Please select your home edition
Edition
Vetus-Maxwell 2021 v2 LEADERBOARD

Santa Cruz and Bruschetta crew win J/24 World Championship

by Event Media on 10 May 2009
SW
The sun came out at last, the wind finally arrived more or less on schedule and the 2009 J/24 World Championship came to an exciting end with three races jammed into the final day of competition.

With the vital worst-race throwout in play once the sailors had completed the day's first contest, standings shuffled quite a bit, and as 1996 World Champion Chris Larson of Annapolis and his National Sailing Hall of Fame team finished third in that race thet took the lead by the narrowest of margins, tied on points with Canadian Rossi Milev and his Clear Air crew.

With a third-place finish in the next race, Larson and his team, which included Dave Hughes, Moose McClintock, Steve Frazier, and Curtis Florence, pulled ahead a bit more, establishing a 2-point lead over 2006-2007 World Champion Mauricio Santa Cruz and his Brazilian team on Bruschetta, who now found himself winning the tiebreaker with Milev and setting up the final race as a real nail-biter to see who would emerge at the top of the highly competitive 76-boat fleet.

In the end, Santa Cruz and the Bruschetta crew, with a third in the seventh race to Larson's 11th and Milev's 14th, came away with a third J/24 World Championship, making him the second-most successful J/24 skipper in class history (Ken Read still holds the record with six titles) and the first non-US sailor to win a Worlds in this country.

Sailing with Santa Cruz were Daniel Santiago, Alexandre Saldanha, Paolo Boido, and Alfredo Rovere, who have been part of his team for six years.

'We have a very good team,' Santa Cruz said as he enjoyed the congratulations of his fellow sailors in the Annapolis Yacht Club basin as they lined up for haulout. 'The first day, the wind was good, but after that it was very difficult. Today, the Race Committee did a very good job, and we had three good races.'

The Bruschetta team came out the box strongly, with finishes of 6-1 on the series' first two races on Monday, and managed to avoid trouble with the starting penalties that plagued others. Tuesday's light air brought them 63 points - ultimately their throwout - but keeper scores no worse than 16th and four top-ten finishes carried them through in good form.

'We had a great day on the water,' Larson said. 'We didn't have a great start in the last race and Bruschetta did, and he sailed really well. We caught up a lot toward the end, and we won the day on the water.

Larson and his team were among the victims of starting penalties on the regatta's first day, when a sixth-place finish became a 22-pointer with a 20% 'Z' flag penalty after the boat was identified as over the line early in a recalled start under the 'Z' flag.

Unfortunately, the Wednesday light air crapshoot resulted in a 43rd-place finish for their drop, so Larson and company had to swallow the expensive penalty.

Principal Race Officer Sandy Grosvenor brought the fleet out early this morning and held them as long as possible, starting the third race with only a few minutes to spare before the drop-deadline.

'The sailors cooperated quite a lot by getting off the line clean,' she said, describing southerly breeze in the 6- to 8-knot range. Courses were set south of Thomas Point Light, on the theory that the normal spring sunny-day thermal would arrive sooner farther to the south. And the strong ebb current which had plagued the racers and organizers throughout the week actually began to die off during the final race of the series. Not soon enough, however, for some 13 teams who were disqualified under the dreaded black flag used for the day's first race. By the time Grosvenor started the third and final race of the day, however, the sailors went off cleanly without the use of any penalty flag signals.

Provisional Results

1. Bruschetta, Mauricio Santa Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, 6-1-[63/20%]-11-16-4-3 = 41
2. National Sailing Hall of Fame, Chris Larson, Annapolis, MD, 2-22/ZFP-[43]-6-3-3-11 = 47
3. Carrera, Matias Pereira, Buenos Aires, Argentina, 8-14-17-[29]-2-1-6 = 48
4. Clear Air, Rossi Milev, Mississauga, Ontario, Canada, [23]-5-6-10-12-5-14 = 52
5. Bomba Charger, Anthony Kotoun, St. Thomas, USVI, 7-2-[80/RAF]-32-11-7-2 = 61
6. Paraloc, Will Welles, Portsmouth, RI, 14-7-22-[26]-7-25-10 = 85
7. Mookie, Peter Levesque, Tiverton, RI, 10-31-9-9-20-8-[33] = 87
8. Fiamma Gialla, Andrea Casale, Genoa, Italy, 21-9-8-5-[44]-40-18 = 101
9. Bangor Packet, Anthony Parker, Washington, DC, 5-22-2-52/40%-[56]-23-5 = 109
10. Three Bond, Tetsuya Matsunaga, Kamakura, Japan, 12-3-23-35 = 73

Results on the Annapolis Yacht Club's racing website, at http://www.race.annapolisyc.com
http://www.j24worldchampionship.com

Reports were not available on a daily basis due to the official website experiencing difficulties.
Vetus-Maxwell 2021 v2 FOOTERNavico AUS Zeus3S FOOTERNorth Sails Performance 2023 - FOOTER

Related Articles

Cruise with confidence with Doyle Sails
Doyle Sails is the sailmaker of choice for many cruising catamarans and performance multihulls Doyle Sails is the sailmaker of choice for many cruising catamarans and numerous performance multihulls worldwide, continuing to lead the fleet when it comes to reliable, durable, and easy-to-handle cruising sails.
Posted today at 12:08 am
Zhik kits out Australia's Olympic sailors
With industry-first high-performance neoprene-free wetsuit When Australia's 12 Olympic sailors take to the waters of Marseille in July this year, they'll wear the industry's first high-performance, neoprene-free wetsuits created by Sydney sailing apparel company Zhik.
Posted on 1 May
Holcim-PRB sustains bowsprit damage
Nicolas Lunven continues racing towards New York While in fifth position in The Transat CIC fleet, Team Holcim-PRB skipper Nicolas Lunven alerted his shore team on Wednesday morning that the boat's bowsprit had broken. The incident occurred overnight amid strong wind conditions.
Posted on 1 May
Momentous day for INEOS Britannia
As AC75 sets sail for first time INEOS Britannia's new race boat for the 37th America's Cup has set sail for the very first time. The British Challenger's AC75 took to the water in Barcelona with Olympic Gold medallists Sir Ben Ainslie and Giles Scott at the Helm on Wednesday 1st May.
Posted on 1 May
FlyingNikka is ready to fly again
Set to get back in the water for a new season of regattas Three appointments are planned for what is to all extents and purposes the first yacht in a new generation of full foiling regatta sailing boats, starting from the Spring Regattas held next weekend in Portofino, Liguria.
Posted on 1 May
52 Super Series PalmaVela Sailing Week Day 4
A thrilling Thursday title tussle is on the cards after no racing was possible Wednesday A thrilling Thursday title tussle is on the cards after no racing was possible Wednesday at the 52 SUPER SERIES PalmaVela Sailing Week due to very strong winds on Mallorca's world renowned Bay of Palma.
Posted on 1 May
PlanetSail Episode 31: New Cup boats
With records and drama down under It's been a big month for the America's Cup as four of the six teams unveiled their brand new AC75s. Years of development work and close to 100,000 hours of build time, there is plenty riding on each of these new launches.
Posted on 1 May
Transat CIC day 4
Charlie Dalin and Yoann Richomme continue to lead in the Atlantic On The Transat CIC solo race across the North Atlantic from Lorient to New York, there are close duels at the top of both the IMOCAs and Class40s.
Posted on 1 May
Henri-Lloyd New Arrival: Dri Fast Polo
Designed to perform for long days in the sun, on or off shore Created by Henri-Lloyd 30 years ago, the DRI FAST Polo has become an industry staple. Clean and smart, the DRI FAST Polo is an extremely comfortable, quick drying polo, with added UV protection.
Posted on 1 May
Cup Spy May 1: Kiwis call it quits
Emirates Team NZ have confirmed that they have finished sailing in NZ and are headed for Barcelona Emirates Team New Zealand has concluded their first sailing bloc, on May Day in Auckland. The America's Cup champions got away to an early start, in the face of a forecast of a freshening breeze, and finished sailing just after midday.
Posted on 1 May