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Monthly archives for July, 2022

New Zealand wins Governor’s Cup

Sunday
Jul 31
2022
Posted by XS Editor

With the lifting of pandemic travel restrictions, Jordan Stevenson (NZL) won the 2022 Governor’s Cup International Youth Match Racing Championship presented by DISC Sports and Spine Center after last appearing at the Cup in 2019.

Admittedly rusty in the qualifying stage, Stevenson turned a meager performance in the first round to domination of the second round, and stayed on a roll through the Semi Finals and Finals to sit atop the 12 teams from five nations in the 55th edition. Race was held in GC22s on July 26-30 in Newport Beach, CA.

On the final day, Stevenson won the first and second races against defending champion and newly crowned World Youth Match Racing Champs Jeffrey Petersen, Max Brennan, and Scott Mais to go up 2-0 in the “first to three”’ point series.

In the 4-6 knot wind conditions, Stevenson had exceptional boat speed, both upwind and downwind. His starts were never disastrous, and he often had a slight advantage. As the boats started the last downwind leg of the third race, Stevenson had a comfortable lead about halfway down the leg in this deciding race.

Stevenson did so and started up the course. Petersen then rounded in the other direction, and once he realized his mistake, he returned to round again. Even then he did not “unwind the string” of his first incorrect rounding and therefore had still not rounded the mark.

At that point, the Race Committee started to move one of the leeward “gate” marks to square the gate to the wind. Since the move couldn’t be done by the time the boats were approaching the mark, that left a single mark, which needed to be rounded in a clockwise direction.

By then, Stevenson had sailed so far away that the Cup was to be his in a walk, but when Petersen protested the race, the umpires called for a do-over with Stevenson remaining at a 2-0 score against Petersen.

Stevenson could not have been pleased, but both boats prepared for another start and a crucial race. Stevenson and crew put that “almost win” behind them, and although the boats in any race were typically less than two boats apart, eked out another lead on the second and final downwind leg.

By mid-leg, Stevenson had increased his lead, and with all the marks in their proper place, looked to complete a sweep. But suddenly Stevenson notably slowed down, snagging what he described as“40 kilos of kelp on the keel.” Petersen forged ahead to win, and with the score now 2-1, he was back in the hunt.

Hoping to even the score in the next race, Petersen at first incurred a penalty before the start, but in shepherding Stevenson down the line before the starting gun, Stevenson made a critical mistake and was over the line when the gun went off. As he returned to the line with no rights against Petersen, he committed a double penalty for an intentional foul, which meant he had to do his penalty turn immediately.

This erased the penalty for Petersen but left Stevenson with one penalty turn to do. His boat speed and tactics were again sufficient to eke out a lead, but it was unclear whether he had enough distance to finish his turn before the hard-charging Petersen finished.

Stevenson and crew did an excellent job with the turn, but Petersen got a puff, got an overlap, and was surging past Stevenson. The large spectator fleet had to wait for the Race Committee to raise a yellow flag indicating that the New Zealand team had won by 2-3 feet giving Stevenson the Cup with teammates Mitch Jackson and George Angus.

The best to two petit final stage between the other two semifinalists, Marius Westerlind (SWE) and Jack Egan (USA) was equally as close with one mistake at the start, or downwind, and a change of lead would occur. With the score tied 1-1, like Stevenson, Egan looked to take the race and place third in the final standings. In the deciding race, Westerind’s team was excellent upwind, but not as fast as the virtual perfection of Egan and his team, and Egan won the race and achieved a “podium finish” in the Cup.

Details: https://www.matchracingresults.com/2022/governors-cup/

The format began with a double round robin qualifying series to advance the top four teams to the knock-out rounds for semi-final, petit-final, and final matches.

Read more on Scuttlebutt

Posted in Article



New Zealand win British Grand Prix at Plymouth

Sunday
Jul 31
2022
Posted by deleteme

Ben Ainslie came within a gnat’s whisker of the British Grand Prix Final at Plymouth, only to be denied by arch rival Tom Slingsby…

Read more on Sail Web

Posted in Article



Sir Ben Ainslie looks to kickstart season

Friday
Jul 29
2022
Posted by XS Editor

After two wins from two events and with two championships from two seasons, Tom Slingsby and the Australia SailGP Team remain the firm focus of the other eight drivers ahead of the Great Britain Sail Grand Prix in Plymouth this weekend…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



34 skippers to compete in La Solitaire du Figaro

Friday
Jul 29
2022
Posted by XS Editor

The starting gun for the first stage of the 53rd edition of La Solitaire du Figaro will sound on August 21, off Saint-Michel-Chef-Chef in the Loire-Atlantique after the fleet has paraded up the Loire from Nantes…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



SailGP – Nathan Outteridge joins Swiss Team

Thursday
Jul 28
2022
Posted by deleteme

Nathan Outteridge, has joined the Swiss SailGP team for the Great Britain Sail Grand Prix at Plymouth this weekend…

Read more on Sail Web

Posted in Article



the old ways

Thursday
Jul 28
2022
Posted by deleteme

Pulling into the harbor at Mackinac Island Sunday, July 24th at 5:04 a.m., driver Greg Fordon parked Whitehawk and a crew of 14 went below deck to toast their first-to-finish of 31 boats in the Cruising Division in the 113th Chicago Mac Race. They were ninth on corrected time at 2:05:41:04.

Sending out emails and making a few calls, owner Peter Thornton assembled a skilled squad who had been with him for a few Macs. Antonio Cuervas mons flew in from Spain, Willie Lynch, Peter Eagan and Lat Spinney are from Rhode Island, Deane Tank from western South Carolina, Bogdan Ogorek, Fordon and Gary Murino are from Chicago, Tom Murray, suburban Chicago, Tom Cote, Harbor Springs, Mich., Chris Thornton and his son, Jack, reside in Ponte Vedra Beach, Fla.

Leaving the starting line Friday, July 22 in front of Navy Pier at 3:00 p.m., the 104-foot ketch set a swift pace propelling them a few minutes in front of several severe storms…

Read more on Sailing Anarchy

Posted in Article



55th Governor’s Cup Day 2

Thursday
Jul 28
2022
Posted by XS Editor

Jeffrey Petersen & Co. maintain their lead, with only three points separating the next nine teams. Fight for four semi-final spots still far from decided among the twelve teams from five countries…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



Celebrate the Clipper Race finish this weekend

Thursday
Jul 28
2022
Posted by XS Editor

A huge celebration is in store for Race Finish at London’s historic Royal Docks on Saturday 30 July in honour of the teams competing in the Clipper 2019-20 Race…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



European Moth Championship – Funk, Fletcher, Hiscock lead

Thursday
Jul 28
2022
Posted by deleteme

No wind on the third day of the European Moth Championship in Quiberon, France, so no racing for the 91 competitors…

Read more on Sail Web

Posted in Article



GP Zero – the Magnificent Seven

Thursday
Jul 28
2022
Posted by XS Editor

Cowes Week beckons and the entire big boat IRC Zero Class at the world-famous regatta will be composed of GP Zero Class. The fastest boats at Cowes Week with crew from the Olympics, America’s Cup, Volvo Ocean Race and World Championships…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



Wallywind110 – a new range of cruiser-racers

Thursday
Jul 28
2022
Posted by XS Editor

The three sailing boat models range from 110ft LOA up to 150ft aim to completely redefine the possibilities for owners interested in blistering performance allied to long-range cruising comfort…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



On Course, Episode 20

Thursday
Jul 28
2022
Posted by XS Editor

The On Course series takes a regular look at the sailing world with show host Matt Sheahan:

After two years of uncertainty, there is no doubt that this year the sailing season is well underway. It’s been a very busy and exciting summer so far with a huge range of events filling the calendar to bursting point. And what a variety we’ve had already.

From a race into unknown territory for the IMOCA 60s, to the launch of a radical new design for one of the biggest offshore rockstars in the scene. Plus, we’ve seen the ProSailing Tour demonstrate why it could be the next hottest thing offshore.

There have been world championships aplenty too, the TP52s in Portugal, the 6 Metres in Switzerland, and three impressive ClubSwan fleets in Spain to name just a few…

Read more on Scuttlebutt

Posted in Article



Multihulls and the 2021 ARC

Wednesday
Jul 27
2022
Posted by deleteme

No longer a rarity, multihulls are now a mainstay of the ARC fleet, shown here departing Las Palmas in Gran Canaria – Photo courtesy of James Mitchell/WCC

The days of multihulls being the weirdos of the sea are gone. Nothing illustrated this better than the 2021 Atlantic Rally for Cruisers (ARC), which departed Las Palmas de Gran Canaria (in Spain’s Canary Islands) in November and wrapped up in December on the island of St. Lucia in the Caribbean. Of the 143 boats that crossed the starting line of the 3,000-mile voyage, 32 were multihulls, mostly cats with a smattering of trimarans as well.

The ARC has been running 36 consecutive years, ever since the first one was organized by the World Cruising Club (WCC: worldcruising.com) in 1986, and multihulls are increasingly visible. This ARC was rough, with 15ft seas and 40-knot winds barreling down on the fleet about a week after an unusually slow (and upwind) start. Nonetheless, the crews on cats fared well. Many commented that they appreciated the more stable platform of multiple hulls and that it enabled them to be more rested and make better decisions…

Read more on Sail Magazine

Posted in Article



Eight Bells: Dan Clapp

Wednesday
Jul 27
2022
Posted by XS Editor

Longtime southern California sailing enthusiast Dan Clapp crossed over the bar at the age of 93 on July 7, 2022.

Shortly after his high school graduation, Dan and his buddies built a “Covered Wagon” on an open truck chassis and drove it to Alaska where they worked aboard a riverboat for the summer. Upon his return from Alaska, Dan got his “Dear John” letter and was off to Korea with the US Army where he was a driver for a Brigadier General.

Once discharged, Dan returned home to attend Cal State Los Angeles where he received a B.A. in Business Administration. While attending college, his best friend set him up on a blind date with a gal from Pasadena named Norma Doell. They were married on June 26, 1955.

Dan started in sales with the R.B. Clapp Co., Inc. a family business and rapidly took the helm from his father. His success in business gave him the opportunity to live his dream of building his first boat and teaching himself to sail.

His love of sailing led them to move to the beach when in 1977, Dan and Norma joined Alamitos Bay Yacht Club in Long Beach, CA. Their boats would include a Coronado 15 (Sugarplum), Santa Cruz 27 (Hot Flash), North American 40 (Hot Flash), Capri 25 (Whoosh!), and briefly a Capri 22 (which proved to be too tippy).

Norma would become Commodore of ABYC (1991), with the constant in their lives being sailing and club friends with which they did several bareboat charters in the Caribbean, San Juan’s, New Zealand, and Portugal…

Read more on Scuttlebutt

Posted in Article



470: Kiwis win Bronze in Mixed 470 Junior Euros

Wednesday
Jul 27
2022
Posted by XS Editor

Annabelle Rennie-Younger and Andre Van Dam were pleasantly surprised after finishing third in the Mixed event at the 470 Junior European Championships in Vilamoura, Portugal, which finished on Tuesday July 26…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



55th Governor’s Cup Day 1

Wednesday
Jul 27
2022
Posted by XS Editor

Jet lag for defending champion Jeffrey Petersen (USA) of host Balboa Yacht Club is evidently not a problem as he stands in first place at the end of the first day of the Governor’s Cup International Youth Match Racing Championship…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



Lightning, strong winds hit Chicago Mackinac Race

Wednesday
Jul 27
2022
Posted by XS Editor

In a race that will be remembered as “one for the books,” the 113th Chicago Yacht Club Race to Mackinac presented by Wintrust is a wrap after staggered starts on July 22 and 23 in Chicago, IL.

And while this year’s 289 nm race didn’t break any official records other than the number of Lake Michigan lightning strikes late on July 23, it was one of the overall fastest races in recent years. By the time the Grand Hotel Porch Party ended the following evening, nearly all of the 33 boats in the Cruising Division had finished; and half of the turbo boats in Section 1 were drying out their gear.

Race chair Sam Veilleux raced on board Dakota, a Beneteau 47.7 co-owned by Steve Sickler and Ray Groble III. They were the second cruising boat to finish after 1:17:34:55, following in Peter Thornton’s 104-foot ketch, Whitehawk, which earned the Royono Trophy as the first monohull boat to finish after 1:13:44:13. On board was 94-year-old Gene McCarthy, who claimed a new Mac record for the most races ever sailed at 67.

“What a delight to be on a boat longer than my age,” joked McCarthy.

“This year proved yet again why the Mac is America’s Offshore Challenge,” said Veilleux. “And what a tough, fun, exciting challenge it turned out to be. Congratulations to everyone who was so well prepared for the expected weather, competed hard and joined us to celebrate a race to remember.”

The night time storms on July 23 wrecked sailors’ nerves, but the fleet’s consensus was all the safety preparation, practice and pre-set plans came into effect. “We expect storms in the summer here in the Midwest,” said Natalie J’s owner Philip O’Neil IIl, whose TP 52 was the first race boat to finish after 1:05:04:51.

“We took our main down when it hit 40 knots; and saw 69 knots at one point. The team had already talked through the scenarios so when it happened everyone knew what their job was. It was a big deal, but it wasn’t a big deal; everyone jumped in and did what they planned on doing. When it was over, we got back to racing.”

Not every boat fared quite as well as Natalie J. In total, out of the 244 registered, 29 boats retired or chose to withdraw, reasons ranging from the impending weather, shredded sails, equipment failures, and minor injuries…

Details: https://cycracetomackinac.com/

Source: CYC

Read more on Scuttlebutt

Posted in Article



about that cloud…

Tuesday
Jul 26
2022
Posted by deleteme

This year I had the pleasure of racing both the Mackinac races with Bill McKinley’s Ker 46+ Denali 3. Not only is it a good design, but it’s kept in perfect shape. Most of the crew have been sailing together for years. This was my 8th Chicago to Mackinac race, so I’m no stranger to the storms you can see on the Great Lakes, but this year was a big one. Our team did a pre-race weather briefing with Chis Bedford. In that briefing, I learned a new term Mesoscale Convective System. This is when a complex of thunderstorms becomes organized on a scale larger than the individual thunderstorms and typically persists for several hours or more. What does that mean… it means hold on tight! Weather GRIB files and navigation routers can’t do the math to tell you what exactly will happen in an MCS.

I woke up Saturday morning to a 5 am thunderstorm in Chicago. The wind was blowing 15-18 knots out of the South. Our game plan was to do whatever we could to sail north up the lake as fast as possible. There was a chance that the MCS would cross the southern part of the lake, and if we could be north of it, the weather would be less severe. This didn’t happen; the storm covered about 200 miles north-south. We also wanted to keep to the west so that we had 60-80 miles of lake to run with the storm if we needed to. Natalie J and Heart Breaker did the same thing. There was no escape; here is the radar when we got hit. We were just south of Milwaukee.

About that cloud at the top of this article…Once we saw the cloud line, we put a reef in, then hoisted the J4 and took down the spinnaker. We did it before the wind came up and even had time to pack the spinnaker. We also made sure everyone got into their gear early so that when the weather did hit we had everyone on deck. The most wind we saw was in the second “cell,” and it had 38 knots. The wind wasn’t too bad, but the amount of rain was crazy.

Huge raindrops, and in 30 knots of wind they hurt and sting. After the “purple” part of the radar had passed us and we were back in the “red,” we were back racing. The wind was 25 knots we kept the reef in and set our A6 (Frac) just in case a new cell developed and took off across the lake towards the Manitou Passage. After a little bit, I was handed the helm; it was time to LIGHT IT UP.

We were screaming along, sitting on 19-22 knots of boat speed. The whole team was stacked in the back starboard corner of the boat. With the lake chop and night, it was hard to keep the bus moving. There was one big wave I drove through, I was waist deep in water and it pushed Norm Berge aft and into the mainsheet winch as he was trimming the spinnaker giving him a nice bruise…

Read more on Sailing Anarchy

Posted in Article



Behind the results of the 2022 Pacific Cup

Tuesday
Jul 26
2022
Posted by XS Editor

With results firm and winners celebrated for the 21st edition of the Pacific Cup, Principal Race Officer Michael Moradzadeh explains how the pecking order was determined for the 57 starters of the 2070 nm race from San Francisco, California to Kaneohe, Hawaii.


With a large and diverse fleet of boats, coming up with a way to identify the “winner” is a significant challenge.

First, we must abandon any hope of being perfect or even, in retrospect, the “best” way to go. What we seek is a method that is objectively unbiased, reasonably transparent, and likely to produce a result that rewards skillful choices and execution in the race.

Pacific Cup uses a “time-on-time” scoring system based on Offshore Racing Rule ratings for faster boats and PHRF ratings for slower boats. Let’s break that down.

“Time-on-time” has gained popularity over the last decade or so as it tends to be a bit more resilient in case of very light winds. Simply put, we take a boat’s elapsed time and multiply it by a time correction factor (their rating). The boat with the smallest number wins.

In the case of our Ocean Navigator division, those ratings ran from 0.744 for an Islander 36 to 0.805 for a speedier Cal 40. If each boat took ten days to run the course, the Islander would be scored with a 7.44 day corrected time and the Cal with an 8.05 day corrected time. Victory to the Islander 36 in that case.

The math and “how are we doing against the competition” in this type of scoring is not easily done in one’s head, and most boats maintain a spreadsheet or some target numbers to judge their progress against their competition.

Some think of their relative handicaps in terms of minutes or hours per day. In the example above, the Cal 40 owed the Islander 36 about 1.4 hours per day of racing, and would have to stay that far ahead at the finish to win (which, we point out, they did do)

So, where do these ratings come from? There are several ratings systems out there, and Pac Cup actually relies on two of them. – Read on

Read more on Scuttlebutt

Posted in Article



ILCA 6 National Championship overall report

Tuesday
Jul 26
2022
Posted by XS Editor

256 entries, of which 104 ILCA 6s turned up raring to go for the 2022 ILCA National Championships held at Hayling Island Sailing Club. With Hayling being a tidal venue, and the forecast as it was, we were undoubtedly in for an exciting week of racing!

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



Youth participation has grown 72%

Tuesday
Jul 26
2022
Posted by XS Editor

Since the partnership between offshore yacht racing club, Junior Offshore Group (JOG), and Henri Lloyd kicked off last year, youth membership has increased by 72% and now comprises 25% of the entire membership base…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



VIDEO: Whale lands on small boat

Tuesday
Jul 26
2022
Posted by XS Editor

Whale watchers were treated to extraordinary scenes as a humpback whale landed on a small boat 🐋🛥

There were no injuries reported following the incident and the boat was still seaworthy after being struck.

Watch more videos here: https://t.co/hhDQuQ1top pic.twitter.com/nYpowiJXTZ

— Sky News (@SkyNews) July 25, 2022

Read more on Scuttlebutt

Posted in Article



55th Governor’s Cup

Monday
Jul 25
2022
Posted by XS Editor

In Tour de France cycling, the winner of each stage wears a yellow jersey. No such identification will be necessary for Jeffrey Petersen (USA), the 2021 GovCup champion from host Balboa YC, who, as of last week, is the youth match racing World Champion…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



Multihull Review: Nautitech 44 Open

Monday
Jul 25
2022
Posted by deleteme

For years, Nautitech Catamarans has been doing things differently from other production cat builders, and it seems to be paying off. When the French company launched its Open series in 2013, it shrunk the saloon and dedicated more space to the cockpit where most catamaran living takes place. The company also placed the helms outboard on the amas rather than high up on a bulkhead or flybridge. Owners loved both approaches. Now Nautitech has decided to focus on its core market of private owners rather than building for charter. That strategy can be tricky, since it ignores 50 percent of the market. But it does give the builder the ability to dial in exactly what distance cruisers are looking for. With that in mind, Nautitech just introduced its new 44 Open, a boat positioned perfectly for the cruising-couple sweet spot…

Read more on Sail Magazine

Posted in Article



mind your back!

Monday
Jul 25
2022
Posted by deleteme

As the 100-foot mastodons prepare for battle in the 384nm Sydney-Gold Coast Race starting this Saturday, Wild Oats XI is finally back in the water after a two-year Covid layoff.

Nicknamed “The Swiss Army Knife” this much-modified Reichel-Pugh has, at various stages since its launch in 2005, sported every appendage known to man.

Its most recent go-fast foil is the towering front canard…

No doubt it helps the boat track and reduces leeway, but spare a thought for any foredeck crew who find themselves working up at the pointy end on a dark night.

WOXI has always had a tendency to nosedive. One big wave over the bow might make that foil and its supporting crane something of a hazard. Maybe that’s why the supermaxi has those nifty handrails along each gunnel? Click pic to take a closer look…

Read more on Sailing Anarchy

Posted in Article



KiteFoil World Series Gizzeria overall

Monday
Jul 25
2022
Posted by XS Editor

The final day of the KiteFoil World Series Gizzeria in Italy produced three highly-deserving winners after a quick-fire Medal Series…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



James Sainsbury’s new Moth: flying first sail!

Monday
Jul 25
2022
Posted by XS Editor

We got off the ferry and to our fantastic AirBnB, and that’s where a couple of us stayed for the next two days, fully concentrating on our new boats. Many beers, rum and small dried sausages have been consumed, but on Sunday we went for a sail…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



GBR SailGP Team athletes to cycle 450 miles

Monday
Jul 25
2022
Posted by XS Editor

Three members of the Great Britain team that will compete in next weekend’s Sail Grand Prix in Plymouth will travel by bicycle to the event in a bid to support SailGP’s commitment to making the event one of the most sustainable races it has ever staged…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



SailGP Plymouth – Time for Ainslie to up his game!

Monday
Jul 25
2022
Posted by deleteme

Ben Ainslie returns to competitive sailing in British waters at the helm of the Great Britain SailGP Team F50. To date Ainslie has only managed to win one SailGP event in nine event starts…

Read more on Sail Web

Posted in Article



KiteFoil World Series Gizzeria day 3

Sunday
Jul 24
2022
Posted by XS Editor

Day 3 of the KiteFoil World Series Gizzeria in Italy was the most interesting yet, with some significant moves on the leaderboard in warm winds of 12 to 16 knots…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



MC38 2022 Season Act 5 on Sydney Harbour

Sunday
Jul 24
2022
Posted by XS Editor

The lottery that is winter sailing in Sydney toyed with the MC38 fleet for act 5 on Sydney Harbour. At the shortened series end, Steven Proud’s Swish held the narrowest margin win over the defending team, Marcus Blackmore’s Hooligan (RPAYC)…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



Peterson wins Youth Match Racing title

Saturday
Jul 23
2022
Posted by XS Editor

After being runner-up a year ago, Jeffrey Peterson (USA) and his team of Max Brennan, Scott Mais, and Sammantha Hemans claimed the 2022 Youth Match Racing World Championship title on July 19-23 in Pornichet, France.

“World Champion, those words sound incredible!” noted Petersen. “Looking back, we finished second last year against another American team, on home waters in California, and that was a bitter pill to swallow. So, to win here feels a bit like our redemption.

“We threw everything we had at it. We didn’t get off to a very good start in our competition, but my crew has been really incredible. They’ve given their absolute all and all credit to them. I couldn’t be prouder of them! We’re really happy to have pulled this off for the United States and for our club, and to be able to keep this title in the USA! We’re really stoked and grateful.”

Peterson was third among the 12 teams in the qualifying round robin series, advancing to the Final after wins over Riccardo Sepe (ITA) in the Quarter Finals and Timothée Rossi (FRA) in the Semi Finals. The other finalist, Marius Westerlind (SWE), was no match as Peterson shut him out 3-0…

Details: https://www.matchracingresults.com/2022/youth-world-championship/

Read more on Scuttlebutt

Posted in Article



mac stack

Saturday
Jul 23
2022
Posted by deleteme

Howz that for a fleet? Chicago – Mac and track em here.

Read more on Sailing Anarchy

Posted in Article



Chasing Tokyo – British Sailing Team baring all in a feature documentary

Saturday
Jul 23
2022
Posted by deleteme

CHASING TOKYO tells the story of a group of sailors from the British Sailing Team as they head to one of the most uncertain of Olympic Games . . . as the world – and their sport – changes around them…

Read more on Sail Web

Posted in Article



mcs

Saturday
Jul 23
2022
Posted by deleteme

The Chicago Mac race got underway yesterday, with the bigger boys starting today.  It is going to be sporty! It should be a nice downwind start. Then sometime between sunset and sunrise shit hits the fan, and we learned a new weather term MCS.

A Mesoscale Convective System is a complex of thunderstorms that becomes organized on a scale larger than the individual thunderstorms and normally persists for several hours or more.

They’ll see somewhere between 25-35 knots as the storms cross the lake…

Read more on Sailing Anarchy

Posted in Article



18ft Skiff Mark Foy European Championship overall

Saturday
Jul 23
2022
Posted by XS Editor

It was an Australian one-two at the Mark Foy European Championship: Lazarus Capital Partners and The Rag & Famish Hotel in the first two overall positions. The best Europeans were the Germans on Black Knight, down to third place overall…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



America’s Cup: First AC40 in fit-out – Video

Saturday
Jul 23
2022
Posted by XS Editor

The first AC40 multi-use yacht for America’s Cup 2024 is being fitted out at McConaghy Boats. The video shows the deck/cockpit layout for the first time.

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



Youth Match Racing World Championship Day 4

Saturday
Jul 23
2022
Posted by XS Editor

On the programme for the fourth day of racing in this Youth Match Racing World Championship was the end of the quarter finals, the semi-finals and the King of the Castle phase, all of which will determine the final overall ranking for the championship…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



Marshall wins J/24 World Championship

Saturday
Jul 23
2022
Posted by XS Editor

Mike Marshall’s American Garage (USA) may have never been in first place overall during races one through nine, but he was after the tenth and final race to claim the title of 2022 J/24 World Champion.

Leading into the final day, four points separated the top four boats, but it was Marshall and crew Dave Hughes, Allan Terhune, Jeffrey Hayden, and Rod Favela posting a 3-2 in 12-14 knots to close the deal in what had been a windy event held July 18-22 in Corpus Christi, TX.

Paul Foerster’s Grand Slam 2 (USA) had won the first three races, and held the lead up to the final race when a tenth place became their demise, dropping them a point behind Marshall for second place.

For Marshall, after scoring an eighth to start their title effort, the Newport, Rhode Island-based skipper stayed in the top five until a Black Flag in Race 7 swallowed their discard. But for the final three races, Marshall’s team regrouped to post the lowest score total…

Race details – Results – Facebook

Read more on Scuttlebutt

Posted in Article



Golden Globe Race: Dalton pressing on

Thursday
Jul 21
2022
Posted by XS Editor

Graham Dalton has he advised Sail-World.com that he had now completed the required medical course, and is about to start the qualifying voyage…

Read more on Sail-World

Posted in Article



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