Please select your home edition
Edition
ETNZ Store 2024 728x90 TOP

Carlos Aguilar Match Race – WIM Series sailors welcome to St. Thomas

by WIM Series on 28 Nov 2016
The picturesque harbor of Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands, will in just a couple of days welcome the world's best women match racing sailors to the Carlos Aguilar Match Race, the fifth and final event of the 2016 WIM Series - Carlos Aguilar Match Race Dean Barnes / CAMR
Twelve of the world’s best women match racers will compete in the Carlos Aguilar Match Race (CAMR), presented by the U.S. Virgin Islands Department of Tourism, on December 1 to 4.

This year, the CAMR is the fifth and final event of the 2016 WIM Series. Equally, St. Thomas’ Charlotte Amalie harbor is one of the world’s best sailing destinations:
'We want to welcome all the sailors and visitors who are traveling to the U.S. Virgin Islands for this year's Carlos Aguilar Match Race,' says Beverly Nicholson-Doty, Commissioner of Tourism, U.S. Virgin Islands.

'Our warm weather, beautiful waters and first-rate marine facilities make the U.S. Virgin Islands an ideal choice for sailing. We also encourage everyone to venture beyond the shores to explore and enjoy the variety of attractions, activities, shopping and restaurants during their stay in the Territory,' Beverly Nicholson-Doty adds.

More specifically, there are two main reasons that make St. Thomas’ Charlotte Amalie harbor such an amazing place to match race:
“The first is that it is so beautiful,” says Henry Menin, a long-time St. Thomas resident, former Chairman of ISAF (now World Sailing) Match Racing Committee, and one of five Umpires for the CAMR.
“You are sailing in a natural amphitheater, with the colorful Danish buildings of the old town just a couple of hundred yards to the north. Then you have Hassel Island, a beautiful National Park just to the south. Behind the town, you have magnificent green mountains overlooking the course and the harbor. And last, but not least, you have the main thoroughfare of the town, bordered by the sea wall, bringing much of the island traffic within easy viewing distance of the racing.”

Secondly, adds Menin, are the beautiful racing conditions:
“The water is blue and warm with virtually no waves and almost no current. The breeze is warm and friendly, but shifty. However, it is almost always out of some form of the east, so it is highly unlikely that the Race Committee would ever have to reverse the starting line with the windward mark. In the eight years of the CAMR, I have never seen that kind of wind shift,” he says.

What does the harbor conditions overall represent for the WIM Series teams?
“It means you have to be intensely vigilant all the time, looking around to see what is coming your way, and sometimes it means taking a flyer, especially if you are behind.
The harbor will test the mettle of even the very best sailors. Keep your eyes open and look for every clue as to where the wind will come from next, or where it will die and leave you struggling to keep up your speed. Never despair though, because you may be the victim of a dying breeze one moment and the beneficiary of a private puff that will take you into the lead the next,” Menin comments.

One WIM Series skipper, the USA’s Morgan Collins, will have a U.S. Virgin Islands crew member aboard:
“It will be great to have a USVI crew to help out with the sailing areas as well as sailing the IC24’s,” says Collins, who is from Port Washington, New York.

Collins is the sailing coach at the State University of New York (SUNY) Maritime College and sets sail in the CAMR as her second WIM Series event:
“Our team’s strategy will be to work together using our diverse backgrounds to make our boat the fastest one on the course. We are all previous college sailors and know that speed is one of the most lethal weapons on the course. Our goal in the final event of the WIM Series will be to aggressively control in the pre-start and gain an advantage early in the race.”

Collins’ USVI crew is Mayumi ‘Mimi’ Roller, who learned to sail in the KATS (Kids and the Sea) program in Coral Bay, St. John, and later raced with the Antilles School sailing team. More recently, Roller is a 2012 Olympian in Laser Radial and 2013 All-American Skipper and St. Mary's College Athlete of the Year:
“I am very excited to crew in the CAMR,” says Roller. “I have never competed in a match racing event before, so this regatta is presenting a new challenge that I am enthusiastic to meet. Other than my fleet racing background, I was a key player on my college’s team racing team my senior year, so hopefully that experience helps!”

Another local aspect of the CAMR is the boats, IC, or Inter-Club 24s. The design takes a used J/24 hull and fits it with a new Melges 24-style deck mold that is wider, has no traveler, and can carry up to five sailors. The design was innovated by St. Thomas sailor, Chris Rosenberg, and boat builder, Morgan Avery, in 1999 in response to a need to jump-start racing and instruction following the decimation of the local sailing fleet after successive hurricanes.

St. Thomas as the site of the WIM Series Finale came about through the friendship forged over the years between CAMR co-director, Verian Aguilar Tuttle, and Liz Baylis, executive director of the Women’s International Match Racing Association and manager of the WIM Series. Baylis has competed as crew in the CAMR in the past.

The CAMR is named in memory of Aguilar Tuttle’s late husband, Carlos Aguilar, who was an avid sailor and loved match racing. Aguilar also enjoyed mentoring young sailors. Thus, the CAMR Youth Regatta, scheduled on December 3 during a mid-day break from WIM Series competition, offers an opportunity for local youth to get out on the water.

“The intent at the inception of the CAMR eight years ago, was to always tie in the youth and especially the local Virgin Islands kids who may not have the opportunity to be exposed to this kind of sailing. The organizing association of the CAMR wanted this event to give back to the community through the youth!” says Aguilar Tuttle.

15 to 20 8- to 17-year old students enrolled in the MVP (Marine Vocational Program), will team up with WIM Series skippers for three short fleet races in the harbor. These students have already participated in the MVP’s learn-to-swim program and sailing lessons at the St. Thomas Yacht Club.

The CAMR WIM Series finale is a World Sailing Grade One event. The format features a full round robin of all teams, followed by knockout quarterfinals for the top eight, and then knockout semi-finals, petit-finals, and finals.

Rooster 2023 - FOOTERPantaenius 2022 - SAIL & POWER 2 FOOTER NZKZRaceFurlers

Related Articles

SailGP: Fired up Slingsby wins two in Bermuda
Australia dominates fleet racing on the opening day of Bermuda Australia has bounced back from its devastating Christchurch penalty by dominating fleet racing on the opening day of Bermuda.
Posted on 4 May
The Transat CIC Day 7
Yoann Richomme on Paprec Arkéa over 70 miles ahead of Charlie Dalin The top trio on the Transat CIC solo race to New York from Lorient, France are charging towards the finish line averaging over 22kts.
Posted on 4 May
Nathan Soper leads in 23 strong Wihau Shield
Nathan Sopher leads strong P Class fleet at Mt Maunganui for Wihau Shield - Day 1 A great days sailing in Tauranga for the running of the Wihau Shield for P Class - Day 1. Nathan Soper CBYC,MBSC is leading the 23 boat fleet.
Posted on 4 May
Armstrong Midlength FG Board redefines foiling
Armstrong Midlength FG Board gives you the freedom to define how you ride. The choice is yours Armstrong Foils have announced the new Midlength boards, they are epic for wing and prone surf among many other things. The Armstrong Midlength FG Board Range truly redefines when and how you can go foiling.
Posted on 4 May
La Grande Motte International Regatta preview
Final dress rehearsal for the Cats and Skiffs ahead of Paris 2024 The Nacra 17 World Championship along with the 49er and 49erFX European Championships is attracting 148 teams to La Grande Motte in the South of France for six days of racing.
Posted on 4 May
SailGP: Spectacular on board video of USA capsize
USA SailGP team has released spectacular on-board video coverage of their capsize in Bermuda USA SailGP team has released spectacular on-board video coverage of their capsize in Bermuda in Friday's third Practice session. Surprisingly given the violence of the capsize, none of the crew were injured.
Posted on 4 May
SailGP: Kiwis push back at Media Conference
Burling disagrees that the Kiwis were gifted the season lead by an Australian snafu in Christchurch New Zealand driver Peter Burling has disagreed that the Kiwis were gifted the season lead by Australia's Christchurch penalty, arguing ‘we have earned our right to be here'.
Posted on 4 May
Antigua Sailing Week Day 5
Classic conditions on Antigua & Barbuda Tourism Race Day Racing at Antigua Sailing Week came to a spectacular finale with Antigua & Barbuda Tourism Race Day. Full trade winds blasted across the race area, bathed in sunshine.
Posted on 3 May
SailGP: Tense times in Bermuda
A capsize in Practice, along with the effect of season points penalties puts big pressure on teams The NZ Black Foils are determined to keep hold of top spot as Australia looks to bounce back from Christchurch horror show. The pressure comes on all the teams to secure a place in the $2 million Championship Final Race in San Francisco in July
Posted on 3 May
The Swarm Podcast Episode 13: Jordan Roberts
The man behind the lens at all major WASZP events Jordan is the man behind the lens at all of our major events at WASZP. General Manager Marc Ablett joins Jordan to discuss what we try and achieve through our coverage.
Posted on 3 May