Please select your home edition
Edition
Sea Sure 2025

Rolex Big Boat Series 2014 - Ready for another 50 years

by KPMS on 15 Sep 2014
Alex Roepers's Plenty takes first place overall in the Farr 40 Class - Rolex Big Boat Series 2014 Rolex/Daniel Forster http://www.regattanews.com
A year after the contest for the 34th America’s Cup, world-class sailing is still alive and well on San Francisco Bay. In fact, for the last four days (Thursday, September 11 through Sunday, September 14), the 50th Anniversary edition of the Rolex Big Boat Series has hosted hundreds of sailors on 99 teams, rotating onto three strategically-placed race circles that triangulated the constant wind and tide challenges of the largest Pacific estuary in the Americas.

Having developed stadium sailing long before the America’s Cup made it a local colloquialism, the St. Francis Yacht Club ensured fast fun for spectators as well as competitors by designing each day’s second race (always sailed in a blustering afternoon breeze) to finish within cheering distance of the clubhouse’s famous second-story race deck that commands attention east to Alcatraz Island and west to a sun-drenched, or alternately fog-enshrouded, Golden Gate Bridge.

After all was sailed and done, victors were named in ten classes (ORR, HPR, BAMA/Multihull, J/70, J/105, J/111, J/120, Melges 24, Express 37, Farr 40), and six prestigious St. Francis Yacht Club trophies and seven Rolex Oyster Perpetual Submariner timepieces were awarded.


Perhaps most appreciative of the Rolex and the trophy (the Richard Rheem Perpetual) he had earned was Alex Roepers (New York, N.Y.) in the Farr 40 class. Like the other 14 Farr 40 teams here, his Plenty is preparing for the class’s World Championships in October, also to be hosted by St. Francis Yacht Club. Plenty, which won the Farr 40 North Americans in May, finished with a point score of 13, a whopping 24 points ahead of 2013 Farr 40 World Champion Enfant Terrible, skippered by Italy’s Alberto Rossi. 'There is a lot of improvement, still, that we can make,' said the native Dutchman, who secured the Farr 40 circuit championship title with his performance here as well, 'but clearly we are on a trajectory and a mission to do really well at the Worlds.' Having last sailed on the Bay here in 1996, Roepers said it was all he remembered it to be. 'It is one of the most spectacular venues in the world. The breeze is so 'on,' the vistas are incredible, and with the organization of the St. Francis Yacht Club, this is an absolutely outstanding event.'

Farr 40 Class Manager Geoff Stagg said that when seven more Farr 40s join the fleet in October, the cumulative talents onboard will be mind boggling: 'You can see it on the water already – the experience of the crews here, with several of the tacticians coming from the last America’s Cup (case in point: Terry Hutchinson aboard Plenty and Ray Davies aboard Wolfgang Schaefer’s Struntje Light). They spent a year or more here learning the Bay inside-out, so they know it better than any local.'


After a mediocre start in the HPR class’s first race, Whiplash improved steadily and stayed consistently in the top three for the remainder of the week, a performance skipper Donald Payan (Hillsborough, Calif.) attributes to the strength of his team. 'One of the big reasons I race this boat is because of these guys,' said Payan, gesturing towards his team. 'They work so hard at getting the most out of this boat, and we’re going faster than ever before.

The boat is great, and I really enjoy racing in HPR, as the competition was really tough this week.' Whiplash took home the City of San Francisco Trophy and the Rolex watch for its performance.

The oldest trophy for this 50-year-old event is the St. Francis Perpetual Trophy, and it was awarded, along with the Rolex, to the winner of ORR, Wayne Koide’s (San Anselmo, Calif.) Sydney 36 Encore, which led its class from day one.

Dorian McKelvy’s (Portola Valley, Calif.) Madmen looked to be the favorite in the J/111 class for the Atlantic Perpetual Trophy and the Rolex, but after two days of leading, the team succumbed to Rob Theis’s (Los Altos, Calif.) Aeolus, which wound up only one point ahead of Madmen in the final standings.


Kame Richards’ (Alameda, Calif.) Golden Moon, a perennial favorite in the Express 37 Class, did not disappoint this year, winning six out of seven races to claim the Keefe-Kilborn Perpetual Trophy and a Rolex watch.

The J/105s made up the largest fleet this year, and Bruce Stone’s (San Francisco) Arbitrage held the lead every day, earning the team the Commodore’s Cup plus the Rolex watch. 'This is the toughest fleet in the country I think,' said Stone, who missed winning last year by a narrow margin. 'We felt that the courses were really interesting compared to the past, and St. Francis Yacht Club did a really excellent job,' he said. 'For us, it was all about keeping the boat moving with all the lulls and gusts and changing of conditions and tides.'

In J/120s, a tight race between David Halliwill’s (New York N.Y.) Peregrine and Barry Lewis’s (Atherton, Calif.) Chance tilted to Peregrine’s favor for the Rolex watch that was awarded in that class.

Don Jesberg’s (Belvedere, Calif.) Viva and Any Costello’s (Point Richmond, Calif.) Double Trouble topped the scoreboard all week in the Melges 24 and J/70 Class, respectively.

Tom Seibel’s (Redwood City, Calif.) MOD70 Orion made a strong rebound from its third-place finish last year, winning the Multihull Class, which was introduced to the event two years ago. To make sense of how fast the 70-foot trimaran was flying, Orion’s Navigator Peter Isler explained, 'Johnny Heineken was keeping pace with us the whole day.' (Heineken, a Kiteboard Course Racing World Champion is seen almost daily, kite foiling on the Bay.)

Isler, an America’s Cup veteran and California native who grew up racing on San Francisco Bay, added, 'I don’t go back 50 years, but I go back a long time with the Rolex Big Boat Series, and when people ask me ‘Where is the best place you’ve ever sailed,’ San Francisco always comes to mind. I love the tradition of racing and of St. Francis, and of course we’ve been on a non-traditional boat the last few years, but that is cool, too!'






Rolex Big Boat Series (September 11-14, 2014_, Day four - Final Results

Place, Yacht Name, Type, Owner/Skipper, Hometown, Results, Total Points

HPR (HPR - Seven Boats)
1. Whiplash, MC 38, Donald Payan, Hillsborough, CA, USA - 4, 2, 3, 3, 2, 2, 2; 18
2. Hamachi, J/125, Greg Slyngstad, Sammamish, WA, USA - 5, 1, 2, 2, 3, 3, 3; 19
3. Beecom, TP 52, Anatole Masfen, Auckland, NZL - 6, 8/DNF, 4, 1, 1, 1, 1; 22

J/70 (One Design - 13 Boats)
1. Double Trouble, Andy Costello, Point Richmond, CA, USA - 8, 1, 2, 1, 2, 1, 2; 17
2. Perfect Wife, Chris Andersen, Pt. Richmond, CA, USA - 5, 3, 6, 2, 4, 7, 4; 31
3. 1FA, Geoff McDonald, San Francisco, CA, USA - 7, 7, 1, 8, 3, 3, 3; 32

J/105 (One Design - 19 Boats)
1. Arbitrage, Bruce Stone, San Francisco, CA, USA - 1, 3, 2, 1, 1/RDG, 5, 4; 17
2. Blackhawk, Scooter Simmons, Tiburon, CA, USA - 5, 1, 3, 5, 5, 1, 1; 21
3. Godot, Phillip Laby, San Francisco, CA, USA - 2, 2, 1, 8, 1, 10, 3; 27

J/111 (One Design - Seven Boats)
1. Aeolus, Rob Theis, Los Altos, CA, USA - 6, 3, 2, 4, 1, 1, 3; 20
2. Madmen, Dorian McKelvy, Portola Valley, CA, USA - 2, 1, 3, 1, 5, 8, 1; 21
3. Big BLAST!, Roland Vandermeer, Hillsborough, CA, USA - 5, 2, 1, 3, 6/SCP, 2, 4; 23

J/120 (One Design - Seven Boats)
1. Peregrine, David Halliwill, New York, NY, USA - 4, 1, 4, 1, 2, 1, 1; 14
2. Chance, Barry Lewis, Atherton, CA, USA - 2, 2, 3, 2, 5, 2, 3; 19
3. Julian, Yasuhide Kobayashi, Tokyo, JPN - 1, 6, 5, 3, 1, 4, 4; 24

Melges 24 (One Design - Nine Boats)
1. Viva, Don Jesberg, Belvedere, CA, USA - 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 10/DNS; 16
2. Nothing Ventured, Duane Yoslov, Corte Madera, CA, USA - 7, 4, 3, 3, 5, 2, 1; 25
3. Insolent Minx, Zhenya Kirueshkin-Stepanoff, Mount Hamilton, CA, USA - 2, 2, 2, 2, 6, 5, 10/DNS; 29

Farr 40 (One Design - 15 Boats)
1. Plenty, Alex Roepers, New York, NY, USA - 2, 1, 3, 1, 1, 1, 1, 3; 13
2. Enfant Terrible, Alberto Rossi, Ancona, ITA - 4, 2, 8, 13, 2, 2, 4, 2; 37
3. Groovederci, John Demourkas, Santa Barbara, CA, USA - 5, 4, 2, 2, 10, 5, 10, 1; 39

Express 37 (One Design - Seven Boats)
1. Golden Moon, Kame Richards, Alameda, CA, USA - 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 2; 8
2. Expeditious, Bartz Schneider, Crystal Bay, NV, USA - 3, 2, 3, 2, 2, 2, 1; 15
3. Elan, Jack Peurach, San Francisco, CA, USA - 7, 4, 2, 3, 3, 3, 4; 26

SF Bay ORR (ToT - 10 Boats)
1. Encore, Sydney 36, Wayne Koide, San Anselmo, CA, USA - 1, 1, 2, 4, 3, 3, 1; 15
2. BustinLoose, Sydney 38, Jeff Pulford, Salinas, CA, USA - 2, 3, 3, 1, 4, 2, 4; 19
3. Tupelo Honey, Elan 40, Gerard Sheridan, San Francisco, CA, USA - 4, 4, 1, 3, 2, 4, 2; 20

Multihull (BAMA) (ToT - Five Boats)
1. Orion, MOD70 , Tom Siebel, Redwood City, CA, USA - 4, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1; 10
2. SmartRecruiters, Extreme 40, Jerome Ternynck, San Francisco, CA, USA - 1, 3, 2, 3, 2, 2, 2; 15
3. Shadow, ProSail 40, Peter Stoneberg, Tiburon, CA, USA - 3, 2, 3, 2, 3, 3, 3; Event website

Vetus-Maxwell 2021 v2 FOOTERZhik - Made for WaterSelden 2020 - FOOTER

Related Articles

Australian Maxi Championship Opening Race
Master Lock Comanche opens strongly The 2025 Australian Maxi Championship is officially under way, following a powerful start overnight with the Cabbage Tree Island Race, the opening act of the championship.
Posted today at 8:06 am
Cabbage Tree Island Race Finish
Master Lock Comanche takes Line Honours, Thorpe and LawConnect second Master Lock Comanche has thrown down the gauntlet to the rest of the Line Honours contenders for the 80th Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race with a clinical performance in the Cabbage Tree Island Race.
Posted today at 2:46 am
WA welcome ahead for Australians racing back home
The fleet of ten Clipper Race yachts are currently battling it after a 4,800nm race from Cape Town From this weekend, the Clipper Race fleet will be heading into Fremantle, WA - with 15 Aussie nationals amongst its crew, including a doctor from Perth and firefighter from Victoria.
Posted today at 12:44 am
Henri-Lloyd has it all wrapped up for Christmas
A range of nautical inspired gifts perfect for the festive season Finding the perfect nautical-inspired gifts this Christmas is now easier than ever, thanks to Henri-Lloyd. All items are available online and in Henri-Lloyd stores and retailers.
Posted on 5 Dec
World Sailing Inclusion Championships day 1
First races contested in Mussanah, Oman The first races were contested at the inaugural World Sailing Inclusion Championships along the shores of Mussanah, marking the start of a historic global event hosted by the Sultanate of Oman at the Mussanah Sailing School, Barceló Mussanah Resort.
Posted on 5 Dec
The Famous Project CIC Jules Verne Trophy Day 6
A long, fast tack in the trade winds We like to repeat it over and over again: to date, no 100% female crew has managed to carve its name on the Jules Verne Trophy.
Posted on 5 Dec
2026 RORC Racing Programme unleashed
The season spans more than a dozen major offshore races and championship events The 2026 RORC Racing Season will deliver one of the most diverse, challenging and internationally connected offshore programmes in the sport, designed for owners and skippers looking to race across a full ten months of competition.
Posted on 5 Dec
Sailing Grand Slam publishes 2026 Notice of Race
Full series of Olympic-class events after a successful pilot season in 2025 Sailing Grand Slam (SGS) announced the publication of the 2026 Notice of Race (NOR) for its full series of Olympic-class events, marking the first complete edition of the international circuit after a successful pilot season in 2025.
Posted on 5 Dec
A Thrilling Weekend at the Manly Cup
High winds, high energy O'pen Skiff racing If there was one thing not in short supply on Day One of the Manly Cup, it was breeze! A punchy 20 knots lit up the racecourse from the very first gun, setting the stage for an electrifying weekend.
Posted on 5 Dec
Globe40 Leg 3 Update
An unforgettable week in the Roaring Forties Having set off on their third leg on November 22nd from Saint Paul Bay on Reunion Island, the eight competitors in the second edition of the GLOBE40 were initially confronted with the calms of the Mascarene High.
Posted on 5 Dec