With Style and Finesse, Bernie Evans-Wong's Cal 40, Huey Too, is Named Boat of the Regatta
as the 27th Running of the St. Maarten Heineken Regatta Wraps Up in
Spectacular Fashion.
 The 27 th edition of the St.
Maarten Heineken Regatta concluded today in spectacular fashion as more than
200 boats in 20 divisions enjoyed classic Caribbean
sailing conditions to wrap up a most memorable running of the annual event.
Highlights of the regatta included the dominating performance of the Volvo 70, abn-reach-finish-big ABN AMRO ONE, Mike Sanderson's world-beating yacht, which put on a sailing clinic while regularly registering speeds of better than 20-knots; the addition of a first-ever fourth day of racing for the top race boats, which turned out to be a resounding success; and a Boat of the Regatta award to a design that was first introduced some 40 years ago.
With three straight wins to capture the
Non-Spinnaker 2 class, veteran campaigner Bernie Evans-Wong's Cal 40, Huey Too, was named Boat of the Regatta
for the 2007 St. Maarten Heineken Regatta. Evans-Wong, from Antigua,
was sailing the venerable design first introduced by designer Bill Lapworth in
1967. The boat was an immediate success in the classic Transpac Race from Los Angeles to Honolulu,
and four decades along, Evans-Wong sailed it to perfection to win his class,
and the prestigious prize for 2007.
The superb race committee continued the
stellar work it's exhibited throughout this breezy regatta while utilizing
three separate courses from the starting line off Marigot
Harbour to the finish in Simpson Bay. The two Bigboats divisions,
Spinnaker Classes 3-5, and the Multihull 1 fleet all sailed a course that first
took them on a windy beat to a mark inside the island of Tintamarre
on St. Maarten's northeast coastline, and which ultimately measured 29 nautical
miles. Spinnaker Classes 6 and 7, and Non Spinnaker 1 and 2, sailed a slightly
abbreviated course of 15.5 nautical miles, while the remaining divisions,
including all six Bareboat classes, were assigned a straightforward race track
of 11.5 nautical miles.
Unlike the 2006 St. Maarten Heineken
Regatta, when Sunday's racing was cancelled for the extremely rare occurrence
of no wind, this year's edition of the event was blessed with plenty of breeze
for all four days of competition, including Thursday's running of the inaugural
Commodore's Cup sponsored by Budget Marine, a first in the regatta's long
history. Today was no exception, as the racers set sail in winds that hovered
in the upper teens this morning and which filled in to superb, challenging
easterlies of 20-knots and more as the day progressed.
In Bigboats 1, Moose Sanderson's ABN AMRO ONE-sailing with a stellar crew
of professional sailors including Sanderson's fellow Volvo Ocean Race and America's
Cup veteran, John Kostecki-submitted its fifth straight "horizon job" in the
5-boat class to take top honors in the division. Jim Swartz's Moneypenny, a Swan 601, sailed a fine
series to finish second in the class, in so doing relegating Tom Hill's
75-footer, Titan 12, to a
disappointing third.
In Bigboats 2, the windy conditions were
perfectly suited to Sir Peter Harrison's 115-foot ketch, Sojana, which, by virtue of its victory in today's race, edged out
2006 class winner Chippewa, Clay
Deutsch's Swan 68, by a single point. Chippewa
took second in today's race, which is where she stood in the final Bigboats 2
standings.
Spinnaker 3 was yet another class that came
down to a duel between a pair of competitors. Between the two of them, Sir
Geoffrey Mulcahy's Swan 56, Noonmark VI,
and Les Crouch's Soca Sailboats 44, Storm,
won every race in the five-race series. But when all was said and done, with a
pair of bullets and three seconds, it was Noonmark
at the top of the 13-boat class.
With a first in today's fifth and final
race, Robert Bottomley's Beneteau 47.7, Sailplane,
wrapped up class honors in the Spinnaker 4 division, which also consisted of 13
entrants. In what turned out to be one of the real surprises in the fleet,
Spinnaker 5 was dominated by Rick Wesslund's J/120, El Ocaso, which won four races to beat Sergio Sagramoso's Beneteau
40.7, a class winner in previous St. Maarten Heineken Regattas, by a
comfortable nine points.
Paul Christo Johnson's well-sailed Beneteau
10M, Bruggadung, from Barbados, edged
out John Bishop's J/100, Expensive Habit,
by just two points to win Spinnaker 6. In Spinnaker 7, the margin of victory
was even tighter, as Ian Hope-Ross's Beneteau 36, Kick ‘em Jenny, was also a single point better than Michel
Heidweiler's J/109, Vrijgezelig.
In Non-Spinnaker 1, Bob Phillips and the
crew of the Oceanis 440, Three Harkoms,
left nothing to chance, winning the class in decisive fashion with three
bullets. As noted, Antiguan sailor Bernie Evan-Wong accomplished the same
mighty feat aboard his Cal 40, Huey Too,
to lead the fleet home in Non-Spinnaker 2.
The Open Class victor was Jorge Lopes
aboard the Sun Odyssey 40, Infinito.
Nils Erickson won every race, and the Multihull 1 division, on his Formula 40
catamaran, Soma. In Multihull 2, the
winner was Jean Pierre Abetel aboard Dreamcatcher.
Pascal Marchais and his Hobie 18 Tiger, Snickers-Dell-Quicksilver,
was another "straight-sets" victor with a trio of bullets in the Beach Cats
crowd. Morgan McClean won the Exhibition class aboard the 12-Meter, Stars & Stripes.
The Bareboat charter classes are always a
big part of the St. Martin Heineken Regatta, and this year was no different,
with some 105 boats racing in six separate divisions. Bareboats 1 was taken by
Canadian Irek Zubko aboard the Jeanneau 49, Guilt.
The winner of Bareboats 2 was Dutch skipper Rene Baartmans aboard the Moorings
505, Harten Heer. In Bareboats 3, U.S. sailor
Jeffrey Sochrin was Top Dog with the Beneteau 47, Team Goldendog.
Papillon, a Moorings 515 chartered by David Saeys, was the winner, with two
firsts and a second, in Bareboats 4. Robert Thole was also a three-time winner
aboard the Oceanis 440, Amsterdam, in
Bareboats 5. Last in this report, but certainly not least, was John Pinheiro on
the Moorings 403, Scooby II, who won
Bareboats 6.
With that, the 27th St. Maarten Heineken
Regatta comes to a close. A final report previewing the 2008 event-that is, if
we can still type after tonight's award ceremony and concerts-will be issued on
Monday, March 5.
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