Local sailors remain in contention
The camaraderie was high, and so was the intensity at the conclusion
of Day 2 in the U.S. junior sailing championships Thursday at Newport
Harbor Yacht Club.
With two races remaining, the excitement grew as the scores got
tighter.
And two local entries, both sitting in third place after
Thursday’s competition, remain in the hunt for the ultimate prize in
their respective divisions.
At the Doublehanded level, which is closer than most anticipated,
the Bemis trophy could be won by any of the top five teams, while in
the Singlehanded races, there is a two-point difference between first
and second place.
Conditions were similar to Wednesday, with light winds picking up
in the afternoon, as Thomas Barrows from Pleon Yacht Club in
Marblehead, Mass., and Cameron Cullman from American Yacht Club lead
the Singlehanded division with a score of 14 and 16 respectively.
“I try to not worry about the wind conditions because I can’t
control it,” said Barrows. “I had good boat speed and good clean
starts, so I’m going to try to do the same tomorrow.”
Cullman, in his second year of the event, was equally pleased with
his performance.
“I feel really great,” he said. “The boats are so much fun --
they’re really physical and they go really fast. I’m just going to
try to stay with Thomas and stay in clean air.”
In the Doublehanded races, Jonathan Bernbaum and Scott Scott
Szawlowski from Colombia Yacht Club in Chicago, Ill., who, after the
first day of competition were in fifth place, climbed to the No. 1
spot with a score of 28. The team, which is led by Coach Evan
Thompson, winner of the Bemis Trophy in 1998 for the same club, is on
a quest for a similar finish.
“We’re pretty excited because I didn’t even think we could get
here,” said 14-year-old Szawlowski, who has been sailing for six
years. “But we knew if we worked really hard we could.”
Jeff Knowles and Caila Johnson from Rhode Island-based Sail
Newport finished two points behind with 30, while Newport Harbor’s
Cole Hatton and Blair Belling remain steady in third place with 35.
In the Triplehanded races, hosted by Balboa Yacht Club, Christian
Emsiek, Wade Buxton and Perry Emsiek of BYC kept a tight grip on
third place as first Mississippi-based Bay Waveland Yacht Club
finished the day on top with Jackson Benvenutti, Gary Taylor and
Davis Bolyard won first place in five of eight races, and second in
two.
While the event brings a high level of competition, the
Singlehanded and Doublehanded competitors are brought together in
activities aside from sailing, such as eating breakfast and dining
together, watching movies, attending dances, and, on Tuesday, the
athletes took the Balboa ferry to BYC to dine with the Triplehanded
sailors.
“It’s the sailing culture,” said Jenn Lancaster, NHYC youth racing
director. “The kids are social even when they’re on the water. It’s
fun but it’s still serious. The kids are really pushing themselves. A
lot of them are so far from home, so they all really support each
other.”
While most sailors are meeting for the first time, several have
met on other occasions, but the intensity still remains.
Barrows, who has known Cy Thompson of St. Thomas Yacht Club since
they were in the second grade.
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