Ready, set ...
- Share via
Bryce Alderton
From his high school days of motocross racing to his current
affiliation with the Yamaha Motor Corporation and personal
watercraft, Newport Beach resident Mike Follmer has had racing in his
blood.
And Follmer will race again today for the ninth time in the ninth
annual Long Beach-2-Catalina & Back International Jet Sports Boating
Association National Offshore Championship.
Follmer, 46, along with more than 100 riders, start the race at 9
a.m. from Long Beach Harbor venturing 23.6 miles to Catalina, where
they make a U-turn at the Avalon Vessel & Fuel Barge and return to
Long Beach.
The race should take less than two hours to complete if one racer
is near the lead, according to Follmer, whose best finish in the race
is 12th, which took less than an hour and a half. He looks at the
race as a chance to gain points in the IJSBA Baja Promotions Offshore
Endurance Series, where he finished second overall last year.
Last year Follmer won the IJSBA National Team Endurance
Championship after taking first place in the Team Endurance 300, a
six-hour race covering eight miles of ocean off of Long Beach.
Follmer completed the race in 6:07, with his watercraft consuming 92
gallons of fuel.
Navigation skills in today’s race will be the difference in who
races well and who doesn’t, according to Follmer.
“The biggest factor is navigation skills and knowing where you’re
going,” Follmer said. It puts everyone on a more level playing field
than having a fast boat and a good rider. It can be like a cork in a
bathtub out there.”
Follmer signed as a factory sponsored rider with Yamaha for a
fourth consecutive season in 2001. He has two wave runners and
changes which one he rides depending on the race.
For today’s race he will use his slower watercraft, an XL 1200
Limited Personal Watercraft (Wave Runner) with a top speed of 64 mph
to save fuel because racers can’t refuel during the race. Among the
items Follmer uses to track his progress and stay on course in the
water include a compass, Global Positioning Systems and a cell phone,
but he mainly relies on the compass to stay on track.
“The numbers are bigger and are mounted on a higher part of the
boat so you can see it easier without having to slow the boat down to
look down at a GPS console in a plastic bag,” Follmer said.
Unsuspecting winds and strong currents can make this an
unpredictable race, according to Follmer.
“The main thing is staying on track and getting a good rhythm
going and knowing what you’re doing when the weather swells up
because these currents can really make the (watercraft) turn around,”
Follmer said.
In last year’s race Follmer said the ESPN helicopter flew overhead
for two miles so he said he knew then that he was on the right path,
but he takes nothing for granted.
When Follmer made the turn at Catalina last year, he said he saw
none of the other racers on the water, which isn’t unusual.
“You think you’re lost but you might see a jet ski off in the
distance and ask yourself, “‘Should I follow him?’” Follmer said.
Last year Follmer earned five titles within the 13-race BP
Motorsports Offshore Endurance Series.
He races in three series, GranPrix, LongCourse and Team Endurance.
GranPrix races are two-hours on five to 10-mile courses with a
solo rider allowed two fuel stops held on oceans or lakes. LongCourse
races are 90 minutes with a three-and-a-half mile layout with a solo
rider and one fuel stop held on lakes and reservoirs.
There are three Team Endurance competitions of the 13-yearly
races. One race is three hours which Follmer’s team of four won
earlier this year at Lake Perris. Another race is four hours that
Follmer and crew competed in a month ago. They led at one point but
their watercraft suffered a crack in the hull and had to retire. The
final Team Endurance race is the six-hour, eight-mile Team Endurance
300 coming up in October off of Long Beach.
In 2001 Follmer won five championship titles and earned the No. 2
position in the overall race standings. Follmer gets to carry the No.
2 plate during the 2002 season.
Right now Follmer has a four-point lead in the overall BP
Motorsports Offshore Endurance standings. At the same time last year
he was 13 points behind the leader, but managed to finish second in
his most successful year racing watercraft to date.
At the age of16 Follmer began competitive racing in motocross and
eventually raced professionally with the Maico Motorcycle --
Motocross Racing Team. In 1978, Follmer won eight of 11 races in the
Formula Super-Vee series and earned the Southern Pacific National
Championship title the very next year.
He owns his own business, Mike Follmer Specialties, which consists
of sports and corporate promotional products.
He now lives year-round in Newport Beach with his fiancee Kay
Carder, who was the original owner of Farmers Market at Fashion
Island. The two met through one of Carder’s sons who rides a jet ski.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.