Please select your home edition
Edition
37th AC Store 2024 - 728x90 TOP

The Russians are coming and they're here at 2017 Transpac

by Transpacific Yacht Club on 18 Jul 2017
Weddel, first-ever entry from Russia, finishing today at Diamond Head - 2017 Transpac Race Sharon Green / Ultimate Sailing
The 2225-mile LA-Honolulu Transpac Race, first run in 1906, is known worldwide and makes many bucket lists, including that of Afanasy Isaev from Krasnoyarsk, Russia. This historic city of 1 million is the third-largest in Siberia, yet a long way from any tidal water.

As such, how did a team of 15 crew on the 1996 Grand Mistral 80 Weddell get to this race and then take nearly 11 days to complete the trip? Well, it's a long story full of twists and turns, but a big part of this team making it here to Honolulu with an elapsed time of nearly 11 days is due to Isaev's co-skipper, Vladimir (Kuli) Kulinichinko.



Many on the US East Coast big boat racing scene know Kuli, he's been active in East Coast pro sailing since arriving over 20 years ago after having completed the Whitbread Round the World Race on Fazisi, the all-red Russian-designed and Russian-built aluminum boat that had heads scratching in the 1989-90 edition of the race when the other IOR maxis were much larger, heavier and ultimately faster around the planet. This unusually narrow light weight design had half the freeboard of their rivals, and looked like it would be - and proved it was - wet, wet, wet.

Yet on a budget that was a fraction of their rivals, this team made it around the planet more or less intact as an underdog favorite with a cult following, and when it did, Kuli jumped off and spent time as a sailmaker in Connecticut, got married to an American, and has been based in Florida ever since. Whenever there is a Russian-based team racing in the US, its likely Kuli will be involved as an important source of skill and a bridge between the two cultures. This was especially needed on this trip, since Isaev runs the Weddel program with paying guests, similar to some other amateur-based offshore racing programs.

'This was a tough trip, but we're all here,' said Kuli. 'We had a core group of us who knew the boat but not quite enough to sail her at 100% all the time. The mainsail broke about halfway across, and that's what slowed us down. The sail broke clear across the girth, luff to leech.'



Kuli had to revive his skills as a sailmaker and said he spent 36 hours with the sail down repairing it to be useable enough to get them to Hawaii. Progress was slow, with the boat progressing at a glacially slow rate of six - eight knots at times, but once fixed the team nursed the sail almost to the finish, and then it broke again, and the team finished under just a jib alone.

'We need to get this sail fixed again to the good enough to get to Australia,' said Kuli, where the team is planning to race in the Sydney-Hobart Race in December, as are several more entries from Transpac. Its likely Kuli will be needed here as well, since Isaev will likely be taking pay-as-you-go crew once again, as he did earlier in his tour of ocean races at the Middle Sea Race and the Caribbean 600.



Other teams to finish today includes Azure, Rodney Pimintel's Cal 40 who was leading most of this race in corrected time but then took a detour halfway across to provide assistance to Jay Spalding's SC 52 Medusa with five gallons of fuel. They have taken their place at the top of the leaderboard for Division seven, and received a warm welcome for their sportsmanship, the second such effort in an ocean race in the last several weeks: in the Coastal Cup Azure also assisted another boat in trouble in an offshore race.

Two boats remain on the course, with one to win the Tail End Charlie award as last boat across the finish...will it be Charles Buckner's Oceanis 48 Cabernet Sky or Jerzy Poprawski's catamaran Kastor Pollux? Currently the multihull is ahead of the monohull, so stay tuned for who gets this symbolic Transpac award.



And speaking of awards, dozens and dozens of keeper and perpetual trophies are on display at the Modern Hotel Honolulu and await being awarded at the ceremony held here on Friday evening. This will be a special event for a special year with new record times achieved in several categories...and a good time had by all.

Join veteran Transpac sailor, Seahorse Magazine technical editor and offshore racing analyst Dobbs Davis with his daily race analysis show viewable on the Transpac website...the next show will be in a few days as a recap to this year's great race.

For this and more information - position reports, photos, videos and stories new and old, visit the event website.

Selden 2020 - FOOTERRooster Wetsuit RangeHenri-Lloyd - For the Obsessed

Related Articles

2024 Formula Kite Worlds in Hyères, France Day 4
Multiple pile-up in women's fleet Perhaps one of the reasons why reigning World Champions Max Maeder and Lauriane Nolot manage to win so many races is because they have enough speed to stay out of trouble.
Posted on 17 May
Regata dei Tre Golfi offshore sets sail
69th edition signals the start of the IMA Maxi Europeans The 69th edition of the Circolo del Remo e della Vela Italia's offshore race, the Regata dei Tre Golfi sets sail this afternoon (Friday, 17 May) at 1635 from Naples' Porticciolo di Santa Lucia.
Posted on 17 May
Seldén Mast's latest Race GRIP winch handle
Incorporating an innovative and logical solution to the locking mechanism Swedish marine equipment manufacturer Seldén Mast is pleased to announce its latest series of patented Race GRIP winch handles, which have been designed to offer a more practical solution to the locking mechanism for a more seamless sailing experience.
Posted on 17 May
Steering the Course 2024
Shining the spotlight on pathways to the Olympics for women in sailing This year's Steering the Course, World Sailing's global women's sailing festival, kicks off today with the spotlight firmly focused on the Olympic pathways available in coaching, officiating and sports administration.
Posted on 17 May
The 5 Minute Warning
Andy Rice & Matt Sheahan's 5min racing update This week PlanetSail's Matt Sheahan tracks down Sailjuice's Andy Rice to a beach in Hyères, south of France, for the Formula Kite World Championships. It's the last big event for the kiteboarders before they make their Olympic debut in Marseille.
Posted on 17 May
Oliver Heer finishes 25th IMOCA in the Transat CIC
“I went through a nightmare” It was with a huge measure of relief that the Swiss German solo skipper Oliver Heer brought his Transat CIC solo race across the North Atlantic from Lorient to New York to a satisfactory conclusion Thursday at 22:19:32hrs UTC, finishing in 25th place.
Posted on 17 May
Top competitors return for Women's Championship
The inaugural edition was a success on many levels The inaugural edition of the New York Yacht Club Women's Championship for the Joan H. Towse Trophy, sailed in late June of 2022, was a success on many levels.
Posted on 16 May
Loads of amenity - Goes like a cut cat
As the first Cure 55 steps closer to being splashed it looked more like a Purosangue to me As the first Cure 55 steps ever closer to being splashed, I could not help thinking that it was a lot like the Ferrari Purosangue. More space than your typical two-seat hypercar, yet with the punch to dispatch distances and pretenders with complete ease.
Posted on 16 May
2024 Formula Kite Worlds in Hyères, France Day 3
"Max is not a robot, he's human" Opportunities to beat Max Maeder don't come along very often, so Valentin Bontus seized his moment on day three of the Formula Kite World Championship in Hyères in the sunny south of France.
Posted on 16 May
Worrell 1000 Race 2024 Legs 3 & 4
The Ocean is a Sleeping Giant… For those who are familiar with the history of the Worrell 1000, they know this race has claimed many boats, bones & pride. The quote "The ocean is a sleeping giant..." started a post-race story by Bud Zimmerman in 1976, the Race Coordinator of that time.
Posted on 16 May