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

NYYC Race Week at Newport presented by Rolex - Day 2

by New York Yacht Club 25 Sep 2020 16:33 AEST September 23-26, 2020
NYYC Race Week at Newport presented by Rolex - Day 2 © Rolex / Daniel Forster

With just a few days to get up to speed in a new one-design class, Michael Goldfarb (Seattle, Wash.) knew exactly where to focus his Waka Jawaka crew's energy.

"We came four days before the event started," says Goldfarb, who has partnered with Laura Grondin (West Hartford, Conn.) to charter a Melges IC37 for the abbreviated fall season. "All we did was set marks and go around them: tack, tack, set, jibe, jibe, jibe, douse. Three days of that, because my view is if you can't go around the corners, nothing else good is going to happen for you."

After struggling off the starting line on Day 1, it all came together today for Waka Jawaka with three firsts and a third. The performance vaulted Goldfarb and Grondin from fifth to first with eight races in the books. The lead over second, Qubit, skippered by Chris Lewis (Seabrook, Texas), is 9 points with Day 1 co-leader Pacific Yankee in third, three points further back. There were a number of protests in the class, so the overall standings may shift slightly overnight, but nothing is going to displace Waka Jawaka for the moment.

The New York Yacht Club's Race Week at Newport presented by Rolex was first run in 1998, and takes place this year from September 23 to 26 out of the New York Yacht Club Harbour Court, in Newport. R.I. The biennial regatta, traditionally run at the apex of the summer sailing season, has established itself as one of the premier summer race weeks in the Northeast thanks to its attractive combination of great racing conditions off Newport and the superlative shoreside hospitality at the Club's waterfront Clubhouse overlooking Newport Harbor. Partners for the 2020 edition of Race Week at Newport include presenting sponsor Rolex and regatta sponsors Hammetts Hotel and Helly Hansen.

While Goldfarb is new to the Melges IC37 class, he is a veteran sportboat sailor, with success in Melges 24s, J/70s and Farr 30s. He also made sure to pull in some experienced talent, namely Shaun and Steven Burke (Atlanta, Ga.), who sailed last season in the Melges IC37 class and brought valuable knowledge to Waka Jawaka program. Goldfarb was also quick to credit the New York Yacht Club's charter program.

"I think these are fantastic boats," he says. "They're fun to sail, not super tweaky, but they're very even and the yacht club boats are just in amazing condition. We came out here, we chartered and it's like having your own boat."

For Paul Zabetakis, getting back behind the wheel of his Swan 42 Impetuous (left, USA 4206) was like hopping back on the proverbial bike after a long layoff, Only this bike came with a key new feature. It took a day for Zabetakis and his crew to truly get back into the swing of racing, but on Day 2 they were impossible to beat, winning each of three races in ORC 2 to take a 1-point lead over Tom Sutton's Leading Edge in what has become a two-horse race for the title. Third-placed Das Blau Max is 17 points behind.

"The boat's going real well," says Zabetakis (Jamestown, R.I.). "Now that we're not doing one-design racing, we did make one change to the boat. We put on a new rudder, which was a Greg Stewart design. The 42s had no helm at all. In 5 knots or 20 knots, it was the same thing. Now I have a little bit of feel upwind and downwind it's better also."

While the calendar says fall, the weather today on Rhode Island Sound was definitely more reminiscent of high summer, with plentiful sunshine, temps in the 70s and a building southwesterly sea breeze, conditions that are as familiar as a pair of old jeans to anyone who's raced off Newport.

"The first race started out really light," says Zabetakis. "I think when we started it was 5 to 6 knots. The second race was medium conditions, 10 to 15. By the end of the second race, it started getting very breezy, and then the last race we were sitting on 15 knots with a couple of shots to 18. It was starting to get a little lumpy out there."

For a team looking to assess a major modification, it would be hard to think of a more perfect day. A full range of conditions and some good competition against which to gauge performance.

"This is the first time we've been out in the boat since last year, the first time with the new rudder," he says. "I was feeling good that boat, both in light- and heavy-air conditions, was doing well. Every time time we were near Rikki (a Reichel/Pugh 42, the fastest-rated boat in ORC 2), we would generally lift off of her. We just picked the right windshifts, and the boat was fast."

Over more than a decade of regularly racing Impetuous, Zabetakis has acquired one of Newport's most loyal crews. While everyone likes to see a string of 1's on their scorecard, the opportunity to reunite with his sailing family was just as enjoyable.

"Except for one person on the boat, everyone is the regular crew, and it's just a blast," he says. "My attitude coming in was I just wanted to have a good time and get back with the crew."

Victor Wild's Pac52 Fox (San Diego, Calif.) won the day in ORC 1, moving within one point of David Team's Vesper (Newport Beach, Calif.) for the overall lead. Hap Fauth's Bella Mente (Naples, Fla.) won Race 2, but struggled in Race 1 and sits third, 11 points off the overall lead.

Both ORC divisions will do a coastal race tomorrow, while the Melges IC37s will continue buoy racing. The 12th edition of Race Week at Newport presented by Rolex will conclude on Saturday.

NYYC Race Week at Newport presented by Rolex - Day 2 Results:
Place, Yacht Name, Type, Owner/Skipper, Hometown, Results, Total Points

ORC 1 (ORC - 6 Boats)
1. Vesper, TP52, David Team, Newport Beach, CA, USA - 1 -2 -1 -1 -3 -2; 10
2. FOX, Botin 52, Victor Wild, San Diego, CA, USA - 2 -1 -3 -2 -2 -1; 11
3. Bella Mente, Maxi 72, Hap Fauth, Naples, FL, USA - 3 -6 -2 -6 -1 -3; 21

ORC 2 (ORC - 8 Boats)
1. Impetuous, Swan 42, Paul Zabetakis, Jamestown, RI, USA - 2 -3 -1 -1 -1 -1; 9
2. Leading Edge, J 109, William Sutton, Houston, TX, USA - 1 -1 -2 -2 -2 -2; 10
3. Das Blau Max, Farr 30, Cory Sertl, Jamestown, RI, USA - 4 -2 -5 -3 -6 -7; 27

Melges IC37 (One Design - 12 Boats)
1. Waka Jawaka, Michael Goldfarb / Laura Grondin, Seattle, WA, USA - 2 -7 -4 -7 -1 -1 -1 -3; 26
2. Qubit, Chris Lewis, Seabrook, TX, USA - 3 -4 -6 -4 -2 -7 -3 -6; 35
3. Pacific Yankee, Drew Freides / Bill Ruh, Los Angeles, CA, USA - 4 -1 -1 -6 -5 -13 -6 -2; 38

Full results available here.

Related Articles

Team Racing Worlds at Newport, RI, overall
Corinthian Yacht Club puts on top notch performance to win Sustained winds in the low 20-knot range and choppy seas brought on another challenging day in the final stretch of the 2025 Team Racing World Championship. Posted on 2 Jun
Team Racing Worlds at Newport, RI, Day 3
Epic breeze cuts racing short; clear division between teams sets scene for final day Sunny skies met big breeze on Day 3 but by 12:30 p.m. racing was postponed, and as the wind built to 25+, the Race Committee abandoned racing at 3:00 p.m. Posted on 1 Jun
Team Racing Worlds at Newport, RI, Day 2
Consolidation In the Ranks: U.S. Teams Lead A thrilling action-packed series of races on Day 2 of the 2025 Team Racing World Championship saw the three teams representing the United States consolidate at the top of the leaderboard. Posted on 31 May
Team Racing Worlds at Newport, RI, Day 1
Tricky conditions & challenging 2v2 format tests Team Racing fleet Gray skies, intermittent rain and shifty light winds were not enough to dampen the energy and enthusiasm on Narragansett Bay for Day 1 of the Team Racing World Championship under way at Harbour Court. Posted on 30 May
All set at the 2025 Team Racing Worlds
12 teams ready to battle it out at New York Yacht Club Last time Pete Levesque raced in a Team Racing World Championship was 2011, in Schull, Ireland, when he was a skipper on Team Extreme representing the New York Yacht Club. Posted on 28 May
NYYC hosts 2025 World Sailing Mid-Year Meeting
Board conducted a series of productive strategic meetings The gathering brought the World Sailing Board and Council together in person at the Club's historic 44th Street Clubhouse in Manhattan—an iconic venue designed by Whitney Warren, renowned architect of Grand Central Station. Posted on 19 May
StFYC repeats as Women's 2v2 Team Race Champs
Being the captain for competitive adult team sport is often a thankless task Being the captain for competitive adult team sport is often a thankless task involving a lot of emails, texts and phone calls to coordinate a group of busy people with multiple conflicting priorities. Posted on 19 May
Team Racing World Championship preview
Changing to Sonar keelboats and the two-on-two format, in New York A new format, a different type of boat and a 10-year gap are all conspiring to tear apart any attempt to build a form guide for the 2025 Team Racing World Championship, which is set for May 28 to June 1 at the New York Yacht Club Harbour Court. Posted on 16 May
Tshcüss 2 eyes Transatlantic Race line honors
The competitors will cover a distance of approximately 3,000 miles Many people find comfort in the familiar. Not Christian Zugel, who spent his youth in landlocked southern Germany, but discovered, late in life, a passion for blue-water ocean racing. Posted on 8 May
Team Race World Championship returns
In a month's time when the New York Yacht Club Harbour Court The past decade for team racing has featured the emergence of a new, spectator-friendly format and the continued spread of the discipline around the globe. Posted on 2 May
Switch One DesignX-Yachts X4.0Allen Dynamic 40 Footer