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EuroSail News #4294 - 13 March

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In This Issue
Inaugural Offshore Sailing World Championship heads to Malta
Uku Randmaa claims 3rd podium place in Golden Globe Race
Positions Vacant With A+T Instruments
Delays - 2019 AC World Series Cancelled?
PRB relaunched in the colours of Arkea-Paprec
First entries in for 29th Australian Women's Keelboat Regatta
Seahorse Sailor Of The Month
Melges 24 European Sailing Series
Why cargo ships might (literally) sail the high seas again
Letters to the Editor
Featured Brokerage
The Last Word: John Peel

Brought to you by Seahorse magazine and YachtScoring.com EuroSail News is a digest of sailing news and opinions, regatta results, new boat and gear information and letters from sailors -- with a European emphasis. Contributions welcome, send to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Inaugural Offshore Sailing World Championship heads to Malta
The inaugural edition of World Sailing's Offshore World Championship will be held in October 2020 in Valletta, Malta alongside the Rolex Middle Sea Race.

Announced in 2017, the Offshore Sailing World Championship will be a powerful platform to accelerate the interest and growth of offshore one-design mixed double-handed sailing within the sailing community.

The 2020 Offshore Sailing World Championship will be organised in collaboration with the Royal Malta Yacht Club and World Sailing.

Originally earmarked to be held in 2019, World Sailing postponed the hosting to 2020 to allow a full qualification system to be developed, allowing ample opportunity for Member National Authorities to qualify and prepare for the event.

The Championship will be a two person mixed competition (one man, one woman) between nations, featuring 20 boats. Held alongside the Rolex Middle Sea Race, the competitors may be required to sail the full course or a reduced course depending on the weather conditions. It is designed to cater to the fast-growing double-handed offshore community worldwide. An important goal is to engage countries new to double-handed offshore sailing by providing turnkey equipment ready to use at the event venue as well as boats being available to charter in Europe for training from the summer of 2019.

Further information on the boats that will be used, the qualification system and race format will be announced in due course.

www.sailing.org

Uku Randmaa claims 3rd podium place in Golden Globe Race
Uku Randmaa crossed the Les Sables d'Olonne finish line at 09:00 UTC today to secure third place in Golden Globe Race. Thousands lined the river entrance to catch a glimpse of this quiet spoken 56 year old Estonian solo circumnavigator and his boat.

Waiting for him at the dock was his wife Maibi and young twins Thor and Orm who were born shortly before his departure, together with the family of fellow circumnavigators who he had kept each other going through good times and bad over the radio. Winner Jean-Luc Van Den Heede was one of the first to shake his hand followed by Dutchman Mark Slats, and two who were rescued in mid-ocean, Loic Lepage and Susie Goodall.

After almost 252 days at sea, all he had left in his larder was three packets of powdered soup, and he grabbed the pizza offered to him with both hands. The champagne was also something to savour, but before quaffing a drop himself, Uku thanked God for his safe return and poured some in the water, then thanked his boat One and All, sprinkling more on the mast and saved the biggest amount for his 2nd crew-mate - his Hydrovane self steering before passing it round his fellow GGR skippers,

Talking about his diet he said: "I think I must have lost at least 20kg. By Hobart, I knew I was going to run short of food so I divided up what I had left by two…and then I divided it by two more. I had two meals a day; a freeze dried dish and a cup of soup, but it has been very good for my health. If I did physical work, I got tired early, but it was not a major problem.`'

`'The hardest part of the voyage was lack of wind. I was stuck in the St Helena high pressure system for more than a week. My biggest worry was keeping the boat in one piece. I was worried that if something broke I might not be able to finish the race"

Another reflection on the voyage was the amount of rubbish in the oceans. "The biggest pollution - mainly plastic - was after rounding the Cape of Good Hope. There were streams of it in the ocean. At one time time I came across a door and on another occasion, a complete tree. If I had hit that, I think my steering would have broken."

What did he enjoy most? "Oh, the Southern Ocean: the waves, the loneliness. The waves were amazing. I watched them for hours and everyone one was different."

4th placed American/Hungarian Istvan Kopar is now within 950 miles of the finish and is expected to reach Les Sables d'Olonne on March 18-19.

goldengloberace.com

Positions Vacant With A+T Instruments
A+T Instruments A+T are the rapidly growing designer and manufacturer of very high-quality instruments for the Superyacht and race boat markets.

Offering upgrades and complete systems, A+T are suppliers to some 250 of the world's largest and fastest yachts. Key to A+T's business is the provision of excellent support.

Year on year growth has been 40% and now A+T are looking to expand their sales team with three appointments:

Technical Sales and Support
Preparation of proposals, drawings and dealing with technical enquiries. Liaison with captains, engineers, high-end electronics installers, project managers and yards. Mostly office based with some travel to visit yachts, dealers, yards and attend trade shows.

Outbound Sales
Office based outbound sales activity primarily around installer/dealers, refit and new-build yards.

Regatta Sales and Support
An upcoming or established professional sailor/tactician/navigator who can add a part-time role around sailing. Providing support, networking and direct sales at regattas and assisting with office- based testing, documentation, product feedback and improvements between events.

Great communication skills and a passion for excellent customer service are essential for all roles. A+T are a friendly team based in comfortable offices in Lymington, UK.

For detailed job description or to apply please email gemma [AT] aandtinstruments [DOT] com

For any candidates in the Caribbean over the next few weeks there may be an opportunity to meet Hugh Agnew, one of our directors, who will be at St Barths's Bucket and then in Antigua.

www.AandTinstruments.com

Delays - 2019 AC World Series Cancelled?
Challenger of Record Luna Rossa announced in November 2018 that the first AC World Series would be in Cagliari, where their base is located, in October 2019. With delays caused by arbitration over the late challengers and structural problems with the design of the one design supplied equipment foil arms, it seems that event has been cancelled. Italy's Giornale della Vela reports here that Luna Rossa's Technical Director Matteo Plazzi made the announcement at a recent Italian sailing awards ceremony.

The Protocol says there would be "possibly" one or two ACWS regattas in 2019. It also says the ACWS "shall comprise three events" in 2020. Remember that "shall" is used to indicate something mandatory. Speculation about a fourth ACWS in 2020 would require a Protocol change. Not impossible, but it would require ETNZ and Luna Rossa to agree to the change.

2020 AC World Series Venues

The Protocol requires announcing the venues for the three 2020 ACWS events by 30 November 2019. Presumably the first one will be in Cagliari in Spring. DutchSail has "requested" awarding an ACWS to The Hague / Scheveningen. Newport, Rhode Island; Long Beach, California; and Hong Kong have all been mentioned as possible venues.

DutchSail's website shows March 2020 as the launch date for their AC75, leaving little time to learn to sail and race it safely before the first ACWS. There has been no news from Malta Altus Challenge about their AC75 launch date. Remember that the Protocol clearly states that if a challenger misses an ACWS event, they are no longer eligible for the Prada Cup Challenger Selection Series.

Jack Griffin in Cup Experience: club.cupexperience.com

PRB relaunched in the colours of Arkea-Paprec
Things are starting to move for Sebastien Simon. On Tuesday 26th February, the IMOCA, PRB, was relaunched displaying the colours of her sponsors, Arkea and Paprec. It is on this foiler the the winner of the last Solitaire du Figaro will be training, while he awaits the delivery from the yard in late June - early July of his brand new Kouyoumdjian designed boat. Sebastien Simon and Vincent Riou, the technical director for the project, will shortly be attempting to smash the record for the Columbus Route (Cadiz/San Salvador). In April, Sebastien will be returning home, sailing as if he was alone, before setting off on 8th May at the start of the Bermuda 1000 race.

Getting used to sailing Vincent Riou's IMOCA, while you wait for your future IMOCA, Arkea-Paprec, to be completed, is a luxury...
"It's the ideal situation being able to sail on an IMOCA immediately. Otherwise, we would have had to wait until July. The Vendee Globe is a big race, which requires a lot of preparation. I still don't have much experience of IMOCAs and none at all sailing solo. Thanks to these couple of months training on the former PRB, when Arkea-Paprec is launched, I won't be in the learning phase, but rather aiming for performance."

This transition isn't happening on any old boat. PRB is one of the references in the IMOCA class and since last season, she has been fitted with foils...
"PRB is now around ten years old, but she was ahead of her time. She was upgraded last season with the installation of foils. I have already had an opportunity to sail on her. In particular after the last Route du Rhum, and she feels great. To start off with, she was awe inspiring, then she was amazing and you end up getting used to her. You can get used to anything. She's a magnificent boat to train on, but also as a sort of lab to test things before my new boat is launched, so that we can run through certain elements, such as the autopilots and sails for example."

The former skipper of PRB, Vincent Riou, is also your technical director for the Arkea-Paprec project. That all seems to come together well...
"I have no regrets about my choice. We get on very well together and Vincent is being very kind to me. He is there to help me build a great boat, ensure I get the full potential out of her and to train me. He has taken part in the Vendee Globe four times and won once. He has an exceptional experience and I can learn a lot from him. It's reassuring to have him alongside me. He supports me, guides me, while leaving me a certain amount of freedom and independence to work on my project."

Full interview on imoca.org

First entries in for 29th Australian Women's Keelboat Regatta
Entries are open for Royal Melbourne Yacht Squadron's (RMYS) 29th Australian Women's Keelboat Regatta (AWKR) and Victorian competitors are throwing down the gauntlet; many will come fresh from competing in the 2018/19 Port Phillip Women's Championship in Melbourne, ending on Sunday 28 April - and two have been quick to enter.

To be held from 8-10 June 2019 and open exclusively to women's' crews from Australia and overseas, committee chair Kristen Buckland has a good feeling around the increasingly popular event, "I am confident that we will have over 30 boats competing from across Australia and New Zealand this year."

First in for the AWKR, founded by a past RMYS Commodore and past entrant Gai Clough, were RMYS members, Nadine Huels and Aurelie Chabrol with their Archambault 32 Remedy. They were quickly followed by Royal Yacht Club of Victoria member, Margaret Goddard, and her Cavalier 30, Balderdash.

While it goes without saying that Victoria will field the largest numbers, strong contenders will also come from Queensland, South Australia, NSW, Western Australia, Tasmania and as far away as the Northern Territory. The Aussies will be joined by possibly three from across the ditch in New Zealand.

Among the Victorian skippers also committed is last year's Division 1 runner-up, Monica Jones (RMYS club captain), owner of the Adams Salamander III. And she is just as committed to helping women reach their sailing potential as she is on performing at the top level.

Consistently on the podium in open competition and at women's events, Jones is highly rated by her opponents. She will be joined by others who have been in winning form at the PPWCS; Marnie Irving, winner of February's Jennifer Goldsmith Trophy with her Cavalier 395, Cavarlo and Leo Eeckman, who sailed the Southern Ocean 31 Le Cascadeur to victory in the Val Hodge Trophy.

The AWKR is Australia's premier and longest running all-female women's keelboat regatta. The 29th running was launched earlier this year at RMYS by Wendy Tuck, winner of the 2017-2018 Clipper Round the World Race. Tuck is the first and only woman skipper to win an around the world yacht race. -- Di Pearson/AWKR media

www.awkr.com.au

Seahorse Sailor Of The Month

Last month's winner:

Simon Fry (GBR)
'It's pretty obvious why, Simon (left, above) and I have achieved a lot together over the past 20 years, originally put together by our great friend and crewmate Glyn Charles' - Andy Beadsworth; 'When someone writes the book of British sailing legends he'll have his own chapter!' - Matt Cornwell; 'Great sailor, weapons grade in the bar' - Magnus Wheatley; 'About time a decent crew man got the award instead of the fly-by-night back end chancers' - Alastair Munro; 'Once a menace always a menace, there is no better man to have on your crew… or standing beside you in the bar' - Ian Walker; 'The best!' - Serhat Altay.

This month's nominees:


Jason Carroll (USA)
Not for that steady flow of results in the Melges 32, GC32 and other classes, this one is for managing to flip your MOD 70 trimaran two days before the start of the Caribbean 600 and then pressing the 'go for it' button so hard that the Argo team got the boat back up, dried out and fixed up enough of the electrics to get them safely round all the rocks. Props also to MOD 70 rival Giovanni Soldini for delaying his own start by two hours to make a race of it


Rod Davis (NZL)
'I'm over the moon…' not surprising after the Olympic gold medallist super-coach won the Masters division at the OK Worlds -much more impressively finishing ninth overall in the 110-boat open fleet. Putting it out there like that is not something every former Cup sailor chooses to do - one or two have come unstuck in the not so distant past. Rod was also happy to be able to follow his own methods as recorded in these pages and see for himself that it works!


Seahorse Sailor of the Month is sponsored by Musto, Harken McLube & Dubarry. Who needs silverware, our prizes are usable!

Cast your vote, submit comments, even suggest a candidate for next month at seahorsemagazine.com/sailor-of-the-month/vote-for-sailor-of-the-month

View past winners of Sailor of the Month

Melges 24 European Sailing Series
With just a few days to go before the beginning of spring, it's already time to think about the upcoming sailing season and the Melges 24 fleet is excited to get back to the water in Europe, for a season that will be one of the most exciting of the latest years.

Four events plus the Melges 24 World Championship, that will be hosted in the stunning location of Villasimius, one of the most iconic touristic destinations of Sardinia, famous for its clear waters and blue skies. Villasimius which benefits from a typical Mediterranean climate, will welcome sailors from all over the World in the still warm month of October, from the 5th to 12th.

The opening of the 2019 Melges 24 European Sailing Series will be sailed on April 5th to 7th in Portoroz, Slovenia - a must-go location for the Melges 24 fleet, and that is getting ready to host the 2020 Europeans.

The inaugural event will be followed by two events on Garda Lake that, with the legs of Malcesine (May 3-5) and Riva del Garda (June 7-9) will entertain the fleets with challenging conditions with the typical winds of the Lake, Ponale in the morning and Ora in the afternoon. The fourth event will bring the Melges 24 fleet more South to Scarlino (July 19-21), where the Melges 24 Italian champions 2019 will be found out.

The winners of the 2019 Melges 24 European Sailing Series will be determined on the main podium of the World Championship in Villasimius right before the new Melges 24 world champions will be crowned in the same place.

melges24.com/europeansailingseries

Why cargo ships might (literally) sail the high seas again
There's something inherently romantic about the great ships of yore: Those massive sails piercing the sky above an endless horizon.

These days, of course, we've given up the sails for the brute force of fossil fuel engines. The modern shipping industry has sacrificed elegance - not to mention the environment - for volume, speed, and efficiency.

But those old sails may be coming back.

There's an overarching organization - the International Windship Association - that's pushing wind propulsion for commercial shipping, and liaising between various governments and entrepreneurs and researchers. But then there are the specific projects, scattered about the globe, in both private business and academia.

Take the Smart Green Shipping Alliance as an example. It's working on a combination of sailing technology and clean fuel to reduce cargo ships' CO2 emissions, hopefully to zero eventually. Diane Gilpin, who founded and heads up the initiative, explained to The Week that they're working on two goals. One is a cargo ship designed from the keel up for sailing, with an optimized hull and so on. The idea has been run through computer simulations and some testing of physical models, and they think as much as 50 percent of the propulsion could come from the sails. "If we do it from scratch we can get better performance results than if we have to retrofit an existing ship," Gilpin explained.

But building new cargo ships, especially technologically-advanced sailing-optimized ones, is expensive. And like much of the global economy, the shipping industry is in an uncertain spot right now.

Thus Gilpin and her colleagues are also looking into retrofitting existing cargo ships. "We want a plug-and-play type system," she said: Ships come into port, they offload their cargo, the sails are installed as new cargo is loaded in, and the ship heads off again. Quick and easy. The sails would be adjustable and retractable, so they can stay out of the way of the loading dock cranes, or when the ship goes under a bridge or maneuvers into port.

The group has been refining the design, getting feedback from players in the industry, and then going back to the drawing board. They're on their third iteration and hope to begin a demonstration project with a fully retrofitted ship in 2021. They think their retrofitted sails could cut 20 percent of fuel consumption.

The Wind Challenger Project, which was started by the University of Tokyo, in conjunction with private shipping companies in Japan, is aiming for much the same goal: A system of sails that can be attached to current cargo vessels, that are maneuverable and retractable, and could cut fuel use by 20 percent. In a further convergence, the sails the two projects are working on even look similar: large, rectangular, multi-sectioned affairs that soar vertically from the ship's deck. Kazuyuki Ouchi, a professor at the University who leads the effort, told The Week they too hope to test a full scale model as soon as 2021.

theweek.com/articles

Letters To The Editor - editor [AT] scuttlebutteurope [DOT] com
Letters are limited to 350 words. No personal attacks are permitted. We do require your name but your email address will not be published without your permission.

Laurent Bourgnon

* From John Burnie: re Primagaz

Interesting to see the photo of the Orma 60 Primagaz on the first page in the latest Seahorse. Laurent Bourgnon who won the Route Du Rhum twice on the yachts is cited as a hero. I have to concur -having raced the yacht a few times (fully crewed) in the Caribbean in the RORC Caribbean 600 (in its later guise as Region Guadeloupe) you will see in the photo attached that the helm position has been moved a good distance inboard. Much easier to get into the cockpit to adjust things. Sitting in his helm seat, dangerously exposed and way out on the weather hull, Laurent was indeed a very tough hero!

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See the RaceboatsOnly.com collection at seahorsemagazine.com/brokerage/

The Last Word
Somebody was trying to tell me that CDs are better than vinyl because they don't have any surface noise. I said, 'Listen, mate, *life* has surface noise." -- John Peel

Editorial and letter submissions to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Advertising inquiries to Graeme Beeson: gb [AT] beesonstone [DOT] com or see www.eurosailnews.com/advertise.html


EuroSail News #4295 - 14 March

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In This Issue
Sea Trials underway in Valencia
The Ocean Race: how sailors and organisers are preparing
Dolan and Foxall Team Up As All-Irish Challenge For Figaro Season Opener
Capri Classica - the first bespoke regatta for classic schooners
Ten places left for Finns at Tokyo 2020
Windy Weekend In Store For King George
Free Easter boat speed
Opposition to NZ superyacht levy grows
Eight Bells: Jack Baxter
Paul Heys - Celebration of an incredible man
Featured Brokerage
The Last Word: Douglas Adams

Brought to you by Seahorse magazine and YachtScoring.com EuroSail News is a digest of sailing news and opinions, regatta results, new boat and gear information and letters from sailors -- with a European emphasis. Contributions welcome, send to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Sea Trials underway in Valencia
Sea Trials for the selection of Equipment for the Paris 2024 Olympic Sailing Competition Men's and Women's One Person Dinghy Events commenced on 11 March in Valencia, Spain.

Real Club Nautico de Valencia is hosting an Evaluation Panel and sailors through to Friday 15 March. During the sea-trials, sailors will sail and test the four boats shortlisted during the Re-evaluation procedure. These include:

D-Zero, presented by Devotti Sailing s.r.o.
Laser Standard and Laser Radial sailboat, presented by ILCA
Melges 14, presented by Melges Boat Works Inc., NELO and Mackay Boats Ltd.
RS Aero, presented by RS Sailing.

Sailors from nine nations are in Valencia, testing the boats. World Sailing invited Member National Authorities to put forward male sailors with a weight range of 75kg to 90kg and female sailors in the 55kg to 70kg weight range.

Sailors at the sea-trials include:

Ash Brunning (AUS)
Guillaume Boisard (FRA)
Pavlos Kontides (CYP)
Stepan Novotny (CZE)
Christian G. Rost (DEN)
Ben Childerley (GBR)
Anna Munch (DEN)
Sarah McGovern (GBR)
Fatima Reyes (ESP)
Tania Elias Calles (MEX)
Mafalda Pires de Lima (POR)

Sailors will sail the boats on a daily basis, testing them in a variety of conditions in Valencia, providing the Evaluation Panel with feedback on items such as performance.

Representatives from each boat will also be invited to present to the Evaluation Panel on universality, measurement, quality control and cost.

World Sailing launched the tender process in May 2018 which invited Class Associations and Manufacturers to tender for the Men's and Women's One Person Dinghy following World Sailing's Olympic Re-evaluation Policy, detailed in Regulation 23.6 and approved by World Sailing's Council at the 2017 Annual Conference in Mexico.

Following the Sea-trial phase, World Sailing's Council will select the Equipment in 2019.

sailing.org

The Ocean Race: how sailors and organisers are preparing
The Ocean Race, the crewed round the world race with stopovers raced for the first time on IMOCAs with foils, will start in Alicante in October 2021. With just over two and a half years to go to the start, the organisers and sailors are already busy preparing behind the scenes for this new event on the IMOCA calendar. We look at the state of play with Johan Salen, co-President of The Ocean Race and skipper Boris Herrmann.

"We are talking to everyone and the potential teams can be divided into three major groups," explained Johan Salen, co-President of The Ocean Race. "We are in contact with existing IMOCA teams, a majority of which are French, but also with teams from the last Volvo and some other teams that are completely new. The teams that are interested come from France, Spain, Germany, Italy, Mexico, the United States, Brazil, Sweden, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Australia, China, South Africa... And we have some other important countries we need to get involved. The goal is to bring together highly professional international teams that are well organised and structured with active sponsors."

For Johan Salen, it is clear that bringing together the ex-Volvo Ocean Race and the IMOCA class is very welcome. "Working with a class that has shown what it can do helps our sport to be less fragmented. It means we can look forward to more feedback with the same platform," he said. What do the sailors already involved in the IMOCA class think about this? We talked to three of them.

Boris Herrmann: "An adventure that complements the Vendee Globe"
In 2020, Boris Herrmann, skipper of Malizia 2, is set to become the first German to take part in the Vendee Globe, but Boris is already looking further ahead. "The Ocean Race interests me a lot," he told us. "The idea is to ensure our project continues with the same boat (a VPLP-Verdier design from 2015, ex Edmond de Rothschild). This crewed adventure complements perfectly the Vendee Globe. In my opinion, there are four big dreams for sailors: the Olympic Games, the America's Cup, the Volvo Ocean Race and the Vendee Globe. Now, two of these four events are raced on the same boat. That is very inspiring."

Already supported by the Monaco Yacht Club, Boris Herrmann is confident he will be able to attract German firms to complete his budget for The Ocean Race. "The crewed round the world race means a lot to Germans. In 2001-2002, a German crew won the Volvo Ocean Race, Illbruck Challenge. There was a huge event organised at the finish in Kiel, which was absolutely incredible. Since then, no major projects have appeared in Germany. This is a great opportunity to get one going again." If he manages to find the required funding, Boris believes that he will set off with an eclectic crew: "The idea isn't to set up a team that is 100% German. In my team at the moment there are as many different nationalities as there are people involved! I love that diversity."

www.theoceanrace.com

Dolan and Foxall Team Up As All-Irish Challenge For Figaro Season Opener
Tom Dolan will form an all-Irish partnership with the vastly experienced Damian Foxall for the first race for the new Figaro Beneteau 3, the Sardinha Cup which starts on March 27th.

After last year's promising first season in the Figaro one design class, finishing third rookie overall, Dolan has embraced the circuit's change to the brand new foiling Figaro Beneteau 3, and has spent recent weeks learning how to make the new boat sail fast. Sailing and training with the star studded Lorient training group, Dolan is profiting from Foxall's skills and experience, on and off the water.

Ten times round the world sailor, a winner of the crewed Volvo Ocean Race and the two handed Barcelona World Race round the world, Foxall cut his teeth in the solo and short-handed world in the Figaro class in the late 1990s and early 2000s. He became was the first even non French skipper to win a leg of La Solitaire du Figaro and who finished top rookie in 1997.

The decision to move to the new foil-assisted, faster and more responsive Figaro 3 has proven a magnet to many of the top French ocean racing stars such as Loick Peyron, Michel Desjoyeaux, and Charles Caudrelier as well as three times La Solitaire winners Jeremie Beyou and Yann Eliès.

Dolan received his new Figaro 3 on January 25th and had his first training sessions in February coached by Tanguy Leglatin and Gildas Mahe.

The Sardinha Cup, from 26 March to 13 April 2019, will launch the 2019 French Offshore Racing Championship! This new double-handed race is the first on the new Figaro Beneteau 3 and it will line up over 50 racers at the starting line in the port of Saint-Gilles-Croix-de-Vie. The race is organized by Team Vendee Formation, which provides unique support and training in the sailing profession.

The Sardinha Cup is open to all the Figaro Beneteau 3 boats complying with 2019 Figaro Class rules and it is the first event in the French "Elite Offshore racing " championship. It will be followed by the Solo Maître Coque and the Solitaire Urgo le Figaro. The race village will open officially on 26 March 2019, at Port la Vie, where the teams will be presented.

www.beneteau.com

Capri Classica - the first bespoke regatta for classic schooners
Press release issued by the International Maxi Association and International Schooner Association From 8th to 12th May the world's largest and most beautiful classic schooners will line up off Capri for the first event initiated by the newly formed International Schooner Association

Following the founding of the International Schooner Association (ISA) at a meeting during last September's Regates Royales in Cannes, so the first ever event purely for classic schooners will take place off Capri in May.

The ISA, the Circolo del Remo e della Vela Italia and the Yacht Club Capri, with the support of the International Maxi Association (IMA), have launched the Capri Classica which will take place over 8-12 May, just before Capri Rolex Sailing Week.

This new regatta will see some of the largest classic yachts competing in an event with a unique format, specifically tailored to classic schooners. Race starts from anchor, staggered starts, race courses optimised for the peculiarities of the classic schooner sailing - these are just some of the new features to be introduced by the organisers plus the team from The Classic Yacht Experience (TCYE), a company created by like-minded individuals, passionate about schooners and with the desire to promote yachting's purest and most traditional format.

The Capri Classica will be the first round of the International Schooner Association's 2019 Schooner Cup Series. The other two events in this series will be Monaco Classic Week (11-15 September) and Les Voiles de Saint Tropez (26 September- 6 October), at the end of the Mediterranean summer season.

Andrew McIrvine, Secretary General of the International Maxi Assocation added: "The IMA is delighted to be supporting the first regatta designed solely for classic schooners and the inaugural event for the International Schooner Association. Our stated aim is to stimulate and support all forms of maxi yacht racing. We look forward to continuing our affiliation through the next events in their series in Monaco and Saint-Tropez."

internationalschoonerassociation.com

internationalmaxiassociation.com

Ten places left for Finns at Tokyo 2020
Over the coming 14 months the final 10 places for Finns on the starting line at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics will be determined. With the exception of the African continental qualifier, the full qualification system for the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games has been published by World Sailing.

The Qualification system is published here

and the continental events are here

The Finn class will have 19 places in Tokyo. Eight places (40%) were awarded in 2018 and seven events over the next 14 months will decide the remaining 10. The qualification events will run from the European Championship in Athens, in May 2019, through to the Genoa world cup event in April 2020.

Four places are initially available in Athens, after which one place is available at each of the various Continental Qualifiers, plus an automatic place for Japan, the host nation. Only the venue for the African qualifier has to be announced - it is still being discussed whether this will be in South Africa or at the Genoa world cup event. The objective is to make it possible for the maximum number of sailors from African nations to be able to take part.

finnclass.org

Windy Weekend In Store For King George
The forecast for the King George Gallop is promising a stern test this weekend on the North London reservoir. Just down the road from Alexandra Palace, where a couple of weeks ago all manner of dinghies and small cats and keelboats were on display, the goal of the Great British Sailing Challenge is to achieve the same kind of diversity on the water.

Using the latest version of the Great Lakes handicap numbers, a variation of the RYA PY system, along with GPS-based Dynamic Handicapping developed by SailRacer, this event and others in the Challenge aims to create as fair a playing field as possible for a wide range of boats. The Saturday schedule is three back-to-back handicap races with a Fast and Slow start three minutes apart, while Sunday concludes the regatta with a Pursuit Race.

The strong forecast for Saturday could suit Tony Burton's Contender from the home club, and also another trapeze singlehander, Michael Iszatt in his RS600. Jonathan Carter's Vortex will enjoy the strong breeze too. The reigning RS600 National Champion Richard Smith might be wondering if he should have signed on in the singlehander, although he's down to compete with his 21-year-old daughter Ellie in the RS800.

The National 18s have proven very potent on the Selden SailJuice Winter Series, and Jessica Berney from Blackwater Sailing Club will be at the helm of her powerful 18-footer this weekend.

After 13 years out of the boat, co-founder of the Great British Sailing Challenge, Andy Rice, has been coaxed out of 49er retirement by 19-year-old 29er sailor Ewan Gribbin who has recently bought a secondhand Olympic skiff. With a 31-year age gap, Rice and Gribbin easily qualify for one of the sub-series in the Great British Sailing Challenge called the 'Generation Game', which encourages sailors of different ages to sail together.

www.sailingchallenge.org

Free Easter boat speed
You can pay for new sails. You can pay for keel fairing and a good bottom job. You can pay a specialist to try and optimise your IRC rating. Any of the above will help you to get around the race track faster in a more successful manner. But none address the real issue - that boat speed gains, ultimately translating into performance on the race course, can come just as readily if you spend time not money. You can change the set-up and trim of your boat, and spend time on the water testing that while practicing to improve your crew's skill-sets, boat handling and techniques. The fast track way to do this is by employing a coach - the reason why Olympic sailors and America's Cup teams have them full time. However, competitors at the RORC Easter Challenge (Friday 19th-Sunday 21st April) - be they RORC members or not - can receive coaching for FREE from some top names.

This coaching is laid on by the Royal Ocean Racing Club to improve general sailing skills, and thus the tightness of the racing, both in its own fleets and more broadly. As a result it attracts crews from the continent too, notably this year the de Graaf family's Baraka GP from the Netherlands and the Goubau's First 47.7 Moana from Belgium.

Once again North Sails is a partner of the RORC Easter Challenge and various sailmakers from the Gosport loft will be both helping with the on-the-water coaching, while others will be sailing on key boats in the fleet.

For those unfamiliar with the event, the coaching comes in two significant parts. On the water the event is almost unique in having RRS 41 'Outside Help' relaxed. This permits coaches can climb on board to demonstrate something and/or crew can step off on to a coaching RIB to check trim... mid-race.

Post racing on the Friday and Saturday nights at the RORC's Cowes Clubhouse, the coaching team will examine lessons learned during the day, backed up with video from the race course. New for 2019 is that due to the breadth of the fleet and the introduction of a doublehanded class, the debrief session for the whole group will be followed by sessions for smaller groups, with, for example, Nikki Curwen leading the one for doublehanders.

www.rorc.org/news/news-2011/news-2019/free-easter-boat-speed

Opposition to NZ superyacht levy grows
Auckland Council has proposed an anchorage tax on foreign-flagged superyachts longer than 40m

Opposition is growing to an Auckland Council proposal for an anchorage tax on foreign-flagged superyachts longer than 40m that moor in waters off the city. If the levy is imposed, the New Zealand Marine Industry Association believes it would cut into the estimated NZ$360m that superyacht visits contribute to the national economy.

The move is estimated to add as much as NZ$1,495 a day to anchor off Great Barrier Island in the Hauraki Gulf.

The most recent to join the fray is Team New Zealand, the defending America's Cup champions. "Owners will simply choose to go to other destinations around the world out of principle at being unnecessarily gouged," said the team in a statement, according to stuff.com. Estimates are that up to 160 superyachts could attend the America's Cup in Auckland in 2021.

NZ MIA executive director Peter Busfield is quoted by the website, saying the government hasn't done its homework. "In Sardinia they imposed an anchoring levy and there was a significant level of disgust, to the extent the Sardinian government had to repeal it," he said. "The superyachts went to Palma Mallorca, which is now a major superyacht hub."

In its statement, Team New Zealand said the impact of taxing superyacht owners has been seen in earlier regattas. "As well as the Sardinia example, we saw at the America's Cup in Valencia in 2007 and Bermuda in 2017, that attempts to gouge the superyacht owners meant they simply didn't come," a spokesman said. -- Tony Esposito

www.ibinews.com

Eight Bells: Jack Baxter
 Jack Baxter For those readers thinking, who? You need to be either an Australian sailor, of a certain age, a participant in the IOR racing in the 1970s and 1980s or a serious aficionado of the America's Cup, in 12 meters.

Jack was a fixture, a near legend I reckon, in the West Australian sailing scene for the better part of 60 years. Coach, crew, navigator, skipper, boat owner and builder, Jack navigated Alan Bond's 12 meters for three America's Cup challenges in Newport, in between a life full of sailing.

Jack Baxter quietly, and peacefully, crossed the bar on Monday 4 March 2019, aged 79, in the company of his wife of nearly 60 years, Di, and three wonderful daughters.

Born in 1939, Jack worked as a Math and Manual Arts teacher in Albany, Western Australia before his first AC with Bondy, as Navigator aboard Southern Cross, in 1974.

He sailed in the Admiral's Cup aboard Hitchhiker, in the Clipper Cup, the Sardinia Cup, and 1976 Half Ton worlds in Trieste, ITA. Jack could spin a good yarn, a significant accomplishment in the Australian sailing community and I remember an instructive (to a nipper Boat Captain) yarn of sailing as Navigator aboard Southern Cross, the first Aluminum 12 meter ever built. -- Joe Cooper

www.sailingscuttlebutt.com/

Paul Heys - Celebration of an incredible man
Paul Heys Afternoon of Tuesday 19th March

On behalf of the team at Key Yachting, we would like to say a huge thank you, for the astounding number of cards and messages we have received since we told you the news of Paul's passing. Even if we have not been able to respond to your message yet, please know that we have read them all. Your support has given us an incredible amount of strength, and we are especially proud to have called Paul a husband, father, friend, and boss.

Anyone who wishes to attend the funeral is very welcome. This will take place on Tuesday 19th March.

As the River Hamble and the village were such a huge part of Paul's life, the funeral car will pass through the village, and along The Quay, on the way to the crematorium. This is an opportunity for anyone who wishes to pay their respects. We estimate this will take place around 13.30.

14.30 - 16.00: Service at Test Valley Crematorium, Ridge Lane, Romsey SO51 6AB. As we anticipate large numbers, please be aware that many guests will be asked to stand throughout the service.

16.30 - late: Drinks and reminiscing at the Royal Southern Yacht Club, Hamble SO31 4HB.

To help us with our planning, please let us know you are coming by replying to this email.

Dress code: Whatever's comfortable, including regatta t-shirts that remind you of Paul!

As opposed to floral contributions, please give generously to Hampshire & Isle of Wight Air Ambulance.

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The Last Word
I don't accept the currently fashionable assertion that any view is automatically as worthy of respect as any equal and opposite view. -- Douglas Adams

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EuroSail News #4296 - 15 March

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In This Issue
92 days 'til Marion Bermuda XXII
Record attempt ends for Pixel Boat
What's in the Latest Edition Of Seahorse Magazine
Solitaire Urgo de Figaro
Miami to Havana Race
Merlin Rockets Open Meeting
Modernizing the Laser Design
RC35 Class Ready for the Sailing Season
Two Sailors In Their Thirties To Tackle The Vendee Globe
Blind San Diego sailor making waves in record trans-Pacific crossing
Correction: Paul Heys service
Letters to the Editor
Featured Brokerage
The Last Word: Albus Dumbledore

Brought to you by Seahorse magazine and YachtScoring.com EuroSail News is a digest of sailing news and opinions, regatta results, new boat and gear information and letters from sailors -- with a European emphasis. Contributions welcome, send to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

92 days 'til Marion Bermuda XXII
The 2019 Marion Bermuda Race starts June 14. More than 90 days to go seems like a lot of time to get all of your preparations done; but when that last week comes, every skipper and every crew member wants more time to finish the last minute details.

As of Monday, there were 46 confirmed entries. Marketing Chair Ray Cullum of Marion says there are several more entries in the pipeline. Could that be you?

"We expect 50 or more boats on the line in June," Cullum said. "One boat we know of that hasn't entered yet, but we know she's coming, is the 'Spirit of Bermuda' in the Classic Yacht Division. She will match up against the Tabor Academy training vessel 'Tabor Boy' and for the first time have some competition in that division."

The Marion Bermuda Race offers a very strong Celestial Navigation incentive and some nice prizes for that division. Cullum pointed out that 18 of the current entries will be in the Celestial bunch. That's more than double the star-steering entries in 2017.

The 2017 race was won by the Class D yacht 'Selkie', a Morris 32.5 skippered by Chip Bradish. 'Selkie' had elected to use celestial navigation giving her a 3% handicap time bonus over the GPS-navigated yachts in the race. 'Selkie' won Class D, short-handed, celestial, and of course, overall. 'Selkie' will be back to defend her title this year.

In 2017, the 40th anniversary and the 21st running of the biennial Marion Bermuda Race went down as a light air battle to the finish. With the Bermuda high shutting down the breeze about 100 miles from the 'rock' and the line off of St. David's Lighthouse in Bermuda, racing was a test of patience for the Class D boats which ultimately swept all the overall podium places.

Special Trophy Races
There are races for several special trophy within the Marion Bermuda Race.

The R&W Rope Rigging Solutions Team Trophy is offered for established Yacht Clubs or Sailing organizations that form a team of three member yachts. The team whose three yachts have the lowest corrected time total will be the winner.

Yachts sailing with a crew of two, a crew of three or four or an all-female crew of any number may compete in the double-handed, short-handed, and all-female competitions respectively. Prizes are the Double-Handed Trophy, the short-handed L. Bryon Kingery, Jr. Memorial Trophy and the Commodore Faith Paulsen Trophy for the ladies.

The Offshore Youth Challenge Trophy encourages youth participation. A "youth" yacht is one with at least 4four youths aboard with at least 66% of the crew qualified as youths. A youth sailor must be 16 years of age or older but not more than 23 years old by June 8, 2017. One or more adults at least 23 years old by June 8, 2017 must be onboard.

The Beverly Yacht Club Polaris Trophy is a prize for stargazers. If a yacht has elected to be celestially navigated, she will receive a 3% favorable adjustment to her ORR rating.

The first Marion-Bermuda Cruising Yacht Race in 1977 saw 104 starters cross the line. Over the forty years since that first race the race has evolved into a true offshore challenge for cruising yachts, amateur, family and youth sailors. Special prizes abound to emphasis celestial navigation, short handed sailing, family crews and regional competition. The race is handicapped under the ORR rating system to assure the fairest scoring available for ocean racing yachts. -- Talbot Wilson

marionbermuda.org

Record attempt ends for Pixel Boat
Sorry everyone, but it is Game Over for the Record Attempt. Here is a message from Alex from this morning:

Most of you will have noticed that a few days ago I took a more northerly course than may be expected and I have been going a bit slower ever since. We have been trying to deal with an issue on board - where the mainsail attaches to the mast. There is a track that runs up the length of the mast, and 'cars' run up the track which attach to 'batten boxes' on the mainsail...., a few days ago it was almost impossible to get the main down to reef it - i had to winch it down with such force that i was expecting either the sail to rip in half or the track to pull off the mast or the line to break. eventually, inch by inch the sail came down. i since noticed damage to several cars and some of the track. i have tried swapping things around but i still get the same jamming issue. This means that I can no longer hoist the mainsail all the way up without it jamming - the bigger issue with this is getting it back down again, which is very important when the wind increases (especially for the expanse of Southern Ocean between New Zealand and Cape Horn) and I need to reduce sail by reefing and lowering the sail again. I am currently in 3rd reef, which means that in light winds I am very slow (like now in 7kts wind!).

I have been trying various solutions but with no success as the track itself is damaged with a nick out of it, and possibly more further up, and three cars are also damaged with bent pins. I have come to the very disheartening conclusion that the only option is to head for a port and try and sort it out - but this means giving up on the Record. I simply can't carry on with 3 reefs all the way and still be viable against the Record.

I have done just over 250 sail changes and sailed 13,910 miles so far, but will be over 14,500 by the time i reach land.

So it is with great regret, and a deep feeling that I am letting you all down, that I am going to have to retire from the record and head to port in Australia. I still have a long way to go to reach a port (maybe Adelaide) so I will leave the tracker running so you can follow me if you still want to. -- Alex Alley

Tracker: my.yb.tl/alexalley%C2%A0

alexalley.com/pixelboat-info.html

Seahorse April 2019
What's in the Latest Edition Of Seahorse Magazine

Seahorse Magazine

World news
Happy 'blue' birthday (amazing, really), the gods are smiling on Clarisse Cremer, Bilou's three boats and counting, multitasking with a vengeance from Sharon Ferris, steady start fast finish for SailGP... and for Tom Slingsby. Plus the world's smallest 65-footer is back in action. Halvard Mabire, Patrice Carpentier, Ivor Wilkins, Blue Robinson and Dobbs Davis

Too easy
People often talk about the Stephens/Burgess designed Ranger as the 'Super J' with a hull shape that no one could compete with. Don Street argues that is really just a small part of the story

Life in the cheap seats
As one fortunate Vendee Globe hopeful has it all land in their lap Germany's best solo ocean racer is still fighting on like a dog... Jorg Riechers

Rod Davis - Where exactly?
Before taking sailing 'forwards' we first need to work out which way forwards actually is...

RORC news - Encore
Eddie Warden-Owen

Special rates for Scuttlebutt Europe subscribers:
Seahorse Print or Digital Subscription Use Discount Promo Code SB2

1yr Print Sub: €77 - £48 - $71 / Rest of the World: £65 www.seahorse.co.uk/shop/subs/

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Discounts shown are valid on a one year subscription to Seahorse magazine.

Solitaire Urgo de Figaro
A little more than a month after the unveiling of this 50th edition of La Solitaire URGO Le Figaro, there is no doubt that the 2019 vintage will be an unparalleled success. As of March 1, there were already 5 registered and 23 pre-registered.

Among the registrants are Charles Caudrelier, Adrien Hardy, Armel Le Cleac'h, Tanguy Le Turquais and Arthur Le Vaillant.

The pre-registrants are: Lois Berrehar, Jeremie Beyou, Cassandre Blandin, Alberto Bona, Clarisse Cremer, Matthieu Damerval, Eric Delamare, Michel Desjoyeaux, Yann Eliès, Benoit Hochart, Tom Laperche, Henry Lemenicier, Robin Marais, Benoit Mariette, Justine Mettraux, Andre Morante Perez, Gildas Morvan, Achille Nebout, Loick Peyron, Julien Pulve, Thomas Ruyant and Benjamin Schwartz.

www.lasolitaire-urgo.com

Miami to Havana Race
The Southern Ocean Racing Conference and Coral Reef YC are hosting their fourth annual Miami to Havana Race, starting on March 13th, Wednesday. The race starts just off South Beach, Miami, then it takes you down around the curve of the Florida Keys, and across the Gulf Stream to Havana, Cuba to the finish line off Marina Hemingway.

The festivities get underway on Tuesday March 12, with a pre-race party and Competitors' Meeting hosted by Coral Reef Yacht Club, with the start on Wednesday morning. Once cleared in at Marina Hemingway, each boat will have a gracious "red carpet" welcome from the staff at the marina, which looks forward to welcoming competitors to their facility once again. Most after race festivities are set and it will be another banner year for the ride to Havana.

Looking forward to the "Havana experience" and sailing in the ORC Division is Andy Wescoat's J/109 HARM'S WAY from Spring, Texas and the Galveston Bay Cruising Association. They have been racing most of the SORC events this year, starting with the Miami to Palm Beach Race, then the Miami to Nassau Cup Race, then the Fort Lauderdale to Key West Race. Currently, they are one of the leaders in the ORC division and hope to get yet another podium finish

www.havanarace.org

Merlin Rockets Open Meeting
Having welcomed Merlin Rockets as a new class this year, Itchenor Sailing Club is preparing to host their first Merlin Open Meeting on Sunday 24thMarch.

The premier adult two-person hiking dinghy in the UK, the Merlin Rocket is a very distinctive national class with a rich history in progression and development.

The introduction of Merlin Rockets at Itchenor has certainly captured interest following a successful Winter Warmer event in February. The visitors, many of whom had never been to Itchenor before, enjoyed a weekend of tight racing in 15 knots, giving a taster of what they can enjoy at the Open Meeting later this month.

The Open Meeting on the 24thwill start with a briefing at 10.00am. The schedule of races will depend on weather conditions but the Race Committee aims to run four races in total. The day will be rounded off with a fish and chip supper in the Club House. This is a fantastic opportunity for visitors to experience sailing in a Merlin Rocket in Chichester Harbour while also finding out more about the Sailing Club and all it has to offer.

Looking further ahead, the Merlin class's racing this year will be focused on specific weekends across the season, with three weekends each side of the summer. During the summer months the Merlin class does a lot of travelling, with events including Salcombe Week and the Nationals, which are this year staged in Looe.

To help encourage fresh talent to Itchenor Sailing Club, the Merlin Rocket class has introduced a new, pay-as-you-sail scheme to allow non-members to book for a weekend of sailing and experience the best that Itchenor has to offer.

www.itchenorsc.co.uk

Modernizing the Laser Design
A good relationship between one design classes and their builders is vital for the success of class associations. Reliable supply is good for the class members while a poorly administered class is bad for the supplier. Everything is either win-win or lose-lose.

A variable all class organizations face is change, and the International Laser Class Association (ILCA) may be the most conservative of them all. Born as a simple boat with basic rigging, the ILCA has demonstrated a pattern of controlled, incremental evolution and development aimed at improving longevity, increasing the ease of use and reducing the cost of ownership.

Nowhere is that more on display than in the development of a new mast and sail combination to modernize the 50 year old design.

Driven by dinghy designer Julian Bethwaite, and with the endorsement of the Australian and Japanese Laser builders, there has been a four year campaign at developing what is known as the C5 rig for usage while seeking the endorsement of the ILCA.

Full editorial by Craig Leweck in Scuttlebutt:
www.sailingscuttlebutt.com

RC35 Class Ready for the Sailing Season
The exciting RC35 class is entering its third year of racing with another close season on the cards. Many of the members are taking advantage of unseasonal weather and getting an early start on boat prep hoping to shave off a few vital seconds round the race course writes Robin Young.

The class is continuing to go from strength to strength with three new boats already confirmed for 2019. The draw of close Corinthian class racing in exciting locations, combined with boats that are potentially equally comfortable on a family cruise as they are thrashing round a windward-leeward race course seems to be a winning formula. With class rules specifically designed to keep racing close while managing the budget, what's not to like. New class member Terry Kirchin summed it up well, "Racing in the RC35 fleet is such an exciting prospect. With well-matched boats making up the fleet, it'll be the nearest thing to class racing most of us yachters will ever see. As a long time east coast sailor, I would say we've enjoyed some fine company and some keen sailing over there but we're now looking forward to making the most of the variety of splendid sailing venues on the west coast and further afield in Ireland and Wales."

afloat.ie/sail/

Two Sailors In Their Thirties To Tackle The Vendee Globe
They are among the newcomers to the IMOCA class. Maxime Sorel, 32, and Clement Giraud, 38, come from different backgrounds, but share the same dream. They wish to take part in the 2020 Vendee Globe. We find out more about their two projects.

The Vendee Globe, a childhood dream and the gateway to the IMOCA class It was the prospect of competing in the Vendee Globe that attracted Maxime Sorel and Clement Giraud to the IMOCA circuit. For Maxime, victory in the 2017 Transat Jacques Vabre in Class40 with Antoine Carpentier was the turning point, which led him to take this leap. "Unlike in Class40, it was not financially possible for my partner V and B to build a brand new IMOCA," explained Maxime. "That suited me as I want to move forward slowly but surely in the class, even if we just look at the logistics and organisational aspects, which are complicated with these boats. Even with an IMOCA from a previous generation, the budgets are huge and there is no room for any mistakes. But it is all worth the effort, as there is greater exposure, which is vital for a sponsor. In the next Transat Jacques Vabre, the IMOCAs will be the biggest boats in the dock. This class attracts people because of its professionalism and the fact that it is thriving."

For Clement Giraud, the Vendee Globe is also a childhood dream. He has come a long way to get here. Until he was eighteen, Clement lived in the Caribbean and although he did a lot of sailing, he never signed up to a sailing club. When he came to Mandelieu in France, he worked for a sail-maker, obtained his official sailing certificate and then became a semi-professional sailor, taking part four times in the Tour de France Sailing Race. After his maiden adventure in the 2005 Mini Transat, he turned to crewed sailing (Farr40, TP52, 15 mJI, VOR70, etc). After all this experience, he wanted to try his hand again sailing solo with everything that entailed and so quite naturally Clement turned to IMOCAs. "I did a lot sailing on big boats out on the foredeck," he explained. "On those boats, being a bowman is physically and psychologically demanding. Dealing with huge amounts of sail doesn't scare me and I feel at home on an IMOCA."

Funding to be completed...
While both projects are well underway, both sailors are busy looking for the funding to be more at ease when working and with the aim of enhanced performance. Already backed by a group of companies, Clement Giraud is now looking for one or more headline partners: "I want to set up a human, collective and meaningful project. Today, the sails and hull on my boat are all white. That is a way to tell any potential sponsors: "Come and join us in this great adventure."

Maxime Sorel has the same problem with the boat initially taking the name V and B - Sailing Together. His loyal partner for five seasons in Class40, V and B has come up with 55 % of the budget for the campaign leading up to the 2020 Vendee Globe. "We are looking for a joint partner and we hope to show her off in early April, which will encourage firms to join us," stressed Maxime.

imoca.org

Blind San Diego sailor making waves in record trans-Pacific crossing
Twelve days after leaving San Diego harbor on a nonstop, 6,000-mile crossing of the Pacific Ocean, sailors Matsuhiro "Hiro" Iwamoto of Kearny Mesa and Doug Smith of Japan are right on target to reach Fukushima, Japan, by April 24.

An uneventful ocean crossing may not seem like news, until you consider the circumstances. Iwamoto is completely blind, yet he's splitting all of the ship's steering, rigging and navigational duties with Smith.

And if they're successful in their quest, they will be the first blind sailing team to ever achieve a nonstop trans-Pacific crossing between the U.S. and Japan.

But the real reason for celebrating their arrival at day 12 is that this is the second time Iwamoto has attempted the crossing. Last time, a 50-foot blue whale struck his boat six days into the voyage and sent it to the bottom of the sea. Iwamoto and his then-sailing partner, Japanese TV newsman Jiro Shinbo, barely escaped with their lives in the June 2013 attempt. -- Pam Kragen The San Diego Union-Tribune

www.heraldcourier.com

Correction: Paul Heys service
In yesterday's issue we noted that the funeral for Paul Heys was at 1:30 PM in Hamble Square. The correct time is 1:00. Fair winds and following seas, Paul.

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The Last Word
It does not do to dwell on dreams and forget to live. -- Albus Dumbledore

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EuroSail News #4297 - 18 March

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In This Issue
LBYC Ficker Cup: Gateway To Greatness
King George Gallop
Season ends on high for 2018/2019 Monaco Sportsboat Winter Series
Cabo Race: Beginning the tequila tango
MS Amlin Yacht Release First Episode of "80 Seconds with Sir Robin Knox-Johnston" on 17th March
Mule A Speedy Workhorse For American Magic Sailing Crew
Happy Days - Doyle Sails
74th Annual Block Island Race
The SSB Debate
Tips and Tricks for bottom painting your boat
Featured Brokerage
The Last Word: Charles M. Madigan

Brought to you by Seahorse magazine and YachtScoring.com EuroSail News is a digest of sailing news and opinions, regatta results, new boat and gear information and letters from sailors -- with a European emphasis. Contributions welcome, send to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

LBYC Ficker Cup: Gateway To Greatness
Long Beach, CA: If the Congressional Cup is the gateway to the America's Cup, the Ficker Cup is the gateway to the Congressional Cup.

This Grade 2 Match Racing competition, organized annually by Long Beach Yacht Club since 1980, is both a qualifier to the prestigious Congressional Cup regatta, as well as a world-class sailing event in its own right.

The 2019 Ficker Cup will take place March 29 to 31 in the Congressional Cup stadium, a designated race course adjacent the Belmont Veterans Memorial Pier, beginning at 11:30AM daily. Eight top-notch skippers from around the globe, each with a complement of five crew, have been invited to compete in the event, which consists of round robin racing followed by semi-finals, petit finals and finals.

At the end of three days, the winner will be awarded the Ficker Cup trophy: so named to honor Bill Ficker, a legendary yachtsman who helmed Intrepid to victory in the 1970 America's Cup and won the Congressional Cup in 1974.

In addition, first and second place finishers are invited to compete in the esteemed Congressional Cup regatta, April 3 to 7, 2019.

Vying for the title are some of the world's leading skippers, including several in the top 20 World Sailing Match Race rankings. Harry Price (AUS) #3, Chris Poole (USA) #15, Pearson Potts (USA) #16, Chris Nesbitt (USA) #38 , Joachim Aschenbrener (DEN) #41, and Dave Hood (USA) #59 return to Long Beach Yacht Club, while Charles Lalumiere (USA) #150, and Tom Spithill (AUS) #372 make their Ficker Cup debut.

www.lbyc.org

King George Gallop
Local Radial sailor Tony Cooper took three straight wins to smash the King George Gallop, the March leg of the Great British Sailing Challenge.

A windy weekend, gusting 37 kts at times, did not worry Cooper who finished two points ahead of Richard Smith in an RS600 and four points clear of Jim Fifield in a Laser.

Only six competitors from 16 entries completed all three races at the King George SC in North london.

And one of the intrepid six was Series founder Andy Rice, sailing with Ewan Gribben in a 49er, making a possible late charge for Tokyo 2020 !?

King George Gallop counting 2 of 3 races
1. Laser Radial, Tony Cooper, King George SC, 2 points
2. RS600, Richard Smith, Wilsonian SC, 4
3. Laser, Jim Fifield, King George SC, 6
4. Laser, Kevin Cooper, King George SC, 7
5. RS600, Michael Iszatt, King George SC, 9
6. Vortex, Jonathan Carter, Rickmansworth SC, 10
7. Blaze, Malcolm Hutchings, RCYC, 13
8. RS Vareo, Luke Fisher, Emberton Park SC, 15
9. 49er, Andy Rice, Stokes Bay SC, 17
10. Laser Radial, Tim French, King George SC, 18

www.sailweb.co.uk

www.sailingchallenge.org

Season ends on high for 2018/2019 Monaco Sportsboat Winter Series
Monaco Sportsboat Winter Series The 6th Monaco Sportsboat Winter Series of monthly regattas (Oct-March) ended in style with the fifth and final Act taking place in spring conditions to the delight of 50 teams in the J/70 and Melges 20s.

Organised by the Yacht Club de Monaco in partnership with technical clothing supplier SLAM, the series attracts an international field which this season saw 29 races launched by the Race Committee.

In the Melges 20, the Russians were again on the podium with Alexander Mikhaylik's Alex Team winning Act 5 after six races to clinch the 2018-2019 season.

In the J/70 it was fitting that on St Patrick's Day victory should go to King Marshall's Irish team on Soak Racing led by the International Class President. The team won two of the six races and were always in the vanguard, despite determined Swiss opposition on CDE CH helmed by Nicolas Anklin. Russian Sergey Sobolev on RUS1271 took 3rd. Two poor results would have cost him dear, as barely two points separated him from his pursuers down to 7th place.

Soak Racing also won in the Corinthian category.

In the final ranking for the 2018-2019 season, consistency paid off for YCM member Ludovico Fassitelli (Junda Banca del Sempiene) who took the title, which bodes well for the J/70 World Championship in Monaco in October 2021.

Another YCM member took 2nd, Loïc Pompée (Allo III) with the Swiss Corinthian team Quarter Eleven in 3rd and 1st Corinthian. After 29 races only a fistful of points separated the top five.

One-designs continue to take centre stage in the Principality which is set to host the 2nd Monaco Swan One Design, 9-13 April.

Dates have already been set for the 7th Monaco Sportsboat Winter Series with five Acts and more than 70 boats lined up to participate.
Act 1: 7/10 November 2019
Act 2: 5/8 December 2019
Act 3: 16/19 January 2020
Act 4: 6/9 February 2020 (Primo Cup – Trophée Credit Suisse)
Act 5: 5/8 March 2020

One-designs continue to take centre stage in the Principality which is all set to host the 2nd Monaco Swan One Design, 9-13 April, with some 20 of these sporty elegant boats expected.

www.yacht-club-monaco.mc/en/home-en/

Cabo Race: Beginning the tequila tango
Twenty-eight teams were among the three staggered start dates on March 14 to 16 for the Newport Beach To Cabo San Lucas International Yacht Race. Two retirees, the Multi 70 Maserati and the Farr 57 Ho'okolohe, opted to not start the 800nm course from Southern California to the southern tip of Mexico's Baja California peninsula. Provisional leaders are Destroyer (TP52, ORR1), Pywacket (Andrew 70, ORR2), Blueflash (J/121, ORR3), Horizon (SC50, ORR4), and Aloha (Hobie 33, ORR5).

www.sailingscuttlebutt.com

Event site with tracker: nhyccaborace.com/home/

MS Amlin Yacht Release First Episode of "80 Seconds with Sir Robin Knox-Johnston" on 17th March
To celebrate the actual date of their Brand Ambassador, Sir Robin Knox-Johnston's 80th birthday, MS Amlin Yacht, the boat insurance specialists, are launching Episode One of the "80 Seconds with Sir Robin Knox-Johnston" video series on the 17th March.

80 Seconds with Sir Robin Knox-Johnston - Episode One - The Lure of the Sea
In this first episode you can look forward to finding out what it is that keeps Sir Robin throwing off the mooring lines again and again, alongside Dee Caffari digging to find out what his future plans are…. Will he be heading back out to regain his record as the oldest person to single handedly navigate the globe non-stop?

Paul Knox-Johnston - MS Amlin Yacht's Business Development Manager said

"The video series was filmed whilst Sir Robin was out sailing aboard Suhaili with his talented peer and friend Dee Caffari. We were able to capture conversations and special moments which allow us to bring you a unique insight into one of the world's most famous sailors. There is a lot of footage to bring you over the coming months, so subscribe to the MS Amlin Yacht YouTube Channel for updates on new releases."

You can watch the video series on the MS Amlin Yacht YouTube Channel or via the website

Mule A Speedy Workhorse For American Magic Sailing Crew
ut on Pensacola Bay, the combination of a fantastical-looking test boat called the Mule and technology from aviation giant Airbus is giving the New York Yacht Club's American Magic a flying start toward trying to win the America's Cup in two years.

When the 38-foot Mule reaches a certain speed, it undergoes a striking visual transformation as it rises up on hydrofoils and slices across the top of the waves. American Magic confirmed this week that it is sailing "dry laps" at its winter base in Florida, with the Mule's hull never touching the water as it flies on foils all the way around a course that's roughly six miles long and two miles across.

"When we get the right breeze direction ... we can do 16 miles of sailing out of the water. It's amazing how fast that happens," Terry Hutchinson, American Magic's executive director and skipper, said in a phone interview.

Although spies from rival syndicates have certainly seen the development, American Magic revealed just this week that it has been doing dry laps for about a month.

It's a big step because American Magic is the only one of the seven teams for the 2021 America's Cup that has built the closest thing allowed by the rules to what the actual race boat, the AC75, will look and perform like. American Magic is building its first AC75 in Rhode Island and expects it to be finished by the middle of the summer.

The Mule was launched in Newport, Rhode Island, last fall. The team set up its winter base in Florida in December.

Automotive giant Roger Penske, one of the team principals along with Doug DeVos and Hap Fauth, nicknamed the boat Mule, a term for a test car. "That just stuck," Hutchinson said.

It performs anything like a mule. Canting arms tipped with T-foils mounted on both sides of the hull make it look somewhat like a nautical insect. In full flight, the boat rides on foils on the rudder and the leeward foil arm, with the windward foil arm out of the water. When the boat tacks, the foil arms switch positions. -- Bernie Wilson

www.cdapress.com

Happy Days - Doyle Sails
Happy Days - Doyle Sails Boxing Day 2018 marked the start of a pretty good story for the latest Doyle Sails technology

The 2018 Rolex Sydney-Hobart race brought together some of the finest offshore sailors on the planet. Four 100ft Maxis raced to Hobart, with two of these plus the overall winner, the Reichel/Pugh 66 Alive, all flying Doyle Stratis sails. This was a key opportunity for multiple world champion, double Olympian and sixtime Volvo veteran Chris Nicholson from Doyle Lake Macquarie to gauge the response, from the talent gathered in Hobart, on the innovations and key developments emerging from Doyle in 2018-19.

'Two of the 100-footers developed a J-Zero, similar to the Volvo 65 sail, and so now we are seeing that information trickle down from the Volvo Ocean Race to mainstream offshore racing, which is great,' Nicholson said.

'Normally the J-Zeros are set on a reaching strut, but with the conditions in the recent Hobart, the struts weren't in range to be used – and still the gains with the luff of the J-Zero projecting so much enabled for a much faster triple head setup. With two inner jibs or staysails flying, the gains have really been impressive.'

Full article in the April issue of Seahorse

74th Annual Block Island Race
Entry for this year's event has been open since February and communications to last year's participants have fostered a dozen entries. Since posting, the NoR has been amended to add the Youth Offshore Challenge to the list for which the Block Island Race is a qualifier, along with the Riverside Yacht Club Stratford Shoal Race, the Around Long Island Regatta, the Race around Shelter Island, the 12th Mudnite Madness Overnight, and the Ida Lewis Distance Race.

Having been the chair of the Block Island Race for over 20 years, I have had the pleasure of talking to many competitors, both stalwarts and newbies, as well as sailors that have yet to compete in this early season, shake the cobwebs out, race. One of the most consistent questions asked is "What do I have to do to get my boat set up for this race?" The simple answer is to direct them to the YRA Safety Recommendations, the US Sailing Safety Equipment Regulations, and the World Sailing Offshore Special Regulations, reminding them that the set-up of the boat is only part of the program. The other part is getting the crew "set up" for it.

Last year we emphasized the Safety-at-Sea (SAS) requirements that 30% of all aboard, but not fewer than 2, have attended a hands-on seminar within the last 5 years. That requirement echoes the Safety Equipment Requirement (SER) 4.2.3. We also recommended that the remainder of the crew complete the US Sailing SAS online course and stated that it was intended that the online course recommendation become a requirement for this year's event. The hands-on requirement has not changed, however in the interests of accounting for last minute crew changes (never happens, right?) the "remainder of the crew" requirement has been amended to 75%, a number which is in harmony with SER requirement 4.2. We urge those that claim they have been sailing "all their lives" and know what to do, to take the time to read the report on the findings of the IMEDI incident in last year's Chicago-Mac Race wherein a seasoned sailor on a TP52 slid under the lifelines in rough seas, his auto-inflate harness failed, and he could not be retrieved. See also Rich du Moulins "Safety at Sea Thoughts which follows.

The Block Island Race is a qualifier for the Northern Ocean Racing Trophy, the Double Handed Ocean Racing Trophy, and the New England Lighthouse Series (PHRF.) For more details, consult the YRALIS Handbook or stamfordyc.com. The Block Island Race is also a qualifier for the De Coursey Fales, Sagola & Windigo Trophies, the duMoulin Cup for Double Handed Racing, the Youth Challenge Cup awarded by the YRA-LIS, the Rugg Family Tri-state Offshore Youth Challenge, as well as the Storm Trysail Club "Tuna Trophy" for the best IRC combined scores in the EDLU (40%) and the Block Island Race (60%). -- Ray Redniss, Rear Commodore, Block Island Race PRO

blockislandraceweek.com

The SSB Debate
Years ago, I and my friends sailed a lot of offshore miles without any long-range communications. Old AM radios had a range of up to 200 miles but when VHF came in, broadcast distances were reduced to line of sight, not enough to call for help if you are hundreds of miles offshore. But HAM and SSB radios were popular and getting more reliably "marinized" until they became the high seas communications tool of choice. But sat phones are changing that. In fact, there are now quite a few sailors heading offshore with only satellite communications and no SSB. With a sat phone you can have voice, text and email connection anywhere in the world. Or, with an inexpensive Iridium Go and a laptop you can have email everywhere.

So, are SSBs irrelevant? I would say not quite but almost. The two qualities I like about SSB radios are the ability to chat with friends in the radio nets all about the world and the very inexpensive email services provided by SailMail and Winlink. Yet, the downside of SSBs is the dearth of shore stations for ship-to-shore communications and general unreliability of propagation for making long distance contact.

We had SSBs on our last two boats but when going to sea we would rent a satphone, plus we signed up with Iridium GO for email. In fact, over the last four long offshore passages on our last boat we used the SSB as a receiver to listen to weather guru Chris Parker and that was all. We were glad to have the radio, but I doubt I will put one on my next offshore cruising boat. What do you think? -- George Day, bwsailing.com

Tips and Tricks for bottom painting your boat
Learn some more cool tips and tricks for bottom painting your boat from shipwright Louis Sauzedde. Brought to you by our friends at Jamestown Distributors - TotalBoat

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The Last Word
St. Patrick—one of the few saints whose feast day presents the opportunity to get determinedly whacked and make a fool of oneself all under the guise of acting Irish. -- Charles M. Madigan

Editorial and letter submissions to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Advertising inquiries to Graeme Beeson: gb [AT] beesonstone [DOT] com or see www.eurosailnews.com/advertise.html

EuroSail News #4298 - 19 March

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In This Issue
New Mount Gay Race Day To Launch 2019 BVI Spring Regatta
Swan One Design North European League
Superyachts to Gather in St. Barths for Bucket Regatta
Russian Bunker Prince team grabs Paul & Shark Trophy
Long Beach Congressional Cup April 3 - 7
M32 European Series - Fast cat warm-up
Industry News
Featured Brokerage
The Last Word: John Bercow

Brought to you by Seahorse magazine and YachtScoring.com EuroSail News is a digest of sailing news and opinions, regatta results, new boat and gear information and letters from sailors -- with a European emphasis. Contributions welcome, send to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

New Mount Gay Race Day To Launch 2019 BVI Spring Regatta
Mount Gay Rum was one of the original sponsors of the BVI Spring Regatta (BVISR) having first partnered with the popular Caribbean regatta in 1972 through its distributor, Road Town Wholesale. The brand, synonymous with sailing, has always been an active partner at the Regatta Village at Nanny Cay, but this year has boosted its support of the regatta, now in its 48th year. In addition to their Gold Sponsorship, Mount Gay Rum will sponsor the first day of the Regatta on Friday March 29th and is also the Official rum of the BVI Spring Regatta & Sailing Festival.

Following the BVI Sailing Festival*, three days of competitive racing will kick off at 1000 on Friday March 29, with the new Mount Gay Race Day where around 90 boats and sailors from 20 countries will test their mettle on some of the world's best waters for sailing.

For further details, check out the regatta website and follow us on social media: #BVISR www.bvispringregatta.org,www.facebook.com/bvispringregatta www.instagram.com/bvisr/

* Round Tortola Race for the Nanny Cay Cup (Tuesday March 26), the Scrub Island Invitational (Wednesday March 27) and Lay Day, plus the BVI Spring Regatta Skipper's Meeting and Welcome Party on Thursday March 28.

www.mountgayrum.com

Swan One Design North European League
In 2017, Nautor's Swan launched the pivotal The Nations Trophy as a focal biennial event in the world of Swan One Design activity.

Following the success of the inaugural event in 2017, Nautor's Swan extended the concept by introducing a season long league in the Mediterranean to maintain the spirit of gentlemanly competition between countries engendered by the original event. 

The Nations Trophy Mediterranean League 2019 comprises four events:

Monaco Swan One Design (April 9th to 13th)
Scarlino Swan One Design (April 30th to May 4th)
Rolex Giraglia (Inshore races, June 9th to 15th)
Copa del Rey Mapfre (July 27th to August 3rd)

In 2019, the league concept is extended to the Baltic as well with the Swan One Design North European League which will be held during the Nord Stream Race (Kiel, Copenhagen, Stockholm, Helsinki, St. Petersburg, Juan 22nd to July 5th).

The Nations Trophy is the culmination of the Swan One Design Leagues season; it will be hosted at Real Club Nautico de Palma from October 8th to 12th and Nautor's Swan expect the participation of 40 yachts coming from all over the world and representing ClubSwan 50 class (17 boats), Swan 45 Class (9 boats), ClubSwan 42 Class (9 boats) and ClubSwan 36 Class (5 boats).

Full 2019 Racing Calendar and the preview for the next years (PDF).

Superyachts to Gather in St. Barths for Bucket Regatta
Harken at  Bucket Regatta Every March superyachts gather for the prestigious three-day St. Barths Bucket Regatta, which features racing and social events. The invitational regatta, scheduled for March 21-24, is for yachts 30.5 meters or greater, or yachts meeting the SYRA 90' Class criteria. It is an event conceived and hosted for the pleasure of sailing superyacht owners.

Among those participating is last year's overall winner, the Baltic 112 Nilaya. She is fresh off a Corsair Class victory in the Antigua Super Yacht Challenge, and is equipped with Harken winches, tracks, cars, blocks, padeyes, and a 32 mm Switch Track mast system with a halyard locking car. The mainsail has a custom Harken hydraulic outhaul control system.

Nilaya is skippered by Ryan Donaldson.

"Harken has always been my 'go to' for deck hardware since sailing Optimists," Donaldson said. "Now, sailing Nilaya the loads are slightly higher. At the top of this game we rely on Harken equipment with our lives. Their service is always prompt, reliable and innovative. You know you're dealing with the most experienced people in this industry and there's never a lack of knowledge shared."

Harken's Tech Team will be at St. Barths. Email technicalservice [AT] harken [DOT] com if you need assistance.

harken.com

Russian Bunker Prince team grabs Paul & Shark Trophy
It was clear that the fight to take the Paul & Shark Trophy, International Dragon Cup, would be tough and decided down to the very last race for the teams aiming at the podium. Going into the last racing day the Russian crew of Bunker Prince, skippered by 470 gold medallist Yevgeni Braslavets and flying the flag of local Yacht Club Sanremo, looked almost unbeatable with their solid margin of 9 points, but the tricky conditions of the Ligurian Riviera reshuffled the cards. The final two races were raced with a light and shifty westerly that never exceeded 6 knots, putting to the test the dragonists' ability and tactical skills.

At the end of the seven-races series two teams emerged at the top tied at points: Ivan Bradbury's Blue Haze with crew Lars Hendriksen and George Leonchek, and Russia's Bunker Prince skippered by Yevgeni Braslavets with Sergey Pugachev and Sergey Timokhov, that thanks to a higher number of wins grabbed the Paul & Shark Trophy 2019.

Despite their consistent series the other Russian team on Annapurna, with veteran Anatoly Loginov and crew Vadim Statsenko and Alexander Shalagin, did not manage to further catch up and finished on the third step of the podium.

Competition was intense also for the other first spots - prizes being awarded to the first five teams- with Germany's Khaleesi led by female skipper Nicola Friesen with Vincent Hoesch and Frithjof Kleen, scoring two good results on the final day and taking fourth place, while Switzerland's Sophie Racing with Hugo Stenberg, Bernardo Freitas and Martin Westerdahl finished the series in fifth.

The Paul & Shark Trophy is the first event of the season for the class in Sanremo, anticipating the Dragon 90th Anniversary Regatta planned for next October on the Ligurian Riviera, the event expected to be one of the top rendez-vous on a national and international level for the quality and number of teams taking part, so much that as of today more than 100 boats have already registered.

Full final results after seven races at this link

www.yachtclubsanremo.it/regate/

Long Beach Congressional Cup April 3 - 7
The Congressional Cup is one of the leading match racing events in the sport, bringing top talent from around the globe to contend in thrilling one-on-one bouts on the water. This prestigious Grade One Match Racing regatta, hosted by Long Beach Yacht Club since 1965, returns to Long Beach April 3 to 7, 2019. Top-ranked skippers and their teams vie in double round robins aboard one-design Catalina 37s; squaring off against each rival twice, with the lucky frontrunners advancing into semi-finals and finals.

This exciting competition takes place directly off the Long Beach Belmont Veterans Memorial Pier, where spectators can enjoy the action and commentary FREE OF CHARGE from 11:30AM to 5PM daily, April 3 to 7.

Compelling and insightful play-by-play will be announced by none other than pro TV personality Tucker Thompson, official Host of the 35th America's Cup. Thompson, a former champion sailor and TV host and producer, will be joined by special guests to emcee five days of Congressional Cup action, live from the heart of the race.

Can't make it to the waterfront? Friday April 5 through Sunday April 7, Long Beach Yacht Club will offer live-streaming coverage and features to viewers around the globe on Facebook and the event website: www.thecongressionalcup.com. Nightly press conferences - relevant to the day's racing, and always entertaining - will also be live-streamed, starting Wednesday April 3, at approximately 5:30pm.

www.thecongressionalcup.com

M32 European Series - Fast cat warm-up
M32 racing resumes in Europe this week with a warm-up event for the M32 European Series taking place in Sanremo, Italy over 22-24 March.

This will be a chance to blow away the winter cobwebs for the high performance one design catamaran teams and while it may not count towards the 2019 M32 European Series, all the teams taking part will be just as focussed and keen to win. Officer Mattias Dahlström.

The daily schedule will comprise windward-leeward courses with America's Cup-style reaching starts, over a three hour window. The first warning signal on day one will be at 1400 followed at 1300 and 1200 on the final two days, culminating in a prizegiving at 1600 on the Sunday at the M32 European Series regatta centre immediately outside of the Yacht Club Sanremo, who are hosting the event.

This being the first event of the M32s' European season, there will be a training aspect too, confirms Dahlström: "We will have longer briefings where we explain the multihull rules and how they differ to monohull rules. We can also discuss race management procedures and any technical aspects of the boat." Among the specialists on hand will be international rules expert and umpire Craig Mitchell and Jakob Wilson, from the M32's builder Aston Harald.

One of the five teams competing in Sanremo will be Richard Göransson's Inga Racing Team. The Swedish campaign, being better known for participating in the 6 metre, Melges 32 and 40 monohull classes, will be making its catamaran debut in Italy this week.

The Sanremo warm-up event will be two months out from the start of the M32 European Series proper. This five event series will see the M32 catamaran teams competing at five scoring events across Italy, Sweden and the Netherlands.

The 2019 M32 European Series formally kicks off in Pisa over 24-26th May, home port of Andrea Lacorte's Vitamina Veloce team. It then heads north to Medemblik on the Ijsselmeer in the Netherlands and continues with two events in Sweden. The first of these will take place mid-July off the sailing mecca of Marstrand while the second, to be held in mid-August, further north in Stenungsund, will comprise two days of racing prior to the annual 28 mile anti-clockwise lap of Tjörn island, the record for which is currently held by an M32.

The M32s return to Italy and Riva del Garda for the final event of the 2019 M32 European Series. This doubles as the Pre-Worlds after which the 2019 M32 European Series champion will be crowned. This event then runs straight into the M32 World Championship.

2019 M32 European Series schedule
San Remo, Italy - 22-24 March (non-scoring warm-up event)
Marina di Pisa, Italy - 24-26 May
Medemblick, Holland - 21-23 June
Marstrand, Sweden - 19-21 July
Stenungsund, Sweden - 15-17 August (two days inshore racing followed by the Tjörn Runt)
Pre-Worlds, Riva del Garda, Italy - 24-25 August
M32 World Championship, Riva del Garda, Italy - 26-30 August

www.m32world.com

Industry News
INEOS TEAM UK, the British Challenger for the 36th America's Cup, is proud to announce a continued collaboration with Coderus, a specialist in technical software development. Coderus, based at the high-tech Innovation Martlesham cluster at Adastral Parkin Suffolk, will use their expertise to offer unique high-performance solutions that deliver data to the sailing and performance teams. Software and systems experts will also be embedded within the team at the HQ in Portsmouth.

Coderus worked collaboratively with engineers from the British Challenger during the team's campaign for the 35th America's Cup, developing a 'tactical app' used onboard by Tactician, Giles Scott, a Rio 2016 Olympic Champion. The device provided fast and accurate tactical information to the crew whilst working at their maximum heart rate.

The team are currently working towards launching their first AC75 race boat this summer in the UK.

www.ineosteamuk.com

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New figures from UK industry association British Marine show that the country's boating sector grew for the seventh consecutive year in 2018, with total revenues up by 1.7% to £3.17bn.

According to the figures, direct revenue from the marine industry trade has contributed over £1.1bn of Gross Value Added (GVA) to the UK economy, supporting over 33,000 direct employees in marine businesses across the UK.

The UK's strong export performance continues to drive growth. In 2018, leisure marine exports surpassed £1bn for the first time since 2013, representing an increase of 16% compared to the previous year. This has been attributed to strong global economic growth in 2018 and a weak pound as a consequence of Brexit, making British products price-competitive compared to their international rivals.

The eurozone and wider EU remains an important market for the sector, accounting for 50% of all industry exports, although the US is fast becoming an increasingly important trading partner for British companies, now accounting for 25% of British exports. The US has also seen a high level of growth at 30%, along with Asia at 20% and South America at 39%.

www.ibinews.com/uk-boating-sector

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Bermuda is one of 15 countries that has been blacklisted by the EU for not having proper governance over tax standards. With Bermuda a leading superyacht flag and location for ownership structures, its blacklisting could have a direct impact on the yacht sector. The EU move appears to have come as a surprise and shock to the Bermudian government.

In a report in the Intelligent Insurer online media outlet, Bermuda's Premier, David Burt, admitted that the blacklisting was a setback but that he was confident that the North Atlantic island nation would soon be removed from the list. The report said that Bermuda had been moved from a grey list to the blacklist for having failed to have fulfilled commitments previously made.

www.ibinews.com

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The Clipper Race is pleased to reveal Spinlock as its new Official Lifejacket Supplier for the next two editions, 2019-20 and 2021-22, of the biennial round the world yacht race.

Spinlock will be kitting out each of the eleven Clipper Race crews with Deckvest VITO lifejackets, the latest Performance Safety Lines and personal AIS devices when they embark on the epic 40,000nm race this summer and will provide expert training and support, for both organisation and crew.

With 85 per cent of Spinlock products currently being exported, the award-winning manufacturer is focusing on markets outside of the UK and will utilise the global marketing platform offered by the Clipper Race route to grow opportunities and brand awareness in markets where the sport of sailing must be encouraged, cultivated and developed.

spinlock.co.uk
clipper-ventures.com

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The Transpacific Yacht Club is pleased to announce Sevenstar as the logistics partner of choice for the global transports of these members of the Transpac fleet, and will be providing tailored solutions from Australia, the USA, Europe and the Caribbean.

Supporting the race locally is Sevenstar's San Francisco representative Kris Caren: "We very much look forward to work closely with the race organization and the teams to provide them with the top-level service that we are known for. In addition to the international transports we are working on providing a mast-up, keel-on solution from Hawaii to the West Coast."

"We are pleased to establish this partnership with Sevenstar," said Transpacific YC Commodore Tom Hogan. "Their help in providing logistics solutions means we can have even more entries from all over the world, giving their owners and crews the ability to take part in this special anniversary edition of this great race."

For more information about how Sevenstar can help your team, with both the transport of your yacht, but also containers, personal gear, spares and sails, please contact:

Wouter Verbraak: wouter [AT] sevenstar-uk [DOT] com, or Kris Caren: kris [AT] sevenstar-usa [DOT] com.

2019.transpacyc.com

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Salcombe Yacht Club is excited to announce Salcombe Gin as the principle sponsor for Merlin Rocket Week (7th - 12th July), one of the most prestigious events in the dinghy racing calendar.

Inspired by the coastal vitality of Salcombe, and adventure on and around the water, the multi-award winning Salcombe Gin is the perfect fit for the highly esteemed Merlin Rocket Week. With its distillery, tasting bar and "Victuallers" retail shop located on Island Street, Salcombe; Salcombe Gin is truly a local business with global aspirations having recently been named 'World's Best Gin Design' at the highly acclaimed World Gin Awards 2019. A 'Salcombe & Tonic' is becoming the drink of choice amongst the sailing fraternity.

Co-founders Angus Lugsdin and Howard Davies have their roots in Salcombe having met there whilst working as sailing instructors at the Island Cruising Club's Egremont in 1995. The pair have since established the now burgeoning Salcombe Distilling Co. and launched Salcombe Gin in 2016.

Both Angus and Howard recognise the long and illustrious history of the Merlin Class which is also synonymous to Salcombe. Howard remarked: "We are thrilled to be supporting this fantastic event. It's always such an action packed week with a brilliant atmosphere around the town. We look forward to welcoming sailors and spectators to relax after the racing with the ultimate sundowner, a 'Salcombe & Tonic'."

Merlin Rocket Week is a popular annual Salcombe event which takes place every July. Yachts take to the water in their scores and the crowds gather to watch the action unfold from the shore. The race includes up to 100 entrants and never fails to create a spectacle for those watching from the nearby beaches. The races are held from Sunday until Friday as the contestants battle for the title of Merlin Rocket Week champion.

alcombeyc.org.uk
salcombegin.com

Featured Brokerage
Raceboats Only 2018 Swab 115. 15,000,000 EUR

Delivered in August 2018, ODIN is the fourth Swan 115 to be delivered and one of the most technologically advanced Swans ever conceived. This new Swan 115 represents a step forward in cruising/racer design. Optimized for racing at the highest level, every detail has been studied by world-class engineers and boat builders to ensure excellent performance under the ORCSY rating. Her hull construction (made with carbon SPRINT pre-preg), sailing systems, mast and keel allow her to be a world class racing boat and guarantee a podium finish.

See listing details in Seahorse's RaceboatsOnly

Contact
sales [AT] burgessyachts [DOT] com

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Raceboats Only 1990 Baltic Yachts 52. 340,000 EUR. Located in Ravenna, Italy

Epoxy vacuum-bagged Baltic 52 with carbon rig and fantastic cruising specification. Stunning Sparkman & Stephens lines and sparkling performance in all weathers.

See listing details in Seahorse's RaceboatsOnly

Contact
GRABAU INTERNATIONAL
Lead broker - Alex Grabau
Tel: +44 (0)1590 673715
Email: alex [AT] grabauinternational [DOT] com

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Raceboats Only 2011 Ker 40 - "Hooligan VII". 260000 GBP. Located in Hamble, UK,

Want an IRC or ORC winning boat, capable of Inshore and Offshore success?... Look no further Hooligan VII is now available at a fraction of the new boat cost and with recent optimization is back at the front of the rating game! Very strong inventory and recent cosmetic improvements too.

See listing details in Seahorse's RaceboatsOnly

Contact
Sam Pearson - Ancasta Race Boats +64 277733717 +44 2380 016582 sampearson [AT] ancasta [DOT] com

See the RaceboatsOnly.com collection at seahorsemagazine.com/brokerage/

The Last Word
For far too long the House of Commons has been run as little more than a private club by and for gentleman amateurs. -- John Bercow

Editorial and letter submissions to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Advertising inquiries to Graeme Beeson: gb [AT] beesonstone [DOT] com or see www.eurosailnews.com/advertise.html

EuroSail News #4299 - 20 March

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In This Issue
Arbitration Ambiguity
Simulator Scare
Positions Vacant With A+T Instruments
The Women's Cup at Copa del Rey MAPFRE
Onboard with Loick Peyron
A whole New World - Excess Yachts
Mirabaud Sailing Video Award 2019
City Of Zhuhai In Clipper 2019-2020
18ft Skiffs 2019 Queen Of The Harbour
CYCA first National Sailing League entry
Letters to the Editor
Featured Brokerage
The Last Word: Rhys Ifans

Brought to you by Seahorse magazine and YachtScoring.com EuroSail News is a digest of sailing news and opinions, regatta results, new boat and gear information and letters from sailors -- with a European emphasis. Contributions welcome, send to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Arbitration Ambiguity
On 5 March, we learned that Challenger of Record Luna Rossa and Defender Emirates Team New Zealand (together "COR/D") settled their dispute about the validity of the three late challenges - from Malta Altus Challenge, from Stars & Stripes (USA) and from DutchSail. We later learned that New York Yacht Club's American Magic asked the Arbitration Panel to rule on the same issues.

This week, we got a somewhat ambiguous decision from the Arbitration Panel and a press release about that decision from ETNZ. We also note that in Amendment 03 to the Protocol, COR/D forgot to specify a penalty for breach.

The short version:
- The three late challengers get more time to pay their Late Fee and Performance Bond.
- Nothing has been published about the "or else" - the penalty if they don't meet the new payment deadlines.
- Nothing has been published about new deadlines for paying the two instalments of USD 1 million each for the regular Entry Fee.
- The Arbitration Panel used somewhat ambiguous wording about whether their ruling was based on interpreting "racing" to include only the America's Cup Match. It took a deep dive into the Protocol to understand that when they refer to "the America's Cup" they mean all the events including the AC World Series.
- ETNZ criticized NYYC for being anti-competitive.
- Luna Rossa defended NYYC.
- ETNZ has said there are concerns about whether Malta Altus Challenge will be able to continue, but they did not give any reasons for their concern, other than the delay, which logically would also affect Stars & Stripes and DutchSail.

You can find a longer explanation here, citing the Arbitration Decision, the Protocol and the necessary references to the Protocol's official dictionary.

For more info about breaches of the Protocol click here: CupExperience Newsletter, Issue 88, 15 February 2019. -- Jack Griffin

Simulator Scare
America's Cup veteran Jimmy Spithill has been freaked out by the new foiling monohulls to be sailed at Auckland 2021.

Double winner Spithill has returned to Italian syndicate Luna Rossa for the 36th edition of the Cup and has been busy acquainting himself with the 75-foot monster on a simulator.

Luna Rossa skipper Max Sirena revealed that Spithill was astonished with what was happening in front of him on the screen, declaring: "We'll s... ourselves".

When the concept was first displayed Spithill predicted the monohulls chosen to replace the foiling catamarans of Bermuda would be "a beast of a boat ... another level".

It seems the simulator is proving exactly that as Luna Rossa, like defender Emirates Team New Zealand and other heavyweight challengers American Magic and INEOS Team UK, look to launch their first editions in the middle of the year.

www.stuff.co.nz

Positions Vacant With A+T Instruments
A+T Instruments A+T are the rapidly growing designer and manufacturer of very high-quality instruments for the Superyacht and race boat markets.

Offering upgrades and complete systems, A+T are suppliers to some 250 of the world's largest and fastest yachts. Key to A+T's business is the provision of excellent support.

Year on year growth has been 40% and now A+T are looking to expand their sales team with three appointments:

Technical Sales and Support
Preparation of proposals, drawings and dealing with technical enquiries. Liaison with captains, engineers, high-end electronics installers, project managers and yards. Mostly office based with some travel to visit yachts, dealers, yards and attend trade shows.

Outbound Sales
Office based outbound sales activity primarily around installer/dealers, refit and new-build yards.

Regatta Sales and Support
An upcoming or established professional sailor/tactician/navigator who can add a part-time role around sailing. Providing support, networking and direct sales at regattas and assisting with office- based testing, documentation, product feedback and improvements between events.

Great communication skills and a passion for excellent customer service are essential for all roles. A+T are a friendly team based in comfortable offices in Lymington, UK.

For detailed job description or to apply please email gemma [AT] aandtinstruments [DOT] com

For any candidates in the Caribbean over the next few weeks there may be an opportunity to meet Hugh Agnew, one of our directors, who is at St Barths's Bucket and then in Antigua.

www.AandTinstruments.com

The Women's Cup at Copa del Rey MAPFRE
2019 is set to be a year of great changes in the Copa del Rey MAPFRE. Following the recent announcement of the new classification system (including a final stage and the new distribution of the ORC classes), a new Women's Class will also be added to the 38th edition, with the aim of reinforcing female participation in the sport of sailing, as it is being supported for the olympic classes in Tokyo 2020 and Paris 2024.

The choice of a one-design such as the Viper 640; suitable for crews of up to four sailors, was one of the main driving forces behind the new class. The class offers the opportunity to put each skipper and their crews' talent and skill to the test, under exactly the same conditions. The one-designs will be handed over three days before the first race under a draw system, which ensures maximum equality between teams, with exactly the same preparation and training time for their boat and crew.

The ten all-female crews will compete in the 38th Copa del Rey MAPFRE under the new classification system, which takes place in two phases: Monday to Thursday with up to eight races and a discard, and the final stage from Friday to Saturday with three further races and no discard.

The 38th Copa del Rey MAPFRE will be held in Palma from 27th July to 3rd August 2019.

www.regatacopadelrey.com

Onboard with Loick Peyron
Click on image for photo gallery.

Loick Peyro Training Session with Loick Peyron onboard a Figaro Beneteau 3 "Action Enfance", preparing for the Sardinha Cup and for La Solitaire Urgo Le Figaro.

The Figaro Beneteau 3 is the first production foiling one-design monohull ever to be designed. A distillation of technology and innovation, it results from a collaboration between group Beneteau's best experts and the Van Peteghem Lauriot-Prévost (VPLP) office.

Christophe Launay on assignment for Loick Peyron.

sailing-legends.com

A whole New World - Excess Yachts
Excess Yachts When the world's biggest yacht builder decided to lean a little harder on the loud pedal they were clearly in no mood to mess around...

There's a great big gap right in the middle of the multihull market and Groupe Bénéteau has launched a whole new brand to fill it. With its allnew Excess catamarans, the world's biggest boatbuilder is forging a sporty, modern and youthful brand identity, offering a new generation of multihull sailors an alternative to what has become, in effect, a binary choice between skittish, hull-flying racing machines on one hand and sedate holiday cruisers on the other. The first boats are in build at the time of writing and two models, the 39ft Excess 12 and the 49ft Excess 15, are set to make their boat show début at Cannes this September.

'The market is a broad spectrum with high-performance boats at one end and comfortable cruisers, which are optimised for charter use, at the other,' says Bruno Belmont, the product designer for Excess Catamarans. 'About 90 per cent of the market – including our own very successful brand, Lagoon – is clustered tightly together at the comfort end of the spectrum. There are some well-established niche brands at the performance end, but there is a big gap in the centre.'

Full article in the April issue of Seahorse

Mirabaud Sailing Video Award 2019
The annual Mirabaud Sailing Video Award celebrates the best sailing videos produced each year across the world and their authors. Building on the lessons learned from the first two editions, the competition continues to evolve and refine its rules. A single category will now include all videos, produced by professional directors as well as sailors, who are generally assisted by video production companies.

The main prize will again be determined by an international jury, while the public will be able to vote online from 25 October.

Unique in its kind, the Mirabaud Sailing Video Award has established itself as the world's leading competition in this field. Open to audiovisual professionals, cameramen, editors, directors and sailors who film themselves during regattas, the Mirabaud Sailing Video Award brings together and celebrates the best sailing videos since 2017. All videos can be viewed online.

The awards ceremony will take place in public on Monday 25 November in Bilbao (Spain), during the gala evening of the Yacht Racing Forum, in the presence of the main personalities of the international sailing world.

The dates to remember :
The videos must have been filmed between September 24, 2018 and October 23, 2019
Videos must be submitted before October 23, 2019 at midnight GMT
Public voting will be open from October 25 to November 5, 2019

Complete rules

Two important information :
Duration of the videos : 45'' to 2'00
Copyright-free soundtrack

The Mirabaud Sailing Video Award can once again count on its loyal partner, Banque Mirabaud & Cie SA. Two co-sponsors positions are still available. Six media partners are also involved in the competition, which is actively seeking other media partners around the world.

Submit your video here

City Of Zhuhai In Clipper 2019-2020
Eighteen brave adventurers, including a professor, engineer and student, have been chosen to represent the city of Zhuhai as ocean racers in the Clipper 2019-20 Round the World Yacht Race. The candidates, who went through a tough three day selection process, hosted by the Zhuhai Jiuzhou Holdings Group and a delegation from the Clipper Race, will become Zhuhai Ambassadors in the upcoming edition.

A total of 48 applicants from across China applied to be Zhuhai Ambassadors and 32 were invited to compete for a place. The role of an Ambassador is to promote Zhuhai around the world, and as the voices of this 'City of Islands', provide a long-lasting legacy for sailing and tourism. The hopefuls were put through their paces, being assessed on their sense of adventure, passion for the city they will be representing and their willingness to learn the skills to sail across an ocean.

Ranging in age from 21 to 56, the seven women and eleven men will soon travel to England for four weeks of intensive training. The training, which is mandatory for anyone taking part in the Clipper Race, will teach the ambassadors how to overcome the most challenging conditions on the planet.

Zhuhai and the Jiuzhou Holdings Group signed a three-edition deal to be a Host Port and Team Partner for the 2019-20, 2021-22 and 2023-24 editions of the global event. The city of Zhuhai is located close to Hong Kong, Guangdong and Macao and has the largest coastal area in China, many beautiful islands and excellent conditions for sailing. Zhuhai is also one of the home cities of the recently opened world's longest sea-crossing bridge. The bridge connects Hong Kong to Macau and the Chinese mainland in Zhuhai.

www.clipperroundtheworld.com

18ft Skiffs 2019 Queen Of The Harbour
Click on image for photo gallery.

18ft Skiffs 2019 Queen Of The Harbour Sydney Harbour: Corinne Feldman today became the 2019 18ft Skiff Queen of Sydney Harbour when she teamed with Jack Sprague, Tim Narborough and her son, Josh Feldman on Dal Zotto to win the Australian 18 Footers League's time-honoured Queen of the Harbour race.

The annual race, which was first sailed at the Sydney Flying Squadron in 1912, is sailed with each skiff including one female member of the crew.

Dal Zotto took out today's race by 41s from Appliancesonline.com.au (Brett Van Munster, Cassy Kowaltze), with Vintec (Kirk Mitchell, Emma Harrison) a further 11s back in third place.

Quality Marine Clothing (Yvette Heritage, Emma Sills) finished in fourth place, followed by Rag & Famish Hotel (Bryce Edwards, Keats Thomson) and Ilve (Jonathan Whitty, Claire Kowaltze)

The 2019 race was sailed in a 12-15 knot WSW breeze over a two-lap windward-return course, which started in Rose Bay.

A shift in the wind direction meant that the run back to the finish was far different to the first lap as the teams had to gybe a number of times before the finish.

Appliancesonline.com.au finished strongly but Dal Zotto's team were faultless and never looked likely to lose.

The race also marked the end of the 2018-2019 Australian 18 Footers League Season.

Racing in the 2019-2020 Season will commence early in October.

Frank Quealey
www.18footers.com

CYCA first National Sailing League entry
The Cruising Yacht Club of Australia, highly-regarded both in offshore and youth match racing circles, is the first club to enter a team for the April National Sailing League Final in Sydney.

CYCA Youth Sailing Academy head coach Jordan Reece won't name his youth team just yet. He still has the difficult task ahead of choosing from the large pool of advanced CYCA YSA sailors aged under 22 who competed last season with success, both nationally and internationally.

With entries initially capped at 24 teams, clubs are encouraged to sign up for the inaugural National Sailing League fleet racing event by getting in touch with their club captain, who received an invitation last month.

The first ever NSL event begins with an opening ceremony at the host Royal Sydney Yacht Squadron the evening of April 25 followed by three days of fully umpired short course keelboat racing using six Elliott 7s. A maximum four crew, at least one of those female, will crew in the open division and a maximum of five will crew in the youth and women's division

Twenty-four teams will take to Sydney Harbour to compete in 45 stadium format races of 12-15 minutes each to find the top six teams to compete in the final series.

The top Australian and New Zealand team will automatically qualify for a spot at the Sailing Champions League (SCL) final at St Moritz in August and the top youth team will be eligible to compete at the SCL Youth Event at Kiel in June.

The Notice of Race for the National Sailing League Final can be viewed here nationalsailingleague.com.au

Letters To The Editor - editor [AT] scuttlebutteurope [DOT] com
Letters are limited to 350 words. No personal attacks are permitted. We do require your name but your email address will not be published without your permission.

* From Sir Robin Knox-Johnston:

Busy getting Suhaili ready to sail back into Falmouth exactly 50 years later on 22nd April 2019. A bit of a flotilla is gathering t share the event, and of course there will be the odd party!

The programme below went out on the BBC last Friday. At least we got some sailing coverage!

www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m00036lz

Featured Brokerage
Raceboats Only 1894 G L Watson 36 FT Cutter. 300,000 EUR, Located in United Kingdom.

PEGGY BAWN is quite simply the best behaved yacht anyone had the pleasure to sail.

Long gone are his huge America’s Cup challengers and “Big Class” racing yachts, and only two of the fleet of palatial steam yachts – the superyachts of their day – from his Glasgow drawing boards are known to survive, in fabulous condition although barely recognisable from their original appearance.

It is left to PEGGY BAWN to carry the flame for Watson’s groundbreaking mid-1890s work in setting the standard for moderation in sailing yacht design, work that has never been challenged – only endorsed by those who followed his lead through the 20th century, especially Olin J. Stephens, who was a self-confessed Watson fan.

See listing details in Seahorse's RaceboatsOnly

Contact
Barney Sandeman info [AT] sandemanyachtcompany [DOT] co [DOT] uk
+44 (0)1202 330077
33 High Street
Poole, Dorset
BH15 1AB
United Kingdom

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Raceboats Only 1999 Swan 44-147 MkII 'Triple Lindy'. 180,000 Euros. Located in Civitavecchia, Italy

Triple Lindy is one of a kind version of the popular Frers Swan 44 cruiser racers that has been fully optimized for racing.

See listing details in Nautor's Swan Brokerage

Contact
Nautor's Swan Brokerage - Giorgio Passarella
brokerage [AT] nautorswan [DOT] com
Tel. +377 97 97 95 07
nautorswanbrokerage.com

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Raceboats Only 2013 IMERYS Class 40. 320,000 EUR. Located in Lorient, France.

Winner of the 2018 and 2017 Class 40 Championship, Imerys is fresh back from a podium in the Route du Rhum in great condition for immediate sale.

See listing details in Seahorse's RaceboatsOnly

Contact
Phil Sharp:
+44 7973 378997
phil [AT] philsharpracing [DOT] com

See the RaceboatsOnly.com collection at seahorsemagazine.com/brokerage/

The Last Word
In Wales, singing and storytelling are party skills, not professions. -- Rhys Ifans

Editorial and letter submissions to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Advertising inquiries to Graeme Beeson: gb [AT] beesonstone [DOT] com or see www.eurosailnews.com/advertise.html

EuroSail News #4300 - 21 March

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In This Issue
Rolex Fastnet Race's most complete pantheon of offshore race boats
2019 St. Thomas International Regatta
What's in the Latest Edition Of Seahorse Magazine
50 Days To 50 Knots
1851 Trust continues as Official Event Charity for Lendy Cowes Week 2019
Add St Barths To Your Bucket List
Video: Ships vs. Boats - How Close is Too Close?
Launchings
Featured Brokerage
Back on Monday
The Last Word: Douglas R. Hofstadter

Brought to you by Seahorse magazine and YachtScoring.com EuroSail News is a digest of sailing news and opinions, regatta results, new boat and gear information and letters from sailors -- with a European emphasis. Contributions welcome, send to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Rolex Fastnet Race's most complete pantheon of offshore race boats
The most impressive collection of offshore racing hardware from across the globe is set to gather off Cowes for the start of the Rolex Fastnet Race on 3 August.

Following the 340 available places in the IRC fleet selling out in just four minutes and 37 seconds when entry opened on 7th January, the Royal Ocean Racing Club, organisers of this, the world's largest offshore yacht race, has provided a sneak preview of the 2019 line-up.

While the bulk of the fleet remains the IRC entries, competing for both their class titles as well as the overall Fastnet Challenge Cup, 2019 will see an unprecedented entry of 'non-IRC' boats, the majority from France. Entered at present are 25 Class40s (plus two more in the IRC fleet). There are also set to be a handful of Ultimes. At 100ft long, these maxi trimarans are the world's largest and fastest offshore race boats. The present race record for the Rolex Fastnet Race was set in 2011 by the 130ft trimaran Banque Populaire V, skippered by Loick Peyron, in a time of 32 hours 48 minutes at an average speed of 18.5 knots. While shorter, any of the new generation Ultimes is capable of bettering this time.

Most staggering are the number of IMOCA 60s entered - 27 of them, making this one of the largest gatherings of these thoroughbred ocean racers outside of the race for which they are principally built - the Vendee Globe singlehanded non-stop round the world race. IMOCA 60s have been in the news in recent months as they are one of the classes set to be used for the next running of The Ocean Race (ex-Volvo Ocean Race) over 2021-22. The Rolex Fastnet Race line-up includes an unusually large number of British female skippers taking part, among them Initiatives Coeur's Sam Davies and former Mini and Class40 sailor Pip Hare.

In sheer numbers the IRC fleet should once again be huge. At present the maximum entries has been comfortably exceeded although the exact number making it to the start will fluctuate due to circumstances, not least the requirement to comply with the RORC's race qualification requirements.

www.rolexfastnetrace.com

2019 St. Thomas International Regatta
When it comes to consistently delivering tradewind sailing on crystal-clear Caribbean water, the St. Thomas International Regatta (STIR), now about to begin its 46th annual edition, has long proven itself popular with sailors from different island nations, Europe and North and South America. And for excellent reason: STIR (March 22-24, 2019) unfurls on a beautiful patch of sun-kissed brine and is administered by seasoned and experienced race officials and a professional race committee who know how to deliver engaging One Design and fleet racing on a wide variety of courses.

Better still, the regatta's organizers also know how to deliver the kind of onshore entertainment that keeps boats and crews coming back for years.

Once the starting guns begin to sound, visiting racers can expect spirited competition in all classes, from modest Hobie Waves, to the Caribbean-grown IC24 fleet, to the keelboats sailing in CSA handicap divisions that have always been the regatta's beating heart.

While Windward-Leewward courses test crew work, boatspeed, and racecourse smarts, so too do short distance courses that wend past nearby islands and give crews a chance to stretch their legs a bit, and STIR has historically done a great job of offering an engaging blend of both styles of racing.

Additionally, the 4th annual Round the Rocks Race (March 21, 2019) serves as a warm-up for STIR and gives teams a great chance to circumnavigate St. Thomas while enjoying fantastic views (weather permitting) of nearby St. John and the smaller surrounding islands.

David Schmidt's interview with BIll Canfield in Sail-World

Seahorse April 2019
What's in the Latest Edition Of Seahorse Magazine

Seahorse Magazine

Vision
When Baltic Yachts and the Farr office agreed to throw their weight behind the biggest DSS project yet they did not hold back. The result is certainly going to be watched unusually closely. Gordon Kay, Soren Jansson, Simon Everest, Ken Read, Bas Peute, Bill Faude, James Wilkinson, Britt Ward and Dominique Pedron

Second life
Or more accurately Act Two? Either way the new 44Cup takes a great boat that is already acknowledged as perfect for the task and fires in a whole heap of fresh energy...

All going to plan
Speed, reliability, skipper comfort... so far it's all going the right way for Sam Davies' third Vendee Globe programme

Seahorse build table - Italian Magic
Designer Mark Mills is pretty happy with what just came out of the shed at Maxi Dolphin

Fun (aka value for money)
Maybe it's time at last? Rob Weiland

Special rates for Scuttlebutt Europe subscribers:
Seahorse Print or Digital Subscription Use Discount Promo Code SB2

1yr Print Sub: €77 - £48 - $71 / Rest of the World: £65 www.seahorse.co.uk/shop/subs/

1yr Digital Sub for £30: www.seahorse.co.uk/shop/digital

Discounts shown are valid on a one year subscription to Seahorse magazine.

50 Days To 50 Knots
In just under 50 days, SailGP will debut on U.S. waters, expecting to break sailing's elusive 50-knot barrier (60 mph) when its six supercharged F50s take flight on San Francisco Bay.

SailGP will bring the all new on-water racing spectacular to San Francisco on Saturday, May 4 and Sunday, May 5, marking the second event in the championship's 2019 inaugural racing calendar, and its first-ever grand prix in the United States.

In San Francisco, the U.S. SailGP Team - comprised of world-class sailors from across the country - will assume center stage as they take on five rival teams from Australia, China, France, Great Britain and Japan. All six teams will race in identical, supercharged 50-foot foiling catamarans at speeds that have never been seen before in sail racing.

Racing will take place just off the Marina Yacht Club Peninsula in the heart of San Francisco Bay, with the stunning Golden Gate Bridge and Alcatraz Island as a backdrop. Competing in a total of five short-format fleet races, the top two teams will face off in a match race finale to determine the event winner on Sunday afternoon.

The U.S. SailGP Team is comprised of Rome Kirby, 29, of Newport, Rhode Island (helmsman); Taylor Canfield, 30, of St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands (flight controller/tactician); Riley Gibbs, 22, of Long Beach, California (wing trimmer); Hans Henken, 26, of Coronado, California (flight controller); Mac Agnese, 24, of Fort Lauderdale, Florida (grinder); and Dan Morris, 31, of Edina, Minnesota (grinder).

Earlier this week, SailGP announced a partnership with Red and White Fleet - San Francisco's leading bay cruise operator - as the exclusive provider of on-water experiences for families, individuals and corporate guests. Exclusive ticketed experiences will be offered on the Red and White Fleet's newest vessels, the Zalophus and the Enhydra, with both spectator boats having prime viewing position within the race zone, guaranteeing the closest viewing of the action, as well as complimentary food and beverage.

Purchase tickets for land or on-water viewing here.

sailgp.com

1851 Trust continues as Official Event Charity for Lendy Cowes Week 2019
Cowes Week Limited (CWL) is delighted to announce that they have appointed the 1851 Trust for a further year as the official event charity for Lendy Cowes Week.

The 1851 Trust's aim is to inspire and engage young people from all backgrounds across the UK to imagine their futures differently. As the Official Charity of INEOS TEAM UK, led by Sir Ben Ainslie, the Trust uses the power of professional sport to inspire the next generation. In 2019, the Trust will be launching a new sailing initiative with the support of INEOS. This programme will provide 6,000 'first-time' sailing opportunities to young people from disadvantaged backgrounds across the country in 2019.

It is widely recognised that not enough talented young people are choosing careers in science, technology, engineering and maths (STEM). The 1851 Trust challenge perceptions and excite young people about STEM through their high-quality education programmes. Programmes like www.stemcrew.co.uk, which is used by over 1,500 teachers and 85,000 students in classrooms across the UK, showcases the cutting-edge innovation and aspirational role models behind the British Challenge for the America's Cup.

The 1851 Trust will be raising money during Lendy Cowes Week which will enable them to reach more young people who would not usually get the opportunity to try sailing. They will be running fundraising activities throughout the week, from family games on The Parade to prize draws for Cowes Week competitors. In the run-up to Cowes Week competitors can offer their support to the 1851 Trust by adding a donation to their regatta registration.

lendycowesweek.co.uk

Add St Barths To Your Bucket List
The St Barths Bucket has a placeholder on many calendars within the North Sails network. This annual superyacht regatta is a 'must do' for more than just its tropical location. The Bucket is considered one of the most Corinthian events of the superyacht circuit, mixing great sailing with a casual vibe that is enjoyed by owners, their guests and the crew who help sail these modern superyachts.

Taking our cue from the event, North Sails is onsite (and onboard) to make sure all 36 yachts taking part in the 2019 St Barths Bucket are race ready throughout the four-day event. Palma-based Superyacht expert, Quinny Houry will be sailing on Missy, an MM330. We called Quinny in advance of his trip to collect his thoughts on the 2019 event, and why, the Bucket has a place in Quinny's schedule since 2003.

The St Barths Bucket is the Corinthian Superyacht event of the modern era - a mix of owners, pro sailors and guests onboard all the boats. The owners are very comfortable to bring their boats because they're with friends. For the pro sailors, it's just an amazing place to be out on the water. The island lends itself to ideal superyachts racing, and also the infrastructure to support an event this size. Anybody who loves sailing, and gets an opportunity to do the event, should.

The Bucket is similar to a golf Pro-Am tournament because although there's competition, and you have some of the best sailors in the world, everyone on the water is having fun too. The most amazing thing about the racing is you'll have an America's Cup helmsman, and Olympic gold medalist sailing on your boat; it's the equivalent is being able to go around a Grand Prix track with Lewis Hamilton driving your car. Owners really see the potential of their boat, whereas when you're cruising it, you don't see the potential because you don't have world class sailors sailing it.

When I've sailed with Shirley Robertson, who's won two Olympic gold medals, and she's on the boat giving the debrief, the owner is sitting there listening to her give her views on the race you've just had and they really feel part of it. It is an amazingly unique event.

www.northsails.com/sailing/en/2019/03/2019-st-barths-bucket-preview

Video: Ships vs. Boats - How Close is Too Close?
When it comes to recreational boats and commercial ship traffic, separation is key. Some boaters, however, may not recognize the dangers of navigating close to a commercial ship. Two 30-second videos captured by a pilot at the helm of 600-plus-foot commercial vessels navigating on New York's Hudson River are aimed at educating recreational boaters on this risk and improving recreational boat safety.

In one of the videos, a recreational boat and personal watercraft cross directly under the bow of a 623-foot bulk carrier underway near the waterway's Bear Mountain Bridge, then disappear out of view from the ship's helm for more than 7 seconds - plenty of time to put the boaters and their passengers at risk.

The videos can be found at: bit.ly/2BniCUn

"In both of these situations, all it would take is an engine failure, striking a submerged object, or any other momentary propulsion or mechanical failure to put these recreational vessels on a collision course with a ship, which has restricted ability to maneuver and may take a half mile or more to come to a complete stop," said BoatUS Public Affairs Vice President Scott Croft. "We hope the videos will educate boaters on the need to give ship traffic a wide berth and to always avoid passing under a bow."

For more information on safe boat operation and ships, go to BoatUS.org/rulesoftheroad.

The videos were done in partnership with the Hudson River Safety, Navigation and Operations Committee (HRSNOC), Hudson River Pilots Association, and the nonprofit BoatUS Foundation for Boating Safety and Clean Water. BoatUS is a member of HRSNOC whose goal is to create cooperation among Hudson River waterway users and communities to seek out non-regulatory solutions to operational challenges and minimize environmental and safety risks.

Launchings
Sodebo Ultim 3 arrives in home port La Trinite-sur-Mer

The 32m long by 23m wide trimaran was launched at Vannes Multiplast Yard in Morbihan two weeks ago.

Incredibly, Thomas Coville's new Trimaran is flying from the front, not the rear. The Cockpit is at the front of the Sailboat, in front of the mast.

Sodebo Ultim 3 left the site at Vannes, France, after 18 months of construction in the Multiplast hanger.

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Lion New Zealand

Zelanian shipyard Yachting Developments has relaunched a 24,4-metre maxi racing yacht Lion New Zealand (built in 1985) in Auckland, after a fundamental two-year refit. The latter has cost the company $ 1,000,000 and included structural renovation and installation of new marine equipment.

The yacht has undergone extensive refit resulting in a new mast, keel and boom, along with new deck winches, rigging, lighting and electronics. Her interior was completely upgraded, with new accommodation facilities, a reconfigured galley and forward area. In addition, Lion New Zealand has been fully repainted in her original colours and covered with antifouling. A new propeller with a propeller shaft and new Volvo engine were fitted alongside new navigation systems and plumbing.

According to Ian Cook, the refit work allowed to upgrade the yacht that had been in need for refit, and repurpose her for a new role. From now on, the yacht will serve ensuring sailing experience on the Hauraki Gulf for Zelanian youth and team building activities.

Lion New Zealand was originally launched 34 years ago featuring design by Ron Holland, serving for Sir Peter Blake's attempt to win Whitbread Round The World Race in 1985/1986. Owned by the NZ Sailing Trust since 2008, Lion New Zealand is now conceived to host thousands of young New Zealanders on-board yearly.

yachtharbour.com

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Perini Navi

The hull of the first S/Y 42m E-volution has arrived in Viareggio from the Perini Navi yard at Yildiz in Turkey. Part of the series created by Perini Navi's in-house designers in collaboration with renowned American performance yacht specialists Reichel/Pugh, the yacht will be delivered in summer 2020.

As the first hull in the E-volution line, the 42m performance cruising yacht represents the beginning of an exciting new era for Perini Navi. Sloop-rigged, it is built from aluminium with a carbon-fibre mast, boom and rigging.

In terms of aesthetics, the crisp exterior styling by Franco Romani, Perini Navi's Style & Design Director, breaks with tradition, while the terraced aft deck introduces more space and improves functionality in addition to bringing guests into closer contact with the water.

The naval architecture and sail plan by Reichel/Pugh offer the ideal compromise between cruising comfort and performance. Equipped with a lifting keel, the yacht will be powerful and easy to handle.

Perini Navi currently has the largest number of over-40m sailing superyachts in build in the world. Its production plans span seven craft, four sailing and three motor. Specifically:

42m E-volution sailing yacht;
42m E-volution GTS sailing yacht;
47m E-volution sailing yacht;
60m Classic sailing yacht;
53m Voyager motoryacht;
56m Voyager motoryacht;
25m Eco-tender motoryacht.

perininavi.it

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DOMANI

DOMANI YACHTS introduced its first Sportyacht S30 at the Dusseldorf Boat Show in January 2018, and immediately became a hit with the general public and the international press. DOMANI YACHTS is now the only true Belgian sailboat builder.

The first S30 Sportyachts were sold last year. DOMANI participated in the Dutch 'HISWA on the water' where the DOMANI S30 was nominated for the election "HISWA boat of the year" and the INTERBOOT show in Friedrichshafen, followed by test trips on Lake Constance in Germany where the conditions were just astonishing; friendly sailors, wind, sun and the unique Alps in the background.

The DOMANI S30 offers sportiness, luxury and design in one elegant boat. This way the Sportyacht brings the ultimate sailing experience within reach.

Due to the compact dimensions and light weight, the DOMANI S30 can also be perfectly trailered to the water of your wishes. Ideal for a relaxing or sporty day or weekend sailing.

For more information or an appointment, contact: michael [AT] domaniyachts [DOT] com, +32 473 662 014.

www.domaniyachts.com

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Dehler 30 OD

Dehler 30 OD
After two years of intensive research, design and development, the Dehler 30 od became a perfect product for the new generation of sailors adopting the challenge of double handed offshore racing.

In tradition of Sprinta Sport and DB1, Dehler Yachts presents a new offshore one-design class, focusing on double-handed long distance racing.

Dehler Yachts starts a new chapter in its more than 50 years of history:

Type: Offshore One Design
Total loa: 10.22 m
Floating length: 9.00 m
Beam: 3.25 m
Draft: 2.20 m
Displacement: 2.500 Kg.
Ballast: 900 Kg.
Furling Jib: 27.50 m2
Main: 31.0 m2

syiberica.com/en/yates/dehler-30-od/

Featured Brokerage
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ben [DOT] cooper [AT] berthon [DOT] co [DOT] uk

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Raceboats Only 2018 JPK 1180 - "Sunrise". 350000 GBP. Located in UK.

A VERY unique opportunity! Ancasta Race Boats are happy to inform you that the 2018 JPK 1180 "Sunrise" is now for sale. Incredible opportunity of securing one of these boats now, rather than joining the near 2 year waiting list for a new build! An 11.80 just won the RMSR overall - potential is H

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Raceboats Only 2018 Grand Soleil 34 185,000 tax not paid EUR. Located in Cowes, Isle of Wight.

A re-styling of the original Grand Soleil 34, the Skyron designed 2018 model is a sleek performance cruiser.

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No Friday Issue, back on Monday
Your humble narrator goes under the knife (albeit for only about 10 minutes) for cataract surgery early Thursday morning. Phones and tablets all charged, audio books and podcasts lined up and waiting. And a pair of those dark black wrap around "old man" sunglasses that put 10 years on anyone who dons them. A quiet few days, a reinvigorated return on Monday.

The Last Word
It turns out that an eerie type of chaos can lurk just behind a facade of order - and yet, deep inside the chaos lurks an even eerier type of order. -- Douglas R. Hofstadter

Editorial and letter submissions to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Advertising inquiries to Graeme Beeson: gb [AT] beesonstone [DOT] com or see www.eurosailnews.com/advertise.html

EuroSail News #4301 - 25 March

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In This Issue
St. Thomas International Regatta
World Match Racing Tour Extends 2018 Season
Southern Spars & Future Fibres Rig Package Integration
M32 European Series Sanremo
Clipper 2019-20 Round the World Yacht Race Skippers Revealed
Marlow Ropes new Splicing Tutorials
Busy season planned for Solent Sunbeam class in 2019
Istvan Kopar secures 4th place in the Golden Globe Race
Better Safe Than Sorry When Racing Sailboats
Darrell J. Lowrance
Featured Brokerage
The Last Word: Lawrence Feringhetti

Brought to you by Seahorse magazine and YachtScoring.com EuroSail News is a digest of sailing news and opinions, regatta results, new boat and gear information and letters from sailors -- with a European emphasis. Contributions welcome, send to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

St. Thomas International Regatta
St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands. Some of the 50-plus boats racing on the second day of the 46th St. Thomas International Regatta (STIR), stretched their class leads. Others overtook fellow class competitors to jump into the lead. Either way, blue skies, warm seas and winds blowing steadily at 12 to 15 knots over the round-the-island and round-the-buoy courses proved fun for everyone in this St. Thomas Yacht Club-hosted event,.

A good example of a lead stretch was St. Thomas' Peter Corr's King 40, Blitz, in CSA Spinnaker Racing 1. The Blitz team, an international contingent of crew from the USVI, USA, UK and Australia, tied on points after the first day with Antigua's Pamala Baldwin's J/122 Liquid. Today, Blitz won the class's two races thus posting a two-point lead over Liquid.

Meanwhile, the USA's Ron Zarrella's team aboard his custom-designed, 49-foot, cold-molded racer/cruiser, Blackfish, maintained a middle of the class position. Yet, they enjoyed a winning day in their own way.

"The racing today, off St. John and in Pillsbury Sound, has to be the most scenic courses I've ever done," says Zarrella, who is competing in STIR for his first time. "We usually sail in the classic yacht regattas, so we weren't necessarily expecting to win. But, we really wanted to experience this (racing in the Caribbean in STIR)."

In the CSA Spinnaker Racing 2 class, it was a case of overtaking rather than lead stretching for the St. Croix-based team aboard the J/100, Bad Girl. Bad Girl, with Mackenzie Bryan at the helm, had a tough time on the regattas first race on Friday and needed to retire. The young Crucians, almost all 20-somethings that grew up sailing together in dinghies, came back strong with nothing less than first place finishes. As a result, Bad Girl pushed St. John's Mike Feierabend's J/24, Bravissimo, to second. It's a very close second as both boats are tied at 8-points each.

Stretch was the word in the CSA Non-Spinnaker class as the team aboard Canada's Rob Butler's Reflex 38 put a five-point spread between themselves and St. Thomas' Lawrence Aqui's Dufour 40, Wild T'ing. Wild T'ing is the defending champion in this class, so Sunday's final day of racing should be highly competitive in this class.

Racing concludes Sunday evening.

stthomasinternationalregatta.com

World Match Racing Tour Extends 2018 Season
The World Match Racing Tour, under new ownership since 1 January, has announced an extension to the 2018 season in order to complete the World Championship following its sale by Aston Harald in December. The revised 2018-2019 WMRT Final will take place in Marstrand, Sweden over 3-7 July, hosted by the GKSS Match Cup Sweden. The event will be sailed in M32 catamarans and the winner will be crowned 2018-2019 Match Racing World Champion, as sanctioned by World Sailing.

The decision to extend the 2018 season follows feedback from teams and stakeholders keen to complete last year's unfinished season. WMRT Executive Director James Pleasance explains: "Teams invested in the Tour last year to win the World Championship. The Tour was sold before a Final took place and we have extended the schedule to ensure the World Championship title is properly awarded. The GKSS Match Cup Sweden has always been a flagship event of the Tour and we are excited to partner with them to host the World Championship."

The top 12 teams from the current WMRT leaderboard will be invited to compete in Sweden. They include defending Match Racing World Champion Torvar Mirsky (AUS), and former World Champions Phil Robertson (NZL) and Ian Williams (GBR).

Going forwards it is the intention of the WMRT's new owners to return the Tour to its roots, with a remit for the series and an organisational structure for 2019-2020 and the future similar to how it was before Aston Harald's tenure.

James Pleasance explains: "The World Match Racing Tour was founded on a very simple premise: To grow top level match racing by bringing together a series of existing and new events under a common 'World Series' brand. Each event is run independently but benefits from the added value that being part of a World Tour brings through global exposure and partnerships – the sum being greater than that of the parts.

Our plan is to return the Tour to have 8-10 world championship events per year and generate financial value to both sailors and sponsors through international media coverage and prize money. Qualifier events will give an open opportunity for any match racing sailor to become World Champion."

www.wmrt.com
www.gkssmatchcupsweden.se

Southern Spars & Future Fibres Rig Package Integration
Thanks to North Technology Group's "Engine Above Deck" concept and our unique bespoke design suite, sourcing both spars and rigging from Southern Spars and Future Fibres is an obvious choice. Together we provide a fully integrated and optimized rig package where the entire sail and rig plan works cohesively and there is a comprehensive understanding of the loads on the rig.

Southern Spars and Future Fibres look to form long term relations with boats and race programs so that together we can maximize racing performance.

southernspars.com
futurefibres.com

M32 European Series Sanremo
Ian Williams and his GAC Pindar team today claimed the M32 European Series warm-up event in Sanremo with a race to spare, at least. The British six time Match Racing World Champion and defending M32 European Series champion and his crew of Richard Sydenham, Pete Nicholas and Will Alloway led from day one of this three day event. This was despite a late challenge from young Swede Nicklas Dackhammar, standing in as helmsman on Cape Crow Vikings for Aston Harald boss Håkan Svensson, which saw Dackhammar taking the fight to the British in the pre-start of today's first race.

While GAC Pindar was again the winning boat of the day, second top scorer with a 2-3-3 was Youth Vikings Denmark, skippered by former Hobie 16 World Champion Daniel Bjornholt.

Having won two races of the 13 sailed here, Richard Goransson's Inga Racing Team was also punching above its weight, this being the Swedish team's first event in the nimble M32 catamaran after years in the Farr 30 and Melges 32 and 40.

The M32 European Series begins properly in two months' time, with the first of five scoring events taking place in Pisa, Italy over 24-26th May

Overall results
1. GAC Pindar, Ian Williams, 21
2. Vikings, Hakan Svensson, 32
3. Inga from Sweden, Richard Goransson, 41
4. Youth Vikings, Daniel Bjornholt, 49
5. Team Shark, Andrea Vacchino, 52

m32world.com/europe/

Clipper 2019-20 Round the World Yacht Race Skippers Revealed
The Skippers, who have a combined total of 1,312,300nm in their log books, hail from the UK, South Africa and Spain and bring a vast range of experience to the roles; Nick Leggatt, 52, (Cape Town) already has three circumnavigations under his belt; Chris Brooks, 33, (Westcliff-on-Sea, Essex) is a high-performance racer with a 95 per cent podium success rate; Josh Stickland, 31, (Southampton, Hampshire) started his sailing career as a teenager through a Prince's Trust bursary; Ben Keitch, 42, (Eastbourne, Sussex) spent 18 months with the British Antarctic Survey, and Seumas Kellock, 26, (Edinburgh, Scotland) is a former Clipper Race Crew whose skills were so impressive he has returned to the global sailing event as a Race Skipper.

The eleven Race Skippers are as follows:
Josh Stickland, 31, Southampton
Ben Keitch, 42, from Sussex
Jeronimo Santos-Gonzalez, 44, Galicia
Mark Burkes, 54, Worcester
Seumas Kellock, 26, Edinburgh
Ian Wiggin, 30, Plymouth
Chris Brooks, 33, Essex
Nick Leggatt, 52, Cape Town
David 'Wavy' Immelman, 48, Cape Town
Mike Surridge, 55, Canterbury
Guy Waites, 52, York

Biographies at www.clipperroundtheworld.com

Marlow Ropes new Splicing Tutorials
The first in the series of Marlow Ropes new Splicing Tutorials!

Skill rating: Advanced

Application: Used for core dependent rope constructions such as D2 Racing, V2 etc. Designs where the core contributes most or all the strength and the cover provides protection to the rope.

marlowropes.com

Busy season planned for Solent Sunbeam class in 2019
Solent Sunbeam class The 96-year-old Solent Sunbeam classic keelboat fleet has a busy racing and social schedule lined up for the coming sailing season, starting on Saturday 30th March 2019 an afternoon race around Chichester Harbour. Based at Itchenor Sailor Club, the class offers competitive and sociable Thursday evening racing, specific weekend regattas and a number of week-long racing events at both Itchenor and Cowes, from April through to September.

32 Solent Sunbeams regularly sail from Itchenor Sailing Club ranging from 96 years in age to new all-GRP and newly epoxied yachts ensuring excellent one-design racing in a competitive and very sociable fleet. Newcomers to the class are welcomed into the fleet with tips and advice on ownership, rig set-up and maintenance freely available from the long-standing owners and enthusiasts. Two new boats will be joining the Itchenor fleet this season, V47, Kitty who has come up from the Falmouth fleet and V70, Minty a brand-new GRP boat.

As one would expect with a class spanning 96 years, many of the current events, regattas and activities of the class have their origins in the past. The Solent Sunbeam class itself originates from Hamble River Sailing Club, where in 1922 the club Commodore, Basil Lubbock MC was asked by the members to find a new one design racing yacht. Lubbock commissioned the eminent naval architect Alfred Westmacott and the Solent Sunbeam was born.

It turned out to be one of Westmacott's best designs for racing; not only is she an extremely pretty 3-man keelboat but also one that can handle the boisterous conditions of the Solent. Her original construction by Woodnutt & Co on the Isle of Wight must have been of exceptionally high quality as eight of the first yachts still actively race today including hulls V1, V2 and V3 which were all commissioned in 1922/3.

The fleet was based at Hamble River Sailing Club from 1922-1930 and also at Bembridge Sailing Club in the 1930s. Itchenor Sailing Club first adopted the class in 1932 and by 1966 all the Solent boats were based at Itchenor. A sister fleet has existed in Falmouth since 1924 and will be celebrating their 95th anniversary this year with a number of special events.

www.solentsunbeam.co.uk

Istvan Kopar secures 4th place in the Golden Globe Races
American Hungarian solo yachtsman Istvan Kopar finally reached the finish line off Les Sables d'Olonne, France at 13:58 UTC today to take 4th place in the 2018 Golden Globe Race.

"This is the happiest day of my life...And this [Les Sables d'Olonne] is the best place to be...The Capital of offshore sailing." He said on arrival at the dock.

The 66-year old yachtsman from Delray Beach, Florida, who suffered continuing steering problems almost from Day 1, overcame setback after setback throughout the race. The water tanks in his Tradewind 35 yacht Puffin became contaminated soon after he sailed down into the Southern Ocean, and by Cape Horn, the black mould growing inside the boat became so bad that his health began to suffer.

His biggest reward was, he says "Solving all the problems en-route." The self-steering issues led to an overload on the gearbox within Puffin's pedestal wheel, which he had to strip down and refashion broken cogs from what he had onboard. He tried to circumvent the wheel steering altogether by fitting an emergency tiller, but that too broke and the lash-up he made to strengthen it used up the last of his epoxy resin supplies.

Kopar said: "It was torture for me. My self steering failed almost from Day 1. The boat itself did not have a problem. It was I who had the problems. Luck was just not with me. I think I'm done with sailing now and will take up gardening instead" he joked.

That was today...Tomorrow it may be a very different story!

Kopar's return leaves just one more skipper at sea – Finland's Tapio Lehtinen and his Gaia 36 Asteria, still 4,227 miles from the finish. He is not expected to finish before mid-May.

goldengloberace.com

Better Safe Than Sorry When Racing Sailboats
Telephoto camera lenses can play tricks with our eyes and make boats and marks appear closer to each other than they really are. Here is such a compressed photo of two boats rounding a windward mark in close quarters. Should the port tacker be better safe than sorry? The starboard tacker is in the zone and steaming toward the windward mark. The port tacker, reportedly, saw an opening to sneak inside the starboard tacker. Could she sneak inside? Would she? Should she?

Even if the first answer is yes, it would still be an imprudent tactic. Rule 18.3 (Tacking in the Zone) clearly gives the starboard tack boat right or way by saying if a boat tacks in the zone "she shall not cause a boat that has been on starboard tack since entering the zone to sail above close-hauled to avoid contact." That's the first fact. But go beyond the rule for a moment and think of the times you've tried to stick your bow inside of a mark. Hopefully you tried it in boats smaller than these 47-footers! You throw in your tack a little shy of the layline and never fully accelerate after the tack. The starboard tacker rolls you and takes your wind. Your boat wallows as you attempt to luff around the mark.

Why get rolled when you don't have to? Why risk fouling the right of way boat? Why risk not having enough way to get around the mark without hitting it?

The smart move, regardless of what size boat you're sailing, is to duck the starboard tacker and tack on its weather hip. That would prevent a foul and let you tack with a lot of speed and get around the mark cleanly.

Low percentage plays are how we lose sailboat races as well as poker hands. Anticipate your port tack approach options; come into your rounding tack with a full head of steam, and don't commit a foul. Be better safe than sorry. -- Adam Loory

www.uksailmakers.com/news/better-safe-than-sorry

Darrell J. Lowrance
Darrell J. Lowrance Navico, parent company to the Lowrance, Simrad, B&G and C-MAP brands, announced this week the passing of Darrell J. Lowrance, founder of its Lowrance brand. Darrell served as President and CEO of Lowrance Electronics from 1964 to 2006, and was responsible for many breakthroughs in marine electronics. In addition to the first recreational sonar product for anglers the Fish-Lo-K-Tor (also known as the "Little Green Box") he led the development of the first graph recorder, the first integrated sonar/GPS unit, and many others. He was President of the American Fishing Tackle Manufacturer's Association (AFTMA) from 1983-1984. Darrell also served as a member of the Board of Directors for AFTMA from 1978-1986, and again in 1988, and was inducted into the Bass Fishing Hall of Fame in 2013.

According to Bassmaster.com, Lowrance came up with the idea for fish finders while working as pilot. As he flew over Oklahoma’s Grand Lake O’ the Cherokees in the 1950s, he could see schools of fish through the clear water. He wondered if sonar - developed to find submarines - could be used to locate school of fish, too.

“He developed the famous “little green box” with the help of his father, Carl, and his brother, Arlen, to help fishermen and boaters monitor water depth and find fish. The product was introduced in 1959 and it revolutionized fishing,” Bassmaster reports.

The Lowrance Electronics Facebook page reports that Darrell J. Lowrance died of a stroke Saturday morning, March 16. He was 80 years old.

"With his passing, the world has lost a great man and a true visionary," said Leif Ottosson, CEO, Navico. "Darrell's passion for fishing, innovative design and dedication to driving the marine electronics industry forward, led to innovative ideas and products that have shaped the fishing experiences for millions of anglers globally during the past 60 years. The fishing world and our Navico family mourn this loss, and we offer our sincere condolences to Darrell's wife, Kathleen, and to his family."

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Raceboats Only 2017 B-Yachts Brenta B42 DC

The epitome of a cool, fast, contemporary designed “push button” sailing yacht which can be easily handled shorthanded thanks to electric winches, carbon in-boom furling, self-tacking jib and bowsprit flown gennaker. Price : 550000 EUR

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Raceboats Only 1989 ROTHMANS 1989 Whitbread Maxi. 190,000 EUR. Located in Stockholm, Sweden.

Bring a piece of history home! Race ready. Original race trim. Carbon / Kevlar. Humphreys Design. Constantly maintained. Total refit 2011. Antifoul, Deck, Electronics & more 2018. Very good condition. Sale by owner.

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See the RaceboatsOnly.com collection at seahorsemagazine.com/brokerage/

The Last Word
Paper may burn but words will escape. -- Lawrence Feringhetti, 100 years young, Sunday March 24th.

Editorial and letter submissions to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Advertising inquiries to Graeme Beeson: gb [AT] beesonstone [DOT] com or see www.eurosailnews.com/advertise.html


EuroSail News #4302 - 26 March

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Issue #4302 - 26 March

In This Issue
Winners Named In 46th St. Thomas International Regatta
Women's World No. 1 Among Latest Entrants To Argo Group Gold Cup
What's in the Latest Edition Of Seahorse Magazine
The Fastest Yacht in the Southern Hemisphere
Ben Houston appointed CEO of Australian Sailing
12 Metre World Championship
Evaluation Trials Footnote
18 IMOCA for Bermudes 1000 Race
Les Voiles de St. Barth Richard Mille
Featured Brokerage
The Last Word: Buddha

Brought to you by Seahorse magazine and YachtScoring.com EuroSail News is a digest of sailing news and opinions, regatta results, new boat and gear information and letters from sailors -- with a European emphasis. Contributions welcome, send to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Winners Named In 46th St. Thomas International Regatta
Photo by Ingrid Abery, www.ingridabery.com. Click on image for photo gallery.

St. Thomas International Regatta St. Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands. Clouds and a couple of squalls sent windy curve balls across the courses set for the 50-plus boats racing in the 46th St. Thomas International Regatta (STIR). STIR, long known as the 'Crown Jewel of Caribbean Yacht Racing', lived up to its reputation by delivering professionally-set round-the-rocks and round-the-buoy courses, the natural attributes of wind, sun and seas, and first-class competition and camaraderie. However, the big story of the final day of racing was all about the wind.

"We had light air and heavier air, a little big of everything," says David Tower, tactician aboard St. Thomas' Peter Corr's King 40, Blitz, winner of the CSA Spinnaker 1 class. "Today, when the squall blew through in the second race of the day, winds hit over 30 knots. We broached and briefly had a man overboard situation. But, there was no damage, no one was hurt and the team recovered quickly to carry on and finish sixth. Overall, it was a really amazing regatta."

Blitz tied on points with Antigua's Pamala Baldwin's J/122, Liquid. However, Blitz had the greater number of firsts to win the tie-breaker to Liquid's second place. Belgium's Philippe Moorgat's Swan 45, Samantaga, came in third.

In the CSA Spinnaker Racing 2 class, St. Croix's Mackenzie Bryan drove the J/100, Bad Girl, to a first place finish.

"That squall today was as windy as I'd seen it the entire regatta. So much so that we decided not to hoist the spinnaker on the first run and we were still flying," says Bryan, who served as a junior crew several years ago when Bad Girl also won her class. "Our strategy was to have good boat handling, minimize mistakes and stay out of the current. The effect of the current was huge."

St. John's Mike Feierabend's J/24, Bravissimo ended second, with the BVI's Henry Leonnig's Melges 24, Fire Water, third.

The 18-boat IC24s were likely the most competitive class. In fact, it came down to the last race, on the last day, after 12 races for the winner to be decided. And, that winner was not the boat that led the first two days of racing.

Full results of all classes

stthomasinternationalregatta.com

Women's World No. 1 Among Latest Entrants To Argo Group Gold Cup
Hamilton, Bermuda: The addition of four of the world's top match racers, including Women's World No. 1 Pauline Courtois of France, makes the field for the 2019 Argo Group Gold Cup one of the most diverse and cements its status as the preeminent match race regatta.

Courtois and World No. 3 Harry Price of Australia, World No. 5 Maxime Mesnil of France and World No. 15 Chris Poole of the U.S. are recent entrants to the regatta, scheduled May 6-11 and awarding $100,000 in prize money.

They join a field that already features World No. 1 Ian Williams of Great Britain, No. 2 Eric Monnin of Switzerland and No. 4 Ettore Botticini of Italy, as well as Women's World No. 6 Lucy Macgregor of Great Britain. Macgregor had a magical run at last year's Gold Cup to place fourth overall, the best finish ever by a women's crew.

Also entered is World No. 7 Nicklas Dackhammar of Sweden, No. 8 Toravr Mirsky of Australia and No. 13 Johnie Berntsson of Sweden.

In total, the field includes two crews each from Australia, France, Great Britain and Sweden and one each from Italy, Switzerland and the U.S. The final entrant will be the Bermuda National Match Race champion.

2019 Argo Group Gold Cup Preliminary Entrant List

Johnie Berntsson (SWE) - World No. 13, 10th Argo Group Gold Cup (champion 2008, '14)
Ettore Botticini (ITA) - World No. 4, second Argo Group Gold Cup, reigning Youth Match Racing World champion
Pauline Courtois (FRA) - Women's World No. 1, first Argo Group Gold Cup
Nicklas Dackhammar (SWE) - World No. 7, third Argo Group Gold Cup
Lucy Macgregor (GBR) - Women's World No. 6, third Argo Group Gold Cup, reigning three-time Women's Match Racing World champion
Maxime Mesnil (FRA) - World No. 5, first Argo Group Gold Cup
Torvar Mirsky (AUS) - World No. 8, fifth Argo Group Gold Cup (champion 2011), reigning Match Racing World champion
Eric Monnin (SUI) - World No. 2, 12th Argo Group Gold Cup
Chris Poole (USA) - World No. 15, fifth Argo Group Gold Cup
Harry Price (AUS) - World No. 3, 2017 Youth Match Racing World Champion
Ian Williams (GBR) - World No. 1, 11th Argo Group Gold Cup (champion 2006), six-time Match Racing World champion
Bermuda National Match Racing champion - to be named

argogroupgoldcup.com

Seahorse April 2019
What's in the Latest Edition Of Seahorse Magazine

Seahorse Magazine

Coming of age
Oak trees and acorns indeed but the small handful of finishers in the 2018 Golden Globe Race should be seen against the early entries that are already in for the next race in 2022. ROB KOTHE talks to the race's creator Don Mcintyre

A winner
No other way to talk about the most successful IRC skipper anywhere, Gery Trentesaux shares 'a few' of his secrets with his sometime crew and sometime rival Fred Augendre

A whole new world
When the world's biggest yacht builder decided to lean a little harder on the loud pedal they were clearly in no mood to mess around..

Sailor of the Month
But not for the more obvious reasons why you might have expected this duo to be nominated

Winging it
Gilles Martin-Raget

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The Fastest Yacht in the Southern Hemisphere to complete in the 2019 Brisbane to Gladstone Race
The 2019 Brisbane to Gladstone Multihull Yacht Race has something the 2019 Sydney to Hobart won't have; the trimaran Beau Geste. She is a 70 foot (21.2m) trimaran weighing in at nearly 7000Kgs. Karl Kwok bought the MOD70 designed trimaran in August 2017 and they are now based in The Yard on the Brisbane River. Since taking ownership of the yacht she has set a new race record for the China Sea race of 38hr 30m 7s (600nm). She also set a new multihull race record for the Hong Kong to Hainan Race 24hr 01m 59s (390nm). The Multihull Yacht Club Queensland's Brisbane to Gladstone Race is a 305nm race and so they will need to improve on these times to beat the existing Brisbane to Gladstone race record set by Sean Langman's ORMA 60 Trimaran Team Australia in 2012 with a time of 16hr 28m 21s.

Some of the Beau Geste crew attended the Multihull Yacht, Queensland's (MYCQ) Club meeting where Spencer talked about the yacht and its history.

Karl bought the yacht from Lloyd Thomburg when it was called Phaedo3. Phaedo3 (originally Foncia) launched in August 2011 and had a reputation of being one of the fastest yachts in the world.

The yacht was delivered to Brisbane in December and they encountered the worst conditions they ever had heading west through the Great Barrier Reef near Mackay. Modifications they have made include adding a 2m prodder and setting it up for lighter wind sailing. This will suit the conditions that are more common in South East Asia.

This year organisers are expecting around 15 multihull yachts and most of them, depending on weather, will arrive in Gladstone the following day, Saturday 20th April. If all goes to plan Beau Geste should arrive well before Black Jack just after midnight Saturday morning. Some of the other entries include the Grouparma Race winner Rushour, previous Brisbane to Gladstone winner Top Gun, the Chamberlin Catamaran Storm Bay, the 9.2m Grainger Trimaran (and probably the smallest yacht in the fleet) Big Bird and an entry from Thailand.

www.facebook.com/themycq www.mycq.org.au

Ben Houston appointed CEO of Australian Sailing
Houston brings a wealth of commercial, corporate governance and legal experience to the role as he looks to take the governing body for the sport through the next phase of its One Sailing evolution.

As current President of Commonwealth Games Australia and as a past President of Triathlon Australia with over a decade as Supervising Counsel at Telstra, Houston is a widely respected sport and legal professional.

Houston's strong business acumen was an attraction for the selection panel, having over two decades of experience in negotiating major sports sponsorship, media and digital rights deal including working with the Telstra Group Executive to negotiate Telstra's digital rights deals as part of the multi-billion-dollar deals with the AFL and NRL.

As a former lead of Telstra's National Sponsorship program, Houston has valuable sports industry experience and was responsible for managing Telstra's multi-million-dollar sponsorship portfolio of sports and arts properties and national sporting events.

Houston will commence in the role first week of April.

www.sailing.org.au

12 Metre World Championship
When the 12 Metre World Championship comes to Newport, R.I. this summer (July 8-13), the significance of the venue will not be lost on sailing buffs, or for that matter, on sports historians in general.

The America's Cup, one of the most famous competitions between countries, was held here in Newport 12 times from 1930 to 1983, and for nine of those times, from 1958 to 1983, the sailboat used to determine the winners was the 12 Metre, a single-masted sloop of approximately 68 feet (21 metres) in length.

During the 12 Metre Cup years, thousands of sailors, support teams, families and spectators from around the world swarmed lower Thames Street and wharves such as Bannister's where the 12 Metres and their teams headquartered during races that determined a final defender and challenger destined to spar one-on-one for the coveted silver ewer that was "The Cup". The most memorable Cup in Newport was unfortunately its last; 1983 marked the first winning challenge to the New York Yacht Club, which had successfully defended the Cup over a period of 132 years. An Australian syndicate representing the Royal Perth Yacht Club wrested the precious trophy from its decades-old resting place, breaking a winning streak that was the longest on record in any sport.

For July's 12 Metre Worlds, teams from around the world again will flock to Newport. They will sail a series of fleet races, held over five racing days, to determine winners in four Divisions: Grand Prix, Modern, Traditional, and Vintage. And they will sail the same America's Cup courses - 24 miles or so in length and plotted beyond the mouth of Narragansett Bay and off Brenton Reef in the Atlantic Ocean - that long ago brought notoriety to scenic Newport and its surrounding waters.

Mike Toppa (Ft. Lauderdale, Fla./Newport, R.I.) will sail on the newly confirmed entry Enterprise (US-27), chartered from the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy (USMMA) Sailing Foundation by Clay and Nancy Deutsch (Newport, R.I.) for the Modern Division competition, who claimed the 2009 12 Metre Worlds title in the Traditional Division with Weatherly (US-17). Toppa sailed on the same boat in 1980 when she served as a Trial Horse for Dennis Conners' successful Freedom campaign.

Enterprise was discovered in France, in disrepair, a few years back, and brought back to racing form by two different owners before she was donated to the Foundation.

The Modern Division is yielding the deepest fleet, with seven entries that include three successful Cup defenders: Freedom (US-30) (1980), skippered by owner Charles Robertson (Guilford, Conn.); Intrepid (US-22) (1967 & 1970), skippered by Jack Curtin (Toronto, Canada/New York, N.Y.); and Courageous (US-26) (1974 & 1977), skippered by Arthur Santry (Arlington, Va./Newport, R.I.), another America's Cup 12 Metre veteran. As well, it includes Jack Lefort's (Winter Park, Fla./Jamestown, R.I.) Challenge XII (KA-10), which two years ago was returned to racing trim specifically for the Worlds; 2009 12 Metre World Champion, Modern Division Dennis Williams' (Hobe Sound, Fla./Newport, R.I.) Victory '83 (K-22); and Harry Graves' (Grand Isle, Vt.) Lionheart (K-18).

12mrworlds.com/partners/

Evaluation Trials Footnote
The World Sailing evaluation event for the Men's and Women's One-Person dinghy closed in Valencia.

The Evaluation Team asked the manufacturers and Classes taking part not to release reports during the trials in order to avoid biased views influencing the panel. The RS Aero team complied with that request…

We also presented standard boats, as requested, which again sadly cannot be said of another manufacturer who seemed more focussed on speed over compliance.

We were happy to put forward the RS Aero both for evaluation on the water and through presentations regarding:

- Universality - world spread and existing infrastructure in place to develop it quickly
- Advanced manufacturing processes and quality control systems - to ISO9001 and aerospace / automotive industry standards
- Equipment costs, competitive longevity and low true competition costs - and ongoing price control proposals

It is absolutely not for us to seek to predict the outcome of the evaluation which, we are sure, will be released through the proper channels in due course after proper analysis.

There is now a rare opportunity to move on from the current 50 year old design and technology and a commercial organisation that appears locked in dispute, with sailors and event organisers often the victims. The RS Aero offers the opportunity to make a positive difference with a cool new boat, evolution not revolution (because that's what universality requires) and a great brand to support it all going forward.

So, perhaps most significantly, we'd like to believe we offered a Class and manufacturer, working together and dedicated to being great partners for sailors and World Sailing going forward. Dedicated to the goal of building the pathway and building sailing from youth to elite level. A fresh start in safe, enthusiastic hands.

We hope the decision makers will understand and grasp the opportunity, for the good of sailing. -- Martin Wadhams, RS Sailing

18 IMOCA for Bermudes 1000 Race
The first IMOCA Globe Series event in 2019, the Bermuda 1000 Race will race from Douarnenez on Wednesday May 8th at 1pm. On the program, a 2000-mile solo trip to Brest, viale Fastnet and the Azores. Eighteen sailors representing six nationalities will be at the start, including many "bizuths" who will take the opportunity to acquire a first strong experience, alone, aboard an IMOCA. Whatever their sporting ambitions, all competitors will be keen to complete the race to earn valuable miles for the selection at the Vendee Globe 2020.

Few sports events can claim to triple the number of participants from one year to the next. This is the case of the Bermuda 1000 Race which attracted last year, for its inaugural edition, six IMOCA (five conducted alone and one in double). Organized following the Grand Prix de Douarnenez by the company Sea to See, in collaboration with the IMOCA class, the event will bring together this year eighteen, almost as much as for the last Route du Rhum! Ten of them will have previously participated in the Pom'Potes Challenge, speed runs organized in Douarnenez from May 4th to 6th.

Among the 18 entries in the Bermuda 1000 Race, seven will compete in their first IMOCA single-handed race, including two sailors hired on high-performance foilers, Sebastien Simon and Giancarlo Pedote. Three other "bizuths" will start with IMOCA built in the perspective of the Vendee Globe 2008-2009: Maxime Sorel, Clement Giraud and Miranda Merron. The Belgian skipper Denis Van Weynbergh will also be in a logic of discovery with the old boat of Nandor Fa, as the navigator Pip Hare, new owner of the legendary Superbigou.

Entrants
Fabrice Amedeo (Newrest-Art & Fenetres)
Romain Attanasio (Pure-Famille Mary)
Alexia Barrier (4myplanet)
Yannick Bestaven (Maitre CoQ)
Arnaud Boissieres (La Mie Caline-Artipole)
Manuel Cousin (Groupe Setin)
Sam Davies (Initiatives Coeur)
Clement Giraud (Envol)
Pip Hare (Superbigou)
Boris Herrmann (Yacht Club de Monaco)
Ari Huusela (Ariel 2)
Stephane Le Diraison (Time For Oceans)
Miranda Merron (NC)
Giancarlo Pedote (Prysmian Group)
Damien Seguin (Groupe Apicil)
Sebastien Simon (Arkea-Paprec)
Maxime Sorel (V and B-Sailing Together)
Denis Van Weynbergh (Eyesea.be)

www.imoca.org

Les Voiles de St. Barth Richard Mille
It's the final stretch for the crews and organizers of the 10th edition of Les Voiles de St. Barth Richard Mille, which begins April 14 in the turquoise waters of the French Antilles island. More than 1,000 sailors and crews will descend into the port of Gustavia to celebrate this anniversary edition in style.

The regatta plans to welcome the famous American racer Terry Hutchinson and the formidable British sailor Pete Cumming, who will be up against quite a few stars from French yachting like Roland Jourdain and Jean-Pierre Dick.

The event - open to Maxis, Spinnakers, Multihulls and Melges 24s - promises a spectacular display of competitive yacht racing on the water, and organizers also plan to deliver magical moments on shore to 'amp' up the fun quotient for this 10th anniversary.

To support the event's increasing popularity amongst the Maxis, organizers Francois Tolede and Luc Poupon officially endorsed the switch from the CSA (Caribbean Sailing Association) rule to the IRC rule, an international race rule recognized by World Sailing (formerly the International Sailing Federation), created back in 2000 from the Channel Handicap System.

"We are responding to the requests of many competitors. IRC is used for a great many races and regattas worldwide, including La Giraglia, Cowes Week, the Fastnet Race, Les Voiles de Saint Tropez, the ARC (Atlantic Rally for Cruisers), the Middle Sea Race, the Sydney Hobart Race and many others.

"This move brings Les Voiles de St Barth Richard Mille in line with other races on the event schedules of other series, such as the Maxi 72s," said Poupon, who points out that in 2018, nearly 7,000 boats in over 30 countries had IRC certificates and that more than 44,000 boats have raced using this rule since it was first created.

The Race Director is delighted at the prospect of welcoming a great many new crews this year, including Fling 16, Irvine Laidlaw's Botin 56 launched last October in Valencia, Spain, and was seen out on the racecourse for the first time in the St Maarten Heineken Regatta some 10 days ago, along with Arara, Tim Gollin's Black Pepper Code 2; The Kid, the JPK54 which will be skippered by Jean-Pierre Dick, double champion of the Barcelona World Race and four-time winner of the Transat Jacques Vabre in IMOCA; Ambersail 2, the VOR65 (ex Team CSA) helmed by Rokas Milevicius, the only Lithuanian to have participated in the Volvo Ocean Race to date (in 2014-2015 aboard Team Brunel); and Chim Chim, the Gunboat 62 sailed by John Gallagher, recent multihull champion in the Caribbean RORC 600.

Loads of 'Little' Newcomers and Then Some...
The new arrivals will be racing alongside the many boats already familiar with the waters of Saint Barth, starting with five of the seven reigning champions: Windfall in Maxi 2, Ventarron in CSA 2, Credit Mutuel - PTO in CSA 3, Flow in OMA and Guyader Gastronomie in IMRR skippered by Christian Guyader.

www.lesvoilesdesaintbarth.com/us

Featured Brokerage
Raceboats Only 2004 Thompson 38 ‘Serena’. $250,000 NZ. Located in Opua, New Zealand.

The Thompson 38 ‘Serena’ is fun, fast, and an impressive sail plan leaves bigger boats in her wake.

See listing details in Seahorse's RaceboatsOnly

Contact
Robbs Hielkema
M.+64 21 858 897
E [DOT] robbs [AT] 36degrees [DOT] nz

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Raceboats Only Modified ORMA 60 'TRITIUM'. 495000 USD.

Official Price: $ 495,000 USD TRITIUM is a modified Orma 60 trimaran - stretched to 72 feet. Originally built by offshore veteran Jean Le Cam, the boat was updated by Artemis Racing for testing of AC wing and dagger foils.

See listing details in Seahorse's RaceboatsOnly

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Raceboats Only 1998 Vismara V43 Open. 96000 EUR. Located in Fano, Italy.

Ultra-slippery Italian 43ft custom performance cruiser/racer with hull lines derived from the Volvo 60 class. Retractable t-keel gives 2.4-3.4m draft range while her 3-cabin interior gives plenty of scope for comfortable cruising.

See listing details in Seahorse's RaceboatsOnly

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Lead broker - James McNeil
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See the RaceboatsOnly.com collection at seahorsemagazine.com/brokerage/

The Last Word
The donor, before giving, is glad; while giving, is inspired; and after giving, is gratified. -- Buddha

Editorial and letter submissions to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Advertising inquiries to Graeme Beeson: gb [AT] beesonstone [DOT] com or see www.eurosailnews.com/advertise.html

EuroSail News #4303 - 27 March

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In This Issue
L30 adopted for World Sailing Offshore World Championship
2019 Season Preview - J/70 UK and Ireland Class
Positions Vacant With A+T Instruments
Transpac 50 Offers New Storm Trysail Team Scoring Trophy
Transpac Tactics and Strategy Talk with Stan Honey
Second Life - 44 Cup
Margaritaville Named First Presenting Partner of 2019 Storm Trysail Club's Block Island Race Week
Mick Marshall
Letters to the Editor
Featured Brokerage
The Last Word: Stephen Fry

Brought to you by Seahorse magazine and YachtScoring.com EuroSail News is a digest of sailing news and opinions, regatta results, new boat and gear information and letters from sailors -- with a European emphasis. Contributions welcome, send to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

L30 adopted for World Sailing Offshore World Championship
Click on image to enlarge.

L30 World Sailing is pleased to announce that the L30, a 30-foot one design keelboat, has been selected as the supplied equipment for World Sailing's Offshore World Championship from 2020.

First tested in November 2015, the L30 boat concept was drawn up by Olympic medallist and Volvo Ocean Race competitor Rodion Luka. Andrej Justin, designer of RC44, brought the L30 to life, combining all round offshore performance, ease of logistics, a strict one-design model and global, ready to race, affordability.

The Championship will be a two-person mixed competition (one man, one woman) between nations, featuring 20 boats. The boats will be chartered by the national teams and allocated to sailors one week ahead of the Championship via a boat draw before sailors have time to test and prepare for the challenge that lays ahead of them. Held alongside the Rolex Middle Sea Race, the competitors may be required to sail the full course or a reduced course depending on the weather conditions.

The Offshore World Championship will engage countries new to double-handed offshore sailing by providing a full fleet of L30s that are ready to use at the event venue. L30s will also be available to charter in Europe for training from the summer of 2019.

Kim Andersen, President of World Sailing, commented, "The L30 Class share our ambition to grow double handed offshore sailing globally. The boat is well designed to cater for the demands of offshore sailing and will provide the sailors competing in Malta next year with a stern challenge.

"The boat has been trialled by some of the world's leading sailors including Charles Caudrelier (FRA), Ian Walker (GBR) and Abby Ehler (GBR). Their feedback has been crucial in the development and progression of the boat following the first concept.

Rodion Luka, CEO of L30 One Design, said, "Our team is proud to be a technical partner of World Sailing's and to support the Offshore World Championship. I have no doubt that this event will bring our sport to a new level, engaging a wider audience and opening new horizons for offshore sailors around the globe.

The 2020 Offshore Sailing World Championship will be organised in collaboration with the Royal Malta Yacht Club and World Sailing.

Originally earmarked to be held in 2019, World Sailing postponed the hosting to 2020 to allow a full qualification system to be developed, allowing ample opportunity for Member National Authorities to qualify and prepare for the event.

sailing.org

www.L30class.org

2019 Season Preview - J/70 UK and Ireland Class
The 2019 season is expected to be bigger than Ben Hur for the J/70 UK and Ireland Class, with ten regattas in the Grand Slam Series, and the first ever J/70 World Championships to be held in the UK. There are over 50 teams racing in British waters, and over 100 international teams are expected for the 2019 Darwin Escapes J/70 Worlds, hosted by the Royal Torbay Yacht Club. Racing for the Grand Slam Series starts 13 April and concludes 27 October.

Scoring for the J/70 Class Grand Slam Series is calculated by the best five events, with the J/70 UK Nationals as compulsory. Two fabulous trophies, for Open and Corinthian teams, will be presented at the end of the season, and the top teams for the series will be allocated places for the 2020 J/70 World Championships. The Grand Slam Series events are all based around weekends with a schedule of racing over no more than 2-3 days, except the UK Nationals, which runs for four days. The Notice of Series has been posted and can be downloaded here.

The 2019 Grand Slam Series kicks off next month with two weekends of racing at the Warsash Spring Championships (13-14 April & 27-28 April). Cowes is the centre of attention for May and June, the RORC Vice Admirals Cup (10-12 May) is followed by the Southern Championships (01-02 June), hosted by the Royal Thames YC. The UK Training Event (18-22 July), will run alongside the J-Cup hosted by the Royal Southern YC. A full race series will be complimented by practice starts plus coaching and video analysis from the expert term at North Sails. Lendy Cowes Week is the venue for the J/70 mini-series (10-13 August), before the J/70 fleet head to the Royal Torbay YC in Torquay for the J/70 UK National Championships (23-26 August), a compulsory event for the Grand Slam Series. Two weekends of racing at the Hamble One Design Championships (05-06 October & 19-20 October), hosted by the Hamble River SC, will be followed by the final event of the 2019 Grand Slam Series, the Solent Championships (26-27 October), hosted by the Royal Yacht Squadron, Cowes.

The highlight of the season is the 2019 Darwin Escapes J/70 World Championships (30 August-06 September). This will be the first J/70 World Championships to be held in the UK. Professional and Corinthian teams are expected from all over the world. The J/70 UK and Ireland Class welcomes new members and chartering opportunities are available from boat owners and yacht clubs. -- Louay Habib

www.j-70.co.uk

Positions Vacant With A+T Instruments
A+T Instruments A+T InstrumentsA+T are the rapidly growing designer and manufacturer of very high-quality instruments for the Superyacht and race boat markets.

Offering upgrades and complete systems, A+T are suppliers to some 250 of the world's largest and fastest yachts. Key to A+T's business is the provision of excellent support.

Year on year growth has been 40% and now A+T are looking to expand their sales team with three appointments:

Technical Sales and Support
Preparation of proposals, drawings and dealing with technical enquiries. Liaison with captains, engineers, high-end electronics installers, project managers and yards. Mostly office based with some travel to visit yachts, dealers, yards and attend trade shows.

Outbound Sales
Office based outbound sales activity primarily around installer/dealers, refit and new-build yards.

Regatta Sales and Support
An upcoming or established professional sailor/tactician/navigator who can add a part-time role around sailing. Providing support, networking and direct sales at regattas and assisting with office- based testing, documentation, product feedback and improvements between events.

Great communication skills and a passion for excellent customer service are essential for all roles. A+T are a friendly team based in comfortable offices in Lymington, UK.

For detailed job description or to apply please email gemma [AT] AandTinstruments [DOT] com

www.AandTinstruments.com

Transpac 50 Offers New Storm Trysail Team Scoring Trophy
Los Angeles: The Board of the Transpacific Yacht Club, organizers of this year's 2225-mile Transpac 50 race from Los Angeles to Honolulu, has accepted an offer from the Storm Trysail Club to award a new team scoring trophy: the Storm Trysail Club Trophy.

This new trophy is designed to promote camaraderie among offshore sailors from the same club, region, or other affiliation, and will be awarded to the 3-boat team which compiles the best score, as determined by using the total of each team member's percentage placement in its respective class.

Affiliations may be self-defined, but teams shall not have more than two boats sailing in the same class.

"Everyone who enters offshore races will be first focused on their own performance," said AJ Evans, Commodore of the Storm Trysail Club. "Yet we have found this team scoring idea to be popular in other races such as the quadrennial TransAtlantic Race, the annual Block Island Race and the biennial Newport Bermuda Race. There will also be an STC-sponsored team competition in this year's Chicago-Mackinac Race. We're thrilled to develop this relationship with TPYC and to help promote blue water racing in the Pacific."

Once class splits are determined, each proposed team must submit a Team Application to the Entry Chairman prior to 1700 on July 7, 2019 in order to be scored for this trophy. This form will be posted on the official online Notice Board.

"Our clubs are very similar and compatible," said TPYC Commodore Tom Hogan. "Our memberships are both composed of serious offshore sailors, and we both help organize offshore races that celebrate and promote the sport. The new Storm Trysail Club Trophy is therefore a welcome addition to Transpac 50, and we hope there are many teams that take advantage of this new opportunity to celebrate achievement in offshore sailing."

The first class start for Transpac 50 is July 10th, 2019.

www.stormtrysail.org
2019.transpacyc.com

Transpac Tactics and Strategy Talk with Stan Honey
Stan Honey won the 2010 Rolex Yachtsman of the Year award for his role in routing the 103-foot trimaran GROUPAMA around the world to set a new course record of just over 48 days. Prior to this he helped get the Volvo 70 ABN AMRO around the world to win the 2005-06 Volvo Ocean Race. Closer to home in the Pacific he has also been the navigator for teams that have set seven course records and eleven first-to-finishes in 22 Transpacs and Pacific Cups, and was overall Pacific Cup winner with wife Sally Honey on their Cal 40 in 1996.

In the last edition of Transpac in 2017, Stan helped guide the 100-foot COMANCHE to her Merlin Trophy win and a new monohull course record of 5 days 1 hour 55 min 26 sec, and a Transpac 24-hour distance record run of 484.1 miles.

As navigator, Stan has also helped set numerous other records, including TransAtlantic monohull, TransAtlantic multihull, 24 hour monohull, 24 hour multihull, Sydney-Hobart, and Newport-Bermuda race records.

Suffice to say, Stan is one of the world's outstanding talents in offshore navigation, and it's with pleasure that TPYC is offering a special Transpac Tactics and Strategy Seminar on Saturday, May 11th from 10:00 AM - 3:00 PM at Newport Harbor YC in Newport Beach. Cost is $50 per person and includes lunch.

Registration here

Second Life - 44 Cup
44 Cup Or more accurately Act Two? Either way the new 44Cup takes a great boat that is already acknowledged as perfect for the task and fires in a whole heap of fresh energy...

Classes of raceboat tend to die prematurely once they reach a certain age. Ironically this seems to have less to do with the boat and more the marketing or having the correct driving force behind it. Witness Peter Morton miraculously breathing life back into the Quarter Ton class, a boat on which many sailors cut their teeth - and can now afford to own. Compare that with the premature demise of the much-loved Mumm/Farr 30.

Attempting to ensure it is one of the success stories is the newly rechristened 44Cup, formerly the RC44 Championship Tour. This year it starts its 13th season with staunchly faithful owners resolute in prolonging the life of their beloved circuit.

Those involved are experienced, level-headed individuals who have been through many classes before finding their home with RC44s. They include Artemis Racing's Torbjörn Törnqvist, a former Audi MedCup TP52 champion and the 44Cup's reigning champion Nico Poons, who previously campaigned a Farr 40 and a Swan 45. Aleph Racing's Hugues Lepic also came from Farr 40s, while Peninsula Petroleum's John Bassadone went through a J/109 and a GP42 before arriving at the 44Cup, where he has remained for nine years. Then there's Vladimir Prosikhin, enticed into the circuit while having a cruising boat built, who in 2018 became RC44 World Champion for a third time. Others like Team Aqua's Chris Bake and Team CEEREF's Igor Lah have stayed with the class since its outset.

Full article in the April issue of Seahorse

Margaritaville Named First Presenting Partner of 2019 Storm Trysail Club's Block Island Race Week
Storm Trysail Club and Margaritaville Holdings today announced that Margaritaville, the global lifestyle brand synonymous with fun and escapism, will be the first presenting sponsor for Block Island Race Week, one of the premier regattas in the U.S. In addition to Margaritaville's participation in the tent each day during the June 23-28th event, the final race day of the regatta will officially be named "Margaritaville Race Day."

Margaritaville will transform the race tent, transporting sailors into the brand's laid-back lifestyle. Live entertainment, the centerpiece of the Margaritaville brand, will take place on-site each day, along with exciting Margaritaville-inspired activities and promotions.

Over 115 boats have already registered for a variety of racing - from "Solent Style" (a combination of short course and distance racing) to cruising and one design - the 2019 Block Island Race Week presented by Margaritaville is shaping up to be an exceptionally lively one.

"We are thrilled to bring the Margaritaville state of mind to Block Island Race Week, a famed sailing event already known for its exciting competition and community spirit," said Tamara Baldanza-Dekker, Margaritaville's chief marketing officer. "Margaritaville's partnership with the Storm Trysail Club will bring added relaxation, fun, and camaraderie to competitors, family, and friends on the island."

Sailors can register and learn more at blockislandraceweek.com

Mick Marshall
Mick Marshall In Britain's febrile world today of what option is right and what's wrong; what is a good course and what is a rum choice, you might be forgiven for thinking that life was always like that.

But there was a time when those who sought out potentially fickle winds and were prepared to challenge others' reading of a situation, emerged true champions in the war of the waves.

The Soputh Coast sailing regattas of the 1960s and early '70s attracted huge entries, unthinkable today for week-long events and, more often than not, one man stood out above all others: Mick Marshall.

The South East Cornwall yachtsman not only sailed a good race (Did he ever sail a bad one?) but also built his own winning boats. In partnership with Alan Pape - coincidentally his often indomitable racing opponent - Marshall ran the long-gone Curtis and Pape boatyard at West Quarries, high up in the woods on the West Looe river.

Famed for its war-time efforts to stave off the unthinkable, and then for its pedigree racing yachts - including Sir Chay Blyth's much-feted 1981 catamaran, Brittany Ferries GB - and the cruisers still found in every nook and cranny across the globe, Marshall and Pape were legends in their own waterlines.

Marshall's death, at the age of 88 after a long illness, will naturally be mourned by his family and close friends. But his life will also be celebrated, and quite rightly so, by those of a certain vintage who always appreciated the seamanship and shipwright skills of a modest and quietly-spoken man.

I have to admit that he could be difficult to interview, almost reluctant to talk. In those days, of course, I was young and green and he was lean, older, wiser and a focussed skipper of a racing machine with his own hand-picked crew. He seldom sought publicity and probably viewed a young reporter as something of an inconvenience. But, boy, was he good. You cannot argue with the results ledger. Hard to believe today, I know, but newspaper reports of daily sailing regattas from Falmouth, all along the West Country to Torquay, in the late 1960s summers were full-page news, and the name of 'Marshall' was always a common denominator in the fathoms of lineage that covered a sport, then still believed to be somewhat eliteist but nevertheless a necessary fabric of coastal village life for the masses.

If renowned naval architect Pape, who died in 2004, or more often than than not, his trusty lieutenant Marshall, won at, say, Fowey Week or Dartmouth Regatta, the speculation was rife that one of the two yard-stormers would be back next year with a brand new racer and a suit of sails to match.

But it wasn't only fully-crewed big boats in which Marshall excelled.

He was part of the 1960-70s pantheon of Enterprise dinghy sailors from South East Cornwall - Paul Martin, Robert Newton, David Pengelly among them - and didn't those Looe boys rock the national establishment - in Marshall's case, always in his own boat built to the strict design regimes of the class association.

So, with Mick Marshall's passing, sailing has given up a pacesetter and a game-changer; his family, including son, Francis, himself a European and National yacht and dinghy champion respectively, have, of course, lost much more. But we are all the better for having known a great and talented man.

Mick Marshall's funeral will be at Glynn Valley Crematorium, Bodmin, on Friday, April 5 (4.30 pm). I am compiling a full tribute for the local media, so if you raced against the white or blue-sailed warrior, or have a particular memory of him you would like to share, please let me know at: jc [DOT] collings [AT] btinternet [DOT] com -- John Collings

Letters To The Editor - editor [AT] scuttlebutteurope [DOT] com
Letters are limited to 350 words. No personal attacks are permitted. We do require your name but your email address will not be published without your permission.

* From Sir Robin Knox-Johnston

Kim Jeffries got it right. This forthcoming Clipper Race will not have a female skipper, which is unfortunate, especially after the success of Wendy and Nikki in the last race. We have had five female skippers over the years and all have been excellent without exception. I would happily take on more provided they had the experience and ability but we did not receive any applications from suitable candidates this time around. Part of the problem is, I think, that in the past fewer women took up sailing as a sport so there is an imbalance of availability amongst the genders. Hopefully this will be corrected in time as some 30% of our Clipper Race crews are now women. And through our courses at the Hamble School of Yachting and our new Mate position within the Clipper Race we hope to be able to encourage more women to take their sailing career to the next level.

So if there is anyone who wants the satisfaction of taking on one of the toughest challenges in yachting, skippering a large boat and managing a mixed crew in a race around the world, please get in contact with us. We are now looking towards to the 2021-22 edition.

Featured Brokerage
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See listing details in Seahorse's RaceboatsOnly

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info [AT] sandemanyachtcompany [DOT] co [DOT] uk
+44 (0)1202 330077
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See listing details in Seahorse's RaceboatsOnly

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See the RaceboatsOnly.com collection at seahorsemagazine.com/brokerage/

The Last Word
Taste every fruit of every tree in the garden at least once. It is an insult to creation not to experience it fully. Temperance is wickedness. -- Stephen Fry

Editorial and letter submissions to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Advertising inquiries to Graeme Beeson: gb [AT] beesonstone [DOT] com or see www.eurosailnews.com/advertise.html

EuroSail News #4304 - 28 March

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In This Issue
Unified GC32 Racing Tour
Scrub Island Invitational
Positions Vacant With A+T Instruments
80 days to enter the world famous Round the Island Race
HRH The Princess Royal accepts Honorary Membership of the Cruising Association
More than Busy - Melges Yachts
Inaugural Hong Kong to Puerto Galera Yacht Race
Nakajima's Hiro Maru Lends Historical Adornment to Transatlantic Race 2019
Featured Brokerage
The Last Word: George Washington

Brought to you by Seahorse magazine and YachtScoring.com EuroSail News is a digest of sailing news and opinions, regatta results, new boat and gear information and letters from sailors -- with a European emphasis. Contributions welcome, send to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Unified GC32 Racing Tour
With the GC32 flying catamaran racing circuits this year amalgamated on the GC32 Racing Tour, so at least 10 teams, including the GC32 teams from the Extreme Sailing Series, are due to compete on this season's five event circuit that takes in some of the best sailing venues in Italy, Spain and Portugal.

Participating on the circuit will once again be many of the world's best sailors, including Olympians, Volvo Ocean Race winners and America's Cup sailors - both past and present - and a more or less equal split in the fleet between pro helms and amateur owner-drivers. For owner-drivers the GC32 represents the rare opportunity to experience state-of-the-art foil borne racing, similar to that seen in the last two America's Cups, together with 30+ knot boat speeds, but with standardised gear and for a fraction of the cost.

Owner-drivers, who typically sail with a professional crew, as usual will have their own Championship running concurrently with the overall results and will receive their own prizes both at individual events and for the whole Championship.

In 2018 American Jason Carroll's Argo finished fifth overall, but won the Owner-Driver Championship in a season that saw four different owner-driver teams claim this prize at individual events.

Switzerland has a long illustrious history in the GC32 class with teams such as Alinghi, Realteam and Team Tilt. Joining the circuit for 2019 will be a new Swiss campaign in Black Star Sailing Team. This has been masterminded by former A-Class catamaran sailor Christian Zuerrer with the assistance of former Armin Strom Sailing Team skipper and renowned Olympic Star sailor Flavio Marazzi.

2019 GC32 Racing Tour schedule
22.-26 May: GC32 Villasimius Cup / Villasimius, Sardinia, Italy
26-30 June: GC32 World Championship / Lagos, Portugal
31 July-4 August: 38 Copa del Rey MAPFRE / Palma de Mallorca, Spain
11-15 September: GC32 Riva Cup / Riva del Garda, Italy
6-10 Nov: TBA

www.gc32racingtour.com

Scrub Island Invitational
Tortola, British Virgin Islands: "Hard to get to, harder to leave, impossible to forget" - a beloved cliché maybe but one that Brits Tony Mack and his wife Sally like to remember when they think about the BVI, and understandably so after today's 42-strong fleet raced up to the idyllic Scrub Island Resort, Spa and Marina, a private-island resort in the BVI, some 13 km to the north east of Tortola.

Today's course for the Scrub Island Invitational started off Nanny Cay in a delightful 12-15 knots from the south which held steady throughout the day. Mack and his Team McFly on the J/122 El Ocaso, narrowly won the Racing Division, beating sistership Liquid by just 48 seconds (corrected).

"It was quite close!" Mack said with a big smile. "We had a very good start, sailed most of the shifts up to Dead Man's Chest and were well positioned for the downwinder to the finish. Liquid is always a good gauge of how we are doing, they made us work really hard to get ahead of them." The Macks love the BVI and spent a week cruising on a Moorings charter boat prior to Spring Regatta and Sailing Festival. He's become a regular to the event, bringing his J/111 crew out from England. He enjoys chartering the J/122 to race, commenting, "It's just much nicer to go downwind on a performance boat!"

Conviction, the TP52 chartered by "Kuli" Kulinichenko, the first monohull to finish in an elapsed time of 1:56:13, had a great race duking it out against E1, the Volvo 70.

Kent Haeger - owner/skipper of the Gunboat 62 Mach Schnell - and his crew took first in the Multihull division with in 2:05:09 (corrected), followed closely by Gunboat 62 Coco de Mer in 2:08:53. Just five seconds behind in third was the Corsair f27 Whoop Whoop! Hailing from the lakes of Wisconsin where he sailed scows for many years, Haeger has been working up to the helming skills required on Mach Schnell. Transitioning last year from his Outremer 5X to the Gunboat Haeger said, "We wanted something more performance-based and we got it!" The Mach Schnell crew had a fantastic day sailing and are having fun lining up against similar boats in good competition.

After two fabulous days on the water, the fleet will enjoy a lay day on Thursday. Registration for Spring Regatta is open noon to 6pm, the Regatta Village bar opens at noon with a Carib Welcome Party from 5-7pm. The Skipper's Meeting starts at 5:30pm. Music by MJ Blues from 7pm-midnight.

Results for the Scrub Island Invitational

www.bvispringregatta.org

Positions Vacant With A+T Instruments
A+T Instruments A+T InstrumentsA+T are the rapidly growing designer and manufacturer of very high-quality instruments for the Superyacht and race boat markets.

Offering upgrades and complete systems, A+T are suppliers to some 250 of the world's largest and fastest yachts. Key to A+T's business is the provision of excellent support.

Year on year growth has been 40% and now A+T are looking to expand their sales team with three appointments:

Technical Sales and Support
Preparation of proposals, drawings and dealing with technical enquiries. Liaison with captains, engineers, high-end electronics installers, project managers and yards. Mostly office based with some travel to visit yachts, dealers, yards and attend trade shows.

Outbound Sales
Office based outbound sales activity primarily around installer/dealers, refit and new-build yards.

Regatta Sales and Support
An upcoming or established professional sailor/tactician/navigator who can add a part-time role around sailing. Providing support, networking and direct sales at regattas and assisting with office- based testing, documentation, product feedback and improvements between events.

Great communication skills and a passion for excellent customer service are essential for all roles. A+T are a friendly team based in comfortable offices in Lymington, UK.

For detailed job description or to apply please email gemma [AT] AandTinstruments [DOT] com

www.AandTinstruments.com

80 days to enter the world famous Round the Island Race
Photo by Paul Wyeth, www.pwpictures.com. Click on image for photo gallery.

Round the Island Race Sailors from around the world have only 80 days left to enter the famous Round the Island Race that will see 1,500 boats sail around the Isle of Wight on Saturday 29th June. The race received a record number of entries within the first 24 hours and is popular with families, first time racers and professional sailors alike.

Participating sailors will be able to experience sailing around the Isle of Wight with iconic views of the fleet and coastal scenery, which starts from Cowes at 0730 and ends in Cowes with the leading competitors taking under 4 hours to complete the course. Overall nearly 200 prizes are available at the event, with boats of every shape and size competing to win individual class and overall trophies.

During the race, spectators watching from the shore and from around the world will be able to follow the progress of friends and family via the race tracking service on the official website, provided courtesy of Raymarine, the Official Race Tracking Partner. The website will also feature a live blog, bringing all of the latest news and breath-taking views from around the Isle of Wight as they happen.

The Round the Island Race will be supporting The Ellen MacArthur Cancer Trust as its official race charity, which raises funds to help young people rebuild their lives after cancer treatment. The Round the Island Race is being sponsored by Helly Hansen, Raymarine, MS Amlin and Chelsea Magazines.

- The current monohull race record: ICAP Leopard (Mike Slade) in 2013 with a time of 3hr 43m 50s.

- The multihull race record: Concise 10 (Ned Collier Wakefield) in 2017 with a time of 2hr 22m 23s.

Sailors interested in participating in the event will be able to keep up to date with the latest news on social media using the hashtag #raceforall and will be able to enter online on the Round the Island Race website: www.roundtheisland.org.uk

HRH The Princess Royal accepts Honorary Membership of the Cruising Association
HRH The Princess Royal has graciously accepted an invitation to become an Honorary Member of the Cruising Association (CA), joining an elite group that includes sailing legend Sir Robin Knox-Johnston and the prolific nautical author, Rod Heikell.

As an Honorary Member, The Princess Royal receives all the benefits of CA membership including access to the unique CAptain's Mate, the Association's cruising APP that provides access to thousands of online and first-hand cruising reports and practical information with pinpoint accuracy. Her Royal Highness showed great interest in the App when she recently visited CA House in London's Limehouse Basin in celebration of the CA's 110th anniversary.

Speaking on behalf of the Cruising Association Council, President Julian Dussek commented on how delighted the CA is to welcome The Princess Royal to the CA. "We sincerely hope that Her Royal Highness finds the benefits of her membership add to her personal sailing experiences."

theca.org.uk

More than Busy - Melges Yachts
Melges Yachts With new Melges IC37s underpinning the world champagne market at the other end of the scale the company's little unballasted puppy is doing pretty well too...

Nearly everyone reading this will have sailed or raced a singlehanded dinghy, either as a youth, more recently as an adult, or both. The pure joy of being in complete control of your own craft speeding effortlessly across the water and the direct feedback it brings to the senses is indescribable and keeps us forever attached to this sport.

So it may come as a surprise that, with this genre being crowded with so many designs over the decades, there could still be space left for innovation - yet Melges Performance Sailboats has done just that with the Melges 14, which is now under consideration as a new Olympic singlehanded dinghy.

Similar to the excitement caused with the introduction of the Melges 24 two decades ago - a design that completely redefined the highperformance small keelboat marketplace and remains popular around the world - the Melges 14 may quite possibly do the same for all the same reasons. It takes a new and fresh approach to use of modern design tools, high-quality durable materials, fastidious fabrication standards and strict one-design class rules and management to create a brand new experience in the joy of singlehanded sailing.

Full tech brief in the April issue of Seahorse

Inaugural Hong Kong to Puerto Galera Yacht Race
Entries are flowing in with just under a month to go until the start of the first Hong Kong to Puerto Galera Yacht Race (16 and 17 April). The Hong Kong to Puerto Galera Yacht Race will be the second longest Category 1 offshore race in Asia; second only to the Club's Hong Kong to Vietnam Race and will take competitors on a 650nm passage to Puerto Galera on the island of Mindoro in the Philippines.

A variety of boats are taking part in the much anticipated first edition. Amongst the fleet are racers and cruisers, the biggest being being Peter Cremers' Warwick 75 Shahtoosh who came first in their division and 5th Overall in the 2018 Rolex China Sea Race - another of Royal Hong Kong Yacht Club's offshore races and which finishes in Subic Bay which is to the north of Puerto Galera in the Philippines. With Overall Winner of the 2018 Rolex China Sea Race Fred Kinmonth and Nick Burns GTS 43 Mandrake III also in the lineup, all eyes will be on the Yellowbrick tracker to see who will be victorious in this inaugural Race.

hkpuertogalerarace.com

Nakajima's Hiro Maru Lends Historical Adornment to Transatlantic Race 2019
Click on image to enlarge.

Hiro Maru Ninety days from today - on Tuesday, June 25 - a fleet of 20-plus yachts is scheduled to depart from Newport, R.I., and head eastwards across "the Pond" in the Transatlantic Race 2019. The reasons for competing are unique to each sailor, but often range from a personal challenge to simply wanting to sail an ocean race.

Among the fleet will be a handful of classic ocean racing yachts. A classic yacht stands the test of time by being a leading design of its day and still successful decades later. Retired architect Hiroshi Nakajima (Stamford, Conn.) will be at the helm of one such yacht, Hiro Maru.

Nakajima's second Hiro Maru is a Sparkman & Stephens 49-footer that was launched in 1971 as Scaramouche, the first of a series of highly successful ocean racers owned by Charles E. "Chuck" Kirsch (d. 2011), the philanthrope and curtain rod manufacturer from Sturgis, Mich. The first Scaramouche won Class B and was second overall in the 1972 SORC. Five years later she won Class B in the 1977 Transpac Race for then owner Robert M. Alexander of California.

Nakajima had the hull painted white, with a blue cove stripe, to resemble the yacht's original look. The boat's name and hailing port on the transom are also painted in the same shade of blue. Relaunched in the spring of 2018, Nakajima placed fifth in Class A in the 2018 Bermuda Race, his best finish ever in the race.

"This boat is [built by the Palmer Johnson boatyard] and built well. It's a period boat from the late 1960s/early 1970s when they were building rugged aluminum boats. This is one of them," says Nakajima. "The sensation that we've gotten is that it's powerful, we've gained a lot of respect for the boat. When you see it loaded up; it's incredible. It makes you pause and think about the load, but the boat's built to handle it."

transatlanticrace.com

Industry News
Fernhurst Books has released two new books:

Introduction to Racing - most applicable to dinghy sailors
GRP Repair Companion - useful to anyone who races a boat

These are part of our Practical Companion series and are being published this Spring for the new sailing season.

Practical Companions are handy, on-the-water reference guides, small enough to slide into your pocket, made from splash-proof paper allowing them to be kept on board or in a kit bag and used at any moment.

The Perfect Introduction To Racing
For the newly taught sailor, racing can be a great way to give a purpose to their newly-learnt skills and develop them. But it can also be a daunting prospect: joining other boats, with experienced sailors, on a crowded start line, and then meeting them at various places around the race course.

That is where this book comes in. It is a compact, handy summary of the key things you need to know to start racing or refresh your knowledge. Reading it will give you an understanding of racing and then it can be the perfect quick reference guide to keep in your kit bag.

Repairing GRP & FRP Boats
Anyone who owns a fibreglass boat (GRP or FRP, yacht, dinghy or motorboat) knows that it can get damaged in the rough and tumble of everyday use. Sometimes the damage is serious enough to warrant a professional repair (which the insurance company will probably pay for). But at other times it is more minor, and you might want to repair it yourself. But how do you repair it, so you can’t see the repair - get that really professional-looking finish? If you’ve ever asked that question, then this is the book for you.

Long-term boat repairer, Pete Vincent, shares the trade secrets of making a lasting, strong and invisible repair. Penni Vincent, who does not share Pete’s experience, got him to explain it to her and together they have created this book - written by an expert, but understandable by a novice.

www.fernhurstbooks.com

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Turkey appears to be prepared to ban foreign-flagged boats from operating as charter vessels in Turkish waters for the 2019 season. IBI has learned additional details from local sources about the sudden shift of policy, including a yacht charter firm active in the country for many years.

The situation apparently stems from a complaint lodged with the Ministry of Tourism claiming foreign companies are taking business away from local gulet operators. The Ministry investigated the claims and decided to enforce a Turkish cabotage law from 1926 preventing commercial operation of foreign vessels between Turkish ports and along the coast. Accordingly, charter licenses which expire on 31 March 2019 are not being re-issued to foreign-flagged yachts for the coming season - a system that has been in effect for more than 35 years.

Despite lobbying efforts by industry members affected by the newly-enforced restriction, the Tourism Minister - who is campaigning for local elections taking place on 31 March - has thus far declined to reverse the decision, stunning operators who were preparing for the start of the charter season in early April.

There appears to be some opportunity for commercially registered yachts to leave the country prior to the license expiration date and re-enter Turkey as private yachts to obtain 'Transit Logs' for personal use by owners and their family and friends.

There is still some hope among Turkish charter companies that the situation may change after the local elections take place in a few days' time - such as extending implementation of the new policy over a longer period - but in the meantime they are preparing for the worst.

www.ibinews.com

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The Clipper Race has renewed its partnership with TIMEZERO by MaxSea, returning for a third consecutive edition as the Official Navigation Software Supplier.

The eleven strong fleet of 70 ft ocean racing yachts will be equipped with TZ Professional for the 40,000 nm circumnavigation. TZ Professional is renowned for its famous routing algorithm, Weather Routing Module, and cutting edge Position Report tool which will enable Clipper Race teams to seek out the fastest route, plan their race strategies and keep track of the competition. Used to its full advantage, it can give teams an edge and the potential of podium finishes.

In addition, the Clipper Race fleet will be one of the first to benefit from the release of the new TIMEZERO software: Version 4. This update will include new exclusive tools, weather display and forecasts.

clipperroundtheworld.com
mytimezero.com

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Harrogate-based premium Gin brand, Slingsby, has partnered with Lendy Cowes Week 2019 as the Official Gin supplier for the regatta and headline sponsor of Ladies Day. Lendy Cowes Week is taking place this summer on the Isle of Wight.

The sponsorship package, secured for the major sailing event running from 10th - 17th August, includes sponsorship of the exclusive evening reception on Ladies Day and on-lookers will also spot a 'Slingsby Ladies Day' flag flying proudly on all boats that have female sailors.

The Gin brand will benefit from broadcast channel support and on-site branding during the event. Slingsby branding will be seen across Cowes Yacht Haven, Shepards Marina, Cowes Parade and the High Street - giving them a spotlight focus for the many hundreds of competitors and visitors who attend the highly anticipated regatta.

A Slingsby branded yacht will also be at the regatta and guests can visit the popular Fever-Tree bar located in Cowes Yacht Haven and other bars to enjoy an award-winning Slingsby Gin. Slingsby's London Dry, Yorkshire Rhubarb, Gooseberry and Navy Strength Gins are made using ingredients sourced locally from across Yorkshire and the brand bears the name of William Slingsby, the first man to discover the restorative properties of Harrogate's famous spa water wells.

www.spiritofharrogate.co.uk
lendycowesweek.co.uk

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Lengers Yachts, the international yacht brokerage and dealership based in the Netherlands, is to open its third European office in Mallorca next month.

Lengers already has locations in Muiden in the Netherlands and in Düsseldorf, Germany.

The new office will be based in Port Calanova, close to Palma de Mallorca in the island's capital. CEO Bas Lengers says the official opening will be held on April 26, just one day before the start of Mallorca's biggest in-water event, the Palma International Boat Show.

The news comes not long after Lengers announced the sale of a Sanlorenzo 500EXP explorer yacht. The 47.2m steel-hulled, custom-built vessel will be delivered to its new owner in 2020.

Lengers Yachts is the official dealer for the Sanlorenzo, Bluegame, Prestige and SACS brands in northern Europe. The company also offers maintenance and repair services at its shipyard in Muiden, near Amsterdam, as well as on the Italian and French Rivieras, in Spain (Ibiza and Mallorca) and in Croatia.

www.ibinews.com

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While officials in Miami, Florida continue to debate best practices, revenue enhancement and whether the city should be in the marina business at all, new reports indicate the city loses nearly half-a-million-dollars in marina revenue per year to the Miami International Boat Show (MIBS).

Miami leases management of most of its public marinas but operates Dinner Key Marina, Miamarina at Bayside, and Marine Stadium Marina - a dry storage facility.

According to Miami Today news, Daniel Rotenberg, director of the city's Department of Real Estate and Asset Management, reported on losses at the dry dock facility related to the city-owned site being used to stage the annual Miami International Boat Show.

The city has licensed use of the property and water surrounding idled Marine Stadium for the boat show for the past four years. Rotenberg said some dry stacks were removed from the Marine Stadium Marina due to the boat show and were never replaced, amounting to an annual loss of US$240,000 revenue, on top of more than US$150,000 in concessions granted to MIBS.

Commissioner Joe Carollo said he thinks the financial hit has been even more substantial and repeated his desire to see the marine facility operated or managed privately. "That's still not what I'm seeing… We need to put real management there," said Carollo, who again stated his belief that many city properties are not bringing in the amount of revenue they should.

According to the city's website, Marine Stadium Marina was one of South Florida's largest full-service dry storage marinas.

www.ibinews.com

Featured Brokerage
Raceboats Only 2004 Thompson 38 ‘Serena’. $250,000 NZ. Located in Opua, New Zealand.

The Thompson 38 ‘Serena’ is fun, fast, and an impressive sail plan leaves bigger boats in her wake.

See listing details in Seahorse's RaceboatsOnly

Contact
Robbs Hielkema
M.+64 21 858 897
E [DOT] robbs [AT] 36degrees [DOT] nz

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Raceboats Only Modified ORMA 60 'TRITIUM'. 495000 USD.

Official Price: $ 495,000 USD TRITIUM is a modified Orma 60 trimaran - stretched to 72 feet. Originally built by offshore veteran Jean Le Cam, the boat was updated by Artemis Racing for testing of AC wing and dagger foils.

See listing details in Seahorse's RaceboatsOnly

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assistant [AT] bernard-gallay [DOT] com

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Raceboats Only 1998 Vismara V43 Open. 96000 EUR. Located in Fano, Italy.

Ultra-slippery Italian 43ft custom performance cruiser/racer with hull lines derived from the Volvo 60 class. Retractable t-keel gives 2.4-3.4m draft range while her 3-cabin interior gives plenty of scope for comfortable cruising.

See listing details in Seahorse's RaceboatsOnly

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See the RaceboatsOnly.com collection at seahorsemagazine.com/brokerage/

The Last Word
Government is not reason, it is not eloquence, it is force; like fire, a troublesome servant and a fearful master. Never for a moment should it be left to irresponsible action. -- George Washington

Editorial and letter submissions to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Advertising inquiries to Graeme Beeson: gb [AT] beesonstone [DOT] com or see www.eurosailnews.com/advertise.html

EuroSail News #4305 - 29 March

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In This Issue
International Laser Class Association Removes Laser Performance as Approved Builder
ORC Sportboat European Championship Now Open For Entries
New Harken® SnubbAir defies classification as a winch
Four dinghies put through their paces in Valencia
Entries start to roll in for Cowes Classics Week
TU Delft Solar Boat Team
Clipper Skippers at China's Biggest Offshore Event
What's in the Latest Edition Of Seahorse Magazine
Cowes Week Ltd continues support of Youth Sailing
Featured Brokerage
The Last Word: Abbie Hoffman

Brought to you by Seahorse magazine and YachtScoring.com EuroSail News is a digest of sailing news and opinions, regatta results, new boat and gear information and letters from sailors -- with a European emphasis. Contributions welcome, send to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

International Laser Class Association Removes Laser Performance as Approved Builder
ILCA is seeking new builders to complement its existing network of manufacturers, the International Laser Class Association (ILCA) announced today. The move comes after longtime builder of the class dinghy, Laser Performance (Europe) Limited (LPE), breached the terms of the Laser Construction Manual Agreement (LCMA), which seeks to ensure the identical nature of all Laser class boats, regardless of where they are built.

"We're disappointed to see such a long and productive relationship come to an end, but we had to move ahead in order to protect the level of competition and the investment for the 14,000 members of the International Laser Class and the more than 50,000 sailors around the world who regularly sail the Laser dinghy," said Class President Tracy Usher. With its UK-based manufacturing facility, LPE was the ILCA-approved builder that produced boats for most of Europe, Asia and the Americas until earlier this week, when Usher says the class terminated the LCMA with respect to LPE after the builder's refusal to allow inspection of the boats being built in their manufacturing facility as required by that contract.

"The very heart of our class is the ability for any sailor to race any other on an equal playing field, and the only way we can guarantee that level of parity is by ensuring that all builders are producing the boat in strict accordance with the Laser Construction Manual," explained Usher, who said that LPE has unequivocally denied the class their right to access to LPE's factory. "It's the same for every class of one-design racing boat: if we can't be sure that they are all the same, we have no class left," said Usher, who said that LPE left the class "no option."

Fortunately for sailors around the world, there are already two other manufacturers of class legal boats, one in Japan and another in Australia. According to Chris Caldecoat, General Manager of Performance Sailcraft Australia (PSA), his company is able to take up the slack if needed. "PSA has sufficient capacity to supply the market until new builders are appointed in Europe and around the world," Caldecoat said. "We have and will always do what is right for the sailors and the sport."

"Doing what's right for the sailors" is really all that matters, according to ILCA Executive Secretary Eric Faust, who emphasized that there will be no disruptions to the the 2020 Olympics or to any major ILCA event. "Performance Sailcraft Japan will supply all the boats for the Olympic competitions in Tokyo, while the next two World Championships are in regions with Performance Sailcraft factories. These are existing, class-approved builders so we expect no issues," said Faust. "We're confident that we'll see new builders coming on line soon, and that we'll once again have a robust dealer network around the world in plenty of time for the lead up to the 2024 Olympics," he added. With PSA and PSJ supplying boats and parts to sailors formerly served by Laser Performance over the next few months, Faust expects the disruption to class owners to be minimal or non-existent.

ILCA understands that many of our sailors will have additional questions about this news. Please know that we plan to post a FAQ with more detailed information soon. Finally, ILCA would like to thank all of our sailors, coaches, members and enthusiasts for their support of the class over the years and we look forward to a prosperous future ahead.

www.laserinternational.org

* LP has responded to the ILCA by stating:

"ILCA statements are falsehoods and defamatory. We will fully protect and enforce our intellectual rights property, including Laser intellectual property. ILCA offices, now located in Austin, Texas, USA, should be moved back to the UK or EU, where over 75% of active Laser class members and sailors reside, managed by a full-time professional team paid for by the builders through increased plaque fees. LaserPerformance is proud and determined to continue to support Laser sailors and community around the world."

I understand the termination of LP was based on a serious breach of agreement that occurred very recently, and while they are aware of the potential for legal action, the decision by ILCA came with significant legal advice and they are confident in their position. -- Craig Leweck

www.sailingscuttlebutt.com

ORC Sportboat European Championship Now Open For Entries
Portoroz, Slovenia - Organizers from the Yacht Club Marina Portoroz (YCMP) and the Offshore Racing Congress (ORC) are pleased to announce the opening for entries to this year's ORC Sportboat European Championship.

Held over 24-30 August in Portoroz, Slovenia, this ORC championship event will be open to yachts that fit the following ORC Sportboat parameters:

- length from 6.00 - 9.15 m
- displacement less than 2000 kg
- displacement/length ratio (DSPM/LSM03) less than 3.70 for Division A
- displacement/length ratio (DSPM/LSM03) less than 6.00 for Divisions B and C

After three days of measurement from 24-26 August, racing will start with a coastal race on Tuesday 27 August, followed by three days of six inshore races until Friday 30 August, the closing date for the event. Inshore racing will take place in the Bay of Piran very near the venue at Marina Portoroz, with the length and location of the coastal race options determined by organizers in the Sailing Instructions.

The area is in the same general region and only a few miles south of where the ORC Worlds 2017 were held in Trieste.

Trophies will be awarded to the top three teams in each division, along with awards for Corinthian teams with all-Group 1 (amateur) skippers and crew members.

For those interested to attend who cannot bring their own boat, CleanSport in nearby Izola is offering charter deals from their fleet of six new Simonis-designed Far East 28R's, a proven performer in ORC Sportboat rules. More info can be obtained by visiting www.cleansport.si/en/fareast-28r_1.html, writing to info [AT] cleansport [DOT] si or calling +386 40 550 520.

www.ycmp.eu
www.orc.org

New Harken® SnubbAir defies classification as a winch
Harken SnubbAir Designed to solve a deck layout challenge on the J/70, the new Harken SnubbAir might look like a smaller, less bruising version of the Classic Harken plain top size 8 winch it replaces, but the SnubbAir has so many other potential uses it really isn't a winch.

"It could act more like a really large ratcheting foot or cheek block or even a ratcheting line diverter in the pit. The SnubbAir provides lots of line-holding power even without a winch handle," said Greg Hartlmeier, the project's lead engineer.

SnubbAir comes with four integral threaded studs that match the bolt pattern of the B8A winch. It weighs less than half of the B8A and is 30% lower to the deck. It features two races of Delrin® ball bearings like a block, which assure it operates with very little friction. The SnubbAir can be used with an adaptor that lets crews use any conventional winch handle. "We named it the SnubbAir, because it's a modern spin on an old-school snubbing winch," Hartlmeier said. "Its low-profile, wide-drum diameter and large center hole make it look a little like our Grand Prix Air Winches."

Ask your Harken dealer to show you SnubbAir.

www.harken.com

Four dinghies put through their paces in Valencia
From 11-15 March 2019, the D-Zero, Laser, Melges 14 and RS Aero were put through their paces at Sea Trials for the Men's and Women's One Person Dinghy Equipment for the Paris 2024 Olympic Sailing Competition.

World Sailing launched a tender process in May 2018 which invited Class Associations and Manufacturers to tender for the Men's and Women's One Person Dinghy.

Eight tenders were received and a Board of Directors appointed Working Party recommended that the Laser be included as a full option in the Sea Trials alongside the D-Zero, Melges 14 and RS Aero .

Real Club Nautico Valencia hosted representatives of each manufacturer and class as well as an evaluation panel and 11 international sailors with Olympic and World Championship experience.

The evaluation panel at the Sea Trials brought together a wide range of knowledge including members from the re-evaluation working party, World Sailing committees, Board of Director, Coaches Commission, Medical Commission and World Sailing technical team.

They will now write a report and make a recommendation on what equipment should be adopted for the Men's and Women's One Person Dinghy at the Paris 2024 Olympic Games.

This recommendation will be presented to the Equipment Committee at the 2019 Mid-Year Meeting in May. The Equipment Committee will review the recommendation and then make their own to World Sailing's Council, the final decision making body of World Sailing, who will make a decision on the equipment that will be adopted.

sailing.org

Entries start to roll in for Cowes Classics Week
Cowes, UK: A pretty little 1927 one off yacht is one of the first entries for the 12th Cowes Classics Week. Chough, owned by Alex Kathrin Vowinckel, typifies the spirit of the event which, despite being a draw for vintage yachts and designs from all over the UK and beyond, is hotly contested on the race course. Chough herself is no slacker - following an absence from the event she will be seeking to reclaim her class title that she last held onto three years ago and even maybe her Concours d'Elegance Award which she has previous won at Cowes Classics Week .

Chough's entry is one of a steady flow of yachts whose numbers are likely to reach in excess of 180 if previous years are anything to go by. Preparation for the event is now officially underway. With the launch last week of the new 2019 website, competitors can now find information and enter the event. www.cowesclassicsweek.org. Racing takes place from 29th July to 2nd August.

Cowes Classics Week has grown strongly since its inaugural regatta whose fleet meets the qualification of being built to designs drawn up before 1979 or in the spirit of tradition.

Many truly classic yachts will be coming back once again to compete in a week which offers thrilling Solent race courses and evening entertainment. The newly formed classic Swan Division is already taking shape with the entry of Stephen Brookson's Kiswala. Meanwhile the XOD class entries are starting to arrive in a class that is likely to number more than 50 entries.

Red Funnel is, for the first time, the Signature Sponsor of the Event. The afternoon Winkworth Tea and Cakes are legendary, held after racing each afternoon at the organising club, the Royal London Yacht Club. Cowes Corinthian YC and the Island Sailing Club are opening their doors for social events as well, while the RORC and the Royal Thames YC are helping on the water.

www.cowesclassicsweek.org

TU Delft Solar Boat Team
Solbian and Hevel Group are the proud partners in this promising project. The TU Delft Solar Boat Team is one of the Dream Teams in the D:Dream Hall on the TU Delft campus. The name of this building is an acronym for: "Delft: Dream Realization of Extremely Advanced Machines". In the D:Dream Hall, several student teams work on their own innovative projects. The companies Solbian and Hevel Group are collaborating with students of the Solar Boat Team to produce the most innovative and highly efficient solar cells, so the team can show what is already possible with this innovative technology!

Completely new design for the open sea
Never before has the TU Delft Solar Boat Team built a solar boat that will defy the open seas. Besides being the first Dutch team, it will also be the first student team to take on this challenge. The design is completely different from previous years, when boats were built for the inland waters. Over the past five months, the 28 students of the TU Delft Solar Boat Team have been working full-time to create the most optimal design. In order to cope with the high waves and heavy gusts of wind on the open sea, this year's boat will take the form of a trimaran. With a larger solar boat, there will also be a considerably larger solar deck. The solar deck will be no less than 28 square meters, which is the same size as nine double beds together. With such a large surface, the energy that can be obtained from the sunlight is maximal. Due to the use of hydrofoils, the trimaran will not only be able to sail but can also fly above the waves at high speed.

The next months, the team will test and optimize the boat, so that at the start of July it will be ready to battle against world-class boats during The Offshore Challenge, the world-championships for solar boats, in Monaco. They will not only compete for the world title, the students will also do a world record attempt at the end of July by crossing The Channel as the fastest solar boat ever. The team hopes to show how powerful sustainable energy can be at sea.

The current team consists of a group of 28 students from ten different faculties at the TU Delft.

www.hevelsolar.com/en
www.solbian.eu

Clipper Skippers at China's Biggest Offshore Event
British Clipper 2017-18 Race Circumnavigators, Mike Miller (50, from Windsor) and Glenn Manchett (53, from Cambridge), who raced on board the winning Sanya Serenity Coast team, have returned to China's tropical paradise this month to compete in the country's famous Round Hainan Regatta.

Having enjoyed everything that Sanya had to offer during the Clipper Race stopover, Mike was especially looking forward to calling into the tropical resort whilst racing on Wan Ming Tang Bravery Honor Team in the race that start and finishes in Haikou, Hainan.

Sharing their Clipper Race experience, they explained how the opportunity to become a Sanya Ambassador has given them the chance to take on the grueling challenges, and also provided them with a once in a lifetime experience whilst helping to spread the word of Sanya. The programme, which is available to residents of Sanya, will give locals the chance to take part in the 2019-20 edition of the epic 40,000 nautical mile circumnavigation when it kicks off this summer.

The Round Hainan Regatta was founded in 2010 by the China Yachting Association and celebrated its tenth edition this year

After more than 30 hours of fierce competition, Wuzhizhou Cup 10th Round Hainan Regatta 2019 ushered in the first team of Haikou-Sanya (West Route) at 17:53 18 March, the Noahs Sailing Club, which has always been at the leading position, and finally rushed through the finish line of the sea outside Sanya Serenity Marina in 31 hours, 48 minutes and 12 seconds.

Updates at en.hnoceanrace.com

Seahorse April 2019
What's in the Latest Edition Of Seahorse Magazine

Seahorse Magazine

Update
That spirit of friendly competition, why looking backwards is rarely a good look (especially if you're over 84kg), first (Figaro) impressions and a racing success that stands out above most others. Jack Griffin,Will Harris, Terry Hutchinson and Mike Woodhead

(More than) busy
With new Melges IC37s underpinning the world champagne market at the other end of the scale the company's little unballasted puppy is doing pretty well too...

Happy days!
Boxing Day 2018 marked the start of a pretty good story for the latest Doyle Sails technology

ORC - For the next trick
Time to lose the lead... Larry Rosenfeld and Dobbs Davis

Into action
Two birds with one (Aussie) stone... why not?

Special rates for Scuttlebutt Europe subscribers:
Seahorse Print or Digital Subscription Use Discount Promo Code SB2

1yr Print Sub: €77 - £48 - $71 / Rest of the World: £65 www.seahorse.co.uk/shop/subs/

1yr Digital Sub for £30: www.seahorse.co.uk/shop/digital

Discounts shown are valid on a one year subscription to Seahorse magazine.

Cowes Week Ltd continues support of Youth Sailing
Cowes Week Limited, organisers of Lendy Cowes Week, the world's best-known sailing regatta, is delighted to announce that they will continue their youth initiative which offers discounted entry fees to boats with crews of under 25 year olds.

The Under 25 Youth initiative, which has been running since 2012, has succeeded in doing what it was originally designed for - inspiring and making it possible for young people to race at Lendy Cowes Week.

By offering an extremely attractive package to young sailors under the age of 25, numbers have, not surprisingly, increased over the last few years, with young crews enjoying both the exciting racing and the lively apres-sail scene shoreside.

This year, Cowes Week Ltd is offering the first 25 crews to enter, who are all under age 25 at the time of the regatta, a 50% discount on the entry fee. The sooner teams sign up the more chance there is of securing one of the highly desirable discounted places.

In 2018, competition was fierce out on the water, but the Under 25 crew of Team Heiner III, not only took home the Land Rover Under 25 Trophy but also won the TNG Newcomers trophy, Musto Young Skipper trophy and were second overall in IRC 3 Class.

Teams wishing to take advantage of discounted entry fees should make their entry as soon as possible by contacting the Regatta Office at entries [AT] lendycowesweek [DOT] co [DOT] uk / 01983 295744

www.lendycowesweek.co.uk

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The Last Word
Once you get the right image the details aren't that important. -- Abbie Hoffman

Editorial and letter submissions to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Advertising inquiries to Graeme Beeson: gb [AT] beesonstone [DOT] com or see www.eurosailnews.com/advertise.html

EuroSail News #4306 - 1 April

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In This Issue
All Foiling Olympics
ORC Faces Lawsuit, Chaos
Owner Driver Rule For The America's Cup
The Ocean Race renamed
Key West Race Week Returns!
The Next Golden Globe Race will be even harder
The Last Word: Douglas Adams

Brought to you by Seahorse magazine and YachtScoring.com EuroSail News is a digest of sailing news and opinions, regatta results, new boat and gear information and letters from sailors -- with a European emphasis. Contributions welcome, send to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

All Foiling Olympics
World Sailing has dropped another bombshell on plans for the 2024 Paris Olympics, with an Executive Committee submission for the 2019 Midyear Meeting that will scrap completely all current proposed boats... and usher in a new era for Olympic Sailing: All Foiling.

"It's our last hope for big television ratings" said a World Sailing Vice President who requested anonymity. "The IOC has directly threatened to eliminate sailing from the 2028 Games unless we bring in more revenue than we collect. The loss of Olympic funds would ring the death knell for our organisation. Only foiling sailing has the elements of danger and speed that will draw big audiences, particularly amongst millennials."

The pushback from the IOC was apparently triggered by the introduction of Keelboat Racing after heavy lobbying and pressure from the French. The huge costs of equipment and the expense (and low viewership) of offshore television filming were apparently the last straws for the IOC.

In a counter proposal to the IOC, and one that will certainly reverberate amongst other sports federations, World Sailing has proposed that the sailing events have title sponsorship, with a yet-to-be-determined percentage handed over to the IOC. Head of World Sailing Sponsorship Lamine Diack told EuroSall News that the split is under negotiations at an extraordinary WS Executive meeting in the Cayman Islands, hosted by bankers BCCI.

The proposed sponsor? French medical giant Sanofi, who have retained the lobbying services of Franck Cammas. "When my foot was nearly severed by a hydrofoil, the medical costs topped 7 figures... as was the spike in media coverage from the mainstream. I realized then that my injury could end up saving our sport" said the famed sailor. Grave injuries = huge media interest = big medical company profits. It's a win-win-win!

Imagine the carnage from foiling boards, cats, monohulls (the Figaro Beneteau 3 is reportedly the new proposed Keeboat) at the Paris Games. "We fully intend to rigourously enforce lifejacket requirements" said another WS official on the Medical Committee. "We need all the target flotsam possible."

sailing.org

ORC Faces Lawsuit, Chaos
Thick as a Brick While the numbers of certificates continues to climb for the ORC, a lawsuit filed in Moordale by Oliver Bostick threatens to upend the 2019 spring season. Mr. Bostick claims that he trademarked the acronym ORC in 1972 for his local pond sailboat racing club, Oliver's Raceboat Challenge. His solicitors are demanding that all ORC certificate owners, and the Offshore Racing Council, pay a retroactive licensing fee and cease and desist any further certificate issuance until settlement has been reached.

While only 12 years old at the time, Bostick's trademark was properly applied for and granted; officials were unable to say why the trademark had not been entered into national and international databases used to insure non-competitive licensing.

"We're talking about tens of thousands of certificates", said ORC's Nicola Seroni, head of the council's wing mast measurers consortium. "Fortunately there is no copyright or trademark indemnification clause in a measurement certification, so our customers are on their own on this one, we're not going to cover the legal costs of any class action or individual suit that Mr. Bostick intends."

Colleagues of Mr. Bostick have privately noted that he may be amenable to a settlement of a new pond sailor in lieu of payment from the Offshore Racing Council. "I think a half scale Shamrock V would do nicely, and Oliver's asked that the hull be a nice British Racing Green and real Burmese teak on the deck not any of that bubingaz shite." reports his sister Honoria.

orc.org

Owner Driver Rule For The America's Cup
According to their latest joint column in The Independent, Stuart Alexander and Bob Fisher have stumbled upon a previously unknown stipulation to the Deed of Gift that requires syndicate owners to be onboard and that they take the helm "for a signficant portion" of a race.

Found in the archives of the Royal Yacht Squadron by Fisher during research for the final volume of his magnum opus "An Absorbing Interest", this previously unknown document was submitted to, and accepted by, the New York Yacht Club in 1930, then sent to the Royal Yacht Squadron in a packet of otherwise unnotable documents from Lipton's fifth and final attempt to take the Cup. Where it lay undiscovered for nearly a century.

The signatories on the document included both Lipton and Harold Vanderbuilt, owner of the winning boat Enterprise. "Both men had a vested interest in making sure that the competition would not be dominated in future by professionals. Thomas and Harold had spent considerable amounts of money on what they considered to be a true Gentleman's Sport and feared that future benefactors would not keep pouring money into boats they'd never get to sail. In a way, their push for an owner driver requirement was the pinnacle of Connthianism and is to be applauded." said Fisher.

How the appropriate representative will be determined in an age of syndicate LLCs and obtuse legal structures, but the news has sparked the interest of both Larry Ellison and Ernesto Bertarelli, who are now reported to be considering late entry into the next America's Cup in Auckland. "Not so bad with Larry and Ernesto, they're very good, proper sailors... but what if we end up getting the VP of Money Laundering from some bloody Maltese Bank?" wrote Alexander.

americascup.com

The Ocean Race renamed
The Ocean Race (ex-Volvo Ocean Race) has a new sponsor. And it's not far afield from its recent past. Stepping up with sponsorship and support is SAAB, the former (and future) Swedish automobile manufacturer. Copyright lawsuits finally settled, NEVS (National Electric Vehicle Sweden) has once again acquired the ability to use the SAAB brand name for their breakthrough electric vehicles.

"We saw what sailing sports sponsorship did for Volvo", cited NEVS marketing director Beaurigard T. 'Skruggs' McTavish. From a a car line described by Dudley Moore as "sure, they're boxy but they're really safe" in the 1990 movie "Crazy People" to the Koenigsegg for those of upper middle class means, we are VERY impressed at how the race affililation brought Volvo into the performance brand spotlight.

"We hope to marry the high technology of our electric cars to the advances in construction, aerodynamics and hydrodynamics that makes this century's America's Cup so alluring. Our parent company SAAB AB is a world leader in aircraft systems and will bring a depth of technological expertise that will send those Kiwi bastids scuttling back to their sheep farms" said one of McTavish's deputies on condition of anonymity.

The SAAB Ocean Race will start from Alicante, Spain in the autumn of 2021 and finish in Europe in early summer of 2022. There will be up to nine stopover ports.

www.theoceanrace.com

Key West Race Week Returns!
In a statement from the Storm Trysail Club today, great news for sailors and for the city of Key West. Key West Race Week is set to return in January 2020... with two new sponsors and new event. KWRW will be named the Bombardier Sea Doo Key West Race Week Presented by Labatts.

The greatest single issue facing racing events is declining registrations; Storm Trysail commissioned marketing firm Hill & Knowlton to determine the best way to increase participation. The answer? Canada!

"The weather's horrible in January anywhere in Canada. They don't call Canadians in Miami 'Snow Geese' for nothing" said H&K's Craig Fuller. Interviews at a dozen prominent Canadian Yacht Clubs identified a real need for a week in the sun. The logistics issue of boat transport has been solved with a contract with JBoats to supply well over a hundred boats for very inexpensive charter. That combined with support from Air Canada will mean that even moderately well-heeled Canadian yachtsmen can fly in and enjoy a week of world class competition with virtually everything sorted with just a swipe of an Amex card.

The closer was integration of two other popular Canadian sports: snow mobiles and beer. Bombardier, the Canadian based sports behemoth, manufacturers of snowmobiles and jetskis, got Storm Trysail to open a course to a new one design at the event: Jet Skis. Labatts will provide hundreds of kegs of Labatts Blue at deeply discounted pricing. "We've lost marketshare in Florida over the past decade, we regard this as a superb way to reintroduce this iconic brand" said Labatt's global brand ambassaors Douglas McKenzie.

"Look... they have stand up paddleboards at Volvo Ocean Race events, kayaks at Kiel Race Week, why not Jet Skis at Key West? Florida has a State Bird, State Flower, State Tree, State Salwater Mammal, even a State Pie (Key Lime) , why not fully embrace reality and denote a State Annoyance? Let's embrace Florida Man instead of shunning him" said STC's Lee Reichert. "We've all been yelling at jet skis throwing up wakes inside marinas... now we can just wave and smile and regard them as comrades. They're helping us keep registration and charter fees low, and we'll be sure to put their racing circle a LONG ways out to sea. We're reasonably confident that most will make it back to the marina intact".

keywestraceweek.com

The Next Golden Globe Race will be even harder
No GPS? No sat coms? No iPads to watch Netflix in the Southern Ocean? We got halfway there in the last Golden Globe, says organizer Don McIntyre. We've winnowed out all the true pussies in offshore sailing now we need to get right down to the gristle.

"For the 2022 event, there will be food allocation based on the average time of the first three finishers in the most recent GG. We'll take the average time, assign 2500 calories per day and skippers will either have to stop and fish or starve if they're slow. Just as they did on the Clipper Ships of yore. We may allow HMS regulations on rum consumption... and we'll allow rudimentary auto pilots, but this will truly be a do or die voyage. No nancy-boys need apply".

goldengloberace.com

The Last Word
A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools. -- Douglas Adams

Editorial and letter submissions to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Advertising inquiries to Graeme Beeson: gb [AT] beesonstone [DOT] com or see www.eurosailnews.com/advertise.html

EuroSail News #4307 - 2 April

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In This Issue
Price Prevails In Ficker Cup
British Grand Prix elite to compete in RORC Easter Challenge
Harken® Element™ Blocks Won't Break Your Budget
Trofeo Princesa Sofia IBEROSTAR Opens
Sardinha Cup for the Beneteau Figaro 3
Seahorse Sailor Of The Month
48th BVI Spring Regatta
BKL season opener just weeks away!
DutchSail admit pressure is on to build challenge after late entry
Featured Brokerage
The Last Word: Lucien Greaves

Brought to you by Seahorse magazine and YachtScoring.com EuroSail News is a digest of sailing news and opinions, regatta results, new boat and gear information and letters from sailors -- with a European emphasis. Contributions welcome, send to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Price Prevails In Ficker Cup
Long Beach, California: In an exciting winner-takes-all final match, Harry Price (AUS) of Down Under Racing defeated Chris Poole (USA) to capture the Long Beach Yacht Club Ficker Cup title. Both will advance to the Congressional Cup, which starts next week. Dave Hood (USA) finished third, while Joachim Aschenbrenner (DEN) took fourth.

Eight teams from around the globe competed in the 40th Ficker Cup match race: three days of what Principal Race Officer John Busch called, "Awesome, epic sailing." Although the wind was slow to come up in the morning, when it did fill in, it was idyllic, with cool ocean breezes and plenty of sunshine.

Going into Sunday's semi-finals, Seawanhaka Corinthian Yacht Club's Poole, who had aced Stage 1, was paired with Hood, a LBYC Staff Commodore. In the first match, Hood got 'hoodwinked' - surrendering a solid lead when he targeted the wrong windward mark. Poole took advantage of the error and won that race, and continued to dominate the series; moving on to the finals.

A crowd had gathered on Belmont Pier to watch the races, and Aschenbrenner and Price kept them in suspense. Each won one race, then another, until at 2:2 they entered a final match-point battle in race five. Off the start, Aschenbrenner tacked too close to Price, earning a penalty. The die was cast. Despite a duel that took them to the outer reaches of the course, Aschenbrenner couldn't rebound. Price won by a boat length, to enter the Finals.

Earlier, the breeze had clocked and built to 9 knots. But with the clock ticking and wind waning, PRO Busch decided to reduce the Finals to a single winner-take-all match.

Despite a penalty in the pre-start, Hood recovered and bested Aschenbrenner, for third place: an impressive accomplishment for the 61-year-old Staff Commodore, and only amateur skipper in the field of finalists.

Ficker Cup Final Results
Harry Price (AUS)
Chris Poole (USA)
Dave Hood (USA)
Joachim Aschenbrenner (DEN)

Congressional Cup Skippers
Ian Williams (GBR)
Maxime Mesnil (FRA)
Nicklas Dackhammar (SWE)
Will Boulden (AUS)
Taylor Canfield (USA)
Johnie Berntsson (SWE)
Nick Egnot-Johnson (NZL)
Scotty Dickson (USA)
Harry Price (AUS)
Chris Poole (USA)

www.thecongressionalcup.com

British Grand Prix elite to compete in RORC Easter Challenge
While the RORC Easter Challenge is on the one hand a training regatta offering free world class coaching from grand masters like Jim Saltonstall, it also kicks off the Royal Ocean Racing Club's domestic racing season.

At present inshore racing is going through a halcyon period in the UK with the return of grand prix racing in the FAST40+ class and the more attainable Performance 40s. The former started with boats such as Ker 40+s and GP42s but has since evolved its own purpose-built hardware as exemplified by Niklas Zennström's Ran 7. While the FAST40+ has an IRC TCC rating band of 1.210-1.270, the Performance 40s are heavier displacement IRC boats with a TCC range of 1.075-1.145.

Both will be out on the Solent in force for the RORC Easter Challenge over 19-21st April.

Seven FAST40+s are expected, including 2018's stand-out performer, Ran 7. Meanwhile Johnny Vincent's Pace has been rechristened Arabella and is being campaigning by Niall Dowling, who famously last year scored the Volvo Round Ireland Race 'double', winning both on elapsed time and corrected.

The coaching facility at the RORC Easter Challenge will enable the crew to fast-track working up their new steed. "We have always found the coaching to be important - it is definitely good to get eyes off the boat," says Cherry. "For example I've never before been involved in string drops. It is hard to get a good camera angle filming that on board, so getting video from off the boat will really help."

In addition, progressing from the Sun Fast 3600, which Cherry says he could sail singlehanded, to one reliant on a full crew, is going to take some work. "With this you need seven out of 11 doing exactly the right thing at the right time to do it well."

While seven FAST 40+s are competing at the RORC Easter Challenge, nine Performance 40s are currently entered. As usual these are topped by the duo of King 40s - the Blair family's Cobra and Roger Bowden's Nifty - and also Tom Kneen's JPK 1180 Sunrise, the trio of J/Boats - Journeymaker II, Red Herring and Jackhammer - the Ker 39 Rumbleflurg, plus the two First 40s La Réponse and Olympia's Tigress.

Olympia's Tigress' direct competition will be former RORC Admiral Andrew McIrvine's La Réponse.

While the RORC Easter Challenge caters for all skill levels and boats of all sizes, the competitive boats are not just limited to the 40s. We can expect to see top performances from the likes of David Frank's new J/112E Leon, to Sam Laidlaw's Quarter Tonner, the relentless champion Aguila to immaculately sailed classics such as Giovanni Belgrano's 1939 Laurent Giles-designed Whooper and Harry Heijst's 1972 S&S 41 Winsome.

www.rorc.org

Harken® Element™ Blocks Won't Break Your Budget
Harken Sailors around the world are putting Harken® Element™ blocks on their boats and reporting that the blocks are achieving what they had been designed to do: be durable and give reliable performance at a surprisingly efficient price. Element blocks are created with sideplates that combine forged hardcoat-anodized aluminum to resist corrosion and compound curves for increased strength. They are simultaneously contemporary and very robust.

Element's design uses the precise amount of metal required to protect the composite sheave with a proven journal bearing. No more. No less. You don't have to pay more than you need. So, size for size, Element is priced significantly lower than our previous line of popularly priced blocks. Whether cruising the bay, competing in a weekend race, or embarking on an extended passage, Element blocks will get you there without breaking your budget. Element is available in singles, doubles, triples, fiddles, and footblocks in 45, 60, and 80 mm. Accepting line from 8 - 16 mm.

Learn more about Element.

harken.com

Trofeo Princesa Sofia IBEROSTAR Opens
A long opening day of the 50th anniversary edition of the Trofeo Princesa Sofia IBEROSTAR was more frustrating for the classes which were sent out to race earlier in the day, the Nacra 17, Lasers and Laser Radials racing out from Ca'n Pastilla had to contend with an unsettled, very light offshore wind before the afternoon sea breeze which took time to fill.

The classes which started later had the best of the day, the 470s and FX's required to spend less time on the water waiting. The hotly contested 470 fleets, Men and Womens, enjoyed two decent races in the 8-10kts breeze on the Bay of Palma. Even the sunshine made a welcome return.

The return to Europe and the Trofeo Princesa Sofia IBEROSTAR is always highly anticipated by Australia's hugely experienced Mat Belcher, double Olympic 470 medallist, and Will Ryan. The 2018 class champions here made a solid start to their European season with a fifth and a first to lie second in the Mens 470 behind Spain's Miami World Cup winners Jordi Xammer and Nicolas Rodriguez.

With the 2020 Olympic regatta just over 15 months away this event figures highly in selections for the Olymipic test event. Top three results

470 Men
1. Jordi Xammar / Nicolas Rodriguez, ESP, 3
2. Keiju Okada / Jumpei Hokazono, JPN, 6
3. Hippolyte Machetti / Sidoine Dantes, FRA, 7

470 Women
1. Hannah Mills / Eilidh Mcintyre, GBR, 7
2. Elena Berta / Bianca Caruso, ITA, 11
3. Camille Lecointre / Aloise Retornaz, FRA, 14

49er - No results

49er FX
1. Charlotte Dobson / Saskia Tidey, GBR, 3
2. Natasha Bryant / Annie Wilmot, AUS, 4
3. Martine Soffiatti Grael / Kahena Kunze, 4

Finn
1. Alican Kaynar, TUR, 4
2. Ed Wright, GBR, 4
3. Andrew Maloney, NZL, 5

Laser
1. Hermann Tomasgaard, NOR, 3
2. Finn Lynch, IRL, 4
3. Filip Jurisic, CRO, 6

Laser Radial
1. Anne-Marie Rindom, DEN, 2
2. Dongshuang Zhang, CHN, 8
3. Erika Reineke, USA, 9

NACRA 17
1. Paul Kohlhoff / Alica Stuhlemmer, GER. 2
2. Gemma Jones / Jason Saunders, NZL, 2
3. Ruggero Tita / Caterina Banti, ITA, 4

RS:X Men - No results

RS:X Women - No results

www.trofeoprincesasofia.org

* Peter Burling and Blair Tuke have become used to people watching them, given their achievement over the past decade, and know they will be under the spotlight at this week's Princess Sofia regatta in Palma.

The event marks the pair's first international regatta in the 49er since winning gold at the 2016 Rio Olympics. The landscape has changed a little since then, with rivals having come and gone, which is why there will be so much interest in how Burling and Tuke fare in Palma.

Burling and Tuke famously won every major regatta between the London and Rio Olympics, including four 49er world titles, and their margin of victory at the Rio Olympics (43 points) was the most in any class at the Olympics in more than 50 years.

The pair announced last August their intention to try to win gold at next year's Tokyo Olympics and started training in October. They won their first regatta back, February's Oceanbridge NZL Sailing Regatta, and were second at the 49er national championships soon after.

They've returned into a strong local 49er scene, and have been working closely with three other New Zealand teams who all have Olympic ambitions of their own. They all train together and there's also a talent pool of promising skiff sailors below this that Burling and Tuke have been helping.

www.nzherald.co.nz

Sardinha Cup for the Beneteau Figaro 3
Because of the very light winds forecast for today on France's Vendée coast, Sunday, Race Direction of the Sardinha Cup made the decision early this morning to shorten course for the opening stage of the three leg race series which is the first test for the new Beneteau Figaro 3 class.

The first leg, entitled The Vendée Warm Up, was in the form of a loop between the country of Saint Gilles, the island of Yeu and the estuary of the Gironde.

Ireland's Tom Dolan and Damian Foxall crossed the finish line in 13th place on Smurfit Kappa after about 17 hours of racing since starting Saturday afternoon at 1400hrs local time.

The Irish duo had lead off the start line and remained very much in the match, in the leading group for most of the stage, succumbing to one small error on what proved to be the final leg in to Saint Gilles Croix de Vie, the start and finish port.

Leg 2, the Great Race No. 1, will be given Tuesday at 16h Saint -Gilles Cross-of-Life on a course of 405 miles. The conditions are expected to be strong, suggesting a good race between the 33 Figaro Bénéteau 3 racing on this stage.

The course of the second stage of the Sardinha Cup, the Great Race No. 1, was presented this Monday at 16h by the race director, Francis Le Goff. 33 teams will start Tuesday (Hive Energy, Will Harris and Eric Péron, victim of a keel failure, will not start but hopes to be back on the third leg).

A 405-mile course that starts Tuesday at 4 pm, with a departure in front of Saint-Gilles Croix-de-Vie, before a first close-to the SN1 buoy at the entrance of the channel of Saint-Nazaire, then a downwind descent towards the BXA mark, at the entrance of the Gironde estuary. The Figaro Bénéteau 3 will then leave Wednesday for a new edge close to the Mare Glénan, before turning around and down to the island of Yeu, to port, and cut the line. arrival at Saint-Gilles Croix-de-Vie.

The course should take about fifty hours, the arrival is scheduled for Thursday late afternoon. As for the weather, the conditions are much more sustained than on the Warm-up, with a start in a good fifteen knots of northwest and the sea quite formed, promising in particular a very fast descent under spinnaker. BXA, then wind on Wednesday, of the order of 20-25 knots, stronger off the coast.

sardinhacup.com

Seahorse Sailor Of The Month

Last month's winner:

Rod Davis (NZL)
'His innovations in the OK have taken the boat to a new level' - Brett Daniel; 'He's not getting paid for this, he just loves sailing... pro sailors take note' - Dan Slater; 'Plenty of runway left, Rod' - David Ross; 'It's the help he gives us off the water that's almost more impressive. In Rod we trust!' - Matt Butterfield; 'I've gotta support a fellow scribe' - Blue Robinson; 'Rod Davis, there is no substitute!' - Michele Henderson; 'Every evening he'd switch from competitor to coach to help all of us... and with the BBQ' - Simon Probert; 'One of the best sailors on the planet, period' - Robin Morgan; 'He just sailed superbly' - Tony Bierre.

This month's nominees:


Stacey Jackson (AUS)
Jeez... where to start. This must be what they mean by 'going viral', the whole world was banging on our door to make this (deserved) nomination. A Volvo racer with SCA and a veteran of most things from skiffs to maxis, Stacey pulled together a really excellent all-woman crew for the last Hobart and then finished second overall. Big at raising awareness of ocean health and women in sport - we were not brave enough to ignore the mob...


Martin Atilla (LAT)
There's lots of talent coming through the Oppis right now but we really respect young Latvian sailor Atilla's big OptiOrange regatta win in Valencia in an almost entirely Spanish fleet and as the only non-Spanish sailor to make the top 10. Closed it out with two wins in the last two races which shows a bit of cool under pressure. OptiOrange was first conceived as a winter training event for Russian Opti sailors. Watch out, world


Seahorse Sailor of the Month is sponsored by Musto, Harken McLube & Dubarry. Who needs silverware, our prizes are usable!

Cast your vote, submit comments, even suggest a candidate for next month at seahorsemagazine.com/sailor-of-the-month/vote-for-sailor-of-the-month

View past winners of Sailor of the Month

48th BVI Spring Regatta
Photo by Ingrid Abery, www.ingridabery.com. Click on image for photo gallery.

48th BVI Spring Regatta Tortola, British Virgin Islands - "It was thrilling to see this place buzzing again!" Miles Sutherland-Pilch, General Manager of Nanny Cay Marina enthused after a fantastic week-long fun-filled event that saw more than 800 sailors on 90+ boats competing. "It's been incredible to be part of the BVI rebuild and this week to be out on the water on a boat that was recovered from Irma and to win in class. I can't thank everyone enough for making this happen. Next year is going to be even better!" Sutherland-Pilch raced with Team Nai'a on Odyssey, a Beneteau First, in CSA Jib & Main 2.

Taking his second consecutive overall win in division in the Offshore Multihull class, Flow, the Gunboat 60 owned and skippered by Steve Cucchiaro (USA) took two bullets today in two races to finish with 6 points. Fujin, the Bieker 53 catamaran owned by Greg Slyngstad (USA), took second, also with 6 points.

The Russian team from St Petersburg took first in CSA Racing 1, on the TP52 Conviction, owned by Clint Brooks (Barbados) finishing with 7 points, just one point ahead of the Carkeek 47 White Rhino, owned and skippered by Todd Stuart (USA).

Blitz, the King 40 owned by Peter Corr (USVI), and a boat that is always difficult to beat, took first in CSA Racing 2 with 9.5 points, barely taking out Team McFly (GBR) on the J/122 El Ocaso in second with 11 points and the Swan 25 Samantaga (BEL) in third also with 11 points. David Sampson, Blitz' tactician said, "We had half a point lead going into the second race and fortunately had a great race. There was a huge left shift at the start, our trimmers did a great job and allowed us to extend every leg. This is one of my favorite regattas anywhere - it's a fun competitive class that makes us want to come back, the atmosphere has been fantastic."

Thanks to every participant in this year's BVI Spring Regatta. See you in 2020 - March 30-April 5!

Full Results at Yachtscoring.com

www.bvispringregatta.org

BKL season opener just weeks away!
The British Keelboat League is excited to be approaching its opening weekend, to be hosted at Ullswater Yacht Club in the Lake District National Park. This event will act as the Northern Qualifier for the series and begins the introduction of the RS21 to racing in the United Kingdom. Taking place over the first bank holiday weekend in May (5th and 6th), the Northern Qualifier promises to be an exciting weekend.

RS Sailing are an Official Partner for the event and have provided a fleet of RS21's for top notch one-design racing. For those teams wishing to get in some pre-event training, the British Keelboat League will also be offering the chance to take the boats out for a shake down sail on Saturday 4th May.

Teams from around the region interested in this event, or the other events to be hosted around the country are encouraged to visit the British Keelboat League website to register.

www.rssailing.com
www.britishkeelboatleague.co.uk

DutchSail admit pressure is on to build challenge after late entry
A late entry into the 2021 America's Cup, the leaders of the Netherlands' challenge admit they are facing a tough task to make up ground.

While Emirates Team New Zealand, Luna Rossa, Ineos Team UK and American Magic have been working on their campaign since early last year, DutchSail were one of three late entries to fleet.

As a result, their campaign began months behind the initial four teams leaving them plenty of ground to make up.

"We started in November with a backlog and we are working hard to make up lost ground," DutchSail general manager Eelco Blok said.

"We are facing killer deadlines, but as long as there are chances, we won't give up."

The three late entries – which also included Stars and Stripes Team USA, and Malta Altus – needed to come up with a 25 per cent instalment of their $US1m entry fee this week, with the balance to be paid by the end of the month. -- Christopher Rieve in the New Zealand Herald

www.nzherald.co.nz

Featured Brokerage
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The Last Word
It’s not about being shocking or upsetting the locals, though it’s an inevitable byproduct. -- Lucien Greaves

Editorial and letter submissions to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Advertising inquiries to Graeme Beeson: gb [AT] beesonstone [DOT] com or see www.eurosailnews.com/advertise.html

EuroSail News #4308 - 3 April

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In This Issue
Trofeo Princesa Sofia Iberostar
America's Cup 2019: Disaster as three challengers set to withdraw
New Harken® SnubbAir defies classification as a winch
Dragon Grand Prix de Cannes
The World Sailing Show
Melges 32 World League Villasimius
All going to plan - Musto
Portsmouth Regatta
Francois Gabart on the subject of Brest Atlantiques
Blanche Cook
Featured Brokerage
The Last Word: Sir Paul McCartney

Brought to you by Seahorse magazine and YachtScoring.com EuroSail News is a digest of sailing news and opinions, regatta results, new boat and gear information and letters from sailors -- with a European emphasis. Contributions welcome, send to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Challenging Palma Sea Breeze Tests the Trofeo Princesa Sofia Iberostar
While it is a perfect kick start to the Olympic classes season in Europe, the annual Trofeo Princesa Sofia Iberostar serves as a touchstone for year-on-year progress. The second racing day provided all fleets with a light breeze of 10-12 knots and sunny conditions. Everyone was excited to hit the water and bring their best performance in order to stay in the fight for the desired podium spots.

Australia's Kurt Hansen and Simon Hoffman took the overall lead in the record-sized 49er class, as GBR's 2017 World Champions Dylan Fletcher and Stu Bithell lie second. They are looking to cement selection to the Tokyo Olympic test event as soon as possible. The strength and depth of young talent coming up in the 49er fleet reflects the appeal of the skiff class and, one supposes, certain security on the Olympic roster.

New Zealand have three duos here with gold medallists Burling and Tuke - who had a shaky 17, 23, return to the class before winning their Race 3. France have nine crews, Germany have 12 crews, GBR eight duos and the host nation, Spain 11. World champions Sime and Mihovil Fantela are 18th after scoring 18,1,11.

Today was also the opening race day for the RS:X Women. Jie Du and Yuw Tan from China and Siripon Kaewduangngam from Thailand stand in the top 3 positions with equal points! Jie Du scored 5,3 and 1 to solve the tie, while Yue opened the day with an Ace followed by 8 and 3. Siripon scored to 2nds and a 15. World champion Lilian De Geus is standing 8th at the moment. -- Icarus Sports

www.trofeoprincesasofia.org

America's Cup 2019: Disaster as three challengers set to withdraw
Half the boats challenging for the America's Cup will not make it to the start line in Auckland in 2021, according to a report.

Newshub have reported that all three teams that filed late entries have failed to get enough money together to stage a challenge.

"It is not surprising that some of the challenges aren't going to make it to the start line," America's Cup veteran skipper Chris Dickson told Newshub.

"It's an expensive game, the America's Cup."

It leaves Emirates Team New Zealand facing the prospect of losing millions of dollars.

Newshub reported that Malta's entry is "dead in the water", DutchSail is resorting to crowdfunding and California's Stars and Stripes is currently drafting a media release announcing its withdrawal.

The three late entries - which also included Stars and Stripes Team USA, and Malta Altus - needed to come up with a 25 per cent instalment of their $US1m entry fee this week, with the balance to be paid by the end of the month.

Stars and Stripes were believed to be well on track in their preparations to get a boat on the water as soon as possible. DutchSail skipper Simeon Tienpont has expressed his eagerness to put together his team and get the building process underway, and said: "We have to get down to work with the boat and the team; we cannot delay any longer. We need to take the water."

Teams are now allowed to launch their first full-scale race boat, however it was expected none of the sydnicates would be ready to do so until the middle of the year.

Malta Altus have been quiet in their progress and were thought to be under enormous pressure to get their challenge into gear.

DuthSail turned to crowd funding to help raise NZ$3.9 million in a bid to put together a competitive challenge.

www.nzherald.co.nz

New Harken® SnubbAir defies classification as a winch
Harken Designed to solve a deck layout challenge on the J/70, the new Harken SnubbAir might look like a smaller, less bruising version of the Classic Harken plain top size 8 winch it replaces, but the SnubbAir has so many other potential uses it really isn't a winch.

"It could act more like a really large ratcheting foot or cheek block or even a ratcheting line diverter in the pit. The SnubbAir provides lots of line-holding power even without a winch handle," said Greg Hartlmeier, the project's lead engineer.

SnubbAir comes with four integral threaded studs that match the bolt pattern of the B8A winch. It weighs less than half of the B8A and is 30% lower to the deck. It features two races of Delrin® ball bearings like a block, which assure it operates with very little friction. The SnubbAir can be used with an adaptor that lets crews use any conventional winch handle. "We named it the SnubbAir, because it's a modern spin on an old-school snubbing winch," Hartlmeier said. "Its low-profile, wide-drum diameter and large center hole make it look a little like our Grand Prix Air Winches."

Ask your Harken dealer to show you SnubbAir.

Dragon Grand Prix de Cannes
Cannes, France: German 470 World Champion Tanja Jacobsohn showed the 50 strong fleet how it's done with some wonderfully consistent sailing at the opening day of the Dragon Grand Prix de Cannes on the Cote d'Azure, France. This first event of the Dragon European Cup 2019 has attracted an extremely strong field from 16 nations across Europe and as far afield as Japan.

Sparkling sun on the beautiful Iles de Lerins and Alpes Maritimes provided the perfect backdrop for what were to be two particularly challenging races, as shifty southerly winds varied from 3 to 13 knots and combined with tricky waves on the 1.7 mile long windward leeward courses.

The first of the day's two races went to Britain's Grant Gordon with Holland's Pieter Heerema taking race two, but it was Tanja Jacobsohn's 3, 2 scoreline which triumphed to give her a three point overall lead. Gordon came seventh in the second race to put him onto eight points overall and into second place on countback from Germany's Thomas Müller in third, who was also very consistent with a pair of fourth places. Fellow German Marcus Brennecke is in fourth place counting ten points with Heerema slotting into fifth on eleven points.

In the Corinthian Division for all amateur crews Sweden's Karl-Gustaf Löhr is leading fellow Swede Martin Palsson with Germany's Maximillian Dohse third.

Racing continues until Friday 5 April with a total of 8 races scheduled. The sailing instructions indicate that two races will be sailed each day, but with the forecast threatening very strong winds for Thursday the Race Committee has elected to post an amendment which gives them the option to race up to three races on day two of the competition. The forecast for day two is for a lot of rain but good winds, with racing due to start at 11.30am. -- Fiona Brown

www.yachtclubdecannes.org

The World Sailing Show
We're all about speed this month. From Tom Slingsby's guided tour of his teams' F50, to the drama that proceeded another record breaking run around the Caribbean 600.

We also find out how aircraft giants Airbus are helping American Magic to develop their trial horse, the Mule as their America's Cup campaign continues to take shape.

Plus, we head to Oman for the EFG Sailing Arabia The Tour, an event that has changed gear and upped its game after the organisers swapped monohulls for the sprightly Diam 24 tris.

Features:
Slingsby's insider tour of the F50
Crash & burn in the Caribbean 600
The American Mule meets Airbus
America's Cup technical
EFG Sailing Arabia The Tour

www.sailing.org/tv

Melges 32 World League Villasimius
Villasimius, Italy: The first act of the Melges 32 World League came to an end today in the Sardinian race course of Villasimius. The three-days of racing was a real sailing show, with seven regattas completed out of a maximum of eight scheduled by the Notice of Race.

The victory, for the first time in his Melges 32 career, goes to the Argentinian team of Luigi Giannattasio,

The last day of racing brought massive changes into the final ranking and podium of the event organized by Melges Europe: with steady breeze ranging from 8 to 11 knots, the crew of Luigi Giannattasio, with Manuel Weiller calling tactics, immediately scores a bullet, leaving at his back the Moneguasque crew of G-Spot by Giangiacomo Serena Di Lapigio and the twice World Champions of Tavatuy by Pavel Kutznetsov.

The Melges 32 fleet will return to racing from 17 to 19 May in the race course of Puntaldia, Northern Sardinia, while Marina di Villasimius and the local Section of the Lega Navale Italiana will return to offer their hospitality to the Melges World League for the first stage of the Melges 20 World League circuit, scheduled from 26 to 28 April.

Final top five:
1. Donino, Luigi Giannattasio, ARG, 10 points
2. Capirinha, Martin Reintjes, ITA, 22
3. Tavatuy, Pavel Kuznetsov, RUS, 23
4. G-Spot, Giangiacomo Serena di Lapigio , MON, 25
5. Torpyone, Edoardo Lupi Massimo Pessina , ITA, 28

Full results on Yachtscoring.com

All going to plan - Musto
Seahorse Speed, reliability, skipper comfort... so far it's all going the right way for Sam Davies' third Vendee Globe programme

'I spent five days non-stop in full foulweather gear and my Musto kit was amazing,' says Sam Davis, when discussing the first five days of the recent Route du Rhum. 'It was absolutely epic weather, some of the worst conditions my boat has ever faced,' Davies adds, recalling the storm that crushed part of her hull and knocked her out of the race along with almost half of the fleet.

There's a crucial correlation between comfort and speed, which sailors ignore at their peril. It has ever been thus, but today's singlehanded ocean racers are on a steeper learning curve than ever as they push the outer limits of physical and mental endurance while battling the violent motion, brutal shock loads, deafening noise and utter fatigue of bashing and slamming a foiling Imoca 60 through heavy weather at full tilt.

The Route de Rhum is a notorious race for gnarly starts - in November the Bay of Biscay often lives up to its evil reputation - and an additional, unusual challenge of this race is the sheer size of the fleet. With 123 yachts jockeying for position on the start line, there's a lot of closequarters, high-speed manoeuvring - an exhausting business for a solo sailor in a powerful boat that's been designed and optimised for ocean passage-making rather than short tacking. Getting away cleanly can be quite a challenge.

Full article in the April issue of Seahorse

Portsmouth Regatta
The first week in June this year will see many activities celebrating the 75th anniversary of the D Day landings. Rounding off the week on Saturday and Sunday 8 & 9th will be the Portsmouth Regatta, the reborn event whose roots go back to the 1830s. This year contestants will not only remember the Normandy Beaches but will celebrate the 85th anniversary of the City's own day boat class, the Victorys.

Contestants have commented warmly on the high standard of racing and the Regatta has flourished gaining numbers and classes year by year. This year they will include Solent IRC Series, J109s, Club Class, Sports Boats and Day Boats organised in Black and White fleets. Courses will be laid in areas ensuring first class sailing but wherever possible with good visibility from land and spectator boats.

Racing will begin at 1100 on Saturday followed in the evening by a social event at the Bridge Tavern in Old Portsmouth. Sunday racing will be followed at 1500 by the prize giving at the Hornet Services Sailing Centre. A wide range of sponsors ensure that prizes will be excellent. The Regatta team are very pleased to announce two new partners for 2019. Again we are very thankful for the continued support of Saulet Townsend Solicitors, DPFX Printing, the A-Bar, KB Boat Park and RS Divers.

Entries are now open at www.portsmouthregatta.org Contact portsmouthregatta [AT] gmail [DOT] com for any questions of further information.

Francois Gabart on the subject of Brest Atlantiques
As far as the MACIF trimaran skipper is concerned, the new Brest Atlantiques race, in which the Ultim' fleet sets off from Brest to Rio and then to the Cape of Good Hope, before returning to Finistère, is a sign of the vitality of the Ultim 32/23 class following the autumn storms.

Francois Gabart and his co-skipper will endeavour to win the first Brest Atlantiques race on the MACIF trimaran, which sets sail on 3 November 2019. It is a non-stop course running south from Brest in a loop and crossing the equator in the direction of Rio de Janeiro, then heading to the Cape of Good Hope, before returning to Brest. This represents an intensive month of double-handed racing, according to Francois. It is very interesting from a competitive point of view and demonstrates the vitality of the Ultim 32/23 class, that was considerably affected by material damage during the route du Rhum 2018.

"The end of January," says Francois Gabart, "was a key moment in the class's history. As the initial calendar was messed up after the autumn accidents, we had to rethink a programme. I was not particularly worried about our ability bring our visions and our interests into line, but it is reassuring to feel the driving force behind the whole Ultim 32/23 class. We talk and respect each other, and we build together. And I believe that we have emerged much stronger for all these misadventures."

Many scenarios were considered by the sponsors and the racing teams. And this Atlantic triangle has much to offer. But far as the MACIF trimaran's skipper is concerned, it will enable the class to write its own history through a long-distance racing challenge. By facing up to the economic realities of our sponsors and the racing realities of the racing teams, we have succeeded in building a programme that meets their expectations.

While the MACIF trimaran is still undergoing a refit to prepare for the challenges this autumn, Francois Gabart has begun a new chapter of his life racing a Flying Phantom double-handed with Louis Viaton. The two skippers have been actively training with ENVSN, the Ecole national de voile et de sports nautiques, with the goal of lining up for the start of three major events in the international season of this very powerful class: the Eurocat (Carnac, 2 to 4 May), Act 2 of the Flying Phantom season, then Act 7, which will take place on Lake Garda (July) and the European Championship, which should also be held on the Italian lake.

Sebastien Col is helping with the development of the MACIF trimaran, but also with Charlie Dalin's IMOCA 60 Apivia and the two Figaro Beneteau 3 yachts of the Macif skipper's Martin Le Pape and Pierre Quiroga. He is a key figure, linking the three projects' different teams and sailors, so that everyone can make good use of their knowledge expertise, and so that everything runs smoothly internally. He is also the "competitive advantage" of MerConcept, where few of us race intensively, and this creates team drive".

www.macifcourseaularge.com

Blanche Cook
Blanche Cook New Zealand's yachting community is mourning the loss through cancer of Blanche Cook, financial director and part owner of Yachting Developments. Cook passed away on March 28 while the Superyacht Gathering was in progress, a new event for the New Zealand yachting calendar but one in which she and her husband Ian, the managing director of Yachting Developments, had given substantial support through being foundation partners.

Blanche was heavily involved in New Zealand's marine community, serving as vice chairperson of the NZ Marine Export Group, supporting the yard's busy apprenticeship scheme and providing her support to a wide range of yachting causes, particularly the rescue and restoration of numerous classic yachts.

Blanche was a passionate supporter of the Yachting Developments team, and was proud of all projects completed by the yard. Together, Blanche and Ian led the Yachting Developments team to build, refit and restore a roll call of beautiful yachts. She will be deeply missed by her family, friends and all the Yachting Developments team.

A celebration of her life is to be held at the Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron later this week.

www.ibinews.com

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The Last Word
One of my best friends was killed in gun violence right around here. -- Sir Paul McCartney

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EuroSail News #4309 - 4 April

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In This Issue
Swede Lead in 55th LBYC Congressional Cup
Nine teams line-up for the 44Cup season opener in Montenegro
Into Action - 11th Hour Racing
Entries open for the 2019 IRC Europeans in Sanremo
39th St. Maarten Heineken Regatta - Documentary
Eve Of The 2019 Melges 20 World Championship
First local entry to Airlie Beach Race Week no longer a 'Mistery'
Gladwell's Line
Inaugural Hong Kong to Puerto Galera Yacht Race
A Group Of Experts Supporting Nicolas Troussel
Featured Brokerage
The Last Word: Douglas Adams

Brought to you by Seahorse magazine and YachtScoring.com EuroSail News is a digest of sailing news and opinions, regatta results, new boat and gear information and letters from sailors -- with a European emphasis. Contributions welcome, send to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Swede Lead in 55th LBYC Congressional Cup
Long Beach, CA, USA: It's been 10 years since Johnie Berntsson (SWE) won the Congressional Cup, but if today's opener is any indicator, he could be celebrating his decennial anniversary with another Crimson Blazer.

The Berntsson Sailing Team looked confident and strong in their bright orange jerseys, as they routed the competition on Day One of Congressional Cup racing at Long Beach Yacht Club.

In mild conditions, with winds of 6 to 10 knots, flat water and blue skies, Stage One Round Robins got underway in the 55th running of this prestigious Grade One match race regatta.

Results were random, as number-one-ranked Ian Willams (GBR) and defending champion Taylor Canfield (USA) found themselves in the middle of the pack with last week's Ficker Cup winners Harry Price (AUS) and Chris Poole (USA).

But while several past Congressional Cup titleholders struggled, newcomer Nick Egnot-Johnson (NZL) sat in second place. Egnot-Johnson, 20, is the winner of the 2019 Nespresso Youth International Match Racing Cup and last year's Oakcliff International Grade Two regatta. As victor in the US Grand Slam Series in September, he received an invitation to Congressional Cup, hand delivered by Chairman Arleen Tolle and LBYC Commodore Camille Daniels.

Racing continues through Sunday April 7 as competitors battle through a Double Round Robin series, to advance to semi-finals and finals over the weekend. Racing takes place in the Congressional Cup Stadium, a designated course off the Long Beach Belmont Veterans Memorial Pier, where spectators can enjoy the action and commentary, free, from 11:30AM to 5PM daily.

www.thecongressionalcup.com

Nine teams line-up for the 44Cup season opener in Montenegro
Nine RC44 teams are set to make their debut on the beautiful waters of Kotor Bay, Montenegro for the first event of the newly christened 44Cup over 10- 14 April.

While the majority of teams have opted for strategic consistency, retaining the same crew as last year, a few key changes promise to mix things up. Entering the fray for the 2019 season are a fresh crop of tacticians: Tom Slingsby takes over from Dean Barker on defending World Champion Team Nika and Ed Baird joins Peninsula Petroleum Sailing Team, replacing long term tactician Vasco Vascotto.

The 44Cup has long prided itself on offering the owner-drivers and tacticians as level a playing field as possible with its strict one design rule. However, the first event of 2019 takes this to a new level, as none of the sailors have previous experience of racing in Tivat, Montenegro - making it the ultimate test of each team's communication ability and skill.

"Montenegro looks like a beautiful venue, but sailing knowledge or an understanding of the area and what to expect is zero," explains Team Aqua's tactician Cameron Appleton. "The racing area is in a beautiful bay surrounded by massive mountains so we are expecting flat water and lighter shifty winds. This becomes tricky as no one will have a clear advantage."

Returning regulars, with only small changes to their crew line-up and looking to monopolise on their consistency, include long term favourites Chris Bake's Team Aqua, Hugues Lepic's Aleph Racing, Vladimir Liubomirov and Kirill Frolov's Bronenosec Sailing Team and Torbjorn Tornqvist's Artemis Racing.

Hosted for the first time by Porto Montenegro over 10 - 14 April the 44Cup Porto Montenegro will be the first event of what promises to be a close, hard-fought 44Cup season span five regattas between now and its conclusion in Palma in November.

Teams competing in the 2019 44Cup

Aleph Racing (FRA17)
Hugues Lepic (FRA) / Michele Ivaldi (ITA)

Artemis Racing (SWE44)
Torbjorn Tornqvist (SWE) / Andy Horton (USA)

Bronenosec Sailing Team (RUS18)
Vladimir Liubomirov (RUS) and Kirill Frolov (RUS) / Cameron Dunn (NZL)

Charisma (MON69)
Nico Poons (NED) / Morgan Reeser (USA)

Peninsula Petroleum Sailing Team (GBR1)
John Bassadone (GBR) / Ed Baird (USA)

Team Aqua (GBR2041)
Chris Bake (GBR) / Cameron Appelton (NZL)

Team CEEREF (SLO11)
Igor Lah (SLO) / Adrian Stead (GBR)

Team Nika (RUS10)
Vladimir Prosikhin (RUS) / Tom Slingsby (AUS)

Tavatuy Sailing Team (RUS21)
Pavel Kuznetsov (RUS) / Evgeny Neugodnikov (RUS)

www.44cup.org

Into Action - 11th Hour Racing
Seahorse Two birds with one (Aussie) stone... why not?

Stacey Jackson had a vision of putting a team of professional female sailors together to compete in the 74th Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race, then using the biggest event in Australia's sailing calendar as a platform to elevate the message of sustainability, raise awareness of the need to restore ocean health, and inspire action for positive change. This vision was supported by two principal backers; the Oatley family who provided the Reichel/Pugh 66 Wild Oats X, and 11th Hour Racing, the team's sponsor, which promotes ocean health through strategic partnerships within sailing communities.

The team, Ocean Respect Racing, came together with 68 Hobart races and 21 laps of the planet between them. The focus was on winning the race, inspiring future generations of young sailors and promoting environmental responsibility. This powerful initiative was born from viewing first-hand the scale of the problem of ocean health, as Jackson outlined just before the race start.

'I was motivated by the amount of debris I came across in the ocean during my two Volvo Ocean Races around the planet - that really hits you; an eye-opener was where I saw it, not even close to land, confirming that pollution really does travel vast distances. What became very important to me was the educational work that we did with Vestas 11th Hour Racing, and why it is vital to reduce single-use plastics and look after our oceans' health. I became highly involved with the activations that we carried out at the various stopovers around the world, and at the end of the Volvo Ocean Race I knew that I wanted to continue this work.

Full article in the April issue of Seahorse

Entries open for the 2019 IRC Europeans in Sanremo
The Notice of Race for the IRC Europeans 2019 is online at www.yachtclubsanremo.it and entries are open.

Organised by Yacht Club Sanremo in co-operattion with Italy's UVAI (Unione Vela d'Altura Italiana) and France's UNCL (Union Nationale Course au Large), the IRC Europeans are scheduled for 23 through 29 June, on two days dedicated to measures and checks and five days of racing.

The Championship is open to offshore boats with an IRC endorsed rating that will take part to a minimum of four inshore or windward/leeward races and an offshore event lasting approximately 10 to 18 hours.

At the end of the week a Sanremo European IRC Championship 2019 Trophy will be awarded to each class' winner and a Special Trophy to the overall winner, who will be therefore crowned European IRC Champion 2019.

A special price will go to the best Corinthian team in class 3 and 4.

All the participant boats are offered a free mooring on the Yacht Club Sanremo pontoons from June 14 to July 1, close to the town centre. The organizers are hoping to gather approximately 80 boats from all over Europe, that will represent a record number, after the successful editions of the Championships in Marseille and Cowes.

Several teams form Germany, Estonia, France, the UK and Italy have already confirmed their participation.

Notice of Race here

39th St. Maarten Heineken Regatta - Documentary
39th St. Maarten Heineken Regatta have been four days of awesome sailing, leaving competitors with unforgettable memories of sparkling azure blue seas, sandy white beaches and windswept ragged rocks. The St. Maarten Heineken Regatta delivered on its promise of four days of serious sailing, with upwind legs dousing the crews hiking on the rails with warm water from the waves breaking over them. Spectacular champagne sailing with roller coaster downwind legs, with a myriad of colorful spinnaker kites flying in the trade winds.

Eve Of The 2019 Melges 20 World Championship
The 2019 edition of the always-competitive International Melges 20 Class Association World Championship looks to be hotly contested under what is forecasted to be beautiful Miami conditions; 80 degrees and breeze in the 9-15 kts range. It is the Melges 20 fleet's tenth year racing at the Coconut Grove Sailing Club, and this weekend's event will be the 32nd Melges 20 regatta hosted by the club over the past ten years. The Melges 20 Class is also grateful for the critical support from Shake-A-Leg Miami. A solid core of Melges 20 sailors from around the globe are prepared to do battle on Biscayne Bay. The only uncertainty is: Which team will be crowned champions?

Teams had two official practice races today at the Melges 20 Pre-Worlds hosted by the Coconut Grove Sailing Club. Alessandro Rombelli and the STIG team won the first practice race and Igor Rytov and the RUSSIAN BOGATYRS won the second.

Tomorrow the teams battle, but tonight they party. The Competitors' Briefing and Opening Ceremony is sponsored by Rob Wilber, Rhonda Joyce and other Melges 20 fleet members that have been solid contributors to the class for years.

Results will be on YachtScoring.com

melges20.com

First local entry to Airlie Beach Race Week no longer a 'Mistery'
When Bill Hopton entered his Swarbrick S99 into the 2019 Airlie Beach Race Week, he wasn't expecting to be the first local in the Festival of Sailing's fleet.

Nonetheless, it wouldn't be the first time 'Mistery' has claimed an inaugural spot.

Originally named 'Thick as a brick' she was the first S99 to be built in 1985.

"Fortunately somebody changed her name," Hopton laughed before going on to explain how Mistery epitomised his feelings about the 31st running of the Whitsunday Sailing Club (WSC) hosted event.

"I've owned the boat for eight years and only missed one Airlie Beach Race Week since then," he said.

"Why? Because it's pure and simple fun.

"You're racing in the Whitsundays in the middle of winter in shorts and T-shirt; it's great passage racing but without being too serious."

When asked how he felt about leading the pack in the entry stakes, Hopton was optimistic of a good omen for things to come. -- Sharon Smallwood/ABRW media

www.abrw.com.au/sailing/entries

Gladwell's Line
Undermining America's Cup teams at this stage of the competition, and indeed right through the regatta, is not unusual. Whether that is a legitimate part of the America's Cup game is another matter.

If the Racing Rules of Sailing had been in force for the current America's Cup, then off the water actions by teams against others could be governed under the Misconduct provisions, for which the penalties are substantial and now cover both teams and individuals associated with teams.

Previously Golden Gate Yacht Club put rules in their Protocols covering the 34th and 35th America's Cup to prevent teams or individuals making adverse public comment about the America's Cup event, but not between the teams. That was the so-called "Dalton Clause".

In this America's Cup cycle, Emirates Team New Zealand was critical of the New York Yacht Club after the publication of recent decisions from the Arbitration Panel.

In a subsequently withdrawn media statement referring to the New York Yacht Club's team continuing with its complaint about imperfections in the Late Challenges accepted by the Royal New Zealand Yacht Squadron, Emirates Team New Zealand said: "This anti-competitive action has caused further delays and uncertainty for the teams and frustrated the Challenger of Record and the Defender who have been working together in the best interests of the event."

While lodging complaints with the Arbitration Panel is quite legitimate, it can also have an adverse effect on Challengers. Particularly affected are commercially based teams who are trying to approach sponsors and backers.

Would be sponsors/backers can run quick, usually informal, checks on the team and which may throw up some minor issue in the context of the America's Cup rules, which appears to be significant to someone new to the event, and who doesn't understand the cut and thrust of America's Cup competition.

www.sail-world.com

Inaugural Hong Kong to Puerto Galera Yacht Race
17 entries have now been received for the inaugural Hong Kong to Puerto Galera Yacht Race, which will start on 16 and 17 April. The race is organised by Royal Hong Kong Yacht Club under the auspices of the Royal Ocean Racing Club and will commence in the iconic Hong Kong harbour and take competitors through the eastern entrance of the harbour before setting out on the 650nm mile journey to Puerto Galera on the Philippine island of Mindoro.

Organisers hope the race will see the yachts sail further south than before; allowing them to sail a wider apparent wind angle in the Monsoon breeze, enabling the yachts to sail faster and hopefully enjoy a spinnaker ride earlier than in the Club's other offshore races across the South China Sea.

Among the entries is the double-handed father and son team of Philippe and Cosmas Grelon. This will be the second Royal Hong Kong Yacht Club offshore race they have competed in double-handed - the first being the 2018 Rolex China Sea Race which took place last March. The Grelons finished the 565nm Rolex China Sea Race in 82h 07m 14s, putting them in second place in their division on their boat Decathlon Aya, a Pogo 10.50.

Decathlon Aya will be once again competing against their Rolex China Sea Race division winner on a fully crewed Blackjack - a Grand Soleil 45 owned by Glenn Smith as well as the rest of the fleet fighting for the overall win.

www.hkpuertogalerarace.com

A Group Of Experts Supporting Nicolas Troussel
Greg Evrard (team director, former director of North Sails France), Juan Kouyoumdjian (naval architect) and Michel Desjoyeaux (double champion of the Vendee Globe and building manager) are all supporting skipper Nicolas Troussel, who will take the start of the Vendee Globe 2020 at the helm of a brand new boat in the colours of CORUM L'Dpargne.

A few weeks after the Route du Rhum 2018, CORUM L'epargne and Nicolas Troussel signed a deal to ramp up their partnership with the construction of a latest generation IMOCA monohull (18.28m) and the launch of a project, which will take them through to 2022.

A long-time racer, Greg Evrard called tactics for Mathieu Richard, whose crew spearheaded the top 5 of world match racing* for over 10 years. He has also won several Tour de France à la Voile competitions, the ORMA trimaran championship and been at the top of his game in numerous series. His managerial skills also saw him head the finance department at Decathlon and then North Sails France, of which he was director from 2014.

Brought together through competition, Nicolas and Greg's relationship is guided by mutual respect and running this project together seemed like the obvious way to step things up a gear. Greg is leaving his responsibilities at North Sails in late March so he can fully devote himself to his new duties.

And here we have the other dynamic duo of the project. "The association of a Juan Kouyoumdjian design project-managed by Michel Desjoyeaux with his Mer Agitee and Mer Forte structures, is the perfect solution for us since we can save time with confidence," explains Greg. "Juan has won the last three Volvo Ocean Races with prototypes and Michel has won two Vendee Globes and built four of the last five winning boats. Both guys were very keen to work with one another and it's a fantastic boost for a project, where the problematics of time are genuine."

CORUM L'epargne is one of eight new boats, which will take the start of the Vendee Globe in Les Sables d'Olonne on 8 November 2020. She's the second such creation by Juan Yacht Design and the last boat to be launched as her slot is scheduled for the first quarter of next year.

www.en.corum.fr

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See the RaceboatsOnly.com collection at seahorsemagazine.com/brokerage/

The Last Word
Anything invented after you're thirty-five is against the natural order of things. -- Douglas Adams

Editorial and letter submissions to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Advertising inquiries to Graeme Beeson: gb [AT] beesonstone [DOT] com or see www.eurosailnews.com/advertise.html

EuroSail News #4310 - 5 April

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In This Issue
Johnie Berntsson Clings to Lead on Day Two of 55th Congressional Cup at LBYC
Selection Pressures Telling at the Sofia Iberostar
The Science of Sailing
The RYA and RORC go doublehanded
Nations Trophy Mediterranean League
What's in the Latest Edition Of Seahorse Magazine
Melges 20 World Championship
Industry News
Letters to the Editor
Featured Brokerage
The Last Word: Richard Feynmann

Brought to you by Seahorse magazine and YachtScoring.com EuroSail News is a digest of sailing news and opinions, regatta results, new boat and gear information and letters from sailors -- with a European emphasis. Contributions welcome, send to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Johnie Berntsson Clings to Lead on Day Two of 55th Congressional Cup at LBYC
Long Beach, CA, USA: Johnie Berntsson (SWE) and his orange-clad Berntsson Sailing Team continued to dominate Congressional Cup racing at Long Beach Yacht Club today, winning all but one race - which went to Ian Williams (GBR).

At the end of Day Two, with the first Round Robins complete and solid headway into round two, Berntsson was 11-1, with Taylor Canfield (USA) putting on the squeeze at 9-2. Ian Williams (GBR) and Scott Dickson (USA) each trailed by one point.

The Congressional Cup is recognized as the grandfather of modern world-class match racing. Founded by LBYC in 1965, it set the standard for top-level match racing worldwide, pioneering the concept of on-the-water umpiring in a spectator-friendly venue. Racing for the 55th Congressional Cup trophy, and the esteemed Crimson Blazer, continues through Sunday. Berntsson, 46, isn't a professional fulltime sailor, like many of his rivals. Competing on the match racing circuit since 2006 just a half-dozen weeks a year, he said, "We know if we do our best, we can beat them - but it's hard to be at that level all the time." In that time he's done "about 14 Congressional Cups" - admitting he's lost count over the years. He qualified for last year's Congressional Cup through the Ficker Cup, going on to semi-finals, where he finished fourth, and in 2017, he was runner up to Williams. But he hasn't donned the Crimson Blazer since 2009.

Berntsson's one loss today was to Williams, who has a history - as does Canfield - of ramping up throughout the event. Both ended Day One mid-fleet, but turned on the heat today, wrapping up at 9-3 for Canfield; with Williams and Scott Dickson (USA) tied at 8-4. Dickson, a long-time member of LBYC, has competed in 20 Congressional Cups, and is the winningest skipper in Ficker Cup history. He said his team is made up of "purely locals, from the local sailing scene."

www.thecongressionalcup.com

Selection Pressures Telling at the Sofia Iberostar
A brisk, NW'ly mistral wind, blowing offshore required contenders at Mallorca's 50th anniversary Trofeo Princesa Sofia Iberostar to do their best to deal with big changes in wind direction and strength.

Such unpredictable conditions added further stress for sailors for whom this annual European season curtain-raiser is an observed event counting towards selection for the Olympic Test regatta. 
Wind speeds varied from 6 to 26 knots during the same race for the Laser and Nacra 17 classes. 
And with one day of racing left to determine which sailors will make the cut to Saturday's medal races, there were already a few disappointed faces when the fleets came ashore from the Bay of Palma.

Sweden's Anton Dahlberg and Frederik Bergstrom maintain a comfortable margin in the 470 Men with a 3,3, today ahead of GBR's Luke Patience and Chris Grube. Aussies Mat Belcher and Will Ryan are on the prowl, climbing to fourth with a seven-point day. There is no change at the top of the Women's fleet either where Camille Lecointre and Aloise Retornaz of France lead Hannah Mills and Eilidh McIntyre of the British Sailing Team.

Top three by class:

470 Men
1. Anton Dahlberg / Fredrik Bergstrom, SWE, 29
2. Luke Patience / Chris Grube, GBR, 43
3. Paul Snow-Hansen / Daaniel Willcox, NZL, 49

470 Women
1. Camille Lecointre / Aloise Retornaz, FRA, 32
2. Hannah Mills / Eilidh Mcintyre, GBR, 35
3. Tina Mrak / Veronika Macarol, SLO, 44

49er
1. Dylan Fletcher / Stuart Bithell, GBR, 25
2. Yago Lange / Klaus Lange, ARG, 33
3. Diego Botín Le Chever / Iago Lopez Marra, ESP, 39

49er FX
1. Martine Soffiatti Grael / Kahena Kunze, BRA, 47
2. Alexandra Maloney / Molly Meech, NZL, 66
3. Charlotte Dobson / Saskia Tidey, GBR, 68

Finn
1. Andrew Maloney, NZL, 28
2. Giles Scott, GBR, 39
3. Josh Junior, NZL, 39

Laser
1. Christopher Barnard, USA, 41
2. Finn Lynch, IRL, 43
3. Elliot Hanson, GBR, 48

Laser Radial
1. Anne-Marie Rindom, DEN, 29
2. Marit Bouwmeester, NED, 48
3. Erika Reineke, USA, 51

NACRA 17
1. Jason Waterhouse / Lisa Darmanin, AUS, 52
2. John Gimson / Anna Burnet , GBR, 62
3. Vittorio Bissaro / Maelle Frascari, ITA, 63

RS:X Men
1. Hao Chen, CHN, 30
2. Michael Cheng, HKG, 46
3. Mateo Sanz Lanz, SUI, 53

RS:X Women
1. Yue Tan, CHN, 26
2. Hei Man Chan, HKG, 41
3. Jie Du, CHN, 46

www.trofeoprincesasofia.org

The Science of Sailing
The Science of Sailing A 10-part complete guide to the physics of sailing & the Naval Architecture governing the performance of sailing yachts.

Since handing over the daily running of the 'Van Oossanen' group of companies to Perry van Oossanen and Niels Moerke, founder Peter van Oossanen has committed himself to the writing of a book on his favourite subject: "The Science of Sailing"

Ships that are partly or wholly dependent on the wind for their propulsion are unique in the sense that fluid dynamics plays a vital role in their design. Both aerodynamics and hydrodynamics, the science of the motion of air and water around bodies, determine the speed potential of a sailing craft. The flow of the wind around the sails, together with sail area, sail disposition and sail shape, determine the level of the propulsive force while the flow of water around the hull and the hull appendages, together with their size and shape, determine the level of the force resisting forward motion, and the force resisting sideways drift caused by the wind on the sails.

The elements of aero- and hydrodynamics involved in the design of wind-driven boats, yachts, and ships, and the associated naval architectural aspects, form the subject matter of the book. All of the important aspects pertaining to the behaviour and performance of sailing craft are described. The arrangement of this material has been chosen so as to offer a logical order, an order that steadily expands the subject matter, chapter by chapter, so that by the time specific designs and design features are presented all of the science required to understand and follow the reasoning that lies at the base of how specific designs evolved has been explained. The subject matter has been arranged into different parts, each covering a specific topic or theme. Each of these parts constitutes separate publications.

Part 1, 2 and 3, of "The Science of Sailing" are available for order. Part 3 has just been published and defines a new methodology for a reliable prediction of viscous- and wave drag.

More details of " The Science of Sailing " and ordering details may be found at: www.vanoossanenacademy.nl

The RYA and RORC go doublehanded
World Sailing's landmark decision to select a Mixed Two Person Offshore Keelboat event for the 2024 Olympics and the recent announcement to hold an Offshore World Championship for mixed double-handed sailing in October 2020 has encouraged the RYA and Royal Ocean Racing Club (RORC) to combine their efforts to develop double-handed offshore sailing in the UK.

Double-handed entries for RORC's iconic Rolex Fastnet Race have increased from 36 boats in 2017 to over 90 entries in 2019, with 63 of those entries racing under IRC rating system, demonstrating a strong desire by people to sail double-handed offshore.

Initial indications from World Sailing is that for the Olympics they will not be selecting one particular class of boat until late in the Olympic cycle and that the intention is to focus on the discipline rather than the equipment.

The RORC's Season Points Championship provides the perfect playground to develop the skills required to sail double-handed in existing boats of approximately 10m LOA.

All of the RORC races have double-handed divisions and an overall series prize in addition to the IRC Two-Handed National Championship in September which consists of the Cherbourg Race one weekend followed by a weekend of inshore racing. There will also be awards for the top mixed double-handed team to encourage mixed entries.

The RYA currently support keelboat activity through support of the British Keelboat League in addition to the National Match Racing Series and the British Keelboat Academy. Keelboat Manager Jack Fenwick is looking into how to further support double-handed offshore sailing in the UK. -- Will Carson

www.rya.org.uk

Nations Trophy Mediterranean League
Some 16 Swans drawn from eight nations, are set to contest the second running of the Monaco Swan One Design due to begin next week. Scheduled from 9 to 13 April, and hosted by the Yacht Club de Monaco, the regatta will witness the opening salvoes of The Nations Trophy Mediterranean League 2019.

With eight ClubSwan 50s, four Swan 45s and four ClubSwan 42s expected at the Monaco Swan One Design, Enrico Chieffi, Vice-President of Nautor's Swan, expressed the Finnish boat-builder's delight at the continuing enthusiasm for regular one design competition among Swan owners.

Crews that led the way at 2018 event are slated to return to the Monaco in 2019, including the three individual class winners: Leonardo Ferragamo's Cuordileone (ClubSwan 50, Italy), Luís Senís Porron IX (Swan 45, Spain) and Lorenzo Mondo's Far Star (ClubSwan 42, Italy). It will not be plain sailing, particularly in the ClubSwan 50 class, where Swiss entry Mathilde, owned by Morten Kielland, lost out to Cuordileone by a mere, single point at the same event a year ago. Stefan Heidenreich's German crew on Onegroup will be looking to continue the run of form that secured the ClubSwan 50 World Championship in Porto Cervo, in September.

Porron IX, with back-to-back Swan 45 World Championship wins, looks a tough opponent to crack, but Valter Pizzoli's Ange Transparent (Switzerland), which finished second in the in Monaco in 2018, proved herself capable of beating her Spanish rival on more than one occasion. The ClubSwan 42 class is probably the most open. With Far Star the only entry to have competed in either Monaco or at the Europeans last year.

The countries represented in Monaco will be Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Russia, Spain, Switzerland and the United Kingdom.

Aside from the racing, 2019 is special year for Swan One Design in the design and production arena too., The hugely anticipated first appearance of the brand new ClubSwan 36 is planned during Scarlino Swan One Design. The occasion will be a first opportunity to see the prototype ClubSwan 36 and to gain a closer look at the rig and foil innovations that make this project so significant.

The ClubSwan 36 is the second one Swan One Design collaboration between Nautor and Juan K. Come October, five will be present in race trim competing for their country at The Nations Trophy and the inaugural class European Championship.

The Nations Trophy Mediterranean League 2019 comprises four events:

Monaco Swan One Design (April 9th to 13th)
Scarlino Swan One Design (April 30th to May 4th)
Rolex Giraglia (Inshore races, June 9th to 15th)
Copa del Rey Mapfre (July 27th to August 3rd)

www.yacht-club-monaco.mc

Seahorse April 2019
What's in the Latest Edition Of Seahorse Magazine

Seahorse Magazine

Vision
When Baltic Yachts and the Farr office agreed to throw their weight behind the biggest DSS project yet they did not hold back. The result is certainly going to be watched unusually closely. Gordon Kay, Soren Jansson, Simon Everest, Ken Read, Bas Peute, Bill Faude, James Wilkinson, Britt Ward and Dominique Pedron

Second life
Or more accurately Act Two? Either way the new 44Cup takes a great boat that is already acknowledged as perfect for the task and fires in a whole heap of fresh energy...

All going to plan
Speed, reliability, skipper comfort... so far it's all going the right way for Sam Davies' third Vendee Globe programme

Seahorse build table - Italian Magic
Designer Mark Mills is pretty happy with what just came out of the shed at Maxi Dolphin

Fun (aka value for money)
Maybe it's time at last? Rob Weiland

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Seahorse Print or Digital Subscription Use Discount Promo Code SB2

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Melges 20 World Championship
Melges 20 sailors are dancing tonight after a lively first day at the 2019 Melges 20 World Championship. Daniel Thielman's KUAI (USA) and Cesar Gomes Neto's PORTOBELLO (BRA) each won a race today.

After last night's dancing and celebrations, sailors were greeted in this morning with fog and rain. After a period of postponement, the first race began at 1530. With cloud cover persisting throughout the day, there was a breeze of 9-14 knots and waves on Biscayne Bay. Melges 20 Worlds is hosted by the Coconut Grove Sailing Club with support from Shake-A-Leg and Melges Performance Sailboats.

With ten races scheduled, it's still anyone's game. But Daniel Thielman's KUAI along with Rayleen Thielman, Jeremy Wilmot and Alec Anderson had a strong start, earning second place in the first race and winning the second race. Following Thielman after the first day are Igor Rytov, Robert Hughes, Cesar Gomes Neto, and Robert Wilber. Rhonda Joyce, an absolute staple and great supporter of the Melges 20 Class, leads in the Corinthian Division; she sponsored the Opening Ceremony along with Rob Wilber to kick off with a great celebration and live music. Racing continues the next three days.

Top five
1. Daniel Thielman / Jeremy Wilmot / Alec Anderson / Rayleen Thielman, USA, 3 points
2. Igor Rytov / Besputin Konstantin / Sergeev Anton, RUS, 7
3. Robert Hughes / Manu Weiller / Federico Michetti, USA, 8
4. Cesar Gomes Neto / Cesar Gomes / Thiago Fett / John Bowden, BRA, 11
5. Robert Wilber / Charlie McKee / Matt Woodworth, USA, 12

Full results: yachtscoring.com

melges20.com

Industry News
Charter firms with foreign-flagged vessels will be allowed to operate in Turkey this season after all - but at a cost

The ban on foreign-flagged yachts operating as charter vessels in Turkey this season has been overturned, thanks to the efforts of local yacht associations and charter firms. But while negotiations with officials at the Ministry of Tourism have been successful, disappointingly high rates have been imposed.

The Turkish Tourism Ministry said on Friday that foreign-flagged yachts will be allowed to operate in Turkey during the 2019 summer season, and is urging charter firms not to abandon clients with early bookings. However, the Ministry's new rates for the operation of foreign-flagged boats are now 10 times higher than last year.

Charter companies claim that the high rates are forcing them to cancel bookings or pay the rates themselves so as not to upset clients. The deadline is also too close to the upcoming season, and many charter companies feel constrained to pay. Application and payments need to be made by 19 April 2019.

Several charter firms have already started to cancel their bookings, stating that they simply can't afford the rates. Rates are particularly high for bareboat companies.

Bahar Uzturk in IBI: www.ibinews.com

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Clipper Round the World Yacht Race has renewed its partnership with British Sailmaker Hyde Sails. The two race deal will see the partnership enter a new decade as it extends into its sixth and seventh consecutive editions of the global endurance challenge for the 2019-20 and 2021-22 races.

Since its debut as Official Sails Supplier for the Clipper 2009-10 Race, Hyde Sails, which prides itself on being at the forefront of sail technology, has designed, developed and produced bespoke blue water sail wardrobes for the Clipper Race fleet.

Each edition has seen continual improvements and modifications to the sails and this edition is no different. The biggest improvement in the new 2019-20 edition sails is the development of the flyaway spinnaker containment tabs fitted of the luff of the downwind sails as a sustainable alternative to wool. This system is reusable consisting of shock cord and Velcro that is used to 'wool' the sail for hoists that remains permanently attached to the sail.

Subtle changes on fore and aft sails and small construction changes on spinnakers will help aid performance and longevity.

The Clipper 2019-20 Race will commence summer of 2019 from the UK with the global route stopping in South America, South Africa, Australia, China and the USA, before returning to the UK 11 months later.

clipperroundtheworld.com HydeSails.co.uk

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The Cruising Association (CA), Britain's leading organisation for cruising sailors with over 6,300 members worldwide, is delighted to announce the appointment of Sian Cantellow as Personal Assistant/Marketing Officer based at CA House in London's Limehouse Basin.

Sian joins from the Canal & River Trust where she has worked as a Business Support Administrator for the last three years. She has over 25 years of experience in fast-paced positions in the public and private sectors and amongst her responsibilities, her role at the CA involves supporting the CA's many and varied range of events by attending in person and producing branded materials. Sian is also looking after discounts for the members, supporting the General Manager and assisting the rest of the team with administrative duties.

www.theca.org.uk

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Aon and Nautor's Swan announce that they have entered into a partnership to offer Swan yacht owners Aon's advice on identifying the major risks to which these iconic yachts are exposed and the best insurance solutions to mitigate and cover the risks identified as most likely and most damaging.

Aon will also provide a 24-hour service to shipowners, 365 days a year, with the assistance of specialised experts. The insurance covers a multitude of accidents, including: those in the course of navigation/racing, during storage in the water and on land, from impact/collision/incandlement/sinking, fire/robbery, earthquakes/lightness/natural disasters, malicious or vandalism acts/theft, hidden defects, assistance and rescue/removal of the wreck.

nautorswan.com
aon.it

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By now you've probably heard the big news: Cruising Outpost is being renamed Latitudes & Attitudes! It's a LONG story but the readers digest version is Bob sold the old Lats & Atts back in January 2012, and the new "owners" scammed everyone - subscribers, advertisers and employees - closed the company, took everything and went underground less than six months later. Just like that, the extremely popular magazine of 16 years was gone. As you know, later that summer more than 700 readers got together and helped Bob found Cruising Outpost, which quickly became the top selling marine title nationally at West Marine, Barnes & Noble, and Books-A-Million. And our Best Seller status is only going to get better with the new/old name (and freshly redesigned logo)!

Bob got the Lats & Atts trademark back a little over a year ago, and we've been wondering what to do with it. Well, we asked our readers/fans what they thought. They were overwhelmingly in favor of changing the name to what they basically think of as a trusted old friend: Latitudes & Attitudes.

You should be excited, too! All this excitement is going to lead to a spike in exposure and readership. Bob has even acquired an extra 200 newsstand locations for the upcoming "premiere" issue and we think it'll become a collector's edition. If you're already in for the next issue, congratulations! Your company will benefit from all the publicity and excitement.

www.latsatts.com

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Russian businesses may invest up to US$1bn in the development of yachting infrastructure on the Red Sea over the next several years, according to officials in the Russian government and representatives of large, local businesses. This is due to the high yachting potential of the region and the ever-growing popularity of its resorts among Russian yacht owners.

In recent years, the number of rich Russians interested in yachting in the Red Sea has significantly increased, which is reflected by a significant rise in the number of Russian-owned yachts that are calling at local seaports and marinas. One reason could be that ongoing EU sanctions against many rich Russians prevents them from entering some EU territorial waters due to the threat of arrest.

In the case of the Red Sea, yacht development to date has been prevented by a lack of necessary infrastructure. However, this could change in the coming years, thanks to recently announced large-scale investment projects from both domestic and foreign investors. One such project is expected to be implemented by a large Russian business and will be funded by the Russian Direct Investment Fund (RDIF), one of Russia's largest investment funds.

In addition to Saudi Arabian Red Sea resorts, Russian businesses are also looking at the development of yachting in Egypt - a country that is extremely popular among Russian tourists and yacht owners. -- Eugene Gerden

www.ibinews.com

Letters To The Editor - editor [AT] scuttlebutteurope [DOT] com
Letters are limited to 350 words. No personal attacks are permitted. We do require your name but your email address will not be published without your permission.

* From Adrian Morgan:

Whether the three late entry America's Cup challenges have paid their deposits or not, based on the money spent, and efforts by the Brits, Americans and Italians, not forgetting the Kiwis, all of whom have been beavering behind closed doors (and computer screens) for many months, to make these things fly, the Dutch, Maltese and Stars& Stripes teams don't stand a prayer. Anyone volunteer to eat their hats if any of them do come to the starting line, or surely the gastronomically riskier bet perhaps, don't turn up...?

Featured Brokerage
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All systems have been renewed or serviced for the last Route du Rhum 2014 entry. The boat has been hauled out and the hull anti-fouled in spring 2015 in Grenada, Caribbean.

See listing details in Seahorse's RaceboatsOnly

Contact
assistant [AT] bernard-gallay [DOT] com

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Raceboats Only 2004 Grand Soleil 50. 139,500 EUR. Located in Torrevieja, Spain

Extremely well-equipped and upgraded example of the Judel Vrolijk designed Grand Soleil 50 aft cockpit performance cruising yacht. Recent hull paint, new generator and cockpit canvas make her a great turn-key option.

See listing details in Seahorse's RaceboatsOnly

Contact
GRABAU INTERNATIONAL
Lead broker - Alex Grabau
Tel: +44 (0)1590 673715
Email: alex [AT] grabauinternational [DOT] com

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Raceboats Only 2016 Hitchhiker Fast40+ MK III. 695000 EUR. Located in Cowes, Isle of Wight.

One of the most succesfull Fast40+ boats in the fleet. During the last three years this boat always had a podium place in the Fast40+ series and One Ton Cup. Highly optimized and professionally maintained. Major refit in 2018, fully kitted out and ready to race in IRC, ORC or Fast40+ series. Perfect opportunity to race in the Fast40+ class in 2019.

See listing details in Seahorse's RaceboatsOnly

Contact
Mika Eid
mika [AT] sailsupply [DOT] nl
+31 85 2100 830

See the RaceboatsOnly.com collection at seahorsemagazine.com/brokerage/

The Last Word
I thought one should have the attitude of 'What do you care what other people think!' -- Richard P. Feynman

Editorial and letter submissions to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Advertising inquiries to Graeme Beeson: gb [AT] beesonstone [DOT] com or see www.eurosailnews.com/advertise.html

EuroSail News #4311 - 8 April

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In This Issue
Williams Captures Fourth Congressional Cup Win
Trofeo Sofia Iberostar Finishes With Medal Blast
The Science of Sailing
Melges 24 European Sailing Series in Portoroz
STIG claims the 2019 Melges 20 World Championship title
Seahorse Sailor Of The Month
Dragon Grand Prix Cannes
WASZP European Championships
Foiling 50 Foot Ocean Racer
lan Roura and La Fabrique
Featured Brokerage
The Last Word: Paul Rudd

Brought to you by Seahorse magazine and YachtScoring.com EuroSail News is a digest of sailing news and opinions, regatta results, new boat and gear information and letters from sailors -- with a European emphasis. Contributions welcome, send to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Williams Captures Fourth Congressional Cup Win
Ian Williams (GBR) and Team GAC Pindar have captured their fourth Congressional Cup win, over Scott Dickson (USA) in final races of the five day series, hosted by Long Beach Yacht Club, here today. Taylor Canfield (USA) defeated Johnie Berntsson (SWE) in petit finals for third place.

After warming up in the California sunshine, Team GAC Pindar began stealthily climbing up the leaderboard, securing a spot in the semi-finals by Day Three. “I’ve got a fantastic team, but we are new together, and hadn’t sailed as a group, so it took a few days to get the team gelling.” Their final 11-match winning streak included swiftly eliminating Canfield in the semis, and striking Dickson out in the finals.

His victory over rival Canfield was particularly sweet.“ Taylor and I have dominated the Congressional Cup since 2011; He’d won four, we’d only won three. So we wanted to catch up.”

His fourth Crimson blazer puts him in an elite league with Canfield, Rod Davis, Gavin Brady and Peter Holmberg. No-one has won more than four ... yet.

Finals:
Williams 3 - Dickson 0

Petit Finals:
Canfield 2 - Berntsson 0

www.thecongressionalcup.com

Trofeo Sofia Iberostar Finishes With Medal Blast
Olympic champions won in just two of the ten classes competing at Mallorca's biggest ever Trofeo Princesa Sofia Iberostar Olympic classes which finished in a blast of strong winds today.

As the overall trophy for this 50th anniversary edition went to China's up and coming Yue Tan in a light RS:X Women's fleet in which there were no medallists competing - it goes to the sailor with the lowest points average over their race series - Britain's gold medal winning helm Hannah Mills and Eilidh McIntyre won today's blustery medal race to secure the 470 Women title by 27 points. Brasil's Olympic champions Martine Grael and Kahena Kunze prevailed in the FX.

At 15 months out from the Tokyo 2020 Olympic regatta the first major Olympic classes regatta this season in Europe drew a record 869 boats sailed by 1224 sailors from 67 different nations. For many countries it was a key event for selection, some for a place at this year's test event, for other Olympic nations whose strategy is to select as early as possible, this was an actual Olympic selection event.

If the six days of racing, contested across a wide range of wind conditions - from 5 knots at the start to more than 25 today - are a measure of current strength and depth of Olympic potential, Great Britain proved they are in good shape, winning eight medals, more than twice the three medals tally of the next most successful countries, New Zealand and USA who won three apiece.

The hugely popular annual event came started in light winds Monday but saw Medal Races for the Nacra 17, FX and 49ers thwarted by strong winds and big seas. Although the forecast was for the 20-25kts breezes to ease in the afternoon, if anything they strengthened and only the Finn, Lasers and RS:X classes completed spectacular, muscular medal races.

With no racing for the Nacra 17 or the FX the titles went to Australia's Jason Waterhouse and Lisa Darmanin and Brasil's Martine Grael and Kahena Kunze. 470 winners Anton Dahlberg and Frederik Bergstrom of Sweden, and Dylan Fletcher and Stu Bithell in the 49ers had already secure their overall wins yesterday.

Final Podium Positions:

470 Men
1. Anton Dahlberg / Fredrik Bergstrom, SWE, 47
2. Jordi Xammar / Nicolas Rodriguez, ESP, 84
3. Luke Patience / Chris Grube, GBR, 86

470 Women
1. Hannah Mills / Eilidh Mcintyre, GBR, 39
2. Camille Lecointre / Aloise Retornaz, FRA, 56
3. Tina Mrak / Veronika Macarol, SLO, 67

49er
1. Dylan Fletcher / Stuart Bithell, GBR, 40
2. Diego Botín Le Chever / Iago Lopez Marra, ESP, 64
3. Yago Lange / Klaus Lange, ARG, 70

49er FX
1. Martine Soffiatti Grael / Kahena Kunze, BRA, 64
2. Alexandra Maloney / Molly Meech, NZL, 81
3. Charlotte Dobson / Saskia Tidey, GBR, 82

Finn
1. Andrew Maloney, NZL, 41
2. Giles Scott, GBR, 43
3. Josh Junior, NZL, 68

Laser
1. Christopher Barnard, USA, 67
2. Elliot Hanson, GBR, 69
2. Nick Thompson, GBR, 79

Laser Radial
1. Anne-Marie Rindom, DEN, 75
2. Marit Bouwmeester, NED, 79
3. Erika Reineke, USA, 85

NACRA 17
1. Jason Waterhouse / Lisa Darmanin, AUS, 69
2. Vittorio Bissaro / Maelle Frascari, ITA, 83
3. John Gimson / Anna Burnet , GBR, 84

RS:X Men
1. Michael Cheng, HKG, 53
2. Hao Chen, CHN, 66
3. Pedro Pascual Suitt, USA, 113

RS:X Women
1. Yue Tan, CHN, 30
2. Hei Man Chan, HKG, 52
3. Laerke Buhl-Hansen, DEN, 74

Full results: www.trofeoprincesasofia.org

The Science of Sailing
The Science of Sailing A 10-part complete guide to the physics of sailing & the Naval Architecture governing the performance of sailing yachts.

Since handing over the daily running of the 'Van Oossanen' group of companies to Perry van Oossanen and Niels Moerke, founder Peter van Oossanen has committed himself to the writing of a book on his favourite subject: "The Science of Sailing"

Ships that are partly or wholly dependent on the wind for their propulsion are unique in the sense that fluid dynamics plays a vital role in their design. Both aerodynamics and hydrodynamics, the science of the motion of air and water around bodies, determine the speed potential of a sailing craft. The flow of the wind around the sails, together with sail area, sail disposition and sail shape, determine the level of the propulsive force while the flow of water around the hull and the hull appendages, together with their size and shape, determine the level of the force resisting forward motion, and the force resisting sideways drift caused by the wind on the sails.

The elements of aero- and hydrodynamics involved in the design of wind-driven boats, yachts, and ships, and the associated naval architectural aspects, form the subject matter of the book. All of the important aspects pertaining to the behaviour and performance of sailing craft are described. The arrangement of this material has been chosen so as to offer a logical order, an order that steadily expands the subject matter, chapter by chapter, so that by the time specific designs and design features are presented all of the science required to understand and follow the reasoning that lies at the base of how specific designs evolved has been explained. The subject matter has been arranged into different parts, each covering a specific topic or theme. Each of these parts constitutes separate publications.

Part 1, 2 and 3, of "The Science of Sailing" are available for order. Part 3 has just been published and defines a new methodology for a reliable prediction of viscous- and wave drag.

More details of " The Science of Sailing " and ordering details may be found at: www.vanoossanenacademy.nl

Melges 24 European Sailing Series in Portoroz
Portoroz, Slovenia - The third day of the Marina Portoroz Melges 24 Regatta, the season opener of the 2019 Melges 24 European Sailing Series, concluded the winner and shuffled the cards among Top Five. Estonian Lenny, taking early lead since the first day, confirmed its victory with eleven point margin ahead of Italian Taki 4 and Arkanoe by Montura completing the podium - both in overall and Corinthian rankings. Thirty boats from all over the Europe were representing ten countries in the first event of the season.

The morning in Portoroz was nice and sunny, but not very windy. However, the wind picked up as much as necessary to start the Race Five at 12.05 with South-Westerly wind of 6 knots. The Race Committee was signalling the wind shift to the left in the first gate, but the wind remained stable and steady enough to complete the race. Completion the race five was very much expected since the discard of the worse result came into play after this race.

With a score of 1-3-2-(8)-3 and 9 points in total past multi-time Melges 24 Corinthian European and World Champion Lenny EST790 with Tonu Toniste, Toomas Toniste, Maiki Saaring, Tammo Otsasoo and Ants Haavel confirmed the solid victory of the Marina Portoroz Melges 24 Regatta, which is also their first ever victory in the Melges 24 European Sailing Series in overall ranking.

The competition was really tight in Top 8 so that from the second to eighth classified teams were within six points in the results. Very content racing of Miles Quinton's Gill Race Team GBR694 with Geoff Carveth in helm with 22 points in total resulted to the fourth place, followed by Akos Csolto's Seven Five Nine HUN759 completing Top 5, one point behind.

Top 8 after 5 races:
1. Lenny - Corinthian - Tonu Toniste, EST, 9 points
2. Taki 4 - Corinthian - Niccolo Bertola, ITA, 20
3. Arkanoe By Montura - Corinthian - Sergio Caramel, ITA, 21
4. Gill Race Team - Corinthian - Geoff Carveth, GBR, 22
5. Seven Five Nine - Corinthian - Akos Csolto, HUN, 23
6. Fgf Sailing Team - Robert Bakoczy, HUN, 25
7. White Room - Corinthian - Luis Tarabochia, GER, 26
8. Arctur - Corinthian - Vazyl Gureyev, UKR, 26

Full results: www.melges24.ycmp.eu/results/

STIG claims the 2019 Melges 20 World Championship title
Alessandro Rombelli and the Italian STIG team of Francesco Bruni, Giorgio Tortarolo, and Tea Faoro are the winners of the 2019 Melges 20 World Championship hosted by the Coconut Grove Sailing Club in Miami, Florida. Rhonda Joyce and the GRINNING STREAK team of Jeremy Edwards and Tony Bowman earn the Corinthian World Championship title. Tight competition characterized the championship; the top four teams were only a few points apart, locked in a tight battle throughout the final day.

HEARTBREAKER by Bob Hughes with Federico Michetti and Manu Weiller finished in second place, giving a warm, happy embrace to the Stig team after the finish. RUSSIAN BOGATYRS by Igor Rytov with Konstantin Besputin and Anton Sergeev, always a tough team to beat, finished in third place. Daniel Thielman's KUAI and Vladimir Prosikhin's NIKA rounded out the podium.

Onward and upward - The Melges 20 Class and the Melges World League now look to Europe and Asia for racing, then back to North America for next winter's Miami Winter Series. The 2020 World Championship will be in Europe, and the 2021 World Championship will be back in North America.

Top five:
1. Alessandro Rombelli / Francesco Bruni / Giorgio Tortarolo / Tea Faoro , ITA, 34.0
2. Robert Hughes / Manu Weiller / Federico Michetti, USA, 41.0
3. Igor Rytov / Besputin Konstantin / Sergeev Anton, RUS, 44.0
4. Daniel Thielman / Jeremy Wilmot / Alec Anderson / Rayleen Thielman, USA, 46.0
5. Vladimir Prosikhin / Morgan Reeser / Charlie Smythe, RUS, 58.0

Full results in YachtScoring.com

melges20.com

Seahorse Sailor Of The Month

Last month's winner:

Rod Davis (NZL)
'His innovations in the OK have taken the boat to a new level' - Brett Daniel; 'He's not getting paid for this, he just loves sailing... pro sailors take note' - Dan Slater; 'Plenty of runway left, Rod' - David Ross; 'It's the help he gives us off the water that's almost more impressive. In Rod we trust!' - Matt Butterfield; 'I've gotta support a fellow scribe' - Blue Robinson; 'Rod Davis, there is no substitute!' - Michele Henderson; 'Every evening he'd switch from competitor to coach to help all of us... and with the BBQ' - Simon Probert; 'One of the best sailors on the planet, period' - Robin Morgan; 'He just sailed superbly' - Tony Bierre.

This month's nominees:

Stacey Jackson (AUS)
Jeez... where to start. This must be what they mean by 'going viral', the whole world was banging on our door to make this (deserved) nomination. A Volvo racer with SCA and a veteran of most things from skiffs to maxis, Stacey pulled together a really excellent all-woman crew for the last Hobart and then finished second overall. Big at raising awareness of ocean health and women in sport - we were not brave enough to ignore the mob...

Martin Atilla (LAT)
There's lots of talent coming through the Oppis right now but we really respect young Latvian sailor Atilla's big OptiOrange regatta win in Valencia in an almost entirely Spanish fleet and as the only non-Spanish sailor to make the top 10. Closed it out with two wins in the last two races which shows a bit of cool under pressure. OptiOrange was first conceived as a winter training event for Russian Opti sailors. Watch out, world

Seahorse Sailor of the Month is sponsored by Musto, Harken McLube & Dubarry. Who needs silverware, our prizes are usable!

Cast your vote, submit comments, even suggest a candidate for next month at seahorsemagazine.com/sailor-of-the-month/vote-for-sailor-of-the-month

View past winners of Sailor of the Month

Dragon Grand Prix Cannes
The 2019 Dragon Grand Prix Cannes concluded in style at the Yacht Club de Cannes with one final race in superb conditions to decide the winner. Going into the day just ten points separated the top six teams so the scene was set for a nail-biting showdown and the fleet did not disappoint.

With the final points calculated Dragon European Champion Pedro Andrade and his team of top dinghy sailors Goncalo Ribeiro and Joao Vidinha da Costa plus youngster Kacey Marfo claimed the Dragon Grand Prix Cannes and first blood in the 2019 Dragon European Cup series by three points from Thomas Muller. Grant Gordon's second place was enough to secure him third overall, a single point behind Muller.

In the Corinthian Division for all amateur crews Germany's Tanja Jacobsohn, a former 470 World Champion, sailing with husband Bernard Jacobsohn and Jan Scharrfesser, put in another great performance to finish eleventh in the race and take the Corinthian overall title from fellow German Maximillian Dohse with Sweden's Karl-Gustaf Löhr third.

To qualify for the final teams must compete in three of the four regattas including the Grand Prix Spain. Twenty teams will qualify for the final and there will be a quota for non-Corinthian and Corinthian sailors, based on the proportion of non-Corinthians/Corinthians participating in all four qualifying events.

Remaining Dragon European Cup events:
May 1-4 - HM King Juan Carlos Trophy, Cascais, Portugal
July 3-6 - Dragon Grand Prix Germany, Kuhlungsborn, Germany
November 11-14 - Dragon Grand Prix Spain, Palma de Mallorca, Spain
November 15-16 - Dragon European Cup Grand Final, Palma de Mallorca, Spain

Dragon Grand Prix Cannes 2019 Final Top Ten
1. Pedro Rebelo de Andrade, POR, 14
2. Thomas Muller, GER, 17
3. Grant Gordon, GBR, 18
4. Marcus Brennecke, GER, 20
5. Hugo Stenbeck, SUI, 26
6. Dmitry Samokhin, RUS, 27
7. Stephan Link, GER, 29
8. Pieter Heerema, NED, 33
9. Yvgeny Braslavets, RUS, 35
10. Anatoly Loginov, RUS, 6

www.yachtclubdecannes.org

WASZP European Championships
The 2019 WASZP European Championships will be set on the iconic foiling venue Lake Garda Italy for the 2nd time. Fraglia Vela Malcesine will again host the event from the 15th - 20th July, with expectations of 100+ boats from 15 nations for the first time since the class began production in August 2016.

Strong teams from the UK, Norway, Spain, France, Germany and Italy are expected, with teams from further abroad expected from Australia, New Zealand and the United States. Smaller teams from other European countries will make up the remainder of the competition, with the total number of nations sailing WASZPs now at 42 worldwide.

The event kicks off on the 15th/16th of July with registration and the European Slalom event, following on from the successful international slalom event at the Perth WASZP Games, this event is expected to be bigger and more exciting than anything seen before. With Malcesine providing the perfect location for a slalom event, with ideal viewing and racing conditions.

From the 17th - 20th of July the Championship racing commences with 2 days of qualifying and 2 days of finals with 100 boats creating a split 2 fleet event for the first time in the class. This will also be the first official event on the new racing foil. By the first event of the European Season over Easter at Campione Lake Garda, most of the world will have access to the new foil. This improvement has been widely accepted and congratulated, with it proving a real game changer for the fleet opening the wind range up to 6-25 knots. We have already raced 2 events in Australia and New Zealand on this foil, with the sailors commenting on how it has made the racing incredibly close and much more tactical, the ability to foil tack and sail higher upwind, while sailing lower downwind has meant for more passing lanes. Also being highlighted is the more forgiving nature of manoeuvres, sailors who were originally nailing 2 out of 5 gybes are now nailing consistent gybes due to the more stable platform.

Entries and NOR are now available on-line as well as accommodation and entertainment details. fragliavela.sailti.com

Foiling 50 Foot Ocean Racer
BoatsOn.tv conducted an interview with Andrew Buckland on his concept 50 Foot Foiling Rolex Sydney-Hobart yacht. Faster than the Maxis under 24 hours.

lan Roura and La Fabrique
Alan Roura's second campaign for the Vendee Globe is characterised by a huge leap forward. Twelfth in the 2016-2017 race aboard one of the oldest IMOCAs in the fleet, the Swiss sailor has been sailing since then with a foiler allowing him to develop his skills and improve his performance. After finishing seventh in the 2018 Route du Rhum, Alan has chosen Sebastien Audigane as his co-skipper for the 2019 season, which includes a lot of double-handed sailing. The skipper of La Fabrique is expecting a lot from this joint effort.

A winter refit in the spring is not that common. But that is what Alan Roura and his team have chosen to do, going about things in a different order from the others in the IMOCA class. On Tuesday 19th March, La Fabrique was taken out of the water to spend two and a half months in the yard in Lorient. "Since finishing the Route du Rhum (19th November), we have spent all our time sailing and the boat has certainly covered a lot of miles," Alan was pleased to tell us. "Firstly, we delivered her back home from Guadeloupe with my little team. The Rhum was the first major offshore test with the foils and in spite of that, my IMOCA arrived in Lorient in very good condition. We then took advantage of the winter weather and some rough conditions off Brittany to test her, pushing her hard and carrying out various trials. We don't have any regrets about the schedule."

"Be careful not to go too far in 2020"
Everything will happen very quickly after the Transat Jacques Vabre. 2020 looks like being a busy year coming to a climax with the start of the Vendee Globe on 8th November. "The calendar is packed with in particular two solo transatlantic races close to each other, The Transat and the New York-Vendee," explained Alan Roura. "We will sail between ten and fifteen thousand miles before the Vendee Globe. We're going to have to be careful not to push the boat too far before the round the world race."

The Ocean Race on the back of his mind...
It is hard to look further ahead and the period after the Vendee Globe, as this race is so big. Alan does however have one thing on the back of his mind and that is the possibility of launching a project for The Ocean Race, the crewed round the world race with stopovers, which will begin in October 2021. "That is not our priority for now, but it is very tempting, of course," he admitted.

imoca.org

Featured Brokerage
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Rocketship performance and great ORC/IRC potential in a fully optimised 34ft package. Great build quality and fantastic design. Also well suited to fast cruising thanks to her fully-appointed interior.

See listing details in Seahorse's RaceboatsOnly

Contact
GRABAU INTERNATIONAL
Lead broker - Michele Antonini
Tel: +39 333 74 89 281
Email: michele [AT] grabauinternational [DOT] com

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Raceboats Only 2009/2012 J/V 62 - "Chinese Whisper". 850000 EUR. Located in

Standout IRC/ORC performer. Huge optimization led by Brad Butterworth, has further pushed the boat down the right track and recent optimization makes her almost impossible to beat on W/L race tracks, whilst having the build quality to push her hard offshore. A must see for ROLEX/RORC campaigners.

See listing details in Seahorse's RaceboatsOnly

Contact
Sam Pearson - Ancasta Race Boats
+64 277733717
+44 2380 016582
sampearson [AT] ancasta [DOT] com

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Raceboats Only 1997 CHESSEA Volvo 60. 390,000 EUR. Located in Sete, South of France.

Ex CHESSIE RACING, ex ASSA ABLOY, ex BIG ONE, this Volvo 60 was refitted with new deck giving a higher headroom of 1.93m. She has fantastic performances (up to 30 knots). She successfully entered the 1997-1998 Whitbread Race and came second at the 2001-2002 Volvo Ocean Race.

See listing details in Seahorse's RaceboatsOnly

Contact
BERNARD GALLAY Yacht Brokerage
info [AT] bernard-gallay [DOT] com
www.bernard-gallay.com
Tel +33 (0) 467 66 39 93

See the RaceboatsOnly.com collection at seahorsemagazine.com/brokerage/

The Last Word
Humor is the most important thing in life. It trumps everything else, and it's the only thing that helps me deal with everything else. -- Paul Rudd

Editorial and letter submissions to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Advertising inquiries to Graeme Beeson: gb [AT] beesonstone [DOT] com or see www.eurosailnews.com/advertise.html

EuroSail News #4312 - 9 April

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In This Issue
Defi Atlantique
Ultim 32/23 Class: What Lies Behind Their Schedule
Royal Thames YC sailing office vacancy
50th Anniversary of Sir Robin Knox-Johnston's Golden Globe Victory
Cory Sertl Elected President Of Us Sailing's Board Of Directors
Nigel Irens delivers the Cruising Association's Hanson Lecture
North Sea Regatta 2019 Schedule
Industry News
Featured Brokerage
The Last Word: John Pinette

Brought to you by Seahorse magazine and YachtScoring.com EuroSail News is a digest of sailing news and opinions, regatta results, new boat and gear information and letters from sailors -- with a European emphasis. Contributions welcome, send to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Defi Atlantique
Almost a week after his victory on the first stage of the Defi Atlantique, the crew of Aïna Enfance et Avenir is about to start the second and last part of the race: 1300 miles between the Azores and La Rochelle.

The second leg started Monday at 15:00 (Paris time). Aymeric Chappellier, Rodrigue Cabaz and Eric Quesnel, who enjoy a 9 hour lead over their competitors in the standings, will hope to do as well as in the first stretch to win in La Rochelle, the home port of the skipper.

A total of 32 sailors are spread across 12 boats, in teams of either two or four, sailing in Class40 boats.

Top five in leg two
1. AINA Childhood and future, Aymeric Chappellier, 1 213.2 nm to finish
2. Campaign France, Miranda Merron, + 7.9 nm to leader
3. Enel Green Power, Andrea Fantini, + 8.2 nm
4. Made in Midi, Kito De Pavant, + 9.1 nm
5. Scouting spirit, Marc Dubos, + 11.4 nm

www.defi-atlantique.com

Ultim 32/23 Class: What Lies Behind Their Schedule
On Tuesday in Paris, the Ultim 32/23 class unveiled its calendar for the next five years. They will be competing in two round the world races, including the Brest Oceans as the climax at the end of 2023, several transatlantic races, a race around Europe and this autumn, a double-handed 14,000 mile race across the North and South Atlantic.

After the accidents in the Route du Rhum, which led to the postponement of the Lorient-Bermuda Race and the Brest Oceans, the solo round the world race initially scheduled for late 2019, and then the refusal of the Transat Jacques Vabre to allow the maxi trimarans to compete, the Ultim 32/23 class had to respond. After the problems they encountered during the winter of 2018, they are bouncing back with a new, ambitious 5-year programme. "It took a long time," admitted Patricia Brochard, the class president. The programme was supposed to have been announced two months ago, but it took a while for Banque Populaire to sign up again, and to analyse together the accidents in the Route du Rhum, while consulting towns and partners about the right choice of dates. It would seem that the reaction from Brest was the deciding factor: "They could have forced us to organise the solo round the world race in 2021," explained Thomas Coville, whose Sodebo Ultim 3 has just sailed for the first time. "But they were exemplary. The possibility of postponing the race until 2023 meant that the situation became much clearer."

They needed to find a replacement for the Transat Jacques Vabre. That was why Brest Atlantiques was created, a way of thanking the city at the tip of Brittany. This non-stop double-handed triangular race across the Atlantic will go from Brest to Brest with two islands to round near Rio de Janeiro and Cape Town. A voyage halfway around the world on waters they know well (almost 14,000 miles). "It was vital to stay in the Atlantic this year to ensure the safety of the sailors and boats if there is a problem," explained Cyril Dardashti, head of Gitana Team.

It has been suggested that there is not enough upwind sailing to test the trimarans. "At 45 knots in the trade winds, they will be tested in any case!" replied Francois Gabart. "The aim of the Brest Atlantiques is to clock up the miles and get to know the boats, without breaking them. That doesn't mean it won't happen, but the goal is to have a real battle between the boats all the way to the finish."

From Tip & Shaft

Royal Thames YC sailing office vacancy
Royal Thames YC An events management role has become vacant based at the sailing office at 60 Knightsbridge reporting to the Chief Sailing Officer, Richard Ambler.

The role is fast paced and varied managing sailing events both in Cowes and at Queen Mary reservoir and also at the Clubhouse in Knightsbridge. The candidate should have a background in event management and a knowledge and interest of sailing. Some weekend and evening work will be required for which time in lieu will be granted.

Interested candidates should send a CV and cover letter with current salary to sailing [AT] royalthames [DOT] com

50th Anniversary of Sir Robin Knox-Johnston's Golden Globe Victory
22 April, 2019, marks an astounding 50 years since Sir Robin Knox-Johnston, and his yacht, Suhaili, returned to Falmouth after an epic 312 days at sea, securing him in global history as the first person to sail solo, non-stop around the world.

An inspiring story of the underdog who went on to inspire the nation and a generation of ocean racers, he was written off by most before he even started and faced many challenges along his journey. From raising his own funds and building his own yacht, to facing 80-foot waves in the remote Southern Ocean, battling appendicitis, carrying out repairs in shark infested waters, and eventually losing all radio contact. Robin was presumed lost at sea for over four months before being reported by a British tanker vessel just weeks from the finish line.

In celebration of this pioneering achievement in global sailing and adventure history, which took place during the year of the first moon landing; a programme of public celebration events will take place over Easter in Falmouth. These include a special parade of sail on Monday 22 April during which Sir Robin and Suhaili, escorted by a flotilla of supporting vessels, will recreate the historic moment they crossed the finish line, and returned home.

Events schedule:

Thursday 18 April
0800, Gosport Premier Marina:
Sir Robin departs Hampshire for Falmouth on board Suhaili, which he has hand restored to its former glory. Interviews/photos available on departure.

Saturday 20 April
Sir Robin and Suhaili arrive to Falmouth with escorting flotilla: Timing TBD.

Sunday 21 April
1200 midday: North Quay, Falmouth
Sir Robin bronze footprint cast unveiled to mark his first steps back on land after 312 days at sea.

In preparation for the anniversary sail tomorrow, a flotilla of supporting yachts will assemble at St Mawes. There are 40 mooring buoys for boats up to 12m; larger boats should contact the harbour master, Martin Bidmead, on 01326 270553 or email: info [AT] stmawesharbour [DOT] co [DOT] uk

Evening: St Mawes Sailing Club, in conjunction with the Cruising Association, Little Ship Club and Clipper Ventures, welcome flotilla crews to the evening party at the St Mawes Sailing Club from 18:00 - 20:00; tickets are £25 including a donation to charity. For those not attending by boat you can also book a special charter ferry from Falmouth to St Mawes and back.

Monday 22 April
0930 - 1130: National Maritime Museum Cornwall (NMMC): "In Conversation with Sir Robin Knox-Johnston and Mike Golding OBE. Opportunity to hear Sir Robin giving first-hand accounts of his epic voyage to one of the world's most accomplished offshore sailors. Tickets available, £18 pp:

The NMMC is also staging an exhibition from April 8 throughout the summer, exhibiting items and photographs from Sir Robin's personal collection as well as a commemorative documentary that is currently in production.

13.00 - 16.00: Falmouth Harbour
On the water spectacle involving Sir Robin and Suhaili, plus a flotilla of supporting vessels to re-enact the exact time (1525) Robin crossed the finish line and returned home.

Supporting vessels are welcome to join Sir Robin and Suhaili on the water, or alternatively you can view the parade from the land, Pendennis being a great spot.

clipper-ventures.com

Cory Sertl Elected President Of Us Sailing's Board Of Directors
The US Sailing Nominating Committee named new members of the National Governing Body's Board of Directors who were officially elected on Thursday, October 11, 2018 at US Sailing's Annual Meeting in San Francisco, hosted by the St. Francis Yacht Club. Cory Sertl (Rochester, N.Y.) was elected as the next President of US Sailing. Rich Jepsen (Alameda, Calif.) was elected Vice President.

The US Sailing President serves one three-year term. Previous US Sailing President Bruce Burton (Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich.) led the organization in this role since November of 2015.

The newly elected members of US Sailing's Board of Directors are Treasurer John Schoendorf (Miami, Fla.), Select Director John Sangmeister (Long Beach, Calif.), and Directors Charlie Arms (Annapolis, Md.) and Jeffrey Johnson (San Diego, Calif.). Ron White (South Bend, Ind.) has also been retained for another term.

Sertl has had an extensive and successful sailing career both on and off the water. Her sailing experience ranges from dinghies and match racing, to one-design keelboat racing at the highest levels of national and international competition. Sertl was a U.S. Olympian at the 1988 Olympic Games as a 470 sailor, and she also launched Olympic campaigns in 1992 and 2004. She is a two-time Rolex Yachtswoman of the Year award winner in 1995 and 2001. Sertl is also a certified US Sailing Instructor Trainer and coach.

Sertl has been active on behalf of US Sailing as a delegate to World Sailing since 1995. She currently serves as a representative on the Council for North America and Chairs the Youth Events Sub Committee.

Sailing is a family activity for the Sertls. Cory and her husband, Mark have two grown children, who sailed at the college level - Katja (Boston College, 2016) and Nick (Harvard, 2018).

www.ussailing.org/news/sertl-bod-2018/

Nigel Irens delivers the Cruising Association's Hanson Lecture
Nigel Irens, a leading yacht designer, recently delivered a fascinating 2019 Hanson Lecture entitled "Slippery Boats" to a 60-strong audience at CA House in London.

Irens is well-known in yachting circles for designing Adventurer, a 34.4m (113ft) trimaran motor yacht that completed a record-breaking global circumnavigation in 1998 - the first boat voyage around the world that took less than the 80 days of Jules Verne's classic novel.

He was also the designer of another famous record-breaker, B&Q, the 75ft trimaran in which Ellen MacArthur broke the world record for a solo circumnavigation in 2005.

Expanding on the title of his lecture 'Slippery Boats', Nigel commented, "In the days of sail and oar, or even the early days of the internal combustion engine, building the most 'slippery' hull possible made perfect sense. In the last few decades though, we have seen the development of ever lighter and more powerful engines that can make a boat the shape of an average house-brick go as fast as you want."

He continued, "Unfortunately though the fuel an engine burns is strictly proportional to the power it puts out, so as we enter a world in which the cost of fuel - and concern about emissions - are becoming serious issues the smart response lies in becoming more thoughtful about how to make better use of every litre of fossil fuel burn."

There is a short interview with Nigel which is available to watch on the CA website:

North Sea Regatta 2019 Schedule
This year, the annual sailing event "North Sea Regatta" will kick off on May 28 with the well-known Vuurschepenrace starting in Scheveningen (NL) and finishing in Harwich (UK) followed by the North Sea Race hosted by the RORC, starting in Harwich (UK) and back to Scheveningen (NL). Finally the North Sea Regatta inshore races will take place off the coast of Scheveningen June 8-10.

This year we have three race courses planned. Track A for ORC 1, 2 and 3, ORC Two Handed & IRC 1 and 2, Track B for the sport boats (SB 20, ORC Sportboats, J / 70, J / 80, J / 22 & Yngling) and track C for the catamarans. The catamarans will fight it out over two days. These races are on Saturday and Sunday. Head over to your event website and portal for all the details and registration.

Event Summary
May 28th : start Vuurschepenrace Scheveningen (NL) to Harwich (UK)
May 31st : start North Sea Race Harwich (UK) to Scheveningen (NL)
June 8,9 and 10: North Sea Regatta Inshore Races

nsr.nl

* Are you ready for one of the most fun weekends of the season? The North Sea Regatta would not be possible without the help of a large group of volunteers. We are always looking for enthousiastic people helping us both on the water as well as on shore, running races, setting courses, building and dressing the race village etc etc. there is something to do for everyone! Best of all you will have fun, make new connections and walk away with new friends! So hurry and sign up as a volunteer, as we have a special prize to give away. We will pick 5 lucky winners who have signed up before April 15 to be taken on a tour around the race course on a sporty rib. Registration Volunteers North Sea Regatta

Industry News
The European Commission has issued a notice to stakeholders that covers the impact of Brexit on the recreational and personal watercraft industries, with a particular focus on the EU's Recreational Craft Directive (RCD).

To read the notice in its entirety, click here.

Meanwhile, the International Council of Marine Industry Associations (ICOMIA) says it plans to issue its latest guidance on Brexit soon. ICOMIA members can access its most recent guidance notes, published last month, by clicking here.

www.ibinews.com

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40 years after Fernhurst Books was first formed, and 6 years under new ownership, the watersports publisher has launched its new website

Unsurprisingly, it displays the company's 141 titles, with books written by such people as Sir Robin Knox-Johnston, Sir Ben Ainslie, Tom Cunliffe, Saskia Clark, Lijia Xu, Jon Emmett, Arthur Ransome and many others (101 authors at the latest count). Physical books can be bought through the website and there are links for buying the 86 eBooks published by Fernhurst Books.

The contents page and other spreads are shown for each book, and many also have videos and other resources. The authors also have their own profile page where you can find out a bit more than them.

The website contains over 100 videos featuring all the authors mentioned above and many others, including Andy Rice, Tom Phipps and Ian Walker. There are also:

- Tests on various subjects
- Forms to complete for celestial navigation
- Checklists for cruisers
- Cruiser Companion updates

www.fernhurstbooks.com

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The new charity Portsmouth Harbour Marine was officially launched today (4 April 2019) with a remit of promoting marine businesses, skills and participation around the harbour.

Building on the success of Gosport Marine Scene, Portsmouth Harbour Marine will work with schools and colleges to equip young people with the skills needed for marine sector employment and encourage young people to pursue a career in marine employment and to get afloat for recreation. Its aims also extend to stimulating marine businesses and their networks locally, and promoting Portsmouth's historic harbour as a destination for all forms of competitive and leisure boating.

The launch, held at the top of Portsmouth's Emirates Spinnaker Tower, was hosted by the Chairman of Portsmouth Harbour Marine, Commodore Peter Melson CVO CBE

All present at the launch recognised the potential of Portsmouth Harbour Marine to make a real difference so that Portsmouth Harbour is seen again as a centre of maritime excellence.

www.portsmouthharbourmarine.org.uk

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The newly launched London Yacht Show has been postponed until 2020.

In a statement, organisers Informa Global Events, said the decision had been made to ensure the delivery of a high quality on-water show, with the scale and breadth to attract full participation of the industries it is aimed at.

The event was rebranded and relaunched earlier this year with a focus on the high-end boating and luxury goods market - building on the previous London On Water Show.

"Since an initial burst of interest in the London Yacht Show, take-up has slowed from some segments of the industry and from luxury brands," said Andrew Williams, president maritime group.

"With just over a month to go until the planned launch, overall commitment to the event is not at the level required to deliver a show with the profile, scale and market breadth the industry asked for and deserves in London.

"Following extensive consultation with key stakeholders, we therefore believe it is in everyone's interest to postpone the show until next year."

The London Yacht Show was scheduled to take place at St. Katharine Docks from May 8 - 12 2019.

www.boatingbusiness.com

Featured Brokerage
Raceboats Only 2018 Swan 115 ODIN. 15,000,000 EUR.

Delivered in August 2018, ODIN is the fourth Swan 115 to be delivered and one of the most technologically advanced Swans ever conceived.

See listing details in Seahorse's RaceboatsOnly

Contact
sales [AT] burgessyachts [DOT] com

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Raceboats Only 1993 Whitbread 60 - TOKIO II. 100000 EUR. Located in Helsinki, Finland

Built for the 1993/4 Whitbread race - she is a yacht with a rich history. In her current ownership, she has been based out of Helsinki and used as a successful charter business. She also competed in the Volvo Legends Race in 2018. She has benefited from ongoing refits and preventative maintenance. It is now time for her next chapter.

See listing details in Seahorse's RaceboatsOnly

Contact
Please Contact: Ben Cooper
Telephone: +44(0) 1590 679222
ben [DOT] cooper [AT] berthon [DOT] co [DOT] uk

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Raceboats Only Swan 82-010 Grey Goose. 3,500,000 EUR. Located in Palma de Mallorca, Spain

This Nautor's Swan 82 FD "Grey Goose" is the perfect combination of performance cruising, easy and safe boat handling with a shorthanded crew and blue water sailing capability.

See listing details in Nautors Swan Brokerage

Contact
Lorenzo Bortolotti
Nautor's Swan Brokerage
T. +377 97 97 95 07
brokerage [AT] nautorswan [DOT] com

See the RaceboatsOnly.com collection at seahorsemagazine.com/brokerage/

The Last Word
If you go to Bed Bath & Beyond without a coupon, people will wonder if you're OK. -- John Pinette

Editorial and letter submissions to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Advertising inquiries to Graeme Beeson: gb [AT] beesonstone [DOT] com or see www.eurosailnews.com/advertise.html

EuroSail News #4313 - 10 April

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In This Issue
Bermuda 1000 Race
Huge Fleets Are a Healthy Sign at RS:X Europeans
1720 European Championships at the Sovereigns Cup in Kinsale
Fresh face on the 44Cup
Antigua's 32nd Classic Yacht Regatta shapes up to be a belter
Fredrik Loof is new OK Dinghy World No. 1
Belvidere Cup at Royal Thames
The business - and benefits - of building next generation racing yachts in Aotearoa
Rush of entries for Hamilton Island Race Week 2019
Cowes Week Ltd continues support of Youth Sailing
Featured Brokerage
The Last Word: Rev. Ivan Stang

Brought to you by Seahorse magazine and YachtScoring.com EuroSail News is a digest of sailing news and opinions, regatta results, new boat and gear information and letters from sailors -- with a European emphasis. Contributions welcome, send to editor [AT] eurosailnews [DOT] com

Bermuda 1000 Race
The first event on the IMOCA Globe Series calendar for 2019, the Bermuda 1000 Race, will set sail from Douarnenez (Brittany) at 1300 hrs local time on Wednesday 8th May. On the programme, a 2000-mile solo race course finishing in Brest, via the Fastnet and the Azores. Eighteen sailors representing six nationalities will be lining up, including a number of rookies, who will be making the most of the event to gain their first important solo experience aboard an IMOCA. Whatever their ambitions in the event, all of the competitors will be attempting to complete the race to clock up some precious miles in order to be selected for the 2020 Vendee Globe.

Few sporting events can boast that the number of entrants has tripled from one year to the next. That is however the case for the Bermuda 1000 Race, which last year attracted six IMOCAs for its maiden edition (five of which were sailed solo and one double-handed). Organised within the framework of the Douarnenez Grand Prix by the Sea to See company in collaboration with the IMOCA class, this year, the event will bring together eighteen boats, or in other words almost as many as for the last Route du Rhum. Ten of them will before that have taken part in the Pom'Potes Challenge, speed runs organised off Douarnenez from 4th to 6th May.

Among the eighteen registered for the Bermuda 1000 Race, seven sailors will be taking part in their very first IMOCA solo race, including two who will be on very good performing foilers, Sebastien Simon and Giancarlo Pedote. Three other newcomers will be setting sail on IMOCAs built for the 2008-2009 Vendee Globe: Maxime Sorel, Clement Giraud and Miranda Merron. The Belgian skipper, Denis Van Weynbergh will also be discovering his boat, which is none other than Nandor Fa's old monohull. That will also be the case for the British sailor, Pip Hare, the new owner of the legendary Superbigou.

The sailors registered for the Bermuda 1000 Race:

Fabrice Amedeo (Newrest-Art & Fenetres)
Romain Attanasio (Pure)
Alexia Barrier (4myplanet)
Yannick Bestaven (Maitre CoQ)
Arnaud Boissieres (La Mie Caline-Artipole)
Manuel Cousin (Groupe Setin)
Sam Davies (Initiatives Coeur)
Clement Giraud (Envol)
Pip Hare (Superbigou)
Boris Herrmann (Yacht Club de Monaco)
Ari Huusela (Ariel 2)
Stephane Le Diraison (Time For Oceans)
Miranda Merron (NC)
Giancarlo Pedote (Prysmian Group)
Damien Seguin (Groupe Apicil)
Sebastien Simon (Arkea-Paprec)
Maxime Sorel (V and B-Sailing Together)
Denis Van Weynbergh (Eyesea.be)

imoca.org
www.bermudes1000race.com

Huge Fleets Are a Healthy Sign at RS:X Europeans
The 2019 RS:X Europeans and Youth European Championships which are being held on the island of Mallorca, Spain, is a record turn out for the RS:X Class with 333 confirmed entries from 43 different nations representing six different continents over five days of racing. These Europeans are a testament to the health of windsurfing at present such that for the first time ever, the youth men's fleet is bigger than the senior men's fleet which is with special thanks to the BIC Techno class who provide an excellent pathway into the RS:X Class. The biggest and most welcome problem the organisers have this week is finding enough beach space!

2019 is a critical year for the senior fleet as this event forms the selection event for many of the nations competing here - looking to determine who will be sent to the all-important Olympic Test event later this year in Enoshima. The Europeans for many is a must perform event, where performance means different things to different sailors where complex little battles fought up and down the rankings.

Racing on Tuesday and Wednesday will be qualifying races for all fleets except the youth women who will be racing together all week. As racing moves to Thursday and Friday, the remaining fleets will be split into Gold and Silver fleets where the top ten of the Gold fleet will move to Saturdays all important Medal Races - where European Champions will be crowned.

www.rsxclass.org/europeans2019/​

1720 European Championships at the Sovereigns Cup in Kinsale
Sovereigns Cup Entries for the 1720 European's are well on target for what should be a very competitive and entertaining event.

Incorporated into the O'Leary Life Sovereigns Cup 26 - 29 June, the one design course will also host the Irish Dragon National Championships, all under the control of IRO Peter Crowley .

Top class racing taking full advantage of Kinsale, the Gourmet Capital of Ireland.

Avail of early entry deal online by 26th April by clicking HERE.

regattadirector [AT] sovereignscup [DOT] com www.sovereignscup.com

Fresh face on the 44Cup
Racing gets underway tomorrow at the 44Cup Porto Montenegro, the opening event of the 2019 season for the high performance RC44 one designs. While the majority of the teams are repeat customers, this year almost all have crew changes, some even changing their vital tactician in this 100% owner-driver class.

The top three teams from the 2018 season - Nico Poons' Charisma, Vladimir Prosikhin's Team Nika and Igor Lah's Team CEEREF - have new personnel this year, with, for example, Dean Barker and Ray Davies temporarily departing to rejoin their respective America's Cup teams. On the RC44 World Champion Team Nika, Barker has been replaced by Australian Laser Olympic gold medallist and former Oracle Team USA tactician Tom Slingsby, while the crew is also joined by a second Russian in former Synergy and Katusha pitman Nikolay Kornev. On the defending champion Charisma, the team's American former coach, 470 Olympic silver medallist Morgan Reeser, steps into Davies' sea boots.

The eight teams from 2018 are joined this year by Pavel Kuznetsov's powerful Tavatuy Sailing Team, fresh from back to back World Championship victories in the highly competitive Melges 32 Class. Calling tactics on board with Kuznetsov is top Russian match racer Evgeny Neugodnikov, the 2008 European Match Racing Champion and former SB20 World Champion.

Racing takes place at the 44Cup Porto Montenegro over 10-13 April, with the Sunday reserved for Navigational and ProAm races on the magnificent Bay of Kotor.

www.44cup.org

Antigua's 32nd Classic Yacht Regatta shapes up to be a belter
Antigua's 32nd Classic Yacht Regatta launches April 17th with a dramatically diverse fleet set to race in eight categories.

Performers on the racing stage will include the Klaus Röder 158' Tall Ships Chronos and Rhea; seven highly charged 29' Petticrow Dragons and the Carriacou built 32' sloop New Moon. Joining them are 66' Herreshoff ketch Arrluuk and 72' Fife ketch Eilean along with enduring designs from Alden, Mylne, Starling Burgess, Sparkman Stephens and more yachting genius.

When the Regatta began in 1987, vessels built after 1976 of any material or hull configuration were considered modern wonders. Time marched on and this year, we welcome those well aged beauties as part of the newly created Historic Class. 6-meter 33' Biwi Magic and 48' Swan sloops, Montana and Sleeper are among the inaugural group battling for glory.

This year's collection of history and tradition spans nearly a century with vessels representing each decade since 1924.

www.classicboat.co.uk

www.antiguaclassics.com

Results, race documents at YachtScoring.com

Fredrik Loof is new OK Dinghy World No. 1
Current European champion, Fredrik Loof, from Sweden is the new OK Dinghy World No.1 in the April 2019 release of the World Ranking List. As runner-up in the past two world championships he overtakes Greg Wilcox, from New Zealand, who has led the rankings for the past two years.

Loof becomes only the seventh sailor to hold the No.1 place in the 14 years of the ranking list and the ninth to accumulate more than 1,000 points. With 1048 points, he also now holds the record as the highest scoring sailor since the list was created.

Thomas Hansson-Mild, from Sweden also moves up one place to second, his highest since March 2017, with Wilcox dropping to third.

This list includes results from Sail Melbourne, the Australian Nationals, the New Zealand nationals, the world championship in New Zealand and the Turangi International open

There are now 540 sailors on the list, having competing in at least one ranking event in the past two years. This is an increase of 30 from the previous release. This is expected to increase further during 2019 with many more sailors buying boats and joining the class.

The next major event, and the next world ranking cycle, starts in May with the traditional Spring Cup in Medemblik.

World Ranking April 2019 (top 10 from 540)
1. Fredrik Loof SWE, 1048.21 points
2. Thomas Hansson-Mild, SWE, 1000.68
3. Greg Wilcox, NZL, 950.77
4. Tomasz Gaj, POL, 928.20
5. Rod Davis, NZL, 792.72
6. Bo Petersen , DEN, 767.23
7. Jan Kurfeld, GER, 762.47
8. Luke O'Connell, NZL, 761.90
9. Henrik Kofoed Larsen, DEN, 745.85
10. Ralf Tietje, GER, 742.37

www.okdia.org

Belvidere Cup at Royal Thames
The Belvidere Cup originated in Early Victorian times as a trophy for yacht match racing put up by the Royal Thames Yacht Club. Today the Royal Thames have dedicated the trophy to match racing in the club's J80s for the alumni of independent schools.

The regatta is a one day event limited to eight teams. This year, on 6th April there were 8 entries with two drop outs in the last few weeks making it difficult for Organising Authority to replace them. However the regatta went ahead with six teams on a cold sunless Saturday in a Northeast breeze which fluctuated between 8 and 14 knots with some gusts up to 20 knots.

Overall Results:
1. Winchester (Alastair Hall) 10 wins
2. Rugby (Oliver Dix) 7 wins
3. Wellington (Charlie Parkinson) 6 wins
4. Charterhouse (Jim Miller) 5 wins
5. Radley (George Chilvers) 2 wins
6. Pangbourne (James Minter) 0 wins

www.yachtsandyachting.com

The business - and benefits - of building next generation racing yachts in Aotearoa
The 36th America's Cup may still be two years away but Emirates Team New Zealand's campaign is already near top gear and Kiwi industry is winning.

Imagine having to raise northwards of $100 million within four years just to run your business, and not being entirely sure how you're going to do it. It's not a challenge most Kiwi enterprises face, and yet this is how Emirates Team New Zealand operates day-to-day.

The countdown is on for the team, with two years to run until it defends the America's Cup on the waters of Auckland's Waitemata Harbour.

Chief operating officer Kevin Shoebridge says they are in a good position to do so due to support from cornerstone sponsors such as Emirates, on board since 2004, and its 26-year partnership with Omega.

As defender Emirates Team New Zealand sets the boat design rules, and it may surprise many to know it has taken the needs of the local marine industry into account in coming up with the impressive AC75 monohulls, Shoebridge says.

"It's a whole new boat, a whole new class.

"When we came up with that rule (the AC75s) we were looking for a boat that would have a trickle-down effect to the industry, whether that's mast design, sail design, boat construction, foils. Something that would have a future and could be used in other areas of the industry.

"That was one of the things that spurred us on to move away from the catamarans we used in Bermuda. Although they're amazing boats they didn't really have an association with the normal yachtsman. A fixed wing like those boats had, a solid wing that required 30 or 40 people to launch them every day, just wasn't that practical.

"We're trying to come up with, for example, a semi-soft wing on this new boat that is something that could eventually be seen on cruising boats.

Maria Slade's full article: thespinoff.co.nz

Rush of entries for Hamilton Island Race Week 2019
If early indications are anything to go by, Hamilton Island Race Week 2019 could already be on course for a record fleet when it is staged on the beautiful, island-laced tropical waters of the Whitsunday Passage from August 17-24.

Entries have been open for little more than a month for the 36th edition of the award-winning series, yet there is already an unprecedented level of interest from yacht owners. Near 70 entries have been lodged, and the number is growing by the day.

The cross-section of entries is spread across all divisions; even trailables where owners in Tasmania and Canberra have registered early.

The most enthusiastic competitor of all to date is offshore racing enthusiast, Wayne Millar, with his 41ft sloop, Zoe. Originally from Townsville and now Lennox Head in northern NSW, Millar has missed only three Race Weeks since 1991.

Apart from the excitement of racing on courses that take the fleet around the myriad of islands in the Whitsundays, the scheduled Lay Day mid-week provides the crews and their families and friends with the opportunity kick up the heels at the big Summer Bright Pool Party or enjoy fine dining and champagne at the Charles Heidsieck Luncheon at qualia, the island's six star resort. Or there are options to play a round of golf on the superbly scenic 18-hole course, do a day-cruise around the islands, or simply relax and watch the sunset from the Bommie Deck at Hamilton Island Yacht Club.

Hamilton Island Race Week has an impressive history. It was established following Australia's historic victory in the America's Cup in Newport, Rhode Island, in 1983. The inaugural regatta, staged in April 1984, attracted an outstanding fleet of 92 yachts which came from all points across Australia, including Perth.

The Notice of Race and all details relating to Hamilton Island Race Week 2019 are on the website www.hamiltonislandraceweek.com.au

Cowes Week Ltd continues support of Youth Sailing
Cowes Week Limited, organisers of Lendy Cowes Week, will continue their youth initiative which offers discounted entry fees to boats with crews of under 25 year olds.

The Under 25 Youth initiative, which has been running since 2012, has succeeded in doing what it was originally designed for - inspiring and making it possible for young people to race at Lendy Cowes Week.

This year, Cowes Week Ltd is offering the first 25 crews to enter, who are all under age 25 at the time of the regatta, a 50% discount on the entry fee.

In 2018, competition was fierce out on the water, but the Under 25 crew of Team Heiner III, not only took home the Land Rover Under 25 Trophy but also won the TNG Newcomers trophy, Musto Young Skipper trophy and were second overall in IRC 3 Class.

Teams wishing to take advantage of discounted entry fees should make their entry as soon as possible by contacting the Regatta Office at entries [AT] lendycowesweek [DOT] co [DOT] uk / 01983 295744 or visiting the website www.lendycowesweek.co.uk

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