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Thu, 12 Jun 2008 17:15:41 -0400
The previous transmission failed to attach the photo. Here it is. Thanks!
Barby
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[mailto:barby.macgowan@mediapronewport.com]
Sent: Thursday, June 12, 2008 5:12 PM
Showcases Racing's Best
CAPTION: George David's (Hartford, Conn.) 90-foot Rambler is one of the
hot-rod racing sailboats competing this weekend in the New York Yacht Club's
154th Annual Regatta presented by Rolex. Rambler is shown here at the 2007
Rolex Middle Sea Race in Malta, which it won, setting a course record.
CREDIT: Rolex/Kurt Arrigo
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Barby MacGowan, Media Pro Int'l, 401-849-0220,
barby.macgowan@mediapronewport.com, or Michael Levitt,
communications@nyyc.org
New York Yacht Club 154th Annual Regatta Presented by Rolex
112-Boat Fleet is Showcase for Racing's Best; Action Starts Tomorrow
NEWPORT, R.I. (June 12, 2008) -- With an entry list flush with famous boats
and crew lists stacked with stars, it's fair to say the New York Yacht
Club's (NYYC) 154th Annual Regatta presented by Rolex is set to be one of
the most talked about regattas of the summer. It all starts this weekend in
Newport, where 112 boats--from brand new to vintage--have gathered to test
equipment and polish racing skills on the world-famous waters of
Narragansett Bay and Block Island Sound. Before competing in multiple races
Saturday and Sunday, the fleet will enjoy a 19-nautical mile race around
Conanicut Island, playing out mini distance-race scenarios that will further
prepare those crews entering the Newport to Bermuda Race, a 635-nautical
mile ocean racing classic that also starts off Newport next Friday.
Familiar to locals is George David's (Hartford, Conn.) 90-foot entrant
Rambler, which has broken records in the Nordbank Blue Race (transatlantic),
Rolex Middle Sea Race and the Offshore Race Rolex Buenos Aires to Rio de
Janeiro in the past year. With several Rhode Islanders aboard as crew, the
boat nevertheless will be without its star helmsman, Ken Read (Newport,
R.I.), who has jumped ship to skipper another boat in the event, the 70-foot
PUMA Ocean Racing, as part of his preparation for going around the world in
the 2008-2009 Volvo Ocean Race.
"The Annual Regatta is going to be hugely important for PUMA, because we
only have a small window to learn how to boat-handle these monsters around
the buoys," said Read, explaining that there are inshore buoy races at each
of the Volvo stopovers. "This won't just be one of the most competitive
regattas of the season, but of this century."
Rambler's owner concurs. "I've been doing the New York Yacht Club events
for a couple of decades," said George David, "and I don't think I've ever
seen a tougher fleet." David referenced a half dozen new IRC designs with
which he will be grouped for handicap racing and says recent structural
changes that have made Rambler "stiffer and faster" should keep his older
boat (launched in 2002) competitive with the pack. Rambler is topped in
size only by the 99-foot super maxi Speedboat, which is "fresh out of the
box," to be skippered by Volvo winning skipper Mike Sanderson (NZL), and has
been optimized for entering distance races and breaking speed records. That
last fact may give Speedboat somewhat of a disadvantage in around-the-buoys
racing, especially since the crew has had little time to train compared to
David's. Before winning the Volvo Ocean Race, Sanderson skippered Mari-Cha
IV in the Rolex Transatlantic Race and broke the 100-year-old NYYC
Transatlantic Race Record set by Charlie Barr and Atlantic in 1905.
"It's tough to push the bigger boats around short courses," said David.
"Our windward legs will be about 2 1/2 miles long and that's a short
distance for sail handling."
Another boat with local roots is Dan Meyers' (Boston, Mass./Newport, R.I.)
66-foot Numbers, which finished second at the US-IRC East Coast Championship
last Fall and won its IRC class at Acura Key West Race Week earlier this
year. It will match up nicely against Bob Towse, the NYYC Rear Commodore,
and his son Farley Towse's (Stamford, Conn.) 66 footer Blue Yankee, which
won its class last year at the Annual Regatta.
Roger Sturgeon's (Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.) Rosebud/Team DYT and Jim Swartz's
(San Francisco, Calif.) Moneypenny will represent the first two boats
developed for the new STP65 class, while no less than 15 NYYC Club Swan 42s,
one skippered by NYYC Commodore Charles Townsend (New York, N.Y./Middletown,
R.I.), will show the strength of that rapidly developing class, which saw
its first boat delivered in late 2006. It is the ninth one-design class
developed by the New York Yacht Club since the early 1900s.
In addition to the hot-rod racers, the Annual Regatta will showcase vintage
designs racing in the 12 Metre and Classics divisions. (The Annual Regatta
serves as the first event in the NYYC's Classics Series.) Included will be
six 12 Metres, including Intrepid and Courageous, which both successfully
defended the America's Cup (in '67/'70 and '74/'77, respectively), and seven
Classics, including Sam Croll's (Rye, N.Y.) Angelita, which won the 1932
Olympic gold medal in the eight metre class, and Edgar Cato's (Charlotte,
N.C.) Dorade, one of Olin Stephens' earliest designs, which won the
Transatlantic Race in 1931 and the Fastnet Race that same year and is
credited with single-handedly revolutionizing all aspects of sail and hull
design for all blue water boats to come.
More About the NYYC 154th Annual Regatta Presented by Rolex
The tradition of the Annual Regatta began at the New York Yacht Club's
original clubhouse in Hoboken, N.J., in 1845, during its second year of
existence.
Now sailed from the New York Yacht Club's Harbour Court Clubhouse in
Newport, R.I., the 154th Annual Regatta presented by Rolex offers eligible
yachts a two-day series of buoy racing on Saturday and Sunday, June 14 and
15, and a 19-mile Around the Island Race on Friday, June 13. While not
scored as part of the regular series, the distance race around Conanicut
Island in Narragansett Bay is highly competitive and a welcome navigational
challenge for boats preparing for Bermuda.
Team trophies will be awarded in both the two-day series and the Around the
Island Race, with the Great Corinthian Trophy awarded to the yacht club team
with the best score in the former and the Rolex Cup awarded to the best
two-yacht team in the latter.
For more information on the New York Yacht Club Annual Regatta presented by
Rolex, please visit http://www.nyyc.org. It is part of US-IRC Gulf Stream
Series for IRC yachts (http://www.us-irc.org) as well as the first leg of
the 2008 NYYC Classic Series for classic yachts (http://www.nyyc.org).
As it is in every even-numbered year, the Annual Regatta also is part of the
Onion Patch Series (www.bermudarace.com), which includes the Newport to
Bermuda Race and the Anniversary Regatta of the Royal Bermuda Yacht Club,
which takes place the Friday after the Newport to Bermuda Race. IRC is the
rating rule for the Annual Regatta and the Anniversary Regatta, and ORR is
required for the Bermuda Race entrants with an additional option for IRC,
which will be used for the purpose of scoring the Onion Patch and
determining an overall IRC winner for the Bermuda Race (North Rock Beacon
Trophy).
Later this summer, the New York Yacht Club will also host its sixth biennial
Race Week at Newport presented by Rolex. The event is scheduled for July
19-27 with the first weekend devoted to Classics racing, in honor of the
100th birthday of Olin J. Stephens, and the second half of the week devoted
to IRC, PHRF and One-Design competitions.
(end)
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