|
2000
OLD NEWS
2000 Schock 35
Nationals:
Alamitos Bay YC
hosted a great Nationals which saw competition sail on different courses
each day in a true test of ability over different conditions. As you
can see from the results below, Mischief was the run away winner this
year. As in '92 when Nationals were hosted at the old LAYC
clubhouse, Long Beach did not disappoint, again serving up some strong
wind for at least one of the days of racing and no drifters.
I would of course
be remiss if I did not note that Piranha pulled off a late surge to take
victory for the Wooden Spoon annually awarded for the biggest blunder of
the season for being over early and not hearing the recall on the radio,
resulting in actually having to set the spinnaker to get back to
restart! Thank God we beat the five minute rule by a few seconds or
they wouldn't have even scored our last place finish in the race.
C'est la vie - but note that the rules of the Wooden Spoon dictate it may
be awarded to a new recipient at any time, so watch out next year!
| 2000
Schock 35 National Championship |
| Pos. |
Boat |
YC |
Race #1 |
Race #2 |
Race #3 |
Race #4 |
Race #5 |
Race #6 |
Race #7 |
TOTAL |
| 1 |
Mischief |
BCYC |
3 |
2 |
1 |
1 |
5 |
1 |
2 |
15 |
| 2 |
Wings |
SDYC |
2 |
1 |
5 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
22 |
| 3 |
Outlier |
CYC |
1 |
4 |
4 |
5 |
1 |
15 |
6 |
36 |
| 4 |
Whistler |
BYC |
5 |
10 |
8 |
4 |
2 |
5 |
3 |
37 |
| 5 |
Chayah |
ABYC |
6 |
3 |
10 |
6 |
7 |
6 |
1 |
39 |
| 6 |
Water
Moccasin |
BYC |
16 |
9 |
3 |
3 |
6 |
8 |
4 |
49 |
| 7 |
Ripple |
CYC |
9 |
5 |
2 |
8 |
16 |
2 |
10 |
52 |
| 8 |
Piranha |
OYC |
4 |
6 |
12 |
7 |
14 |
3 |
8 |
54 |
| 9 |
Whiplash |
LBYC |
8 |
12 |
13 |
9 |
4 |
9 |
9 |
64 |
| 10 |
Strategem |
BCYC |
7 |
7 |
7 |
12 |
10 |
12 |
11 |
66 |
| 11 |
White
Fang |
CYC |
12 |
8 |
6 |
11 |
8 |
7 |
15 |
67 |
| 12 |
Slippery
When Wet |
BYC |
10 |
14 |
11 |
10 |
9 |
14 |
7 |
75 |
| 13 |
Minnesota
Fast |
DRYC |
11 |
11 |
9 |
13 |
12 |
10 |
12 |
78 |
| 14 |
Magic |
SSYC |
13 |
13 |
15 |
14 |
11 |
13 |
14 |
93 |
| 15 |
Twister |
DRYC |
16 |
15 |
14 |
15 |
13 |
11 |
13 |
97 |
|
Santa
Barbara to King Harbor -- UPDATED Mon. August 7 @ 8:34 p.m.
Entry
Form / Race Info / Events
and Schedule / Facilities / Other
Info/Phones
Exciting!
If you missed this one, you missed the most exhilarating sailing our class
has seen - maybe ever! With wind peaking at 26 knots true (on
Piranha - 29 gust recorded at KHYC!) and nice steep waves we had surfing
conditions for 50 miles and finished before midnight. Various crew
and owners are reporting this Sunday that 48 hours after the race start,
bruises and sore muscles abound - this was sailing as a contact
sport! We now know of at least two death rolls (see first hand
accounts below) and a bunch of roundups.
Thursday night at SBYC was great with
cocktails at sunset looking over the water. Some of the fleet stayed
for the BBQ and a group from Stratagem, Whiplash and Piranha ended up
having a fabulous meal at the 150 yr. old stagecoach stop in the San
Marcos pass. All in all a very civilized start to a regatta.
Our dinner toast was that one of the boats at the table win the race - and
it came true.
CORRECTION
TO WINNER: Official results posted at KHYC were in error in that a
30 minute penalty for being OCS was given to Whiplash when it should have
gone to Restless! The KHYC website showed Whiplash OCS and the
results board (see photo below) reflected this error! The CORRECT
RESULTS show Whiplash won convincingly and John reports that they saw 30
knot gusts and 15.5 on the knotmeter!! Minnesota Fast ends up with
the Andy Warhol trophy for 15 minutes of fame and a second place finish
with White Fang, Piranha and Stratagem filing out the trophies. What
a great turn out for our fleet as perhaps the largest one-design class in
a SoCal distance race in decades!
The
race started in a nice 6-8 kt. jib reach with the boats to the west having
the most breeze. Piranha led White Fang at Anacapa Island after a
beautiful tight reach across from Santa Barbara in winds that built to 20
knots. Unfortunately for the leaders, the wind died and filled from
astern which brought all the trailing boats up to and past the lead
boats. However, White Fang, after falling into a hole and dropping
back initially, hugged the shore, got the first new breeze and appeared to
be so far ahead no one would catch them, along with Outlier and Minnesota
Fast who were also popped loose of the deadly grab of the Anacapa
hole. Once loose of Anacapa, it was off to the races with a solid
20+ knots of wind spread out over the entire course. Pretty soon, it
became apparent that instead of finishing in the morning, this was a
sprint race to sleep in your own dry warm bed! I seriously doubt any
boat had dinner (our planned repast of smoked salmon, filet mignon and
cheesecake with merlot came home in the cooler and was instead replaced by
muffins intended for breakfast). Finishing the race in 14 knots of
wind under chute was incredible.
From the winners Rod
Godwin and Crew of Whiplash: "We
read all the good (and amazing) stories on your site this morning. Loved
it! Sorry we're late with ours. We started the race feeling pretty
down when we heard our sail number called OCS after sailing for one
minute. We went back and dipped below the line, got a X flag dip and
clear call on the radio. After deciding to stop whining and sail hard,
we gained some back by the Island. You can imagine how happy we were to
see the race was being re-started on the backside of the Island.
Like having the race committee call a general when you were the only one
over early. We got a better start that time, second only to White Fang.
Our Sailmaker Expert had advised us to favor the port jibe after the
island. We did. For control reasons we pointed higher than we wanted to.
At Sunset we jibed but got lifted and went back in less than an hour. We
stayed on port, even pointing to the left of LAX. We finally jibed so
late that we went inside the big tanker anchored offshore. With the
spinnaker as tight as it would go, we barely made the outer buoy.
Absolutely Exciting all the way.! Even when we got to the trophy
ceremony ten minutes late only to find out we were Eighth!! Thanks to
some good help from the people at KHYC, we got it straightened out in
time for trophies. Our first Trophy in class and an all time exciting
race!"
From
Jim Maslon (Minnesota Fast): "I'm glad you issued the
correct results in your Web Site. There were 4 boats over early,
Minnesota, Restless, Whiplash and one other. Three went back but
Restless had the wrong channel on their VHF and did not go back. The
Race Committee mistakenly penalized Whiplash. Frankly, we were amazed
that we came in second. We were trailing Whiplash probably by 5 minutes
or so. We were rocking along at 13 to 14 knots, when out of nowhere we
were hit by a huge wave, did a death roll, the boom whipped across, and
three of us in the back of the boat were under water for a short period
of time. Fortunately everyone stayed on board and no one was hurt.
We finally recovered only to tear our 3/4 ounce trying to get
it down. After at least 10 minutes or more, we put up our #3 and winged
it. By that time Whiplash was well in the distance. We sailed this
way till the wind died enough to put up our 1/2 ounce. It was dark as we
approached Redondo. We had know idea where we stood. We could see boats
to the right of us that we were moving on. The wind had clocked south
which helped us a lot. It was some race. Our crew did a great job. I
think I've finally recovered and this is Sunday."
From Piranha:
We think that we must have provided the best entertainment of the race for
those who could see it. First, on the way to Anacapa, while getting
a mound of kelp off the rudder using a telescoping dock hook, the hook got
stuck in the prop shaft and came apart, dragging underneath the
boat. Power Play, Restless and White Fang were no doubt amused to
see us go head to wind to stop the boat and swim to retrieve the
hook. But by far the best entertainment was provided to Outlier,
Restless and Nitro when we tried to push the VMG window a little too hard
and death rolled Piranha! Several minutes later we were off to the
races again after, in order, jibing the main, releasing the runner,
releasing the spin sheet and blowing the spin halyard - the boat pops
right back up nicely after that! One of our crew who usually sails
dinghies said the nice view of the keel tempted him to walk out on it to
right the boat. Undaunted, we kept on pushing the boat deep surfing
after that and set a new boatspeed record of 14.3 knots while continuous
10's and 12's became commonplace. After all the adversity, we were
happy to finish right on the heels of White Fang although the restart
behind Anacapa was not at all what we wanted with the lead we had
developed!
From Don Adams
(White Fang): "Dave: Read your great accounting of the
"destruction derby" for the SB to KH race on the website. Great
job in reporting and with pictures. Many thanks for a superb and timely
review. It was very interesting hearing reports of other skippers. Would
be nice to get all to send info.
Your description of getting to Anacapa
was revealing, especially what happened on Piranha with the kelp. Tell
your foredeck man to keep his eyes open better!.. White Fang thought we
had it nailed to be first to Anacapa, but Piranha sneaked by up closer to
the tip and then everything died and we started the race all over again
for 60 boats or so. White Fang stuck close to the island along with
Minnesota and Whiplash, changing positions inch by inch. Finally White
Fang broke loose from those two with the rest of the Schocks farther out
away from the Island. As you described White Fang got to the windline past
the mid island point and took off like gangbusters. As the website
described we were soon way out in front of every Schock. It was had to
determine who was who except we could make out the blue spinnaker of
Outlier along the way and the white spinnaker of Piranha.
As the winds build to 20 knots we still
had our 1/2 oz up but a spinnaker change went smoothly to the 3/4 and we
zipped along at 10-12 knots and ultimately to a peak of 14.3 k (the
fastest I have ever been on my boat). Surfing is not a feature of a Schock
but we were doing it! As the winds built more our topping lift halyard
broke and we quickly changed to our genoa halyard as a topping lift. At
that time we were still ahead of our fleet. With Whiplash and Minnesota
will inside of us and behind and Piranha and Outlier well outside of us
and well behind. We continually got more and more headed (our plan was to
follow the rumb line) we were heading more toward Pt. Dume so we elected
to jibe to starboard. The pole went over well but were unable to get the
main over quick enough do to pressure in the sail and suddenly the 3/4 oz
spinnaker came crashing down with a blown top of the head. Then the
spinnaker wrapped itself under the bow and unable to retrieve going down
wind, so Rick Palmer turned the boat into the wind and virtually stopped
us while we struggled to get the spinnaker back on board.
Finally accomplished we put up our genoa
and went wing and wing for while until the winds died down some about 20
minutes later and we were able to put our 1/2 oz chute back up. Except for
a lot of rolling, and the cockpit floor filling partly with backwash, we
had no death rolls or knock downs. We sailed the rumb line thence with
ease to the KH bellbouy and as we finished we saw Minnesota and Restless
just in front of us at the finish. We finished at 11:13+ after a thrilling
and very interesting ride; a real "E-ticket", Piranha was just
beind us and then Outlier. We figured we lost 1.5 to 2 miles in our turn
around manuever. But that's sailboat racing. We were happy with our 3rd
place finish! I'd like to hear what Whiplash did; they beat us all
handily, I appreciate the hard work of our crew: Rick Palmer, Ben Guevara,
Doug Felberg, Greg Hoffman, Rush Gomez, Bob Snow, and Crystel Billfhoffer."
More from White
Fang: "Dave, Doug Felberg here from White Fang. You were
right about the being so far in front that no one could catch us until we
too suffered the wrath of the wind god and blew out the head of our 3/4.
Naturally the sail cooperated nicely and fell over the bow and under the
boat while cruising along at about 13 knots. This, of course, slowed us
down considerably but not enough to get the sail back on the boat.
Eventually our only solution was to do what others seem to have described,
turn around and stop. We did get the sail onboard but then had to use the
heavy #1 as it was still blowing too hard for the 1/2. Twenty to thirty
minutes later, we were able to put the 1/2 up and sailed that to the
finish. Top speeds for us hit just over 15 down the biggest waves. At one
time, we had about 4" of water in the cockpit from stern drain
backfill. Great race."
From
Tom Parker (Restless):
"The King Harbor race was a great introduction to Schock
racing. As you heard, we had our V.H.F. radio turned to channel 72
instead of 71 and didn't hear we were over early, but the class racing was
great. The boats handled the winds much better than I
expected. The Schock can actually surf, which came as
a pleasant surprise. What happened at the end of the race
was a light spot for about 20 minutes a few miles from the finish where
the wind moved more south. Whiplash and Restless were a few boat
lengths apart when Whiplash got a little more wind to help push
them into the new breeze and they broke away. Minnesota Fast was
more in shore and was moving well in the light air. The boats
outside had a deeper angle and had less boat speed. Restless
actually made 14.6 on the knot meter and always felt in
control. I will say sailing the boat too deep in those conditions
could lead to a real problem. I'm sorry I didn't get a chance
to meet many of the Schock racers. The boat is constantly
impressing me and hope to have it ready for some classing racing next
year."
From
Richard Schriever (Slippery When Wet):
"Just wanted
to let you know what the race was like from Slippery's
perspective. The first item is "SPEED".
Whoopee!! We literally did "surf" Slippery - sending
crew to stand on the transom as we dropped into waves, and walking the
deck as we went down the wave faces. Exhilarating is the only word
that can describe that experience. We tracked our speed via GPS
and hit a 14.6, a 14.5, several 14.4's and 14.3's beyond count. Of
course, speed isn't everything.
We were
determined to sail according to lessons learned in past SB-KH races,
when the wind has historically has shut off completely in the middle of
the bay an hour or two after sunset, leaving only down-drafts from the
mountains and slight off-shore breezes to supply momentum 'til near
dawn. As we approached the Marina del Rey breakwater at around
9:45, we thought we'd made the right choice, seeing no other boats
approaching from the middle of the bay. Unfortunately for us,
there was a "mini-doldrums" just off the breakwater (farther
in than the historical precedents) that kept us there, struggling to
avoid the rocks for nearly two hours before the southerly shift reached
that point.
Looking
forward to next year on this course!!

For
the crew, I know we all had a great time with whooping and hollering all
around over and over again during the surfing conditions. For myself
l can definitely say that it was one of the most exciting sailing
experiences in my life and will be the source of sailing stories for years
to come "...remember the Santa Barbara to King Harbor Race of
2000..."
I know there have GOT to be some good
stories from other boats, so please keep the emails coming!
NEW: Photos on KHYC Website @ http://www.khyc.org/Fleets/Racing/Santabarbara/Santabarbaragallery/index.html
(see especially pages 7 & 8 of the index for photos of the Anacapa
restart.
| Santa
Barbara to King Harbor 2000 |
| Pos. |
Boat |
Finish Time |
Time Behind Next |
| 1 |
Whiplash |
10:56:12 p.m. |
-- |
| 2 |
Minnesota Fast |
11:11:29 |
16:17 |
| 3 |
White Fang |
11:13:01 |
1:31 |
| 4 |
Piranha |
11:16:49 |
3:48 |
| 5 |
Stratagem |
11:20:18 |
3:29 |
| 6 |
Power Play |
11:20:20 |
0:02 |
| 7 |
Outlier |
11:21:48 |
1:28 |
| 8 |
Ripple |
11:29:33 |
7:45 |
| 9 |
Restless |
11:42:33 |
13:00 |
| 10 |
Slippery When Wet |
03:26:13 |
3:43:40 |
| 11 |
Twister |
-- |
-- |
News from Lake Erie
(Fleet 4):
Hi Dave - Some months ago I approached you
about wanting a Schock to race on Lake Erie, out of Cleveland. Well, we
found one. I bought "State of Schock" (1986) from George Wooten,
Raleigh NC. He had owned the boat since 1995 (it was previously in Rhode
Island, same boat name). The boat is in EXCELLENT condition. The surveyor
said it was the best boat from that era he's ever seen. It arrived last
week, and I can attest to its condition. There isn't a spot of mold, all
the hardware/rigging has been updated, and everything is in great shape!
Needless to say we're excited. Here is a link to some pictures of
"State of Schock". We'll be adding to our webpage over the next
few weeks. http://www.executivetitle.com/schock.html
Nico Cottone, Cleveland YC
Ed. Note: This makes six boats with their own
home pages that I know of. If you have one, let me know and I'll add
it on the Links page.
Pacific Coast
Championship
The
new millennium continues to offer up some unusual weather conditions. This
year's boatscape.com/North Sails Race Week was strongly influenced by the
approach of Hurricane Charlotta riding up the coast of Baja. On Friday,
the fleet found that the typical prevailing west-southwesterlies and heavy
wind conditions we look forward to were nowhere to be seen. Instead the
Southern jetstream was drawing tropical moisture off the hurricane and
dished up a light air race in which Mischief reveled by starting off the
left and and banging the left corner of the race course.
On Saturday, we moved to the inside race course and saw the wind settle
down to little bit more normal breeze including a second race which saw
No. 3's used for the first time this year by the fleet. Despite the
changing conditions, the leaderboard look much the same with Mischief
posting two seconds and Wings taking two bullets for the day. Meanwhile,
Claudia on Whistler had enlisted the aid of Ron Baerwitz who was in town
from New Jersey to assume fourth position while Outlier had posted a
consistent 2,3,3, to move into third position.
By Sunday, it was quite clear that the the trophies were to be divided up
by the aforementioned four boats; however, Charlotta dished up another
twist of nature for the fleet this year when the race started in so little
wind that five minutes after our gun had gone off the Olson 30 started
generally only 7 to 10 boat lengths behind the Schock 35 fleet. Limping
upwind, Mischief was able to leverage a perfect time to run at the
committee boat and for an early lead; but, the wind gods continued to toy
with the fleet for the balance of the race throwing out 30 to 40 degree
wind shifts with no apparent pattern. As a result, boats like Whiplash and
Power Play that found themselves very deep on the first weather leg were
suddenly thrown back to the top by the end of the first downwind leg.
Unfortunately for Outlier to jibes into the middle on this leg pretty much
ended their chances of beating Wings or Mischief for the regatta. Ron and
Claudia meanwhile had used the left side of the upwind leg to be so far
into first-place that they were effectively an entire phase of wind shifts
ahead of the fleet, and took a very easy victory for the race, with Wings
and Mischief pulling second and third respectively.
Going into the last race, the Pacific Coast Championship was either Wings'
or Mischief's to be had as Mischief led Wings by one point. Following an
incident at the pin end of the line, Wings popped out of the melee
unscathed, sailed into a sudden freshening breeze out of the left side,
tacked onto port and would never be passed again for the remainder of this
one lap race. Things were interesting for the fleet has everyone had light
No.1's up, and the wind was suddenly blowing 16 knots true. Despite Wings
great fortune, Mischief was right on their tail at the weather mark as the
fleet flew downwind in double file formation to either side of the
restricted start finish line and thence to the leeward gate. Although the
wind was now blowing and 15 to 18 true, almost the entire fleet chose
heavy No. 1's and were overpowered for the short half-mile beat to the
finish line. Many in the fleet wished we had a second lap on the race now
that we had the wind conditions we look forward to in Long Beach, but the
race committee had to get us back to the dock after the inordinately long
race in light air that started the day. Wings did beat Mischief to the
finish line and ended tied for the regatta. On the tiebreaker Wings had
three firsts to Mischief's one and therefore successfully defended their
title as Pacific Coast champion of the Schock 35 fleet. After their fifth
on Friday, Wings comeback was a tough one. To do it, they beat Mischief in
the last four races in a row -- each time by only one position! Third
overall went to Whistler which had a strong one, four finish on Sunday
while Outlier suffered from a letdown taking a six, nine, and finished
only two points further back.
Overall Volvo Inshore Champion was also Wings with White Fang second and
Piranha third. The VIC 2000 was made up of the SDYC Yachting Cup, Cal Race
Week and boatscape.com/North Sails Race Week.
Results of the regatta are at: http://www.premiere-racing.com/nsrw/nsrw_results.htm
Thanks to Mike Segerbloom and his group for their race management through
the weekend and Bruce Golison, Margo and Jay for putting on their usual
great event.
California Race Week

Once
again (and for every regatta our class has sailed as part of the Season
Championship circuit for a few years) S-35's were the largest class at the
event. For the third time this year, Wings came away the winner,
although the racing was very even throughout the fleet. As a
statement of how tight the fleet was, perennial class favorite and
defending Cal Race Week champion Mischief finished only one point ahead of
last (reminds me of Laker/Portland game two - better watch out at PCC's as
they'll be out for blood!) Minnesota Fast sailing with Bill
Menninger won the last race to take second place for the regatta edging
out Whistler on the third tie breaker, and White Fang sailed a
consistently strong regatta to take fourth.
Fog!
For the third time in four Season Championship events in 2000, mother
nature stepped in on Sunday and prevented the intended number of races
from being run. W.D. Schock saw too much wind, NOOD saw too shifty a
wind, now it wasn't possible to see the other end of the starting line and
get the race off. Well actually, only a few minutes after the last
race was abandoned it was a beautiful sunny day, but you sure wouldn't
have believed it possible from the starting area which was socked in
solidly. Once again, lots of boats would like to have had that last
race to move up with, but it wasn't meant to be.
Big move of the regatta was
Wings taking third on Saturday after being over early at the start.
Not a regatta for the conservative tactician, the center of the upwind leg
was often death due to the chopped up wind from the Farr 40's and 1D35's,
so even overstanding left side layline often paid big rewards.
For the season, unless they
have a mast failure, Wings looks like a lock on the Class Championship and
Chayah is solidly second and looks good to win the Corinthian Fleet
Championship. Second through sixth is now only separated by three
points with Whistler making the biggest move of the week up to third
overall for the season followed by Mischief, Outlier and Piranha.
With two events to go it will be interesting to see how it works
out. At PCC's, no IR's are permitted and the finale is the overnight
race from Santa Barbara to King Harbor.
| Pos. |
Boat |
Race #1 |
Race #2 |
Race #3 |
Race #4 |
Total |
| 1 |
Wings |
1 |
3 |
3 |
7 |
14 |
| 2 |
Minnesota Fast |
9 |
2 |
4 |
1 |
16 |
| 3 |
Whistler |
6 |
7 |
1 |
2 |
16 |
| 4 |
White Fang |
2 |
8 |
7 |
4 |
21 |
| 5 |
Chayah |
4 |
10 |
5 |
5 |
24 |
| 6 |
Outlier |
3 |
12 |
2 |
9 |
26 |
| 7 |
Ripple |
5 |
5 |
15 |
3 |
28 |
| 8 |
Slippery When Wet |
10 |
4 |
11 |
11 |
36 |
| 9 |
Piranha |
13 |
6 |
9 |
8 |
36 |
| 10 |
Power Play |
12 |
11 |
8 |
6 |
37 |
| 11 |
Mischief |
8 |
9 |
10 |
10 |
38 |
| 12 |
Stratagem |
11 |
1 |
13 |
13 |
38 |
| 13 |
Absolute |
7 |
13 |
6 |
12 |
38 |
Lipton Cup 2000
In
a very well-sailed come from behind effort, San Diego YC defended its
title in the 85th running of the Lipton Cup. In the regatta there
were really two battles - the one between the mega- budget teams with all
new sail inventories, etc. and the battle in the more, shall we say,
corinthian fleet. The victory by Hotspur was something of an upset
after watching Kathmandu dominate in their local waters two weeks earlier
and come out with a 2-1-1-3 to start the regatta. Although the first
2 was later erased by a DSQ, thankfully that was not the difference
between winning and losing as Hotspur would have won either way.
Nonetheless, the racing was generally very close with one leeward rounding
in particular being the memorable moment of the regatta seeing all ten
boats arriving simultaneously. SDYC/Hotspur had rounded the weather
mark in 8th, but popped out of the cluster in 1st in what was probably the
most important part of the regatta for their victory. 
SDYC did a splendid job
hosting the event and will do so again next year. I highly recommend
clicking over to www.sdsailing.com
if you have a high speed connection for a number of good high resolution
photos.
Final Official Results:
| Place |
Boat |
Club |
Race
1 |
Race
2 |
Race
3 |
Race
4 |
Race
5 |
Race
6 |
Race
7 |
Total |
| 1 |
Hotspur |
SDYC |
2 |
3 |
3 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
2 |
13 |
| 2 |
Whistler |
BYC |
5 |
2 |
5 |
2 |
3 |
2 |
3 |
22 |
| 3 |
Kathmandu |
CorYC |
DSQ |
1 |
1 |
3 |
10 |
3 |
1 |
30 |
| 4 |
Wings |
SBYC |
1 |
DSQ |
2 |
6 |
6 |
5 |
5 |
36 |
| 5 |
Ricochet |
CYC |
3 |
4 |
4 |
5 |
9 |
7 |
4 |
36 |
| 6 |
Piranha |
CCdLP |
4 |
7 |
7 |
10 |
2 |
4 |
8 |
42 |
| 7 |
Shillelagh |
SWYC |
7 |
5 |
9 |
4 |
7 |
8 |
7 |
47 |
| 8 |
White
Fang |
SMWYC |
8 |
8 |
6 |
7 |
5 |
6 |
9 |
49 |
| 9 |
Strategem |
ChIYC |
6 |
6 |
10 |
8 |
4 |
DSQ |
6 |
51 |
| 10 |
Absolute |
SBYRC |
9 |
9 |
8 |
9 |
8 |
9 |
10 |
62 |
SDYC Yachting Cup
The
1st stop on the Volvo Inshore Championship schedule saw a rare picket
fence finish for the Coronado YC Lipton Cup team. Lipton Cup teams
from 8 yacht clubs were represented with only Balboa, Cal and Santa
Barbara YC's not present. Second went to Wings which itself had a
string of three 2d's and two 3d's but never could break through Kathmandu
which won every race despite not leading at the first weather mark
on more than one occasion. Third and fourth went to Hotspur and
Piranha respectively. Interestingly, these four took the top four
spots in all five races save once. The racing was close though with only a
few boatlengths separating the top boats in each race.
It was a perfect weekend for racing with
heavy #1's seen on almost every weather leg. The SDYC race committee
did a superlative job with square lines and courses and with the
consistent breezes, all three races were three lap affairs. On
Sunday we were even treated to a bonus - we got to watch the 100+ mph
powerboats racing on San Diego Bay which was closed to traffic while the
racing took place. All in all it just couldn't have been a better
weekend for sailing.
Even
though Yachting Cup was not a part of our Season Championship Series for
2000, our class was nonetheless the largest one-design class at the
regatta.
From Rich Roberts: "A shocker in the
competitive Schock 35s, where Willem van Waay drove Fred Kirschner's
Kathmandu to five consecutive wins. Kathmandu's performance on the
inside South Bay course appeared to come from tactics and boat handling
more than any speed advantage. Dennis and Sharon Case, whose San Diego
boat Wings is a perennial Schock 35 class leader, gave full credit.
"We're in awe," Sharon Case said. "I've never known any
boat to pull in five aces in a regatta - not in this class."
Dennis Case said van Waay is "a great starter [and] very tough to
deal with, but it's not just him, it's the whole program."
| 1 |
97012 |
Kathmandu |
Fred Kirschner |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
1 |
5 |
| 2 |
97092 |
Wings |
Dennis & Sharon Case |
2 |
2 |
3 |
2 |
3 |
12 |
| 3 |
2 |
Hotspur |
Keith Lorence |
3 |
3 |
2 |
4 |
2 |
14 |
| 4 |
87780 |
Piranha |
David Voss |
8 |
4 |
4 |
3 |
4 |
23 |
| 5 |
31 |
Shillelagh |
Tim Hahnke |
4 |
6 |
5 |
5 |
6 |
26 |
| 6 |
97513 |
White Fang |
Don Adams |
6 |
7 |
7 |
8 |
5 |
33 |
| 7 |
97209 |
Absolute |
Ray & Susan Beckett |
5 |
8 |
8 |
6 |
7 |
34 |
| 8 |
97974 |
Stratagem |
Hinrichs/Johnson |
11 |
5 |
10 |
9 |
8 |
43 |
| 9 |
97657 |
Slippery When Wet |
Robert & Tom Mooers |
7 |
10 |
11 |
7 |
9 |
44 |
| 10 |
42439 |
Super Gnat |
Cliff Thompson |
10 |
9 |
6 |
10 |
10 |
45 |
| 11 |
97350 |
Twister |
Ty Hokanson |
9 |
12/dnf |
9 |
11 |
11 |
52 |
Ensenada 2000
From what I can glean off
the net, it looks like Stratagem won the class bragging rights for the
S-35's finishing 15 minutes ahead of White Fang in second. Winning
time was 24 hours 23 minutes 20 seconds - fairly typical time for Schock
35's in this race. Five boats participated this year including
Whiplash, Magic and Slippery When Wet. In PHRF-C standings,
Stratagem, White Fang and Whiplash appear to have finished 2d, 3d and 5th
overall, but I don't have corrected times.
View From The
Front (written by Mark Hinrichs
- owner of Stratagem)
After more than an hour delay by the race committee,
the 53rd Newport to Ensenada race is underway. We are Mexico bound with
only 5 souls onboard: Ron Johnson, Ardis Young, Jeannie Goodwin, my son
Mac, and myself.
A great start by Ron at the committee end of
the line (squeezing out number of boats), and we are off (under the #3 at
first, which proved to be too conservative, as the wind did not build
until later.) We sail high, on the wind, make a sail change to the heavy
#1 and watch the rest of the PHRF-C fleet crack off and move out on
down-range. The wind is moving steadily to the west/northwest. We stay on
the wind until we are sailing 200°,
and then keep that heading while easing until almost dark, when the call
is made for the kite set before we lose the last of the daylight.
Just after dark, Mac is suffering from a bad case of
mal-de-mer, and Jeannie is down with a migraine. Just three of us now.
What a great night for sailing a Schock 35. Under the stars, about 15 to
17 knots of breeze, and enough of a quartering sea to provide many moments
of excitement. Ron sleeps while Mark drives, with Ardis keeping company
and providing lasagna, candy bars, and coffee through the night (thanks,
Ardis). About 4 AM, the breeze begins to die, and the helmsman is beat.
Ron takes over to fight out the hard part of the race in dying breeze, and
I go below.
7 AM comes. Next to zero breeze, however, the large
left-over swell is still pushing us in the good direction at about a knot.
Ron is working hard at keeping the boat moving. Finally, the wind comes
back to stay about 9. We put the ‘chute back up, and . Looking around,
we see no boats in our class at all. We don’t know if that is good or
bad, but we are a long way down the course, and moving well.
We gybed at last in about 20 knots (only briefly
wrapping it around the headstay), tuning into the bay, and smoked on down
to Ensenada with sustained 8’s and 9’s. We now go DDW, and start
looking at the finish line. There are two boats, but only one has a
visible R/C flag. We can just make it through the two boats without
another gybe, but not if we need to cross between the boat and the
inflatable mark. We decide that it must be an R/C boat, and sail the last
5 minutes by the lee, praying that our decision is the right one (‘cause
I don’t want to wrap the ‘chute again). Our decision is the right one,
we finish, and then take the boat to the fuel dock at the Coral Marina to
prepare it for delivery back to S.D. that evening..
We had no idea how we did at the time, but we felt
that we had sailed our race -- the race we wanted to-- no matter how we
finished. That felt good.
Lipton Cup LXXXV
This
year's defense will be held out of the San Diego Yacht Club after the win
last year by Vince Brun who led the SDYC team
sailing Hotspur to two bullets and two seconds on the first day and
coasted home with a 3, 1, 4 on the second day yielding a total only half
that of the next closest team, defending champion Coronado YC. As of
this time it appears that eleven yacht clubs will participate this
year. In a bit of a surprise, the Lipton Cup Committee chose to
again run the regatta inside in the South Bay below the Coronado
Bridge. Many thought that with SDYC's victory, the Cup would move
outside to the Coronado Roads rather that the inside where Coronado Cays
and Coronado YC's chose to stage their defenses in '98 and '99.
Since 1992, the Lipton Cup has been run in
Schock 35's, replacing the IOR's boats of another era. Of the boats
entered, prior winners include 5 time winner Katmandu (4 times for Balboa
YC as "Buttercup" with Dave Ullman driving from '93-'96 and in
1998 for Coronado YC with Robbie Haines at the helm then called "Wild
Thing") Shillelagh (1997 winner for Coronado Cays YC with
Neville Wittey steering) and Hotspur (1999 for San Diego YC see above).
The San Diego YC has set up a great website
for the event this year including an interesting history of the event
worth checking out at http://www.sdyc.org/liptoncup.htm
and Santa Barbara YC has a web page devoted to their team's efforts to win
the Cup at http://www.sbyc.org/2000Lipton.htm
Note: I had previously thought this
was the 97th running of the Lipton Cup; however, there were years
including WWII in which no races were run, so although the first running
of the event was in 1904, this is the 85th Lipton Cup.
|
Expected entry list
for 85th running of the Lipton Cup in Schock 35's |
| Yacht Club |
Boat/Odds(unofficial) |
Skipper |
| Balboa YC |
Whistler/2:1 |
Dave Ullman |
| California YC |
Ricochet/5:1 |
Bob Little |
| Channel Islands YC |
Stratagem/40:1 |
Ron Johnson |
| Club Cruceros de La Paz |
Piranha/25:1 |
Dave Voss |
| Coronado YC |
Katmandu/1:1 |
Willem Van Waay |
| Del Rey YC |
Twister/50:1 |
Ty Hokanson |
| San Diego YC |
Hotspur/3:1 |
Keith Lorence |
| Santa Barbara YC |
Wings/10:1 |
Ken Kieding |
| Santa Monica Windjammers
YC |
White Fang/35:1 |
Yumio Dornberg? |
| South Bay Yacht Racing
Club |
Absolute/35:1 |
Ray Beckett |
| Southwestern YC |
Shillelagh/25:1 |
Tim Hahnke |
Ahmanson
Cup 2000:
Two things
stand out about this year's Ahmanson Cup:
1) With 18
boats in class, and the only other fleet even able to get a one-design
class together at all being our little brothers the Santana 30/30's, if
you want to race one-design keelboats in Southern California, you'd better
get a Schock 35! J-105's, J-120's, 1D35's were all invited but no
showed.
2) Wings won the regatta for
the fifth consecutive year!
Newport Beach
once again served up it's typical dose of unpredictable winds.
Sailing on the near course, left shifts were as equally possible at any
given time as were righties. Even on the last beat of the day on
Sunday as the wind shifted to the right to 220 and built to 11 kts. true,
the last shift was a lefty that really scrambled the fleet.
Big news on
Day 1 was the huge lead enjoyed by Absolute which stood atop the leader
board with a 5-1-3 for a mere 9 points. Unlike most regattas in
which the lead boats all have only single digit finishes, many of the
typical leaders found themselves looking at the transoms of the
fleet. Examples: Mischief (12), Outlier (10), Whistler (14),
Chayah (11) and Piranha (15). Even eventual winner Wings took a 15th
in race #2!
Unfortunately
for Absolute, Day #2 didn't go so well, and Wings returned to the front of
the fleet scoring a 2-1 to put the regatta away. Mischief pulled the
other bullet for the day and won the tie-breaker for second over Minnesota
Fast which was led by UK's Bill Menninger for the weekend. Close
behind in fourth with a great 3-2 for Sunday was Outlier and Absolute
rounded out the trophies.
Especially on
Sunday, the RC did a great job adjusting the line and the courses to the
changing conditions and we also thank them for responding to our requests
for over-earlies by radio and leeward gates. With some of those
crowded leeward marks, the gates were a big help!
For results,
go to www.nhyc.org
San
Diego National Offshore One Design (NOOD):
We
again had more sailors on the water on a Schock 35 than any other class at
the event and twice as many boats as the J-120, J-105 or 1D35's. Two
new boats made their debut: Ken Manzoni of Southwestern YC has
chartered Shillelagh for the season and Lipton Cup and Fred Kirschner
brings his Katmandu for class racing for the first time. Katmandu
you may remember by its former names Wild Thing and Buttercup...or as
Steve Grillon used to call it, the Wonder Boat. Great to see all the
new blood in the class!
Congratulations
goes to Chayah as the class winner. One fun thing about this event
was that lots of new names made it onto the leader board -- Kathmandu
(2d), Whiplash (tie 3d) and Super Gnat (5th) all finished in the
money!
Day one of the regatta saw
mostly 8-11 knot winds ranging from about 260-290 on our course which was
so close to the entrance to San Diego Bay that Point Loma was very much
affecting the breeze. There was big excitement at the first weather
mark when three of the leaders misjudged the strong flood tide and found
themselves stacked up on the mark. Chayah led around in first with
Whiplash, Whistler and Wings in pursuit. On Piranha, we saw this,
tacked away for several boatlengths, came back and still hit the mark in
the current. Need more SF experience! Anyway, lots of boats
did circles to exonerate. Positions held except that we decided to
push to the right to get up current approaching the mark and passed four
boats from behind as they cam in from the left sailing directly into the
maximum part of the current. Chayah rounded inside of us, but coming
out of the mark, we aggressively swung to their inside and jibed because
we could now lay the mark in the building breeze and held them off to
win.
Race two saw Wings at max
speed on the favored committee end of the line just flat take off.
They were never challenged and got what turned out to be the last gun of
the day even though three races were scheduled. When race #3 was
abandoned, the wind was building and now getting near a #3 and it was warm
and sunny. Frankly, race conditions were awesome, but we went
to the dock.
On
Sunday, the east coast mentality had our race starting at 11:30 again in a
foggy unsettled wind that was waiting for the thermal to develop.
This race saw from 1-8 knots of wind and more than 90 degrees of
shifts. As Sailing World reports it "Drama in the Schock 35
class came on at series' end for this 12-boat division. Three
skippers--David Voss (Marina del Rey), Dennis and Sharon Case (San Diego),
and Peter Johnstone (Corona del Mar)--were in a three-way tie for the lead
as the fleet entered the last race. None of those three skippers, however,
took the class lead. Class winner Oscar Karinsky (Long Beach) and the crew
on CHAYAH took a third in the final race for a two-point edge over Fred
Kirschner's KATHMANDU." For an hour the class sat and waited
for the last race to determine the regatta winner -- the "R"
flag was up signaling that there would be another race -- but the RC
decided that it was now too difficult to get a race started because they
were seeing 30 degree shifts. Again we went home while the sun
cleared and the wind was building with the race abandoned at 1:30 in the
afternoon! On other courses, the RC put up the postpone flag and
ended up getting the race off, but we went home as the fleet loudly booed
the Race Committee on the water.
Three races in two days and we
were all standing at the yacht club at 2:30 p.m. To add insult to
injury NOOD organizers refused to honor wrist bands for drinks because it
would be "unfair" to the boats still out on the race course
racing -- even though we paid for the bands and everyone was going to
leave and go home if there was no party then - which they did. I am
sorry to have to say this, but unfortunately, the event will be remembered
by most for some shockingly awful race management decisions. Our
experiment with adding NOOD to our Championship Calendar was a
failure. Frankly, it looks like Yachting Cup will be the event on
the Championship Calendar in 2001.
|
2000
NOOD - Final Results |
| Position |
Boat |
Race
1 |
Race
2 |
Race
3 |
Total |
| 1 |
Chayah
- Krinsky/Sentovich, ABYC |
2 |
6 |
3 |
11 |
| 2 |
Kathmandu
- Fred Kirschner, CorYC |
9 |
3 |
1 |
13 |
| 3 |
Wings
- D. & S. Case, SDYC |
5 |
1 |
8 |
14 |
| 4 |
Whiplash-
R. Godwin, LBYC |
3 |
4 |
7 |
14 |
| 5 |
Super
Gnat - C. Thompson, SDYC |
6 |
5(rdg,12) |
4 |
15 |
| 6 |
Whistler
- Johnstone/Wainer, BYC |
4 |
2 |
10 |
16 |
| 7 |
Piranha
- D. Voss, OYC |
1 |
5 |
12 |
18 |
| 8 |
Stratagem
- Hinrichs/Johnson, BCYC |
8 |
9 |
2 |
19 |
| 9 |
Mischief
- C. Hardy/M. Pinckney, BCYC |
7 |
7 |
5 |
19 |
| 10 |
Absolute
- R. & S. Beckett, CYC |
11 |
10 |
6 |
27 |
| 11 |
Slippery
When Wet - R. & T. Mooers, BYC |
10 |
8 |
11 |
29 |
| 12 |
Shillelagh
- K. Manzoni, CCYC |
13
(dsq) |
11 |
9 |
| |