44th
Transpacific Yacht Race
Los
Angeles to Honolulu
Starts July 9, 12 and 15,
2007
2,225 nautical miles
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Barker
joins Pye for last Transpac start Sunday
Both
events are public ceremonies. Each boat's crew will be introduced and
saluted with an "Aloha!" cannon blast as it departs from Transpac's
mainland home port in
Smaller boats started the 2,225 nautical miles Monday and Thursday and
struggled early on with light and erratic winds that appeared to be
settling into a stable pattern, as forecast, as the biggest and fastest
boats join the chase.
But
even Pyewacket navigator Stan Honey, who charted ABN AMRO's victorious
course around the world in the 2005-06 Volvo Ocean Race and has excelled
in several Transpacs, sees a challenge.
"The
tricky part for all starters is that it's going to be real light in the
middle of the race," Honey said. "It's pretty unusual for the middle of
July. There's more wind to the north and south. Most boats will choose
to go south."
Most
boats aren’t Pyewacket, which will be at sailing's leading edge in its
maiden race. Disney "retired" from racing after his 15th Transpac in
2005 when Hasso Plattner's Morning Glory from
Disney
then donated his boat, a maxZ86, to the Orange Coast College School of
Sailing and Seamanship, but the defeat gnawed at him for about three
months until, now 77, he decided to charter the boat back from the
school and pump enough improvements into it to virtually ensure getting
the record back, no matter what the wind.
Pyewacket is now eight feet longer at 94 feet and has a new 130-foot
mast 30 feet taller than the old one, plus humungous port and starboard
dagger boards longer than surfboards that project from the cabin top
when not in use, and the real eye catchers: three-foot-wide wings at the
stern to stack unused sails and crew members for ballast stability.
Barker
drove
Disney
will be among 21 crew members on Pyewacket, but his thoughts also will
be with Morning Light, a team of sailors ages 18 to 23 he recruited and
trained to sail a smaller Transpac 52 in a project being filmed for a
documentary scheduled for release in theaters next spring. Rick Deppe
will be on board Morning Light as a cameraman but not as a member of the
crew. The producers have charted Steve Fossett's 125-foot power
catamaran
Eleven
of the final 15 sailors, including skipper Jeremy Wilmot of
Robbie
Haines, who serves the dual rule of sailing manager for Pyewacket and
head coach for Morning Light, doesn't think he and Disney will be
distracted by the other boat's presence in the race.
"I'm
not worried about them getting there," Haines said. "There are going to
be other boats with professionals, but after the people like Stan
[Honey], [Volvo winner] Mike Sanderson and Jerry Kirby that we've had
working with them for four months in Hawaii I think there's never been a
team better organized or better trained to sail offshore than these 15
kids."
Pyewacket's closest threat for the Barn Door---the huge slab of carved
koa wood awarded to the monohull with the fastest elapsed time---appears
to be Magnitude 80 from
The
turbocharged Pyewacket is rated more than a day faster than Magnitude 80
but Baker said, "Anything can happen, especially the way the weather is
this year."
The
problem is whether to follow Pyewacket and concede to a faster boat or
pick another course hoping for better breeze.
"Maybe
we will go the other way," Baker said, "but they have an awfully good
[navigator] on their boat. Do we think we're smarter than Stan Honey? If
all goes well, we'd just like to beat them [on] corrected [handicap
time]"---which Mag 80 did in 2005.
Every
boat in the race competes for the prestigious Governor of Hawaii Trophy
for first place overall on handicap time, rewarding the crew that sailed
its boat, whatever size, design
or age, nearest to its speed potential. Morning Light has a shot
at that. It was called Pegasus when Philippe Kahn sailed it to second
place overall behind Roger Sturgeon's Rosebud, also a TP52, in 2005.
This
time Kahn, who also won the Barn Door in 2001 and 2003, is sailing
doublehanded with Richard Clarke on his new Pegasus 101, a fast Open 50
design, chasing the Transpac doublehanded record of 10 days 4 hours 4
minutes 14 seconds set by Howard Gordon and Jay Crum in 2001.
Sturgeon, of
As
Transpac enters its second century, this race also features the youngest
and oldest crews and the oldest boat ever to compete. Skipper Sean
Doyle, 19, of
Alsumar, a Sparkman & Stephens 70 built in 1934, was restored and is
being sailed by brothers Bill and Ted Davis of
One,
Jim Partridge's Cal 2-46 from Pasadena, dropped its sails the second day
because of light winds and started to motor toward Hawaii but now,
according to the Flagship satellite tracking system, appears headed back
to California.
Saturday morning's positiojn reports indicated that the boats that
started Thursday avoided the doldrum-like conditions that trapped
Monday's starters.
Doug Grant's Tower,
a Lidgard 45 from San Pedro, logged the best day of 265 miles at 11
knots average speed to leap from seventh to first in Division 5.
The
Transpacific Yacht Club has joined with Casio Computer Co., Ltd., in a
sponsorship agreement to make the company's Oceanus watch the official
timekeeper of the 44th biennial race. The Oceanus is a solar-powered
chronograph watch with
a time signal-calibration function developed by making full use of
Casio's advanced electronic technologies.
News and product information:
http://world.casio.com/
Transpac supporters also include the Long Beach Sea Festival 2007,
Editors: If you are publishing excerpts of this release, you may link to
http://www.underthesunphotos.com/transpac2007.htm
for the complete version.
Archived press releases:
http://www.underthesunphotos.com/Press%20Releases/PR-index.htm
More
information:
www.transpacificyc.org
Transpac 2007 entries
(Standings by corrected handicap time. ORR rating allowances in
parentheses in days:hours:minutes:seconds based on handicap distance of
2,300 n.m.; subtract time allowance from actual elapsed time to
determine corrected handicap time)
Division 1 (Starts July 15)
Pyewacket (Reichel/Pugh
90),
Magnitude 80 (Andrews
80), Doug Baker,
Rosebud (STP 65),
Roger Sturgeon,
Peligroso (Kernan
70), Mike
Medicine Man (Andrews
63),
Division 2 (Starts
July 15)
Hugo Boss (Volvo 60),
Andy Tourell,
DH-Pegasus 101 (Open
50), Philippe Kahn/Richard Clarke,
Lucky (Transpac 52),
Bryon Ehrhart, Chicago (2:05:26:28)
Morning Light
(Transpac 52), Jeremy Wilmot,
Skylark (
Holua (
Trader (Transpac 52),
Fred Detwiler,
Division 3 (Starts
July 15)
Denali (Nelson/Marek
70), William McKinley,
It's OK (Andrews 50),
Tres Gordo Sailing,
Cheetah (ULDB 70),
Chris Slagerman,
Pendragon IV
(Davidson 52), John MacLaurin,
Yumehyotan (Nelson/Marek
68), Yasuo Sano,
Ragtime (Spencer 65),
Chris Welsh,
Bengal 7 (Ohashi 46),
Yoshihiko Murase,
Locomotion (Andrews
45), Ed Feo,
Division 4
(Started July 12)
1. Bolt (Nelson/Marek
55), Craig Reynolds,
2. Delicate Balance
(Andrews 56), DBB Transpac LLC,
3. Raincloud (J/48),
Lorenzo Berho
4. Lucky Dog (J/125),
Colin Shanner,
5. Verizon Wireless
(ex-Stealth Chicken; Perry 56), Timothy Beatty, Rancho
6. Cipango (Andrews
56), Bob & Rob Barton,
7. Reinrag2 (J/125),
Tom Garnier,
8. Ruahatú (Concordia
47), Ricardo Brockmann,
NO REPORT--The Secret
(MacGregor 65), Cheryle Rayson/Garry Golding,
Division 50/52
(Started July 12)
1, Relentless (
2. Adrenalin (
3. Hula Girl (
4. Kokopelli 2 (
5. Tachyon III (
6. Stags' Leap
Winery (ex-Chasch Mer;
7.
8. Passion (
9. Horizon (
Division 5 (Started
July 12)
1. Tower (Lidgard
45), Doug Grant,
3. DH-Tango (J/133),
Michael Abraham/Phillip Rowe,
4. Recidivist
(Schumacher 39), Ken Olcott,
5. On the Edge of
Destiny (1D35), Sean Doyle,
6. Uncontrollable
Urge (
7. Rancho Deluxe
(Swan 45), Mike Diepenbrock,
8. DH-Narrow Escape
(Fast 40), Allen Lehman Sr. and Jr.,
9. Paddy Wagon (Ross
40), Richard Mainland,
Division 6 (Started
July 9)
1. DH-Brilliant
(J/100), Tim Fuller/Erik Shampain,
2. Peregrine (Hobie
33), Simon Garland,
3. Psyche (
4. Far Far (
5.
6. Shanti (Olson
911S), Jon Eberly,
8.
DH-X Dream (X-119), Steen Moller/Bob
MacDonald,
9. Inspired
Environments (Beneteau First 40.7), Timothy Ballard,
Aloha A
(Started July 9)
1. French Kiss (Beneteau
50), Bryan Daniels,
2. Ariadne (Ladd 73),
Frank Easterbrook,
3. Between the Sheets
(Jeanneau 52), Ross Pearlman, Marina del Rey (5:12:56:15), 1,788.
4. Windswept (Sean
57), Maxwell Phelps,
6. Alsumar (S&S 70),
Bill and Ted Davis,
7. Anna Katarina
(First 47.7), John Otterson,
8. Enchilado (Jeanneau
54), Cesar de Saracho,
Aloha B (Started July
9)
1. Mysteré (Swan 42),
Jorge Morales, Dana Point,
2. Ginny (Calkins
50), Chris Calkins/Norm Reynolds,
3. Cirrus (Standfast
40), William D. Myers,
4. Traveler (North
Wind 47), Michael Lawler,
5. Lady Liberty
(Catalina 36), John Wallner,
RETIRED--Gaviota (Cal
2-46), Jim Partridge,
.
DH-Doublehanded.
Multihull
LoeReal (Jeanneau 60
trimaran), H.L. Enloe,
Minnow (Catana 52
catamaran), Bob and Mike Webster,
Complete position
reports:
www.transpacificyc.org
COMMODORE
(310) 600-0158
ENTRIES CHAIRMAN
(831) 476-9639
PRESS OFFICER
(310) 835-2526
Cell (310) 766-6547 |
Crew
member Anthony Merrington puts finishing touch on Rosebud
Stacking
sailors for ballast is what Pyewacket's wings are about
Danny
Akaka, a Hawaiian kahu, blesses the Pyewacket (rear) and Morning Light
(foreground) boats
Pendragon IV (l.),
Click to
visit websites
Official
timekeeper of Transpac 2007
Shoreline YC lead mainland host
Transpac schedule of events
Sunday,
July 15
10 a.m.---Final
start ceremonies,
1 p.m.---Divisions
1, 2, 3 start, Point Fermin, San Pedro
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