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2018 Friday Night Slalom Series at St. Francis Yacht Club - Just enjoy the ride

by Steve Bodner 5 Sep 2018 06:26 PDT
Friday Night Slalom Series 2018 © Maxim Pantchenko

It may be the end of summer but the San Francisco Bay is lit up like a Christmas tree with white caps and voodoo chop. The NW breeze has returned with gusts of over 25 knots and I'm as giddy as a small kid on Christmas morning.

14 other slalom racers jockey for position at the favored pin end of the start line. With 10 seconds to go, the fleet sends it, pushing speeds of 30 knots on the first beat set 1/4 mile north of the St. Francis Yacht Club for the final race in the 2018 Friday Night Slalom Series.

It's anyone's race as the top two are tied on points going into the series final. Most racers have 2-3 rigs and 1-2 boards available at their disposal but I'm running tight this season with only one board and one rig used for the entire series. It works for 90% of the time. The other 10%, I hang on like hell and just enjoy the ride.

We round the first mark set deep in mounds of chop and a blistering breeze. I come in hot just behind the leaders and wait for a moment to pounce. Dr. Nick Mast is in full control just behind the series leaders, Soheil Zahedi and Jean Rathle. I wait for any opportunity but the leaders don't let up one bit.

Two more gybes, three more reaches and all I can do is hang onto third for the first race

My approach is to sail as conservative as possible in the front of the fleet and not make any mistakes.

Race two starts and it's full mayhem on the first leg. I nail the start, getting a good jump on the fleet at the pin end but the steep chop and deep heading to the first mark make it almost impossible to control the 70 cm slalom board. My back foot goes into the leeward strap just to maintain some sense of control. We round in a tight pinwheel formation carving through the gybe and getting shot out to the next leg. Those that don't commit fully, go down hard and are left swimming at the mark. When you're out in front all you have to worry about is not screwing up too much. There's no head games except for your own.

I make it through the remaining two gybes, hang on like hell and get the bullet for the second race of the night.

Race three goes by like some type of white flash. Wind, water, spray- it's everywhere. I find myself in fourth behind the series leaders going into the last leg. Local hot shot and chef extraordinaire, Andre Larzule demonstrates that you don't need race gear to get around the course fast, just fast gybe and the dude can gybe. I never get an opportunity to pass except to send it in the last 100m of the course. I put the petal to the metal and pass to windward with just seconds to spare and squeeze into third again.

Race four is where it's anyone's game. The leaders both take themselves out in spectacular wipe outs. Soheil does a super man going into the first mark and is left swimming as the fleet scurries by him. Local wizard, David Bernsten has full control on his xs slalom board and small slalom rig. These are his conditions for the past 25 years and he's killing it tonight. One more gybe to go with David in the lead and Jean just a few board lengths ahead of me. We both go into the gybe like a pair of synchronized swimmers. I opt for the inside lane as Jean stumbles through his gybe and goes down. He's left a small room of opportunity for me to take. The lane is only a few feet wide. With my butt checks fully clenched, I send it.

All I see are the whites of his eyes as I fly past his head bobbing in the water. I make it through by the skin of my teeth or maybe Jean's. I somehow keep it together the last leg to secure second while Dave gets the bullet. Jean is slow to get going to amongst the chaos of the rounding and takes his throw out for the evening in seventh.

Race five: A quick tally of the scores in my head puts Jean and I tied going into the race and Soheil just two points ahead. Again, it's anyone's game to win or lose. Both Jean and Soheil have eaten their throw out so there's no room for any mistakes. There's some fierce head battles between the two as whomever wins this last race, takes the series. The duo never let each other out their sights in the pre-race battle. Soheil is on his xs mike's lab 90l slalom board and 7.1 rig while Jean opts for his 100l bump and jump board and 6.3m rig. What ever gets you around the course faster.

I'm just about beat down. Holding onto the 7.6m rig and big board has me feeling the pain. My arms are stretched to their limit. My hands- barley able to hold on. Maybe I should have opted for my time on the water this season in liue of kiting but I try not to think about it and just enjoy the ride for the last race of the season.

I get absolutely buried at the start, failing to pull the trigger early enough as the top three boards fly off to an early lead. Soheil is in absolute control on his small rig and flies to an early lead. However, you can never count Dave out. He flies past Jean on the last leg and gets second for the night while Jean and I fill in from behind. That leaves us tied for the evening and the tiebreaker for windsurfers goes to whomever has the better throw-out. I have a fourth while Jean is sitting on a seventh. As I'm reminded for the umpteenth time, you're only as good as your worst race, even if it's a throw out.

A big congrats to Soheil for taking his first season series. He's been the man all season, always with the right gear and sailing solidly every race when it counts.

Ive been racing in the St.FYC Friday night series for almost 20 years now and it's never been as much fun as it is now. I don't take things as seriously as I used to but realize the reward comes in the process, not the results. No matter how you finish, just enjoy the ride.

Many thanks to the St.FYC, PRO Ian Mcclelland, Race office and many volunteers to make this possible.

2018 StFYC Friday Night Slalom Series Results

www.stevebodner.com

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