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New York Yacht Club Race Week presented by Rolex - Part 1

by Stuart Streuli 12 Jul 2016 11:51 UTC 9-10 July 2016

It's All About the Flow During Part I

The applause spoke volumes. In deciding to award the overall prize—a Rolex Submariner—for Part I of the 2016 New York Yacht Club Race Week at Newport presented by Rolex to seasoned classic yacht skipper Joe Loughborough, the race committee had made the correct choice.

Subjective awards, where a committee is forced to pick the most deserving winner from a diverse group of classes, are always a challenge. The first half of Race Week at Newport presented by Rolex delivered three worthy choices: Loughborough's perfect scoreline in the Classics Spinnaker Division, the final-race comeback that netted Courageous the overall victory in the 12-Metre class, and Stephen Cucchiaro's steady sailing in the Gunboat class. The committee chose Loughborough, a marine industry veteran who personally restored his 1944 Luders 24 Belle and sails her regularly, though good weather and bad. The weather for the first part of the Race Week at Newport was somewhere in between. The sun was a very infrequent visitor, but the rain held off and the wind, while never strong, was enough for each class to get in a number of races.

It was the sort of weekend of racing that required a steady, veteran hand and a lot of patience. Some good fortune never hurts either.

"Little bit of luck and skill," said Loughborough when asked how he had won his class. "Well, actually, we kind of killed it a little bit this weekend. We got some old and good competitors. We don't always get the better of them, but we got the better of them this weekend. So it was a great, great time."

Loughborough has worked restoring plenty of boats. But Belle holds a special place in his heart.

"Every year I get excited about putting her back in the water, having done some little tweak, revamped something," he said. "And little by little, I think we have built up our boat-speed edge."

Among the other boats racing in the Classic fleet is Halsey Herreshoff's NY40 Rugosa, which was designed by his grandfather Captain Nat Herreshoff. Rugosa's weekend wasn't much to write home about when it came to the results, but just sailing a boat that his grandfather built is victory enough for the younger Herreshoff.

On the opposite end of the sailing spectrum from Belle, Rugosa and their colleagues in the Classics divisions were the six modern multihulls, five of them made by Gunboat. Built for cruising at speed, it's no surprise that the owners have gravitated toward a racing schedule, and six multihulls from 53 to 62 feet competed at Race Week. The pre-race favourite was actually the smallest of the six, a 53-footer from Sammamish, Wash., that has the advantage of being by far the lightest of the group. But in the light air, Fujin (below left), as she is called, wasn't able to really stretch her legs.

After struggling a little bit to get up to speed in the first race, Stephen Cucchiaro's Flow (USA 61002), won the second and third races to claim a one-point win in the class over Fujin, which finished second in all three races.

"It was tricky, the key was to focus more on speed rather than pointing, and that's something we had to learn over time," said Cucchiaro, a nationally ranked sailor in his youth, and a gold medalist in the 1979 Pan American Games. "I never raced a catamaran until last year when I bought the boat. I'm going up a steep learning curve, but I have a great team that has given me a lot of good advice."

They regatta didn't start well for Flow. The first race was started in very light and spotty conditions and Cucchiaro and his team found themselves on the back foot.

"The first race was like two different races," he said. "We had some particular problems getting going. Once we got out to the ocean, it was a whole new race and the breeze settled down. We were able to play some wind shifts and get back into the race. Everything changed at that point."

Cucchiaro and his team applied the lessons learned in that first race to the rest of the regatta.

"We felt it was really important to get a good start and get the first windshift correctly, and then we just focused on keeping the boat going and not making any mistakes."

While Fujin was first across the line in the second and third races, Cucchiaro and his team were able to stay close enough to win both once the handicaps were applied.

On the first day of the regatta, Gary Jobson and the team on Courageous could do no wrong. While the conditions were fairly similar for Day 2, the results were quite different. Courageous (below, second from the right) was fifth in today's first race, and entered the final race with a two-point advantage over Dennis Williams' Victory '83.

"The last race, at one point we're fifth and we needed to finish right behind Victory [which was winning the race]," said Jobson. "So I shifted tactics from splitting from the fleet to just working one boat at a time. The Grand Prix boats [New Zealand and Laura] got a little invested in each other, which worked to our benefit. It's like Olympic class sailing, just focus on the boat in front of you, and that for us was a better strategy."

The ultimate lesson, for Jobson, however had nothing to do with the specific races.

"The 12-Metre class is a viable, very interesting class both tactically and operationally," he said. "They need to keep sailing."

Given the interest in classic yachting in Newport and throughout the sailing world, it's likely this won't be an issue down the road.

Full results at: nyyc.org/yachting/racing/2016-nyyc-race-week

Momentum Builds for Part II

After a recent winning streak on Narragansett Bay, Carl Olsson and his team on the J/109 Morning Glory will carry a lot of positive momentum into the 2016 New York Yacht Club Race Week at Newport presented by Rolex.

Morning Glory is one of 19 J/109s that will be sailing in the class's 2016 North American Championship, which will be held as a part of Race Week at Newport presented by Rolex. The biennial multi-class regatta is hosted by the New York Yacht Club Harbour Court in Newport, R.I., and is a highlight of Newport's busy summer sailing season. Race Week at Newport is known for its split format: Classics and multihulls sailed in Part I of the regatta, from July 9-10, while one-design and handicap classes will sail Part II from Wednesday, July 13, to Saturday, July 16, when the regatta will culminated with a Rolex Awards Dinner on the spectacular grounds of Harbour Court.

On Tuesday, July 12, participants will enjoy some expert insight into racing on Narragansett Bay and Rhode Island Sound from one of Rhode Island's most famous sailors, Ken Read.

Despite his recent success—three wins in three races at the 162nd Annual Regatta presented by Rolex in June—Olsson is quick to temper expectations for the coming week. "We were not ready for the huge talent we encountered at the 2015 Nationals," said Olsson (below right), who hails from New Rochelle, N.Y. "We also had equipment problems plaguing us during the series. Our prep this year is better equipment-wise, but practice has been a little less than last year."

And, he added, the fleet is just as strong as it was in 2015 when Olsson's team finished seventh: "There are lots of boats that have already proven their mettle in different events year after year and this season so far. We regard at least eight to 10 different boats as potentially winning this series. We simply hope we are among them at the end."

Two other continental championships will be taking place during NYYC Race Week at Newport presented by Rolex. The Swan 42 class will be holding their 10th National Championship while the C&C 30 One-Design Class will be holding its inaugural North American Championship.

The C&C 30 One-Design Class has grown steadily since the boat was first launched a few years ago. "The class is honoured to hold our first North Americans at the New York Yacht Club," said Class President Dan Cheresh. "The conditions in Newport are always spectacular, and the NYYC logistics and hospitality are top-shelf."

Seven C&C 30s trained for the National Championship at the NYYC 162nd Annual Regatta presented by Rolex. Cheresh won the regatta with half as many points as the second place team, and is looking to take home another win this coming week.

"I'm thrilled to be competing in such an exciting event," said Cheresh, of Saugatuck, Mich. "We've be training hard all summer. The competition gets tighter at every regatta; I can't wait to get to the starting line."

Along with the one-design classes, there will be 24 boats racing under the IRC handicapping rule during Race Week at Newport. The variety of boat designs involved often means that when the conditions change, so do the results. A boat that excels on one day can find itself fighting to avoid the cellar on the next.

"It always comes down to the last day and the last race, and there is always a little bit of luck involved," said Arthur Santry, of Newport, R.I, who will be racing his Ker 50 Temptation/Oakcliff in Race Week. "It will probably be three or four boats contending for first."

The best overall performing yacht of the IRC-rated classes, as well as the winners of the C&C 30 and J/109 one-design classes, will be awarded Rolex Stainless Steel Submariner Date watches during the regatta. First introduced in 1953, the Submariner has a redesigned Oyster case, distinctive dial with large luminescent hour markers, graduated rotatable Cerachrom bezel and solid link Oyster bracelet.

Whether or not Santry, a long time New York Yacht Club member whose father was a commodore, is able to earn a Rolex, he's confident the week will be enjoyable for everyone involved.

"I think if you talk to a lot of the skippers, this is arguably the highlight of the season," he said. "It is such a great regatta, everyone knows that the competition is fantastic, but the venue is really special. It feels like home, this is our place."

nyyc.org/yachting/racing/2016-nyyc-race-week

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