
47 Boats in 7 Classes Kick Off Heineken Action in Second Budget Marine
Commodore’s Cup
St. Maarten, N.A. March 6 – The sailing was spirited, the
images memorable. There was Elandra, the Beneteau First 40.7, wiping out at the
leeward mark and struggling with a spinnaker takedown as many of her competitors
slipped past. And MAD IV, the Grand Soleil 50, suffering the same mishap with
her kite flailing away at the masthead. And no one who saw it will forget the
sight of the Melges 24, French Connection, in a near knockdown with her big red
asymmetric spinnaker in the water as her crew scrambled to windward to try and
get her back upright.
But no crew had more of a handful than the team aboard the
J/109, Vrijgezeilig, which faced not one but two fire drills: a spinnaker that
exploded into three sections and, worse, a man-overboard situation when an
unfortunate crewman went into the drink after yet another broach. That incident
had a happy ending, as the soaked sailor was recovered a minute later and
Vrijgezeilig resumed racing.
In other words, the weathermen said it would blow today, and
blow it did.
In staunch easterly winds of 25-knots, forty-seven boats in
seven classes answered the call today in the second running of the Budget Marine
Commodore’s Cup, the prelude to the 28th St. Maarten Heineken
Regatta, the annual three-day Caribbean sailing carnival which begins tomorrow
with a series of point-to-point races to Philipsburg.
In the interests of keeping carnage to an absolute minimum,
the race committee chose discretion over valor and conducted a pair of races,
rather than the three that were originally scheduled. Still, up and down the
course and before and after the brief, passing squalls, there were patches of
light air and holes in the breeze, with plenty of opportunities for substantial
gains for the savvier crews.
Several teams proved that they were at the top of their
games, winning their respective divisions with a pair of victories. That was the
case in the Spinnaker 1 class, where Benny Kelly’s TP 52, Panthera, stood atop
the field with consecutive bullets, and also in Spinnaker 2, where Clay
Deutsch’s perennial campaigner, the Swan 68, Chippewa, matched the performance
with a straight-set victory.
The last time many sailors saw Carlo Falcone’s plywood
rocket, Caccia Alla Volpe, was a year ago during Antigua Sailing Week when
Falcone and his crew sat forlornly in wavy seas after the boat was dismasted
early in the series. But Falcone is back, as he proved today, winning the
11-boat Spinnaker 3 class with a first and a second.
Arnaud de Meillac’s A40, sailing styl’carabies, recorded the
same score to win Class 4, narrowly beating Sergio Sagramoso’s Beneteau 40.7,
Lazy Dog, in a preview of what may well be one of the most competitive of all
the St. Maarten Heineken Regatta classes.
In other action, the division winners in the remaining three
Commodore’s Cup classes were also decided by crews who posted a pair of
victories: Robert Armstrong’s J/100, Bad Girl, in Spinnaker 5; Clive Llewellyn’s
Grand Soleil 50, MAD IV, in Spinnaker 6; and Ian Hope-Ross’s Beneteau First
36s7, Kick ‘em Jenny, in Spinnaker 7.
With the second Budget Marine Commodore’s Cup now in the
record books, attention now turns to the main event: the 28th running
of the St. Maarten Heineken Regatta. Tomorrow, on Day 1, the fleet will embark
on a point-to-point race to Philipsburg, with the spinnaker racing classes
setting out on courses around-the-island, and the bareboat and cruising
divisions scheduled for a shorter contest along the island’s southern shore.
The forecast calls for continued steady breeze, which
promises another full day of full-on sailing. It’ll make for thirsty work, but
one thing’s for certain: There will be a steady supply of ice-cold Heineken
awaiting on Front St. when the day’s competition is done.
For full information, entry lists, entry forms and much more,
visit www.heinekenregatta.com.
Herb McCormick
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