - a whorl of bad air swirling towards them. Before the oxygen masks
dropped down, the first three took the low road. Sayonara had squeezed
inside the equally impressive vacuum machine that is Adela, at the windward
mark. And having fought clear of that, she headed high, to go above
Alejandra.
Behind them, the left hand side of the beat was also paying for Riccardo
Bonadeo's Rrose Selavy - rounding close behind leader My Song - but looking
a leader on handicap. From behind would come a strong challenge from
thirdaround, Highland Fling - top boat overall in the IMS Class outside the
ILC Maxi's. But Highland Fling's owner Irvine Laidlaw has brought together
an impressive crew, that includes British Admiral's Cup sailors James Stagg
and Andy Hemmings, New Zealander Campbell Field, and American America's Cup
sailor Mike Toppa. With winning Dutch Admiral's Cup skipper, Bouwe Bekking,
as tactician, Laidlaw steers the Farr designed, Carroll Marine built 60
footerhimself. Bekking reckoned of his owner, ' He is one of the best
owner/drivers around, and he has to be, there are some good guys out
there'. The boat has already won IMS Class 1 and the Boat of the Week
trophy at the highly competitive Key West Race Week, last January.
Once around the windward mark, the boat speed race commenced. It was
straight-line white sail reaching, before the course eased enough as they
approached the Ecueil de Lavezzi to set spinnakers. But once there, the
kites came back down as they gybed around the rust-coloured rock - and set
off for 'bomb alley'. The 'lap' of the islands was all about angles, and
how quick each boat could go with their headsails, jib tops, spinnakers,
staysails, gennakers and, in the case of Lindsay Owen Jones' Cruising
Division leader Magic Carpet, what looks suspiciously like a Code Zero.
As they emerged through the Pas de Bisce, the battle amongst the Cruising
Division boats for line honours was unchanged - Wally B led Tiketitan and
Nariida. But the two top Maxi's had ground their way past Alexia and
Sagamore - Boomerang led from Sayonara, after they rounded the top mark
almost together. The breeze off Porto Cervo had shifted right and the
remaining loop of Monachi and Mortoriotto to the finish was more reaching.
As Vasco Vascotto from Tiketitan said, 'It was a reaching race, after the
first mark, we didn't go upwind or downwind'. The only passing lanes came
from speed, reading the pressure on the water better, and sharper crew work
on the sets and drops.
Wally B couldn't keep up her stubborn resistance to the finish, and slowly Tiketitan wore her down to pass and take her third line honours in three days. Boomerang won her battle with Sayonara, to close the points gap in the ILC Maxi fleet to zero. But with the rest of the fleet stretched out behind them, north to south across the setting sun, they will have to wait to see how the handicap results resolve themselves.
Written by Mark Chisnell, for The Strategic Organisation
For further information please contact:
Lucy Boxall, Rolex Media Centre
Tel: +39 0789 92197
Email: strategicevents@compuserve.com