Please select your home edition
Edition
Sea Sure 2025

Merlin makes 40th year Homecoming at the 2017 Transpac

by Transpacific Yacht Club on 15 Jul 2017
Merlin finishes just like 40 years ago..but even faster and even more fun - 2017 Transpac Race Sharon Green / Ultimate Sailing
Today a Transpac legend that came to symbolize the Fast is Fun philosophy in ocean racing crossed the finish line at Diamond Head 40 years after she did it the first time: Bill and Lu Lee's venerable Lee 68 Merlin. Her elapsed time of 8:02:34:09 did not set any records this year, but this was still better than the elapsed time of 8:11:01:45 that she set in her original configuration when Lee and his team raced her in a very windy 1977 Transpac, a testament to the upgrades made to the boat over her long and storied life.



'Lu and I are the eighth owners of this boat for the second time,' said Lee, who navigated this race to be second (currently) in corrected time behind another legendary finisher today, Roy Pat Disney's Andrews 68 Pyewacket. Disney's newer boat rates slower than Merlin, so being only two hours behind but allowed several more hours gave her the corrected time edge. Nonetheless, Lee said they had a fantastic race on Merlin.

'We had no major failures or breakdowns, and this boat has had seven keel changes, four mast changes, deck layout changes and countless sails through its life. Right now it is set up nicely. She sails better, easier and faster than the original boat, so much so its really a different boat and a pleasure to sail.'



It was this boat that in 1977 turned offshore yacht design in an entirely new direction when Lee's design concept was to keep the boat long, narrow, and intentionally light weight to sail efficiently in the off-wind races of the US West Coast, yet to also be at the prevailing IOR Rating of 70.0 feet, which was the defined Maxi rating limit of those days. Other conventional IOR Maxis were often referred to as 'lead mines' because of the large keels they needed to keep their stability for their massive sails and 80-foot lengths. The conventional Maxi's of this era were designed to perform well relative to their rating in all conditions, whereas Merlin excelled in one direction alone: downwind.

It was this design feature that then prompted a new generation of ULDB (Ultra Light Displacement Boat) designs to not necessarily rate well and win on corrected time, but to be first to finish. When Merlin set a new race record in 1977, she not only beat it, she smashed it by defeating Windward Passage's record time set in 1971 by over 22 hours. So remarkable was this boat that this record stood for 20 years before beaten by Roy Disney's Pyewacket in 1997.

And here she was again: finishing at Diamond Head under sunny skies and tradewinds with the same rainbow color scheme on her spinnaker that she had in 1997. Lee even donned his Wizard cape at his team's Aloha party at Hawaii YC, just to complete the nostalgia.



Asked about his vision of the future of this race, Lee said 'I think it will continue to do what it does now: it attracts the really fast boats with all-pro crews who will continue to hunt for records on big 49-ers, and the amateur teams who are sailing boats they can handle comfortably. There's a lot for both in this race.'

Meanwhile, there are other stories on the docks at the Ala Wai marina on Transpac row, including one that looks forward to that promising future that Lee mentions. At 14 years old, Gray Hemans may not be the youngest crew to race Transpac, but she might be the youngest who has gone the fastest. Her dad Chris Hemans's Rogers 46 Varuna looks serious with its all-black carbon fiber attire in the mast, hull and deck, and it has few creature comforts for its crew of eight, including Grey, which allowed them to stay light and have their best-ever elapsed time of 8:11:26:49, good enough to have the corrected time lead in Division 3. Even though the eighth-grader has been actively racing smaller boats like Sabots and 29-ers in and around Newport Beach, her first love is sailing offshore.

'I love the open space, the sky, the sea, everything about it,' she says. She then rattled off a long list of offshore races she had done on Varuna for the past two years to train and prepare for this race 'mentally and physically,' and she feels that she was every bit as part of this team as the older guys. 'Everybody accepted me and I know everyone so well I would trust them with my life, they are like family now,' she said. 'This was a great race, it was a long time in preparing, but I'm glad I did it and want to keep doing more.'



And out on the race course the boats are finding the pleasures and pains of being in warmer climes with variable winds. Their race trackers are showing a lot of course changes and variable boat speeds, indicating some boats being more aggressive at working through the squalls and shifts.

From Bill Halvestine's SC 50 Deception came this report where they got a lot of some but none of the other:

'No squalls. None. On the horizon, sure, but not for us. Slow, lots of shifts and jibes, spinnaker screw up followed by seven - eight knot breezes in the AM.

We lost massive ground to everyone last night. Whatever we did, we (expletive'd) it hard and owned it.

Fiche passed less than a mile behind us this morning. Our supply of tortillas are now on ration, 1 per person per day and trading has already been attempted with zero success. We tried to hail Fiche on the radio to see if they would trade us for mayonnaise but they didn't answer after three attempted hails. Bastards. Either they knew we had nothing to trade or their radio was off.

At least Oaxaca is still behind us, we have that.

It's hot today, full sun, no clouds near us. We're drinking crystal (meth) light infused water like Richard Simmons is going out of style and we're sweating in the 80's.

More birds around us, lots of flying fish (the fish, not the boat) we just passed, but plenty of them too.

We finally stepped into some breeze about an hour ago, gybed and we're hoping this takes us in the right direction.

Cornue pulled a funny yesterday. Randall R asked him to tie the sails to the deck repetitively and Peter C. gave him the stinkeye of death. In the middle of the night watch Randall R was forced to untie an obscene amount of knots in prep for our spinnaker change. Peter C seems to be in better spirits today.

A few more days to go. Send wind, but don't send Bill emails. His fan club is growing out of control.



The Canadians on David Sutcliffe's TP 52 Kinetic V remain in good spirits based on their photos, perhaps because as shown on the tracker they have been close running with another Division 1 rival boat only a few miles away, Jim Partridge's Antrim 49 Rapid Transit.

Other boats finishing in the last 24 hours include Naomichi Ando's R/P 45 Lady Kanon VI, John Gallagher's Gunboat 62 Chim Chim, Hector Gallarde and Tom Corkett's Andrews 70 Runaway, and Bob Lane and Lisa Meier's Andrews 63 Medicine Man.



The next three boats calling in at 100 miles out are Tim Fuller's J/125 Resolute, Joel Ronning's SC 70 Catapult, and John Sangmeister's turbo SC 70 OEX, due in after dark tonight. And in the pre-dawn behind them should be Larry Andrews's Summit 40 Locomotion, James McDowell's SC 70 Grand Illusion, and Edward Marez's SC 70 Buona Sera.

Veteran Transpac sailor Seahorse Magazine technical editor and offshore racing analyst Dobbs Davis is providing a race analysis show viewable on the Transpac website. His show today can be found here.

For this and more information visit the event website.

Doyle_SailWorld_728X90px_GP BOTTOMNorth Sails Loft 57 PodcastCyclops Marine 2023 November - FOOTER

Related Articles

World Sailing announces split venues for LA28
The boards will be at Long Beach, with the dinghy events at the Port World Sailing has said it welcomes the confirmation of sailing venues for the Olympic Games LA28 the boards will be at Long Beach, with the dinghy events at the Port.
Posted on 30 Jun
One thing. One big, very fast boat
One thing that opened the door, another made us enquire some more - 50 knots! Yes. It was one thing that opened the door, as it were. One thing that piqued the curiosity enough to go, ‘I'll take a look at that!' One thing that when you're trying to crack in excess of 50 knots...
Posted on 30 Jun
NYYC International Women's Championship update
The first group of invited skippers have been announced Elite-level international women's keelboat competition will return to Newport, R.I., in late summer of 2026 when the New York Yacht Club hosts the inaugural International Women's Championship.
Posted on 30 Jun
Luna shines bright in 2025 Morgan Cup Race
This was a truly international fleet with the majority of the teams from the UK and France The start of the Morgan Cup Race was a spectacular sight with over 100 boats beating to windward into the Western Solent for the fourth race of the Cowes Offshore Racing Series and the 11th race of the 2025 RORC Season's Points Championship.
Posted on 30 Jun
Freestyle Pro Tour Paros day 1
Kicking off with a nuclear single elim The opening day of the Freestyle Pro Tour (FPT) Paros kicked off exactly as forecasted - nuclear winds from morning till late afternoon, accompanied by nonstop freestyle action.
Posted on 30 Jun
New Zero Weight 2-in-1 Shorts from Henri-Lloyd
When the weather's hot, there's nothing better to keep you cool on or off the water When the weather's hot, there's nothing better than Henri-Lloyd's Zero Weight 2-in-1 shorts to keep you cool on or off the water.
Posted on 30 Jun
2025 Tiedemann Regatta
Experience shines alongside the brightwork at the Nw York Yacht Club A century ago, R Class yachts were the sports cars of the yachting world, sleek and low to the ground, nimble in the corners and quick around the course, and, above all, demanding to drive.
Posted on 30 Jun
2025 Marion to Bermuda Race - Trophy time
Recognizing the outstanding achievements of the sailors Thank you to everyone who made the 2025 Marion to Bermuda Race such a memorable success! We're thrilled to recognize the outstanding achievements of our sailors with this year's special awards, which were presented at last night's prize-giving and Gala.
Posted on 30 Jun
Foiling Week Malcesine 2025 concludes
Champions crowned and records set during the twelfth edition The twelfth edition of Foiling Week came to an end today in Malcesine with the awarding of the first BirdyFish World Championship title, showing the largest fleet ever for the occasion.
Posted on 29 Jun
Transpac 2025 opens with Aloha send off
Aloha Spirit & Naval salutes on aboard historic USS Iowa It's not every day that serious offshore sailors get the opportunity to party aboard a decommissioned WWII battleship—but it's also not every day that world-class sailors gather to race across 2,225 miles of open Pacific Ocean.
Posted on 29 Jun