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MySail 2025

Swan 42s look to duplicate ORC success to this side of Atlantic

by New York Yacht Club 11 Jun 2021 05:26 PDT June 11-13, 2021
New York Yacht Club Annual Regatta © Paul Todd / Outside Images

Sailing is full of passionate participants who enjoy nothing more than sharing their love for the sport. For crew-hungry big-boat owners, it's generally a win-win situation.

The average 40-foot raceboat requires a crew of 10 to 12 people for each regatta and a deep bench of willing substitutes. Sometimes, however, a crewmember aspires to bigger things and the next thing you know, the smiling face you invited to trim jib last summer is tacking on you this summer.

Such a situation may just transpire this weekend as Impetuous, skippered by New York Yacht Club Vice Commodore Paul Zabetakis (Jamestown, R.I.), and Lagertha, skippered by Kurt Kalberer (New York, N.Y.), battle each other, and eight other boats, for top honors in ORC 3 at the 167th edition of the New York Yacht Club Annual Regatta, which starts tomorrow with the traditional opening race around Conanicut Island.

"I had the pleasure of crewing one summer for Commodore Zabetakis onboard Impetuous and fell in love with the boat," says Kalberer (above, at the helm of Lagertha, née Quintessence, during the 166th Annual Regatta). "Since 2018, I've raced ORC locally, competed in the Swan 42 one-design class in the Med and spent some time this winter cruising in the Caribbean. I've sailed the 42 under ORC at Palma Vela in Mallorca and found the boat very competitive against many top European programs."

The Annual Regatta was first sailed on the Hudson River on July 16 and 18, 1846. A similar competition the previous year was called a Trial of Speed. With a few exceptions for world wars and other global crises, the event has been held every year since. For the majority of its existence, the New York Yacht Club held its Annual Regatta on waters close to New York City. Since 1988, however, the event has been sailed out of the Harbour Court clubhouse in Newport, R.I., and has settled into the current three-day format, which includes a race around Conanicut Island on Friday and two days of buoy racing or navigator-course racing on Saturday and Sunday. The 167th Annual Regatta is sponsored by Hammetts Hotel, Safe Harbor Marinas and Helly Hansen.

The second act of the Swan 42, as a top ORC competitor, is one of the more intriguing storylines of the Annual Regatta. The boat was created in 2006 as the New York Yacht Club's eighth one-design class and as the platform for the biennial Rolex New York Yacht Club Invitational Cup, the premiere global competition for Corinthian sailors. After more than a decade of strong one-design competition, and five editions of the Invitational Cup, the class dwindled in the United States.

"The Swan 42 is a great ORC yacht," says Zabetakis (at right), one of the founders of the class and the lone remaining original owner in the United States. "This is evidenced by the fact that most sold boats went to Europe where they were converted and successfully raced under the ORC handicap rule. On our first few outings, we have done quite well under ORC."

At the 2021 ORC European Championships, sailed last month in Capri, Italy, the Swan 42 continued its years-long domination, finishing first, second, third and fifth in Class B.

On this side of the Atlantic, where the rule is just gaining traction, Zabetakis and his Impetuous team took ORC division victories in the 2020 Race Week at Newport presented by Rolex and the 166th Annual Regatta, both of which were sailed in early fall of 2020 due to COVID.

Repeating this year is likely to be more of a challenge. In addition to Kalberer and Lagertha, there are three other Swan 42s joining the fray: Patricia Young's Entropy (Jamestown, R.I.), David Fass' Zammermoos (Mamaroneck, N.Y.) and Henry Brauer and Steve Madeira's Tio Loco (Northeast Harbor, Maine).

Having five nearly identical boats—some have undergone minor medications to improve performance under ORC—in a handicap class does greatly increase the chance that two Swan 42s will find themselves fighting over the same piece of water, or for inside position around a mark. But Kalberer believes that, ultimately, this fleet within ORC C will improve each Swan 42's chance of winning the class.

"Having five 42s together in ORC will be an advantage," he says. "It should allow us to test and tweak our boatspeed against each other, and sail as close to our rating as possible."

And have fun doing it, which, depending on whom you ask, may be more important.

"I just really enjoy sailing on the Swan 42," says Zabetakis, preparing for his 15th year racing the boat. "It's a platform that permits me to still sail with friends with whom I've sailed on and off for 30 years. I can take several of my core Newport team and mingle good sailors who had been regular crew, but because of distance and family obligations are no longer available for regular sailing. We can get together once a year, have fun, sail aggressively and, most years, do quite well."

NYYC Regatta Association welcomes Safe Harbor Marinas as partner for 2021 Regatta Season

When the New York Yacht Club committed to building a fleet of 20 Melges IC37s, which will be the largest one-design fleet at the 167th Annual Regatta, one of the first major decisions was where to store the boats. Safe Harbor New England Boatworks, in nearby Portsmouth, R.I., was the obvious choice, with the requisite space and expertise to house, launch and service the paradigm-shifting fleet. Safe Harbor even built a custom storage facility for the fleet during the off season.

"The Club knew, when we launched the IC37 project, that we'd need a lot of support from the marine industry," says Jim Wilson, president of the New York Yacht Club Regatta association and an IC37 skipper. "Safe Harbor New England Boatworks has become an integral part of the program and critical to the high level of service that we provide to our charterers. We're very happy to bring them on as a regatta partner for the 2021 season. It's a true win-win situation. We both want more boats on the water, enjoying great racing and great camaraderie."

Formed in 2015, Safe Harbor Marinas now includes more than 115 properties across 22 states, a one-of-a-kind boating network that provides access to an unparalleled boating lifestyle. The story of Safe Harbor is one of astonishing growth, persistent innovation and a relentless commitment to excellence.

"We are proud to partner with the New York Yacht Club Regatta Association and support their long-standing tradition of sailing", says Rebecca LeBlanc, Vice President of Partnerships & Sponsorships at Safe Harbor Marinas. "Together we share a passion for the water and for this iconic sport; our partnership is a natural fit."

Racing in the 167th edition of the Annual Regatta will start with the traditional lap of Conanicut Island on Friday, June 11. That race is scored separately from the weekend series, which features buoy or point-to-point racing for boats racing in one-design classes and under ORC, PHRF and classic-yacht rating formulas.

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