Pacific Cup - Division E start - the Big Boats head for Hawaii
by Sail-World.com on 16 Jul 2016
RIO100 - Pacific Cup, San Francisco - Division E start - July 15, 2016 John Navas
Described as the 'Fun Race to Hawaii', the final division of the Pacific Cup, Division E, started Friday from San Francisco.
San Francisco based photographer and videographer, John Navas was just to the west of the St Francis YC and filed these images and HD video of the start.
The fleet started in a 15-17 kt from the usual direction in San Francisco and the fleet beat out to the Golden Gate with the benefit of an ebbing tide.
A clean start and a huge port tack lift that carried the yachts quickly under the Golden Gate Bridge.
Manouch Moshayedi’s super maxi Rio 100, was first over the line with edging out the Ker 56 Varuna VI and followed by the Andrews 70 Runaway. Rio was completely refitted in 2014 with an eye toward winning Transpac’s Barn Door Trophy (first to finish). The refit was successful, and the longer, lighter and faster boat won the Barn Door Trophy in the 2015 Transpac Race. Rio’s pro/am crew includes well-known navigator Gavin Brady and many of the 2015 Transpac crew.
The award for “farthest hailing port” goes to Jens Kellinghusen’s Ker 56 Varuna VI, from Hamburg, Germany. Launched in September 2015, the latest generation racer designed by Ker Design with canting keel and daggerboards. The Pac Cup is a tune-up race for the Sydney to Hobart Race. Most of the crew is unpaid. “We’re mostly amateurs who have a lot of sailing days,” says crew member Vasco Ollero. This is a lower profile race than many Kellinghusen’s boats have done, but Ollero says it doesn’t mean that they don’t expect strong competition. “We have to finish to win,” says Ollero. “Our first priority is getting there with the boat intact.” Matt Noble, a Bay Area sailor from Pt. Richmond, got lucky. He was tapped as a last minute replacement for a crew member who got injured before leaving Germany.
Two venerable Andrews 70s, Pyewacket and Runaway are back this year. Roy P. Disney’s Pyewacket raced in 2014, finishing second in division and ORR, and third overall. This will be the 24th Hawaii race for Disney, who describes himself as an owner/grinder. He is joined by project manager Robbie Haines, and navigator Tom Addis, a veteran of multiple Volvo Ocean Races and winning Sydney Hobart teams. Another key member of the team is Bay Area rigger, Scott Easom, who will be sailing his 18th Hawaii race. Combined, the team has sailed 19 Pac Cups, and well over 60 Hawaii races.
The other Andrews 70, Runaway, (formerly Chevall / Pegasus / Decision) won Transpac’s Barn Door trophy in 1995, despite sailing the last 8 hours with a broken mast. As Pegasus she took the Barn Door Trophy again in 2001. Current owner/skipper Hector Velarde who hails from Lima, Peru, is a veteran of two previous Pac Cups having sailed his Nelson/Marek 92 Locura in the 2014 Pac Cup, and his Santa Cruz 70, Mirage, in the 2010 race, finishing fourth overall. While this will be the first Pac Cup for navigator David Voss, the team has combined experience of over 50 Hawaii races.
Edward Marez’s Santa Cruz 70 Buona Sera is reuniting many crew who sailed the 2015 Transpac. Members of this Santa Cruz, California based team have been sailing together for many years. Navigator Gerry Swinton, and watch captain Michael Anthony Evans both sailed on the Santa Cruz 50 Octavia in 2000 when it won the Pacific Cup. Jack Halterman, a veteran of more than a dozen Hawaii races counts sailing in the 1977 Transpac aboard the famed Merlin among his most memorable races.
The race was first run in 1980 and is sailed every year from San Francisco to Kaneohe Bay, Oahu.
Follow the race on the official website including fleet trackers
For John Navas' video channel click here
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