Showing the stuff winners are made of
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June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH -- Four things set apart the winners in the annual
Newport to Ensenada Yacht Race, four crucial factors that turn
world-class competitors into first-place winners: “Preparation,
preparation, preparation and luck.”
The Tommy Bahama Newport to Ensenada Yacht Race, which will begin at
noon today, owes much of its success to its popular appeal. Its theme of
fun and camaraderie draws entries from the ranks of boaters who usually
would never dream of pitting their sails against the likes of Steve
Fossett or Roy Disney.
But, while in some ways the race is a floating party, at the same time
it’s an amazing, dead-serious competition -- one only the best can win.
“One area is boat preparation -- you have to be in good repair,” said
Fred Slocum, vice commodore of this year’s race. “Then there’s crew
preparation. The more serious people go out sailing regularly before the
race to get ready, to do practices. The third aspect is preparation
regarding the weather.”
While it may seem like everyone’s in the same boat (so to speak)
weather-wise, the truth is this universal factor really has a way of
separating the best from the rest.
By checking weather patterns twice a day for the week before the race,
skilled sailors can make what may be the most crucial decision in the
race: whether to stay close to the shore or head a few miles farther out
in hopes of catching some favorable winds. It’s always a trade-off,
always a gamble, because a boat adds several miles to its trip by heading
farther out to sea.
Last year, the gamble paid off. Sailors who raced to Ensenada from a
position 15 to 30 miles offshore, near the Coronado Islands, were
rewarded with winds between eight and 16 knots.
Stark Raving Mad, James Madden’s J160 from the Newport Harbor Yacht
Club, sailed to the spot of overall winner on corrected time last year
after sailing about 13 to 14 miles outside the Coronado Islands.
But winds, especially in this part of the world, are unpredictable at
best. This year’s conditions are looking favorable: The National Weather
Service is predicting that by Friday night, northwest winds will be 20 to
30 knots, waves will reach 3 to 5 feet high and a northwest swell will be
9 to 12 feet at 10 seconds.This seems to spell a big departure from last
year’s race, when ideal breezes helped Roy Disney’s Pyewacket cross the
finish line first. The 73-foot Reichle/Pugh, however, was not a
first-place winner on corrected time.
Corrected time, of course, is everything in this race.
“The winner is not necessarily the boat that finishes first. It’s the
boat that is sailed best according to that boat’s performance
capabilities,” Slocum said.
And though this criteria serves to give all the sailors a fighting
chance, everyone knows that the high-performance catamarans and the
ultralight displacement boats rule the race.
Nonetheless, the Newport Ocean Sailing Assn., which puts on the race,
continues to add to its 20-plus classes, giving even more sailors a
chance to win. The double-handed class first introduced last year is just
for two-person teams. Entries in that category have nearly double this
year to about 16.
Also new in recent years is the Carolyn Starr trophy, awarded to
all-female crews. This year, at least three women-only crews are expected
to compete for that trophy.
But across all categories, don’t be too surprised if the winner is an
internationally known sailor. After all, this year’s 450 entries include
world-class sailors Dennis Conner and Gino Morrelli, Southern California
favorites like Bill Gibbs and Fred Preiss, and Transpac-winner Seth
Radow.
This year, they are all expected to show what kind of stuff winners
are made of.
* June Casagrande covers Newport Beach. She may be reached at (949)
574-4232 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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