Winner fond of race
Jeff Benson
Most of the sailors entered in the 69th annual “Flight of the Lasers”
boat race in Newport Harbor last weekend were there purely for the
fun, a spokesperson at the Newport Harbor Yacht Club said. Trophies
awarded included “Best Decorated Boat,” “Best Costume,” “First
Married Couple” and “First Parent/Child Team.”
But then there were those, such as reigning Laser Masters champion
Ned Jones and former America’s Cup Australia team captain Philip
Thompson, who had their sights set on much more. The two finished
fourth and sixth, respectively.
In an upset, it was a young unknown who drifted away with this
one. Lido Isle’s Clark Fonda, 19, staked his claim as the newest
force in the Southern California sailing scene by beating 68 other
competitors, only two weeks after his first career win in the
Southern California Youth Yacht Racing Assn.’s So Cal Laser
Championships. The “Flight of the Lasers” race, sponsored by the
Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce, allowed for males and females of
all ages in similar 14-foot, single-person, Olympic-class Lasers or
12-foot Bytes, which sailed as a separate class.
“I was really looking forward to this regatta,” Fonda said. “I
thought if I tried hard enough, I could win.”
Now comes the “purely-for-fun” part.
Newport Harbor Yacht Club Racing Director Jennifer Lancaster said
the race is historically so unofficial that no one has ever bothered
to keep finish times. So when Fonda, a sophomore at the University of
Southern California, said he eked out a win over close friend, fellow
Trojan and second-place finisher Harrison Turner on Sunday, he really
didn’t know how far in front the two were.
“I looked at my watch, and we finished around 2:15 p.m.,” Fonda
said. “We were supposed to start at 1 p.m., but I’m not even sure if
we started on time. Harry was maybe 20 seconds behind me. He and I
got punched after rounding the Z mark [northwest of Lido Isle], and
we just pushed each other on the downward leg [back to Newport Bay].”
Fonda said his pre-race plan was to hang around the top five for
most of the race and make a late surge. The strategy worked, as he
and Turner stayed in the top four before they found themselves
battling it out in front by a wide margin.
“He’s such a good upwind sailor, but I felt good about my downwind
boat speed,” he said. “It was just a matter of staying with him.”
The win netted Fonda the item in the toy-store window that he’d
been drooling over for months -- a new laser sail -- a grand prize
that Lancaster valued at approximately $400. His name is also on
display on one of the Yacht Club’s larger trophies. But the biggest
prize of all, he said, was the congratulations from his USC sailing
coach in attendance, Mike Segerblom, and mother Emily Fonda.
“We’re really pleased with his progress,” Emily Fonda said.
“During the year, he’s been sailing with a top national team at USC,
and he’s learned a lot on that team. It’s been very, very enjoyable.”
Cole Hatton, Ned Jones and Mark Gaudio rounded out the top five in
the race.
Lancaster said the race was entirely sponsored and free to members
of local yacht clubs. Two-time defending champion Chris Raab did not
race this year.
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