What it takes to win
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Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT HARBOR -- Many will shoot for 24 hours. Some might take more
than twice as long and a few are likely to get there in less than a day.
But one common goal unites the 430-plus skippers that will line up to
race in the 54th annual Newport to Ensenada International Yacht Race
today. And that’s to get to the finish as soon as they can.
With 27 different racing categories this year, including a so-called
“cruising class” that lets skippers use their motors for up to 12 hours
during the race, it’s clear that not everyone’s competing on the same
level. By handing out 144 trophies during the festivities in Ensenada,
the Newport Ocean Sailing Assn., which organizes the race, clearly
recognizes that fact.
After all, there are boats up to 100 feet long and others that stretch
for just 25 feet. And size does matter, according to some.
“The biggest boats get there the quickest,” said Mike Wathen, who used
to compete with his own boats years ago and will race as a crew member on
It’s OK this year.
That’s pretty much because they’ve got a longer water line, said
Wathen. The longer the boat is, the faster it can go through the water.
With the right winds, that’s led to incredible records. In 1998, Steve
Fosset’s Stars and Stripes made it to Ensenada in six hours, 46 minutes
and 40 seconds and Roy Disney set the monohull record with his Pyewacket
at 11 hours and 54 minutes.
The way wind forecasts looked Thursday, such times were unlikely to be
repeated this year.
“Right now it’s not looking too good,” Wathen said. “It doesn’t look
too promising to be a fast one. If we had had it last weekend, it would
have been terrific, with winds blowing at 25 knots.”
But while winds or their absence still remain the single most
important factor for the speed of the race, experience, hard work and
state-of-the-art equipment can go a long way as well.
Skippers have to decide whether to head out to the ocean or sail along
the coast, for example. That also involves some luck in reading the winds
correctly and predicting which direction they’ll blow.
“If you guess right, you do OK,” Wathen said. “If you don’t, you’re
dead. [The other boats] will be ahead by such a margin that you can’t
catch up to them.”
So what about any favorites? Craig Reynolds, who will skipper his
40-foot Bolt, said Dennis Conner, with Stars and Stripes, and Allan
Andrews, with Doubletime, are forces to be reckoned with.
“They sail real hard all night,” he said, adding that this is the real
key to winning the race as far as he’s concerned.
“A lot of people don’t sail the boat hard between midnight and four or
five in the morning,” Reynolds said. “It’s hard to sail a boat in the
pitch dark.”
But that’s what’s needed to excel.
“The old adage of following the beer cans to Ensenada” just doesn’t
hold up any more, Reynolds said. “People who work real hard and those who
have good equipment, will win.”
FYI
The race send-off is scheduled to start at noon today. The Newport
Ocean Sailing Assn. will have a narrator explaining the event at Lookout
Point on the bluffs above Corona del Mar State Beach beginning at 11:30
a.m.
FUN FACT
If skippers have had problems fining the finishing line in Ensenada in
the past, they don’t have to worry about it this year. Race organizers
will light up the sky with a laser beacon to make sure that everyone gets
in safely.
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