Please select your home edition
Edition
A+T Instruments BFD 2024 Leaderboard

Fast multihulls are in, next in line is Comanche to finish in Transpac 50

by Transpacific Yacht Club 18 Jul 2019 22:07 PDT 10-25 July 2019
Argo team celebrates their line honors victory - Transpac 50 © Sharon Green / Ultimate Sailing

After Jason Carroll's Argo crossed the finish line at Diamond Head last night 20:52:32 local time, only 29 minutes later Peter Cunningham's PowerPlay crossed the line, followed 6.5 hours later by Giovanni Soldini's Maserati, ending the rivalry between all three MOD 70 trimarans in the 50th edition of the Transpacific Yacht Race. For over four days these teams battled with each other, one (Maserati) limping for a while due to impact damage after the first day of the race, but never giving up.

"Crossing the finish line was a great moment for us," Carroll told local TV news teams. "It was 4 1/2 days of anticipation to find out if we were going to beat out the competition and it came down to a pretty close race in the end, so this was a great celebration."

Asked about conditions leaving the coast, Carroll said "The conditions were very different there then they are here in Hawaii where it blows 26 knots every day; it was very light and variable and our navigator [Anderson Reggio] did a great job getting us out of [that hole] which gave us a leg up on everybody."

This is Carroll's first Transpac, to which he said "Every offshore yacht racers dream is to sail [this race], and this is my first time ever in Hawaii. So it's great to come and do this. The full moon was with us pretty much every night guiding us safely here."

When asked what it was like being 4 days with his team, Carroll said "Ya know I spend a lot of time with these guys, we get to see each other everyday!"

(An Erratum from last night's release: an additional member of the Argo team omitted from mention was Westy Barlow - sorry Westy!)

Argo team member Brian Thompson is a highly-experienced veteran of offshore multihull projects, and even he was impressed with this race.

"It is amazing to be back here. I think this is my sixth time in Honolulu racing from California. So I've got the course record with Phaedo and after the fourth attempt, being the first multihull to finish, the first boat to finish this race here on Argo tonight - which is incredible. It turned out the racing was really close. The start was incredible. There was an eddy off the coast of California which made it super light. Much lighter than normal and at night it shut down and we were the boat that got out the best. And just got out before the wind shut down, so we got out into the wind and extended through the night to have about an 80-mile lead. So four and half days is not a bad time at all to 2,200 miles. We are all chuffed to be here."

Meanwhile still charging towards the finish is the fastest monohull in the race, Jim Cooney and Samantha Grant's VPLP 100 Comanche from Australia. At 1500 Hawaii time they are about 115 miles from the finish travelling at 23.4 knots, so they're expected sometime after sunset tonight.

The remainder of the fleet is enjoying beautiful tradewinds sailing, with many reports of fantastic sunsets and sunrises, moon rainbows, challenging squalls, and the like. This account from Chip Merlin's team on his custom Lee-designed 68 Merlin:

Day 5 turned into an intense night after a few spinnakers went up and down and dodging little black clouds and intermittent showers. Today Day 6 the sun is out, nice trade winds are blowing, the crew is in good spirits and moments of offshore humor are more frequent. Last night we were treated to a special phenomena - when under the full moon a moonbow appeared which is a white halo like ring similar to a rainbow but without the colors.

And from John Miller's Beneteau 46 Tropic Thunder on their 8th day, a similar account:

So, as sailing goes it is wash, rinse, repeat. The other watch seems to get all the sail change fun. My watch gets all the cool sights.

Overnight we had a brief light rain that felt wonderful. The moon was once again bright and beautiful. We were treated to a full moonbow; rainbow made from moonlight. I have no idea what the actual term for it is and Google is not exactly available out here so you are stuck with moonbow.

We are starting to see schools of flying fish which is really cool and increasing amounts of trash which is not so cool. There was a small squid that tried to make itself into calamari on the jacklines but he wasn't quite successful, poor little thing.

We are having a good time out here. Life is good. Except there were some hurting puppies this morning from the 1/2 way celebration. When will they learn. Now starting to ration ibuprophen.

Another story from the race course on board Scott Deardorff and Bill Guilfoyle's SC 52 Prevail is less jolly. A crewman had got his finger caught in a winch and sustained a compound fracture to his arm. The team received medical advice via sat phone from Hoag, the Transpac official medical assistance provider, wherein antibiotics were prescribed, but of a type not in the Prevail medical kit.

With help from Transpac Race HQ, an alert notice went to the fleet to ask who had the specific type of drugs needed. Luckily only 5 miles away was Vela, another SC 52 owned by Steve Davis, Tim Dornberg and Clark Davis, who made the rendezvous with Prevail. The patient is reported to be in stable condition.

Another problem on the course has arose on The Eddy Family's Cal 40 Callisto, where their YB tracker is now officially dead. The device had been behaving erratically throughout the race, so now Race HQ has directed navigator Kerry Deaver to report positions every 4 hours.

One tracker that seems to be working well is that on Jason Andrews's J/125 Hamachi, because based on their recent rates of progress they are positioned at the top of the leaderboard in corrected time. It's still a little early to make predictions, but they are now very much in contention to win the overall King Kalakaua Trophy, a historic perpetual award named after the royal Hawaiian founder of this race, first sailed in 1906.

For more information on Transpac 50 and its history, events and sponsors, visit the main website at 2019.transpacyc.com.

Related Articles

The international entries taking on Transpac
Aloha to competitors from outside the USA Transpac's reputation as one of the premier offshore regattas always draws a contingent of sailors from all over the world. Posted on 28 May
Ragtime Returns to Transpac
Recently relaunched and sporting significant upgrades Over the years, Transpac has drawn many legends of yacht racing - this year one one such legend, Ragtime, returns after years away. Posted on 29 Mar
Transpac welcomes 52 entries and counting
Lessons from Whittier Trust on sailing and planning Transpac Heritage Sponsor Whittier Trust is no stranger to the challenges that arise when preparing for a feat such as racing from Los Angeles to Honolulu. Posted on 27 Feb
Doug Jorgensen prepares for his seventh Transpac
For many of the skippers and crews, the event is one they return to time and time again Pasadena, California's Doug Jorgensen agrees with that sentiment. This year, Jorgensen will be making his seventh crossing from Los Angeles to Honolulu racing in the 2025 Transpac. Posted on 1 Feb
Transpac is for everyone
Entries are stacking up for Transpac 2025, with 34 boats committed to the sailing contest Once again, the challenge of racing 2,225nm from Los Angeles to Hawaii is drawing all types of boats, from high-tech multihulls to traditional monohulls, from amateurs racing for the first time to veteran competitors. Posted on 21 Dec 2024
Why not race Transpac 2025?
A crew of friends for 50 years signs up For many Transpac skippers and crew, the race to Hawaii is their first ocean crossing. Not so for the crew of Heroic Heart—which includes two sets of brothers. Posted on 28 Nov 2024
Transpac 2025 hits 30 entries
Entries are steadily increasing for the event Entries are steadily increasing for the 2025 Transpac, with John Raymont's Ker 52 Fast Exit II the 30th boat to register and one of several veteran competitors to commit to a repeat offshore run from Los Angeles to Honolulu. Posted on 1 Nov 2024
Entries rolling in for Transpac 2025
Twenty boats and crews have already claimed their spot on the starting line Twenty boats and crews have already claimed their spot on the starting line for the 2025 Transpacific Yacht Race, including past first-place finishers Pyewacket, Roy Disney's Andrews 70, and the Kernan 68 Peligroso. Posted on 1 Sep 2024
Start preparing for Transpac 2025
Already 17 boats have registered Entries are open for the 2025 Transpacific Yacht Race, a historic 2,225 race from Los Angeles to Honolulu. Posted on 30 Jul 2024
Register now for Transpac 2025
Entries are now open for the race from Los Angeles to Honolulu Entries are now open for the 2025 edition of the Los Angeles to Honolulu Transpacific Yacht Race. Posted on 20 Jun 2024
Zhik 2024 DecemberSwitch One DesignRS Sailing 2021 - FOOTER