Perfect Winds, Perfect Racing at Quantum Key West Race Week 2016
Key West, FL, USA -- Unlike yesterday in the howling wind, today started well in Day Three of Quantum Key West Race Week. During his morning weather briefing, former America's Cup Champion Ed Baird alerted the assembled sailors about the importance of Wednesday's racing.
The 54 entered J/70's had four races today in perfect conditions - photo Max Ranchi, Quantum Key West
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J/70 starts keep race managers on their toes - photo Andy Newman/Florida Keys News Bureau |
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Belle Mente preparing for the hoist - photo Andy Newman/Florida Keys News Bureau |
"More than likely, there's going to be three races today. That means the regatta is going to be more than halfway complete by the time you come off the water," - Baird said. "Like I tell my kids with their junior regattas, this is moving day. This is when all the action happens. Some boats are going to fall off the cliff while others are going to climb up the standings."
Baird's words proved prophetic and many teams did indeed make a major move on Mount Gay Rum Day as multiple races were contested in perfect 15-18 knot northeasterly winds that held steady enough to provide the closest race action of the week.
Bobsled (to windward) had good starts and won two bullets in the C&C 30's today - photo Sara Proctor/Quantum Key West
On Division 1, it was Bella Mente in the Maxi 72's and the TP52 Spookie in IRC 1 that had an outstanding day on the water to take the lead in their respective classes. On Division 2, Extreme2 posted a string of superb results to take charge of the new and competitive C&C 30 class. On Division 3, the J/80 Wired showed it will be a factor in ORC 2. And on Division 4, the New York 40 Defiant won its second straight distance race to seize control of the Performance Cruising class.
Early sneak of the tack on Belle Mente - photo Sara Proctor/Quantum Key West
"Today was important for a lot of people, and it was a perfect day of racing. When you've completed six of 10 races, you want to be in position to win the week," - said Dan Cheresh, skipper of Extreme2. "We knew it was key to do well today and we're happy with our results."
Meanwhile, several boats that came out of the gate strong on Monday did well again on Wednesday to increase their advantage. Christopher Dragon (IRC 2), Skeleton Key (J/111) and Blind Squirrel (Melges 24) have all taken commanding leads.
Skipper Hap Fauth and his 20-man team on Bella Mente posted a score line of 1-1-2 on Wednesday to move past Day 1 leader Caol Ila R (Alex Schaerer, Malta) in Maxi 72 class. "We started the boat well and sailed consistently the entire day. We were well prepared for the conditions, had all the right sails. It was pretty much a mistake-free day," said Fauth, who hails from Minneapolis, MN.
Spookie had a great day to take the lead in IRC 1 - photo Sara Proctor/Quantum Key West
Two-time Rolex Yachtsman of the Year Terry Hutchinson (Harwood, MD) and America's Cup veteran Adrian Stead of Great Britain are serving as tactician and strategist, respectively, on Bella Mente.
"Tactically, Terry is on top of his game and working very well with Ado," Fauth said. "Our goal today was to start well and stay clean. We didn't want to get tangled up with the other boats like we did on Monday."
Extreme2 captures the lead in the C&C 30 class - photo Sara Proctor/Quantum Key West
Skipper Steve Benjamin steered Spookie to victory in Race 4 and 5 in IRC 1 then took second in the third race of the day to overtake Quantum Racing (Doug DeVos, Ada, MI). St Thomas native and former America's Cup champion Peter Holmberg is calling tactics for Benjamin.
"We made a bunch of changes based off Monday and I would say the changes we made were all for the positive," said Benjamin, crowned just last week as the 2015 Rolex Yachtsman of the Year.
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J/80 Wired hanging tough off the start with the GP 26's - photo Max Ranchi/Quantum Key West |
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Crossing tacks in the J/111 Class - photo Max Ranchi/Quantum Key West |
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Benjamin (Norwalk, CT) said the crew debrief on Monday focused on improving communication. Crew members also made a few adjustments to the rig tune, giving Benjamin more helm.
"We had much better communication between helmsman and tactician, between tactician and trimmer and so on," - Benjamin said. "We're still learning how the boat feels and how it should feel. We learned a lot on Monday that we applied today."
Black Seal wins both the lead in the Melges 24's and the Mt Gay Rum Boat of the Day prize - photo Sara Proctor/Quantum Key West
Dan Cheresh (Holland, MI) steered Extreme2 to victory in Race 4 then added a pair of second places to ease into the lead in C&C 30 class, which has proven quite competitive with four different boats winning races so far.
"We had some trouble with crew mechanics on Monday. We talked about some things and our crew work was much better today," - said Cheresh, who has Olympic medallist Morgan Reeser aboard as tactician. "We were fairly conservative on the starting line and just took what we could. We saw a lot of wind shifts and did a good job of staying in phase."
Teamwork has a narrow 2-point lead in ORC 1 - photo Max Ranchi/Quantum Key West
Wired is a J/80 owned by Henry DeGroot of Newton, MA, and is the slowest-rated boat in an ORC 2 class comprised primarily of sport boats (three Farr 280s, three GP 26s). However, DeGroot and his team have sailed quite well so far in winning three races and placing second in three others.
"I'll admit it's very helpful to have a favorable rating, but we are trying to sail the boat as well as it can possibly sailed and I think we are doing that," said DeGroot, who holds a seven point lead over the GP 26 Rattle N Rum (Mike Beasley, Annapolis, MD. "Our best finishes have been due to good starts. After the first couple legs, the other boats get away from us and it basically becomes a race against the clock. This is my third straight Key West with this team and we work very well together. We pretty much had an error-free day."
Christopher Dragon, the Sydney 43 owned by Andrew and Linda Weiss of Mamaroneck, NY, has put forth a very impressive performance in IRC 2 - winning five of six races and placing second in the other. Legendary sailmaker Butch Ulmer is calling tactics for Andrew Weiss, who has Byren LaMotte as strategist.
"We worked the chinks out a bit on Monday and the team is starting to pull together. Our sets and takedowns were a lot cleaner today," - said Ed Bahen, captain of Christopher Dragon. "Butch is putting us in the right places and we're executing our maneuvers."
Christopher Dragon has a low score of seven points, six ahead of the J/125 Double Trouble (Peter Krueger, Reno, NV). Bahen said third place Cool Breeze, the Mills 43 owned by John Cooper (Cane Hill, MO) is also sailing well. Those three boats have raced in close quarters for much of the regatta, Bahen said.
Deviation trails Wings by 2 points in the J/88 Class - photo Max Ranchi/Quantum Key West
Skipper Peter Wagner and the Skeleton Key team have really stretched out the lead in J/111 class. Two bullets on Wednesday gave the San Francisco Bay area boat a total of five for the regatta and a comfortable 11-point lead over Spaceman Spiff.
"The Skeleton Key guys start well and are very consistent. They're also darn fast," - said Rob Ruhlman (Cleveland, OH), skipper of Spaceman Spiff. "If we're going to do something we need to do it tomorrow."
In an attempt to get the best bang for the buck value in races, Division 2 principal race officer Dave Brennan actually completed four races today, which was enough to trigger a discard in the scorelines for the Melges 24 and J/70 classes.
Italian skipper Carlo Alberini's Calvi Network posted a scores of 2-3-1-3 on to maintain the lead in the J/70's, the largest fleet in the regatta with 54 boats. Branko Brcin is calling tactics for the defending regatta champion, which now has a low score of eight points and leads the reigning J/70 world champ Flojito Y Cooperando (Julian Fernandez Neckelmann, Mexico City) by three points. Relative Obscurity (Peter Duncan, Rye, NY) and Helly Hansen (Tim Healy, Newport, RI) are still in the mix with 14 and 19 points, respectively.
"There are a lot of very good boats and very talented sailors in this field. We prefer strong wind so we are enjoying the racing here this year," Alberini said. "The game is far from finished. Tomorrow is a new day and we must keep our focus."
Factoring in the discard in points put British skipper Richard Thompson and the Black Seal team into first place of the 12-boat Melges 24 class. Jamie Lea and Nigel Young are tactician and strategist, respectively, who has won four races and leads Blind Squirrel (John Brown, Philadelphia, PA) by a point. Their impressive 1-1-1-3 scores for the day was enough to earn them the Mt Gay Rum Boat of the Day prize.
"I really must give credit to my tactician, Jamie Lea, for this prize. He made a lot of great calls today," Thompson said. "Our crew work as a whole was fantastic. Blind Squirrel sailed very well today, but we were just a little better."
Lying in fifth place in the Melges class is Thomas Ritter's Tramp from Bloomfield Hills, MI, who also had a day good enough to earn them the Corinthian Boat of the Day award.
The ORC 1 class is close, where J/122 sister ships Orion (Paul Milo, Leesburg, VA) and Teamwork (Robin Team, Lexington, NC) are battling every race and are only two points apart. Four boats are still very much in contention, with the modified Evelyn 32 Bluto (Ben Hall, Tiverton, RI) in third place and SkyFall (Peter Sulick, Naples, FL) in fourth place in the hunt, totaling 19 and 26 points.
Skipper Mike Bruno (Armonk, NY) and the crew of Wings stayed on top of the J/88 class by closing with consecutive second place finishes on Wednesday. Rob Fear is tactician on Wings, which leads Deviation by three points.
"It has been really close sailing. Wings sails very consistently and very fast, which keeps us on our toes," - said Deviation skipper Iris Vogel (New Rochelle, NY), who sandwiched a pair of bullets around a seventh on Wednesday. "We had one bad race today and we cannot afford to do that. We need to be more consistent."
The Performance Cruising class is a new addition to Quantum Key West 2016 and principal race officer Bruce Bingman has the four entries doing distance races around government marks. Defiant, a New York 40 owned by John Streicker of New York, has won both races.
"It's a matter of teamwork. We have 10 people on the boat that have all sailed together before and we know each other's strengths and weaknesses," - Streicker said.
Triple Lindy, a Swan 44 owned by Dr. Joseph Mele of New York, captured line honors on Wednesday with Defiant not far behind and easily saving its time on ORC handicap.
"We sailed pretty close to our course the whole way," - Streicker said. "The only deviations were to go around crab pots. It's like a mine field out there at times."
Racing resumes tomorrow at 11:30 AM, with another three races expected in another day of similar breeze.
Complete results, photos from Max Ranchi and Sara Proctor, and videos from T2P.TV are available on the event website at www.keywestraceweek.com
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The racing at Quantum Key West Race Week will be conducted under permit in the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary. The sanctuary protects 2,900 square nautical miles of critical marine habitat, including coral reef, hard bottom, seagrass meadow, mangrove communities and sand flats.
For more information, please visit floridakeys.noaa.gov.
The Storm Trysail Club is comprised of blue water sailors with the purpose of promoting good fellowship and to encourage the sport of sailboat racing. STC is one of the world's most respected sailing organizations, composed of over 900 members by invitation who have demonstrated their abilities as expert offshore sailors. Established in 1938, it is a not-for-profit club, headquartered in Larchmont, NY with regional stations throughout the U.S. It is well known as an organizing authority for a number of racing, social and junior events for its members and other sailors, both on the water and ashore. The Storm Trysail Foundation has a strong commitment to youth sailing and safety training, and the club has been in the vanguard of development of new events, handicap rating systems, yacht design, safety procedures...and new rum drinks.
For more information, please visit www.stormtrysail.org.
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