STORM TRYSAIL CLUB
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Dana Paxton, Media Pro Int’l for Storm
Trysail Club, 401-849-0220, dana.paxton@mediapronewport.com
or Chris Brown for SORC Management, 954-294-0555, cbrown@sorcsailing.org

Fort Lauderdale to Key West Race
Winning is a Breeze for Samba Pa Ti
LARCHMONT, N.Y. (January 18, 2008)— John Kilroy’s Samba
Pa Ti grabbed an IRC trifecta in the 33rd annual Fort Lauderdale
to Key West Race: first to finish, first in IRC class A and first for
IRC overall on corrected time. Forty three of the forty nine entered boats
started shortly after 1 p.m. on Wednesday, January 16, and Kilroy charged
in before midnight after the 160-mile reach. Organized by SORC Management,
which includes members of the Storm Trysail Club and Lauderdale Yacht
Club, the race stretched from Port Everglades to Key West Harbor. Along
the way, navigators had to “connect-the-dots“ to keep the
fleet between all major Florida Keys markers and the Gulf Stream. Entrants,
in two classes for IRC, four for PHRF and two for Multihull, ranged in
size from a 76' catamaran to two 21' mini Transats, but it was Kilroy’s
52-foot TP52 that stole the show.
“It starts with a good boat,” said Kilroy about Samba
Pa Ti's success, noting that he modified the boat -- adding
a bow sprit, changing the bulb and extending the deck ” for leverage
on reaching legs” – after winning the US-IRC East Coast Championship
last year. “These are very fast boats (two other TP52s took second
and third in IRC A)…at the start, we had to hang high and let everyone
underneath us go, so everyone in the class got a better start, but within
five minutes we were launched. The consistency we have in crew is also
key….there have been some changes, but 85% of them were with me
last season.”
Many in Samba Pa Ti's crew were grand-prix
racing notables such as New Zealand’s Nick White (navigator), Florida’s
Tom Lihan and Maryland’s Terry Hutchinson (tactician), who, according
to Kilroy, said he had more fun on this race than on any other he has
done. ”It's because it was a good breeze,” said Kilroy. “And
everyone was hiking out and the driving was intense… and it’s
nice when you’re getting wet that you’re getting splashed
with warm water.”
At the start, Race Chairman Joel Bowie reported “sporty conditions,”
which started with four- to six-foot seas and an 18-knot reaching Easterly,
favorable for breaking the current monohull race record of 10 hours 24
minutes and 2 seconds posted by Joe Dockery’s Reichel/Pugh 81 Carrera
in 2005. Samba Pa Ti fell just short of that
record by seven minutes, 23 seconds, posting an elapsed time of 0:10:32:25.
“That's pretty amazing for a 52-foot boat,” said Kilroy.
“We had 15-20 miles where we were hard on the nose, so if we’d
had a staysail up the whole time we’d have done even better.”
This was Kilroy’s first time to enter the Fort Lauderdale to Key
West Race and he did so to support IRC in the U.S. “while they are
expanding and promoting it.” The event was the 2008 kick-off for
the annual US-IRC Gulf Stream Series. Winning IRC B was Stuart Hebb (Coral
Gables, Fla.) on the Aerodyne 38 Thin Ice.
Multihulls - Flight Simulator
While Kilroy and Hebb were sailing smoothly along to victory, others weren’t
so lucky. For the multihulls, especially, it was a gear buster. Patriot,
a 76-foot catamaran owned by Mike Rush (Fort Lauderdale) and the early
favorite for line honors retired shortly after the start with mainsail
problems. Matador, a Corsair F31 owned by Rick
Tobin (Miami, Fla.), lost its mast just off Marathon; and the 42-foot
Shuttleworth catamaran The Beast, owned by Rubio
Julian (Westin, Fla.), reported a “broken cross beam.” Sarah,
owned by Gregory Manning (Warwick, R.I.) in IRC B, had a steering failure
just outside the Key West sea buoy.
It was Flight Simulator, a Corsair 28R, owned
by Tom Reese (Youngstown, N.Y.), that prevailed to take Multihull A and
overall multihull honors with an elapsed time of 0:12:39:49. (In 2007,
Steve and Scott Liebel’s Custom 60 Stars and Stripes
turned in the multihull record of 8 hours 31 minutes and 4 seconds.)
“We couldn’t have asked for better conditions,” said
Reese of the weather. “We had strong winds. It was a tight reach
at first, then a beam reach, finally a broad reach and the wind was steady
all thorough the race.”
Although Flight Simulator was among the last
of the fleet to start the race, Reese said the boat averaged 16-17 knot
speeds and along the way passed almost every competing boat, even the
monohulls. “While it was still daylight, we could see all the boats
behind us. We almost caught the TP52 (Samba Pa Ti).
It was a lot of fun.” He credited his three crew – Richard
Stevens (navigator), Miroslav Kaffka from Ullman Sails (Sarasota) and
Phil Styne (NY) – for the boat’s success.
Snagging victory in class B was Anhinga, a
Corsair F27 owned by Robert Libbey (Fort Myers, Fla.).
PHRF - Munequita
Munequita, a 60' Cherubini schooner (with a
44-foot waterline) owned by Charles Evans and sailing out of the St. Pete
Yacht Club (St. Petersburg, Fla.), won PHRF Class D and overall PHRF honors,
posting an elapsed time of 19:32:22. Gwailhir,
the Open 40 owned by Stuart Williams (Newport, R.I.) took PHRF A, while
securing PHRF B victory was the Du Four 44 Second Wind,
owned by Ray Sullivan (Key Biscayne, Fla.). And finally, winning PHRF
Class C was Bandana, an Oyster 48 owned by Dave
Wallace (Fort Lauderdale).
According to Munequita’s Captain Mike
Lawrence, “As the course went west, the wind went south, so we were
always on a beam to a close reach. We had 22-knots true wind at times
and never much below 18 knots -- we correct out well in that weather!”
This year’s fleet included 28 boats from Florida, as well as boats
from Ohio, California, Rhode Island, New York, Maryland, Alabama, Georgia,
Massachusetts, North Carolina and Kentucky, plus Russia and Great Britain.
Race management was particularly pleased with the mix of competitors
from near and far, professional and amateur. “In addition to the
professionals, we were happy to see a number of local South Florida teams
taking home trophies,” said Race Chair Joel Bowie. “Five of
eight class winners were locals.”
For complete results, visit www.keywestrace.org.
(end)
(top-three results in each class follow)
Top-Three Results
2008 Fort Lauderdale to Key West Race
Place, Boat Name, Type, Owner, Hometown, Finish, Final Points
IRC A (IRC - 4 Boats)
1. Samba Pa Ti, Transpac 52 52', John Kilroy, Jr., Los Angeles, CA, USA
- 1, ; 1
2. Flash, Transpac 52 52, Hap Fauth, Newport, RI, USA - 2, ; 2
3. Rusal-Synergy, Transpac 52 15.85 m, Gateway Overseas Limited, Russia
- 3, ; 3
IRC B (IRC - 7 Boats)
1. Thin Ice, Aerodyne 38 38, Stuart Hebb, Coral Gables, FL, USA - 1, ;
1
2. Sea Turtle, Beneteau/Moorings 38 38, James Miller, Satellite Beach,
FL, USA - 2, ; 2
3. Uxorious III, Swan CS 42 42.58, Colin Buffin, Putney, London, UK -
3, ; 3
PHRF A (PHRF - 4 Boats)
1. Gwaihir, Class 40 Open 40, Stuart Williams, Newport, RI, USA - 1, ;
1
2. Buena Racha, J 145 48'01, Francis Rooney, Naples, FL, USA - 2, ; 2
3. Velox, J 125 41, Steve Mills, St. Petersburg, FL, USA - 5/DNC, ; 5
PHRF B (PHRF - 9 Boats)
1. Second Wind, Du Four 44 44, Ray Sullivan, Key Biscayne, FL, USA - 1,
; 1
2. Dragon Fly Plus, Swan 53, Dr. Ulrich L. Rohde, Marco Island , Florida,
USA - 2, ; 2
3. Flying Jenny V, J 120 40, David and Sandra Askew, Annapolis, MD, USA
- 3, ; 3
PHRF C (PHRF - 7 Boats)
1. Bandana, Oyster 48, David Wallace, Ft. Lauderdale, FL, USA - 1, ; 1
2. Holy Toledo!, Hobie 33 33, Clif Vaughan, Whitehouse, OH, USA - 2, ;
2
3. L'outrage, Beneteau 34', Bruce Gardner, Annapolis, MD, USA - 3, ; 3
PHRF D (PHRF - 8 Boats)
1. Munequita, Cherubini 48 schooner 59' 10, Charles Evans, St. Petersburg,
FL, USA - 1, ; 1
2. Unicorn, Creekmore 36', Michael Peteler, Pompano Beach, FL, USA - 2,
; 2
3. Ocean Dancer, Catalina 387 39 ft 10, Mark Stephenson, Fort Lauderdale,
FL, USA - 3, ; 3
Multihull A (PHRF - 5 Boats)
1. Flight Simulator, Corsair 28R 28, Tom Reese, Youngstown, NY, USA -
1, ; 1
2. Endorphin 3, Corsair 28R 28, John Laughlin, Hollywood, FL, USA - 2,
; 2
3. Patriot, Catamaran 76, Mike Rush, Fort Lauderdale, FL, USA - 6/DNF,
; 6
Multihull B (PHRF - 5 Boats)
1. Anhinga, Corsair F27 Formula 27, Robert Libbey, Fort Myers, FL, USA
- 1, ; 1
2. CatNip, Catamaran 35ft 10in, Victor Mendelsohn, Miami, FL, USA - 2,
; 2
3. Double Trouble, Catamaran 57, Don Balthaser, Fort Lauderdale, FL, USA
- 3, ; 3
|
|