Newport-Mesa sailors rule the seas
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Danette Goulet
A brand new boat with the fierce snorting bull on the hull and a
Californian crew on board, including two brothers from Newport-Mesa, took
the overall win in the 41st Transpacific Yacht Race on Wednesday.
The Bull, a new 40-foot, Australian-built Sydney 40, skippered and
owned by Seth Radow of Marina del Rey, crossed the Diamond Head finish
line at 3:49 a.m. Wednesday to claim the best overall corrected time and
first in its class.
One of the most prestigious yacht races in the world, the Transpac is
a 2,225-mile journey from Los Angeles to Honolulu, Hawaii.
The biennial race was the vision of a Hawaiian king in the 19th
century and continues to be the premier race of the Pacific.
The victorious Bull was neck and neck for the title of overall win
with corrected time with the Pegasus, a 75-foot Reichel/Pugh skippered by
Phillippe Kahn out of Santa Cruz.
At a mere eight days, two hours, 34 minutes and three seconds, the
Pegasus had the fastest overall time. But when all handicaps were
considered, the Bull came out the front-runner.
Among the seven-member crew aboard the Bull for 10 days, 17 hours, 49
minutes and 19 seconds were Rick and Vince Valdes. Rick, a sailmaker who
lives in Costa Mesa, and Vince, a trust fund account executive from
Newport Beach, have never sailed in the Transpac before but grew up
around boats, said their sister, Heather Spears.
“My brothers have been sailing since they could walk and have both
built their own boats,” Spears said.
It’s also not a surprise, she added, considering their father, Dick
Valdes, was one of the founders of Columbia Yachts and a pioneer in the
construction of fiberglass boats.
The crew is still in Hawaii celebrating the safe and triumphant
journey and will return to a hero’s welcome Sunday, Spears said.
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