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IC-24's
DOMINATE OLD TROPHIES RACE
by Carol Bareuther

©Dean Barnes |
Aug. 6, 2001 The ability to judge the
interplay of current and winds was the key to
winning the St. Thomas Yacht Club's Old
Trophies Race Sunday. "Heading clockwise
around the course meant going with the
current and much faster," said Chris
Rosenberg, who skippered the winning IC-24.
The race course was set around the natural boundary of Great
St. James, off St. Thomas' east end. The regatta began over
30 years ago
when it seemed that STYC club members knew the waters around
the neighboring British Virgin Islands and St. Croix better
than their home St. Thomas waters - where they would often run
aground in current cut. So, a race whose course rounded the
James islands three times was set up.
Today,
sailors still have to circumvent the first lap counterclockwise,
then opt to sail the subsequent two laps either clockwise, or
counterclockwise, their choice. Also, different from other races
where boats begin in a pack, each boat had an individual start
with the time for their start calculated by the boat's handicap.
Thus, the first boat over the line wins.
Bright
skies, patched with occasional squalls, prevailed across the
course with winds blowing 10 to 12 knots. According to long-standing
tradition, the Old Trophies Race is for mono-hulls only. IC-24s
dominated the first three slots with Rosenberg's Feeling Friendly
finishing first, followed by Cold Beer V driven by Morgan Avery,
and third Chris Curreri aboard his brand new IC-24. "They
went one way, and I went the other, but I guess we saw who was
faster," said John Haracivet, who was at the helm of his
Beneteau 30, Tempest, and ended fourth by sailing every lap
in a counterclockwise pattern. Finishing out the fleet was Verian
and Carlos Aguilar's IC-24, followed by Bill McConnell's Whippet.
True
to tradition, every skipper who participated in the race won
a prize - an old trophy. On the awards table there were well
over a dozen old trophies to choose from. For his win, Rosenberg
selected one of the oldest. "It's from back in the early
80's," he said, holding up a wood plaque with rust covered
name plaques and identification marking it as from the old Caribbean
Ocean Racing Circuit. Other winners also selected some grand
prizes - green tarnished silver plates, figurine statues and
cups that looked like the historic Holy Grail.
The Old
Trophies Race marks the end of the sailing season until November,
when the STYC hosts and invitational event for IC-24 racing
where teams of sailors from islands throughout the Caribbean
will be invited.
For more
information, contact: 340-775-6320. |
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