March 25, 2007
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Barby MacGowan, Media
Pro Int'l for Rolex,
barby@mediapronewport.com, +1 401-849-0220 or Wally Bostwick for St. Thomas
Yacht Club, newsdog@viaccess.net, +1
340-690-2898 mobile
International Rolex Regatta
Winners named in Seven Classes
ST. THOMAS, USVI (March 25, 2007) -- A third day of perfect trade winds and
pleasant sunshine helped wrap up the International Rolex Regatta, where sailors
on 87 boats have been competing in seven classes. The event, in its 34th year
and hosted by St. Thomas Yacht Club, is the oldest of the Caribbean's popular
Spring racing events and counts as the favorite for many, with its unique blend
of around-the-buoys and through-the-islands racing mixed with lively local
flavor and camaraderie ashore.
"This is one of the best island regattas because of the venue, the course
selection, and the winds," said defending champion Martin Jacobson (Greenwich,
Conn.), whose Swan 44 Crescendo won today's Pillsbury Sound distance race and
added the victory to three others in his six-race series to secure victory in
Spinnaker Racing Cruising class. "It's why we come back." Jacobson's class,
along with four others on the Ocean Circle, sailed three windward/leeward
courses on opening day and two middle-distance races (from the east end of St.
Thomas to Charlotte Amalie and back) on Saturday. Today's race, a navigator's
delight, totaled 21 miles and took about three hours for Crescendo to complete.
Straight bullets marked the overall regatta performances of three winning teams,
whose skippers were awarded with Rolex Steel Submariner timepieces as prizes.
One of those teams was Doug Baker's (Long Beach, Calif.) Olson 30 J Bird 4 in
Spinnaker Racing Class 3. About today's racing, tactician Keith Kilpatrick
(Newport Beach, Calif.) said a good start combined with the longer length of the
course enabled his team to put more distance on the fleet than in the previous
races. "Our strength is buoy racing, because there is not as much local
knowledge involved " said Kilpatrick, adding that the boat's southern California
crew gets plenty of experience in that discipline from regularly sailing Baker's
Andrews 80 Magnitude. "Today on the first beat, we really didn't know which way
to go -- but it was all fun."
For Chris Stanton (St. Croix, USVI), who strung his victories together like a
perfect pearl necklace in Spinnaker Racing Class 2, today's winds, rather than
local knowledge, helped put his Melges 24 Devil 3 ahead. "It seemed to start out
light, but it got every bit as windy as the last few days," said Stanton. "It
was more southerly than usual, so the waves were not as steep as they can be in
the Sound--it helped us in the smaller boats." Sailors dubbed racing in this
class the "battle of the Melges boats," since three other Melges 24s and two
Melges 32s also competed.
IIn the Non-Spinnaker class, which sailed only one race through the islands on
opening day to include four races instead of six in its scoreline, it was
Christopher Lloyd (Tortola, BVI) and his Beneteau 442 Three Harkoms who won all
the races to easily defend his crown. "Nobody stopped working the whole time --
that was the secret," said Lloyd.
Carlo Falcone (Antigua), the winner of Spinnaker Racing Class 1 on his
Vallicelli 44 Caccia Alla Volpe, today continued focusing on his closest
competitor Clive Llewellyn (Paris, France) aboard the Grand Soleil 48 Mad IV. He
finished second to Llewellyn's first, but it was enough to edge Llewellyn out of
first by two points. "We stayed close but had a bit of a cushion today," said
Caccia's mainsheet trimmer Karl James (Antigua), who has represented Antigua
twice in the Olympics in the Laser class.
The IC-24s, a fleet indigenous to the area, completed 13 races in their series,
using this final day to complete five windward-leeward races on a separate
racecourse instead of participating in the Pillsbury Sound race. Tieing on point
scores were Mio Broadband's Robby and Michael Hirst (Tortola, BVI) and Orion's
Fraito Lugo (Ponce, PR), with the tie-breaker going to Mio Broadband.
"On the last day you get more defensive if you have the lead, and it's better to
be on the offensive," said Robby Hirst, who was the British Virgin Island's
Olympic representative in 1996 and has won the IC-24 class here now three times
in a row. "We had very mixed results today, and we could see that Fraito was
very focused." Going into today, Orion was 12 points behind Mio Broadband,
having made the major mistake of missing a mark of the course in yesterday's
second race and suffering dearly for it after having to turn back to re-round.
Today, however, Lugo -- who has won this event five times in a J/24 and another
time in a Melges 24 -- did a stellar job of "putting boats between us," but it
was just not good enough for the overall victory.
Enrique Figueroa and crew Jorge Hernandez, two names synonymous with Olympic
sailing, easily won the race today and the Beach Cats class overall with their
20-foot Tornado Suzuki/Red Bull. The duo, which represented Puerto Rico in the
Tornado class at the Athens Games and hopes to do so again at Quingdao in 2008,
blew away their competition, but it was expected. Figueroa, either with is wife
Carla or Hernandez, has won this regatta at least a dozen times. "It took us two
hours to cover 37 miles today at an average boat speed of 15 knots," said
Hernandez, "and we smoked the big boats." Hernandez said he and Figueroa used
the regatta for testing equipment before heading off to Mallorca tomorrow for an
international regatta. "When we sail in some beautiful place in Europe, and
someone says what a nice day, I say 'no, no, you haven't seen a nice day until
you've sailed in the Caribbean!'
The Governor's Cup, supported by newly elected USVI Governor John deJongh and
the V.I. Office of Tourism, was awarded to the boat and crew that traveled the
farthest to race in the event. The 41-foot X-Yacht Xpresso from The Netherlands,
which sailed in Spinnaker Racing Cruising class, was declared the winner and
received four free rooms at the Frenchman's Reef Marriott Hotel for the 2008
running of the International Rolex Regatta. Accepting the award from the
Governor himself at the beachside awards ceremony was Marc Noordhoel of
Bloemerdaal, The Netherlands. "We sailed from The Nertherlands across the
Atlantic to sail this regatta," said Noordhoel, "so I am very happy to be here."
The International Rolex Regatta is part of the US-IRC Gulf Stream Series 2007.
Live results by Yacht Scoring (www.yachtscoring.com) will be posted on
www.rolexcupregatta.com, where hometown rosters, nightly reports and photos also
can be found. Daily video coverage will be available on demand by 9 p.m. each
night at www.t2p.tv or by clicking on the TV icon on the regatta web site.
A.H. Riise, Official Retailer of Rolex watches in the U.S. Virgin Islands, takes
an active role in sponsorship of the event. The St. Thomas duty free shop is one
of the largest in the Caribbean and is located on the historic waterfront of
downtown Charlotte Amalie. Rolex is known for sponsoring high quality events
such as the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race, Rolex Fastnet Race, Giraglia Rolex
Cup, Rolex Middle Sea Race, Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup and the Rolex Farr 40 Worlds.
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(top-three results below)
International Rolex Regatta - Day Three
Place, Yacht Name, Type, Skipper's Name, Hometown, Results, Total Points
IC-24 (One Design - 19 Boats)
1. Mio Broadband, IC-24, Robby & Michael Hirst, Tortola, BVI - 1, 2, 3, 1, 3,
10, 1, 1, 1, 4, 5, 3, 12; 47
2. Orion, IC-24, Fraito Lugo, Ponce, PR - 2, 4, 6, 2, 1, 6, 3, 11, 2, 3, 1, 1,
5; 47
3. Bambooshay, IC_24, Chris Rosenberg, St. Thomas, USVI - 4, 1, 1, 5, 8, 5, 4,
10/SCP, 14, 1, 2, 4, 2; 61
Spinnaker Racing 1 (CSA - 6 Boats)
1. Caccia Alla Volpe, Vallicelli 44, Carlo Falcone, Antigua - 1, 3, 2, 1, 2, 2;
11
2. Mad IV, Grand Soleil 48, Clive Llewellyn, Paris, France - 4, 1, 1, 3, 3, 1;
13
3. Yeoman XXXII, Rogers 46, Barry Lewis, San Francisco, CA, USA - 2, 2, 3, 5, 1,
4; 17
Spinnaker Racing 2 (CSA - 9 Boats)
1. Devil 3, Melges 24, Chris Stanton, St. Croix, USVI - 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1; 6
2. Crash Test Dummies, Melges 32, Tim Kimpton, Diego Martin, Trinidad & Tobago -
2, 4, 5, 2, 2, 2; 17
3. Expensive Habit, J/100, Robert Armstrong, St. Croix, USVI - 3, 2, 2, 4, 4, 4;
19
Spinnaker Racing 3 (CSA - 17 Boats)
1. J Bird 4, Olson 30, Doug Baker, Long Beach, CA, USA - 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1; 6
2. The Good The Bad and The Ugly, Kirby 25, John Foster, St. Thomas, USVI - 4,
6, 2, 4, 4, 2; 22
3. SP MRI & CT Center/Tax Return, J/24, Carlos Feliciano, Caguas, PR - 5, 4, 3,
8, 2, 3; 25
Non-spinnaker Racing 1 (CSA - 17 Boats)
1. Three Harkoms, Modified Beneteau 442, Christopher Lloyd, Tortola, BVI - 1, 1,
1, 1; 4
2. Affinity, Frers 49, Jack Desmond, Marion, MA, USA - 2, 5, 2, 2; 11
3. El Presidente, Thomas 35, Jeffrey Fangmann, St. Croix, USVI - 3, 4, 3, 3; 13
Spinnaker Racing Cruising (CSA - 9 Boats)
1. Crescendo, Swan 44, Martin Jacobson, Greenwich, CT, USA - 2, 1, 1, 2, 1, 1; 8
2. Team Paul Mitchell, Beneteau First 40.7, Mark Palermo, Slidell, LA, USA - 3,
2, 2, 3, 4, 2; 16
3. Shamrock V, J/120, Thomas Mullen, Campton, NH, USA - 1, 3, 3, 5, 2, 3; 17
Beach Cats (Portsmouth - 12 Boats)
1. DRD/Suzuki/Red Bull, Tornado 20, Enrique Figeroa, San Juan, PR - 1, 1, 1, 1,
1, 1; 6
2. Heineken, Hobie 16, Francisco Figueroa, San Juan, PR - 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2; 12
3. Fitness Warehouse, Hobie 16, Dennys Junco, Carolina, PR - 6, 3, 3, 4, 3, 4;
23
For information on the International Rolex Regatta, contact Bill Canfield at styc@vipowernet.net or 340-775-6320. The regatta web page is www.rolexcupregatta.com where further information and online-entry forms can be found.
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| May 31, 2007 | 2008 Event to Offer IRC Division | |
| March 25, 2007 | Winners named in Seven Classes | |
| March 24, 2007 | Excursion to Town Challenges Rolex Sailors | |
| March 23, 2007 | Wild and Windy Day Sets Pace for Rolex Sailors | |
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