Please select your home edition
Edition
Elvstrom Sails Australia

An interview with Chris Alexander on the 2025 VX One North American Championship

by David Schmidt 15 Oct 2025 02:00 AEDT October 16-18, 2025
One-Design VX One racing in STIR 2025 © Ingrid Abery / www.ingridabery.com

If you enjoy fast, high-performance racing but aren't a fan of money changing hands in the pursuit of trophies and dinghy-park bragging rights, the VX One class should be on your radar. The 19-foot sloop carries a lifting keel, a powerful square-top main, a generous retractable sprit pole, and a fractional-rigged headsail and asymmetric kite. The two-to-three-person boat was designed in 2011-2012 by a Brian Bennett, Roger Martin, and Ross Weene, and has been delivering high-level racing since 2012.

Take, for example, this year's VX One North American Championship, which will be hosted by the Gulfport Yacht Club, in Gulfport, Mississippi from October 16-18. The event's eleven scheduled races will unfurl on the waters of the Mississippi Sound, near the GYC, and will feature up to 11 scheduled windward-leeward courses.

All competing skippers must be active members of the VX One Class Association, and all competing sailors must sign a declaration of compliance stipulating that they are not being paid or compensated (directly or indirectly). Moreover, all teams must declare their crew names eight days before racing starts (read: no weather-related crew-weight manipulations).

I checked in with Chris Alexander, who serves as event chair for this year's VX One North American Championship, via email, to learn more about this exciting event.

Can you give us a quick update on the health and status of the VX One class? Also, would you say the class is in a period of growth, stability, or an ebbing tide in terms of participation numbers?

I feel like the class has been doing great—we had better numbers in Miami for the winter series [this year] than the year before. Registration for North Americans this year is down just a couple boats from last year, but last year was in Miami, leading into the winter series, so it was a bit logistically easier for many participants.

New boats are being imported and selling well. We have matured and really built a family of people around what I would consider the best-built and most fun boat to sail in all the land.

What kind of competition levels can one can expect to encounter at this year's VX One North American Championship? Are we talking about Corinthian crews, or professionals?

We have an impressive mix of Corinthian and professionals in the class for North Americans.

No one can be paid in the class [so] they are all Corinthians in my eyes since everyone is there for the love of the sport. The [VX One North American Championships for the] previous four years of have all been won by different teams, and all four will be back this year.

Weather-wise, what kind conditions can sailors expect to encounter on Mississippi Sound's waters in mid October? What are the best-case and worst-case wind scenarios?

Best case would probably be a few days before a frontal system that sucks in a nice southerly breeze off the Gulf of America.

Worst case, a cold front rolls through and it's dead on the back side. [Previous] regattas that we have hosted [around] this time of year typically get full sailing and a mix of conditions.

Do you see local knowledge playing a big or small role in the regatta's outcome? Can you please explain?

As a local, there really isn't much knowledge to be had. It's a nice flat coastline with a fair amount of fetch if [it's blowing] from the south.

I can remember sailing the VX One North Americans here ten years ago and in one race I was really excited to get a five-degree lift.

Then it could also be coming off the land with your typical oscillating phases rolling through.

If you could offer one piece of advice to visiting (and local) sailors, what would it be?

Enjoy the food and a little slower pace of life!

Do you have any entries that you're eyeing for podium finishes? What about any dark horses who you think could prove to be fast, once the starting guns begin sounding?

It could be a toss-up or a parade of likely suspects!

I would expect to see previous winners Trevor Parekh, Geoff Moore, and Doug Clark all fighting hard.

For the dark horses I'd have to slide a few chips on Reed Baldridge, Charlie Welsh, and Paul Kleinschrodt. But most importantly, I'll be betting on myself!

What kind of evening entertainment do you and the other event organizers have planned?

We've got a 100 pounds of shrimp on the way and we will be doing a Cajun-style shrimp boil with all the fixin's.

Related Articles

TP52s, IMOCA 60s, Congression Cup
52 SUPER SERIES and IMOCA 60 season openers, 61st Congressional Cup When the conversation turns to Grand Prix keelboat racing, it's never long before the 52 SUPER SERIES enters the mix. The 2026 season is will feature five events, starting with this week's Puerto Portals 52 Super Series Sailing Week. Posted on 5 May
Close Encounters…
Of the Jimbo kind. To know Jim Close is to have an experience. To know Jim Close, aka Jimbo, or Mumbles, is to have an experience (Boom. Boom. Basil Brush). It's not a reflection. It's a casting of vision. Yes. What a trip. Part acid. Part journey through space. Part adventure in existentialism. Posted on 4 May
Rotters and Colanders
Initiatives which blow preconceptions about sailing out of the water In these times it's all too easy to fall back on old adages about sailing, saying the costs are too high, it's elitist and things are in decline, but there are some incredible bright spots which blow preconceptions about sailing out of the water. Posted on 28 Apr
French Olympic Week and Charleston Race Week
Racing action at French Olympic Week and Charleston Race Week For many Americans, 2028 might feel like a far distant horizon right now, however for Olympic sailing hopefuls, the 2028 Summer Olympics, which will be held in and around the city of Los Angeles, are rapidly hoving into view. Posted on 21 Apr
Two things
The first time something occurs it's happenstance. Next is circumstance. The third is enemy action. So, there's an axiom that states, the first time something occurs it's happenstance. The next is circumstance, and the third is enemy action. Now on paper, and under that ruling, that makes this here Ed the latter. Hhhmmmm. Posted on 19 Apr
SailGP Venue vs. Revenue
In 'Grandstand' sailing the race area is defined well in advance of the event SailGP finally got to land in South America, with the inaugural Rio Sail Grand Prix taking place over the weekend. Posted on 13 Apr
Olympic class racing, Caribbean racing, Globe40
Important times to be speed checking against rivals The Los Angeles 2028 Olympics might still be more than two years over the horizon, but for Olympic hopefuls and medal-ceremony contenders alike, these are important times to be speed checking against rivals. Posted on 7 Apr
Mission Accomplished!
Keeping it in the family was always really the main mission. Just ask him… Keeping it in the family was always really the main mission. Just ask him… Now at 138 days and some change, Tristan Gourlay has shaved a fair old chunk off the 179 days and change his dad, Ken, set 19 and a bit years ago. Posted on 6 Apr
Victoria Low on the 2x25 Review
A Q&A with Victoria Low about the findings of the 2x25 Review The Magenta Project, in collaboration with 11th Hour Racing and World Sailing, recently conducted the largest gender equity study in sailing's history. The findings weren't great. Posted on 2 Apr
Measure twice. Cut once.
Perhaps even measured thrice? Yes. On reflection, I think we can absolutely lock that one in. Perhaps even measured thrice? Yes. On reflection, I think we can absolutely lock that one in. So then, let's consider all this. Now that initial quantum was keeping the ambition in check. No headlines. No elongated rig. No overtly aggressive sail plan. Posted on 1 Apr
Vetus-Maxwell 2021 v2 FOOTERRolly Tasker Sails 2023 FOOTERVelocitek March 2026