Please select your home edition
Edition
Cyclops Marine 2023 November - LEADERBOARD

18ft Skiff International Regatta - Crash and burn on San Francisco Bay

by Rich Roberts on 26 Aug 2010
18ft Skiff International Regatta. Erik Simonson/ h2oshots.com

Competitors in the ninth annual 18ft Skiff International Regatta gathered around John Craig on Crissy Field early Wednesday afternoon as the St. Francis Yacht Club race manager offered fair warning before they launched their swift but unstable craft into the meaner elements of San Francisco Bay.

'Get ready to get wet,' he said.

That wasn't the half of it. Before the day was over the 18s' seventh race of the week would be cut short as boats flipped over like in a slapstick film, and then the ensuing Bridge to Bridge Race from the Golden Gate to the Oakland Bay suffered similar catastrophe.

Australia's Michael Coxon, New Zealand's Alex Vallings and Australia's Herman Winning swept the first three places over all of the kite boards and windsurfers, with Herman's father Woody fifth. But only one other 18 finished and two sailors were injured---Maersk Line skipper Graham Catley with a severely cut lower left leg and Chad Freitas, leader of the bay's Skiff Sailing Foundation, with possibly broken ribs.

Freitas' skipper, Paul Galvez, said, 'Something happened and he went flying forward. At that point we were done.'

The race's defending champion, Howard Hamlin from Long Beach a few hundred miles south, didn't even get beyond the Golden Gate before toppling seconds after the start—his second flip of the day.

A few minutes before they all left the beach Matt Noble, a local resident who crews for Hamlin, spoke about the hazards of the bay.

'My only worry is down by Alcatraz,' Noble said, noting the westerly breeze that would blow as hard as 29 knots while opposing a 3.5-knot ebb tide. 'It has a working undertow effect, especially with the ebb tide. That's usually the hardest part of the race. The waves back up in there.'

Noble was a prophet. Within the hour, one by one, each of the lead boats---first Coxon, then Hamlin and Herman and Woody Winning---would fall victim to Noble's words of warning until six boats lay flipped flat simultaneously near the notorious former island prison.

No cons are known to have safely escaped from Alcatraz, and neither did any of the 18 skiffs in this particular race.

Before it got any worse, Craig fired the cannon to abandon the effort.

The day ended with Coxon and Herman Winning each with 11 points but Coxon owning the tiebreaker with four first places in seven races. There was no immediate decision on whether there would be an attempt to complete the 10-race schedule with three today.

Whatever is decided, the bay may get its way. The forecast for Thursday was for a steep drop in temperature, which usually means big winds.

Current leaders
(14 boats; after 7 of 10 races; discards after 5 and 9 races)

1. Thurlow Fisher Lawyers, Michael Coxon/Aaron Links/Trevor Barnabas, Australia, (8)-3-1-1-1-4-1, 11 points.
2. Appliances Online, Herman Winning/Peter Harris/Euan McNicol, Australia, 1-1-2-2-(7)-2-3, 11.
3. Yandoo, John (Woody) Winning/David Gibson/Andrew Hay, Australia, 3-2-3-(5)-2-3-4, 17.
4. CST Composites, Howard Hamlin/Matt Noble/Fritz Lanzinger, USA, 2-4-5-4-3-1-(15/DNF), 19.
5. CT Sailbattens, Alex Vallings/Chris Kitchen/Josh McCormack, New Zealand, 4-5-(14/DNF)-7-4-5-2, 27.
6. Maersk Line, Graham Catley/Riley Dean/Nick Catley, New Zealand, 5-(15/DNF)-4-3-6-6-15/DNF, 39.
7. JF Hillebrand, Phil Airey/Murray England/Sam Tretheway, New Zealand, 6-7-6-6-8-7-(15/DNF), 40.
8. Panasonic, Jonathan Whitty/James Hozack/Tom Anderson, Australia, 7-6-(15/DNF)-10-5-15/DNF, 51.
9. Tangles' Harken Express, Patrick Whitmarsh/Joe Penrod/Mark Breen, USA, (15/DNF)-8-8-145/DNF-9-9-5, 54.
10. Harken Black, Skip McCormack/Paul Allen/Jodi McCormack, Australia, 9-9-7-8-12-12-15/DNF, 57.
11. Skiff Foundation Red/Hogin Sails, John Gilmour/Pike Harris/Cooper Dressler, USA, 10-(15/DNF)-9-9-13-11-15/DNF, 67.
12. skiffsailing.org, Chad Freitas/Dan Morris/Tangles, USA, (15/DNS)-14/DNF-15/DNF-15/DNF-11-10-15/DNF, 81.
13. Harken Grey, (crew names not available), (15/DNS)-15/DNS-15/DNS-15/DNS-10-13-15/DNF, 83.
14. Chad's Angels, Mallory McCollum-Bozina/Yvonne Galvez/Katie Love, USA, no finishes, 90.

St Francis Yacht Club click here
Selden 2020 - FOOTERX-Yachts X4.0Pantaenius Sail 2025 AUS Footer

Related Articles

WingFoil Racing World Cup Switzerland day 4
Contrary to all the forecasts, the sun shone and the local Maloja breeze blew up to 15 knots Contrary to all the forecasts, the sun shone and the local Maloja breeze blew up to 15 knots to give us an incident-filled final day of opening races.
Posted on 13 Jun
IRC UK National Championships day 1
From dead calm to dead heat Racing on Day 1 of the 2025 IRC UK National Championships began under clear skies and glorious sunshine, but a lack of wind delayed the start for all classes.
Posted on 13 Jun
Capricorno wins Loro Piana Giraglia maxi 'double'
A neck and neck dash for the finish Loro Piana Giraglia, the YC Italiano's offshore race from Saint-Tropez to Genoa via the Giraglia Rock, and fifth event in the International Maxi Association's 2024-25 Mediterranean Maxi Offshore Challenge, has often seen leader changes in its last miles.
Posted on 13 Jun
5.5 Metre World Championship overall
Peter Morton, Andrew Palfrey, Ruairidh Scott on The Jean Genie win the title The Jean Genie (GBR 43, Peter Morton, Andrew Palfrey, Ruairidh Scott) has won the 2025 5.5 Metre World Championship in Sopot, Poland, after the final day of racing on Friday.
Posted on 13 Jun
Sailing with Matt Cornwell
From youth sailing in Lymington to the America's Cup and TP52 Worlds From youth sailing in Lymington to the America's Cup and TP52 Worlds, Matt's journey has been shaped by resilience, big moments, and life at the bow. We caught up with him to talk favourite races and what he'd be doing if he weren't a sailor.
Posted on 13 Jun
CYCA Publishes report reviewing 3 incidents
In the 2024 Rolex Sydney Hobart and Commits to Implementing Safety Recommendations The Cruising Yacht Club of Australia (CYCA) has published the full independent review report into the three incidents in the 2024 Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race, which tragically saw two fatalities and a man overboard (MOB) incident.
Posted on 13 Jun
5.5 Metre World Championship Day 4
Double bullet puts The Jean Genie in pole position The Jean Genie (GBR 43, Peter Morton, Andrew Palfrey, Ruairidh Scott) produced the best of the day on Thursday in Sopot at the 5.5 Metre World Championship with a 2,1,1 to take a two-point lead into the final day.
Posted on 13 Jun
The Ocean Race unites at UN Ocean Conference
A powerful week of of action, innovation, and collaboration for ocean health Today, at the UN Ocean Conference in Nice, The Ocean Race brought together an extraordinary lineup of athletes, policymakers, scientists, and environmental leaders to spotlight the unrivalled power of sport as a driver of ocean action.
Posted on 12 Jun
The new Beneteau First 36 SE
Seascape Edition badge promises a race-grade sailing experience Introducing the BENETEAU First 36 SE - the ultimate planing racer, born from the collaboration between BENETEAU and Seascape. This is more than just a boat; it's a mindset.
Posted on 12 Jun
WingFoil Racing World Cup Switzerland day 3
Fast and Furious racing on Silvaplana Lake. Day 3 of the Wingfoil Racing World Cup Series saw spectacular conditions. The local thermal wind, the Maloja, blew up the valley from Italy right on cue averaging 14 knots with gusts of 20.
Posted on 12 Jun